Taboo 1 -1980- [ ORIGINAL • 2024 ]
She nods. That’s the second taboo: the agreement to return.
She is seventeen, sitting on the edge of a cracked vinyl booth in a diner that smells of coffee and old smoke. Outside, a Buick Skylark the color of rust idles in the rain. Her mother thinks she’s at the library, studying The Scarlet Letter . Instead, she is studying the curve of his knuckles as he lights a cigarette.
He drops her off two blocks from her house. No kiss. No promise. Just: “Same time tomorrow?” Taboo 1 -1980-
The rain stops. The clock on the dashboard says 11:47. She has fifteen minutes to become the girl who walks through the front door, the one who never left the library. She practices the face in the rearview mirror—innocent, tired, vaguely annoyed by homework. It fits like a borrowed coat.
Later, in the back seat of the Buick, the windows fogged with breath and regret already pooling like gasoline on water, she will think of a word she learned in Latin class: vetitum —the forbidden thing. Not evil. Not impossible. Just… not allowed. And that is exactly why she stays. She nods
He reaches across the table. His thumb traces the inside of her wrist. She doesn’t pull away. That’s the first transgression: not the touch, but the permission.
She takes off her jeans. A matchbook falls from the pocket. The Rusty Nail Lounge . She doesn’t smoke. She puts it in her jewelry box, next to a dried corsage from a dance she didn’t enjoy, with a boy she doesn’t remember. Outside, a Buick Skylark the color of rust idles in the rain
He is twenty-three. He wears a leather jacket that isn’t broken in, just broken. He says things like “You’re not like the others” and means it, for about six hours. His car’s tape deck plays The Clash, then Springsteen, then nothing but static and the hiss of tape winding.