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    Chasing Brooklyn

    Page 4
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    their first date was a trip to the art museum

      and an Italian dinner afterward.

      Being Italian, he wanted to see if she liked the food.

      Turned out she loved it.

      Turned out he loved her.

      And the feeling became mutual.

      I look out the window and see her

      walking up the front path.

      Her wavy brown hair is tucked behind her ears

      and there’s a hint of apprehension in her sad, dark eyes.

      She hasn’t been here since he died.

      I wonder what she’s thinking.

      Fri., Jan. 13th—Brooklyn

      I tell myself

      it’s just a house.

      A house with walls,

      windows,

      doors,

      and a roof on top.

      I tell myself

      don’t think about the window

      up there on the second floor,

      the one he looked out of

      while he talked to you on the phone,

      telling you how much

      he loved you.

      I tell myself

      don’t think about the front door

      he walked through a million times

      or the welcome mat

      that no longer

      welcomes him.

      I tell myself

      don’t cry.

      But I do.

      Because it’s

      so much more

      than just

      a house.

      Fri., Jan. 13th—Nico

      Oh no.

      She’s crying.

      I opened the door,

      she fell into my arms

      and she’s standing here crying.

      I gently move her to the sofa

      in the living room.

      What do I do?

      I’m not good at this.

      I mean, come on.

      A crying girl?

      In my house?

      The one time Ma might actually be useful,

      she’s not here.

      Help!

      Fri., Jan. 13th—Brooklyn

      When he opens the door,

      I step in

      and an army of memories

      comes at me from all sides.

      Meeting his parents for the first time.

      Studying for finals together, munching on peanut

      M&Ms.

      Making out in his room when no one was home.

      A trickle becomes

      a sprinkler.

      Nico looks like he wants to call

      for a rescue party.

      To rescue him.

      Not me.

      Fri., Jan. 13th—Nico

      She finally stops crying.

      “Sorry,” she says. “Just what you needed, right?”

      “You want a glass of water?” I ask her.

      She nods and follows me to the kitchen.

      “Where are your parents?”

      “Work.”

      I feel her eyes on my back

      as I fill the glass with ice cubes and water

      from the fridge door.

      Our eyes meet as I turn around and hand her the glass.

      The sadness between us is thick,

      like smoke.

      I take a deep breath.

      She does too.

      I watch her swirl the glass around,

      the ice cubes

      clink

      clink

      clinking together,

      trying to separate

      but always coming back together

      eventually.

      “Why’d you ask me here, Nico?”

      “Worried about you, I guess. Are you doing okay?”

      She shrugs.

      Because she isn’t.

      But to say it out loud is like admitting defeat.

      It’s been a year.

      We should be okay.

      Somewhat okay, anyway.

      “Can I see his room?” she asks.

      Damn.

      This isn’t good.

      Fri., Jan. 13th—Brooklyn

      Up the stairs.

      Down the hall.

      Third door on the right.

      The door is closed.

      Nico takes a deep breath

      before he turns the knob.

      Then he turns it

      very

      very

      slowly.

      In the movies

      the dead person’s room

      is always so neat,

      it’s freaky.

      This room

      is so messy

      it’s freaky.

      An unmade bed,

      clothes all over the floor,

      dirty dishes on his desk.

      It’s as if Lucca

      was just here this morning,

      getting ready for school.

      “Oh. My. God.”

      “Ma wanted to keep it the way he left it.”

      “Yeah. Obviously.”

      I walk around

      his room,

      taking it all in.

      His drawings,

      on his desk,

      and his messy handwriting

      scribbled on the pages.

      His iPod,

      full of songs

      he listened to and loved.

      His pictures,

      me and him,

      taped to his computer monitor,

      smiling, gushing,

      totally in love.

      His clothes,

      ones he used to wear

      on a warm, living body.

      I pick a shirt up

      off the floor,

      and hold it to my face.

      Unbelievable.

      It’s still there.

      The slightest scent of Lucca,

      the scent of joy, of art, of love,

      still there.

      I blink fast

      trying to keep the tears away

      but unable to.

      I bury my face

      in the shirt

      and the tears come

      because Lucca

      should be sitting at the desk,

      listening to his iPod

      writing me an e-mail,

      wearing this shirt.

      He should be here.

      And he’s not.

      The room is suddenly

      a merry-go-round,

      spinning faster and faster.

      My legs buckle beneath me

      from the intensity of it all.

      Strong, steady arms

      wrap around me,

      holding me up

      and moving me

      to the bed,

      where we sit down.

      I lean into him.

      “He should be here, Nico.”

      He doesn’t say anything.

      He doesn’t have to.

      That’s why the room

      was left

      exactly the same.

      Fri., Jan. 13th—Nico

      I let her talk

      and cry.

      Maybe this is what she needed.

      Maybe Lucca was afraid

      this Gabe thing might push her over the edge.

      Maybe he just wanted me to listen

      and tell her it’ll be okay.

      During the course of our conversation

      she says she feels

      shocked

      sad

      confused

      terrible

      powerless

      empty

      and bitter

      and a couple more I missed.

      “I know. It sucks,” I tell her.

      “But it’ll be okay.”

      She looks at me like I just told her

      I have a ghost haunting me.

      Like there’s no way

      that can possibly be true.

      Fri., Jan. 13th—Brooklyn

      I talk and cry

      while Nico sits and listens.

      Like we’ve been friends forever.

      Finally, I use the shirt

      to wipe the tears

      and take a
    deep breath.

      We’re quiet

      for a long time

      and then Nico points

      to a pair of boxer shorts on the floor.

      “I’m glad you picked the shirt.”

      Fri., Jan. 13th—Nico

      Before she goes

      I ask her if she wants anything.

      Something of his to take with her.

      “Can I borrow his iPod?”

      I nod, so she picks it up and sticks it in her purse.

      “I better go,” she says. “My dad’s going to be looking for

      dinner soon.”

      “Does it frequently hide or something?” I ask.

      She smiles.

      “Lucca was right. You’re funny.”

      I walk her to the door.

      She lingers there, her fingers fiddling with the doorknob.

      “I still don’t get it,” she says. “Why get in touch with me now?

      It’s been so long.”

      Right then, I’m tempted.

      Tempted to tell her my brother seems to be haunting me.

      But if I want to keep her talking to me,

      I can’t say that.

      So I don’t.

      “I just had a feeling. A feeling you could use a friend.”

      I tuck her hair back behind her ear. “And I think I was right.”

      She looks at me like she wants to tell me something.

      But then she looks away, opens the door,

      and leaves.

      Fri., Jan. 13th—Brooklyn

      He thought

      I might need

      a friend.

      I’m not exactly sure

      what I need

      but another friend

      probably can’t hurt.

      Fri., Jan. 13th—Nico

      The perfect thing

      hits my e-mail at just the right time.

      A sprint triathlon coming up in the next town over.

      I click the register button

      and dream of losing myself

      in the intense training

      that will ensue

      in the coming days and weeks.

      I’ll lose myself in the pain.

      It might not make sense.

      But it works.

      Fri., Jan. 13th—Brooklyn

      Half his iPod

      is filled with

      The Killers

      because he loved them.

      There’s some

      Fall Out Boy,

      Linkin Park,

      Coldplay,

      and All-American Rejects

      and it’s like

      I’m in Lucca’s head,

      being Lucca,

      listening to the music

      he loved.

      The beautiful thing is,

      music can be like

      a time machine.

      One song—

      the lyrics, the melody, the mood—

      can take you back

      to a moment in time

      like nothing else can.

      And so,

      when the song comes up

      that takes me back

      to a night

      in a hot, sweaty gym

      where we danced slow

      for the first time,

      I close my eyes,

      listen to You and Me

      by Lifehouse

      and it’s like I’m there.

      I’m there and

      we’re dancing.

      I look up at him,

      he kisses me,

      the room is glowing,

      my heart is pounding,

      my head is screaming

      I love you, Lucca!

      Music is so personal.

      I fall asleep

      with the music playing.

      It comforts me.

      Like he’s lying

      right there next to me,

      his breath,

      the sweetest music of all,

      whispering in my ear.

      Sat., Jan. 14th—Nico

      I wake up freezing.

      The window is open again.

      I go to close it and when I do,

      I see something written on the glass.

      It’s faint,

      like someone wrote it with a dirty fingertip,

      but if I squint my eyes just right

      I can see the words.

      help her

      I spin around and look for any other signs

      that he was here.

      Nothing.

      I don’t get it.

      I wish he would tell me how exactly

      I’m supposed to help her!

      Sat., Jan. 14th—Brooklyn

      I’m in a field.

      A big, open field

      filled with beautiful white daisies.

      In the distance,

      a forest stands at attention.

      I’ll stay here,

      feeling sparkly and new,

      like laundry hung out to dry

      on a warm, sunny day.

      It’s peaceful here.

      Serene.

      It feels like we belong together,

      me and these daisies.

      But then,

      something moves

      in the distance,

      near the forest.

      I feel panic

      rise up in me.

      Has he found me again?

      Am I in danger

      no matter where I go?

      As the figure approaches,

      I see that it’s him.

      He’s getting closer,

      and I urge my legs

      to start moving.

      A breeze picks up

      and I watch as the

      precious, fragile flowers

      blow in the wind,

      their stems reaching up,

      offering me hundreds

      of helping hands.

      I run through the field,

      crushing their helping hands

      like a cold, heartless soul.

      I run,

      knowing they can’t help me.

      I wake up,

      feeling like no one can.

      #283

      Dear Lucca,

      I feel like you’re the only one I can talk to

      about this. About Gabe. About these frightening

      nightmares that are more real than any dreams

      I’ve ever had. Why is this happening?

      Why aren’t you visiting me in my dreams?

      Why him? I don’t get it. It makes no sense.

      Please, help me. I need it to make sense.

      Love always,

      Brooklyn

      Sat., Jan. 14th—Nico

      I’m not really good

      at detective work.

      Look for clues,

      narrow down possibilities,

      follow hunches,

      identify leads.

      I want to know

      where to go

      and what to do.

      Give me a list

      with specific things to do,

      and I’m good to go.

      Otherwise, forget it.

      I write a note and tape it to my window—

      I’M NOT A DETECTIVE.

      BE SPECIFIC!

      Sat., Jan. 14th—Brooklyn

      I spend the day

      by myself,

      just walking.

      Walking around town

      looking in windows

      filled with pretty things.

      They call it

      window shopping.

      I call it

      window dreaming.

      Dreaming of being

      the mannequin

      smiling,

      looking hot,

      nothing wrong,

      the world

      picture perfect

      from the window.

      Sat., Jan. 14th—Nico

      Another Saturday.

      Another long run,

      hoping to put distance

      between me

      and everything else.

      The farther,


      the better.

      Only problem is,

      the distance is just temporary,

      Because no matter how far I go,

      I always have to come back.

      Sun., Jan. 15th—Brooklyn

      A dark, narrow street

      void of houses

      or buildings

      or people.

      No matter how fast I run,

     


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