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Alone

Page 12

by Megan E. Freeman


  and am crushed to see

  I should have started the seeds

  indoors two months ago.

  Apparently growing seasons are specific.

  Should I wait until next spring?

  Is it really possible I could still be here next spring?

  Photos on the front of the packets

  make my mouth water.

  Even the flowers look delicious.

  I decide to try half now and

  save half for the future

  whatever the future turns out to be.

  Farmer Girl

  Once again the library saves the day.

  Provides everything I could

  ever hope to learn about how

  to plant and tend a vegetable garden.

  (Back in civilization

  when I grow up

  I think I might want

  to be a librarian.)

  No time to waste so I get right to work.

  Use Grandpa’s plot for luck.

  The garden is so neglected and overgrown

  it’s hard to tell it was ever anything

  but a vacant lot full of tumbleweeds.

  I am undeterred.

  The thought of fresh homegrown vegetables

  wakes me each day like an impatient rooster.

  By the end of the week

  I am sunburned and so sore from all

  the weeding and clearing and digging

  and bending and hoeing but I’ve done it

  and my seeds are in.

  I write the names of each vegetable

  on Popsicle sticks to mark the rows.

  I haul water from the lake.

  I even make a scarecrow out of an

  upside-down rake, a flannel shirt

  and a pair of overalls.

  The birds don’t seem to care

  but it scares George.

  optimism

  satisfaction

  pride

  Unfamiliar feelings take root

  in the soil of my tired soul.

  Seedlings

  The radishes are sprouting!

  I have created life.

  I feel like God.

  Twenty-Five Days Later

  I sit in my garden

  on an upside-down bucket

  holding a warm, white radish.

  I brush away the dirt

  and marvel

  at how perfectly

  exquisite it is.

  It smells like earth

  and life

  and prosperity.

  It tastes like euphoria

  and hope

  and laughter.

  the bite

  the crunch

  the tang

  the sweet

  I roll it on my tongue

  until my stomach

  gets jealous and demands

  satisfaction.

  It does not disappoint.

  Watercolor Sky

  Starts to drizzle.

  There is no thunder or lightning.

  It just rains. And rains and rains.

  The scorched little town is thirsty.

  The cool moisture is a welcome change.

  Washes away the trauma of fire and devastation.

  Nourishes the growing garden.

  Like a blessing.

  Deluge

  After losing count of rainy days

  I hear a sound I haven’t heard

  in over two years.

  Water running in the house.

  I look in the bathroom

  and the kitchen

  half expecting to see

  a tap left on

  but find nothing.

  I go down the stairs

  to the basement

  which is hardly more than

  an unfinished storage space.

  Water gushes up

  from a drain in the floor.

  I grab a bucket

  but the thick, muddy water

  bubbles in faster than I can bail.

  More water pours down the walls

  from under tiny basement windows.

  It is as if the earth has

  drunk its fill and

  the rain has decided to come

  live with me.

  It moves in bag and baggage.

  I have no choice but

  to watch the water rise.

  A Plague of Water

  I monitor the basement

  constantly.

  The water rises well above

  the bottom steps

  before the rain outside

  finally lets up.

  I pull on my father’s slicker

  and Jennifer’s rain boots.

  Venture out, leaving George

  at home safe and dry.

  Streets are rivers.

  Yards are cluttered with debris.

  Hubcaps. Porch furniture.

  Broken fence posts.

  Everything is littered with

  leaves, branches, mud.

  Where my garden was there is now a pond.

  Popsicle sticks float on the surface.

  Ducks paddle around my scarecrow’s knees.

  The sky is the color

  of bruises.

  Matches the hue

  of my new mood.

  Flash Flood

  I pick my way to the trail.

  Hike up the rise above

  the bike path and

  look down on the creek.

  A stream once narrow

  enough to jump across

  is now a torrential river

  dozens of feet wide

  rushing with a ferocity

  I’ve never seen.

  Bridges and paths are

  washed away.

  Fences are pushed over

  or gone.

  Roads are wiped out

  leaving jagged edges of asphalt

  like broken teeth in

  a gaping mouth.

  A red barn door crashes past

  spins around

  jams against the bottom

  of the train trestle

  creating new obstacles for

  the water to pummel and thrash.

  A pair of tractor tires tumbles by

  like toys in a bathtub.

  I start to back up but

  the deep muck wants to suck

  the boots off my legs.

  I tug my foot

  lose my balance and slip

  down the embankment

  toward the rushing rapids.

  I scream

  but the roar of the water

  drowns my voice.

  And there’s no one

  here to hear me.

  Trapped

  I grab

  at tufts of grass

  as I slide

  down

  the muddy bank

  but

  my hands

  can’t

  grip

  and I fall

  into

  the

  torrent.

  I come up

  sputtering

  head

  above water

  shoulders out

  but

  my foot

  lodged

  between two rocks.

  The current

  slams me

  like a battering ram

  against

  a concrete

  retaining wall.

  I’m trapped.

  Even as the river

  pins me again and again

  I feel it

  rising.

  I have to

  get out of here

  or

  I will

  die.

  Rope

  tree branch

  rope swing

  big knot draped

  over pipe on wall

  reach

  out of water

  up

  farther

  fingers barely


  graze

  too high

  one foot stuck

  one free

  brace against rock

  pull hard

  harder

  foot won’t budge

  wiggle toes

  in boot

  wiggle pull

  wiggle

  pull

  pull

  pull

  foot starts

  to slide

  cry out

  deep breath

  pull

  more until

  foot

  escapes boot

  water slams body

  against

  wall

  breathe

  brace

  feet on rocks

  count three

  push

  up

  reach

  stretch

  up

  reach

  rope unhooks!

  swings

  way out

  across river

  away

  water slams body

  watch

  arc

  breathe

  wait

  brace

  push

  reach

  grab rope!

  hold hard

  tight

  pull

  push

  climb

  push

  climb

  pull

  pull

  push

  up

  out

  up

  out

  to safety

  Wrung Out

  I drag

  hands and knees

  up

  the muddy bank.

  Collapse

  in the

  soggy grass.

  Exhausted. Shivering.

  Ghost water still slams me

  slams me against the wall.

  My muscles don’t know I’m safe.

  I’m safe.

  I don’t feel safe.

  I can’t hear anything

  over the rush

  of the angry flood.

  The din and vibration of the rabid river

  expand into my chest and my throat.

  Grief presses on the backs of my eyes

  and blinds me.

  I wail

  hugging myself

  rocking.

  Of Course

  of course

  I am alone

  so no one

  hears me cry

  comes to comfort

  or help me

  of course they don’t

  they can’t

  because

  they aren’t

  so of course

  they don’t

  there is no they

  the river stole

  my boots

  my socks

  my feet are gashed

  and bloody

  my hands

  are raw

  rope-burned

  rock-sliced

  but there is nothing

  to do

  of course

  except haul myself

  up from the ground

  and

  go home

  Parable

  Home in bed

  embraced in my comforter

  curled around sweet, steady George

  I remember a parable

  from a friend’s bar mitzvah.

  A man who drowned in a flood arrives in heaven,

  angry that God didn’t save him. God reminds

  the man that he sent him rescuers in a canoe,

  a rowboat, and a helicopter, but the man kept

  telling the rescuers, “No, God will save me.”

  He was too foolish to recognize God’s help.

  It’s one thing to stay alive.

  I’m managing that with or without God’s help.

  But how much longer can I stay sane?

  How much more can I bear alone?

  Elliott’s words

  float through my brain.

  “I think if I were the Challenge Girl, it would be

  even harder for me to be alone for all that time.”

  The challenges of fires and floods

  can be overcome with courage and wit,

  but this feeling of loss and loneliness

  might just prove too great to endure

  even for this Challenge Girl.

  After the Flood

  The world is strange.

  A floating propane tank

  tumbles downriver

  crashes into a boulder

  and explodes.

  Wild animals

  wander through town

  disoriented and displaced

  from flooded habitats.

  And rattlesnakes invade

  the neighborhoods

  in search of dry ground

  after their culverts overflow.

  After surviving so much

  for so long

  I swear

  I will not die

  from a stupid snakebite

  or an encounter with

  a mountain lion.

  When we’re outside

  I ring the cowbell

  from Dad’s bike races.

  Stay to the center

  of streets.

  Eyes peeled

  for anything coiled

  or crouched.

  Ears tuned

  for rattles or growls.

  When the cold weather finally arrives

  and sends the snakes into hibernation

  I exhale for the first time in centuries.

  Another Birthday

  I do not celebrate.

  Push aside all feelings

  about turning fifteen.

  Every day is just another

  to withstand and overcome.

  Every night is just a Pyrrhic

  victory of survival.

  Emma and Ashanti already

  had their birthdays.

  I didn’t remember.

  If a birthday falls in the forest

  but there’s no one there to celebrate

  do we still get older?

  October

  First snowfall.

  Ongoing hunt

  for food and fuel.

  Basement water’s gone

  but leaves a nasty smell.

  The creek

  is swollen

  but has receded some.

  I wonder if it will

  freeze completely

  or flow

  through the winter.

  Acceptance

  (n.) the act of believing; coming to terms with something; recognition

  Sanctuary

  I love the library.

  My own personal book church.

  Safety.

  But I’m losing patience with fiction.

  The challenges and triumphs of

  fictional characters only make me

  feel worse about myself.

  Novels end nicely and neatly

  with all obstacles overcome.

  Loose ends tied up.

  My own story just keeps unraveling

  with a depressing predictability.

  In fourth grade, Mrs. Hawkins taught us

  three kinds of literary conflicts:

  humans against humans

  humans against nature

  humans against themselves

  I don’t need to read novels to understand

  the challenges of human survival.

  Don’t tell me about tragic heroes on epic quests.

  I am Penelope

  weaving the days away

  waiting for Odysseus

  to return.

  Emily

  I hated poetry in school but for some reason

  I love browsing in the poetry section.

  There is something about poetry

  being nonfiction

  but not factual.

  The most intimate personal thoughts


  —things people would never dream

  of saying out loud in middle school—

  right there on the page in black and white.

  I choose books based on the titles

  and whether the poets’ names

  sound like people I might like.

  e. e. cummings is a rebellious teenager

  who refuses to follow any rules

  and Billy Collins is an eleven-year-old kid

  who lives next door.

  I wonder if T. S. Eliot is a man or a woman.

  One day

  I’ll go to college with poetic friends

  sit in coffee shops

  write stories about

  the olden days of the imminent threat

  the trials and tribulations

  I endured.

  I want a poetic friend to keep me company

  explore alongside me

  help me forage for food and fuel.

  I run my hands along the spines

  looking for women’s names.

  I find Emily Dickinson.

  The book falls open.

  “Hope” is the thing with feathers -

  That perches in the soul -

  And sings the tune without the words -

  And never stops - at all -

  Well, that’s true.

  I have never stopped hoping

  my parents will come back for me

  or at the very least

  someone will pass through town

  and rescue me.

  But there are many days

  when the act of hoping

  feels even more difficult

  than the never-ending work of

  gathering food and fuel.

  If Emily Dickinson is right

  and

  hope is a bird perching in my soul

  then my hope hovers

  on the verge of flying away

  at any moment.

  Mary

  With Emily in my backpack

  I move farther down the aisle

  to New and Selected Poems

  by Mary Oliver.

  The woman on the cover

  gazes at something out of view

  as if she doesn’t know

  she is a poet and

  she is being photographed

  for the front of a book jacket.

  She looks pensive.

  I open to a random page.

  The Summer Day

  Who made the world?

  Who made the swan, and the black bear?

  Who made the grasshopper?

  This grasshopper, I mean—

  the one who has flung herself out of the grass,

  the one who is eating sugar out of my hand,

  who is moving her jaws back and forth instead of up and down—

  who is gazing around with her enormous and complicated eyes.

  Now she lifts her pale forearms and thoroughly washes her face.

  Now she snaps her wings open, and floats away.

 

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