Skid Dogs
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About this ebook
A raw and riveting coming-of-age story about the wild love of teenage friendships and the casual oppression of 90s rape culture
Emelia Symington-Fedy grew up with her girl gang on the railroad tracks of a small town in British Columbia. Unsupervised and wild, the girls explored the power and shortcomings of “best” friendships and their growing sexuality.
Two decades later an eighteen-year-old girl is murdered on Halloween on the same tracks, and Emelia returns to her hometown to stay with her mother, who is fearful of a murderer at large.
While the media narrows its focus on how the girl dared be alone on the tracks, Symington-Fedy slowly comes to terms with the mistreatment of her own teenage body. Giving a bold and often darkly humorous first-hand account of nineties rape culture and the sexual coercion that still permeates girlhood, Symington-Fedy holds her hometown close and accountable and exposes the subtle ways that misogyny shows up daily. Award-winning poet and author Aislinn Hunter describes Skid Dogs as a “riveting, raucous and tender look at growing up a girl in a boy’s world. […] Beautifully written and bravely told, this book is the Stand By Me for girls that’s been far too long in coming.”
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Skid Dogs - Emelia Symington-Fedy
Skid Dogs
Skid DogsEmelia Symington-Fedy
Douglas & McIntyreCopyright © 2023 Emelia Symington-Fedy
1 2 3 4 5 — 27 26 25 24 23
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system or transmitted, in any form or by any means, without prior permission of the publisher or, in the case of photocopying or other reprographic copying, a licence from Access Copyright, www.accesscopyright.ca, 1-800-893-5777, [email protected].
Douglas and McIntyre (2013) Ltd.
P.O. Box 219, Madeira Park, BC, V0N 2H0
www.douglas-mcintyre.com
Edited by Caroline Skelton
Cover design by Naomi MacDougall
Text design by Libris Simas Ferraz / Onça Publishing
Cover photo by Emelia Symington-Fedy
Author photo by zev tiefenbach
Printed and bound in Canada
Printed on 100% recycled paper
Supported by the Government of Canada
Supported by the Canada Council for the ArtsSupported by the Province of British Columbia through the British Columbia Arts CouncilDouglas and McIntyre acknowledges the support of the Canada Council for the Arts, the Government of Canada, and the Province of British Columbia through the BC Arts Council.
Library and Archives Canada Cataloguing in Publication
Title: Skid dogs / Emelia Symington-Fedy.
Names: Symington-Fedy, Emelia, author.
Identifiers: Canadiana (print) 20230440673 | Canadiana (ebook) 20230440681 | ISBN 9781771623643 (softcover) | ISBN 9781771623650 (EPUB)
Classification: LCC PS8637.Y45 S55 2023 | DDC C813/.6—dc23
Dedicated to all the girls
We were made to bleed, and scab and heal and bleed again, and turn every scar into a joke.
—Ani DiFranco (Buildings and Bridges,
1991)
Skid Dogs is based on real events. To protect the identities of the people involved, names have been changed and personal characteristics altered. For creative purposes, timelines have been condensed, flipped and stretched and some characters are composites of many different people. The telling is mine. My friends and Taylor’s family have given me their consent. I respect that our memories may differ. That said, though artistic licence was taken, and fictitious scenes built for dramatic purposes, this is my attempt at the truth.
2011
I know it’s our spot when I get to it by the curve in the rails that used to hide us from view. The moon is three-quarters full and gives off good light. I crouch, searching the gravel. I’m looking for a memory. Lip chap. A single button. Something to tie me to this place. But it’s been two decades and there’s nothing left of us here — just ice crystals playing tricks on me.
The night has a bite; that just-before-winter feeling that makes my eyes water. I tuck my mom’s coat — a thin red wool — underneath me and sit with my head on my knees, taking on the perspective of a train, the same view I had the first day I met my girls. Four of them, dressed in crop tops and high-waisted shorts, long tanned legs, lounging along the rails.
A few feet down the tracks my eye catches a glint of something on the ground. I turn on my phone’s flashlight and get onto my hands and knees to look closer. Tucked into the gravel is a piece of glass, and as I shine my light across the area I find another worn shard. Then another piece reveals itself, half buried and roughed up. It couldn’t be. Squatting, I turn the few dull pieces over in my palm. How is it possible after all this time? But why not? And like they’ve been waiting for permission, I’m penned in again. My eyes close. The air is cigarette smoke and Juicy Fruit as the girls crowd around me, a knee pressing into my thigh as an arm slumps over my shoulder. Faint at first but like a radio dial made clear when I tune in to the right frequency, a giggle pops up beside me and a raspy laugh drops from above. Rowdy. As hell. I open my eyes a slit so colours and textures can come into view and see the wheat-white curls of Aimes’s new perm, Bugsy’s bare brown shoulders, Cristal’s crisp plaid button-up, and there’s Max humming like she always does: with us, but also far away. Aimes’s knees knock as she settles beside me, a stick of a thing compared to the cleavage pouring out of Max’s tank top. None of us are allowed to wear makeup in public yet. Bugsy and I are the only ones to have bled so far. No one has kissed a boy, and all we want to do is be together. The others plunk in a row alongside Aimes and Cristal lights another smoke. Max pulls me toward her and I can smell her Herbal Essences shampoo as easily as I feel the cold on my cheeks. Bugsy flashes me her thin-lipped grin and another squeal pierces the air. I feel a bit hysterical inside, like how it used to be when we’d sit here for hours, talking shit, sucking on slushes and throwing stones.
Curling the glass in my hand I look up to the cold, wide sky. On my fourteenth birthday we drank a bottle of vodka here. After we’d finished it, I smashed the bottle across the rails, ricocheting glass. I shake my head, not wanting to think about that night. An old instinct, what we did back then too: we shook the pain off, by laughing, and smoking and making fun. Everyone knows, a girl has to be killed before she’s taken seriously; anything less is just called growing up.
I look down the tracks and I’m alone again. The ghosts of my girls are gone, but in my palm there’s proof. This was us. We were here. It happened.
1991
Mom moved us into a real house during a heat wave. When everyone else was living at the river, drinking warm root beer and languishing in inner tubes, in the two hot months before high school started, she packed up our Hyundai Pony and drove us load by load from our trailer in the bush, along the river and out of Ashton Creek to Armstrong, a farming town we’d never seen before, an hour away. She was excited, sweat on her upper lip, long brown hair, thick as a rope, pulled into a low ponytail overtop a men’s shirt covered in flecks of paint. She yakked at my little brother, Grum, through the rear-view mirror — words like ravine,
and attic,
and rose arbour
— while I pressed my forehead against the passenger-side window, the VCR on my lap.
When we pulled up to a shaded house — squat but regal with gingerbread spindles decorating the front porch and fish-scale shingles falling off the dormers — it reminded me of one of the cover illustrations in the books I read: an image of a young girl in an apron running down the crumbling porch steps, about to get herself and her furry sidekick into all sorts of mischief. The house was cream-coloured, Victorian era, with scrolls of flaking paint rolling up the boards. The window trim and doors, painted a dark brown, were shedding too. Grum rode his BMX across the overgrown yard yelling We’re rich,
while Mom began to tug at the vines of wisteria that had spread across this real-life doll’s house. When they linked elbows and began discussing a spiffy new paint job as a way of properly introducing ourselves to our new town, I set out down the driveway to explore Armstrong by myself.
Down the hill, past the Armstrong cheese plant, I saw the tracks. They were raised up off the road, set high along a gravel embankment. From where I stood across the street I could only see flashes of metal through the brown grasses. The road continued its descent toward a few small buildings, which made me think that if I climbed up onto the tracks I’d be able to get a view of the whole town. I crossed the road and scrambled up the scree, grabbing choke grass for the final heft onto the rails. The tracks were shiny and dry, partially shaded by blackberry bushes, so the heat throbbed less. I peered across to where I’d just been, the cement cheese plant with four chimney stacks on its roof billowing out a thick tang, the park roped off by a rusty chain, and I realized that if I hadn’t been able to see the full rails from the road, no one could see me up here. Cars drove by below and a few peals of hoarse end-of-summer laughter blasted from the chipped-up-looking outdoor pool beside the park, but with the scrub on one side of the rails and more dense brush on the other, I was hidden. The tracks smelled of oil. No, it was heavier than that. There was black grease on the ties, train juice of some sort. I looked toward the heat shimmering off the flat-roofed buildings in the distance and changed my mind. Instead of discovering our new town, I turned toward the protection of the trees.
Following the curve of the rails away from the park and the pool and the new town noises, I headed into a tunnel of maples, which brought immediate shade. The large spikes that attached the rails to the sleepers were almost hidden by the dandelions growing between the cracks, making them feel old and unused. I raised my arms toward the trees, stretching out my sore parts from the past two weeks of packing, scrubbing and dragging furniture. Picking up speed, I jumped from one tie to the next, counting the boards as I leapt.
Because my head was down, I heard the girls before I saw them. Faraway chatter and laughter that sounded like a fast-moving creek. My head jerked up and I counted quickly. Four girls, about half a block away. They hadn’t noticed me so I jumped off the rails and scurried into a ditch of brambles and crouched low like I was taking a pee. I couldn’t make out the details of their faces but the picture they made — of bodies lazing, bright colours, legs in shorts spread wide — was beautiful. These were languid creatures and their repose scared me. I scooted farther back into the bush, ready like a deer, alert and poised to bolt.
The two girls closest to me were sitting between the rails, across from each other, knees bent and heels dug into the gravel for traction. It looked like they were lobbing small stones at each other’s faces. One of the girls had short blond hair and by the wisp of smoke rising behind her, I guessed she was holding a cigarette. Her competitor was clutching a small bouquet of yellow flowers. Yellow Flowers hit the smoking girl above her eye and brought her hand to her mouth in alarm. Smoker laughed, took a drag, and picked up a couple more rocks to restart the game. Another girl balanced along one rail, her back to me. The girl cackled every time she fell off, which was often, seemingly tickled by her own failure. From the platinum streaks in her hair I guessed she came from a we-have-a-boat kind of family. Reflexively, I tucked my own hair behind my ears; the Sun-In spray I’d tried a few weeks ago had left it a tell-all brassy orange.
My eyes held on the last of the gang and the tiniest, a girl perched straight-backed like a squirrel, immersed in her friends’ antics, but not joining in. A frizzy blond, this girl’s legs were so skinny that they were hard to differentiate from the poplar branches behind her. She sneezed messily and I jumped, falling out of my crouch. As I tripped into a pile of dead brush, a crack rang out and all four girls turned like a pack of dogs interrupted. The tiny one leapt to standing, wiping the snot onto her shorts, squinted into the brush and pointed at my hiding spot.
Someone’s there,
she yelled. We’re being watched.
The girls bunched together in the middle of the tracks and scanned the woods. Tiny stomped her foot on the tie once, like she was trying to scare off a tomcat. Her kneecaps were wider than her thighs.
It’s a girl,
she said, pointing to me. She’s hiding beside the birch.
I looked behind me, then remembered I was the one caught.
Hey pervert,
the tiny one yelled, we can see you.
I stayed put behind the tree.
How do you know it’s a girl?
the smoker asked.
Because she’s right there,
the tiny one said, pointing again.
I was still far enough away that if they started to chase, I’d be able to outrun them, but Tiny raised her arm again, this time in a come-here motion. She seemed friendly but it could have been a trick.
As I emerged from my hiding spot, the gang opened their circle to stand in a line across the rails. The girl with the yellow flowers tossed her long brown hair over one shoulder. The short-haired smoker ground her cigarette into the gravel. Platinum Blond stood in the centre of the tracks, her Chucks spread as wide as her grin and Tiny cocked her chin and placed a foot on the rail, claiming it. This is the moment where everything changes, I thought, taking another step forward. Thinking of myself as a character in a story relieved some of the pressure I often felt in real-time situations, so I willed myself to rise up and out of my body just enough to watch the girl who was me begin to move independently of myself. The girls were still a little ways off and I didn’t know where to set my eyes so I kept them on the planks. I could pretend I was just wandering. Yes, that sounded right. I’m the new girl meandering along railroad tracks, coming upon my first adventure. That’s a fine way to start a story.
Walk faster ya donk,
Tiny yelled.
They’d started to jostle and shove, anticipating my approach, but I kept my pace steady, settled by the heavy track scent.
When I reached their line, the girls surrounded me in a huddle.
You’re the new kid,
Tiny said, not asking a question.
Do you know what your homeroom is?
Platinum Blond said.
There’s only one homeroom for grade eights, ’tard,
Tiny said.
Kill me for living,
said Platinum.
They laughed like small dogs.
I’m Aimes,
the tiny girl said, grinning a mouthful of metal at me. This is Bugsy,
and she pushed the tanned blond from the edge of the circle out front.
Bugsy’s eye colour was the same as a cat’s, with yellow bursts at the centre. The tan lines underneath her Esprit tank top confirmed my assumption that she was the kind of girl who spent her summers bouncing on an inner tube behind a speedboat as her dad steered one-handed, gripping a beer. Bugsy’s fingernails were stubby though, as small as nails could get without being gone, the thin moon indents painted a bubblegum pink that tried to distract from the ragged skin. Before I could look away, she tucked her fingers into a quick fist.
Burns in the wind,
the short-haired smoker said to Yellow Flowers and motioned for a drag.
That’s Cristal,
Aimes said, pointing to the smoker.
As I’d seen at a distance, Cristal’s blond hair was almost a buzz cut. Her shoes were Crest white. Cristal nodded without smiling and reached for the smoke.
And Max,
Aimes said, indicating the girl holding the yellow flowers. She’s an opera singer.
I’m not a friggin’ opera singer,
Max said, ignoring Cristal and taking a drag.
"Max knows the entire CD of Les Misérables by heart," Aimes said.
Max rolled her eyes. They were the lightest of blue, like a glacier, and her brown hair matched the glacial look, lying flat like a sheet down her back.
"I love Les Mis was the first thing I heard myself say aloud.
I have the T-shirt."
This was a lie. Mom had taken me to the touring show of Les Misérables for my thirteenth birthday but I hadn’t dared ask for a souvenir.
Max looked me up and down while shaking her hair out behind her. She seemed unimpressed, which attracted me. She took another long drag, skipping Cristal again.
Pass the fag, fag,
Cristal said.
Max took another puff.
These girls acted like how I imagined sisters would be.
What’s your name, new girl?
Aimes asked and stepped closer.
Uh, Emmy,
I said. I moved into —
— the olden days house across from the elementary school,
she interrupted, as the girls made clucks of agreement.
Cristal sat down again and pulled out a pack of Du Mauriers. She counted how many were left, nodded to herself, pulled out another cigarette and lit it. She’d quit trying to make Max share and she hadn’t made a fuss about it, which made her seem the most laid-back of the group.
You want a drag?
Cristal patted the rail beside her.
I didn’t sit down. I’d never smoked before and had assumed I’d have time to practice in private before trying it out in front of high-stakes strangers. I passed the cigarette along, with the dexterity of someone holding a live caterpillar, to Aimes, who stood beside me.
Don’t worry,
she said. Cristal’s the only real smoker. We just do it to be cool.
The girls nodded again as they shuffled closer, trying to get a look at all sides of me.
We heard from Ollie that there was a name change on his mom’s paper route last week,
Aimes said. We were hoping you’d be a girl.
Realizing that my moving here was town news buoyed me up.
Who’s Ollie?
I asked.
He’s our best guy friend,
Bugsy said. Ollie Solly and his older brothers run this town. They’re in a gang called the Raiders, so watch out.
Ollie’s mom grows a garden for food,
Cristal said, standing up.
She does seven paper routes every morning before work,
Bugsy cut in. My mom says it’s a monopoly but my dad says it’s called industrious and what else can a single mother do?
We have a garden for food,
Max said, flipping her hair again.
You have a greenhouse for cherry tomatoes, Max,
Cristal said. And your parents don’t have real jobs.
Max scowled. Being a ceramist is a real job.
My dad said it’s not a real job unless you hate doing it,
Cristal said.
That’s what my dad says too,
said Bugsy.
Sucks to be you,
Max said, and tossed the yellow flowers into the bush. Can’t be a single mom. Can’t grow vegetables. Did you finally get your rag, Cris?
Cristal laughed. I wish.
Max stepped off the rails to reach a fanny pack that was suspended from a low-hanging tree branch. There was a detachment in her decision to leave that made me want to follow her, but Cristal interrupted the thought.
So, where’d you come from?
she asked, taking a drag.
This was the question I needed to answer carefully. We’d just moved from our trailer. Townies didn’t understand the difference between living in a trailer in the bush and renting a pad in a trailer park. We’d owned our land, but they’d still assume I was trash.
Um, I lived in a place my mom built, in the woods, by the Shuswap River,
I said.
I wasn’t lying. Mom had built three separate additions to the trailer in the decade we’d lived there. First was the screened-in porch she’d tacked on to the front — for our shoes and coats and sick chickens and bad dogs and the seedlings we were trying to grow. A year later, she’d built another addition to the back of the trailer so she could have her own bedroom. A few years after that, Mom paid a church friend’s brother-in-law in cash to pour a basement for storage and canning. Eventually there was nowhere else left to build onto and our mothership with its two space stations had reached capacity.
Your mom is a construction worker?
Aimes said, tucking the frizz behind her ears.
No, she’s a nurse,
I said.
So, your dad built the house?
Cristal said.
My dad lives in Victoria,
I said, letting the word house slip off my radar. But it’s cool because I get double the Christmas presents.
No shit, that’s a silver cloud,
Bugsy said.
My parents never got married, so technically I’m a bastard,
I said, hoping to sound provocative. The girls giggled, so I kept going. I mean, what kind of an awful baby do you have to be for your dad to leave when you’re three months old?
The worst kind,
Bugsy said.
Yer funny,
Aimes said and grabbed her backpack. My parents are probably getting a divorce.
She stuffed her Walkman away and started to trot down the tracks, her backpack bouncing off her butt as she tried to catch up to Max. Welcome to Cheese Town,
she yelled over her shoulder, where everyone knows you better than you do.
And you get all the free curds you want,
Bugsy with the cat eyes said, pointing down the rails to the cheese factory. Grab a handful from the bucket. They never run out.
There’s not much else here,
Cristal said. One traffic light and three churches.
She put her smoke out on the ballast and carefully set the butt on the top of the rail before starting off behind the others.
Bugsy was the only one left, sucking up the last sips of slush from the corners of the cup. I looked to her for direction and her eyes narrowed.
You ever kissed a boy?
Bugsy asked.
No.
Me either — I wish. You ever been drunk?
No.
Same here. You ever eaten shit?
My breath caught.
Just kidding!
Bugsy snorted and slapped me on the back.
Come on ya bastard,
she said, raising her eyebrows then turning to run. We’ve got a whole day to waste.
If a bird had been flying above us on that first blazing summer day we met, it would have seen one girl in the lead, about a block ahead of the others, another girl running to catch up and three trailing behind, moving away from the protection of the trees and heading toward flat, open land. The bird would have seen our bodies gathering together in different formations then spreading out again, sometimes on the rails, sometimes moving straight down the centre of the tracks, always commanding the entirety of the space and staying within yelling distance.
First thing to know is, adults don’t use the tracks,
Aimes yelled.
So, if you see one,
Bugsy said, it’s a pervert or the high school counsellor.
But why up here?
I asked, pointing to the sidewalk below.
It’s faster than taking the streets,
Bugsy said.
Slash through the bush, cut through a backyard, jump on the tracks and get where you’re going, ya know?
Aimes yelled. Gives us more time to donkey around.
As we got closer to the main street the gravel embankment that kept us above the town started to grade down. We were still elevated over the cars and the few people walking along the sidewalk, but the trees had thinned considerably, so we had to rely on large blooming bushes on either side of the embankment to travel undetected. Soon there were no hiding spots left and we cut directly through the centre of Armstrong on a swath of exposed rail, almost level with the stores and businesses coming into view. The girls pointed out the important landmarks as we passed them. Short Stop, where the slushes were bought, the post office, an old brick building that had an awning in the shape of a cowboy hat. Tuckers was the diner they went to for fries and gravy on Fridays after school. There was a 7-Eleven in the distance. On our right we passed a grain silo.
Sometimes Max lets us listen to her sing in there,
Aimes said.
My voice sounds clearest at night,
Max said.
There seemed to be one of everything in the small downtown core: one pizza place, one pharmacy attached to one Video Express, one grocery store, one gas station and one junk shop — all sharing the same country-and-western theme.
If we’d taken the road, we’d still be back by the post office right now,
Bugsy said.
And we’d probably have run into some dink-donk like Eli or Tyson. Up here, there’s not so much BS to deal with,
Aimes said.
In what felt like only a few blocks, the buildings stopped. A small bottle depot was on our left and then — open field. The town noises got quieter and the birds went back to calling out to each other and we were alone again, travelling alongside marshland and willow trees. At what seemed to be a pre-agreed-upon location all four girls stopped and circled a few times, like dogs do before finding rest. One by one we sat down along the rails, now on the opposite side of town from where I’d met them less than an hour ago. I was pushed to the centre, my thigh pressing into Cristal’s. She lit another smoke.
As if unable to be still for more than a second, Aimes jumped up as soon as Bugsy sat down. She stepped onto a rail and started to balance.
If I fall, Chad Chud is going to French me,
she said.
Chad Chud is a chode,
Bugsy said, focused on an ingrown hair on her knee.
The girls laughed in concert again. There was something about making these sharp, harsh sounds together that seemed to excite them further. It reminded me of a crow’s warning cry. Don’t get too close or we’ll split your eardrums with joy. Watching Aimes balance, Club Monaco sweater tied around her waist, logo facing out, it hit me: an hour ago, not only did these girls not have names, but the tracks didn’t exist — and now I was in the middle of it all. We’d had friends in Ashton Creek, but the feeling — one I could only identify now that it was gone — was of goodwill. Letting us share in their Sunday family dinners and butchering days was an act of kindness for us to be grateful for. With these girls, I wasn’t being included
; instead I felt part of.
A bit lower in the sky now, the sun was softer, and the only sounds came from Max snapping twigs into small piles.
What’s yer thing?
Max asked, glancing up with those ice-blue eyes.
I wasn’t sure what she meant. A thick dandelion was growing out of a crack between a tie and its ballast. Common, I thought, but then I felt bad. The plant didn’t know it was a weed.
I like to read,
I said. I read a lot of books.
"Not what do you like to do, Aimes said, sliding into the conversation.
Who are you going to be? she asked.
For example, Bugsy is going to have twins and marry her high school sweetheart — "
Bugsy crossed her eyes like a nerd.
" — and I’m going to have two sets of twins, marry my high school sweetheart and become a teacher for kids with learning disabilities."
I smiled at Aimes, this frizzy-haired, chicken-legged girl.
I’m moving out of Armstrong and never coming back,
said Cristal, running her hand through her hair, making it spike.
"That’s not doing something, that’s not doing something," Max said as she placed the sticks on top of each other, making a log cabin.
"Well, not doing Armstrong is my goal," Cristal said.
Max is going to be an opera singer,
Aimes said. Obviously.
Holy crapola!
Max jumped up, ignoring Aimes. I knew it!
We all rubbernecked.
I knew I knew you from somewhere.
Where?
I asked, relieved for a distraction from the interrogation.
"You were the White Rabbit, in Alice in Wonderland."
She was right. I had been. Mom had driven me to rehearsals at the Ashton Creek community hall three times a week for months. Even the morning Lucky got hit by a logging truck — after she pried Grum off his body, dug a hole and buried the dog — she got me to dress rehearsal on time. We’d performed the show for five nights and each performance I got more laughs. But then Mom told us we were moving and I’d forgotten all about it.
You were good,
Max said. She was real good.
You’re going to be an actress then,
Bugsy said.
Actor,
Max