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Far From You

Page 9

by Lisa Schroeder


  for another dose of heat.

  I thought back

  to waking up

  on the couch

  at five in the morning

  in the matchbox house,

  and what I wouldn’t give

  to be back there

  again.

  Vic and I

  exchanged some words

  about how much

  we did and didn’t sleep

  and joked about

  breakfast.

  I ordered pancakes with bacon,

  while she thought a

  a Spanish omelet

  sounded good.

  Then

  it was deathly quiet

  in the darkness

  until she said,

  “Ali, I want you to know, um—

  I really do love your father. A lot.”

  “I know.”

  “And I’m sorry if I’ve hurt you.

  It’s all new to me.

  Like it is to you.”

  She sounded

  sincere.

  “From what he tells me,” she went on,

  “your mom was a great woman.”

  She paused.

  Then she said,

  “She sounds like someone I would have liked.”

  Ivy started to fuss,

  so Vic pulled up her sweater

  and put her there,

  secretly hoping,

  I’m sure,

  that Ivy was getting

  more than just comfort.

  “She was awesome,” I whispered

  as we listened to Ivy’s

  little suckling sounds.

  “You know those sketches?” I continued.

  “On my bed that day?

  Those were hers.

  I found them, locked in her desk.”

  “Really?

  Why were they were locked away?”

  I’d thought about that.

  About what that meant,

  and why she didn’t give them to me,

  even if they weren’t finished.

  I think it’s like my music.

  “Sometimes it’s just too personal,” I told Vic.

  I think she drew

  those sketches at a time

  when she was really hurting.

  Thinking about leaving me

  and wishing,

  on paper,

  she didn’t have to.

  Kinda like

  my songs.

  Me writing them,

  thinking about her leaving me,

  and wishing,

  through music,

  she didn’t have to.

  Except maybe

  Claire was right.

  Maybe I’ve been wishing

  long enough.

  I hope he knows

  As snow filled the air,

  Blaze filled my thoughts.

  With every breath,

  my heart ached

  to see him again,

  to touch him again,

  to hold him again.

  What if

  I never saw him again?

  Did he know

  how much I loved him?

  Did he

  really

  and truly

  know?

  Victoria noticed

  when quiet tears

  trickled out.

  “Ali?”

  “I should have done it.”

  “Done what?”

  “He got us a hotel room.

  On his birthday.

  But I couldn’t do it.”

  She put Ivy

  in her car seat,

  then moved over

  so she sat

  next to me.

  “I just hope he knows

  how much I love him,” I told her.

  “Ali,” she said,

  “you don’t do it to prove your love.

  Saying no means you love yourself and him.

  Besides, he obviously adores you.

  He let you decide.

  And it didn’t change anything between you.

  Right?”

  I nodded.

  “The way you look at him?” she said,

  wrapping her arm around me

  and pulling me to her.

  “He knows.

  Believe me, he knows.”

  day three

  The snow

  was getting

  deeper

  and

  deeper.

  The air

  was getting

  colder

  and

  colder.

  Our spirits

  were getting

  lower

  and

  l

  o

  w

  e

  r.

  “I have to go for help,” Victoria said,

  looking out the window

  at the vast display of whiteness.

  “You won’t make it.

  It’s too cold.”

  She looked at me.

  “I have to try.

  If I don’t, none of us will make it.”

  I offered to go,

  so it was me

  making the sacrifice

  instead of her.

  But she shook her head.

  “No. I got us into this.

  I’ll get us out.”

  “Victoria, you’re Ivy’s mother.

  She needs you.

  She needs your milk.

  I have to go.

  Don’t argue.

  I’m going.”

  I started to pull out clothes to wear,

  when she grabbed my arm.

  I had never seen her

  so stern.

  “Ali, I don’t have much milk left.

  And besides, it doesn’t matter.

  I’m the grown-up here.

  I can’t send you out there.

  I can’t.

  It has to be me.”

  I looked at her,

  at Ivy,

  and then

  at the monster

  outside.

  It felt like

  my insides

  were being ripped

  out of my chest.

  “Don’t go,” I sobbed.

  “Just stay here.

  They’ll find us, like you said.

  They will.

  We have to stay together.”

  She shook her head again.

  “If they haven’t found us by now,

  it means we’re hard to find.

  I’m going.

  And you will stay and take care of Ivy.

  You can do it.”

  Good thing

  Confident

  was her middle name,

  because it certainly

  wasn’t

  mine.

  out of our cold hands

  We put layer

  upon layer

  of clothes

  on her,

  along with my

  boots.

  I hoped

  those boots

  would be as good to her

  as they had been

  to me.

  She had brought her heavy coat,

  which we were thankful for.

  I searched the car

  to see if there was anything

  else she could take

  to help her

  on her journey.

  Wishful thinking.

  Why didn’t Dad

  put a roadside

  emergency kit

  in the car?

  How could we travel

  all that way

  and not have one?

  I kept searching,

  and when my hand

  touched something

  hard and cold,

  underneath the backseat,

  I pulled it out.

  A flashlight.

  It wasn’t a lot.

  But it was something.


  “Are you sure you don’t want it?” Vic asked me.

  “You might be scared by yourself.”

  I shook my head

  and placed it in her hand,

  mine wrapping around hers

  for just a second.

  I made her eat

  the rest of the chips

  before she left,

  and she drank lots of water

  plus a little brandy.

  We talked about Ivy

  and keeping her fed

  and warm

  and all the other things

  a baby needs.

  When she looked at me,

  her tongue curled up,

  I saw fear

  in her eyes.

  But I saw

  determination there

  too.

  And when she looked at her baby daughter,

  I didn’t see a tongue-curling chameleon anymore.

  I saw

  one thing

  and one thing

  only.

  A kind,

  loving

  mother.

  I thought of my mom

  and how hard she fought

  with love

  in her heart

  for us.

  Maybe it’s not about

  determination

  or love

  or how hard

  you can fight.

  Maybe it’s just about

  fate

  and what is meant

  to be.

  And so,

  when I really

  didn’t know what to say,

  I told her,

  “Good luck,”

  as she hugged me good-bye.

  Because

  that was probably what

  she needed most

  in that moment.

  “If I don’t make it—”

  “Don’t talk like that,” I told her.

  “You’ll find help and you’ll get us out of here.”

  Then it occurred to me

  she probably needed

  something else

  in that moment.

  “Dad would be proud of you, Vic.

  He loves you. He really does.”

  She nodded.

  “Come back to us,” I said.

  I really,

  really

  meant it.

  gone

  I watched her walk

  until her silhouette

  was swallowed up

  by the forest

  and there was

  once again

  nothing to see

  but white.

  Words and a melody

  popped into my brain—

  a song

  asking to be

  written.

  I grabbed my guitar

  and sang it out loud to Ivy,

  who watched and listened,

  like she totally loved it.

  “Walking away with love in your heart,

  hoping the coldness won’t keep us apart.

  “Playing the memories like songs in my head.

  Things we’ve shared and words we’ve said.

  “Don’t drift away.

  I want you to stay.

  Don’t drift away.

  You really should stay.

  Don’t drift away.

  Please…

  come back to stay.”

  a snow-angel friend

  The formula,

  the water,

  and the food

  weren’t the only things

  we’d been stingy with.

  We’d been treating the diapers

  like a precious commodity,

  making Ivy wear them

  as long as possible.

  When we went to our

  make-believe

  outhouse in the snow,

  we took the used diapers

  with us.

  Ivy drifted off to sleep,

  so I used the opportunity

  to bundle up

  and head to our

  special tree,

  diaper in hand.

  The clouds above

  had cleared slightly

  and the snow

  had stopped falling

  for the moment.

  I took just a second

  to appreciate

  the pure beauty

  around me.

  I felt sad

  that I couldn’t

  enjoy it

  by building a snowman

  or making snow angels.

  And then I thought,

  Why can’t I?

  I flopped down on the ground

  into the fresh powder,

  my arms and legs

  gliding back and forth.

  When I stood up,

  I looked down at the angel,

  white and delicate,

  like lace.

  A guardian angel

  for us.

  alice in winter wonderland

  In the afternoon,

  when Ivy started fussing

  and I’d fed her

  some formula

  and there was nothing else

  I could do,

  I pulled out the antique book

  and started reading.

  My voice

  or the story

  or something

  calmed her,

  and so we settled in.

  I read about Alice

  d

  r

  o

  p

  p

  i

  n

  g

  down the rabbit hole

  and growing small

  and growing big

  and growing small again.

  Alice was

  by herself

  down that hole.

  She wanted

  to follow

  the rabbit

  so bad,

  but she wasn’t able to.

  I’m pretty sure

  I knew

  exactly

  how she felt.

  from bad to worse

  So thirsty,

  I drank

  the last few drops

  of remaining water.

  My hand

  became a shovel

  as I scooped snow

  into one of Ivy’s

  bottles.

  It seemed somewhat

  ironic that what could kill us

  would now keep us

  alive.

  Except,

  I quickly discovered,

  there would be no heat

  if the car

  wouldn’t start.

  And without heat,

  there would be

  no water.

  grow wings, little one

  Every hour

  it got colder.

  I felt it

  when I went out

  to the bathroom.

  I tried

  on and off

  into the evening

  to start the car.

  Even though

  it still had

  some gas,

  it just wouldn’t

  start.

  Too

  freaking

  cold.

  Ivy

  fell into

  a deep sleep.

  I put her

  in the sleeping bag

  and thought of her

  as a caterpillar,

  snuggled up

  in her cocoon.

  I watched her,

  then closed my eyes

  and saw

  a little girl,

  her brown hair

  flapping in the wind,

  the yellow sun

  kissing her face

  as she ran around

  in our yard.

  Sleep,

  little one,

  sleep.

  Grow strong,

  and grow wings.

 
The world

  is waiting for you.

  sometimes prayers do work

  Like an old man

  waking from a long nap,

  the motor sputtered and coughed,

  and finally turned over.

  Like an old woman

  coming inside from a rainstorm,

  I breathed a sigh of relief.

  After I melted the snow,

  I took a couple sips

  of water

  and then I made Ivy

  a bottle.

  I had never been

  so glad

  to see a bottle

  completely

  emptied.

  believe

  Help did not come

  like I hoped it would.

  Darkness

  surrounded us,

  and without Victoria

  there to talk to,

  the silence

  was almost

  maddening.

  I thought of her

  walking alone

  in the dark

  and I wanted to scream

  from all the fear,

  anger,

  and sadness I felt.

  I would start to imagine

  the worst,

  but then I’d make myself imagine

  a different picture.

  It looked something like this:

 

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