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    The You I've Never Known

    Page 23
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      “No. Let it drop. We should open

      some windows. It stinks in here.”

      It does. It smells like sweat and weed

      and old booze with a float of tobacco.

      We finish the cleanup, windows

      open, Syrah flirting obnoxiously

      with Gabe all the while, and

      the strange thing about that is

      I don’t seem to care. To his credit,

      Gabe doesn’t bite, but if it’s only

      to impress me, I almost want

      him to know it’s okay if he does.

      Almost. Shouldn’t I feel more

      possessive? Is it just because

      I discovered something about

      him tonight I never expected?

      I’d say something completely

      foreign, but it’s not. It’s something

      I’m intimately aware of, having lived

      with it all my life. Dad hides it well

      most of the time, and obviously

      Gabe does, too. In fact, he disguises

      it better, or maybe it only seems

      that way because I’ve known him

      for such a short while. But beneath

      his gentle exterior, way down

      in the depths of those lizard eyes,

      roils a red-hot mantle of rage.

      Maya

      For Casey

      Oh my God! What’s happening? We’re a long way from New York City, but if it could happen there, maybe it could happen right here. It seems like the whole world’s gone crazy. NYC. North Carolina. There. Here. Everywhere. Crazy. Who would do such a despicable thing? Who? And why?

      It’s September 11. Your birthday. I got up early to see your daddy off to work and bake a cake for your party. It’s Tuesday, so I didn’t plan anything big, just a few of your playgroup buddies and their moms, who I can more rightly call acquaintances than friends.

      Daddy said we should’ve waited until Saturday, but I think a girl should celebrate the actual day she was born, rather than hold off to accommodate other people’s schedules. But now your party is on indefinite hold.

      Not too long after your daddy left, he called me. “Turn on the TV.”

      “Why? What channel?”

      “All of them. Just do it.”

      Every channel showed the same thing. The twin towers of the World Trade Center, the biggest buildings in this whole country, were in flames. Smoking. Falling apart. Someone flew planes into them. On purpose. Big planes. Jetliners.

      They showed it in slow motion.

      I couldn’t stop watching. Still can’t turn it off, even though I know people are dead. They keep repeating footage of them screaming. Falling. Jumping. Jumping from so high up in the air they could never survive, but they preferred that to burning to death.

      One of the towers crumbled. Crashed to the ground, nothing left but rubble, dust, and smoke. And bodies. In pieces. So much carnage. How do you escape when you’re seventy stories up in the air, only stairs to get you down, not knowing what’s below, or if what’s above you will crush you?

      Then the second tower broke apart, too. There were—are—people trapped inside. Some are first responders—cops, firefighters. Trying to save the others. You don’t know, baby girl, you don’t know.

      It’s like a scene from a movie. Some awful disaster flick. Only it’s real life. Real death. So many must have perished. Men. Women. Little kids. Babies. What if you and I were there in that building or on the ground, when it all came tumbling down?

      Now they’re saying another plane crashed into the Pentagon, and yet another in a field somewhere. Hijacked, all of them. Passengers and crew, minding their own business, traveling to or away from home.

      “Collateral damage.” That’s what the military spokesman called them. Not wives or parents or brothers. Cold as a mortuary slab. “Collateral damage.”

      A pretty newswoman, coaxed not to smile as she usually would, says, “These are concerted acts of terrorism.”

      Well, yeah. What else could they be? We don’t know who these terrorists were, or what motivated them to commit this kind of atrocity, and we won’t for a while. But our country is under attack. That means we—you and I—are under attack. This isn’t supposed to happen on American soil.

      I’ve never considered myself patriotic. Definitely not a fan of the military. I married a soldier so I could divorce my mother, not because of his uniform or because I believed in some noble cause. But since this morning, love for my country has skyrocketed.

      I don’t know a single soul in New York City, but as I sit glued to the television, watching them run for their lives or stand there, staring in shock, I’m crying for all of them, and for every American. We’re afraid. So very afraid.

      The base is scrambling, all personnel on high alert, and I’m sure every active installation in the country is the same way. The threat feels foreign, and what might happen next, not to mention when, is anyone’s guess.

      Four different people managed to fly four domestic jet aircraft into four separate targets. Well, the one that went down in Pennsylvania probably missed whatever it was aiming for. Even so, how is this possible?

      “Don’t worry,” your daddy tells me. “Everything will be fine. You’re safe. I’ll see to it, no matter what.”

      I wish I could believe him, but anxiety surrounds me like a prickly aura, vaguely electric. I work very hard to keep you from sensing it. You’ve played and napped through the whole thing, happily unaware.

      While you were sleeping, Tati called, and we talked for a long, long time. One of her cousins is a New York City policeman. She doesn’t know if he’s all right. “Air travel will probably be tough for a while,” she said. “But when it eases up, I want to come visit. Think that would be okay?”

      It was the best thing I heard all day, other than you trying out new words that you happened to overhear. “Pre-zi-den?”

      “Close. President.”

      I wouldn’t want to be President Bush right now. Or anyone in charge of anything. I just want to shut the blinds and hide.

      Daddy won’t be home, so I fix your favorite dinner—mini corn dogs and Fritos. After you finish, I go ahead and light the three candles on your cake, and as I watch you licking chocolate frosting off your fingers, I wonder about your future in a world gone totally insane.

      What will you face tomorrow? In a year, or five, or a decade? How can I possibly keep you safe when I don’t know what might fall from the sky? Will I spend the rest of my life looking up, or scanning the horizon for incoming planes?

      Before today, I was only really afraid of two people. My mother. And your daddy. Sometimes he stares at me and I think he wants to take me apart, and I don’t know why except there’s a piece of him that only appears when roused by anger. So I try very hard not to make him mad. Now, with everything going on, he’ll be ridiculously on edge. As long as he doesn’t take it out on you, I’ll make it all right.

      Happy birthday, my angel. I’m sorry this day will always be linked to this awful event, but with time the fear will fade and I’ll do everything I can to make our celebrations happy ones. For now, I’ll share a piece of cake with you. Then we’ll watch Dora the Explorer until you’re ready for bed, and after I tuck you in tonight, I’ll worry about tomorrow.

      Ariel

      Last Night

      Post Gabe-and-Garrett nightmare

      I immersed myself in the dream

      that is Monica. Once Syrah’s house

      emptied we smoked a little weed,

      and then it was past time for bed.

      You two take my mom’s bed, urged Syrah.

      “You’re sure she and her boyfriend are

      out of town? I’d hate to surprise them.”

      I’m sure. She and the nimrod don’t have

      sex here. I think she’s afraid I’ll learn

      something a girl shouldn’t by listening

      in on her mom. So when they’re in the mood

      they get a room. And, l
    ucky you, that

      also means the sheets are mostly clean.

      Where’s your sister tonight? asks

      Monica. One of us could take her bed.

      She spent the night with a friend, and if

      you’d rather sleep separately, okay by me.

      No Judgment

      Either way. I love that about

      Syrah. She went off to her own

      bed to dream about Gabe

      or whatever. I was so happy

      when he finished the cleanup,

      then begged off for the night.

      Not sure if he intuited my

      negative reaction or if the act

      of beating people to a bloody

      pulp tired him out, but he left

      right away, reminding me

      we’d talk after my game.

      Once Syrah shut her door,

      I asked, “You want to be alone

      tonight? It’s okay if you do.”

      It would’ve hurt my feelings

      terribly, but I wasn’t about

      to say so. “Feliz cumpleaños,

      mi bella amiga.” Happy birthday,

      my beautiful friend, and that’s

      exactly how she looked there

      in the low lamplight. Beautiful—

      wild and dark and unpredictable,

      like some creature of the forest.

      She held out her hand.

      Quiero pasar la noche contigo.

      We spent the night together.

      Monica’s Beauty

      Was blanketed by darkness,

      but every unique inch of her

      is pressed into my memory.

      All the recent ugliness melted

      beneath the luscious mocha

      of her skin, a whisper against

      mine, promising tomorrows

      saturated with love. Love. I hardly

      know how to accept the possibility

      that it’s real, and available to me.

      We had no need to hurry, and

      in the tarrying, I found something

      unexpected—an exchange of energy

      so intense I think we could have

      come without even touching.

      But touch we did, with mouths

      and tongues and, oh, you can hardly

      imagine the incredible sensuousness

      of the lowly fingertip when bringing

      pleasure to a partner is your entire

      realm of being for an hour or more.

      More. Much more, until, completely

      spent, we fell asleep, safe in each other’s

      arms. Oh, that was sex as it should be.

      What I Can Say

      In retrospect

      is I still like sex.

      But I think it’s better

      with trust involved.

      I didn’t have to worry

      about doing anything

      right

      or

      wrong.

      I just had to trust

      we’d take care of each

      other, there in bed,

      but also after,

      when maybe cake

      becomes the determining factor,

      or tamales or a horror flick.

      Anything except

      orgasm

      which is not

      necessarily dependent

      on someone wanting

      to spend the night with you.

      What I Can’t Say

      With certainty is how

      I feel about Gabe

      this morning.

      Maybe I overreacted

      on a purely emotional level.

      I mean, he was protecting me,

      and had he not stepped up,

      who knows what might

      have happened?

      Still, pulling back

      from the situation and

      dissecting his response,

      I come away

      not only disappointed

      but also a little scared.

      Not so much scared

      that Gabe would hurt me.

      I’ve never felt threatened

      by him before. But then

      again, how would I know

      exactly what might

      set him off?

      And that’s what

      really scares me—

      that I never noticed

      even hints of warning

      signs before.

      Or Maybe

      It was just a fluke

      and I’m way overthinking it,

      when right now

      what I should be thinking

      about is the game.

      I take my car.

      Syrah follows with Monica

      in hers. I’m sure sooner

      or later I’ll try to cheat

      the system and allow

      someone under twenty-five

      to ride with me

      before my provisional license

      becomes unrestricted

      in a year. But for now

      I’ll play by the rules.

      The high school isn’t far,

      and when we pull into

      the parking lot, I’m gratified

      to see it’s already filling

      with spectator vehicles.

      A quick scan

      doesn’t reveal Dad’s car,

      but it’s still an hour

      to game time,

      so maybe he’ll show.

      The GTO, now sporting

      a fresh coat of racing green

      paint, is noticeable, however.

      I park close to the locker

      room, go in to suit up

      in my shiny blue uniform,

      nerves tingling.

      This will be my first

      actual game

      and as starting center

      the pressure to perform

      well is building.

      Coach Booker gives

      a short pep talk

      that does little to alleviate

      the tension bloating the space

      between the locker rows.

      At least it’s not just me

      who’s nervous.

      We’re all pacing

      or bouncing up and down

      on our toes.

      It’s a relief

      when Coach calls us

      to go warm up.

      At least until we file

      into the gym,

      where the bleachers

      seem to sag beneath

      the weight of so many people.

      But hey, it’s cool.

      No reason to think we’ll blow it.

      From Tip-Off to Halftime

      It’s a fairly even match,

      the scoring shifting back

      and forth between teams.

      Syrah misses a couple

      of rebounds; I miss a shot

      or two, and so does Monica.

      But on the upside, I sink

      four two-pointers and one

      from outside the key that

      nets us three. Monica scores

      a half-dozen times,

      including the free throw

      that puts us ahead

      going into the locker

      room at the half.

      As we start in that direction,

      I scan the bleachers.

      No sign of Dad. Big surprise.

      I do catch sight of Hillary,

      who’s sitting between Peg

      and Gabe. They’re laughing.

      One other person stands out,

      mostly because she holds

      herself painfully straight, which

      puts her a good six inches

      taller than the man beside her,

      and if I’m not mistaken,

      she’s staring at me.

      When she sees me notice

      her, she smiles warmly,

      as if we know each other,

      which we definitely don’t.

      If she wasn’t so pretty,

      I might think she was

    &
    nbsp; some creepy stalker.

      Maybe she just likes

      watching stellar girls’

      basketball play.

      In the locker room,

      Syrah comes puffing up,

      water bottle in hand.

      Did you see Gabe, all over

      Hillary? What’s up with that?

      Why do you care? asks

      Monica. Not like he’s yours.

      But maybe he could be.

      I mean, as long as you’re finished

      with him. Addressed to me.

      “Listen, if you can snag him,

      go for it.” Seems doubtful.

      “Anyway, I don’t think

      he and Hillary are together

      together. Just sitting together.”

      Coach Rallies Us

      For the third quarter,

      figuratively slapping us

      on the back and promising:

      You girls got this.

      Now get on out there

      and take ’em down!

      We don’t exactly drop

      them to their knees,

      but two quarters of hard

      play put us ahead by four

      at the end of the game,

      and I can personally take

      credit for nineteen points,

      second only to Monica.

      Syrah even scored six,

      so we’re all happy

      when that final buzzer

      rings. As we slap hands

      with the other team, the crowd

      begins to desert the stands

      and I notice Zelda’s with

      Gabe now, no Hillary, Peg,

      or Dad in view.

      Thanks, Dad. Glad I mean

      so much to you.

      But as I Shower

      It occurs to me that Dad

      might have come with Zelda.

      He could have been in

      the bathroom taking a piss.

      He could have been outside

      polluting his lungs.

      He could have been at

      the snack bar buying popcorn.

      Nah. The snack shack

      would have been closed.

      But the other two options

      are still valid, so I’ll go in search

      of my father, hoping, if not

      believing, he’ll be here somewhere.

      A phrase that materializes

      from the ether: glutton for

      punishment. And right behind

      that: none so blind as those

      who will not see. Wonder if

      the idioms will prove wrong.

     


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