Book Read Free

Three Things I Know Are True

Page 6

by Betty Culley


  is pretending

  to be responsible.

  I reach out and touch

  a piece of his hair.

  It feels dry and warm

  in my hand.

  It doesn’t feel like

  a science experiment.

  O Man

  In the stupidest mistake

  ever,

  the Oxygen Services Home Delivery truck

  turns into

  Number 24

  instead of

  Number 23.

  Gwen comes out

  (in her bathrobe)

  frantically waving

  the truck

  away.

  Does she think

  O

  is contagious?

  The man who carries

  the O machine

  into the house

  asks us where we want to put it.

  It comes with twenty feet of

  tubing

  and makes a rumbling noise

  and a hissing sound

  when it’s turned on.

  It’s like a magic trick—

  the O machine

  pulls O

  out of the air

  and sends it through

  the plastic tubing

  right to Jonah.

  The man also brings

  green metal canisters of O.

  These are portable—

  good for short trips

  or outings, he says.

  Like Jonah would be packing

  a lunch

  of O

  for on-the-go.

  When you use O,

  you need another machine.

  I call it Fire Alarm.

  It screeches when Jonah’s O

  is low.

  Bad timing.

  Mom comes home

  when the O man

  is still here.

  What’s all this?

  Mom stares at the O machine

  like it’s a piece of furniture

  that was delivered

  by mistake.

  Her finger is rubbing

  a tooth again, and

  an ugg ugg sound

  comes out of her mouth.

  The O man looks

  startled.

  It’s your oxygen

  concentrator, ma’am.

  Hmm, Mom says,

  and turns her back on it,

  the way she did

  when her parents

  came to visit.

  I’d hear her tell Dad,

  I’m not gonna ask them to leave,

  but I don’t have to like

  them being here.

  White Noise

  The school counselor

  invites me in

  again,

  to review the results

  of my audiology screening.

  There is a little machine

  on his desk,

  smaller than the O machine,

  and quieter,

  making a whooshing noise.

  What’s that machine called?

  We have a machine at home

  that sounds

  a little like that,

  but louder,

  I tell him.

  The counselor squints

  at the machine.

  This?

  It’s just a white noise machine.

  White noise?

  I never imagined noise

  as a color.

  For privacy, Liv.

  Anyway, your results

  showed excellent hearing abilities.

  Yes, the woman told me.

  I hear as good as a bat

  or a dog or something,

  some animal.

  So what is next?

  Colleges do care about

  sophomore-year grades.

  It’s not like there’s money

  for college.

  And I’ve been thinking,

  I’d like to do something

  different—

  something

  with my hands.

  I tap the top

  of the counselor’s

  wooden desk.

  The counselor looks down

  at my hands.

  For a counselor,

  he is slow to understand.

  Then he does.

  YES YES, HANDS-ON,

  the counselor says

  really loud,

  like he’s figured me out.

  I check

  to see if the

  white noise machine

  gets louder

  when he shouts.

  It doesn’t.

  I can look into that.

  See if there are any spaces

  available

  in our tech programs.

  Do you have a

  personal preference, Liv?

  Automotive technology

  Welding

  Electrical

  Construction

  Culinary arts

  The programs are geared

  toward work in those fields.

  And of course there is not

  just hands-on training,

  but also an academic component.

  I tap the desk again.

  If I knew Morse code,

  I could tap out

  my answers,

  help him understand.

  Hmm.

  Automotive, maybe.

  I am pretty good with

  machines.

  And just to prove it,

  I reach out and turn off

  the white noise machine.

  Rooms

  After the accident,

  after Jonah came home,

  we all switched rooms.

  Jonah’s room off the kitchen

  is tiny.

  Dad said it was

  a pantry

  or summer kitchen

  or woodshed—

  something

  old-timey

  that got turned into a bedroom.

  Jonah’s room was too small

  for the nurses

  and machines,

  so he got the living room.

  Mom and Dad’s room

  upstairs

  is the big one

  facing the street

  and Clay’s house.

  Mom wouldn’t sleep

  in that room

  anymore,

  so she took mine,

  in the back of the house,

  the one that looks out

  over the river.

  You can see the train tracks

  that run along the river,

  though no trains

  run there anymore,

  and you can see

  the sky over the river,

  and when the leaves fall

  in winter,

  you can see the river.

  In our backyard

  there are wooden steps

  going down

  the steep bank

  to the river,

  but the path to them

  is all overgrown now.

  I’m glad Mom

  has the river

  instead of Number 24.

  I have Jonah’s little room

  downstairs.

  When the nurses need me,

  I don’t have far to go.

  Daredevil

  After the accident

  everyone had the same question.

  Did Jonah do it on purpose?

  They said to Mom,

  Can you tell me about your son

  and why this might have happened?

  At first I thought

  Mom wouldn’t answer,

  but then she did.

  Because he’s a teenage boy.

  Because he didn’t think first.

  He never had time for thinking,

  even as a baby.

  Not when he tipped himself

  out of his crib

  headfirst.

  Ran
straight into the swings

  at the playground.

  Tried to jump out of shopping carts.

  Cut his head open

  sledding into a tree.

  I didn’t mention

  the other things—

  the ones Mom

  doesn’t know about:

  Walking the metal railing

  of the train bridge

  over the Kennebec.

  Falling through

  thin ice

  in spring.

  So impatient

  to start his big life,

  to make people laugh,

  to see what would happen.

  Doing anything

  for a dare.

  So afraid

  he’d be stuck

  in Maddigan, Maine,

  for the rest

  of his life.

  No

  Mom could teach

  the school counselor

  how to say NO

  with one word.

  Liv, he says,

  I’m afraid those involved

  raised concerns

  about the vocational programs

  we discussed.

  It was mentioned

  that a certain degree

  of attention

  is needed

  to ensure safety.

  Unfortunately,

  the consensus

  was that it is not

  a good fit

  right now.

  Mom would have just said

  NO.

  I feel a little sorry

  for the counselor.

  He doesn’t

  look me in the eyes.

  That’s okay, I say,

  I’ve got some

  independent projects

  that are taking up

  a lot of my time

  these days, anyway.

  This cheers him up.

  Oh, really.

  What kind of projects?

  Well,

  for one,

  I am studying the

  Kennebec River,

  and then

  there is party planning

  for Jonah’s birthday.

  The counselor looks

  down at his desk again.

  I see.

  I see.

  Logs

  If Dad were here,

  he’d like my

  Kennebec River

  independent study.

  I would ask him

  about the logs

  on the bottom

  of the river.

  If they’ve been

  lying in river water

  all this time,

  why aren’t they rotted?

  Is it something

  about the water

  that does that?

  It’s like the logs

  are in a time machine

  down there.

  When they’re brought

  to the surface,

  the whole world

  has changed.

  The Nurses Talk about Me

  From Jonah’s little pantry room

  off the kitchen,

  I hear the nurses talking.

  It is dark out

  when Johnny comes

  and Vivian gets ready to go.

  I always leave my door

  open a little.

  I like how the light

  from the kitchen

  shines into the room.

  Johnny and Vivian

  talk about Jonah—

  his numbers, his machines,

  his sounds.

  Then I hear my own name—

  Liv . . . way too much . . .

  responsibility . . .

  what kind of a life?

  what kind of mother?

  hey, I think it’s her birthday

  the same week . . .

  let’s do it up right . . .

  The small animal

  inside me

  I didn’t know

  was there,

  is there.

  Wanting

  Wanting

  Wanting

  I stop myself

  from calling out—

  Hey guys,

  just because I wear

  Hello Kitty pajamas

  doesn’t mean

  I want a Hello Kitty–

  themed birthday.

  Ditto for

  unicorns.

  I like cake

  but honestly,

  I’d rather

  cupcakes.

  Some people think

  trick candles

  are fun—

  but not me.

  I think now I understand

  how Rainie feels

  when she wants

  something.

  Vivian leaves

  and the house

  is quiet,

  except for Jonah’s

  machines.

  I know

  it’s just a birthday

  and I’m not a kid

  anymore.

  But I’m glad

  I heard them,

  so I can practice

  my surprised face

  for Jonah’s party.

  Crossing the Line

  A deal is a deal

  and I made a promise

  to Gwen.

  And she made a promise

  to me.

  I wait on the line

  for her.

  Good thing it’s a

  DEAD END,

  or I’d be

  run over

  by now.

  Gwen limps to the line

  on crutches.

  There is an Ace bandage

  around one foot.

  Sorry,

  I tripped on the stairs

  and turned my ankle.

  I don’t know

  what she’s sorry for—

  for being late to the line

  for tripping

  for hurting her ankle.

  But I do like hearing the word

  Sorry

  come out of her mouth.

  Your gun is in

  the gun safe.

  Your husband

  is keeping it

  safe.

  Because of the sleeping pills

  you take.

  Clay told you that?

  Gwen takes a step forward—

  forgetting the line

  forgetting the crutches

  forgetting her hurt ankle.

  She sways,

  like she is about to topple,

  and I grab her

  in my arms.

  Even though she is shorter

  than me,

  she is heavier than she looks.

  Her face is on my shoulder,

  her arms are around me,

  her voice is in my ear.

  Clay doesn’t have it.

  He doesn’t have it.

  He doesn’t have it.

  This feels like a

  hug.

  Mom is not a

  hugger,

  and Jonah can’t

  hug back.

  Gwen steadies herself.

  I hand her the crutches

  that fell.

  You wanted to know

  where the gun was.

  Now you know.

  And don’t forget

  our deal.

  I look down at the road.

  I realize this time

  we both crossed the line.

  Fudge

  I wait

  for the

  FOR SALE

  sign

  on Clay’s lawn.

  No sign

  appears.

  No moving van

  comes and

  loads the

  Halloween decorations

  from the attic,

  the Bugz Away

  jackets,

  the GUN SAFE

  and drives off

  DEAD
END.

  I would miss Clay,

  but we’d always have

  the river.

  Then I see Gwen

  on the line.

  Only one crutch

  this time,

  something shiny

  in her other hand.

  When I get closer,

  I see that the shine

  is made of

  aluminum foil.

  The thing that’s

  the strangest—

  Gwen is smiling.

  A real smile.

  An almost hopeful smile.

  Clay has the same space

  between his top front teeth.

  I didn’t forget the deal,

  Gwen whispers

  into the air

  between us.

  I tried,

  I really did,

  Clay even took my side,

  but my husband won’t do it.

  I want to say

  that the deal was

  LEAVING,

  not

  TRYING TO LEAVE.

  Gwen’s eyes

  are wet now.

  Clay talked to me.

  He said he was

  proud of me.

  I made you this.

  Gwen holds out

  the shiny aluminum package.

  It’s a perfect square.

  In geometry

  that means all sides

  are equal.

  Definitely not true.

  Another thing they

  don’t teach

  in geometry—

  Even when you can’t see

  any sides,

  there are sides.

  I take the square package

  from her.

  Fudge,

  Gwen says.

  Fudge?

  I ask.

  Yes, chocolate marshmallow fudge.

  I made it.

  For you.

  You made it.

  Thank you,

  I say.

  You’re welcome.

  Let me know how you like it.

  I don’t know why

  we are repeating

  everything we say

  to each other.

  It seems like

  we both need to be

  very clear

  about what is happening.

  Gwen made fudge.

  She made it for me.

  She gave it to me.

  I took it.

  We both know

  FUDGE is not

  moving away.

  But it’s the best

  Gwen can do.

  Beavers

  If I could be one animal,

  it would be a

  beaver.

  I’ve seen them

  on the river.

  I’ve seen the lodges

  they make,

  that look like

  big upside-down nests

  made of branches.

  I like the way

  they use their

  teeth and paws—

  to chew things down

  in one place,

  and build them up

  in another.

  I decide they

  can be part of my

  independent project.

  The next time

  we are at the river,

  I speak before Clay

  has a chance.

  Ask me to tell you

  three things about beavers.

  Tell me

  three things about beavers,

 

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