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Freakboy

Page 14

by Kristin Elizabeth Clark


  You choose what to wear

  and how to present yourself.

  I can choose how

  to respond to him

  but I can’t choose

  how I feel about

  what he chooses

  to share with me.

  So I choose to

  take him home

  but I choose not

  to kiss him good night.

  I Drive Home Numb

  and stay that way

  until I’m setting my alarm

  and I realize tomorrow’s

  the fifteenth.

  Then I’m madder than I’ve ever been.

  Was he only pretending

  to love me?

  Was breakfast

  in bed a lie?

  Was sex with me

  just a sick experiment?

  And besides mad, I feel

  used

  helpless

  weak.

  I’m not used to feeling like a loser

  and even when I’ve lost a match

  I’ve always had comfort

  knowing chances were

  I’d prevail next time.

  But how do you win

  against something

  like this?

  If he knocks

  on my window

  tomorrow morning

  I’m pushing him

  out of the tree.

  (BRENDAN)

  All Vanessa Said

  when I came clean was

  “I see,” and I wanted

  to beg her for more words

  but I was scared they’d hurt.

  She drove me home

  without saying anything else.

  “See you tomorrow?” She nodded.

  But that could mean anything.

  And just the thought

  of tomorrow, another day

  of this so-called life,

  exhausts me.

  I go to bed tired of confusion

  tired of being so alone.

  No Vanessa, no Angel, no Andy.

  Now I’m really alone

  and I’ll be this way for

  the rest of my life.

  No one will ever want to be

  with the person who lives

  in this body …

  Not Me

  With that insidious sensation

  I’m in the wrong skin

  slicing through my spirit,

  though s o m e t i m e s

  it’s muffled—

  whispers almost heard

  in that dark and murky season

  when the last light is d y i n g.

  Who could love this soul?

  Anyone normal or

  right-thinking wouldn’t.

  Vanessa used to tell

  me to stop being so down.

  Whatever will be will b e.

  Easy enough for her.

  No doubt about it,

  she’s got her gender straight.

  I don’t and that’s b a d.

  (Angel)

  Surprise! Happy Birthday!!!!

  For once in my life I am speechless.

  Can’t think of a thing to say.

  Denai’s holding a birthday cake,

  Marcus has a wrapped box,

  there’s more presents

  on the kitchen table.

  Gennifer says,

  “Girl, you better shut your mouth

  if you don’t want flies in there!”

  I can’t help it

  or the tears that sprout,

  stream, and don’t want to stop.

  Of all God’s blessings

  these friends are

  the most important to me.

  Marcus comes forward, kisses me.

  “Baby, it’s okay.”

  And I smile even though I know

  my mascara’s running.

  Three Years Ago Today

  Cake, champagne, roses, chocolate

  were the farthest things from my mind,

  I tell you.

  It didn’t matter

  it was my birthday.

  I was workin’ it hard

  on the boulevard

  tired and dirty.

  A Chevy pulled up

  baseball cap,

  sunglasses,

  Western button-down shirt.

  “You wanna party?”

  He wasn’t my first trick

  far from it in fact

  and I ignored the tingling

  at the roots of my hair.

  (My advice? Girl, don’t ever

  let things get so bad you ignore

  tingling at the roots of your hair

  unless you wanna find out how

  much worse they can get.)

  Driving inland

  nerves really

  kicked in.

  Baseball Cap

  finally stopped the car

  at a deserted business park.

  Beer

  belly

  belt

  buckle.

  Throat too dry

  to work

  up the spit

  I needed.

  Still he got

  what he was there for

  and afterward

  grabbed my crotch.

  “I knew it!”

  Slammed my

  head against the dashboard

  so hard my world

  came back together

  in pieces

  dragged out

  pavement

  boots

  blood

  black.

  When I woke up

  I’d been 17 for 6 days.

  Veronica Says

  everything happens

  for a reason.

  Ever notice how

  when something’s a cliché

  it’s ’cause it’s true?

  Her only brother

  died of AIDS

  and her husband ditched her

  ’cause she never could have kids.

  Sad, but if all those things

  hadn’t happened

  in her life

  she might not of

  been there for a kid like me.

  She was more than

  just a foster mother

  who cleaned me up

  got me back into school

  made me quit smoking (everything)

  helped me check out Willows.

  She even tried to get me visits

  with Frankie—

  till that asshole judge ruled

  I was unfit company

  for a thirteen-year-old.

  In return I gave her

  fashion advice (she never took it),

  mowed the lawn without her asking,

  rubbed her feet.

  I was that grateful.

  I worried ’cause I knew

  I could never pay her back.

  “Don’t worry,” she’d say.

  “I know you’ll pay it forward.”

  I hate

  The Sperm Donor

  The Asshole Judge

  The baseball-cap-wearing pervert

  but I’m grateful, too.

  Why?

  Veronica.

  Willows.

  The life I got now

  and the chance to pay it forward.

  Next time Veronica checks in on me

  I’m gonna tell her about Brendan.

  He’s messed up

  but I’m gonna find a way

  to help him.

  (Vanessa)

  In the Morning

  I’m putting on waterproof mascara

  before wrestling practice and

  the eyes looking back

  at me are tiny.

  Sheahan notices,

  takes advantage of

  my slowness

  in the takedowns.

  Brendan doesn’t come to wrestling

  and no one says anything to me

  about him.

 
(BRENDAN)

  At Breakfast

  I tell Mom

  I quit wrestling.

  “I never could go see you

  after that first match.

  It just looked so awful.”

  She shakes her head, like the

  memory will fall out.

  “I was afraid I’d scream terrible

  things at your opponents.”

  I’m a little surprised

  she’s so relieved—

  Is that really the reason

  she was the only parent

  who never came to meets?

  Detached,

  I mull it over.

  Dismiss,

  it doesn’t matter.

  Claude the Interloper

  pats her arm

  like she’s an invalid,

  then invites me to get donuts

  now that I’m not training.

  Just great.

  I know he’s secretly thinking

  I’m a weakling for quitting

  days before finals.

  (Vanessa)

  Brendan and I

  must be broken up

  even though neither

  of us has said so.

  And how could we

  when we don’t talk?

  He takes the bus,

  I don’t offer him a ride.

  There’s an empty space

  where anger was

  and in its place

  my heart is breaking.

  This morning I started to wonder

  if it was all an elaborate lie

  to trick me into dumping him

  because he was too chicken

  to end it himself.

  And then I saw him

  drooping down

  the hall

  and knew

  there’s something

  really wrong.

  I wish I had someone

  I could talk to about it.

  The Night Before Wrestling Finals

  I turn out my bedside lamp

  and when I close my eyes

  an Erin Bledsoe memory

  flashes behind them.

  She lived

  next door to me

  until third grade.

  Erin had bunk beds

  and on sleepovers

  we liked to be

  in the top one together.

  After popcorn

  and a Princess DVD

  her mother would kiss

  us both on the forehead.

  And turn out the lights.

  It started

  just before Christmas.

  December break.

  Stormy night

  howling wind

  thudding rain

  prevented sleep.

  Doctor, nurse,

  boyfriend, girlfriend,

  soap opera.

  The games

  built slowly.

  Exploring

  our bodies

  ourselves

  each other.

  Hello Kitty

  days-of-the-week

  jammies

  panties

  discarded.

  Touching

  never felt wrong

  at the time

  but daylight

  always left me embarrassed.

  We fought

  sometimes

  over who had

  to be the boy

  and I search my

  mind for any

  memory

  that I ever

  wanted to be

  anything but the girl

  or that I wanted Erin

  to be anything

  but the boy.

  I can’t find it.

  There Are Phases

  of the moon that

  I learned in Science.

  Waxing crescent

  first quarter

  waxing gibbous

  full

  waning gibbous

  third quarter

  waning crescent

  new.

  And, easy to remember,

  phases of the seasons.

  Spring

  summer

  winter

  fall.

  There are phases of life.

  When you’re a baby

  child

  teenager

  adult.

  And these

  are all passing;

  nothing stays the same.

  I’m flopping, turning

  in bed. Hot pillow,

  no sleep.

  Maybe Brendan’s thing

  is just a phase?

  A strange phase. Like me and Erin.

  Hard to understand

  but maybe he just thinks

  he wants to be a girl for now

  and in a year

  we won’t even remember

  this phase.

  Kind of like

  you don’t remember

  thudding December rain

  in the soft touch of spring.

  (Angel)

  Nerves at the Sight of a Sweet Bungalow

  set off from the street.

  Sunflower lights

  line the walk.

  Lord, I’m jumpy as a cat.

  Marcus’s hand

  holds mine tight.

  “Praying?” he asks.

  “You know it,” I say.

  He smiles. Cocoa eyes crinkle.

  “They’ll love you—

  just don’t mention religion.”

  I nod. There’s a horde of bees

  swarming in my belly

  but the roots of my hair

  don’t tingle.

  We’re barely on the step

  and the screen door flies open.

  “Welcome!” His moms

  are framed in the door.

  I almost fall over.

  One of ’em’s

  my English professor.

  You never think of your teacher

  having a life outside of school.

  All four of us exclaim over this

  small, small world.

  Then we go in,

  sit down.

  They offer me wine,

  I take iced tea.

  It feels good

  being with someone

  who wants to introduce me

  to his family.

  And it feels even better

  that I’m mostly nervous

  because we all know

  I have a paper due

  that I should be home working on.

  Just feels a normal

  kind of nervous.

  One I could get used to.

  I Keep Messing Up

  Calling one of his moms

  Dr. Wolski.

  “It’s Kathleen, here, Angel,”

  she says. His other mom,

  Dorothy, nods.

  “Trust me, she gets enough of

  that at school—she’d be

  insufferable if we

  kept it up at home!”

  We laugh and talk

  through dinner and into the night.

  Turns out Dorothy is an administrator

  at the hospital—and she’s on something

  called an ethics panel.

  “Angel has an ethical dilemma,”

  Marcus says, grabbing another

  homemade cookie off the plate.

  “Tell them about Brendan.”

  So I tell ’em about the broken window

  and blue envelopes,

  and I’m trying not to get worked up

  but it’s hard.

  “You should absolutely

  call the authorities,” Dorothy

  says. And she takes a sip of wine.

  Kathleen shakes her head.

  “I couldn’t disagree more.”

  “Why?” Dorothy asks.

  “For one thing, the money he

  sends is a clear sign of remorse—

  he is paying his
debt.

  “For another, Angel doesn’t know

  why he broke the window—that

  should inform any decision she

  makes.” Kathleen says to me,

  “You should try to find out.”

  Dorothy doesn’t like that.

  “The reason doesn’t matter—

  actions have consequences.”

  And they’re off into

  a philosophical argument

  about crime and the meaning

  of punishment.

  Disagreeing but not fighting.

  It’s interesting to hear and

  I’m trying to follow them

  but it’s getting late and

  I accidentally yawn.

  Marcus takes my hand.

  “Now we’ve done it,”

  he pretends to whisper.

  “They’ll be up

  half the night debating …

  Let’s go.”

  They stop

  long enough

  to walk us

  to the door.

  “It was wonderful to meet you,”

  Dorothy says. Kathleen smiles.

  “See you in class.”

  And on the way home

  even though I don’t

  mention religion

  I’m thanking God.

  You think meeting

  your boyfriend’s parents

  for the first time

  is nerve-racking?

  Girl, you just try doing it trans.

  (Vanessa)

  Weigh-In for Wrestling Finals

  at 6 a.m. Afterward

  the team goes out for pancakes

  before the first match at eight.

  I slump at the end of the table

  next to Sheahan,

  across from

  Flannigan.

  There’s a rowdiness down at the

  other end, but for once Flannigan’s

  not in the thick of it.

  I watch brown maple syrup

  seep into the golden stack.

  “Nervous?” Sheahan asks.

  Shake my head no.

  “Awww, she’s probably

  missing her boyfriend,”

  Flannigan says,

  but not in a mean way.

  I almost start crying.

  It’s the truth.

  “We broke up.”

  “’Cause he’s a fag?” Flannigan asks

  like he’s genuinely curious.

  I look up from the table

  to see Sheahan give him a dirty look.

  “Shut up, Flannigan,” he says.

  We finish eating in silence.

  On the way back to the tournament

  Sheahan walks with me.

  He’s nervous,

  talking a lot like he

  always does before a match.

  “You know Flannigan’s just a dick.”

  I nod.

  “I know what they say

  about Brendan, but

  I like him.

  Not like THAT,”

  he adds in a hurry.

  I smile.

 

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