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Love Rewards The Brave

Page 16

by Monroe, Anya


  was remind me of what wasn’t

  and what was.

  Nothing good

  came out of it.

  Toby pops his head in the doorway. “Hey, Louisa, want to get a hot dog next door, with me?”

  “No,” I say. “But can you bring one back? No mustard.”

  “Sure thing.”

  I didn’t want to stop

  writing.

  And even if the crossed out part was crap

  for some reason this floor is the place

  I want to be.

  Maybe that’s how Terry feels when

  she puts seeds in the

  soil.

  It all boils

  down to what your body says you need.

  I look back down at the crossed out page

  realizing that I can want to do this.

  For me.

  155.

  After work I ask Ms. F

  if I can use her computer.

  “What for?” she asks.

  “Oh, um…this poetry contest thing. It’s not a big deal, it’s just a thing for teenagers.”

  “Oh, okay, sure.”

  She leaves me alone in the den, letting me type

  the address in

  to submit my entry.

  I have a gut feeling it’s because she’s glad.

  Glad

  to see me grab

  onto something good.

  An hour later she brings me a slice

  of warm apple pie.

  I like the way she

  processes.

  156.

  “So I wanted to let you know I decided to enter.”

  “Really? That’s awesome!” Margot gives me a hug.

  She came over to Ms. F’s on a rare

  Saturday afternoon when we’re both

  off work.

  “I guess, but I was looking at the website. At the rules and everything, and I’m super confused. Like, how it all works.”

  “Oh, right. Okay. So here are the rules.”

  Margot sits on the couch

  pulling up her now bright orange hair

  (think safety cones)

  into a ponytail

  revealing a new tattoo

  under her collarbone.

  It reads:

  Fortes Fortuna Adiuvat.

  “What does that mean?” I ask, pointing to the script.

  on her neckline.

  “Fortune Favors the Brave,” she says.

  I repeat the words

  letting them resonate deep

  knowing that connection

  everyone seeks

  in life

  is found with Margot and me.

  “That’s beautiful,” I say.

  Ms. Francine walks in. “Whatcha guys talking about?”

  “Just my new ink.”

  Margot lifts her chin up high

  to more easily let Ms. F spy

  her heart art.

  “I love it, Margot. I can’t believe you did it without me, though,” she says, pouting.

  “You want a tattoo, Ms. F?”

  I look at her, with what must have been

  shock and a scowl

  because the two women laugh.

  “Girl, you have a lot to learn about my sister!” Margot says. “But we need to talk about the rules. You only have a few weeks!”

  I listen as Margot explains in

  detail

  everything I need to

  to excel.

  I listen closely, intently

  but keep finding myself looking at Ms. Francine

  wanting to know

  who she is

  realizing (again) there’s more

  to her

  than what I see

  and wondering why

  it’s taken me so long to

  show

  an interest.

  157.

  Do I start at the beginning or do I

  start at the end?

  The parts in the middle seem to blend

  together so much that I can’t tell what

  bit I should say

  or what year was more significant

  or which way

  I should go.

  I scratch out and restart and try to decide

  how I want to use my three minutes on stage.

  Margot said the rules are:

  Three minutes on stage,

  to pour out your heart.

  Three minutes on stage,

  if you go over and under you are docked points

  and points added together

  give you a passing, a failing or a soaring grade.

  Three minutes on stage

  just me, myself and I ––

  I can’t bring out an instrument,

  a costume or a prop.

  Three minutes on stage

  to give it all I got.

  Three minutes on stage

  to tell an original poem about

  whatever I choose,

  but most winners always use

  the most important plot:

  Truth.

  “No pressure,” I told Margot after she went through the list of do’s and don’ts.

  “It is no pressure,” she said. “Because it can be whatever you want.”

  Some poets focus on something happy

  something political

  something scary

  something radical

  whatever resonates with the artist is the

  thing that matters most.

  I keep thumbing through my journals

  trying hard to see

  what part of my story

  means the most

  to me.

  I realize that my story

  won’t ever be complete if

  I

  don’t go

  and see Benji.

  Because for me

  I need that chapter to be bookmarked

  not to close

  but it needs to be okay for me to put that part

  on hold.

  I ask Terry if I can go see him

  if she can put in a word

  for this one special request.

  She gets me the consent.

  I get to go see Benji tomorrow.

  158.

  The facility is just like the hospital.

  Clean, bright.

  Lockdown doors so no one can take flight.

  Be out of sight.

  It’s safer that way.

  I stay

  in the waiting room until the lady

  at the desk calls my name.

  She says we have the same

  shoes.

  I look down and see I’m wearing

  brown boots from Christmas

  I look at her smiling quietly

  trying to act politely

  wondering if we’ve walked the

  same steps in our same shoes.

  She takes me back to a room

  where couches line the walls

  Ping-Pong table set in the middle

  smells like freezedriedfried

  chicken nuggets.

  Eww.

  My response makes me think

  I’m morphing into Ms. Francine

  in ways I don’t even know.

  He sits with

  hands on his knees

  tapping the beat

  beat to my heart.

  Seeing him

  makes me realize how long we’ve been apart

  and more importantly

  Just. How. Long.

  He’s been away.

  “Benji?” I say, questioning everything.

  He looks up

  with those big brown eyes

  and

  I see him.

  “You came, Lou-Lou?”

  My beating heart stops.

  It feels so good to hear him say my name.

  159.

  “Of course I came, Benji. First chance I got.”

  I go to the threa
dbare couch

  noticing the man sitting in a chair

  surveying the scene.

  “Don’t mind me, I’m Geoffry,” he says, smiling. “Just here, doing my job. Your brother Benji and I have spent time together the last few weeks and he’s told me so many things about you. Can I get you something? Coffee? Water?”

  “Water would be good,” I say.

  “Great, I’ll be right back. Benji, you okay?”

  “Yeah, I’m cool.”

  We look at one another after Geoffrey walks away.

  “Is he your…your doctor or something?” I ask.

  “No, he’s like the guy who’s on suicide watch. They come in shifts. He’s here most days.”

  “Terry told me. About how you tried...again.”

  “Yeah, well did she tell you why?”

  “About Mom you mean?”

  “Yeah. That’s the understatement of the century. She’s locked up though. Did you hear?” Benji asks me.

  “Yeah. I know. I tried to see her, like to say goodbye at the termination hearing. But then...then everything came out...out about her.”

  “Out about me is more like it.”

  “Why didn’t you say something to me? Ever Benji? You never said a word.”

  I wipe my eyes on my sleeve

  as Geoffrey walks back in

  making me freeze

  inside.

  “He’s cool, Lou-Lou. I mean, I’m done hiding. I never told you because I didn’t think I could. But after I saw Mom and had my…attempts…I was tired of holding it all in so I told the truth…about Mom…about our family.”

  Geoffrey hands me a bottle of water and

  sits back down

  pulling a book out to read

  not making a sound.

  “But how did that make you so strong…so brave? I can’t talk about anything, without…without falling or breaking or…feeling like I’m dying.”

  My hand flies to my mouth.

  “Shit, Benji, I didn’t mean that,” I say.

  “It’s the truth though, Louisa. Isn’t it? I tried to kill myself and somehow doing that…it set me free.”

  “So you think I should try and kill myself, Benji? What are you talking about?”

  Geoffrey lowers his book

  giving our conversation a harder look.

  “No, of course not, Louisa. I would never, ever want that. I thought I wanted to go…go away forever. Some days I still feel like that. It hurts so bad –– being messed up inside like this.”

  His eyes fill

  he looks away, breathes in and out.

  Steady now, finding his ground

  ing.

  “But what I’m learning here is that nothing is as bad as it feels. I have things to live for. I have you.”

  He has never spoke like that.

  Broke

  it down like that.

  So perfectly.

  So intelligently.

  “So how am I supposed to unfreeze? Get unstuck. I can’t do what you did to get to that place.”

  “I don’t know, Lou-Lou. I just know I wish I’d said something sooner. Told the truth sooner. But I was scared. I’m sick of being scared.”

  Me too.

  I am sick of living in fear.

  Sick of being scared of having people get near

  me.

  Sick of the girl trying so hard

  to sweep up the messes

  sweep up the crumbs of myself

  bury myself.

  I want to sweep up the fear

  once and for all

  and put it in the

  trash.

  160.

  I beat Benji in Ping-Pong

  and he beats me in checkers.

  The afternoon wasn’t long

  enough.

  Benji is different somehow.

  In a good way.

  In a grown up way.

  I see him like I never have before.

  A person who’s going to be okay

  without me.

  I’ve been trying so hard to save him

  make him

  whole.

  I can’t offer salvation when I

  haven’t set myself free.

  I can’t offer salvation to a

  boy who I see

  is becoming more whole than me.

  Whole in his imperfection

  because he’s finding

  a voice

  in his introspection.

  In his dissection of his

  story.

  And God,

  that sounds like a salve-made-for-glory.

  He’s still hurting, that’s for sure.

  A nurse came in once

  and gave him his meds

  a cupful of pills

  pinkbluered.

  He swallowed them fast

  they must be what

  is giving him this last

  ing

  effect of calm and collected.

  It’s working.

  I wonder what my mom would have

  been like

  if she’d gone to a

  doctor for help

  for her head

  instead of lying in bed

  self-diagnosing

  self-medicating in a sicktwistedway.

  Crazy how Benji’s attempt on his life

  is the very thing

  saving

  him.

  I put on my coat

  Ms. F’s here to pick me up.

  “Are you going to be okay here, Benji?”

  “Yeah. I’m more worried about you, sis.”

  I scrunch up my mouth. “You keep making me cry, Benji. Stop it, will you?”

  “Louisa, did they give you the note? The note I wrote the first time…time I tried?”

  I nod

  thinking of the crumpled piece

  of paper

  I put in my palm.

  “Do you remember the stars?”

  “I remember the stars, Benji.”

  And I did.

  I do.

  I remember the nights that came after

  the dark.

  The dark that broke us.

  I see how they stole

  so much from us

  but here

  right now

  in the clean white facility

  I can see that

  they never took what mattered most:

  Brother and Sister.

  Lou-Lou and her little Benji-Boy.

  The dark

  is pushed out by

  the light.

  The sickness they carried

  that they tried to pass along to us

  didn’t survive.

  But we did.

  We Are.

  We Are Survivors.

  161.

  Suddenly I’m on a roll.

  Rock n’ Roll inspiration from the 6-Spot’s

  not quite what I mean.

  More like rolling down a hill

  suddenly feeling free.

  Finding words for my poetry performance

  that makes me believe

  in change.

  I take a break from the words I write

  to go to the hill by the side of the house

  the one still covered in snow.

  The February chill

  still setting in deep down to my bones,

  but somehow I just

  know

  what I need.

  I need the rolling down a hill

  feeling of free.

  Jess is with me

  and I know I need to tell her

  a piece

  so the

  rest doesn’t come like a shock.

  We ditch our sleds

  as we act like kids

  rolling in the snow.

  We get to the bottom and we laugh

  loud

  our make-up smeared in the

  tiny creases of our eyes.

  Surprised

 
it’s as fun as it is.

  We lie on our backs

  snow angels under us

  the wings flying with us

  we look at one another

  both knowing there’s so much unspoken

  ground I we never had the guts to tread.

  She speaks first.

  “Louisa…?” Her voice cracks.

  Maybe it was the exhilaration of the

  downhill motion

  or maybe it was the part of her that was scared

  to utter words that would

  ring true.

  “Are you okay?” she finishes.

  I hear the hitch in her voice.

  I feel the catch in my throat.

  “Not really, Jess,” I say.

  Before I can turn away

  she makes me stay

  by grabbing my hand.

  Wrapping it around

  hers.

  And the contact that I spend forever running from

  hits me full force.

  I can do this.

  I can be like Benji.

  I can find words.

  Even if it’s hard.

  I can be brave.

  “What happened to you, Louisa? To make you like this?”

  “It started before I can even remember. My dad. Taking pieces of me until there was nothing left.”

  162.

  I keep talking,

  telling the story of my childhood.

  She stays by my side

  in the freezing white snow

 

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