Lauren said she’d kill herself if I didn’t come over right
away. I went over, like I always did when she called me crying. I told her that
she needed to find help. She said she had help and that I shouldn’t worry; she
got overwhelmed for a little. But everything was better after I got there. I
told her that she shouldn’t joke about this and that the next time I would have
to call the police because I wouldn’t take it anymore. I had said that once
before and she called my bluff.
She said “no really, this is the last time I’m talking to
someone about my issues and I’m getting better.” I nodded, hugged her, and
kissed her hard. I told her I had to leave; my mom would worry if I stayed out
too late. She said she understood and told me I was the best boyfriend ever. I
smiled and walked out.
I stumbled into school the next day. I hadn’t slept much. My
bones ached. Football practice was going to suck. I liked to show up early to
school since Lauren slept in a lot. She always had a doctor’s note from a
family friend. The school was mostly empty. I said hi to Tim, the janitor. He
grunted back, which meant his wife wasn’t doing well that day. The hallways
smelled musty. Tim tried to get rid of the smell, but the school building was
old. A few other students wandered around. Many parents worked early shifts and
had to drop their kids off early. Most parents wanted to get rid of their hassle
as soon as possible. They walked about in a silent daze. Tim huffed as he
mopped the floor. He spilled his bucket and I helped him clean it up. We soaked
up the dirty water and when we finished, he nodded and shook my hand.
I went to my locker, picked up my beat-up books, and went to
homeroom. My friend sat in the back and read a book she didn’t have to read.
Her back was hunched over the book and she gripped the sides hard; I could tell
since her knuckles were white. The air felt soggy: a heat wave in the first
month of school. Emily wore a baby blue cardigan; I think that’s what they’re
called, she told me before. It was buttoned up to the top. She developed early.
The other girls resented her for that. My girlfriend never grew past an A cup.
Emily and I used to be neighbors but my family moved to a better neighborhood.
I couldn’t recall the last time I hung out with her outside of school. Her hair
looked different that day. She had it brushed to the right side and had her
bangs clipped back with a bobby pin. Her hair shined like fresh ink. It smelled
rosy, and I could tell she changed her shampoo. Her skin was pale; I knew she
didn’t go out much over the summer. Some people call her Casper. My secret nickname
for her was ‘dumpling,” cause of her fluffy cupid cheeks. She said she’d kill
me if I ever told anyone. I used to poke them when I was a kid. She’d puff up
her cheeks and I’d poke the air out. I don’t know why that memory came up but I
smiled. I sat down next to her. Her shoulders tensed. She sniffled. She closed
the book.
“Another sad story?” I asked her. She said yes. I asked her
why she reads stories like those since she always got so affected by them. She
said she felt more human when she read those stories. I didn’t reply. She said
“It’s the only way I know how to feel anymore.” I told her I understood, but I
didn’t. She told me the story was about a young boy who ran away from home
because his parents beat him. It was winter and he was too young, too lost, and
he froze to death. I said, “That must be a terrible way to die, completely numb
and alone.” Emily said she thought it would be very peaceful.
She looked at me and her eyes shimmered. She told me I had
huge bags under my eyes. I felt my skin and it felt soft and loose. She said,
“It’s Lauren again, isn’t it?”
I exhaled. I looked worse than I did last week when Lauren
called me in the middle of the night. She said, “Look, I’m not going to tell
you what to do. But, I’ve said this before, you should break up with her.” I
said I loved her and couldn’t break up with her because it wouldn’t be right.
Emily asked me if I knew what love was. I told her it’s when you care about
someone more than you care about yourself. I read that somewhere I couldn’t
recall. I had dated Lauren for a year and isn’t that what you are supposed to
say after a while? “That’s not what love is.” Emily, you haven’t had a
boyfriend how would you know. She said she knew.
She asked me if I was still drawing. I said, “I doodle from
time to time.” She told me I should draw more. I didn’t have enough time, but I
know I’m making excuses. She placed a pen in my hand. It was lacquered and
looked custom-made. A friend had made it for her, but she said I should keep
it. She knew that I hid my passion. I wanted to talk about something else. With
a smirk, she said “the truth hurts.” She put her hand on my hand. I didn’t
realize I had pushed my chair so close to her. I squeezed her hand. It was cold
and I wanted to warm her. I didn’t know what to say. Emily always knew what to
say. She talked about more stories from writer around the world, about people
she never met but felt as though they were lifelong friends. Her words washed
over me like a cleansing shower. I listened and her voice calmed me. My hand
was shaking but it stopped.
The bell rang. I looked around and people were staring. I
jerked my hand back and sped away. My classroom was split down the middle. The
geeks sat on the left side while the jocks and cheerleaders sat on the right.
The football team sat by the door. Bobby waved me over. Sam sat fuming. Ben
leaned against the wall. Everyone calls them “The Three Amigos.” I don’t really
call them anything.
“What the hell are you doing with her, my sister's gonna be
pissed,” Sam said. He was right, but I felt Emily’s heat linger on my hand and
smiled. Sam said what are you smiling for? He was the biggest one, did most of
the blocking while I took the glory. I told him, “You know that Emily and I
grew up next to each other. I just needed some help with last night’s
homework.” Sam said, “Yeahsuuure.” I don’t think they saw Emily and I holding
hands. Bobby told Sam to leave me alone. Bobby’s arms were bare again. He liked
how defined his muscles got after weight training. Bobby recently made the
varsity squad while Sam and I started since middle school. Bobby said it’s too
early to be fighting. Sam backed off. Bobby said “You know Lauren would be
furious if she saw you.” I said, “You know Lauren never shows up for homeroom.”
Sam said, “She gets away with everything, it’s not fair.” Ben said, “If you
ladies are done talking, we should sit down or Mr. Henry will give us
detention.” We did.
I pulled my headphone wire through my sleeve and put the
earplug in. Leaned on my arm to cover it up. Mr. Henry came and taught a lesson
about stuff I already knew. I did the homework, and the next night’s homework,
actually the next week’s because it was interesting. I dozed off. Mr. Henry
left me alone because I always aced the tests and I was probably tired from the
big football game. The bell rang and I opened my eyes. I looked at the back of
the room. Emily was gone.
I walked toward the door and Mr. Henry stopped me. He shook
my hand and wished me luck. You’re only a hundred yards from breaking the
school’s rushing record. I shrugged my shoulders and left. The rest of the
morning block was the same. Every teacher wished me luck even though I fell
asleep in the class or doodled the whole time.
I hated lunch because the food tasted like compost. I saw
the cheerleaders: Lauren, with Sarah and Jane, her best friends. I joked that a
flashlight would shine through their ears. Sam and Bobby sat at the table by
the door. Emily came late. She walked past their table. Sam tripped her. She
fell forward and caught herself with her hands. Her plate crashed onto the
ground. Her grape juice splashed up and stained her cardigan. I knew she
couldn’t afford another plate. Sam laughed. The girls laughed louder. Bobby
gave a crooked smile, saw me and waved me over. I looked up at the clock. Forty
minutes left in the lunch period.
I ran over and helped Emily up. I picked up her tray and
gave her my food. Our eyes met and she was about to say something. I said not
to worry about it but that she should get out of here. She hurried to the
corner table without looking back. I told Sam he was a dick. “Emily is cool and
you know her family’s not doing well right now”, I said. He said, “Ok, ok, ok,”
but didn’t understand. Bobby said, “Leave him alone, he was just messing
around.” Lauren smiled blankly. Sarah looked down at her food. Jane sat on her
hands. Bobby and I flashed a glance of concern. Sam shifted in his seat. Lauren
said, “It’s ok, my brother’s just an idiot. How are you, honey?” I said, “I’m
tired.” She averted her eyes. Lauren was a bit tired too. Sam was about to
speak but I glared at him and he knew not to talk about our business. The other
two girls turned to each other and talked rapid fire: how gross the nerds were.
How they need to shower. How they should grow up and stop playing children’s
games. How much they hated it when they looked at them. How they feel like they
undress every cute girl with their eyes. How the girls at the corner table are
the worst. Especially that girl with the big tits. She looks like a cow. She
walks all proud like she’s better than us. Lauren joined in. She said she hated
that girl. She looked at me and said, “Sorry, honey, I know you used to be
friends with her, but I just thought I should be honest. I just want you to
stay away from her.” The other girls agreed. I kept my mouth firmly shut, lips
pressed. One of the girls said, “Let’s talk about something nicer. What are you
doing this weekend?” They spoke even faster.
Bobby leaned in and whispered, “Don’t worry, it’s just girls
being girls.” Sam nodded. “Why do they keep saying ‘just?’” I got up and wasn’t
feeling well. Lauren said, “Honey, it’s because you didn’t eat; you shouldn’t
have given your food away to that slut.” I really did feel sick.
I went to the nurse’s office and got out of the rest of
classes for the day. Asked the nurse if I could rest in her office, she said
“of course” and pointed to a mat in the back. She closed the curtain around me.
I tried sleeping, but I kept tossing and turning. The mat was too thin and my
back hurt and my mind jittered in my skull. I massaged my temples and I could smell
a remnant of Emily’s hand; she used good soap. My head stopped hurting and my
chest tightened. I felt nauseous but not in an unpleasant way. It felt like my
stomach was being tickled. I lay there with my hand held on my nose. I drifted
to sleep and I woke up when the nurse told me school was over.
“You should be one hundred percent by game time,” the nurse
said. I thanked her, took some candy off of her desk, and hurried to the field
to tell coach that I would be missing practice.
I showed up without my football gear and he was furious. I
told him I wasn’t feeling well and that the nurse said I was exempt from
practice for today. He snatched the note from my hand and said, “You are
practicing today.” I responded, “The nurse thought you would say that and told
me to tell you that legally the note exempts me from practice.” He was
screaming at me and I responded with a blank stare. Once he was out of breath,
his face purple and his voice raspy, he tried to say, “Leave.” but it sounded more
like a cough. I said, “I’m going home now,” but I knew I wouldn’t, I knew where
I wanted to go.
The hallways were empty except for Tim who was scraping gum
off of a flipped desk. A kid must have thought it would be funny to see how
many pieces he could stick to it in one class period. I walked up to him and
started saying, “I’m sorry, that’s horrible,” but he cut me off. “Why are you
saying sorry? You didn’t do this.” I asked him if he needed help while tapping
my foot and glancing down the hall. He said, “Don’t worry about it, you look
like you are in a rush. I know when a man has a woman on his mind.” I blushed.
Tim laughed a deep throaty laugh. I asked him if he knew where the gaming club
met since they’re always here the latest. “Third door down on the right side.”
I turned and ran, forgetting to say thanks. His laughs turned to bellows that
echoed down the hall.
I cracked the door open and peered inside. No one noticed.
The club members sat across from each other in three pairs. They looked like
they were playing poker. They stared daggers at their opponents. On the table,
there were six play mats decorated with different dragons, angels, and demons.
On the play mats, each player had a stack of cards in colored protective
sleeves. One of the club members had Star Wars sleeves. In front of each
person, there were about a dozen face up cards organized in a grid. The cards
also had the same style fantasy artwork. They spoke strange jargon, like moving
to “draw phase” or “do you declare blockers or counter target spell” or “I have
priority in this game action.” I had no idea what they were talking about. They
moved the cards around like chess pieces. I leaned on the door, and Emily
wrenched it open.
I fell forward and landed flat on my face. Emily held out
her hand and pulled me up. The club members stared wide-eyed at me. “Always the
graceful one,” she said. I said, “You’re a jerk.”
“I was waiting for you to lean on the door.”
“How did you know it was me?”
“You walk like a dinosaur.” She said she could recognize my
thumping from a mile away. I laughed and called her a punk. None of the club
members said anything, but their mouths hung open. Some wouldn’t look me in the
eye. Emily asked, “What’s up?” I told her, “I’m skipping football practice
because I wanted to hang out with you.” Her cheeks turned rosy red. Closing the
door, I said, “I’m sorry about what happened earlier with Sam,” noticing the
blotchy purple stain on her cardigan. “Don’t worry about it. Not your fault.”
“It was still a shitty thing to do.” “You must be starving,” she noted, as my
stomach grumbled. Shoving me her dinner, she said “Shut up and eat or I will
make you eat.” The food tasted sweet. She asked if I wanted to play with them.
I sat down and said, “Teach me.”
Their names were Harry, James, Will, Ryan, Colin and George.
Harry had a bony, frail, elongated body. His elbows stuck out at weird angles.
But I found out he was a writer. He liked to write mostly short fiction. He
told me some of his favorite authors, and he had good taste. I made him promise
me to show me his stories. It took a while, but he eventually agreed. James was
tiny and had a baby face. I found out he was my age, but he had a growth
hormone deficiency. I told him that must be hard. He said no way, I get kid
prices on everything and clothes and shoes are so much cheaper. Always look on
the bright side of life. James loved fantasy football. He loved the mathematics
behind the athletics. He showed me his statistical analyses and they were
thorough to say the least. Will built things. His dad was a carpenter so he
knew his way around a wood shop. I asked him what things he made. He listed
things like handmade pens, benches, bird houses, a porch. I asked him what he
was working on now, and he said he was making a wood sculpture of himself. I
learned how many different kinds of saws there are. Lots. Ryan was quiet, he
didn’t say a word to me. But I found out from the others that his mom was
really sick and that he’d been up late every night for the past month taking
care of her. He was the first person I played a real game with, and I borrowed
Emily’s cards but he crushed me mercilessly. Colin was the first one to talk to
me of the six. He had the worst jokes ever and talked a ridiculous amount of
trash. He was loud, and his voice cracked a lot. But I couldn’t stop laughing
hearing the wild things he said. And I will always respect someone who can
quote Monty Python on command. George had a nervous twitch. He said it was from
his Tourette syndrome. I asked if it was like the guy who can’t stop cursing.
He sighed and said that was only one kind of Tourettes called coprolalia. I
said copro as in the root for shit? He said wow how did you know that. Emily
and I used to do a ton of pretend spelling bees. I think I’m up 21-20. Emily
said you’re dreaming, it’s the reverse. I said let’s decide it here and now.
George and Harry pulled up a word bank from past national
spelling bees and we breezed through them. When we hit the words from the final
rounds, we both struggled, me more than her. At this point, Harry, James, Will,
Colin, George and even Ryan were cheering and doing fist pumps. Colin was the
one reading off the words. He looked at the screen and a devilish grin crossed
his face. He said the word slowly, enunciating each deceitful syllable. Emily
looked at me and I hadn’t seen her that frustrated since I beat her in Connect
Four back in middle school. My mind was blank. All six saw our confusion and
heckled us. I heard a rap at the door. Tim popped his head in and said what the
hell is going on here. I said a battle for the ages is happening. Tim shook his
head and said he had to kick us out. We didn’t notice the sun had set. I
declared the battle shall continue another day. Emily punched me in the ribs.
We packed up our stuff, and I put Emily’s cards in my bag. We left the
building. Ryan walked next to me and said I never knew you were this smart.
You’ve never shown it before. I thought you were just another dumb jock. I told
him dumb is easier. Emily and I split off from the group toward our homes. I
realized I had been holding her hand.
I felt her soft hand mold to fit mine, as if it always
belonged there. I could feel my palm pulsate. My breaths were short and
labored. My stomach churned but I wasn’t hungry. My ears burned and my cheeks
hurt. Despite my attempts to hide my joy, a goofy smile emerged. I could hear
her breathe and I could tell she was out of breath. I had to resist the urge to
look at her because I thought if I looked down I wouldn’t be able to look away.
But I gave in and glanced down. She looked straight ahead. Her cheeks were
flushed. I never noticed she had a tiny dimple. I don’t think I’ve ever seen
her smile so wide. Our hands trembled. We took the long way home.
I was lost. I forgot how to get to her house; she lived on a
hidden dead end off the main road. She guided me through the darkness. We got
to her house and I realized I hadn't been there in over a year. Dandelions
covered the yard. I thought they were pretty as a kid, but I learned they are
weeds and look bad to adults. Her dad's old muscle car sat on cinderblocks.
Last time I was here, he said he would rebuild his baby, make her brand new.
Rust dotted the frame. The grass driveway was overgrown, and the plants wrapped
around the bricks. A vine crept up the side of her house. I remember when I
helped her mother install the siding and I didn't know what I was doing but she
let me help anyways. Looked crooked and a few nails jutted out. Her house had
two bedrooms, a kitchen, and a bathroom jammed into one story. The front door
was closed. The screen door was slightly off its hinges and the screen was
ripped. The lights were off and I could see Emily's pained face in the
moonlight.
Emily said thank god the lights are off. That means either
my parents aren’t home or dad’s passed out. Let’s sit over by the old tree. I
remembered the tire swing but it wasn’t there anymore. I asked what happened.
“Dad,” and shook her head. The biggest root split in two, and made a perfect
seat. I sat down and Emily nestled in my lap. She hunched her body together.
Her head rested in the hollow of my shoulder. I held her tight. She leaned
back. I brushed her hair. It was as smooth as I imagined. I wrapped my hands
around her waist. She turned her head and looked at me and no one had ever
looked at me that way before. She closed her eyes and leaned in.
I said no. What are we doing I have a girlfriend.
She said, “you are an idiot.” I said I know.
“No you don’t know.” I asked why.
She put her hand on my chest and asked what are you feeling
right now. I said I feel like my heart is dancing. I feel lost. I don’t know
how I feel. She put my hand on her neck. I felt her pulse race.
“Are you still confused what love is? I said nothing.
Emily told me she lied earlier when she said she didn’t know
how to feel. Do you remember this morning when you asked me if I knew what love
was and I said yes. I’ve always known. Too bad I’m in love with an idiot. I
pulled her in closer. She wrapped her hands around my back. We touched
foreheads and rubbed noses. She giggled. Eskimo kisses. I put my thumb on her
chin and pushed her up toward my lips.
The patio light turned on. “Shit why now. My dad’s awake.
You need to get out of here now before my dad sees you.” I heard her father
yell EM GET IN HERE NOW. Emily told me to leave, and before I could debate, she
said go now. Now. I said see you tomorrow dumpling. She blushed and said I told
you not to call me that. See ya tomorrow. EM I’M COMING OUT THERE I HEAR YOU.
Emily said weakly, I’m coming dad sorry sorry sorry.
When I got home, I called out for mom and dad. They must
have gotten the night shift again. I went to the fridge. My stomach was in
knots. I brought a few boxes of leftovers up to my room. I shoveled them in, taking
the occasional breath. I should have left mom a message saying I got home ok.
She must have gotten a call from school about my sick day. I looked at my phone
and saw I missed thirteen calls and my inbox was full. I forgot I turned my
phone on silent. I hit the first speed dial and took a deep breath.
I heard a three rings and then she picked up. Hello Lauren.
I heard heavy breathing. Then my phone exploded.
She screamed, “why haven’t you been picking up the phone or
answering my texts, you have a lot of answering to do.”
I told her I forgot and she said bullshit.
Sam told me he saw you and that whore holding hands.
I asked when?
When you left the school with that pack of losers.
They are not losers, they are really cool.
Shut the fuck up.
No you shut the fuck up.
Did you kiss her? Did you? Huh? Answer me.
I said no, of course not, we are just friends.
You are a fucking liar and you know it.
I said look Lauren, you are my girlfriend and you are the
only one for me.
She said you are a liar and you are going to pay for this.
She hung up the phone. What the hell have I gotten myself into.
As usual, I got to school an hour early. I saw Tim and he
was mopping the floor. He said hello. That meant his wife was able to sleep
through the night. He asked how’d it go. I beamed. He said that good? That
good. He gave me a firm slap on the back. Attaboy. Tim, do you need help? No,
but I know you have somewhere to be. Thanks.
Homeroom was empty. I went to school with Emily since we
were kids and this was the first time she wasn’t at homeroom early. I sat down
where she normally sat. I looked at the desk to see if she had carved my name,
but I knew I wouldn’t find anything. I sat there alone and I couldn’t help but
replay the events from last night in my head. Did I screw up? Did I scare her
off? She’s right, I’m an idiot. I should have never mentioned Lauren. I should
have just gone for it. I hope she’s ok. God I hope she’s ok. Her father. I
forgot. Damn, why am I making this all about me. I hope he was sober but he
didn’t sound like it. I hoped she was safe. I wanted to see her. I wanted to
hold her and tell her everything is going to be ok and I’m here. I would break
up with Lauren today. I don’t know why I lied last night over the phone. Emily,
where are you?
It was five minutes before the bell and she wasn’t there.
Harry, James, Will, Ryan, Colin and George sat in front of me and they
reassured me that everything would be ok. I said thanks because what else was I
supposed to say. About half the class had arrived. Sam and Bobby strutted in
the room. Sam looked at me like I stabbed his dog. Bobby gave me a pleading
look. He mouthed what the hell when he saw who I was sitting with. They sat on
the opposite side of the room. Ben walked in right after. Sam and Bobby pushed
a chair out but Ben ignored them and sat in the front. Right before the bell
rang, Lauren strolled in the door. She was dolled up, and she knew how to do
her make up. Sam looked down and rubbed his forehead. Bobby did a double take.
The gaming club members gave me a look of concern. She smiled at me and I
shrank away. She sat next to me and said good morning honey. I didn’t respond.
The bell rang and Mr. Henry showed up a couple minutes late.
No one talked for those few minutes. He walked in and said is everything ok?
Everyone seems on edge this morning. Lauren said nothing’s wrong, I think
you’re just tired. He said yeah, I just need my coffee and I’ll be ok. He took
attendance but paused when Emily didn’t answer. He repeated her name and scanned
the room. He said wow, first time for everything. He taught for the next half
hour, but everyone stared at me and Lauren. She sat up straight, got in perfect
posture and turned the corners of her mouth up. Near the end of class, I heard
the door open. Emily slumped into class, her bangs down. She wore a white
sweater with a matching white skirt. Mr. Henry asked if she was ok and she sat
down and said everything is fine. She let her hair flow down and cover her
face. I counted the seconds until class ended. The bell rang and I shot up.
Emily was already halfway out of the door. Lauren grabbed my arm. I shouted to
Emily, please wait. She was gone.
Lauren hung on my arm as we walked to the next class. I
fixed my eyes on the open door. The teacher waved her hand in front of my face.
Said my name a couple times. Snapped her fingers. I saw Emily speed past the
door, a white blur. I stood up and said I really need to go to the bathroom,
it’s an emergency. Lauren reached for my arm but I swatted it away. My teacher
said that’s why you were zoned out. Go ahead but hurry back. I left before she
finished talking.
I saw Emily at the end of the hallway and I sprinted. I
needed to get to her as fast as I could. She stopped and leaned on a locker and
turned around. You run like a dinosaur too, she said. I sucked in air to reply but
I couldn’t think a full thought. I moved her bangs behind her ear. Her right
eye was purplish and swollen half-shut. The bruising spread out to her upper
cheek and the bridge of her nose. I quaked with anger. I’m going to kill him.
She laughed. He’s a combat trained vet. He’ll snap your neck and say it was
self-defense. The cops are always on his side. I asked are you ok. She said I’m
fine. I sneezed and my teacher saw the bruise. Told me to go to the nurse right
away and that she needed to make a call. I touched her face and said does it
hurt a lot? She said I’m used to it. I moved in to hug her, but she said no. I
can’t. Why not? I just can’t. Why do people keep saying that word? She asked what
word. I said everyone says just, like nothing’s a big deal. Please talk to me.
She shook her head. The bell rang. A hall monitor poked me. She said go to
class now, both of you. I said can’t you see I’m busy. I’m talking to my friend
here. She said what friend are you talking about. Emily wasn’t there.
I went to my next class and noticed Lauren, her two friends
and Sam weren’t there. Shit, Emily please be ok. I swear if any of you touch
her, I will hurt you. I asked to leave class and I said I wasn’t feeling well.
My teacher said ok, feel better for the big game. I paced up and down the
hallways, but she wasn’t in any of the classrooms. I checked the nurse’s office
but she said she hasn’t had anyone come in today. The hallways were empty. Tim
was probably on his break. I realized I didn’t check the bathrooms. As I ran
down, I heard a girl scream someone help me please. The screams came from the
girls’ bathroom.
Sam shot out of the bathroom and slammed me against the
wall. He wore a torn wife beater and loose athletic shorts and he had scratches
on his arms. I screamed let me go, is that Emily in there? I swear to God, I’m
going to kill you. What did you do to her? He said I saw everything. He said
why’d you choose Emily. Her screams pierced my ears. Sam wept. Why Emily. Why,
Why, Why. I’m sorry Emily, so sorry. The teachers heard the noise and saw Sam
pinning me down. Mr. Henry pulled him off, and said what the hell is going on.
Sam slunk to the office. I got up and I saw Lauren and her two friends strut out
of the bathroom cackling with glee. I said what did you do. Lauren said you’ll
see. The bitch got what she deserved. A small crowd had gathered. The teachers
told them to go back to their classrooms but no one listened of course. Emily
fell out of the bathroom. No one helped her up.
Emily wasn’t crying. She sat up and rocked back and forth.
They lopped off her long hair and ripped her sweater off. Her shirt was down
the middle and her bare bra hung loose. All the guys stared at her chest. I
stared at her arms. From shoulder to wrist, there were precise, horizontal
slashes. The scars looked old. Mr. Henry went and put his blazer over her
shoulders. She shrieked when he touched her. I stepped backwards. Lauren and
her friends laughed. The teachers shoved them down the hallway into the office.
They cheered all the way down the hall.
People cleared out, there was nothing more to see. A teacher
grabbed my wrist and said we should go. Emily hugged her knees and her knuckles
were ghost white. Her jaw was slack. I couldn’t take my eyes off her scars. I
felt afraid. I felt nauseous. I felt repulsed I felt like she was something
alien, not the girl I grew up with. My perfect, innocent girl was broken. She
stopped rocking and looked up at me. I sat next to her. I put my arm around her
shoulders. She screamed and shook violently. I went back to class.
That night I got a text from Lauren. My life is over. They
kicked me out of school. It was just a prank that got out of hand. Oh god, my
life is over. I should just end it all.
I replied then go fucking do it.
Emily didn’t go to school for a week. I called, but her
phone was off the hook. I never visited her house. Then one day, she was there
in homeroom an hour early. Her hair was neatly tied into a short ponytail. She
wore a red button-up sweater. She was sitting in her usual seat. No book. She
had a serene smile. I couldn’t look at her. I should have tried harder to
contact her. I should have stayed with her that day. I sat on the other side of
the classroom. My mind felt heavy. I buried my head into my textbook. The kids
filed in but no one sat next to me or Emily. Mr. Henry came in, saw Emily and
opened his mouth to speak. She whispered don’t.
Lunch came, and I chose an empty table. Or the empty table
chose me. I went up to Ben earlier and said I quit football. He didn’t protest.
The jocks looked at me with disgust. Harry, James, Will, Ryan, Colin and George
sat as far away as possible. I force fed myself. I heard a rustle. Emily sat
down next to me. A hushed whisper ran through the cafeteria. I froze. I just
couldn’t look at her. Lunch ended and I didn’t say a word to her. My lips
opened and closed each time I wanted to say I’m sorry. Everyone hurried out of
the room. We stayed. She calmly said everything is going to be ok. I said it’s
not ok. I should have protected you, I should have been there for you. She said
you can’t protect me from everything. I said I knew Lauren was going to do
something to you. She said you could never have foreseen what happened. I said
why, oh why, do you have to suffer so much. It’s wrong. She kissed me on the
cheek. She said nothing’s just. I felt her place something in my hand. It was a
small gold key. She said promise to keep it safe. And goodbye.
She hung herself a few hours later. Her mom found her body. They
say she pulled the belt so tight that her skin turned purplish-blue. No open
casket at the funeral.
The funeral was simple. Not many people showed up. A pastor
said a series of memorized lines. The groundskeepers lowered her coffin into
the grave. Filled the hole in. The dirt sounded like rain when it hit the
coffin. The geeks were there, but left right when the service finished. I was
the only guest who lingered. Emily’s father knelt at her grave. He wasn’t
crying. He trembled and whispered to himself. I could hear him repeat over and
over I’m sorry.
Emily’s mother took measured steps toward me. She stood at
eye level, a step too close. She said I didn’t see you cry, not once during the
whole service. I said I didn’t know why. Her eyes filled with tears. For the
past year, you treated her like dirt. She dug her nails into her palm. You
meant everything to her. I couldn’t make eye contact. She said look at me. I
did. She pulled out a small book from her jacket pocket. This had a post it
attached with your name. I assume she wanted you read her last words. I didn’t
put my hand up to accept it. She slid the book into my front pocket. She said
read it. You owe her that much.
I got home and went to bed. I was tired, so very tired. But
Emily’s mother’s words echoed in my ears. I pulled the book out and placed it
on my desk. I took her key out of my treasure box. Emily and I used to fill it
with the silliest stuff. When we were in third grade, we put slugs in there and
they bred. We forgot about the box and after a month the whole inside was goop.
Took hours to clean. When I heard about Emily’s death, I trashed everything
that reminded me of her. But I kept our box and her key. I took a deep breath
and unlocked the diary’s latch.
On the first page, she saved the first drawing I gave her.
It was two stick figures holding hands. It said forever and ever. I turned the
page, and I saw a picture of us playing baseball. I had a soft face and she had
short cut hair and dressed in a t-shirt and jeans every day and people thought
we were brothers. Had her big blushing dumpling cheeks. I turned the page and
read about the first time her father beat her. She sounded so confused. I
turned the page and I found dried leaves taped to the paper. They were our
fourth grade science project. I turned the page and found more memories,
memories I had long forgotten. The time I went on one knee and slid a ring pop
on her finger. I said I wanted to try it, I saw someone do it on tv. She said
it was super cheesy. I neared the end and I turned the page. All it said was
I’m in love. There was a blood splatter at the bottom of the page. The next
seven pages were torn out. I stopped. I knew the final page held her last words
and they were for me.
I’m sorry. There is nothing I can say that will make what
I'm going to do ok, but I hope you can forgive me. You should know I’m not
angry at you. You could never make me angry. And I’m not angry anymore. I’ve
been angry about so many things in my life, but I'm going to make the pain
stop. I know I’m selfish and I’m going to hurt you. But you’ll be ok, you are a
strong man. You’ll forget about me, find a wonderful wife and live a happy
life. Live a good life for both of us. Never stop drawing. Don’t lose yourself.
You are an amazing person, and I love you. I will always love you.
Goodbye.
Emily
There was more writing at the bottom of the page.
Please tell me you felt something that night. Please tell me
that I’m not making this all up. What’s the point of asking now. I’ll be gone
by the time you read this. Forgive me.
I leaned back in my chair and let myself fall to the ground.
I shimmied into the corner and buried my face into my hands. A wall of tears
blocked my sight. It was as if I had forgotten how to cry, and my body was
making up for lost time. When I felt as though no more tears were left, a new
torrent would flood down my face. My mouth made screaming motions but nothing
came out. I felt like a ball was stuck in my throat. I gasped for air, and I
tried calling for help, to my parents, to God, to anyone who would answer. Yet
I could not speak, and silence responded.
I stayed in that corner until dawn.
I saw the sun pierce through my blinds. I got up and went to
school. The hallways were empty except for Tim. I waved to him. He shook his
head. His eyes were watery. I got to homeroom and it was empty. I reached into
my bag to find something to do and I found Emily’s cards. Started playing a game against myself.
I lost.
I pulled out my notebook and a pen. I realized it was the
pen she gave me. I sketched the outline of a face. I filled in the skeletal
structure, saving her dumpling cheeks for last. I added the finer details like
her button nose, her hair just how I remembered it, her wispy eyelashes.
The tip of the pen broke. I was almost done.
Drops of ink blotted the page.
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