Sarah's Winstons, Part 3 | |
Index by date |
Index by author |
Index by subject Smoking From All Sides ( Glamor - Pics | Female Celebrity Smoking List ) [ Printer friendly version ] Jump to part: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 | |
|
Sarah's Winstons by slimv ********* THREE ********* After graduating from high school, I chose to attend a college that was almost 500 miles away rather than attend the local college. The local college was still an hour's drive away, and I would have lived on campus. But the last thing I wanted was to spend the next four years living with people I knew and living up to their preconceived notions of who I was. 500 miles affords a lot of room for a fresh start. I bought a pack of Winstons and a lighter minutes after getting off the plane. I was 18 and looking forward to defining my new self. Defining myself as a smoker was more challenging than I expected- both physically and mentally. I walked around with that pack of cigarettes hidden in my pocket for two days before I got up the nerve to try one. My first mistake was not identifying myself as a smoker to my new dormitory roommate. If he had been a smoker, I probably would have removed the cigarettes from my pocket and placed them on my dresser, but he wasn't so I didn't. I don't think anyone smokes their first cigarette in public. The risk of coughing one's lungs up and looking like a fool is too much of a risk. I smoked my first cigarette in the woods behind our dormitory. I was excited and looking forward to it. I hit my knees on the first puff, thankful that I had the good sense to do it in the privacy of the woods. I wouldn't get up the courage to try it again for another three days. I did a lot of soul searching during those next three days whenever I wasn't sitting in class or studying. Coughing my lungs up in the woods had intensified my respect for Sarah and the other smokers I knew. I questioned both my desires and my determination, but three days later, I was back in the woods with my battered pack of Winstons. I'm not sure if it was fear or guilt that kept me from trying another cigarette. I can remember looking around the woods and asking myself what I was doing. I'm hiding in the woods trying to sneak a cigarette like some dumb kid. I'm 18 years old for crying out loud. I'm in college. I should know better than this. My parents didn't spend good money for me to come all the way out here just so I could learn how to smoke. What would Sarah think if she could see me now? Would she be proud of me? I dropped the pack of Winstons on the ground and walked back to the dormitory. I kept the lighter though. I put it in my pocket thinking that I might actually need it. I was overcome with guilt as I thought about why I'd kept the lighter. Sarah wrote me every day and I wrote her back. We talked on the phone at least once a week. Whenever we talked on the phone, I could hear the sound of her lighter clicking and her exhales across the telephone's mouthpiece. She told me she loved me. I told her I loved her too, and it was the truth. I missed her badly. Even though Sarah was waiting for me, I tried to break our bond by dating other girls. I didn't waste my time on the non-smokers. I focused on the bubbly sorority girls with packs of Virginia Slims Menthol Lights in their purses. Maybe it was my imagination, but it seemed like every female smoker on my campus smoked Virginia Slims Menthol Lights. The other thing I noticed about these girls was that they rarely smoked unless they were drinking. Their habits weren't nearly as established as Sarah's and I saw no commitment in their actions. They did it because it was cool and stylish. Sarah smoked because she was a smoker. These were the girls I had saved that lighter for. My intense and perverted urge to smoke didn't end with me. It was focused on women. I was fascinated by women who smoked. I wanted to watch them and join in with them but I'd made up my mind in the woods that I couldn't join them. But I could do the next best thing. I could be close to them while they smoked. Maybe I could even light their cigarettes for them. I'd never lit a girl's cigarette for her. I'd never even done it for Sarah. I wanted to, but what if she said no, or what if it had offended her? I was at one of those open fraternity parties, the kind where everyone on the campus is invited. I went with my roommate. There was a keg on front porch and people were drinking from it in plastic cups. I'd never had a beer before. I tried a cup. I'm not an expert on beer but it tasted kind of bitter and flat, but everyone else seemed to like it, so I finished the cup and had some more. It didn't take me long to decide that drinking beer was a whole lot easier than smoking cigarettes. The one thing I liked about drinking beer is that it makes it easier for people to talk to each other. I'd seen these people on campus and in classes every day and I hardly talked to them, but now they were talking to me and I was talking back. I saw three blondes wearing baby blue sweatshirts standing on the corner of the porch. They were Zeta girls. There was this joke at school about how all the Zetas looked alike and it was pretty much true. They all looked like Barbie dolls. I quickly noticed that two of the Zeta Barbies were smokers. I got to admit those girls looked cute when they smoked. They were just so dainty and feminine, nothing like Sarah. The Barbies made it look like a hobby rather than a habit. The beer had made me brave so I walked up to them and introduced myself. I had my hand in my pocket around the lighter in case one of them needed some assistance. The girls smiled and said hi before returning to their conversation. When I was sure I had made enough of an idiot of myself by standing there with my hand in my pocket and nothing to say, I stepped off the porch and walked back to my dorm. I wrote Sarah when I got back to my room. I didn't write anything about the party or the Zetas or the beer. I just told her I was studying hard and that I missed her. Although my studies were going well, I was very home sick. Finding a church helped, but it wasn't the same as the one I'd left behind. Nothing was the same and nothing was turning out the way I had hoped it would. I hadn't redefined myself. I was still a small-town boy with small-town values. I considered dropping out and not coming back when I went home for Christmas. Sarah's Christmas kisses were indescribably sexy as well as comforting, even if it did make me think a little bit about kissing my mother. Their smells were identical. She confessed to smoking more since I'd left. She blamed it on missing me, but she wanted me to go back to school for us. Her heavy Winston kisses were so unlike the hinted menthol breath of the sorority girls back at college. ****** Sarah graduated from high school during my junior year of college. She had started working part time for Mr. Rawlings in his convenience store the year before. After graduating, Mr. Rawlings gave her a full time position making $3.35 an hour. He liked her and wanted to pay more but minimum wage was all he could afford. But he did supplement her income by giving her access to free cigarettes. That was the biggest perk of being one of Mr. Rawlings full time employees. At 75 cents a pack, it was like getting an extra $20 in your paycheck every two weeks if you were a two pack a day smoker. It was an easy job and Sarah loved it. If she and Mr. Rawlings weren't waiting on customers or stocking shelves, they were playing cards behind the counter and smoking cigarettes. Sarah said that working for Mr. Rawlings was like getting paid to smoke. By the time I started my senior year, Sarah was smoking more than three packs a day- just like Mr. Rawlings. Her dad used to laugh and say that he was glad he wasn't having to pay for it. Sarah's dad started getting sick right about the time I came home for Christmas. He thought it was bronchitis but it was much worse than that. He was diagnosed with lung cancer two months later. She called me at college with the news. She was scared to death, both for her father and for everyone else who smoked, including herself. "I'm so glad you don't smoke," she said as as she cried into the phone. "Me too," I said and I halfway meant it. If Mr. Jacobs could get cancer so could Sarah. The thought of Sarah getting sick frightened me. At the same time it made her seem brave for taking such risks were health. The good thing was that Mr. Jacobs was a lot older than both my parents and Mrs. Jacobs. He'd turned 76 on his last birthday so maybe it was just nearing his time to go. I wondered about Mr. Jacobs' sex life with Mrs. Jacobs. He was so much older than her. Maybe they didn't have sex any more and were just satisfied with being in love and raising their children. |
Previous part | Next part | |
Index by date |
Index by author |
Index by subject Smoking From All Sides ( Glamor - Pics | Female Celebrity Smoking List ) [ Printer friendly version ] Contact webmaster | |
Processing took 0.00121 seconds
|