Hold Me Tight

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Hold Me Tight Page 7

by Lorie Ann Grover


  What would Mrs. Crow say

  if they told her,

  “Oh, you are just separated

  from Chris”?

  Yeah, right.

  Some big comfort

  separation is.

  The Envelope

  I stare into the nearly empty fridge.

  “Man, Mom. There’s nothing

  to eat for breakfast.”

  “I’ll fix you and Dale-o some oatmeal.

  He’ll be in here looking soon enough too.

  I shove the door closed,

  flop down at the table,

  and wait.

  “Can’t we get some

  better groceries now?” I whine.

  She stops measuring the water.

  “What do you mean?”

  “Wasn’t that money Dad gave you last night?”

  She shakes her head.

  “The envelope, I mean.”

  “That’s for the house payment

  and the utilities, Estele.”

  “Can’t we just go grocery shopping instead?”

  She flicks the burner knob hard.

  “No, Estele Leann, we can’t.

  We need this house.”

  She bangs the pot down,

  and water sloshes out.

  “Sorry, Mom,” I say super quietly.

  She grips the edge of the stove tight

  and nods.

  “It’s okay, sweetheart.”

  Is it?

  Because

  Because of my headaches,

  I have to visit the school counselor

  instead of going out to lunch recess.

  Mom told our whole big fat story

  to him, I guess.

  She said she had to

  for my own good.

  And of course

  she didn’t mention it

  till I was getting out of the car

  this morning.

  At least the counselor is nice and all.

  But I can’t even look at him.

  He knows

  everything.

  “How are you, Estele?”

  “Fine.”

  “I understand

  your father came by last night.”

  I shrug and swing my legs.

  “It was just a stupid visit.

  I don’t want to talk about it.”

  That keeps him away from asking

  me

  way too personal stuff.

  He should be talking to my dad

  anyway

  about why

  he

  left us.

  And then I could get out to the playground.

  Besides, I’m getting a headache in here,

  and Ms. Dryden

  has my medicine.

  Money

  Walking back to class,

  I find a dime and pick it up.

  Will anyone get the reward

  for finding Chris?

  Or will there be a ransom

  for him?

  Will the kidnapper

  want money

  to give Chris back?

  How much?

  How much would his folks pay

  a kidnapper

  to get him back?

  A million?

  Probably.

  I rub the ridges of the dime.

  Could I pay my dad to come back?

  How much?

  A million?

  Probably not enough

  to make him

  want to come back

  to us.

  Besides,

  all I have is this dime.

  I stuff it into my jeans.

  I gave my piggy bank to Mom

  for food.

  Idiot

  Maybe

  someone is paying Dad

  to stay away.

  Like some TV show

  is filming us,

  and hell win us a million bucks

  if he stays away for a long time.

  Maybe a million

  is enough for Dad.

  If he played the game,

  he’d be an idiot.

  I look around the hallway.

  No hidden cameras anywhere.

  He’s still an idiot.

  Questions

  The note says:

  “Message from Starfleet:

  So what was that about?

  Where were you after lunch?

  Wally”

  I shrug.

  I know he sees it

  and that’s enough

  for him to know

  not to ask

  any more questions.

  Reading Time

  I don’t think we should read any further

  in The Wizard of Oz.

  Chris will miss out

  and not know

  how Dorothy really gets back to her family.

  I bet Ms. Dryden skipped last week

  hoping he’d get back to hear the story.

  But today

  she opens to the bookmark

  and reads aloud anyway.

  Lies

  Dorothy’s shoes

  weren’t red.

  They were silver.

  In the movie on TV,

  they were sparkly red.

  Liars.

  Maybe the TV

  is lying about Chris, too.

  Maybe he’s not kidnapped

  after all.

  Or …

  Maybe the TV is right this time.

  What if Chris was kidnapped

  and now he’s dead?

  Deader than the Wicked Witch of the East.

  Dead.

  The word sizzles through my brain

  like the electricity

  zoomed through the circuit panel

  we made this morning.

  It burns and sears.

  I yank the battery

  out of that thought.

  Hats, Coats, Socks

  “Everybody remember

  your hats, coats, and socks tomorrow.”

  Ms. Dryden straightens her desk.

  We file out the door.

  “Of course, if it was a real snow day,

  we’d get to stay home,” says Jarin.

  “It’s still fun, though,” says Wally,

  shouldering his backpack.

  “It’s fun to nail you with snowballs!”

  He grins.

  “You wish” is all she says back.

  We step out into the sunshine.

  It must be ninety-five degrees today.

  “See ya,” I call to Wally.

  “Later,” he says.

  Is that what Chris said

  to his buddies

  when they saw him

  last?

  He’s Thinking

  I give Dale a push

  on our swing in the avocado tree.

  He flies high.

  “You know what, Es?” he shouts.

  “What?” I ask.

  “I don’t need Daddy to come back.

  “Really?”

  I push again.

  “Really.

  I can

  be the man

  and take care of us”—

  he leaps out of the swing

  at the highest point—

  “myself!”

  Dale lands hard.

  His legs buckle;

  he falls to the grass,

  then gets up quick.

  “I meant to do that,” he says.

  Laundry

  Mom turns the socks

  right side out

  and lines them up

  on the couch.

  I try to match the pairs.

  “If it was an option,”

  she starts, then pauses really long,

  “would you want to stay

  with your dad?”

  “What?”

  My hand is stuck

  in a sock ball.

  Is she saying

  that she
wants us to?

  I yank out my fist.

  “I mean if you could?” she says.

  “Do you want us—”

  “No! I don’t want you

  to leave,

  but if you had the opportunity—”

  “Mom, this

  is my home.”

  “Our home.” She smiles.

  We work quietly

  and match up all the socks.

  Not one

  is left

  alone.

  Back Massage

  Mom lets me stay up late

  if I massage her back.

  I dig my thumbs into her back muscles

  as hard as I can.

  She sighs and hits the remote

  to run through the channels.

  It’s worth making her feel better,

  even if I didn’t get to stay up.

  It’s one more thing she might stick around here for.

  Gone

  The message about Chris

  doesn’t loop

  the bottom of the TV screen anymore.

  But that doesn’t mean anything.

  Does it?

  No.

  Except that everyone knows now

  who to look for.

  Not Going to Be

  Whenever Mom cooks now,

  she sweats

  and rocks from one foot to the other

  because her back hurts so much

  from being so way pregnant.

  Dale holds his sword tight

  when he heads off to bed.

  I look at myself

  in the bathroom mirror

  every morning

  and say,

  “Not a victim,

  not a victim,

  not a victim.”

  Fake Snow

  It’s Chris’s grandpa

  who owns the ice factory.

  So once a year

  a giant dump truck comes

  and unloads a pile of crushed ice

  on the school playground

  next to the hibiscus bushes.

  Each grade gets a turn to play.

  Everyone wears a couple of sweaters

  and socks on their hands.

  We chuck snowballs at each other

  and scream and laugh.

  Today, we didn’t see Chris’s grandpa

  or his dad,

  but two trucks came.

  We had more snow than ever.

  Wally and I scored two great hits on Jarin.

  The ice chunks

  stuck in her fake bunny-fur jacket.

  But she got me hard

  on the back of my head.

  Wally checked for blood.

  Man, that girl is mean.

  Overall, it was still a blast.

  But Chris wasn’t there.

  And I didn’t get to tell Dad

  all about it.

  He used to always

  want to hear

  about Snow Day.

  Buzzed Over

  “Come on, get in.”

  Mr. Paul grins up at me.

  I climb into the teensy backseat.

  Dale stays on the curb.

  “Mom says not to ride with strangers.”

  “Come on, Doozerdude.”

  “Dale-o, I’m not a stranger.

  Get in.”

  Mr. Paul pats the front seat.

  “Your mother didn’t feel up to driving

  so I buzzed over for her.”

  “What’s the secret password then?”

  “Bufo.”

  Dale grins and slides into the car.

  “That’s my favorite kind of toad.”

  “Me too,” says Mr. Paul.

  And he drives us home

  while Dale tells him

  all about Snow Day.

  Pizza

  Even if

  he ordered in for us

  pizza with crab topping,

  and played cars with Dale,

  and did the dishes,

  and helped with my math,

  he didn’t

  need to sit in Dad’s chair

  at the table

  or rub Mom’s neck

  like that.

  Morning News

  Mom flicks on the TV

  while Dale and I eat our cereal.

  “Chris Crow has been missing for over two weeks. His parents maintain hope while the authorities pursue leads. Former clients of Mr. Crow’s law office are being interviewed.”

  The camera zooms in on Chris’s mom. “Please give my boy back,” she begs, choking the words out.

  A commercial

  for a remote-control car comes on.

  “Cool I want that!” Dale sputters.

  “You make me sick!”

  I dump my cereal down the disposal.

  “Estele Leann. You apologize

  to your brother right now.

  He doesn’t realize—”

  “Sorry,” I barely mutter,

  and I stuff my math book

  into my backpack.

  Doozerdude still

  makes me sick.

  Recess Giants

  Wally does a giant on the bar.

  “Whoa!” he yells.

  His body sticks out straight

  as he twirls around and around.

  He breaks in the middle

  and his hips nail the bar.

  “Ugh.”

  I hold tight

  till the bars stop shaking.

  “Cool, huh?” he asks.

  “Warp speed on that one,” I agree.

  “Try it, Essie.”

  “No, I like this better.”

  I scoot back

  and spin.

  Over and over.

  The bar rocks

  against my knees,

  then thighs,

  till I slow

  and end up hanging down.

  I look up at Wally‘s dizzy, freckly face.

  “I like to spin

  all curled up tight.”

  “Not me,” he says

  and swings out

  to do more giants.

  “I like to fly!” he yells.

  PE

  My class gathers closer

  around the bars.

  Coach Skytema has his stopwatch.

  Buffy is shaking

  in her flexed-arm hang.

  “Keep it up, Buff,” says Juan Carlos.

  “Fourteen, fifteen,” counts Coach.

  “I can’t do this,” I whisper to Wally.

  “Sure you can.” He nudges my shoulder.

  That’s what he says

  every year.

  But I can’t.

  I can’t even hang

  for three seconds.

  Buffy drops to the dirt.

  ”Excellent endurance!”

  Coach high-fives her.

  ”Essie,” he calls.

  Oh, great.

  Coach’s Announcement

  ”Essie has the qualifying time

  in the shuttle run,

  the fifty-yard dash,

  and the hundred.”

  Someone whistles.

  I tug my braids.

  ”All she needs

  is fifteen seconds

  on the flexed-arm hang.”

  ”No way,” Jarin says.

  ”Okay, Essie.” He looks at me.

  ”Palms away from you.

  Step up on the stool,

  and then I’ll pull it away.”

  I’m shaking,

  and I haven’t even

  touched the bar.

  As Tight As I Can

  I space my hands.

  Nod to Coach.

  Clench as tight as I can.

  He pulls away the stool.

  And

  I drop.

  Not even two seconds.

  A couple of boys bust up laughing.

  Another whispers, ”Loser.”

  I turn from Jarin�
��s smirk.

  ”Told you I couldn’t, Wally,”

  I choke out.

  He gives me the Vulcan sign

  to live long and prosper.

  In other words,

  it’s okay.

  ”Sorry about that.”

  Coach pats my shoulder.

  ”Every year you miss

  the fitness badge

  by the flexed-arm hang.”

  ”Yeah.”

  He crosses my name

  off the list,

  and I shrink

  to the back

  of the crowd.

  A Shower

  With Mr. Paul’s

  leftover pizza

  and Mom’s rice and black beans,

  I’m almost full.

  I get a clean towel

  from the linen closet

  and go to shower.

  ”Oh, man. Mom!” I yell.

  There’s water all over

  the bathroom floor.

  Floaty toys are scattered everywhere,

  and there’s a gray scum ring

  in the tub.

  Mom comes up behind me.

  ”What is it now, Estele?”

  ”Look what that Doozerdude did!”

  ”Estele, I’m tired.

  Just clean it up

  and drop the issue.”

  ”But Mom!”

  ”Do it.”

  She shuffles to her room.

  I throw Dale’s towel down

  into the slop

  and shove it around with my foot.

  He gets away

  with everything!

  Tight

  Dale peeks in my room

  at bedtime.

  ”Did you get the fitness award, Es?”

  ”No.” I refuse

  to look away

  from my book.

  ”Flexed-arm hang?”

  ”Yes.”

  ”That stinks, Es.”

  He doesn’t go away.

  ”I think you should have

  gotten the award.”

  He hugs my arm tight

  and runs off.

  I look up into my dresser mirror.

  A little bit of the mad stuff

  slips off my face.

  Picking Up My Room

  Chris gets the fitness award

  every year.

  He has like four patches.

  The boys get to do pull-ups

  and he aces those.

  He really is fit.

  But he didn’t get

  to do the pull-ups yet.

  Will they save the patch for him?

  For when he gets back

  or if—

  Smack

  ”It’s Friday.

  It’s Friday,”

  Dale sings all the way to school.

  His big head

  balanced on his little neck.

  I just want to smack it.

  He took the last cereal

  the last milk,

  and left goops of toothpaste

  in the sink that I had to rub out.

  ”It’s Friday.

  It’s Friday.”

  Mom joins in the singing.

  I glare at my reflection

  in the window.

  I want

  to smack everyone

  this morning.

  Whacking

  Ms. Dryden gives us tasks.

  ”Only a week until vacation.

  Let’s start getting this room in order.”

 

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