The Way the Light Bends

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The Way the Light Bends Page 16

by Cordelia Jensen


  How we pretended

  to fetch water.

  I tell her then about Silas.

  “I know I can be stupid

  but I didn’t think I was that stupid.”

  “Don’t say that,” she says.

  “You’re not stupid.

  You just really liked him.

  Sometimes when we like people,

  we ignore the things about them

  that we don’t want to see.”

  She looks down then,

  sad,

  and I can’t help but wonder

  what more

  she isn’t telling me.

  BACK THROUGH THE GATE

  Eventually,

  we walk back.

  My heart speeds up

  as we

  get closer

  to home.

  I tell her I don’t want to see them,

  I have nothing to say.

  She says maybe they’ll do the talking.

  Almost all of me wants to keep walking,

  go anywhere

  except back there.

  But Holly’s hand holds firmly

  to my own

  as we walk through

  the gate,

  and we enter together.

  IN/AWAY

  “Oh, thank God,” Mom says,

  her eyes red.

  They were about to head out

  to look for me too.

  She pulls me into a hug—

  I pull away.

  She lets me.

  Dad says he’s so relieved to see me.

  Hugs me too.

  But I shrug him off.

  He guides Holly out of the room.

  I want to yell at them not to go.

  Not to leave me alone

  with her.

  Mom sits on the couch.

  Pats the seat beside her.

  I sit as

  far away

  as I can.

  In the chair that no one ever sits in.

  She looks sad, nods.

  And then she starts talking.

  FUNCTIONS

  “Linc, I want to explain what I think you heard.

  There’s a lot you don’t know about

  my own childhood

  because I haven’t been ready to tell you.

  There’s something you asked about

  when you were much younger

  but I never really answered.

  You asked why summers were happier without my father.”

  I look up.

  This isn’t the conversation

  I expected.

  “As you know, my father died before you and Holly were born.

  But not much before.

  In those last years, I hardly saw him.

  That was a choice I made.

  He was a violent man,

  a terrible alcoholic.

  Half the time he was out of his mind.

  So—when Roy—”

  Pause.

  She clasps her hands together.

  Exhales.

  I feel my own heart rate pick up.

  I have no idea what she’s going to say.

  “Roy was an artist and he was also gay. Did you know that?

  It was something that my father tried to be okay with,

  sometimes.

  But really, he wasn’t. Not on the inside.

  And when he drank, it was worse.

  He beat Roy, frequently.

  One night it got really bad.

  Broken bones.

  Called him horrible names.

  And Roy never fully recovered psychologically—

  Honey, he—”

  And then she begins to cry.

  “He committed suicide?”

  I say it

  so she doesn’t have to.

  She nods.

  The air in the room

  sits heavy.

  “If my father had been different,

  I know Roy would still be alive.

  He wrote in his note—”

  Her voice cracks.

  More tears fall.

  “He just wanted his approval, really.

  And Mom left Dad of course,

  finally.

  After.”

  Deep breath.

  “When I married your dad, I told him I never, ever

  wanted to pass on my dad’s genes.

  Alcoholism runs in families, you know. And his was so severe.”

  Mom. Drinking now every Sunday.

  “And I have some issues of my own. Maybe you’ve noticed?”

  I nod.

  “I drank too, after everything.

  Some things are tough to fight, and I guess I wanted to forget.

  But then I stayed sober for a long time, sweetie.

  All through med school, you and Holly being little—

  so long—

  I thought I could—”

  “Drink just on Sundays.”

  She sighs.

  “I thought I could handle it in moderation.”

  “So you didn’t want to pass on his genes . . . or your own?”

  “No I didn’t, and it wasn’t just that I—

  I had so many fears thinking I could never be a good mom

  considering the way I was raised.

  But your dad wanted kids so badly

  and when we went to Ghana, working with those orphans,

  for the first time, I could picture myself as a mother.

  So I told your dad we could look into adoption.”

  She pauses. Looks away from me.

  “But then—as you know—

  I got pregnant too—

  and I was so scared about it.

  Your dad really wanted you, Linc.

  And, yes, I did think about putting you up for adoption.

  But then—

  you were born—”

  She is weeping now.

  I can’t stop the tears

  streaming down

  my own cheeks

  either.

  “You looked so much like him.”

  “Your dad?”

  “No, honey—

  Roy.

  So when I saw you

  I knew I had to try.

  To hold on.

  Even if I was scared.”

  I wipe my face.

  “And you were so creative

  even as a child, just like Roy was.

  But he struggled so much as an artist.

  He never did well in school.

  He flunked out of freshman year of college.

  Tried to sell his art, never could—

  he always needed money

  which made Dad even more angry, disappointed—

  he—

  Roy never figured out how to find his way

  in spite of Dad

  like I did.”

  She pauses.

  “Watching you struggle,

  it’s brought up a lot of my own past again.

  But I thought if I wasn’t hurting you the same way Dad hurt

  Roy, I—

  maybe—

  but somehow—

  in trying not to make the same mistakes my dad made,

  I think a part of me has found the similarities anyway.

  He would get mad at Roy

  for failing, for drawing instead of studying.

  He never took the time to try to help him

  with his work.

  So I’ve tried my hardest to be present

 
; to help.”

  She lets out a sob.

  Pulls herself back together.

  “Linc, I know I haven’t been easy on you, and maybe I should have tried harder to listen to what it is you really want.

  I know I need to work on myself. I’m trying.

  I’m going to get back into therapy, to recovery.

  Do better.”

  I look down.

  “All I’ve ever wanted for you—and your sister—is for both of you to not have to struggle.

  To be able to function

  to succeed

  in this world.”

  The shadows of the window bars

  crisscross on the floor.

  In between them

  light streams in

  from lampposts

  outside.

  I try to process

  everything I’ve just learned

  this part of my past

  I never knew

  that now feels like the opening

  of a door.

  So I say to Mom,

  “Maybe I have my own way of functioning?

  And succeeding?”

  It sounds like a question

  but I know it is an answer.

  She looks at me,

  nods.

  The light from the lamppost

  just barely

  touches her shoulder.

  TOUCH

  After we sit

  breathe in silence

  for a while

  Dad comes in with tissues,

  gives me a sideways hug

  sits next to Mom.

  Before leaving

  I touch the place

  on her shoulder

  where the light hits.

  LUCIDITY

  That night

  I dream:

  I’m inside Gramercy Park.

  I look down at my hands.

  They are shadows.

  Silas touches them

  and

  my shadow fingers

  break

  off

  one

  by

  one.

  I shout for help.

  Mom comes but says

  she doesn’t have the right medicine

  to fix me.

  She floats away.

  I look down at a pigeon,

  ask him if he has a key.

  He shrugs and takes my picture.

  EMPTY SPACE

  I wake up early

  Saturday morning

  but stay in bed,

  hoping if I do

  I can pretend

  I dreamt it all—

  getting caught

  expelled

  jeopardizing my chances at IAA

  Silas and his ex

  Mom and her secrets

  me, unwanted,

  learning the truth.

  I take pictures of the ceiling.

  White

  on white

  on white.

  GESTURES

  Before her shift

  Mom comes in

  in her scrubs.

  She has a breakfast tray.

  Says I deserve something special.

  She puts it down.

  Then places a finger on Roy’s camera.

  Out on my desk.

  “I’ve been thinking,”

  she says,

  “if you think you can do photo class

  and keep up with your schoolwork . . .”

  She stops,

  smiles.

  “Really?”

  I say,

  then break into a smile back.

  “Maybe for the next session?

  In January?” I say.

  “Start fresh?” she asks.

  “Start fresh,” I confirm.

  THE RIGHT MEDICINE

  After she leaves my room

  the details of my dream

  come back into focus—

  Mom didn’t have the right medicine.

  I think of the truth—

  Roy so badly beaten.

  Mom,

  an orthopedic surgeon,

  Roy,

  robbed of his fight.

  And I know

  with startling clarity

  that my family’s

  history may be in the choices

  they—

  we—

  have all made

  but our story

  is still being written.

  And

  there’s always room for

  re-

  vision.

  WORDLESS

  I eat Mom’s pancakes

  check my texts

  Ellery.

  She said Holly texted her

  a bunch last night

  asking if she knew where I was.

  She hopes I’m okay.

  I text her that

  I’m home, safe,

  no need to worry.

  I tell her sorry

  for not listening to her

  about Silas.

  She was right.

  Silas.

  He sent a heart emoji.

  He can’t even say

  sorry?

  I toss the phone onto my bed.

  Go find

  Holly.

  A SPACE FOR US

  For the first time in a long time,

  Holly & I have a lounge day in the den.

  Pull out the couch,

  make popcorn,

  watch movie after movie.

  Sometime later

  we talk about my

  conversation with Mom.

  How intense

  her childhood was.

  How she makes

  more sense to me now.

  Holly says Mom talked to her too.

  That she hopes things really will get better.

  Then she says she has been feeling

  more disconnected

  from Stefano, Maggs

  lately.

  Even from Mom.

  That she keeps wanting to know more

  about where she came from.

  Feeling not quite there, not here either.

  I say

  sometimes it feels like what’s

  invisible

  is more real than what’s actually

  in front of us.

  As we sit,

  //side by side,

  knee to knee//

  we make a deal.

  To help each other,

  “one for one.”

  And—as we do—

  I make a wish

  that there was more room in this world

  for those of us caught

  in the space between.

  REENTERING

  I.

  On Sunday,

  just two weeks until winter break,

  Dad comes in to help me plan

  my cyber week.

  We enter the cyber school website.

  Notice there have been three comments made

  about my post on Richard III.

  Looks like you’ve already made some friends,

  he says.

  I raise my eyebrows,

  then click in.

  II.

  Two days later,

  Dad starts going back

  to his office.

  The days pass faster

  than I expect.

  The silence of the house

  helps me think.

  Seem
s like I have a lot in common

  with these online kids.

  Kicked out of schools.

  Couldn’t quite catch up.

  Not sure where they belong.

  III.

  On Thursday,

  a new comment

  on the one I made about

  Richard III’s duplicity,

  someone named Rachel

  calls me insightful.

  Later,

  I hear from Silas.

  It’s been 5 days since he texted

  me a heart

  6 days since I saw him

  with that other girl.

  Now he wants to see me.

  I ask him if he’s still with her.

  He tells me I don’t understand.

  That they’re old friends, will always be.

  The first day we met

  I was so drawn to him.

  We seemed so similar.

  I almost say: let’s meet up.

  But I stop.

  We are our choices.

  And I know that

  I don’t trust him.

  My stomach knots

  then releases

  I think of finally standing up for myself

  to Mom.

  It feels the same when I write Silas back.

  I tell him it’s over.

  Deep breath in and then I write:

  I’m not okay being in your peripheral view.

  I know now I’m worth someone’s full focus.

  I tell him it’s over

  then take a celebratory selfie.

  It’s me: I’m smiling, centered.

  Then, to the class,

  I write about the pity I feel

  for Richard III.

  When someone likes my comment,

  calls it intelligent,

  my body feels lit,

  and this time

  it’s from within.

  ARRIVAL

  I take a break

  get a snack.

  Look to see if the mail has arrived.

  And there it is.

  An envelope from the

  Innovative Arts Academy

  with my name.

  I don’t wait.

  I tear it open.

  BUT/AND/THEN

  Your portfolio is remarkable . . . strong vision and voice . . .

  Highly recommended by your teacher . . .

  But then:

  When we called the school for your transcript we were made aware of your expulsion . . . and your current 2.4 GPA.

  We regret to inform you that

  we cannot offer you a spot . . .

  Underneath my feet,

  the ground cracks.

  Eyes tear.

 

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