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The Places We Sleep

Page 7

by Caroline Brooks DuBois


  whoever you want to be in this town.

  You’re free. No history.

  I have to be

  who everyone expects me to be.

  Good old Camille.”

  “You think I’m free?” I smirk.

  “Free and forever

  the newbie, maybe.”

  “One day, Abbey,

  I’ll be in college somewhere, far from here,

  playing basketball.”

  “That’s funny—you want to leave,

  and all I want is to stay put,” I say

  without a smile on my face.

  “Yeah, funny,” Camille agrees.

  “It’s a wonder we met at all.”

  76.

  The community center oozes orange

  and black. Tables overflow with candy,

  popcorn, and caramel apples.

  Parents are throwing us

  a Halloween party,

  Ghouls After School,

  since we’re “too old

  for trick or treat.”

  We’ve been warned to take it easy

  on the gore. “Out of respect

  for all that’s happened.”

  Mr. Lydon’s band, The Hiccups,

  plays in a corner. Tommy and Sheila

  show their fangs and slow dance.

  Angela and Lana float over angelically

  to Jacob and me, where we’re drinking punch sheepishly,

  waiting for Camille to show up.

  My costume consists of a shirt

  splattered with paint, and Jacob wears

  an orange tee with the word

  Costume written on it.

  “What’re you supposed to be?” Angela stops near me to stare.

  “A Jackson Pollock painting,” I reply.

  “I knew it!” Jacob smiles.

  “O-kay.” Angela nudges Lana and rolls her eyes, then says,

  “Camille must’ve lost her jockstrap.”

  I don’t say anything,

  and neither does Jacob—at first.

  Some friends we are!

  Then suddenly Jacob speaks up,

  “Were they all out of pitchforks and horns at The Devil Store?”

  Angela and Lana groan

  and flutter away. I let a laugh

  escape once they’re gone.

  Then—all in one breath—Jacob describes

  a Pollock-inspired project he once made

  and how he mostly plays soccer now

  but his favorite teacher was Mr. Lydon last year

  and do I like Mr. Lydon, too?

  “He’s definitely my favorite!” I agree,

  and a new kind of warmth floods me.

  Jacob grins back,

  and we glance once more

  toward the door,

  waiting for our shared friend

  to appear.

  When Camille finally shows,

  clad in jersey and high-tops,

  I’m annoyed that Angela

  got the gist of her costume right.

  Feeling the need to say

  I’m sorry

  or

  I’m a loser friend

  for not defending her,

  I push Jacob in Camille’s direction

  and we rush over to her.

  Then the three of us

  spend most of the night

  huddled around a bowl of candy,

  laughing and eating

  only the good chocolates

  and voting on our

  all-time favorite

  costumes.

  77.

  After the dance, I wait at the curb

  for Mom to show up.

  I’m beginning to think she forgot

  since Jacob and Camille

  and most of the others have left.

  Mr. Lydon, loading instruments,

  calls to me: “You okay, Abbey?”

  “Yeah,” I say, before spying

  Angela and Lana approaching

  with arms full of dismantled decor.

  “Waiting on Mommy?” they giggle

  but don’t stop for my reaction

  because they’ve spotted what looks like

  Jiman and a little boy

  walking by themselves,

  her arm tight around

  his shoulder.

  “Who invited you?!” Angela yells.

  “Ange!” Lana claps her hand over Angela’s mouth,

  “You’re so mean!”

  But the expression

  on Jiman’s face doesn’t seem to change,

  although I’m too far away to tell for sure.

  What I don’t do

  is tell them to shut up,

  to leave people alone for once

  because mostly I’m relieved

  that they’ve forgotten

  about me.

  NOVEMBER

  78.

  Most afternoons,

  I find Mom lying on her bed

  with books propped around her

  neither sleeping

  nor reading.

  Once a week, she writes

  a letter to Jackson and Kate

  from our kitchen table

  and asks me to draw

  a “happy” picture on it.

  One time, I sketch

  a pink flower blooming

  up the side of the paper—

  and for some reason,

  this makes her cry

  and lock herself

  in her bedroom

  for the weekend.

  79.

  Does someone stay the age

  they die forever? A still life,

  a photograph, a timeline

  stopped, a forever blank spot

  in their family’s future?

  I dream Aunt Rose

  takes an elevator skyward,

  finger on the Up button,

  Willy Wonka style,

  zipping like a shooting star

  across New York’s horizon.

  I hope

  the rivers run chocolate

  where she is. And they have music.

  And all the instruments.

  And a twinkling of souls

  strung ’round the dark

  like a party where she’s

  the honored guest

  all dressed

  in light.

  Mom hopes,

  she whispers in a broken voice,

  “One day they find her

  or some of her bones,

  find something to lay beneath

  the ground and a stone

  we can write her name on.”

  80.

  Camille tells me

  that Jacob informed her

  that Sheila’s boyfriend Tommy

  and some eighth-graders

  were caught after hours

  at the elementary school next door

  throwing rocks at a little boy

  and calling him “Terrorist!”

  because of his name

  and the shade of his skin.

  I recall

  Dad’s words:

  “It’s what they do.

  They’re terrorists.”

  But

  He’s just a little boy!

  81.

  In the cafeteria,

  I overhear some girls at a table nearby

  gossiping and pointing in Jiman’s direction.

  Jiman sketches in a sketchbook.

  Does she know they’re talking about h
er?

  Any other day,

  they could be

  just as easily

  talking about me.

  I hear

  them say

  that she moved here

  from somewhere up north,

  or maybe farther away,

  that her parents run a restaurant in town.

  Who’d eat there!

  the girls laugh

  and

  Terrorists!

  they whisper.

  But I am thinking:

  My parents and I will.

  We

  will

  eat there.

  82.

  Today

  for the first time ever,

  Jiman doesn’t sit alone on the bus.

  She sits with a little boy,

  who usually sits near the driver.

  Perhaps he’s her brother.

  He looks like the boy from Halloween.

  I wonder if he’s the ONE

  they threw rocks at.

  Jiman sits on the outside

  facing the aisle, as if daring

  anyone to bother them,

  and the little boy sits by the window.

  He crouches low in the seat

  and pretends to sleep.

  83.

  We’re having class outdoors.

  I zip my jacket from the autumn chill.

  Mr. Lydon has instructed us

  to pick a “natural” object to draw.

  So I wander around, begin sketching

  a large rock that lies left of the soccer field,

  a rock kids hang out on after school.

  But I crumple my page, move on.

  I come to Aunt Rose’s tree,

  the one I tied a ribbon around in September,

  and I sit at its base.

  The branches are mostly empty now.

  Like arms, they could hug me

  if they could bend.

  Dry leaves surround the tree—

  like clothing fallen free.

  I think of Dad’s camouflage

  and its shades of color

  meant to keep him hidden.

  A few branches have broken and are hanging crooked,

  from where kids must have swung from them.

  It’s a lovely tree, really.

  After sketching it,

  I re-tie the faded ribbon

  and think of Aunt Rose,

  before leaving

  to look for

  Camille.

  84.

  It’s that time again.

  “Has your monthly visitor come to call?” Mom asks,

  which seriously irritates me

  because a visitor should be invited

  or wanted, or at least have permission

  to drop by.

  I spend lots of time

  in the bathroom and my bedroom,

  crossing off the days

  until my “company” departs.

  At least this time,

  Mom caves and writes an excuse for P.E.

  that lets me sit out, lean against the wall

  and draw, try to avoid the stray basketballs

  that always seem to find me. But I regret

  leaving Camille alone in the locker room,

  so each time she looks my way from the court,

  I wave or give her a thumbs-up

  for the points she scores.

  Tommy asks her to play H-O-R-S-E,

  so The Trio

  cheer loudly on the sidelines for Tommy—

  but mostly Sheila boos Camille,

  who makes shot

  after

  glorious

  shot!

  85.

  All week long,

  Mom lets me order

  my takeout favorites—

  enchiladas, pizza, lo mein—

  says she’s lost the energy to cook.

  I make heaping plates for Dad

  and leave them wrapped up

  in the fridge.

  Before bed each night,

  I warm a heating pad

  filled with starchy-smelling rice

  and sleep curled around it,

  like I used to sleep

  with Mr. Poodle.

  In the mornings,

  the heating pad has slipped

  between the wall and the bed,

  and the plates for Dad

  are scraped clean and waiting

  in the sink.

  86.

  Mom and I hang out

  mostly without talking these days.

  We speak an unspoken language,

  a mother-daughter language

  that leaves a lot open

  to interpretation.

  I mention my art class

  in case she might want to ask

  about it, but she’s listening

  to news on the radio

  while pushing her noodles

  around with chopsticks,

  so I sketch her face,

  between bites.

  Words on the radio are tossed about,

  words like hijackers and evil-doers.

  I want to talk about Aunt Rose.

  But Mom shrugs:

  “I can’t talk about that right now.”

  87.

  Camille has a dentist appointment

  so I’m alone on the bus again—

  not really alone—

  but sometimes

  it feels that way

  with lots of people around,

  people who don’t really know me,

  listening

  and witnessing

  what goes down.

  The football boys perch

  a few rows back.

  And I will them

  not to target me,

  especially since Jacob

  is within hearing

  range today.

  Jiman boards the bus,

  passes the little boy, who might be her brother,

  and heads toward the middle, toward us.

  Others deliberately scoot their backpacks over

  to take up their half-empty seats.

  She pauses briefly near me.

  Unfortunately, I look up too late,

  drop my sketchpad, watch my pencils roll away.

  Jacob stifles a giggle, whispers,

  “Awk-ward!” and waits

  for me to agree.

  Then I surprise myself

  and him

  when I whip around

  and snap, “Shut up!

  She might hear you.”

  Stunned or hurt, he says,

  “I was kidding

  and talking

  about you,

  Abbey,” and hands me

  a handful

  of runaway

  colored

  pencils.

  88.

  It’s Saturday night

  and we’re trying out a new restaurant,

  one of our long-standing Wood family traditions

  for when we’re celebrating.

  Tonight, it’s my choice

  so I choose Middle Eastern food,

  hoping the place might belong to Jiman’s family.

  What would I say if I happened to see her?

  “So what’s the occasion?” I ask my parents

  between bites of savory rice.

  Mom and Dad exchange worry.

  “What?” I brace myself

  for what I’m about to feel.

/>   Like a balloon losing its air,

  Dad starts to explain,

  “Very soon…

  I’m going…

  to be leaving…

  for Afghanistan.”

  “Wh-When?” I ask, confused,

  and, “For how long?”

  “We knew this was coming, remember?

  I warned you.

  Maybe a six-month tour.”

  “You didn’t say Afghanistan!”

  “Well, I didn’t know then, but now it’s clear.

  It’s my job, Abbey, it’s what I do.”

  “Can’t you do anything else?”

  because

  what if…

  something terrible

  happens

  over

  there?

  I push back

  from the table

  just as the waiter reaches over

  to refill my water,

  and I knock the pitcher

  out of his hand.

  He apologizes like it was his fault,

  as I stare blankly back at him.

  “Abbey,” Dad says gently,

  and mops the table with his napkin.

  “Abbey,” he says again,

  and suddenly I’m filled

  with fear—

  but for whom or what

  I don’t know.

  And that’s when I see Jiman

  and the little boy,

  who has to be her brother,

  smiling from a picture

  behind the cash register.

  I chose the right restaurant!

  Beneath their picture,

  a plaque reads

  FOOD, FAMILY, AND FRIENDS.

  And I repeat those words to myself

  again and again until

  I am calm.

  89.

  The details are vague,

  so Dad packs his gear

  and polishes various pieces

  of equipment each night.

  His rucksack stays bloated

  by the door, as we

  await his orders.

  Each morning, he reports

  to the base earlier than usual,

  trains all day, then returns to our house

  in the dark. The specifics

  of his deployment are one

  BIG secret, so we act

  like nothing is different.

  Sometimes it feels

  like we’re pretending,

  like we’re dolls in a dollhouse,

  just waiting, in whatever position

  we’ve been placed.

  Here’s what we look like:

  Mom sits at the kitchen table,

 

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