The Best and Hardest Thing

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The Best and Hardest Thing Page 3

by Pat Brisson


  in which Molly is wildly successful

  In the Lunchroom: Instant Replay

  I’m counting up the actual words

  he actually said to me today:

  Me: So, you’re new here, aren’t you?

  He: Yup.

  Me: My name’s Molly.

  You’re Grady, right?

  I’m a sophomore. That’s why

  we don’t have any classes together.

  He: (nods and smiles a little—no teeth)

  Me: So, do you like it here?

  He: (shrugs)

  Me: Yeah, I know exactly what you mean—it’s not the most exciting place on earth. When I think that there are kids living in New York or Las Vegas or L.A. and all they have to do is walk out the door at the end of the day and they’re in the middle of everything! And what have we got? Cather’s Market and the Beechwood Bowling Alley. I mean, they’re practically the definition of boring.

  He: Maybe you need to make your own excitement.

  Me: Oh, really? How?

  He: (smiles mysteriously)

  Me: C’mon, tell me . . .

  He: (lifts his eyebrows in a knowing way, still smiling mysteriously) (And oh my gosh, his eyelashes are to die for! Then some other senior guy goes by and tilts his head toward the door.)

  He: Gotta go (and leaves).

  Total: Twelve (counting that first “Hey!”)—

  a perfect dozen,

  an utterly completely perfect

  way to make a start.

  Subject: Angel Kisses

  I did it, Barb!

  Sat next to him at lunch today!

  He smelled like soap and corn chips;

  has eyes the color of summer leaves

  and the longest lashes a boy should

  legally be allowed to have because—

  remember when, as little kids,

  we learned to give angel kisses,

  fluttering our lashes on each other’s cheeks?—

  all I could think about today,

  sitting so close to Grady

  and his practically illegal eyelashes,

  was getting angel kisses from him

  on my cheeks and neck and everywhere,

  and oh my gosh,

  it made it hard to even breathe. . . .

  Gram / Molly

  Lecture/response for voice/thought:

  Molly, Oh, no,

  we need to talk. she’s using her I-wish-I-didn’t-have-to-say-this voice.

  Now,

  I wish I didn’t have to say this, but

  I promised your mother

  Not this again!

  (in unison)

  I’d do the best I could

  by you,

  and God knows that

  I’ve tried.

  I’d do the best I could

  by you,

  and God knows that

  I’ve tried.

  But Molly, I have to tell you

  No, really, you don’t!

  I don’t like what I see.

  (Memo to self: don’t roll your eyes!)

  You’ve changed so much . . .

  Thank you!

  your clothes,

  So hot!

  your hair—

  My hair??

  well, your hair is fine,

  just different’s all, but

  different like so much of you is different—

  Better, Gram.

  makeup like you never wore before,

  I’m not a baby anymore.

  skirts up to here, and tops down to there. . . .

  Face it, Gram—I’m practically an adult.

  Is there some boy you’re trying to impress?

  Not some boy—the boy.

  I may be old, Molly,

  You said it, not me. . . .

  but I know this much:

  Uh-oh, crazy old-person advice coming up. . . .

  he won’t buy the cow

  if he can get the milk for free.

  What!?

  All I’m saying is

  Oh, good, she’s almost through.

  I want you to be careful

  I will.

  and not get hurt.

  I won’t.

  You know how much I love you, right?

  I do, Gram. Love you back!

  I Let His Words Caress Me

  His words run round and round my brain:

  Maybe you need to make your own excitement.

  (his eyes so green)

  Maybe . . .

  (his hair so shiny black)

  . . . you need . . .

  (his fingers, long and thin)

  . . . to make . . .

  (his lips, his cheeks, his neck)

  . . . your own . . .

  (his hands, his arms, his chest)

  . . . excitement . . .

  (his legs and oh!)

  . . . excitement . . .

  Yes!

  . . . excitement . . .

  Yes!

  My own.

  . . . excitement . . .

  Yes,

  I do!

  The Next Day: English Class

  Where are Romeo and Juliet when you need them?

  Today I’m longing for a love—

  intense, electric, hot—

  between one aching lover and another,

  and where have Juliet and her boy gone?

  Packed away in cardboard boxes

  in the bottom of the classroom closet

  until next year.

  What lousy timing.

  Even Annabel Lee would do,

  Poe’s perfect wife;

  a bit too dead for comfort, sure,

  but still a love story that could

  be a launchpad to imagined bliss.

  Not here.

  Not today.

  Today we’re doing grammar,

  dull, dry, boring grammar,

  until I see that any sentence can be diagrammed

  and content myself to be

  object to his subject,

  a very active verb between us

  with lots of delicious adverbs

  and demonstrative pronouns

  in wonderful prepositional phrases.

  Since Lunch Is the Only Time I Get to See Grady

  This

  is what I live for:

  lunch.

  Lunch: The Second Day

  I carry the memory of yesterday—

  made perfect by perpetual repetition—

  with me to the lunchroom

  like a prize:

  “This is to certify that

  the bearer of this memory is entitled to

  full and immediate access

  to the object of her affection,

  one Grady Dillon,

  during the full course of the lunch period,

  and is further granted

  the right to pursue

  a romantic and mutually rewarding relationship

  with the aforementioned Mr. Dillon

  until a state of Absolute Bliss is achieved.”

  So I’m not at all surprised

  to find an empty seat next to Grady.

  And not surprised when he

  half-smiles as I sit down.

  I’ve earned this, right?

  And in my mind I’ve already done this

  at least a thousand times.

  It Wasn’t Perfect, But . . .

  Electricity shot through me

  each time our thighs touched.

  And I found out he loves

  corn chips,

  hates hotdogs,

  thinks pickles are gross,

  and won’t say where he’s been.

  (Around. You know, here and there . . .)

  I love a man of mystery.

  He’s like a puzzle I get

  a little of each day

  and have to piece together over time.

  The Big Steep

  In Honors Poetry

  we read and read.
r />   And read.

  I count 160 volumes—

  fat and thin—

  along the classroom shelves for us

  to borrow.

  “Immerse yourselves,”

  Ms. Butler says.

  “Steep yourselves in different styles.”

  I think of this as the

  Teabag Method of Teaching

  and see myself up to my neck

  in boiling water with

  poets old and new.

  “Keep copies of your favorites

  in a binder for yourselves.”

  We do.

  And then comes the assignment—

  to take the lines that speak to us

  and make a new poem with them.

  “Huh?” we ask, confused.

  “Just try it,” she says.

  “Fool around with it; have fun.”

  We try,

  and surprise ourselves.

  The new poems carry with them

  traces of the old;

  like finding a grandparent’s nose or chin

  in the face of a child:

  the one is not the other

  and yet,

  is.

  Here’s my poem’s ancestry:

  Eyes, Langston Hughes;

  Cheeks, William Carlos Williams;

  Mouth, Emily Dickinson;

  Hair, John Gillespie Magee Jr.;

  Smile, Edward Lear;

  Ears, John Masefield;

  Fingers, William Butler Yeats;

  Toes, John Ciardi.

  Listen: A Pastiche

  Well, son, I’ll tell you:

  so much depends upon

  the thing with feathers that

  slipped the surly bonds of earth

  and danced by the light of the moon.

  When the long trick’s over,

  tread softly—

  the next step up is sky.

  Initial Bliss

  For three straight days my lunch spot

  was my hot spot,

  was my yes! spot,

  was the spot right next to Grady,

  and everything was great.

  And then she beat me to it,

  got there first and took right over,

  worked her wiles,

  made him smile,

  shot me daggers with her glance.

  And well,

  at least he noticed,

  did a couldn’t-help-it shrug thing,

  mouthed a silent word,

  “tomorrow,”

  sent me long and luscious looks.

  So I sat and cursed the teacher

  who delayed me just a moment,

  ’cause it only takes a moment

  to win a guy

  or lose.

  Weeks Go By

  Barb’s e-mails start off long and daily

  and gradually dwindle to shorter

  and less often.

  She’s getting involved in her new school—

  debate team,

  journalism club,

  orchestra—

  and volunteering at the hospital

  twice a week.

  She’s making lots of friends.

  How is it that this new school

  is such a perfect fit for her

  when this one never was?

  She writes of people I don’t know,

  places I’ve never been,

  a school I can’t even imagine.

  My life feels small next to hers.

  I miss her,

  and the spot where she was

  is growing cold.

  A Weird and Totally Unexpected Gift from Gram

  I find them on my dresser after school.

  There’s a note:Dear Molly,

  Please don’t be insulted.

  You may not need these now

  (I hope you won’t be needing them for years),

  but better safe than sorry.

  And I want you to be safe.

  Don’t get pregnant, Molly.

  It makes everything so hard,

  delays your dreams until sometimes

  they shrivel up and die.

  I love you more than I can say

  and always will, I swear.

  You’re such a smart girl, Molly.

  Whatever else, stay smart.

  I feel a blush that’s creeping up my neck,

  across my face,

  imagining my Gram at the Rite Aid register,

  sliding these across the counter.

  It makes me want to die, but

  I stuff them in my dresser,

  except for just the one I put

  into my bag and zip it in there:

  safe.

  And So It Goes

  Long mornings of

  waiting-for-lunch,

  long afternoons of

  remembering-what-happened-at-lunch,

  long weekends of

  figuring-out-what-to-wear-to-lunch, and

  lunch!

  the center of it all,

  with me (next to Grady)

  charming, teasing, smiling,

  joking, working my way into his heart.

  (I hope. I think.)

  Unless that other girl

  got there first.

  That Other Girl

  I ask around and find out

  she’s a senior and a schemer.

  And even though I dodge and duck

  my way through halls to get there first,

  sometimes I just don’t make it.

  And there she is—

  in my chair,

  with a grin that’s too triumphant,

  touching Grady’s arm or shoulder,

  whispering

  something in his ear.

  There is one consolation:

  her name is Valerie Turdo.

  Makes me think of something steaming

  left behind by some old dog.

  Turdo.

  Turd—oh!

  Turd.

  The Game

  There’s a game we play,

  that girl and I

  (though she might be surprised).

  Our playing field’s the lunchroom,

  and Grady is the prize.

  Did I sit next to him today?

  I start my score at ten.

  Or was I late and she there first?

  I start at seven then.

  Did I make him laugh?

  Up eight points more.

  Or smile, at least?

  Up five.

  Or was she the lucky one this time?

  I take a two-point dive.

  Did he smile big when I sat down?

  Add seven to my score.

  Or linger some when he was through?

  Then add another four.

  If she sat next to him today,

  did he smile past her at me?

  I get a satisfying six;

  she gets a minus three.

  Did he do anything flirtatious—

  smile, salute, wink, nod, or grin?

  That’s however many points I make it,

  just so, in the end,

  I win.

  Curious

  Barb, from out of nowhere,

  writes about a boy she’s met.

  A boy! Barb—

  who’s never bothered with boys before.

  And not just any boy,

  but one whom she alone can understand because—

  and this is just too strange for words—

  he only has one leg!

  She saw him in her gym class, shooting baskets.

  He was wearing shorts and

  one leg “newer than the other.”

  “It was love at first sight,” she wrote.

  “I went up to him and said,

  ‘Nice knee. Hydraulic, right?’

  and swept him off his foot.”

  (Even in love,

  she still has her weird sense of humor.)

  What If I’m Fooling Mys
elf?

  What if I’m just imagining

  Grady likes me?

  What if he enjoys

  when she gets there first?

  What if he likes

  her hands all over him?

  What if he’s attracted

  to airheaded bimbos?

  What if we don’t

  have a special connection?

  What if I

  lose?

  Rules

  Ms. Butler says,

  “So, what do you all think about

  punctuation?”

  Silence.

  She waits.

  And here’s the thing about Ms. Butler—

  she’s not afraid of silence,

  like so many of us are.

  In seconds we are spattering the air

  with talk.

  What do you mean?

  What’s there to think about?

  Punctuation!!?

  Like periods and commas?

  “Periods.

  No periods.

  Commas, colons, semicolons,

  dashes . . .” (and here she pauses).

  “Oh!” Sierra blurts, “like Emily Dickinson!”

  You can almost see the lightbulbs

  going on over people’s heads.

  “Yeah, what was up with her

  and all those dashes?”

  Henry asks.

  “Hadn’t they invented commas yet back then?”

  “Oh! Oh! Or e. e. cummings—

  how he never used capital letters,

  not even in his name!”

  Dakota is practically falling off

  her seat in her excitement

  at this insight.

  “You always say

  poets do the things they do

  for a reason,”

  Jessica says.

  “What was his reason for that?”

  “Maybe his shift key

  didn’t work.”

  (Henry again.)

  “But we learned punctuation rules

  back in, like, second grade,”

  says Kevin.

  “Why don’t poets know them?”

  “They know the rules all right;

  they just choose to break them.”

  (This from Kate.)

 

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