Book Read Free

Ben Y and the Ghost in the Machine

Page 6

by K. A. Holt


  the consequences would be DIRE,

  but I just thought

  extra detention,

  not this. . . .

  Ace looks down at the poncho.

  A sticky stain drips down

  between the word DRESS

  and the word CODE,

  and there are other

  unidentified

  blotches, too. . . .

  Maybe mold?

  Grosssss.

  Ace’s face twists,

  dissolving

  into the blackest hole

  of frowns.

  Mr. Mann grabbed me,

  like actually grabbed my arm,

  and dragged me,

  like actually dragged me,

  into the front office

  and said I had to wear this

  or . . .

  or . . . he’d call my grandma.

  And Ben Y,

  that is NOT a thing

  that can happen.

  I had no idea

  they could DO this

  to someone.

  Did you?

  Ace takes a breath

  that’s also

  a bit of a hiccup.

  Hey,

  I say,

  That jerd can eat my farts.

  No, he can eat OUR farts.

  Our farts.

  Because we’re a We.

  Ace’s head tilts to the side

  just a smidge more

  to see me better

  I guess

  in the shadows

  under the stairs.

  A tiny tiny half smile

  sneaks into the corner

  of Ace’s mouth.

  Are you wearing a belt under that thing?

  Ace nods.

  Excellent.

  I have an idea.

  Hand it over.

  Okay. Yes.

  I can own this look.

  Ace laughs,

  looking down

  at our belts crisscrossed

  over the words DRESS CODE

  in a Conan the Barbarian

  kind of way.

  Then,

  out of nowhere,

  Ace hugs me tight

  and whispers,

  Thank you.

  Over Ace’s shoulder,

  I see Jordan on the stairs,

  looking down,

  twirling a bathroom pass.

  Jordan starts to wave,

  but brushes his bangs

  from his face instead

  and then walks back

  the way he came.

  Ace lets go quickly,

  saying,

  Sorry.

  I probably should have asked first.

  Before the hugging.

  Not everyone likes that.

  It’s okay,

  I say.

  But my mind is on Jordan now,

  and why he didn’t say hi.

  Jordan never

  doesn’t say hi.

  For a second

  we both stand there,

  under the stairs,

  saying nothing,

  lost in our own worlds.

  I snap back to now,

  nod once,

  put my hands on my hips,

  and do my best

  Ms. J impression:

  Looking good, Ace.

  Now go to class.

  Own it.

  Flaunt it.

  Make it work.

  Ace grins,

  runs back into the main hallway,

  and disappears

  with a see-it-from-space

  poncho swoosh

  (that reminds me

  just a little bit

  of Ms. J’s

  swooshy caftans).

  When I’m five seconds

  from class,

  I take a corner too fast,

  and I smash into

  a glob of girls

  outside the bathroom.

  Hey, it’s Ben Who What Why!

  someone says.

  Hey, you’re right,

  IT is Ben Who What Why!

  someone else says with a sniff

  like the word IT has a smell

  no one likes.

  Hey, how’s IT going, Ben Who What Why?

  The first voice asks,

  like I would actually answer.

  Fire crawls,

  crackling up my face,

  sizzling my eyes

  as I try

  to push by

  the glob.

  Ben Who What Whyyyyy are you so rude?

  Can’t you hear us talking to you?

  The edges

  of my vision

  go dark,

  a closing circle

  of rage

  as I turn,

  delivering

  one

  gentle

  dead-leg bonk

  to the back

  of Annabelle’s knee,

  tumbling her

  to the ground,

  so I can easily

  twist her around

  to look up at me,

  squeezing her lips

  between my fingers

  like I’ve grabbed a fish

  and am about

  to pry out

  a wriggling mess

  of words

  or worms

  from

  ITS

  mouth.

  Oh, am I rude?

  Sorry about that!

  My words smile at her surprise,

  while she squeals through her nose,

  while her friends squeal at her side,

  and my pinpoint

  refocuses.

  How now

  to cram my sincere

  and heartfelt

  apologies

  via my fist

  down Annabelle’s

  vibrating,

  car-alarming

  throat?

  Miss Ybarra.

  Get lost on your way to class?

  Mr. Mann

  appears

  out of nowhere,

  arms crossed,

  voice loud:

  RELEASE Miss Smith.

  [very short pause]

  Immediately.

  I give Annabelle’s mouth

  one

  last

  twist

  before I let go,

  with maybe

  possibly

  a bit of a shove

  away from me

  for emphasis,

  releasing her

  back into the beige sea.

  You can call me Mx. Ybarra.

  The sparks fly from my mouth.

  Their heat burns my eyes.

  It’s spelled M-x.

  And it’s used for anyone:

  boys, girls, everyones.

  Mr. Mann sighs deeply,

  and uh-oh.

  Mr. Mann’s deep sighs

  only mean one thing:

  A speech is coming,

  and it cannot be stopped.

  MX. Ybarra,

  I know this is a NEW concept,

  BUT . . .

  listen CAREFULLY.

  Mr. Mann likes to

  EMPHASIZE

  certain WORDS

  during

  his SPEECHES

  so that YOU

  feel extra

  DUMB.

  He points his pointy nose

  right at me

  while he sniffs loudly

  and barks out:

  We are ALL

  on a JOURNEY

  TOGETHER

  to Planet SAFE Space.

  KINDNESS

  is our fuel,

  and without

  KINDNESS FUEL . . .

  He shrugs

  like he can’t help

  what’s about to happen,

  YOU,

  MX. Ybarra,

  will be

  LEFT BEHIND.

  His chest puffs out
/>   and he nods sharply

  like that explains that.

  I wipe Annabelle’s lip gloss

  off my fingers

  and onto the concrete wall.

  My eyes start to water.

  Probably from all the burning

  in my face.

  I look at the smirks,

  I hear the laugh-snorts

  disguised as short coughs,

  in the blob of beige.

  I imagine a whole planet

  made of Annabelles.

  Fine by me!

  My voice is louder than I expected.

  PLEASE leave me behind!

  I mean . . .

  who wants to live on a planet

  filled with mean boring monsters?

  I choose

  to blast off,

  to literally

  any

  other

  planet,

  thanks.

  I channel a smidge of Ace

  as I face the blob,

  stick out my tongue,

  and give a small bow

  before I turn and run.

  But where am I running?

  To gym?

  No way.

  I’m already gonna be soooo late

  and I just cannot EVEN

  with that hot mess today.

  So I keep running.

  Not to gym.

  Not to room 113.

  But out.

  Out.

  Out the school doors.

  Down the sidewalk.

  All the way to the bus stop

  where I stop,

  even though

  I feel like

  I could keep running

  for days.

  Humid heat

  melts the last

  of the school AC

  off my skin

  as I breathe deep,

  and decide

  to keep running after all,

  (to the next bus stop

  at least)

  so I can keep

  smashing my feet

  harder and faster

  in front of me,

  and I can keep

  enjoying the feeling

  of the seeping beige

  melting off me,

  in what I imagine

  looks like

  streaming steam,

  billowing and huge,

  being dissolved

  and swallowed

  by the deep blue sky

  above me.

  The 315 pulls up

  and I hold back

  for just a second,

  because this is

  something

  I never do,

  like, ever.

  Despite taking a vacation

  from gym

  every now and then,

  I’m really not

  a class-skipping

  kind of kid.

  But here I am

  not only skipping class,

  but about to skip

  the whole rest of the day

  of school?

  That’s like,

  big-time trouble

  if I get caught.

  Except . . .

  A thought explodes

  in my brain,

  opening my eyes

  to the idea that . . .

  honestly?

  In-school suspension

  would be kind of nice

  if it meant no beige,

  no hallways,

  no comments my way

  for a whole day

  or week

  or whatever

  the punishment

  would be.

  I fling myself

  up the stairs

  and onto the bus,

  and I do the scan I always do.

  But this time,

  none of the faces on the bus

  belong to the regulars I see

  in the mornings.

  There are none of the smiles or nods

  I’m used to getting

  in the afternoons.

  That makes me feel extra alone,

  and it’s a little scary, actually,

  like I took the wrong bus,

  or like the world becomes

  a different place

  during the day

  when I’m in school.

  At my stop,

  I leap off,

  keep running,

  and thank goodness

  my house is still there,

  not different

  or weird

  or gone.

  Not that I

  really thought

  it would be,

  but I’m relieved

  just the same.

  I put in the garage code,

  throw my hip into the door,

  burst into the kitchen,

  and wow.

  I haven’t been at home

  in the middle of the morning

  in the middle of the week

  since,

  I don’t know,

  maybe ever?

  I guess I really am,

  technically,

  a class-skipping,

  school-skipping

  kind of kid

  now.

  Is that a benefit,

  or a side effect

  of my new look?

  I go to Benicio’s room,

  leap on his bed,

  thinking maybe

  possibly

  I could take a nap,

  even though,

  weirdly,

  his pillow is missing,

  but then—

  wait—

  what was that noise?

  There it is again . . .

  like a cat’s howl,

  but quieter,

  more sad,

  stretched-out,

  and close by,

  like,

  right here,

  in the house,

  coming from

  just down the hall.

  Mom’s bedroom door

  isn’t closed all the way

  for maybe the first time

  in the history

  of ever,

  and I can tell

  from the shiver down my neck,

  and the rising hairs on my arms

  that the

  stretched-out

  quiet

  sad

  howl

  is coming

  from inside.

  Of course I think,

  AHHH GHOST

  because that’s

  the first thing

  anyone would think

  when they hear

  a stretched-out

  quiet

  sad

  howl

  coming from

  a barely open door

  at the end of the hall.

  (Even if it’s the door

  to their mom’s bedroom,

  and even if,

  previously,

  there have been no ghosts

  heard

  or seen

  in the house.)

  But as I get closer—

  (Why, feet?

  Why would you think

  it’s okay

  to bring me closer

  to the sound

  instead of away???)

  As I get closer—

  the sound slides

  into my brain

  and chisels away

  at a memory

  buried deep.

  I know this sound.

  It’s not a ghost.

  It’s Mom.

  Crying.

  On her knees.

  Overcome with grief.

  Just like that day

  that feels like yesterday

  but also a million years ago,

  Benicio’s funeral,

  where we all made sounds

  like animals

  because none of us

  knew how to be a human


  in a world

  without him.

  I peek through the crack,

  where the door

  isn’t quite shut,

  and watch Mom,

  kneeling by her bed,

  like she’s praying,

  but instead,

  her face is buried

  in Benicio’s pillow,

  muffling her howls,

  but not hiding

  her grief at all,

  and I back away,

  the hairs on my arms

  still standing,

  the back of my neck

  still tingling,

  because this is—

  worse?

  scarier?

  more surprising?—

  than finding

  a real live ghost

  in the house.

  Mom doesn’t cry.

  Not anymore.

  Mom is tired, sure.

  Mom gets lost in her thoughts, sure.

  Mom prays for our souls, sure.

  And, sometimes,

  on good days,

  Mom makes bad jokes.

  Sure.

  But she never cries.

  Not anymore.

  At least,

  that’s what I thought.

  That’s how it seemed,

  day after day

  after day

  after day.

  But this?

  This means what?

  Does she come home from work

  to howl before lunch?

  Does she do it a lot?

  I back my way

  back down the hall

  back through the kitchen

  back to the garage

  back outside

  back to the bus stop

  back to the 315

  and back to school

  where everything

  might be awful,

  but at least it isn’t

  cat-howl terrifying

  in the middle of the morning.

  BACK AT SCHOOL

  The library

  at Hart Middle School,

  Home of the Rockets,

  always has a low rumble

  made of laughing

  and chatting

  and kids making stuff

  or working on puzzles,

  or even studying.

  Before school,

  during school,

  after school,

  it’s like the brain

  or maybe the heart

  of the building,

  sucking in

  and pumping out

  laughs and thoughts,

  nonstop.

  As soon as I escape

  from whatever

  just happened

  at home,

  (and after realizing

  my backpack

  is still taking a nap

  on Benicio’s bed

  without me,

 

‹ Prev