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Three Things I Know Are True

Page 9

by Betty Culley

when Clay’s birthday is,

  but he remembers mine.

  The little animal inside me

  hops around

  waiting for my answer.

  I don’t have a clear membrane

  that closes over my eyes,

  or a way to seal off my nose

  and ears,

  but still, I want to go down the

  middle of the river

  like a beaver.

  Clay nods his head,

  as if he understands perfectly,

  and maybe he does.

  Toothache

  Mom is making

  little hurt whimpers.

  Not like Jonah’s

  big moans.

  She pushes her fingers

  into the side of her cheek,

  as if she can push away

  the pain.

  What’s the matter?

  I ask her.

  Mom is dressed for work

  in her red Tractor Barn shirt.

  This tooth.

  It was only hurting

  once in a while.

  Now it’s

  all the time.

  The nurses say

  I have good hands.

  I wish my hands

  could heal,

  like it happens

  with miracles.

  I would put my hand

  on Mom’s cheek

  and watch the pain

  go away.

  If my hands could heal,

  people would come to me,

  and I would never turn anyone

  away.

  Over and over

  I would watch the pain

  leave their body.

  Let me see,

  I say,

  and surprisingly,

  Mom opens her mouth.

  Here,

  she says,

  putting her finger

  where it hurts.

  I don’t need her finger there

  to see the problem.

  One tooth has a hole

  that is black.

  Yeah, that looks bad.

  What are you going to do?

  Mom whimpers again,

  a quiet

  ooh.

  It’s almost worse

  that she’s trying

  not to make noise.

  I guess it’s got to get pulled.

  Then I’ll have a space there.

  We don’t say

  what we both know.

  It would cost more than a day’s pay

  to pull the tooth

  if we had a dentist.

  There’s no money for

  new teeth

  to fill the space.

  Can I see it again?

  I ask Mom.

  Maybe it’s loose?

  Mom opens her mouth,

  and one of my hands

  gently holds her chin,

  and the other reaches—

  GRABS THAT BLACK HOLE

  OF A TOOTH

  AND YANKS IT OUT

  AAAARGGHHH

  Mom screams once,

  and the pain is gone.

  She holds my good hands

  in hers,

  and cries with happiness.

  I give Mom a dish towel

  for her mouth,

  and I throw the

  rotten little stone

  of a tooth

  in the trash.

  I want to tell Hunter’s mom

  she was right.

  I trusted my hands,

  and they showed me where to go.

  Bangs

  With the trial coming,

  Maddigan is divided—

  like our DEAD END

  invisible line.

  The line starts

  in our town

  and keeps going.

  It’s not a straight line.

  It curves back and forth,

  in and out,

  crossing right through

  houses and apartments,

  over the river,

  through the woods,

  and down the interstate.

  I stop hiding the newspaper

  from Mom,

  because now Jonah

  is on the front page

  of the paper

  that’s for sale

  at Tractor Barn.

  It’s a photo of Jonah

  pole-vaulting

  at a high school track meet

  where he placed first.

  It’s taken at the moment

  in the air

  when his legs are on one side

  of the bar

  and the rest of his body

  is on the other side.

  There’s a photo

  from Facebook

  of Clay’s father

  in an orange vest

  with a hunting rifle.

  Mom irons her

  court outfits—

  navy-blue skirt/

  pale-pink shirt,

  brown skirt/

  pale-yellow shirt,

  gray dress/

  black sweater.

  If the trial

  goes more than

  three days,

  she’ll start over with

  navy-blue skirt/

  pale-pink shirt.

  Elinor painted Mom’s fingernails

  pale pink

  to match her day-one outfit.

  Her boss is letting her

  take the days off

  without pay.

  In a way,

  it’s a good thing

  Mom’s so busy thinking

  about the clothes.

  It’s less time thinking

  about what might happen

  in the courtroom.

  Mom’s lawyer

  has a talk

  with me about

  Fashion Week

  “courtroom etiquette.”

  No shorts, no hat

  No flip-flops, no sunglasses

  No ripped jeans

  No gum chewing

  No food or drink

  No name-calling

  Cell phone off

  He pauses a moment,

  then asks me:

  Any questions, Liv?

  What kinds of questions

  does he think

  I would have about

  ripped jeans or

  name-calling?

  I didn’t ask to play

  Nine Things about Courtrooms—

  unless you count

  food and drink

  separately,

  then it’s Ten.

  Yes, I do have a question.

  What about bangs?

  Bangs?

  Mom’s lawyer moves

  the papers

  in his open briefcase

  as if there might be bangs

  under them.

  Yes, bangs.

  I take a scissors

  out of the junk drawer,

  rake out the pieces

  of my hair in front

  with my fingers.

  and chop them into long

  BANGS

  right in front of

  Mom’s lawyer.

  Mom shrugs her shoulders.

  She may not understand,

  but I guess she figures

  it’s my hair

  to style.

  Mom’s lawyer closes

  his briefcase,

  and reaches a hand

  out to me

  for the first time.

  I don’t take it.

  I am busy fluffing

  my BANGS.

  I can’t wear a hat

  or sunglasses,

  but with bangs

  over my eyes,

  I don’t have to see anything

  I don’t want

  to see.

  And it makes it hard

  for anyone

  to see

  me.

  Sides

&nb
sp; If I could understand

  what Mr. Sommers

  is saying in geometry class,

  I would ask him

  if there are ever

  more than two sides

  of a line—

  say, in some alternate geometric

  universe.

  Because when it comes to Jonah

  appearing in court,

  there are many sides.

  Appearing is a strange court word,

  since its opposite is disappearing.

  Some of us want him to appear.

  Some want him to disappear.

  For once, me and Mom’s lawyer

  are on the same side.

  Mom’s lawyer wants Jonah

  to appear to help win his case.

  When I take Jonah for walks

  on DEAD END,

  it’s easy for Clay’s father to

  pull the curtains

  or look away when he’s driving

  the Bugz Away van—

  to make Jonah disappear from sight.

  In the courtroom I will make

  a slit in my bangs

  to watch Clay’s father

  when Jonah appears.

  If he looks away,

  I hope the judge will notice.

  There is a Team Meeting

  about Jonah’s appearance

  in court.

  There are lines dividing the nurses

  and Dr. Kate.

  Lila and Phoebe worry

  about crowds of people

  coughing on Jonah.

  Dr. Kate listens

  to the nurses

  but says there is

  no medical reason

  for Jonah not appearing

  in the courtroom.

  All his equipment is portable,

  even O,

  she says.

  I am not ashamed of Jonah

  or his dent

  or his feet turned inward

  or his legs that will never stand

  or all the equipment we need

  to keep him alive.

  I heard Lip and Blee-ah.

  I heard the sounds of Jonah

  calling from the place

  we cannot reach him.

  He is my brother.

  He always took the leap

  over the abyss

  without thinking,

  and always made it across—

  until now.

  Let them see it all.

  Let them hear what Jonah

  has to say.

  Let them try and blame Jonah

  for being Jonah.

  Johnny and Vivian

  and Mom and Elinor

  and Mom’s lawyer and I

  will appear with Jonah.

  There will be six of us there

  on Jonah’s side.

  Dr. Kate

  Dr. Kate doesn’t leave

  when Team Meeting is over.

  She takes a seat next to Jonah’s bed.

  First she looks at his machines,

  then she looks at Jonah.

  She puts a hand on Jonah’s forehead,

  as if she’s checking his temperature,

  but she leaves it there.

  Jonah closes his eyes.

  It looks relaxing

  to have a hand on your forehead,

  so I put my own hand on my forehead

  under my bangs

  and it makes me close my eyes, too.

  When I open them,

  Dr. Kate’s hand is still on Jonah’s forehead.

  Jonah’s eyes are closed

  and so are Dr. Kate’s.

  This is the first time I’ve had a close look

  at Dr. Kate.

  She has bangs too,

  but they are short and straight,

  not long

  like mine,

  and hers have some

  silver hairs in them

  I didn’t notice before.

  When she opens her eyes again,

  it’s as if touching Jonah

  put a spell on her.

  She doesn’t look at Jonah’s machines.

  She stretches her arms and yawns.

  Whew, I didn’t know I was so tired.

  Then she looks at me strangely.

  I can tell she is wondering

  what is different

  about me.

  I don’t tell her

  it’s my bangs.

  My son turns ten next month,

  Dr. Kate says to me,

  and I understand exactly

  what she is saying.

  We both watch Jonah.

  Dr. Kate puts a hand on Jonah’s chest.

  Does your brother often have this kind

  of breathing?

  she asks me.

  You mean stopping

  and then starting again?

  I ask. That’s how I think of it.

  Yes, she answers.

  He’s been doing it for a few days.

  It mostly happens when he sleeps,

  I explain.

  It reminds me

  of when Jonah would practice for

  our river game

  Last One Up.

  We’d jump from

  the high bank

  out into the river

  and see who could stay underwater

  longest.

  Jonah and Clay and their friends,

  me and Rainie and Justine.

  Piper watched from the bank,

  because of all she knew about

  water-borne protozoans.

  Jonah was always the last one to surface.

  He used to train at home.

  Holding his breath, letting it out,

  holding his breath, letting it out,

  timing himself

  again and again.

  Thank you, Dr. Kate says to me, thank you,

  like Dr. Liv has given her the answer

  to some great medical mystery.

  On the Record

  If you follow the river

  downstream,

  you will get to the dam

  in the town of

  Stoppard,

  where the Headwater courthouse is.

  That is where we will go

  for the trial.

  Below the courthouse

  is the empty woolen mill

  that was built on the banks

  of the Kennebec.

  Five stories high,

  the long brick factory

  is full of windows

  that are mostly broken.

  My grandmother worked there

  as a loom weaver

  from the age of ten

  until it closed,

  making woolen blankets

  and cloth for coats.

  Some people want to turn the empty building

  into luxury apartments,

  because of the river view,

  but the soil

  and the water

  are contaminated

  from the chemicals and dyes.

  Clay could probably name

  the chemicals

  if I asked.

  In the spring they open the

  giant floodgates of the cement dam

  to let out

  the spring rain

  and ice melt

  that fills the river.

  And the rush of water

  is so loud,

  no matter what you say

  or how loud you shout

  your words are swallowed up

  into the air.

  I’m sorry the spring rush

  is over,

  because there’s no chance,

  if the Headwater courtroom windows are open,

  that the words spoken there

  will disappear.

  Even if they did,

  Mom’s lawyer says there will be

  a court reporter

  taking down every single word
r />   before it has a chance to

  escape.

  He doesn’t think

  I will be called to testify.

  But if I do,

  it will all be on the record,

  he says.

  I’m guessing Clay’s father’s lawyer

  told Clay the same thing.

  I’ve always known Clay

  to tell the truth,

  whether he was

  “on the record”

  or not.

  The Night Before

  The phone has been ringing all week

  since the trial date was announced

  in the paper.

  Mom’s lawyer says that

  if we answer the phone

  and we’re asked a question

  about Jonah or Clay’s father

  or guns,

  we need to say

  “No comment.”

  Mom is afraid she won’t sleep

  during the trial,

  so Dr. Kate gives her a prescription

  for a few little pills.

  When it gets dark,

  Mom takes half a pill.

  She offers me the other half.

  I say No thank you.

  I don’t care if I can’t sleep tonight.

  Since Jonah came home

  from the hospital,

  I’ve found that, in fact,

  not-sleeping

  makes me more awake.

  Maybe that’s my new special animal

  talent,

  like Hunter’s mom being able to

  predict storms and floods.

  There’s a knock at the door

  and Johnny lets Rainie in.

  She stands there rubbing her amber

  “stone of courage”

  between her fingers.

  My father dropped me off.

  He won’t let me miss school

  to go to the trial,

  but I can stay over with you tonight.

  Where’s your mom?

  Asleep.

  How’s Jonah?

  He’s asleep too. But he’s good.

  It surprises me

  how true the words feel.

  Rainie walks farther into the house

  than since before the accident.

  She drops her backpack

  on the floor,

  and peeks under the aluminum foil

  of the dish on the counter.

  Help yourself to some casserole.

  There’s also fudge in the fridge.

  In her usual Rainie way

  that’s so familiar to me,

  that drives Mom crazy,

  Rainie takes a plateful of casserole,

  spilling some on the counter,

  leaves the casserole uncovered,

  pulls off three paper towels at once

  to use as a napkin,

  tastes a corner of the fudge

  with the refrigerator door wide open,

  decides she likes it,

  takes another plate for her fudge,

  and settles herself at the table.

  So, who’s the bald dude?

  Rainie jabs her elbow in the direction

  of Jonah’s room

  where Johnny went.

  Is he Jonah’s bodyguard?

  That’s Johnny.

  He’s one of Jonah’s nurses.

  Oh, where’s the one who did your braids?

  That’s Phoebe. She only works Tuesdays.

 

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