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    Heartbeat

    Page 2
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      that when I was ten

      I suddenly jumped off a swing

      and said

      Why are we here?

      I remember that moment—

      how I was swinging

      and feeling so happy and free

      watching the people in the park

      all the mothers and fathers and

      grandmas and grandpas and

      children

      going to and fro

      but suddenly I felt shivery

      alone and apart

      dizzy from seeing all those people

      and multiplying them by all the people

      in all the towns and cities

      in the world

      and I jumped from the swing

      with my urgent question:

      Why are we here?

      In the park? Max asked.

      No! I shouted.

      Why are we here

      on this earth?

      Max scowled at me.

      I don’t know, do I?

      he said.

      Am I supposed to do something

      important?

      It doesn’t seem enough

      to merely take up space

      on this planet

      in this country

      in this state

      in this town

      in this family.

      I know why Max wants to be

      a famous athlete

      but I do not yet know

      what I should be

      or

      do.

      QUESTIONS

      When I ask Max why he hates our town

      he shrugs

      aims his deep gray eyes at me

      then turns and sweeps his arm

      through the air

      as if he has waved it over the whole town

      and he says

      Too small.

      Always the same.

      I want to see what is out there—

      and he stands on tiptoe

      as if he could see over the tops

      of the trees

      to the rest of the world.

      I don’t understand Max.

      The town seems huge to me

      and never the same

      everything changes:

      the light, the smells, the sounds

      and people coming and going

      and growing bigger and older.

      When Max says he will open camps

      for boys like him

      I ask him what kind of boy that is

      and he aims his eyes at me again

      and keeps them there

      and keeps them there

      and keeps them there

      as he lifts one hand

      to remove a leaf from my hair

      and he says

      Boys with nothing.

      And he will not stand still for my reply.

      He is already off and running

      while I am wondering if I am part

      of

      the

      nothing.

      FEARS AND LOVES

      My teacher, Mr. Welling, asked us

      to make a list of things we fear.

      I did not want to do it

      my mind would not go there

      until Mr. Welling said that after

      we made our list of things we fear

      we would make a list of things we love.

      Things I Fear:

      I am afraid of war

      of shootings and murders

      of other people killing our people

      because our people killed their people

      because their people killed our people

      on and on

      until maybe nobody will be left.

      I am afraid of dying

      and of my family dying

      of disappearing

      and not knowing

      that you have disappeared

      or being left alone

      with no one to love you.

      Things I Love:

      I love running

      out in the air

      smelling the trees and grass

      feeling the wind on my face

      and the ground on my feet.

      I love drawing

      because it feels like running

      in your mind

      and on a blank page

      a picture appears

      straight out of your mind

      a phantom treasure.

      I love laughing

      and hearing people laugh

      because the sound of it

      is rolling and free and full.

      I love many many things

      which sound too sappy

      to write about.

      Later, I hear others talking about

      their fears and loves.

      Some fear:

      algebra and tests

      essays and reports.

      I am not good at these things

      but I do not fear them

      and I wonder if I am wrong.

      I wonder if I am supposed to fear them.

      Many of them love:

      candy and television

      weekends and sleeping.

      I like these things

      but I do not love them

      and I wonder if I am supposed to love them

      and I wonder if

      I have done the assignment wrong

      and when I look at my own list

      of fears and loves

      they seem too big

      maybe not what the teacher had in mind

      maybe not

      but I am feeling stubborn

      and so I do not erase them.

      PUMPKIN ALIEN

      My father speaks to the alien baby

      aiming his words

      at my mother’s abdomen:

      Hell-ooo, pumpkin alien baby

      he says

      how are you today?

      He consults the baby book.

      Let’s see, pumpkin alien baby

      you are nearly four months old

      and you are this big—

      he holds his hands

      about four inches apart—

      and you have fingers and toes

      and are sprouting little tooth buds!

      My father looks amazed

      and my mother smiles

      and I try to imagine

      how this happens.

      How does the alien baby

      know how to grow fingers and toes

      and little tooth buds?

      I run my tongue over my own teeth

      smooth and slippery

      like polished stones.

      I feel the slim space

      between the front ones

      a narrow doorway

      for a sliver of air.

      And I think about Grandpa’s teeth

      upstairs

      in an old jelly jar

      on a lace doily

      beside his bed.

      That night I dream

      of an alien pumpkin

      round and bright orange

      with two rows of white teeth

      clacking.

      FRIED CHICKEN

      Grandpa’s room is next to mine

      Annie! he calls. Annie, Annie, Annie!

      I rush in

      find him sitting in the blue chair.

      A piece of paper rests in his lap

      a pencil in his hand.

      Annie, Annie!

      How did I make fried chicken?

      I would laugh except he is so earnest

      in his question

      a frown on his face

      his eyes big and wide.

      I can’t remember how I made fried chicken!

      I touch his hand and

      tell him I will ask my mother

      and Grandpa says

      Hurry!

      My mother is in the backyard

      snipping the remains of lavender

      from a frosted plant.

      Smell this

      she says

      rubbing her fingers against the silvery leaves

      and holding them to my nose.


      It’s a calming, soothing smell

      softer than pine

      gentler than roses.

      I tell her about Grandpa’s question

      and my mother looks puzzled.

      She says

      But Grandpa made fried chicken

      every single week for—for—maybe forty years!

      How could he not remember how he made

      fried chicken?

      She wipes her hands on her jeans

      and goes to Grandpa

      where she explains exactly how

      Grandpa used to make fried chicken

      which is exactly how my mother

      makes it now.

      When she is done explaining

      Grandpa says, Again. I want to write it down.

      And so my mother repeats the process

      and Grandpa writes it all down

      and then says

      Now how did you make those strawberries?

      Strawberries? my mother says.

      You know, you had them once

      when your mom and I came over

      and you were living in the yellow apartment—

      But that was ten years ago!

      my mother says

      sitting on the bed beside

      Grandpa’s chair.

      Grandpa waves his hand in the air.

      They were in a little white bowl

      strawberries

      all cut up.

      They were so good.

      How did you make them?

      My mother bites her lip.

      I think I just cut them up.

      I bought some strawberries

      and I cut them up

      and I put them in that bowl.

      Maybe I sprinkled a little sugar on top.

      That’s all I did.

      Grandpa nods.

      Well, they were very good strawberries.

      In my parents’ room

      I lift the miniature white T-shirt

      from the basket that holds

      a few little things for the baby.

      The shirt seems infinitely small

      too small for any living person

      and I wonder if the alien baby

      can think now

      and if it can think

      what does it think?

      And what did I think

      when I was small

      and why did I forget?

      And what else will I forget

      when I grow older?

      And if you forget

      is it as if

      it never happened?

      Will none of the things

      you saw or thought or dreamed

      matter?

      I fold the shirt and replace it in the basket

      and I race down the steps

      and out the door

      and leap off the porch

      into the chilly air

      and run run run

      over fallen leaves

      yellow and brown

      glazed with frost:

      crunch, crunch, crunch.

      SAVING

      As I run past the church

      I see Mrs. Cobber

      and she calls to me

      Annie-banany!

      You going to clean my porch today?

      Yes, Mrs. Cobber-obber

      I’ll be there later

      and she salutes me

      as I run up the hill.

      In the summer, I mow Mrs. Cobber’s lawn

      with her old push mower

      smelling of rust and oil.

      It’s a small lawn

      easy to mow

      and when you are done

      it looks as if you have done

      so much more

      than walk back and forth

      a few times with a little old mower

      and Mrs. Cobber is so pleased

      with the newly mown lawn.

      She acts as if it is the best present

      she has received in a long, long time.

      In the fall, I rake her leaves

      and in the winter tidy the garage

      and the back porch

      both filled with old creaky things:

      benches and chairs and lamps

      musty, dusty, and intriguing

      (Who sat on this bench? This chair?

      Who used this lamp?)

      She pays me for these chores

      even though my father said

      I should do them for free

      but Mrs. Cobber insisted

      saying that I should save the money

      for something special.

      I know exactly what I will buy

      and I am thinking of this when

      I hear

      Hey, Annie!

      Hey, Max!

      and we fall into step thump-thump

      beside each other

      my feet tingling from the frosted ground

      and when we come to the bench

      I suddenly feel shy with Max

      aware of his long legs and long arms

      and his breath floating into the air

      and the silence seems full of something

      I do not understand

      and so I fill up the silence.

      I tell him about the chores for Mrs. Cobber

      and about the money

      I am saving for something special

      and I know Max gets paid for working at the diner

      so I ask him if he is saving for something special

      and he doesn’t even blink

      he wiggles his feet and says

      Running shoes!

      And he tells me he has to have them

      for the track meets in the spring

      because the coach won’t let him run barefoot

      and he has to get them in time

      to break them in

      and he hopes they work

      because he has to win the meets

      he has to

      and then he tells me

      again

      for the nine millionth time

      that I should join the girls’ team

      that I am stupid not to

      and what am I afraid of

      and I tell him I am not afraid

      I do not want to join the team

      I like to run by myself

      or with Max

      and he knows that I am mad

      and so he asks me what I am saving for.

      I tell him

      about the box of charcoal pencils

      soft and black as night

      and colored pencils

      with every pastel color

      and the paper

      thick and white

      on which you can draw

      whatever you want

      and he nods

      as if he understands how much I want

      the pencils and paper

      and how they are not ordinary ones

      but special ones

      and I like this about Max

      that I do not have to explain

      but then as we turn to run back

      he says—

      as if he cannot help himself—

      But you really should join the team

      and he takes off very fast

      thump-thump, thump-thump

      and my heart matches my steps

      thump-thump, thump-thump

      as I take off after him

      forgetting the pencils and paper

      and the team I do not want to join

      forgetting everything

      as I run.

      FOOTNOTES

      In school we are learning footnotes.1

      It made me laugh to hear them called

      FOOTnotes.

      I pictured little notes on my feet

      and could not stop giggling

      as Mr. Welling tried to explain

      why we needed to do footnotes2

      and the exact, correct format

      and we had to practice

      everything exactly right

      with the commas and the colons

      in the right place.

      He
    was very

      par-tic-u-lar.

      And I liked getting everything

      in the right place

      and knowing there was a plan

      for how to do it right

      but then I could not get the footnotes

      out of my mind

      and started putting them everywhere—

      on spelling tests

      and on math homework—

      and just about everywhere

      where I wanted to add a little explanation

      (which you do not normally have a chance to do

      on tests or homework)

      but I am not sure all of my teachers

      appreciate the footnotes3

      and now I am dreaming

      in footnotes

      which is a peculiar thing.

      I dreamed of running past the barn

      and in my head I saw a footnote

      which said

      Faded red barn

      and when I passed the church

      I saw a footnote

      Old stone church

      and on like that

      footnotes for every little thing

      and when I stopped at the red bench

      and looked at the soles of my feet

      all the little notes were printed there

      in charcoal pencil

      and somehow it pleased me

      that the notes were there

      imprinted on my feet—

      footnotes.

      THE SKELETON

     


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