Dating Down

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Dating Down Page 9

by Stefanie Lyons

under foot

  in my room

  by my side.

  Still no word from X.

  It’s like he’s fallen off the planet.

  Guilt, maybe?

  Anger?

  Gavin reminds me how not-noble X is being

  says he’ll always support me.

  He is, after all

  my go to

  my Gavin.

  Turns

  Every brush turn

  becomes my turn

  U turn

  Painting myself

  180 degrees

  away from the

  me

  stuffed like a cream puff

  with jealousy

  insecurity

  obsessively

  checking my phone

  checking the clock

  tick tock

  turns out,

  it’s just not

  me.

  Tides are turning toward

  me

  turns out what I thought

  was burning love

  just might not

  be so hot

  embers of our spark

  blitzedburntblown

  out of the park

  turning heads with their

  flim flam

  flop

  into the dark.

  Relying

  on another to

  cover me,

  X’s silence

  smothers me

  missing my mother

  I discover

  I’d rather be

  turning away

  turning a blind eye

  turning my focus

  to canvas

  to college

  to RISD

  and back to me

  a better me

  a sister to Melanie

  I can be

  immediately.

  Obviously,

  the tables have turned.

  A Sunny Sunday Morning

  Like something out of a movie—

  Jane makes pancakes

  Dad reads the paper

  Melanie sets the table

  orange juicefresh cream butter

  blueberry pancakesreal maple syrup.

  Have aliens replaced my family?

  My stomach growls

  I sit.

  Maybe we’re not so broken after all.

  Melanie recites the alphabet

  shovels up pancakes

  drives them into her mouth.

  Dad asks about my SAT studies.

  I lie.

  Unless the study guides start seeping in

  while I sleep

  I’m doomed to SAT failure.

  I ask about the campaign.

  Dad:Let’s get through today. One blow at a time.

  How cryptic.

  Jane sighs, excuses herself, runs from the table.

  Is she crying?

  Melanie chokes on a giant bite.

  I pound her back

  and she spits out the half-chewed mass.

  Hello?

  Nobody notices

  I’ve casually saved my sister’s life over breakfast.

  If only I could save myself that easily,

  unchoke

  undo

  rewind

  and replay

  where summer went wrong.

  Dad has to drive Jane to the doctor.

  Miguel has to finish up the roster for the next rally.

  Me:Why can’t she drive herself?

  I ask with what I think

  is a rather innocent tone.

  Dad:Can’t you just help out?

  He pushes his chair

  storms off.

  I didn’t mean to …

  Maybe we are broken after all.

  Our perfect

  delicious

  sun-drenched

  something Sunday special

  breakfast.

  How Things Were with Mom

  When I was Melanie’s age I used to

  sit in Mom’s lap

  suck my middle fingers.

  Dad used to yell,

  You’re too old for that.

  You’ll wreck your teeth.

  Big girls don’t act like babies.

  All of which I ignored

  sitting in Mom’s lap

  fat as a cat.

  My High Priestess, Mom

  protected me from the

  pressure to grow up,

  act like a big girl,

  worry over crooked teeth.

  When I got older, I quit

  sitting on Mom’s lap

  being a baby

  letting her protect me.

  But I never got over wanting to be

  near her

  touch her

  need her.

  Her scent of

  Cover Girl pressed powder

  Chanel lipstick

  switched to IV’s

  hospital beds and vomit.

  The yin and yang of my mom.

  My down-to-Earthhigh-end tastes

  High Priestess waysmom.

  Oh, to be

  near her

  like her

  with her.

  Pondering Things at the Park

  While Dad’s driving Jane to the doctor

  I’m staring at my phone

  contemplating calls

  running around with Melanie

  at the park.

  Remembering creepy friends

  fearing druggie strangers

  wondering how they knew my name

  at the park.

  Never questioning

  never doubting

  never sensing a pattern

  at the park.

  X leaving me at

  parties

  music shows

  his mother’s

  returning with

  excuses

  duffle bags

  strange people

  Why do I let him lie?

  If he

  knows druggies

  parties with druggies

  leaves me for druggies

  hangs out with druggies

  visits druggies

  he’s lying when he says he’s

  not a druggie.

  He’s a druggie

  and I’m not going to be the fool.

  Believe

  Honestly,

  I can’t believe

  in us.

  I was a fool

  painted blue

  instead of canvas colors

  true

  to the hues needed

  for the scene.

  Honestly,

  it’s too far

  where you are

  I believed in you

  not me,

  too bad

  now I see

  I do

  when I move on I

  move away from you.

  Honestly,

  I feel okay

  whole of me

  I believe

  in it all.

  I’ve tried

  Ted

  dread

  X’s bed

  there’s nothing

  I can’t be

  at RISD.

  Honestly,

  I believe

  in me

  mine, I’m

  glorious

  vain glorious

 
high school victorious

  away from notorious

  I’m college ready.

  Honestly,

  I believe

  in me.

  When I Visit His Apartment, Pt. II

  I walk in

  shutting the door behind me.

  The room reeks

  of takeout and tennis shoes

  half-drunk bottles of Pabst Blue Ribbon

  bad manners and boorishness.

  Piles of books make it look like

  hoarders live here.

  Paper plates decay into Jawbreaker albums

  paint crumbles off the wall

  the fern rots in the windowsill.

  His roommates hang out,

  wave Hi as I step over

  the banjo case.

  Where’s the banjo?

  X leads me to his room navigating through

  the wreckage saying

  Nothing

  like a tune from a

  washed-up country ballad, the silence

  saddens my heart.

  At last, I’ve figured out

  this song

  this boy

  the lies

  even when he looks at me

  in that way.

  That way.

  After we enter his room, he

  sits on the bed

  I stand next to his dresser

  covered in coins and something sticky

  we used to be giddy, gulping up

  laissez-faire.

  Me:I don’t want to do this anymore.

  X:Why?

  Me:I’m tired of the lies.

  Our eyes pour into each other

  I want to melt, but I can’t

  see past

  the dirty clothes

  baggies of meth

  and unmade bed

  in his room.

  This is it, I think,

  and I don’t believe in anything anymore.

  Tears of Change

  X:It’s not what you think.

  Me:I know about Jessica.

  X:I love you, and—

  Me:And what? AND Jessica?

  X:It’s not like that.

  Me:Then what’s it like?

  He fumbles, nervous, quiet.

  Only guilty people are nervous. Liars. Cheaters.

  I will not be the Fool.

  Every second ticking by

  I just want to die.

  X:I don’t love Jessica.

  His long, beautiful fingers,

  wrap around a towel.

  The same hands that wrapped around

  my face

  first kiss

  my waist

  his embrace

  stroking my hair

  touching my shoulders.

  X:I do it sometimes …

  drugs …

  but mostly I sell …

  to people like … Jessica.

  X breaks down.

  Sobs into the towel while I try to stop the room

  from spinning.

  Says he’s sorry about the lies,

  that he told them to save me,

  protect me.

  Confesses he

  sells meth

  dabbles in coke

  pushes a pill or two

  needs money

  needs me

  knows he’s weak

  hates himself

  less so

  when he’s with me.

  Didn’t want me to know because he thinks I’m

  perfectbeautifulsmarttalented

  nothing like him.

  Hearing these things makes my

  energyrageangerinsecurities

  slide down his bathroom drain.

  X:You and me, Sam. That’s all I ever wanted.

  Me:I don’t care about the drugs.

  my angermy standquickly losing steam

  Me:I care about the lies.

  His weakness deflates me,

  corrodes my brain as we

  hold each other and I see,

  while the drugs scare me

  it’s not nearly as much

  as the distance they create,

  the lies and deceit.

  This is what I believe,

  honestly.

  But SELLING?

  He swears he’ll stop

  if I promise not to leave.

  As he wraps his arms around me

  big

  strong

  close

  I feel we

  are yet again

  meant to be

  like serendipity like floating downstream like good ole Henri

  like love works.

  Places

  After the fight,

  our relationship takes a turn.

  I’ve found my place

  my role

  protector, mother hen—the new definition of me.

  If Mom cannot be this to me

  I can be this to X.

  It’s what Lady Elba meant for me,

  the High Priestess.

  Still, I await my something big.

  X and I find our new stride,

  it feels right

  and strange.

  Like a bird unable to fly

  or balloons caught in a tree

  time turns.

  Jane gets headaches daily

  Melanie will only talk to her invisible friend,

  Valerie

  Miguel nags me

  Dad ignores me

  Ted begins texting me

  April is now a blonde

  Gavin,

  my Gavin

  my guide

  stops talking to me.

  Says I’m a fool if I think X can change.

  Doesn’t have time for foolish people.

  Tips his hat, leaves me

  with his half of our banana split

  in Thirty-One bittersweet Flavors.

  But the Fool is my friend, right, Lady Elba?

  How Smoke Burns

  Lying around in X’s bed,

  nestled up in the crook of his arm

  watching him smoke

  in and out

  thinking about how we’re

  in and out

  just like that smoke.

  falling in lovein

  lyingout

  making upin

  fightingout

  Cigarettes.

  The only habit he’s kept.

  I’m about to turn into

  Sam, High Priestess, mother hen,

  lecture about what he actually rolls in them

  when he looks at me

  a look I recall

  a look I remember

  a look before he called me

  a baby

  I shift my weightlift up my armgrab his cigarette

  take a

  long

  slow

  draw

  choke from the sheer power

  of his home-rolled cigarette.

  X laughs,

  reminds me that Dad would die if he caught me smoking

  because I am not a rebel,

  I’m reputable.

  We Hendersons have a reputation to uphold …

  His wordsinhaled in, blown outmake so much sense.

  Where’s the Sam that wanted to

  try thingsexperience lifeall of it?

  All of It

  With the good comes the bad.

  But is the bad really so bad?

  How
bad is bad?

  Like lonely break-up bad? Or smiling-at-every-rally bad?

  Worse than being called a baby?

  Played like a fool?

  How bad is bad?

  Inferior to a boring step-mom?

  Living without my mom?

  Loving a boy who loves drugs?

  How bad is bad?

  Can it eliminate friendships? Take father from daughter?

  Cause cancer?

  Is bad poorer than a political promise?

  More repulsive than lying?

  How bad is bad?

  And if I like it,

  does that make it good?

  How bad

  is

  bad?

  Consulting April, Pt. II

  PickupPickupPickupPickupPickupPickupPickupPickupPickup

  April’s phone goes into voicemail.

  I’m out with my man. Leave it at the beep.

  Since when is Ralph a man?

  A

  clueless boy—yes

  lazy guy—sure

  but man?

  I try again.

  This time she picks up.

  I plop on my bed, get comfy.

  April:Wanna do something later?

  Me:I can’t.

  I mumble something about X.

  April:Because you’re a couple again?

  I mumble a perhaps.

  Me:Thought you of all people would understand.

  April:I want to, but he’s—

  Me:Trying to change.

  April:Trying?

  Me:Maybe it’s not so bad.

  April:What did I tell you about boys and drugs?

  I quote our cafeteria conversation.

  Me:People who do drugs are lame.

  April:Good. So we agree.

  Me:But not all drugs are bad.

  Me:Some save lives, you know.

  Me:Cure cancer even.

  April:Right.

  Her voice trails

  sounds so far away

  like a fuzzy, unfamiliar connection.

  She sighs.

  April:Look, are you okay?

  I touch a dried-up rose petal beside my bed.

  One from X.

  From the sidewalk. It’s delicate.

  And beautiful.

  Me:Yeah, I’m good.

  Consulting Gavin, Pt. II

  Gavin:You leave him yet?

  Me:You left me with your ice cream sundae.

  Gavin:And you left … ?

  Me:It’s complicated.

  Gavin:It’s simple.

  Me:You should try being more forgiving.

  I’m thinking of George.

  Gavin:You should try being honest.

  Me:What’s that supposed to mean?

  Gavin:He does drugs.

  Which means he is a druggie.

  He tells lies.

  Which means he is a liar.

  Me:People can change.

 

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