The Attack
When it
happened to Mimou, she was seventeen. She was so perplexed and stunned when it
went down, that she felt later she had not sufficiently opposed, and wondered
for years if she could have fought him off instead of the pathetic attempts of
a surprised school girl's feeble verbal nos. Yet at the same time she was
full of childish astonishment and wonder: was that the way it was done, was
that – abyss - what being an adult was all about? Did everyone else go through
it, too? Was being with a man like that, forced, a secret rite of passage?
She was
stupid.
Afterwards,
she never told anyone except Peri, and even then she would not use the actual
word for it. She wouldn’t use it for another twenty years.
The guy
was flamboyant and suave, he wore a striped jacket, had carefully disheveled
hair with too much gel in it. He had a gap between his front teeth. He wrote
her a poem on a piece of napkin. He went to an extremely prestigious and
hard-to-get-in art school.
Ten years
later, a movie and documentary director with the same name emerged. Mimou went
to great lengths never to find out if it was the same man.
She had
won a hotel gift certificate in another town in a raffle for her school. She
had her books with her, she promised mother she would be careful and she would
see her tomorrow, she figured she would shop and study for a big exam.
She met
the guy right there at the bus station.
When she had
lost her virginity to that drunken jerk from another school she had blamed
herself, for drinking too much, for allowing the fact that he had lush curly
hair delude her into thinking he was a nice guy. But everyone lost their
virginity to some jerk at a drunken party. Maybe it did upset her a little, but
she compartmentalized it and wasn’t scarred. After all, she had okayed it. It
was nothing like with this guy.
They had a
good time at first. He dazzled her with knowledge and prestige. He spoke in
hushed tones. He wasn’t exactly handsome, but he had something about him. To
ask him to come check out her room after the lunch together seemed like an
innocent enough idea. Did she think it would possibly lead up to having sex?
Perhaps, eventually. But right then she just figured they’d go leave her
luggage in and go roam the city. They did not.
It was
over fast. She lay on her stomach, fully clothed except for her skirt and
underpants which the guy had shoved down to her ankles. The worst part was, she
thought afterwards, that the guy would not leave. She tried to stay as
invisible as possible. She went into a shock and was unable to leave the room
or move at all.
There was
a movie house inside a mall attached to the hotel. When she could, much later,
she went inside to see a movie. She had a roundtrip ticket, and it never
occurred to her she could just leave. For the life of her she would never be
able to bring back what film she went to see that night. Years later she
marveled a little how she never, even for one second, as it was going down, or
even later, when the guy just took a shower and made some calls and made
himself at home at her hotel room, was scared for her life. There was a part of
her that really thought this was the way it must be, since the guy offered no
apologies, no remorse, and took her into no consideration whatsoever after
having had his way with her. It was almost as if she ceased to exist to him.
As fate
would have it, decades later, she found herself working at that exact same
movie house for some years, the one that was still right next to the hotel.
When she once read a story in the paper about the multiple rapings that had gone on inside the hotel,
she was chilled to the bone, and found herself thinking that that was the real
Overlook Hotel, where Jack had always been, and would continue to be, the caretaker.
That night
she promised herself she would never be caught off-guard like that again. That
she would make herself the baddest, the best, the rawest, and no one would have
the chance to send her to have her blood checked for HIV, or sit at the doctor’s
telling some tale about a broken condom to get the morning-after pill, again.
What
happened was, after all, her own fault. God, she had been so stupid. She swore
to lose the naivety, to lose the trust. Ten or so years later, when she
accidentally stumbled on the poem the guy had written her in the restaurant,
and realized it was a lesser-known piece by one of the country’s major poets,
she was not surprised, only sad that there once was a girl so gullible.
And learn
she did. She did become the best, the baddest, the rawest. She also lost all real
interest or desire for sex. She was the best they ever had, but her heart
was never in it. She did it all by the numbers. To have an orgasm would be to
lose oneself in the moment, so she made damn sure to never ever come. She
wouldn’t touch herself even when alone. Sometimes, when she awoke in the night
to her body convulsing, and felt it was trying to release on its own, to unwind
on its own, she felt a deep shame, and sometimes cried. She used sex for
everything else besides showing someone she loved them.
If she did
fall into love, she did not want to act anymore, but could not bring herself to
communicate the reasons for the sudden change, the what appeared to be coldness
and unwillingness, fearing they would not understand. Of course,
not having a clue as to what was going on inside Mimou's head, none of them did
understand. Every single one of her relationships ended for this very reason.
She became
convinced all men ever wanted was to fuck, they did not care about anything
else, and whether the woman wanted to or not was incidental. She had the
nicest men as her boyfriends, she had bad men, she even once tried to make a go
of it with someone she found utterly uninteresting. It was the same, every
time.
After
twenty years of failed relationships, she once made an off-hand remark to
Sally, while she was trying on sweaters at her shop, about the time when that
one asshole raped her and how she had been stupid enough to let what happened influence
her entire history of relationships with men ever since, and did Sally think
the size was alright and what about the color? Then she saw the look on her
friend’s face.
Telling
her boyfriend two weeks after inadvertently telling her best friend Mimou felt
absolutely no fear at all, only the familiar profound weight at the pit of her stomach.
She had no idea whether this time there would be any difference whatsoever in
how things turned out. For the first time though, she didn’t think about it at all. Making
someone stay felt unimportant. Trying to be understood was secondary. It was the saying it that seemed most critical and essential. If it was the power of love, she did not know or question it. If it was Mimou healing after twenty-odd years, the better to leave it alone. Mimou
just wanted to tell someone whom it may concern, finally.
The Girl Zone: Nine.
For Kate
Beckinsale, Gwyneth Paltrow, Angelina Jolie, Asia Argento, Mira Sorvino, Ambra
Battilana Gutierrez, Rosanna Arquette, Léa Seydoux, Lysette Anthony, Lucia
Evans, Rose McGowan, and all the others who have come forward recently. The story
may be an old one, but that will never make it okay. Some monsters are real.
Silence kills.
The
hardest part is trying to see who are the monsters and who are those that are
just trying to love you.
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