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    Ghosting

    Page 22
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      and hobble back

      onto the ice.

      Then I take off after Brendan,

      camera clutched firmly

      in my mittened hand.

      The number of people thins out

      as I get farther away

      from the harbor.

      There are

      no bonfires

      here.

      The night is perfectly still,

      the moon

      almost full.

      The only sound

      I can hear now is

      my skates

      cutting

      the

      ice.

      The cold wind freezes my face,

      but it is exhilarating

      swooping along

      the glassy smooth surface,

      one foot,

      then the other,

      whoosh whoosh,

      like an Olympic speed skater.

      At least I feel like I’m going that fast,

      but I can’t seem

      to catch up to

      Brendan and his brother.

      A lone torch

      marks the spot

      where Artie Phelps must’ve left off his

      grooming.

      The ice is rough here,

      so I slow down.

      I’m beginning to think that

      Brendan and his brother

      are headed all the way

      into Chicago

      when I hear voices

      ahead of me.

      From the torchlight behind

      I can just make out

      the wheelchair

      and

      the skater,

      and I catch

      my breath.

      Brendan and his brother

      are doing

      a figure eight,

      in concentric circles,

      passing each other

      in the middle.

      They are awkward

      and unpolished,

      but it is

      an awe-inspiring,

      humbling

      sight.

      And the most beautiful thing

      about it is

      the concentration and

      the joy on

      both their faces.

      Someone skates up next to me

      and I turn to see

      Chloe Carney.

      She is intently

      watching

      the two boys

      skate.

      Then she turns to me

      and smiles.

      Wednesday, March 9

      ANIL

      1. The whole point of a shrine,

      I thought, was praying.

      But I have no talent for praying.

      I’m too self-conscious,

      too analytical.

      My prayers tend to be

      more like checklists,

      or mathematical formulas.

      2. My mom says there is

      no right way to pray

      and that prayer is really just

      thinking.

      Focused thinking perhaps.

      Anyway, it’s not like I kneel

      in front of my dresser and pray.

      More often, I lie on my bed,

      glancing over at the pieces of glass,

      the roses, and the candle,

      and yes, up at those

      glow-in-the-dark stars

      pasted on the ceiling,

      which have become an

      unofficial part of my shrine.

      3. My mother has already started

      planning the feast that she will cook

      for the Hindu festival of Holi

      which in India marks the

      start of spring.

      It always falls on

      the day of the first full moon

      in March, which this year

      is on the 19th.

      Holi is also called

      the Festival of Colors.

      At night people light bonfires

      to say good-bye to winter.

      They gather together to

      sing and dance and play music.

      And during the day they throw

      gulal at each other—

      brightly colored powders

      that you carry in your pocket

      to fling at anyone

      you meet.

      Everyone knows to wear

      old clothes on Holi because

      the gulal will stain.

      By the end of the day

      everyone is covered with

      brilliant colored splotches—

      on hair, faces, eyelashes, lips,

      clothes, shoes.

      Like they’ve been tie-dyed.

      I love photos of Holi,

      the laughter on everyone’s face.

      As if they’re throwing

      Technicolor clouds of happiness

      into the air.

      Anointing

      everyone around them

      with color.

      4. I still think about Maxie.

      In a different universe,

      I imagine spending Holi with her,

      us laughing together,

      drenched in color.

      But she has made it clear that

      I am an outcast to her, that

      we cannot be friends.

      And sometimes I do not know

      if I can recover from that.

      If I could wash away

      these feelings, the way you can

      cleanse yourself of the gulal powders

      at the end of Holi, I would.

      But what kind of unholy joke is it

      that I should have stumbled across

      this stubbornly unyielding joy

      in a girl’s crooked smile

      on that one terrible night.

      Friday, April 8

      POLICE CHIEF AUBREY DELAFIELD

      When it looked like one of those kids

      was going to die,

      the prosecutor was all set

      to slap Walter Smith with

      Murder One.

      But as soon as the boy who lost an eye

      came out of the coma,

      things shifted.

      There was plenty of talk.

      That Walter Smith was on suicide watch, which I knew to be true, early on anyway.

      That his court-assigned lawyer was going to plead not guilty by reason of insanity.

      That he was going to plead not guilty period, using a defense similar to the ‘Stand Your Ground’ laws they’ve got in states like Arizona and Alabama, under the theory that he had a legitimate fear of being under attack.

      Then on a cold morning in April,

      word came down that Walter Smith was going

      to plead guilty.

      A plea bargain had been reached,

      second-degree murder,

      with a possible sentence of eight to nineteen years in prison,

      depending on the judge’s final decision.

      I wondered why Walter decided

      to plead guilty.

      I heard it was against the advice of his lawyer.

      My best guess is it had to do with

      all those tears I saw him shed

      that night,

      on the curb

      and at the jail.

      I remember thinking at the time that

      he was like a kid who had done something wrong,

      and knew it,

      and felt bad.

      WALTER

      When a marshal is hired to protect a town but it turns out the town is populated by the lawless and the insane,

      the only option left for the sheriff is to

      turn in his badge.

      Monday, April 11

      EMMA

      We get a call from the prosecutor

      saying that Walter Smith

      is going to plead guilty.

      He asks if we want

      to attend the hearing,

      maybe even say something to the judge.

      Faith isn’t sure she wants to go.

      But I am sure.
    Which is surprising

      because lately there has been very little I’m sure of.

      Tuesday, April 19

      EMMA

      The day of the hearing, Faith

      decides to come with me, even

      though I told her she didn’t have to.

      Anil is the only other one of us there.

      He is with his parents and seeing him

      in the courtroom is somehow comforting.

      Chloe told me Brendan refused to come, mainly because

      his dad wanted him to, wanted everyone in the courtroom

      to see Brendan in his wheelchair.

      Brendan’s dad thought that their seeing the wheelchair

      would get Walter Smith slapped in jail for

      the maximum sentence allowed by the law.

      Chloe says that Brendan’s turned a corner.

      He’s more interested in looking ahead than looking back.

      And that he doesn’t care what his dad wants.

      I stare at Walter Smith, who looks so small and pale

      in his oversize glasses, and all I can think is that he

      looks like one of those scrawny stubby-tailed squirrels,

      the ones you see frozen in the middle of the road

      as your car barrels toward them, and you know

      that squirrel isn’t long for this world.

      And suddenly I know

      I have to say something.

      Something important.

      When the prosecutor looks over at me,

      I stand up. My hands are shaking

      and my tongue feels thick in my mouth.

      I start to talk but only a

      croaking sound comes out. The judge

      asks me to speak up.

      I clear my throat,

      take a deep breath

      and this time my voice is loud, clear.

      We were all at fault, I say. Not just Walter Smith.

      We were all to blame.

      WALTER SMITH

      When the girl with the dark-red ponytail stands up to speak

      I realize she is the sister of the girl with the dog,

      the one on the bike. They look a little alike,

      but this one has a harder face, not as nice-looking.

      But then I notice her hands are shaking,

      and what she says surprises me.

      She says everything that happened that night

      wasn’t just my fault. We were all to blame.

      And I suddenly remember the movie High Noon and how

      the marshal’s nice wife who wears white dresses

      is the only one in the whole town who helps the marshal,

      who stands beside him when the bad guys come.

      The girl with the pony tail now has tears running

      down her cheeks, and she turns toward me

      looks me straight in the eye.

      And she says, “I’m sorry.”

      Tears are running out of my eyes, too, and then

      a man with a red face jumps up and starts yelling

      about how his son is crippled for life because of

      “that sonofabitch” and I realize he means me.

      The judge bangs her gavel, telling the man to be quiet.

      He won’t and so a sheriff takes him away.

      I look at the ponytail girl, sitting next to her sister.

      They are holding hands and looking back at me.

      And my heart starts beating hard because just for a second

      I think that maybe there still are good guys

      in this world. And that maybe I shouldn’t

      hand in my badge after all.

      Saturday, July 9

      MAXIE

      It is a warm Saturday in

      early July.

      Mom is in the kitchen,

      trying a new recipe for turkey chili,

      and Dad is off at the garden center.

      Now that he’s got a job,

      Dad wants to get the backyard

      fixed up.

      The doorbell rings.

      I open the door

      and Anil Sayanantham

      is

      standing

      there.

      Right away I can’t

      breathe.

      Hi, Maxie, he says.

      Hi, I half whisper, half say.

      How are you? he asks.

      I stammer back that I’m okay.

      Which,

      despite my current inability

      to breathe,

      is actually sort of

      true.

      Uh, he starts, then clears his throat. I’ve been wanting to tell you that those photos you took, the ones in Versions, were amazing. Congratulations on getting the Ellen Loomis Award. You deserved it.

      Thanks, I manage to reply.

      This is so surreal,

      I think to myself,

      chitchatting on the front

      stoop

      with Anil Sayanantham.

      I heard you’re going to Columbia, I say.

      Well, yes and no, he says, I’m actually taking a year off. Going to India to live with my mom’s family. Work in a clinic, travel.

      Wow, that’s great, I say.

      How about you, next year I mean?

      Uh, not India exactly, but I did get into Northwestern, which is sort of a miracle.

      I hear my mom calling me

      from inside

      the house.

      Well, I say, it was nice to see you, but I . . .

      Maxie, Anil blurts out, his cinnamon-colored skin tinged with a red blush, I was wondering, if you, well, would like to go to dinner with me next Saturday night? And maybe a movie?

      I am

      floored.

      Is Anil Sayanantham

      actually asking me out

      on a

      date?

      Really?

      Like nothing ever happened?

      Like somehow we are

      just a normal

      teenage boy

      and

      teenage girl?

      I can’t take it in.

      I feel tears brimming up

      in my eyes.

      Because

      Anil is

      that night.

      I stare at him.

      But then I think to myself

      that Chloe

      and Brendan

      and Emma

      and Faith

      and Felix

      are all

     


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