Capricious

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Capricious Page 12

by Gabrielle Prendergast

I could have done my usual meandering

  Instead, I point myself like a ship’s prow

  And make landfall in front of Genie’s house.

  IN GENIE’S FRONT YARD

  What are YOU doing here?

  Go away.

  You’re still here.

  What is the matter with you?

  You have to leave.

  My dad is getting suspicious.

  Freakazoid!

  Get lost!

  You can’t just stand in our yard all night!

  What do you want?

  I have nothing to say to her, Dad!

  I have nothing to say to you.

  Please, Ella, Dad’s asking questions now.

  I’ll get grounded again.

  I’m sorry, okay?

  Now go.

  You’re crazy!

  Why are you doing this to me?

  INSIDE OUT

  I had an epiphany

  I say

  Genie sighs, sits

  And pulls out her phone

  epiphany[n. pl -nies]

  a sudden, intuitive perception of or insight into reality or

  the essential meaning of something, often initiated by some

  simple, commonplace occurrence.

  Go on, she says

  It happened on the steps of the mosque

  Samir and I had one of those final scenes

  I’ll tell you about it one day

  It was crushing, but kind of priceless

  Anyway, after I was just sitting there

  And this old dude started talking to me

  He might have been some kind of priest

  Long story why, but I thought of you.

  And I saw you then, but inside out

  And I saw things I recognized

  And it terrified me to think that maybe

  Everybody looks like that on the inside.

  I know now that Samir does, and David

  And Kayli, my mom, my dad even

  Marika, Sarah, Kieran, it’s getting so

  I don’t want to look into people anymore.

  Somehow I thought you might be

  The one who was neat and tidy inside,

  I thought your meanness required control

  But maybe you’re just as random as the rest of us.

  I take things too personally

  It felt like you wanted me dead

  But now I’m starting to think

  It was never about me, was it?

  BLUE BALLPOINT

  Do you have a pen and paper?

  I ask

  I want to draw your hand.

  You’re so weird, Genie says

  But she goes inside

  And comes back out

  With paper and a blue ballpoint.

  I hate blue ink

  So it seems fitting

  But soon I’m frustrated

  Freckles are hard to draw, I say.

  Try living with them, she says.

  And then

  Want to hear all the names

  I’ve been called?

  Spot, spotty, leopard

  Leper, patch, pixels

  Spackle, speckle

  Freckle-face

  Pox, poxy

  Measles, dotty

  Speck, splatter

  Sprinkles, fly poop.

  She sighs.

  Ugly, fat, stupid.

  I reach forward

  And take her hand

  Turning it over.

  Palms are easier anyway, I say.

  And let my fingers

  Linger

  On her wrist

  On

  A

  Thin

  White

  Scar.

  STARS

  Genie falls back

  Like she’s been shot

  In a movie

  Slow motion.

  Her head rests in

  The long grass.

  She stares up

  While the last glow of day

  Leaves the sky.

  I watch her

  And wait

  Expecting

  Something

  Crucial.

  I don’t speak

  But for the scratching

  Of the blue pen

  Tracing her life line

  Her love line

  Her fingerprints.

  If there’s one thing

  Marika has taught me

  It is the value

  Of silence.

  UNDERNEATH

  Do you know how breast cancer kills?

  It’s not the cancer in the breast.

  That doesn’t matter.

  It gets into other things.

  The lungs. The liver.

  My mother’s brain.

  In the end she didn’t know who I was.

  I’d tell her that I love her.

  “What?” she’d say.

  Once she said,

  “Where’s my daughter?”

  I’ve never told anyone this before

  This is not an excuse.

  Reasons aren’t excuses.

  Samir broke my heart.

  Sarah was my best friend.

  You have everything.

  It wasn’t my idea to leave you.

  It was one of those other bitches

  But she was just trying to impress me

  As if that will make a difference

  In her pathetic life.

  I hate those girls.

  I hate all girls.

  Especially myself.

  Our parents look at us and wonder

  Why we are the way we are

  The moods and tears

  The bullying, the jealousy.

  But what do they expect?

  Surrounded by rivals all the time

  Like jackals fighting for a bone

  Failure shoved in your face

  Teachers looking at us

  Like we’re shit on their shoes.

  They’ve forgotten what it feels like.

  Maybe we will forget one day too.

  I sure hope so.

  I heard your mom had bulimia.

  Of all the things to be jealous of.

  That’s fucked up.

  I want a mom with your mom’s disease

  Instead of the one I had and lost.

  MY OFFERING

  I join her

  Lying back on the grass

  Looking up through the branches

  To the drifting silver clouds

  The black sky above that

  And beyond

  The ozone layer

  The orbit of the moon

  The sun and planets

  The Oort cloud, the heliopause

  Space, the galaxy

  Nebula, stars

  The entire universe

  And everything beyond

  And everyone

  Who has ever lived and died

  Every atom of them

  Goes on somewhere.

  As beautiful as that seems

  It is also terrifying

  So precarious

  A delicate balancing act

  A fragile house of cards

  An infinitely complex machine

  That can never be understood.

  No wonder I hide inside myself.

  I cried, I tell Genie

  The day I learned

  How big the moon really was

  And that it didn’t float

  Around our sky

  Like a lost balloon.

  I used to let balloons go

  On purpose, she replies

  And pray for them to come back

  How stupid is that?

  Like God would care

  About a balloon.

  Like there even is a God.

  Like he helped

  The football team

  Win the regionals

  But ignored me

  Begging him

  BEGGING him

  To let Mom live
.

  What an asshole.

  A swarm of bats flies

  Across the moonlit

  Silver sky

  Gross, Genie says

  And somewhere

  So far away in time and space

  That maybe only I can hear

  The coyote howls.

  INVERSION

  I lock the mudroom door

  Behind me

  Because my mind and me

  Need some time alone.

  Pulling all the hands down from the wall

  I lay them on the bed

  Then, starting with the coyote paw

  I grow a tree of hands

  Back on the wall

  The wild furry paw

  Part of a sturdy trunk.

  I flip the hands upward

  The fingers bent or straight

  Curled, waving, pointing

  But not at me anymore

  Not pushing down

  Grasping

  But branches

  Lifting

  Growing

  Into the open

  Sky.

  Genie’s hand tucks in

  Like all the others.

  There’s nothing special

  Or magical

  Or dangerous about it.

  It’s just a hand

  With a scar more visible

  Than anyone else’s.

  I throw away my own hand.

  The dripping sponge doesn’t fit

  Somehow

  It’s like a storm cloud

  In a blue sky.

  Instead

  I coat my hand in red lipstick

  I never wear it

  And press a print right on the wall.

  At the top

  Perched there

  Like a vibrant tropical bird

  Poised to fly

  Away.

  TRUST

  Then I make a secret plan

  A vow for grade twelve

  I will become Genie’s best friend.

  What could be more audacious than that?

  Maybe together we could use our powers

  For good instead of chaos and heartbreak.

  I’m probably an idiot.

  She’s screwed me over twice now.

  But there’s something about the idea

  Of friendship with Genie that intrigues me.

  Like the wild, wiry coyote

  The vibrant bird and me maybe

  She lurks on the fringes of civilization

  Waiting for someone to tame her

  And after all, if I can make a coyote sing

  Maybe

  I

  Can

  Do

  Anything.

  Acknowledgments

  Sometimes I think editing a book must be like psychoanalyzing someone. If this is true, then Sarah Harvey knows me better than almost anyone in the world. Without her gentleness and rigorousness, this book would never have been finished. Thanks go to her and everyone at Orca for being so fabulous. Thank you Aida Bardissi for invaluable help with Arabic language and culture. Thanks to Kris and Carolyn at the Carolyn Swayze Literary Agency for making it possible to complete (continue?) Ella’s story.

  To my patient husband and tolerant daughter— I know it’s not easy to live with a writer in the house. Thank you for understanding. Mum and my beautiful sisters—I could not do this without your unconditional love.

  GABRIELLE PRENDERGAST is the author of the acclaimed verse novel, Audacious (Orca). She holds an mfa in Creative Writing from the University of British Columbia and is a writing teacher and a regular contributor to blogs about verse novels. Gabrielle lives in Vancouver, British Columbia with her husband and daughter. She can be found online at Angelhorn.com and VerseNovels.com.

 

 

 


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