The Sky Between You and Me

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The Sky Between You and Me Page 20

by Catherine Alene


  Beneath the exam room lights

  Where she holds one up

  The other lying down

  Two sisters

  Her life

  How will she

  Could I

  Forget

  Forgive

  The cause

  This worthless waste

  of a girl

  Why Can’t They See?

  All that scared

  Seeps through the cracks in my heart

  Fractured

  As her arm

  Lacey

  My Lacey

  Their Lacey

  Sterile gauze pale

  Holding her arm

  Set straight

  Broken—so broken

  Even Dad’s arm wrapped around my shoulder can’t hold me

  Together

  The jagged sobs send the pieces of me flying

  That don’t understand why they’re not mad

  Those three sets of eyes

  One’s arm wrapped up tight

  The others by her side

  Fortresses around the wheelchair

  That wasn’t meant to hold her

  Not Lacey

  My Lacey

  Their Lacey

  “You saved us,” Lacey says. “Got us out.”

  This is worse

  Than the slate

  Not this kindness—

  It’s not right

  Their grandma’s garden-stained hands hugging me limp

  Kierra

  Butterfly-bandaged cheek pressed against mine

  Hugging me too

  Why can’t they

  Don’t they see?

  It was me

  All me

  The why, that’s the we, in the now, standing here

  Can’t they see her?

  Broken—so broken

  Here now

  Like she was then

  When we were the fortresses

  Dad and I

  Dad’s arm reaches through the hole

  Time left behind

  To pull me close

  And I know

  Dad sees her too

  Can hardly see past

  The ghost

  Who was our life

  Sink or Swim

  “It wasn’t your fault—

  You know that,” Dad had said.

  Those words were easier to swallow

  Almost made it down to my heart

  As I’d stared into the rearview mirror

  Watching the hospital shrink

  small, small, small

  Caught in the half-moon collarbone groove

  Of my neck

  Those words woke me up

  Made it impossible to breathe

  Drove me out to the porch to sit

  Gathering stars

  Around my shoulders

  Tracing tiptoe solar systems on the stairs

  Until I see it

  Frame scratched

  Otherwise intact

  Against the side of the house

  A Good Samaritan’s deed

  One better left undone

  My shadow pulls me

  Across the dry grass

  To the truck for tools

  Wrench, screwdriver, nails

  Hammered one at a time into the tires

  My bike

  Coming undone

  First one nut

  Then two

  Wheels, handlebars, seat

  From the frame

  Rattle-canned new

  Forever ago

  Thrown into the bed of the truck

  By hands slick with oil

  The keys drop from the sun visor

  Into my lap

  As I slam the door against the night

  Drive through grasshopper leg music

  Out to the pond

  Where I Frisbee-throw them in

  Tires

  Handlebars

  Catching

  Pieces of metal

  Of me

  Sinking into gone

  News of the Day

  Cody didn’t even know

  It had happened

  Until he drove into the parking lot this morning

  Where the words hit his windshield

  “Heard your girlfriend almost died yesterday,” they’d said

  As they grabbed books and bags out of their rig

  Parked alongside Cody’s rusted-out, dented-in orange truck

  Cody didn’t stay to ask

  Swung out of his truck

  Walked into a run

  Blasted into the cafeteria

  Through the line of heavy-eyed students

  Doing the breakfast shuffle

  In one door, out the other

  With waffle sticks

  Scared me so bad

  Asia too

  The way his gaze was flying around the room

  Until he found us

  Saw me

  He’d been out of town

  Should have called

  Didn’t know

  “What happened?”

  So I tell him

  Around the plastic stir stick in my mouth

  Worried flat between my teeth

  About the crumpled metal

  Ice-cube words

  Leave me cold

  Even the warm coming off my coffee

  Can’t make it disappear

  All that cold

  That pulls my eyes into my coffee

  So much easier

  Than thinking about the part

  the ipecac and the purge

  the food I should never

  have eaten

  The part I never told

  Anyone

  About

  The guilt will wake me up

  Tonight

  Tomorrow

  And again

  Until the forever I don’t have to think about

  If I let myself grow cold

  But they won’t let me

  Not Cody

  Tipping my chin toward the light

  Or Asia

  Hand on mine from across the table

  Holding me down

  Lifting me up

  Willing me to blink

  Back into my life

  Hallway Confessional

  Dodging the shoe squeaking-jostling-growing, moving energy

  That fills the eight-minute space

  Between last class and next

  Kierra walks down the hall

  Comes right up to me and starts talking

  All chitchat

  Cast aside

  “I thought you’d been hit. You were just lying there. Crumpled next to your bike,” she says.

  The rest of the world falls away

  Leaves me standing

  Across from her

  On this island

  Of accountability

  I fell. I guess I—

  “I was driving too fast.”

  Kierra charges ahead

  Shoving my excuses out of the way with her words

  “It makes Lacey laugh when I fly up and down those hills. She’s so tiny she bounces all over the place, even in a seat belt. I know it’s not an excuse, but that’s why I was driving like that. I just love hearing her laugh.”

  Kierra pauses

  Clears her throat

  “Before our mom killed herself, she used to do it all the time. Laugh. You know?”

  And I do

  Not exactly


  Because no one’s lives

  Are exactly the same

  But still

  I think I know

  “Anyway, she saw you. On the ground. I jerked the wheel, slammed the brakes. My front tire blew, and then we were rolling. She was crying. And I couldn’t help her. Again. But you could. You did.”

  Kierra, I—

  “I should be mad at you. At myself. I don’t know. I don’t even care. All I know is, if I were to lose Lacey, I might as well die myself.”

  We stand there

  Looking at each other

  Me and her

  Because those last words

  Came so fast

  So hard

  They knocked the breath

  Out of me

  “Sometimes I hate it here,” Kierra says.

  But she’s not angry

  Just sad

  “I miss everything back home. My school. My friends.” She pauses. “My dad. I really miss my dad. But we can never go back. It’s just too…”

  Her voice melts

  Sad.

  I finish for her

  Without even thinking

  Immediately wishing I could take

  That word

  Back

  But she reaches out

  Pulls it in

  Exhales and nods

  “It is. Don’t tell anyone I said that last part, okay? About hating it here? Everyone has been so nice to me. They might feel bad if they knew, and they shouldn’t. It’s me. Like I said. I miss my old life.”

  And everyone who was in it

  I think

  “Anyway, here.”

  Kierra digs in her bag

  Pulls out a construction-paper star

  With a crayon picture on the front

  A girl and a dog

  From Lacey to me

  Tell her I said thank you, I say, taking it from her hands. And I hope she gets better soon.

  “I will.”

  Kierra pauses

  Turns to go

  But stops

  “I hope you do too.”

  I look down

  At the star in my hands

  As the bell rings

  Wondering just how much

  She

  And everyone else

  Knows

  Special Day

  I don’t know why

  I didn’t think this would be awkward

  I just didn’t expect them both to be here

  Kierra and her grandma Jean

  Standing alongside me at the edge of the carpet square

  Beneath the dancing numbers and animal cracker alphabet

  Behind the audience of seventeen kindergarteners

  Eyes trained on the one standing beside Miss Dixon

  Wearing a smile

  Holding the Sharpie

  That each of her classmates will use to initial the hot pink cast

  Encasing her arm

  Because that’s what she has requested

  On her Special Day

  An uppercase, proper noun, double-decker date

  Lacey’s first day back

  After three days out

  And her birthday

  Six years old today

  I knew her birthday was this month

  I’d just forgotten when

  It makes me sick

  To realize that I’ve been so

  Self-absorbed

  Lacey ran up to me when I walked in

  “I missed you!” she’d cried.

  Her voice so strong

  Soaring above the shadow of the little girl

  With sun-streaked braids

  Who had been so interested in her shoes

  Forever ago

  It made it worse to know that Kierra and their grandma Jean

  Had seen the package in my hand

  And assumed that the horse-print wrapping paper

  Curlicue ribbons

  Meant

  I remembered

  Because it never crossed their minds

  That it had been meant

  As a get-well-please-forgive-me gift

  Another day of just her and me

  Sitting on the beanbag chairs the color of lima beans

  Just me and her

  Or so I’d thought

  “Can you stay for my snack?” Lacey had asked

  As I handed her the gift

  That’s what I’m thinking about now

  as the kids all stand

  ready to single file past Lacey

  so excited to sign her cast

  That snack

  Caramel Rice Krispies Treats

  Individually wrapped

  One for everyone

  Including

  Me

  Insurmountable

  These are the things I can do:

  Ride a horse

  Rope a steer

  Drive a tractor

  Buck a bale

  Fix a fence

  This is the thing I cannot do:

  Eat

  The

  Rice Krispies Treat

  In my hand

  Knowing

  I should

  If I could

  I would?

  But my mind says

  Not this

  Not now

  Not even for Lacey

  Because

  There is a wall of numbers

  Stacked

  On the side

  Of the wrapper

  That wall

  It’s too tall

  Too thick

  I can’t make it

  Around

  Should-Would-Could

  The next part should be easy

  Here is how it should go

  I would understand

  Why

  I should

  Eat

  I would see

  How sick

  I

  Am

  I would know

  That this (eating)

  Is the right thing

  To

  Do

  If I admit that I can’t

  Couldn’t

  Do this

  Not even for Lacey

  I would have to admit

  I am

  out

  of

  control

  Cheese Sandwiches

  He made them

  Dad did

  One for each of us

  An after-school snack

  On matching blue plates

  Because he came home early today

  To check in

  To make sure

  I’m doing

  Okay

  I thought I’d have

  More time

  Before this discussion

  More time

  To figure

  Out

  How to

  What to

  Say

  But this sandwich

  In front of me

  Is making it difficult

  Impossible

  To speak

  Dad sits

  Sinks

  Into his chair

  Across from me

  At the kitchen table

  Hating myself

  As another hole opens

  Yawns and stretches wide

  Between us

  I wish I could tell him

  Why

  This began

  How

  It will end

  But I can’t
>
  Because I don’t

  Know

  So I stand

  On the far side of the hole

  Staring at my sandwich

  “It’s hard, isn’t it?”

  His words

  Soft and slow

  I nod

  Because it is

  He raises his sandwich

  Takes a bite

  Tips his head toward me

  Glancing at my sandwich

  As he chews

  Slowly

  Slowly

  Just one bite

  Then puts his sandwich down

  This sandwich

  It’s only cheese

  Two slices of bread

  I can do this

  One bite

  I can

  And I do

  Chewing

  Slowly

  Slowly

  Just one bite

  Then I put it down

  This is how we go

  Slowly

  Slowly

  He and I

  Ignoring the tears

  On our cheeks

  As we eat our sandwiches gone

  Follow-up Exam

  We need to check in, Dad said

  Make sure everything is okay

  What with the accident and with you

  Being so thin

  Too tired

  Just not able

  To

  Eat

  Not like you used to

  Even though

  As I pointed out

  I did

  Eat

  That sandwich

  Yesterday

  Which he knows

  Because he saw

  But still

  This is fine

  It makes sense

  A trip to see

  What is wrong

  If anything is

  Which I doubt

  pretend not to know

  it

  is

  On Second Thought

  Seeing this doctor

  the one who handed me red suckers after my booster shots

  pasted Bugs Bunny Band-Aids over my playground cuts

  who hugged me hard after Mom

  was gone

  Hadn’t seemed like a bad idea

  At first

  But now that I’m here

  Sitting in the waiting room

  Jiggling my knee

  Staring at the Highlights magazine in my lap

  It does

  Feel

  Bad

  The door to the hallway that leads to the exam room opens

  “Raesha, come on back,” Kami, the nurse in Snoopy-print scrubs, calls.

  I look at Dad

  Wish we could call it off

  But we’re here

  With my name

  Hanging in the air

  A smile on Kami’s face

  As she waits

 

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