Scars

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Scars Page 7

by Cheryl Rainfield


  15

  I run fast and hard, my shoes pounding against the pavement, jarring my bones. Carolyn, a sexual abuse survivor. It all fits now: the empathic looks, the sadness in her eyes I sometimes catch, the way she really gets my fear and pain. The way she understands me.

  Why did she hide it from me? Why didn’t she trust me enough to tell me?

  My blade is in my pocket. I can’t stop thinking about how much I want to cut, how much I need that comfort. All I’d have to do is duck into the bathroom of some all-night coffee shop….

  I reach for my blade, and my fingers touch the smooth warmth of the stone instead. I take it out and press it against my cheek, remembering the tenderness in Carolyn’s eyes as she offered me the basket of shells and stones.

  Carolyn is still Carolyn. Even if she didn’t tell me herself, it doesn’t change the way she’s been there for me. Or how much she cares.

  I slow down.

  Or maybe it does change things. She understands on a gut level what I’m talking about—and she’s made it to the other side. She’s happy, and she’s got a life that doesn’t revolve around pain. I want that so bad—but I never believed I could have it. But if Carolyn can do it, maybe I can, too. I just have to hold onto what makes me happy. Carolyn. Meghan. Sandy. Mrs. Archer. And my art.

  My cell rings. Mom. I can’t talk to her right now, not without screaming. I shut my cell off and keep running, not even knowing where I’m going, until I find myself in front of Sandy’s. His kitchen windows are warm squares of yellow light pushing back the darkness.

  I raise my hand to knock.

  Sandy swings open the door before I do, letting light and the warm aroma of garlic and tomato out into the night. “Kendra! I’m glad you’re okay,” he says. “Come on in.” He opens the door wider.

  Why wouldn’t I be okay?

  Sandy shuts the door on the night, then ushers me into the kitchen. The table is laid out with dishes: a bowl of asparagus and slivered almonds; a plate of crusty bread; bowls of pasta with cherry tomatoes, mushrooms, and some kind of herb on top. There are two half-drunk glasses of wine.

  Emil stands, wiping at his mouth with a cloth napkin. He picks up the bottle of wine. “Good to see you, Kendra,” he says, coming around the table and hugging me with one arm. “I’ll just be in the living room, if either of you need me.”

  He kisses Sandy, and leaves.

  I look at their half-eaten meal. I shouldn’t be here. I turn to Sandy. “I should have called first. I’m sorry!”

  “Nonsense,” Sandy says firmly, steering me to the table and sitting me down. “You are welcome here any time, day or night. You know that.” He ruffles my hair, takes a plate down from the cupboard. “Have you eaten? Would you like some pasta? It’s good, if I say so myself.”

  I bow my head. “No, thanks.”

  Sandy sits down across from me. “I’m glad you came to me. I was worried.”

  “My mother called you,” I say slowly.

  “When you ran off like that, she was scared. We all hoped you’d come here.”

  I hate that my mom can interfere in my friendship with Sandy like that. That she can call him and tell him her side of things before I even get a chance to. I cross my arms over my chest.

  “So, you want to tell me what’s going on?” Sandy asks, leaning forward.

  “Why? Didn’t she already tell you everything?” I slouch down in my chair.

  “Kendra.” Sandy reaches for my hand. “Your mom told me a few things, it’s true. But that’s between her and me as friends. I try to keep that separate—as separate as I can. I want to hear what’s going on with you. I can see you’re upset.”

  “They’re talking about moving, Sandy—right out of the city!” I say. “I need my therapy! God, I don’t know how I would have gotten through the last few months without it. Or without you. It’s like ripping my life supports away.” I swallow. “And things were just starting to get better. I met a girl I like—”

  Sandy’s eyes light up.

  “I don’t know where that’s going,” I say quickly. “I need time to find out. But most of all—I need to stay around the people who love me. Carolyn, and you. It’s too hard alone.”

  “I know you need us,” Sandy says. “If you have to move, I promise we’ll stay in touch. You’re important to me, Kendra. No way am I letting you out of my life that easily.” He squeezes my hand. “Your parents love you, too, though.”

  I choke back the tears. I realize now that I was hoping Sandy would let me stay with him. But Sandy’s in an uncomfortable position, being friends with both my mom and me. Like being pulled apart by two opposing magnets. Still, I have to try.

  I draw my hand away, pick at my cuticle. Try to keep the tears from coming. What do I do if he says no?

  “Kendra?” Sandy says.

  “Can I stay with you if my parents move?” I say it all in a rush, not looking at him. “I can’t handle leaving here—” My voice wobbles. I clench my teeth, hating how weak I sound.

  There’s a silence. I look up and see Sandy’s face shadowed with pain. “I want to help you; you know I do. But Kendra—you’re a minor,” he says, spreading his hands apart. “I don’t have any legal right to keep you here. I’m not your guardian. If your parents want to stop you from staying here, they can do it.” Sandy pushes his plate away. “But I promise you, I’ll negotiate on your behalf. I’ll try to get your mother to agree to let you stay here. It’s craziness to take you away from your support system right now.”

  But my mother is bullheaded and close-minded, especially when it comes to me. She’s always resented how close I am to Sandy—and to my dad, too. And I know Sandy feels he owes her, because she’s the one who introduced him to the local art world.

  “I shouldn’t have asked you,” I say, clenching my hands together.

  “No, I’m glad you did,” Sandy says. “I want you to be able to ask me for what you need. I might not always be able to give it, but if I can, I will.”

  Sandy takes a mouthful of wine, and swallows it. “I’ll try to convince your mom that it’s not in your best interest to move right now, and I’ll let her know that I’d be happy to open my home to you. But you know how your mom gets about me being gay. She probably won’t be able to stomach the idea of you staying under the same roof with me. She’ll think I’m corrupting you.” The pain in his face deepens.

  “Why are you even friends with her, when you know she thinks like that?” I ask.

  “Your mom’s a good person,” Sandy says. “And—”

  “You owe her,” I say.

  “Well, yes, I do. Your mom helped connect me with the right people. I couldn’t have established myself here so quickly if she hadn’t. But that’s not what I was going to say. Your mom tries to do the right thing, even when she doesn’t know what it is. She just needs a little time—”

  “A little? You guys have been friends for more than twenty years, and she’s still homophobic!”

  “She’s changed a lot, Kendra. You wouldn’t know it, but she has. But we’re getting off track here.”

  “I didn’t know we were on a track.”

  Sandy sits there silently. I look up at him.

  “Kendra—the years I spent on the street were some of the worst years of my life. Worse even than all the homophobic crap I grew up with. Sometimes I don’t know how I survived it.” He reaches for my hand again. “I wouldn’t ever want you to make the same mistake I did. Promise me that no matter how bad things seem, you’ll always come to me before you try anything stupid.” He squeezes my hand.

  For a second, I wonder if Sandy’s hand is his hand. But it can’t be.

  Tears well up in my eyes, and I look away. What’s the point of turning to Sandy if he can’t help me?

  “We’ll work something out, Kendra,” he says. “I’ll never leave you hanging. Now promise me you’ll come to me—”

  “I promise,” I say.

  Sandy’s on my side. I know he is. But h
e’ll try to convince my mom without breaking their friendship. And I’m not sure I have the right to ask him to do more.

  Sandy’s still looking at me worriedly.

  “I’m not going to run away,” I say. At least, I don’t think I am. “And I promise I’ll come to you if I get to that point.”

  “Before you get to that point,” Sandy says determinedly.

  “Right!”

  The phone shrills from the other room. I stiffen. I just know it’s my mom.

  Sandy looks at me unhappily. The phone rings again. I hear Emil pick it up in the other room, hear his voice rumble.

  “Sandy, it’s Lori Marshall!” Emil calls.

  “I have to tell her you’re here,” Sandy says quietly. “But I promise I won’t tell her anything you said. I can probably convince her to let you stay the night….”

  “No, that’s okay.”

  “Sandy!” Emil shouts again.

  “You sure?” Sandy asks, standing. “We’d be happy to have you.”

  “I’m sure.”

  Sandy shrugs, then goes to the living room.

  I listen to his voice rise and fall, and I know she’s giving him the third degree, probably for not calling her as soon as I got here.

  I glare down at the table. She’s probably not calling because she’s worried about me. She’s probably calling to make sure I’ll be home before Dad is. Because he’d worry. “Don’t worry your father”—I’ve heard that so many times. It’s like she thinks he needs protecting—more than me.

  He was devastated when he found out I’d been abused. He looked like the pain was going to rip him apart. But it was me that it happened to, damn it. I’m the one who was raped—over and over and over again.

  I press my fingers against my lips. I can’t think about him right now. Can’t think about any of it. I have to figure out how to keep seeing Carolyn. How to stay here. And Sandy isn’t it.

  I push back my chair and stand.

  Sandy strides back in, then stops when he sees me. “You leaving already? I told your mom you’d be here for at least another half hour or so—”

  Good. “Don’t tell her I’ve left, Sandy, okay? I need some time to think.”

  Sandy puts his hands on my shoulders, gazes down into my eyes. “You’re not going to do anything stupid?”

  “I’m not.”

  Sandy kisses my cheek. “Then go have your half hour or so of freedom. But make sure you call me when you get home, all right? I don’t want to be sitting up worrying about you.”

  “I will.”

  Out on the street, I flip open my cell. If anyone can help me, it’s Meghan. I call 411. There’s a lot of Ellises in the directory, but only a few are listed under a woman’s name. I accept the first one.

  “Yeah? Whaddya want?” a woman’s irritated voice asks.

  “Is Meghan there?”

  “I dunno. Let me check.” The receiver clunks down. “Meghan? Meghan, get your ass down here!” The woman coughs, then picks up the phone again. “She’ll be right down. Mind you don’t stay on too long. I got an important call coming through.”

  “Yes, ma’am.” Guess they don’t have call waiting—if it’s even the right number.

  I keep walking, clutching my phone, trying to look confident in the dark—and unapproachable.

  “Yeah?”

  It’s Meghan.

  I grip the phone tighter. “Hi, Meghan? It’s Kendra. Listen, do you know any place I can crash if I need to?”`

  “Why? What’s wrong?”

  “My parents. They’re talking about moving out of the city. But I can’t leave my therapist and the group—” And you. “I thought maybe if I can find some place to stay, they won’t drag me with them.”

  “Well, you can crash with me if you’re desperate. My mom would never know the difference.”

  I breathe out. “Thanks, Meghan.” I snap my cell shut.

  I’m not going to stop seeing Carolyn, even if I have to run away to keep on seeing her.

  I start back towards home, and suddenly there are footsteps behind me—heavy and deliberate.

  I spin around, but no one’s there—just a torn chip bag fluttering along the sidewalk. I pound ahead, moving faster now, trying to pretend I’m not afraid, my heels slamming against the cement. My heart’s pumping so hard, I think I’m going to choke.

  I flip open my cell again, keep my finger on the speed dial key for Carolyn.

  I hear the footsteps again—louder this time. I whirl around, peering into the darkness, the streetlights barely making a dent in the night. The cars and newspaper stands cast long shadows along the dirty sidewalk, shadows that a man could hide in. Broken glass glitters beneath a parking meter.

  A muffled cough explodes into the quiet.

  I jerk my head toward the sound. I don’t see anything at first. Then I spot a shiny black shoe sticking out from behind a parked car. My heart jolts like it’s been shocked with a defibrillator; I turn and run as fast as I can toward home. A car passes me, driving slowly. I dodge away from it. My breath rasps in my ears.

  The porch light glows like a beacon. I run toward it, gulping air. I can almost feel him behind me, reaching for me. I race up the stairs, leap onto the porch. There’s movement in front of me, a shadow rising to block my way.

  “No!” I cry.

  The shadow moves into the light, and I see it’s just Mom. She grabs me by the arms.

  I hiss with pain.

  “Don’t ever do that to me again!” Mom says, shaking me.

  “I’m sorry!”

  “It’s dangerous for a girl out alone at night. For any woman.”

  I know! I keep the words locked inside; I don’t want to scare her. Yet a tiny part of me wants to scream that it was a lot more dangerous for me to be with one of her friends—or with a teacher or an uncle or someone she knew—than to be out alone in the dark, chased by some faceless stranger.

  Her fingers dig angrily into my arm, making my wounds burn—but I’m angry, too. I lift my head high. “I’m not moving.”

  “You may not have a choice.”

  You’re wrong. “Is Dad in yet?”

  “He just got in. Went straight downstairs to watch TV. He’s more upset about the downsizing than he’s letting on.”

  “I’ll go look in on him.”

  “Don’t you worry your dad about this. He’s got enough on his plate right now without you adding to it. You hear me?”

  I hear you. Dad always comes first.

  16

  I head down the stairs slowly, past all the maps Dad has papered the wall with—maps of places he’s never been. Laughter blares from the TV. The scent of glue and paint rises up to greet me; he must be working on his model soldiers. I peer through the banister. Dad isn’t watching the screen or working on his soldiers; he’s holding his face in his hands, his shoulders shaking.

  I take a step back. I’ve only seen Dad cry once in my life—the night he found out about the abuse. My legs wobble as if I’m ill.

  I don’t know whether to go back upstairs and pretend I never saw him or to let him know I’m here. I turn and sneak back up the stairs, then thump back down them as noisily as I can. “Dad! Hey Dad, where are you?” I pause at the corner, give him another few seconds to compose himself, then head into the rec room.

  Dad’s sitting up—his glasses back on, his face composed. Scattered on the table next to him are the bits and pieces of his model soldiers—arms and legs and torsos—ready to be glued together, and little jars of acrylic paint. Dad turns down the volume on the TV and sets a soldier’s head down on the table. “There’s my girl! You’re always so busy, I feel like I never get to see you any more.”

  He holds out his arms. I lean down to hug him, then flop beside him on the sagging couch and kiss his rough cheek. Dad chucks my chin with his strong hand. “How have you been holding up?”

  I hear the footsteps in my mind again. I clench my hand until the scabbing wounds part, the pain jagged. “I
’m okay.” I look at his watery, reddened eyes and his blotchy neck, and I want to ask how he is. But I know I can’t—not without him realizing I saw him cry.

  Dad searches my eyes. “You sure?”

  I pick at a tear in my jeans. “It’s been hard lately, but nothing I can’t handle.”

  “I know you’re strong, honey. You don’t have to prove it to me.”

  “I wasn’t, I was—” Trying to protect you.

  Dad shakes his head. “I know you think you always have to put up a front for your mom and me. I don’t know where you get that from—”

  From you guys!

  “But you don’t have to, Kendra. We’re your parents. We want to be there for you.”

  Maybe you do. Mom sure doesn’t.

  Dad rubs his jaw. “I know you must be upset about the idea of moving—”

  “It’s not that, Dad.” I pull away from him. “It’s about leaving therapy and my friends. I need them right now.”

  “I know you do.” Dad bows his head. “And you deserve it. It’s just….” His voice trails off.

  “It’s okay, Dad. Mom told me. But listen—I can pay for the sessions myself. I just have to be able to get to them!”

  “And that means you don’t want to move.”

  I nod, hope rising inside me. “I’m sorry, Kendra, but that’s something I can’t control. I can’t pay the mortgage, and—”

  “I thought you guys paid that off years ago?”

  Dad looks startled. “We did. But when things started looking bad at work, I took out another mortgage. Thought I’d start up my own business—but that didn’t work out. I’m just a damned failure, any way you look at it.”

  I’ve never heard him talk like this. It scares me. “You’re not a failure, Dad.”

  “I am. My daughter needs therapy, and I can’t even provide it for her.”

  I don’t know what to say any more. Dad laughs feebly. “Here I am, gabbing away, when I should be listening to you. That therapist of yours—you really feel she’s helping you?”

  “Yeah, I do.”

  “And you think it’s important to keep seeing her?”

  “Yes. I told you, Dad, I can pay for the sessions.”

  “But you can’t pay the mortgage. Look, I’ll go to the bank again, see if I can’t work something out. Okay? I don’t want to move, either. Your mother and I were married here. I ever tell you that? We were so young and so in love—”

 

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