by Lucy Frank
   years old, Barb. You ask me,
   it’s high time she had a boyfriend.
   Right, Chessie?”
   On our island, David asks:
   “So do you have a boyfriend?”
   When I say, “No. Not really,”
   he answers, “Awesome!”
   And by moonlight
   and the flashlight app
   on my cell phone,
   scribbles on my hand.
   “How’m I FEELING, Doc?
   ’Bout time someone
   in this shithole asked me that.
   “How the HELL YOU THINK
   I’M FEELING?”
   “She’s got some mouth on her,
   that little girl. How old
   do you think—”
   “Nineteen, not that it’s your business,
   and I got ears, too, lady! And a name.
   Shannon Elizabeth Williams. So
   if you got something to say to me …”
   “Okaaay! Here’s
   one you haven’t heard.”
   Poppy’s back in hearty mode.
   “So what did Buddha
   say to the hot dog vender?”
   “OWWWW!”
   “I haven’t touched you yet!”
   “Make me one with everything!”
   “And you better not … OWWWW!”
   “Why do you always have to give me
   such a hard time?
   Why can’t you be more like
   this nice little girl next to you?”
   “You mean all meek and shit?”
   “No, just pleasant.
   She’s not feeling any better
   than you are, but she always
   manages a thank-you and a smile.”
   “Cuz her evil juice
   hasn’t worked its magic yet.
   Just wait. You’ll see.”
   “What is she talking about,
   evil juice?”
   “What do you think’s wrong
   with that little girl? I understand
   she’s upset, but rude like that?
   There’s no excuse—”
   “Frankly, I’m more worried
   about Chessie. How’re you doing, there,
   Cupcake? You’ve been awfully quiet.”
   Poppy leans in for a kiss.
   “Anything we can get you before we go?”
   Or bring next time?”
   “I’m fine,” I tell them,
   telling myself the lump
   clogging my throat
   is just the tube.
   “I promise. I’ll be fine.”
   “Knock, knock!
   We were here to see Jared’s
   dermatologist, so
   we thought we’d pop in
   and say hi.”
   “Ma, I think she’s sleeping,”
   Jared whispers.
   Jared from the sandbox,
   from the school bus,
   Jared destined to be valedictorian,
   whose dad is our dentist,
   who Mom, I know, wishes
   was my boyfriend,
   who before—No! Don’t
   let yourself even
   think of David—
   my friends swore
   I was doomed
   to marry, saying,
   the good news is,
   you’ll get free dental care.
   “Ma, come on,” says Jared.
   “Let’s just go.”
   And even through closed eyes
   I can see how I must look to him.
   “I just want to say one thing.
   Chessie, honey,” says Mrs. Kaye.
   “A girl at work has what your mom said
   you might have, and as long as she avoids
   stress and gets plenty of rest,
   she’s fine.”
   I squeeze my eyes tighter.
   Wait for them to go away.
   “So, the immune system
   as I’m sure you know,
   protects the body
   from viruses, bacteria and other …”
   She’s so cool, this doctor
   in the orange Crocs,
   with the glasses I’d get
   if I needed glasses,
   corkscrew hair
   miraculously pinned up
   with a pencil,
   “… foreign organisms.
   Sometimes, however,
   the cells supposed to fight enemies
   can turn on your own body.
   We call this …”
   Talking to me like
   I’m just as cool,
   as smart. I wonder
   if my hair’s curly enough
   to curl like that. I love
   her engagement ring,
   so not flashy, yet
   so sparkly. I wonder
   “… autoimmunity.
   Researchers think certain bacteria,
   viruses, toxins, and drugs
   trigger an autoimmune response
   in people genetically susceptible …”
   If she’s noticed my
   new diamond studs.
   “Most autoimmune disorders,
   unfortunately, are chronic.
   But many, I’m glad to say,
   can be very successfully
   controlled with treatment.
   In your case, most likely
   inflammatory bowel disease,
   also known as Crohn’s disease,
   your immune system appears
   to be attacking healthy cells
   in your terminal ileum.
   “Francesca. Chess.
   Am I throwing too much at you?
   Do you have any questions
   you’d like to ask?”
   “No. Not really.
   I was just wondering …
   would you mind telling me …
   what product
   you use on your hair
   to get it to curl like that?”
   Forget
   a little light reading
   to take my mind off things.
   Lotions, cute cartoons,
   pretty notebook for my thoughts,
   flowers to brighten up the place.
   Give those to this Shannon girl,
   the sick girl, with nothing
   on her table but a sippy straw.
   Bring me my running shoes,
   a black bikini, a bottle of sriracha,
   a kite, a Bernese mountain dog,
   chandelier earrings that throw sparks
   in the light, a ticket
   to Machu Picchu.
   When the nurse comes,
   pleasant as I can,
   I tell him no more visitors.
   None. I don’t want to see or
   talk to anyone.
   One good thing:
   Looks like I lost
   my phone.
   Blared from sleep, I almost rip
   the IV needle from my vein,
   grabbing the red-flashing
   bedside phone before
   my clanging heart
   can stop me.
   “Chess!”
   It’s Lexie:
   “I’m so upset you’re sick!
   Are you okay?
   Are you any better?
   Your mom just said—”
   “We waited and waited
   for you.”
   Bri’s on, too:
   “We met no one, needless to say,
   and when you didn’t text or call,
   we figured you were still
   with Berry Boy,
   and when my dad came
   to get us …”
   “This is not, like, our fault,
   is it?”
   “No. It was fine.”
   Monitor Me hates
   the quiver in my voice
   as I picture wide-eyed,
   stork-legged Lexie,
   Bri, elf-small with
   rowdy black hair.
   “And I am so
   much better.
   Seriously
.
   No worries.
   I’ll be fine.”
   “You know, I knew
   something was up with you!
   I mean, cramps are supposed
   to be once a month, right?
   And that mono that wasn’t mono
   last winter? And quitting choir.
   Which you love? Telling Mr. Jensen
   you wouldn’t try out for Ophelia,
   which you could have gotten,
   especially with that whole ethereal
   thing you’ve got going lately—”
   “And we finally get an invite
   to Ruby’s pool party and
   you refuse to go?
   If it wasn’t for that crush
   on Mr. Sugar Snap,
   we wouldn’t have gotten you out
   of the house all summer.”
   “But something good
   happened, right?
   Something as in Something.
   Or you’d have come back to the party.
   I know this isn’t the ideal time
   to talk about it, but
   I mean, did you guys,
   you know …”
   “Chess? It’s kinda silent on your end.
   Is your mom there?”
   “Umm. Yes.”
   Lying to them,
   for the first time ever,
   to drive the night beetles away.
   Between the curtains
   I watch two ladies sit
   with Shannon as she sleeps.
   Hear click of knitting needles,
   rustle of starched legs
   crossing and uncrossing.
   “See all them earrings?” the older one
   tells an aide hanging
   a new bag of medicine.
   “She’s got one for every surgery.”
   “Seriously?” The aide looks impressed.
   Or shocked. “That’s a lot of surgeries
   for a young girl.”
   “Oh yeah. And that little cross
   in the other ear? That’s to keep
   her from any more.”
   The older one counts stitches
   on something pink, crinkles open
   a starlight mint, sighs,
   Hands another to the heavy,
   younger one, whose name necklace
   might say Yvonne.
   When I wake up,
   a baby hat is almost done.
   The older lady stabs her needles
   through the ball of yarn.
   “Seems like they gave her
   a double dose of sedative this time.”
   She hauls herself to standing,
   Untangles tubes on the IV pole,
   smoothes the comforter,
   the pillow, the girl’s jagged hair.
   “Not sure how soon
   we can get back, kiddo.”
   Yvonne leaves the mint
   on Shannon’s pillow,
   bends to kiss her forehead,
   So close to me that if she knew
   I was watching through the curtain,
   she could pull it aside and kiss me, too.
   In a dream David sets my lips tingling
   with his eyes, even in the dark.
   “I really want to kiss you.
   Is it okay if …”
   “MWAAH!”
   Stubble scrapes my cheek.
   “Heyyy! How’re you doing,
   Chessie Chestnut?”
   Strawberry-slick lips brush
   my forehead.
   “Hello, sweetie.
   You weren’t sleeping,
   were you?”
   “Huh?
   Oh, hi, Aunt Dawn.
   Hey, Uncle Charlie.
   I’m doing fine.”
   “Because, sweetie,
   I just want to tell you
   the woman down the street
   has what they’re saying
   you might have,
   and as long as she stays away
   from certain foods …”
   In neon running shoes I race
   through sand, sprint
   through the rainbow
   droplets of a sprinkler,
   run straight up a waterfall,
   Shoot out a purple cloud
   of squid ink so no one
   can see me jetting
   through the ocean
   on You’ll never catch me! bubbles.
   “Genetic. I looked it up online.
   Cousin Joanie had it… .
   Wouldn’t surprise me a bit
   if Uncle Bobby …”
   Now if I can just stay
   inside the dream.
   “Dawn. Why make her upset?
   Nobody’s said for sure—”
   Blur their voices.
   “They know something’s
   very wrong. I’m no doctor
   and I could tell she wasn’t well
   for months …”
   But Bri’s and Lexie’s words
   creep in like beetles:
   “That time you ate
   the entire bottle
   of my dad’s Tums …”
   “My dad’s single malt
   to kill the pain …”
   “Julia’s sleepover
   where you spent
   the whole night
   in the bathroom …”
   “Why does everyone
   in this family think
   if you don’t talk
   about things,
   if you just smile
   and don’t look,
   or look polite
   they’ll, like,
   miraculously …”
   “Dawn’s right, Chessie.
   You had to have known
   you were—”
   “And I get
   that you must have been hoping
   it would go away—”
   “Or trying to protect your mom—”
   “Right. God forbid
   there should be something amiss
   in my sister’s perfectly
   constructed perfect world!”
   “But protecting?
   By going for a swim
   in the middle
   of a freezing-cold night
   in the pouring rain
   with some boy who
   she won’t even tell
   anyone his name?”
   “That’s not the issue now.
   What’s important is
   finding out what’s—”
   “Not important?
   Getting home at three
   in the morning?
   Crying too hard to talk?”
   “What happened, Chess?
   I know you were sick,
   but something
   must have happened!”
   “Did that boy push
   you to do something
   you weren’t ready for?
   Did he …”
   “If there was a, like, asteroid
   headed for the Earth?”
   pipes up Natasha Oldenburg
   from fifth grade,
   “And the only guy you could find
   was, like, Mr. Flood, the septic tank man?
   Would you do it with him?”
   “What about Donald Trump?
   SpongeBob SquarePants?
   If you knew it was your
   one and only chance to ever know …”
   “WHY DO YOU THINK
   SOMETHING
   ‘HAPPENED’?
   “NOTHING HAPPENED!
   AND IT WAS NOT RAINING!
   AND IT DOESN’T
   MATTER
   ANYMORE
   WHO
   HE
   WAS!”
   My words boom
   in my ears,
   turn the air
   Nile-bile-algae-vile
   While David’s words
   on that endless drive home
   echo in my head:
   “You should have said something.
   If you’d just said something …”
  
; And the night beetles swarm.
   The nurse sets down a basin
   of warm water, soap, and paper towels
   to clean up for the night.
   I ask her to help me scrub
   these damn wings
   off my hand.
   Somewhere in the clockless night,
   the sobbing starts, so quiet
   I have to strain to hear, so terrible
   I could believe it’s me,
   while on my other side
   Mrs. Klein demands a cab,
   her pocketbook, her shoes:
   “Sam, my pearls were right here
   and now they’re gone. Sammy,
   I told you that new cleaning girl
   would rob us blind… .”
   Then, from Shannon’s side again, I hear,
   “Do I really need another
   crazy person?
   Would somebody
   shut her up
   before I go
   friggin’
   ripshit here?”
   Trapped between voices,
   buzzing like a fluorescent
   tube about to die, I buzz
   for help, wait, buzz again,
   wait, until, not sure which side
   of the curtain creeps me out more,
   I unplug my wires from the wall,
   inch my pole around
   to the old lady’s side, and
   looking past her face,
   uncurl her hand.
   Her nails bite my palm;
   I want to flee. But from some
   forgotten corner of me
   in a voice that barely quavers,
   come the words I’ve wanted:
   “It’s gonna be all right.
   We’re here with you.
   You’re not alone.”
   Lizard eyes click open.
   “Who are you?
   Where’s Sammy?
   You stole my clothes!”
   “Me? No! No. Look at me.
   I don’t have clothes either.
   We’re in the hospital.
   No one here has clothes.”
   “Gimme that phone!”
   Scraggle-haired, red-eyed,
   Shannon stands beside me,
   turns thumb and pinky
   into a phone.
   “Hello, Sam?
   It’s me, Shannon.
   “How’re you doing tonight?
   So you know which shoes
   she wants, right?
   And you’ll be here
   in how long?
   “No, half an hour’s perfect, Sam.
   Don’t worry about a thing.
   Mrs. Klein’s doin’ fine.