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Skyscraping

Page 11

by Cordelia Jensen


  I ask her what she’s making,

  she looks up,

  says she’s making a collage for the Walk.

  She’s trying to get more people involved.

  Says I should come to the meetings.

  I tell her I’m not so into hanging with James in my spare time.

  She shrugs, says she might join ACT UP

  next year, a group that’s more hard-core than GMHC.

  Cut

  cut

  glue.

  Says Mira, they’re so thin.

  Whoever they are.

  Africans.

  Children who had blood transfusions.

  Men, like Dad.

  I tell her she needs a break,

  pull her up,

  look down

  at all the photos,

  so many people,

  different colors

  ages

  races,

  but all with the very same

  face.

  TWO CITY GIRLS

  We hit the closet on our way out,

  cloak ourselves in Mom’s jackets, big shoulder pads,

  April in cheetah print,

  me in shiny coral,

  grab umbrellas, huge purses.

  See Four Weddings and a Funeral,

  expecting more laughs than tears,

  eat peanut M&M’s,

  popcorn,

  drink Cherry Cokes.

  We laugh until we cry

  and my heart gets that stony feeling—

  not knowing the death would be from AIDS.

  On the walk home,

  April says even if Dad lives

  longer than we thought,

  I’ll still be leaving.

  Guilt rolls in

  thick like fog.

  I swallow hard,

  keep in my cry,

  point to purple and yellow crocuses,

  poking their heads out around a

  concrete-imprisoned tree.

  I tell her not to worry,

  she can come visit me—

  and I tell her a story of

  two city girls picking flowers under a starry country sky.

  COUNTING TIME

  WAXING CRESCENT MOON, 7 DAYS LEFT

  Friends chant in the hallway:

  count down the days,

  the hours,

  till prom,

  graduation.

  My clock counts time by T cells,

  which seem to be holding for now:

  dancing needles,

  crystals around his neck,

  the smell of sage hanging

  in the apartment air.

  I count time by platelets

  and Dad is at 5,000—

  only one-thirtieth the amount

  of a healthy person.

  Do I dare

  at 5,000 platelets

  with no date

  pick out a dress?

  Do I dare

  look to the future?

  rush across the sun?

  gallop past the moon?

  OPEN STAR CLUSTERS

  FIRST QUARTER MOON, 2 DAYS LEFT

  My Astronomy textbook says

  open clusters of stars

  are easier to study

  than isolated stars

  because they are almost

  the same age

  and have almost the same

  chemical composition.

  Scientists

  get to know stars better

  when they live in these clusters

  than when they live

  out

  isolated

  alone.

  Then they are hard to study,

  hard to tell

  when they fade or glow.

  I come out of my room,

  to find April.

  She’s drawing flyers for the AIDS Walk.

  I sit down with her, ask her, please, if I can help.

  She says sure, hands me white paper and a black pen.

  I write in

  black

  bold:

  FIGHT AIDS. WALK TALL.

  Line my poster with

  clusters of stars.

  MORNING STAR

  WAXING GIBBOUS MOON

  day

  0

  wake up

  hardly slept, my palms scattered with crescent

  marks from my nails dug in, he’s

  awake, alive, i grin and

  kiss him on his

  cheek on the way

  to school april

  and i

  walk

  hopeful

  together.

  SIP SWEET SIPS

  Come straight home after school,

  Dad’s showered and dressed.

  I ask him, sun bright,

  if he’d like to take a walk with me.

  A new coffee shop just opened,

  Starbucks, does he want to try it.

  We walk, slowly, hand in hand,

  to 87th and Broadway.

  We get things called Venti Frappuccinos,

  which sound ridiculous but taste delicious—

  and I don’t think about

  who sees or doesn’t see

  his AIDS face.

  I just sip sweet sips.

  Dad talks about all the big businesses

  taking over Manhattan:

  Tower Records,

  Banana Republic.

  How we’re living

  in a changing city.

  Then he says, smiling,

  sun blasting through the windows,

  and I’m alive to see it.

  OVERLAPPING LIVES

  April heads downtown

  with James

  to stuff envelopes for a GMHC mailing.

  This time, I don’t ask to join,

  just tell her I’m coming, bring Dylan.

  On a crowded 9 train,

  we hang on to silver poles,

  where so many fingerprints

  have already left their mark.

  Think about how many places

  these people are going,

  wonder how many to the

  same street,

  same building,

  how many lives

  are constantly overlapping.

  Wonder if flutters of hope

  (like mine)

  can pass

  from person to person

  without so much

  as a touch or

  glance.

  INSIDE OUR SELVES

  I.

  The Gay Men’s Health Crisis sign

  waves proudly in the breeze.

  The mailing’s in full swing.

  Keith Haring posters everywhere,

  men and women

  talking over each other,

  snacks and drinks.

  Reminds me of a Yearbook meeting

  except April, Dylan and I

  are the only teenagers.

  I wonder if any of these people

  have children of their own.

  I’m in charge of sticking address labels

  on postcards.

  I lay them out alphabetically,

  pull them off delicately,

  careful not to rip.

  April licks the stamps.

  Dylan stacks the postcards in messy piles,

  shoos me away

  when I start straightening them,


  laughs, says don’t even think

  of micromanaging me.

  April smiles.

  II.

  James knows everyone here.

  Like he’s in charge,

  keeping things organized,

  pouring Coke,

  sneaking April extra Doritos.

  Dylan talks about his cousin,

  now suffering with pneumonia.

  James shows us proofs

  for new safe sex ads

  for the buses and subways, asks

  for our “youthful opinion.”

  As if James is so old?

  April tells me James is here

  almost all the time

  when he’s not teaching,

  playing music,

  caring for Dad.

  I think about how our lives don’t just overlap

  with other people’s, but how

  inside each person

  we are

  so many selves

  all at once.

  MOVING THE AIR

  In Peer Mentorship,

  we discuss safe sex.

  Condoms, pamphlets.

  Mr. R introduces the topic,

  then steps into the hall.

  Two Freshmen blow condom balloons,

  toss them back and forth.

  Girls laugh.

  Heat swells inside me.

  I erupt:

  My dad’s dying from AIDS.

  It’s not just happening in Africa.

  Condoms aren’t a joke.

  You need to be safe.

  Their mouths hang open.

  I’m sure they’ve heard the rumors

  but it is different

  to hear the truth spoken directly.

  The condom balloons whiz to the ground.

  And even though the windows are closed,

  and the fans are turned off,

  the air feels like it’s moving.

  THE BLANKET OF THE MOON

  SOLAR ECLIPSE, MAY 10, 1994

  Mr. Lamb leads us out

  to watch the sky,

  clutching our pinpricked cardboard

  for the solar eclipse.

  We herd across the street.

  As the sky grows dark,

  Dylan asks me—in a whisper—

  if I want to go to prom with him.

  I smile as

  the always-lit New York City

  goes dark for a bit

  of day.

  Moon and sun,

  the same for the moment.

  Together, light and dark, they make something

  more beautiful than when alone:

  A moon with sun’s rays.

  A sun the color of moon.

  And then I tell Dylan

  I’ll go to prom with him

  if he’ll do something in return:

  march alongside

  me and my family

  in the AIDS Walk.

  For Dad, for his cousin.

  I thought you’d never ask,

  Dylan says, smiling,

  hugging me,

  just as the sun reemerges

  from behind

  the blanket of the moon.

  FLYING

  April and I walk

  from school

  to street corner

  to store,

  passing out

  flyers

  for the AIDS Walk.

  We curve through the crowded blocks,

  shoulder to shoulder,

  stream through the streets.

  Carol at the Starlight Diner

  lets us put a stack

  on the windowsill.

  Chloe puts some up

  in her own neighborhood.

  The movie theater won’t take the flyers.

  Celestial Treasures does, of course.

  Others fly away

  in the early May winds.

  The last place we hit

  is Adam’s lobby.

  Put some in an envelope,

  label it 11C.

  I might never hear from Adam again,

  so he might never know:

  when he pushed me out

  I floated

  into the black

  and found there

  the light of my family and true friends.

  And like a real North Star

  it guided me home.

  OUR OWN SKY RAINBOW

  AIDS WALK, MAY 22, 1994

  I.

  On the way there

  April chatters about the history

  of the Walk:

  it started in 1984,

  San Francisco,

  there are Walks everywhere now,

  even in Kansas,

  she says.

  I listen,

  wonder what it will feel like,

  marching with so many people

  affected,

  infected,

  by this disease,

  wonder if anyone’s story

  is just like our own.

  April and I meet up with Dylan,

  join James, register walkers.

  Hordes of people swarm

  Central Park

  with their papers.

  A teenage girl, just my height,

  comes to the table, pushing

  a man in a wheelchair,

  face and neck spotted with lesions.

  Says she and her dad are here to register.

  Her father looks much worse off than mine.

  I wonder if she knows about astragalus,

  pineapple juice, protein shots.

  Wonder if she has anyone else to help

  with her dying father.

  Hand her the papers,

  thank her for coming,

  tell her it should be a great day.

  She smiles weakly—

  says we need one of those.

  Next:

  two men,

  a couple,

  arms locked.

  One flirts with James,

  says the volunteers are getting better and better looking.

  James laughs, gives them their papers.

  One rests his head on the other’s shoulder.

  Says he’s already tired, the other says

  they’ll walk and rest.

  Rest and walk.

  They move on.

  Some members of ACT UP

  approach us with their own flyers,

  I recognize the slogan:

  SILENCE = DEATH.

  For the first time

  I think I know what this means.

  How silence

  breeds secrecy, shame.

  How I hurt myself

  being silent.

  How silence can ruin

  lives.

  April and James speak Spanish

  with an older woman,

  who says she’s here to march for

  her son, who’s in the hospital.

  Chloe arrives,

  wearing layers of rainbow clothes.

  Birds tweet in trees,

  the sun sits high in the sky,

  masses of people ready to march,

  spilling out

  into the streets,

  red ribbons on display,

  they begin to cheer,

  wave rainbow flags.

  I look around and wonder how

  I ever could have

  thought myself

  alone.

  II.

  We meet Mom
,

  who’s pushing Dad

  in a wheelchair of his own.

  Waving a small flag.

  We burst onto Central Park West,

  turquoise sky sloping between

  one building and the next,

  walking north,

  up, up,

  we all take turns pushing Dad.

  The sky splinters and darkens.

  Volunteers pass out ponchos, Gatorade.

  Mom puts Dad’s hat on.

  James grabs him a drink.

  As we walk,

  I see that girl again

  with her father,

  and I notice

  another man with them now,

  and a woman.

  Flanking them.

  She looks at me,

  and sort of waves.

  I sort of wave back.

  Two families

  in reflection.

  III.

  On Riverside,

  past our own apartment building,

  rain threatens but then

  the sky settles back

  into baby blue.

  James shouting, Fight back! Fight AIDS!

  We join in.

  Dylan and Chloe compete

  to see who can yell the loudest.

  There’s no rainbow in the sky

  but I wave my flag high.

  April grins,

  holding her crystal necklace

  into the sun,

  where it splashes

  its own tiny rainbow

  onto my arm.

  SUMMER

  FIREWORKS

  Last quarter moon,

  Dad still hanging on.

  Forty-two days longer than they said he would.

  Can he make it longer still?

  To graduation?

  Beyond?

  Open my Astro textbook,

  search for an answer,

  stare at photo after photo of nebulas.

  They may only be gas shells

  produced by dying stars—

  a star’s last wish—

  but they look like

  fireworks,

  red, purple clouds

  of hope—

  a yes

  suspended

  in a wide-open

  sky.

  WATCH IT FLY

  Yearbook’s out.

  Grab Chloe, to the stairwell,

  flip through it together.

  The front page quote, my idea, still reads:

  When we look to the stars

  we are looking back in time . . .

  Cliques sit in star clusters,

  faculty fly in rocket ships,

  whole grades in constellations.

  I’m not listed as editor,

 

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