Quotes From "The Understory" By Elizabeth Leiknes

1
There once was a woman named Story Easton who couldn't decide if she should kill herself, or eat a double cheeseburger. Elizabeth Leiknes
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Deep down, Story Easton knew what would happen if she attempted to off herself–she would fail It was a matter of probability. This was not a new thing, failure. She was, had always been, a failure of fairy-tale proportion. Quitting wasn’t Story’s problem. She had tried, really tried, lots of things during different stages of her life– Girl Scours, the viola, gardening, Tommy Andres from senior year American Lit–but zero cookie sales, four broken strings, two withered azalea bushes, and one uniquely humiliating breakup later, Story still had not tasted success, and with a shriveled-up writing career as her latest disappointment, she realized no magic slippers or fairy dust was going to rescue her from her Anti-Midas Touch. No Happily Ever After was coming. So she had learned to find a certain comfort in failure. In addition to her own screw-ups, others’ mistakes became cozy blankets to cuddle, and she snuggled up to famous failures like most people embrace triumph. The Battle of Little Bighorn–a thing of beauty. The Bay of Pigs–delicious debacle. The Y2K Bug–gorgeously disappointing fuck-up. Geraldo’s anti-climactic Al Capone exhumation–oops! Jaws III–heaven on film. Tattooed eyeliner–eyelids everywhere, revolting. Really revolting. Fat-free potato chips–good Lord, makes anyone feel successful. Elizabeth Leiknes
3
In the spring and summer I watched my plants flower, but it was, perhaps, in winter that I loved them best, when their skeletons were exposed. Then I felt they had more to say to me, were not simply dressing themselves for the crowds. Stripped of their leaves, their identities showed forth stark, essential. Pamela Erens
4
Night is the worst time. After the long regimentation of the day, the enforced silences, the men want to talk. At first it doesn’t matter what about: TV, movies, travel, jobs. I lie on my side on my mattress as the words pool around me, reciting to myself the botanical classifications for peach, cherry, apple. Magnoliophyta, Magnoliopsida, Rosales, Rosaceae… I smell the smell of other bodies: stale skin, flatulence, cologne. I long to open the windows and let the fresh air sweep the smells away, sweep the bodies away too. Gradually one man drops out of the conversation, then another. Soon there will be only two men left speaking. And these two–they are not the same two every night–will drop their voices, speak in an intimate murmur. Perhaps they are only gossiping about one of the monks. Perhaps they are complaining about the food. But no, there is a reticence that lets me know that they are trying, clumsily, to reach each other. Pamela Erens