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Three Things I Know Are True

Page 4

by Betty Culley


  participating in class

  or handing in assignments.

  I lean over his desk

  and tap my ears.

  I can’t always hear

  what’s going on.

  He looks relieved.

  Well, I can see that could

  be a problem.

  I’ll make an appointment

  for you

  with the school audiologist.

  In the meantime

  I can arrange that you get to sit

  up front.

  I raise my hand.

  Oh no, please,

  I don’t want anyone

  feeling sorrier for me

  than they already are.

  He gives me a kind

  counselor smile.

  Got it, Liv.

  Elinor

  At the soup kitchen

  people say

  Hi there, singer girl

  and talk to me for the first time.

  Hunter isn’t there.

  Elinor and I work in the

  walk-in cooler,

  checking expiration dates.

  Donated food

  goes bad, too.

  Only one more afternoon

  with us, Elinor comments.

  I’m guessing she’s thinking

  I’m gonna say

  how much l love volunteering

  how much I’ve learned

  how I want to keep giving back,

  finding meaning here.

  I’d like to come visit

  your mother,

  Elinor says.

  I don’t know about that.

  Mom’s kinda busy

  working at Tractor Barn.

  Trying to clean the house

  on the weekends.

  That last part

  about the cleaning

  isn’t exactly true.

  Elinor gives me a

  mind-reader look,

  Your mom and I used to hang out

  with the same crowd in high school.

  My brother worked with your father

  in the mill.

  My aunt lives one block over from

  where you live.

  Maybe some Sunday

  your mother has off?

  Right, this is a small town.

  You don’t need to give anyone

  your résumé.

  They already know everything

  they need to know.

  That’s up to you.

  Try giving her a call

  is the nicest warning I can think of.

  Sounds

  The school audiologist

  is friendly,

  at first.

  I like the sounds the machine makes

  in my ears.

  They remind me of the sounds I hear

  in class—

  Bip Barp Eet Dud Deep

  When we’re done

  she says she didn’t find

  any problem

  with my hearing.

  I scored well

  on high-pitched sounds, too.

  Oh, like what a dog hears

  or a bat?

  I ask her.

  I forget which animal hears those sounds

  or makes them.

  No, she says,

  this test is for

  PEOPLE.

  I confess,

  It’s more the words

  that are the problem,

  not the sounds.

  I see, she says,

  but does she?

  River

  Next time we meet

  at the river,

  Clay’s hair is wet

  and he smells like soap,

  but there is still a chemical smell

  in the air.

  He looks even skinnier.

  Are the chemicals slowly

  exterminating him

  like a bedbug or a flea

  or a carpenter ant?

  Would the river

  wash him clean?

  Would it wash

  both of us

  clean?

  I don’t have the heart

  to play Three Things.

  I lie back on the dock

  next to Clay.

  The snow is gone

  from the banks now,

  and today for the first time

  I heard the loud honking

  of Canada geese,

  returning north for spring.

  If it wasn’t half dark

  we could see the sky.

  So much sky

  over the river.

  If we fell asleep right here,

  I say,

  when we woke up

  the first thing we’d see

  is the sky.

  That’s true,

  Clay says.

  He’s nice enough

  not to point out that

  even though it’s spring,

  we’d freeze

  if we tried to sleep outside

  this time of year.

  Gwen

  One morning

  Gwen is waiting for me

  on the line again

  in her bathrobe.

  I know about the river,

  she says.

  What about the river?

  The river belongs to

  everyone.

  Does Clay talk to you there

  at the river?

  He won’t talk to me.

  He won’t listen

  about going back to school.

  Can you talk to him?

  Please.

  It’s the please

  that gets to me,

  and the bathrobe

  and the fact

  that she won’t

  cross the invisible line.

  Talk about what?

  Talk about anything.

  We don’t know

  what he’s thinking

  anymore.

  What he wants.

  Gwen reaches a hand out

  to me.

  I tell my hand NO

  but it grasps Gwen’s

  across the line.

  I don’t know what I have

  promised Gwen

  or how I will keep

  that promise.

  Friends

  It’s decided

  my time-out

  from the cafeteria

  is over.

  The office secretary says

  she’ll miss my company

  at lunch.

  Rainie, Piper, and Justine

  make room for me at the table.

  This is what’s in my school salad—

  two large pieces of lettuce,

  brown and curling in on the edges,

  four skinny slices of carrot,

  one long slice of celery,

  two cherry tomato halves.

  I think about making a beach bungalow

  with my salad.

  I could stand four carrots upright

  and cover them with the largest

  piece of lettuce

  for the roof.

  For the palm tree—

  little cuts in the top of the celery

  to make fronds.

  Instead I eat a carrot

  and the palm tree.

  Rainie leans her head against mine.

  When we were little

  and people said our hair

  was the same shade of brown,

  we’d say it’s ’cause

  we’re best friends.

  We missed you, Liv.

  That was so unfair,

  Rainie says.

  Piper puts the two halves

  of the cherry tomatoes

  together

  and gives them to me.

  Justine asks,

  So, is Jonah getting better?

  It is not my friends’ fault

  what they say

  what they don’t say.

  I remember the quote

>   on the blackboard

  in English class.

  How can you expect a man

  who’s warm to understand

  a man who’s cold?

  From One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich

  by Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn

  Mrs. Osgood asked us,

  What do you think that means?

  Gavin raised his hand.

  It’s wicked cold in Russia?

  We laughed at that.

  I think I could answer

  Mrs. Osgood’s question

  now.

  My father had a lecture

  Jonah called

  Dad’s everybody-has-something sermon.

  Dad believed we

  couldn’t judge anyone

  ’cause we could never really know

  what it was like

  to walk in someone else’s shoes.

  Justine doesn’t see

  how beautiful she is,

  how everyone wants

  to be her

  except her.

  She thinks her legs

  are too long,

  her chest too big,

  her hair too thin,

  her eyes

  too far apart.

  Justine’s mother died

  of an overdose

  when she was a baby.

  She says she sees her mother

  in her dreams,

  and is sorry when she

  wakes up.

  Rainie

  can’t stop herself

  from shoplifting,

  even though her father

  is a police officer

  and she hears his stories.

  Her mother has no clue.

  I know that Rainie’s hands

  are in charge

  and I

  can’t judge.

  I picture

  a small hungry animal

  burrowing inside Rainie,

  and her hands

  finding things to give it,

  to make it

  less hungry.

  Piper worries she’ll die

  from the superbug

  and is afraid of germs

  I can’t even pronounce.

  She is sure

  flesh-eating bacteria

  are everywhere.

  She was born in India

  and her mother, Millie,

  adopted her

  when she was two.

  Millie wants to

  take her back there

  for a visit this summer,

  but once Piper heard

  the shots she’d need—

  against diseases like typhoid

  and rabies and yellow fever—

  she wouldn’t go.

  Everybody-has-something.

  I have Jonah.

  Soup Kitchen

  Hunter is back

  and his fiddle

  is on a chair next to him.

  I got a book

  of fiddle music.

  I’ve been practicing

  the “Erie Canal” song.

  Elinor says we should play

  after lunch.

  Hunter looks out at the crowd of people

  with the fiddle in his hands,

  I’ve got a mule and her name is Sal—

  Fifteen miles on the Erie Canal.

  She’s a good old worker and a good old pal—

  Fifteen miles on the Erie Canal.

  We’ve hauled some barges in our day

  Filled with lumber, coal, and hay,

  And we know every inch of the way

  From Albany to Buffalo.

  His right foot keeps time

  like the music

  is inside tapping to come out.

  Low bridge, everybody down,

  Low bridge for we’re coming to a town.

  And you’ll always know your neighbor

  And you’ll always know your pal

  If you’ve ever navigated on the Erie Canal.

  There’s laughing and clapping

  and waving as people leave.

  I turn the urn spigot for a few last drips

  of coffee

  scoop sugar into it

  and raise my cup to Hunter.

  That was great.

  Jonah’s nurses are planning

  a birthday party for him.

  Would you come and play?

  Sure, just let me know when.

  He zips his fiddle

  into its case.

  Of course

  in our small town

  there’s no need to explain

  Jonah or nurses

  to Hunter.

  This is your last afternoon,

  Elinor says,

  as if I hadn’t been counting

  them off.

  Don’t be a stranger.

  Termites

  The days are getting longer

  and the half dark comes slower

  down by the river.

  Are your eyes green or blue or brown

  or yellow?

  I ask Clay.

  Every time I look

  I see a different color.

  It’s like a kaleidoscope.

  Mayflies and yellow-eyed crickets

  have yellow eyes,

  not people.

  he says

  It’s just like Clay

  to be studying about bugz

  when he is not “managing” them.

  Clay points to the half-light sky and then the river.

  You’re probably just seeing reflections

  of colors

  in my eyes.

  What about my eyes?

  I ask Clay

  Dark brown with little orange streaks.

  You didn’t even look at them,

  I point out.

  You think

  after all these years

  I don’t know

  the color of your eyes, Liv?

  I turn my face

  so Clay can’t see

  what I’m feeling.

  Tell me three things

  about termites,

  I say.

  Clay groans.

  Really, Liv?

  I poke him in the chest

  with my finger.

  Play the game.

  First Finger.

  Only the worker termites

  can digest wood.

  Second Finger.

  They are responsible for

  building the mud tubes and nests

  for the whole colony.

  Third Finger.

  Worker termites are blind

  and work twenty-four hours a day

  for their entire two-year life.

  I’m sorry I asked

  about termites.

  Clay sounds so sad

  about the worker termites’ life,

  I don’t know what to say.

  That’s the problem with the

  Three Things game.

  You have to tell the truth

  and sometimes the truth hurts.

  I think about my promise to Gwen.

  I did talk to Clay.

  We talked about eyes

  and termites.

  That will have to be enough

  for now.

  Mom

  Mom watches me make

  my morning coffee.

  She stands at the counter

  with one finger

  in her mouth.

  She’s pressing her finger

  on a tooth

  and I see her flinch

  like she just got

  an electric shock.

  Then she speaks to me.

  I hear you’re working yourself up

  to repeat your sophomore year.

  Did you change your mind

  about college?

  What do you think you’ll do

  with a tenth-grade education?

  I dump an extra spoonful of sugar

  in my coff
ee

  and turn around to look at my mother.

  Her work shoes are scuffed,

  her face is puffy.

  It’s been a long time

  since she’s had her hair trimmed.

  Even so,

  I raise my hands in the air

  my palms facing upward,

  and shrug my shoulders,

  Work at Tractor Barn?

  Jonah

  Ga-Ga-Ga-Rah Ga-Ga-Ga-Rah

  Zombie Vest makes Jonah’s sounds

  vibrate.

  Ga-Ga-Ga-Urgh

  Suck-It-Up makes Jonah gag.

  Ook Ook Ook

  Food Truck

  delivers too much supper

  and Jonah cries in pain.

  Sometimes the machines

  are Jonah’s friends.

  Sometimes they betray him.

  When the machines are bad

  I put them in the corner

  of the room.

  I tell Jonah,

  Don’t worry about Food Truck.

  I pressed the Pause button.

  And I warned Suck-It-Up

  he’s next.

  There’s a calendar

  in my head

  and all the months

  say “Jonah.”

  Instead of

  Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday,

  the days are

  Good Day, Bad Day.

  If there are more Good Days

  than Bad Days,

  then it’s a Good Month.

  The Deal

  Gwen is very impatient.

  She is back on the line

  again.

  Same faded bathrobe,

  accessorized with

  worn slippers.

  Did you talk to Clay?

  I did.

  Gwen ties another knot

  in the bathrobe belt.

  And?

  We talked about eyes

  and termites.

  It was only one time.

  Muh Muh Muh

  Gwen sounds like Jonah,

  making sounds but not

  words.

  I have seen his struggle

  so the new nicer me

  just waits.

  Gwen can’t look at my face.

  My guh guh . . .

  My gun is gone.

  I realize she can’t speak

  the word gun

  to me

  any louder

  than a whisper.

  You think Clay has it?

  I don’t know,

  Gwen says.

  Why don’t you ask him?

  Gwen lets her arms

  hang down by her sides.

  We both know she can’t

  ask him.

  Okay,

  I say,

  okay, I find your

  gun

  and you move

  off this street.

  Gwen nods YES

  to the deal.

  Logs

  My dad’s father

  was a log driver

  on the Kennebec River,

  this same river

  that passes behind our house.

  My grandfather rode the logs

  down the river

  to the mill.

  All he had was

  spiked shoes

 

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