The Sky Between You and Me

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The Sky Between You and Me Page 3

by Catherine Alene


  Which really isn’t an answer

  Not that Cody seems to care

  “Really? That’s great! I mean, your grandma’s place is right down from my family’s.”

  Sweet and polite, let’s make it right time is over

  Two steps left and I’m standing

  Next to Cody

  Mr. Welcome-to-the-Neighborhood

  That’s not even his real smile

  This goofy grin he’s giving her

  What’s wrong with him?

  I wish I didn’t know

  Almost

  Cody’s turning me into one of

  Those girls

  Who pout

  Every time their boyfriend

  Talks

  To another girl

  This isn’t who I want to be

  But I am

  At least right now

  Hey.

  “Hey, what?”

  His eyes wander out the door

  After her

  “I was just being nice. She’s new.”

  Whatever.

  “Are you jealous? You know I love you.”

  Cody closes his eyes

  Smooches his lips

  A cartoon-style lip-smack kiss

  My throat’s getting tighter and tighter

  Like it does before I cry

  Not that I

  Do that often

  I hate

  To cry

  Blue lies down

  Across my feet

  Starts to chew on his bone

  My dog

  With the stitches and staples

  Holding together the hurt

  That could have been a gone

  A forever gone

  Like they always are

  My voice is quiet

  Tight

  She practically killed my dog.

  Cody’s eyes go wide

  “I was just messing around. You know I wouldn’t ever—”

  Leave you.

  Is how the sentence would end

  If I let it

  But I don’t

  I’m sorry. I know you wouldn’t.

  He smiles

  The real kind

  And hugs me tight

  I press my face into his shoulder

  Pull away

  As Blue stands

  Gives me

  The look

  And relocates to his bed

  Next to the couch

  To chew on his bone

  In peace

  We follow him over

  Curl into each other

  On the couch

  Cody fishes the remote from between the cushions

  Turns on the television

  Looks for a movie

  That will make us

  Laugh

  Cody doesn’t even know that he almost lied to me

  He did, though

  Everyone leaves

  So he shouldn’t say he won’t

  Tipping Point

  It’s hard to say

  Why

  I do it now

  Why

  I pull the scale

  From under the trash can

  Beside the toilet

  Maybe

  Because I haven’t been hungry

  Lately

  Maybe if I was one of those girls

  Who obsessed over magazines with more pictures than words

  With shiny images of models

  In white feather wings

  Maybe if I was one of those girls

  The number on the scale

  Would matter

  If I was one of those girls

  I’d care

  But I’m not

  So I don’t

  Since it doesn’t matter

  really it doesn’t

  I pull it from beneath the trash can

  And step

  Off a cliff

  On to the scale

  The Morning After

  It’s usually cereal

  Never toast

  But sometimes an egg

  First thing in the morning

  I’ve never been one

  To skip

  Breakfast

  But the thing is

  I’m just not

  Hungry

  Truly

  It has nothing to do

  With that number

  On the scale

  Because really

  It wasn’t (was) that bad

  It would just be better

  If it were less

  Trample and Sample

  It’s my job

  To regulate the heat

  Blowing through the vents

  As Asia pulls down our drive

  Onto the road

  On our way to school

  I grab the bandanna

  Lying in the middle of the seat

  To wipe the condensation

  That fogs the middle of the windshield

  The one place the defroster can’t seem to reach

  That’s when I see them

  Standing off to the side of the road

  The part of their herd

  That leaned the fence down

  Wandered out of the pasture

  Round behind Asia’s house

  Standing with their tails to the wind

  Their mouths to the ground

  Eating the garden bare

  “We are going to be so late,” Asia says.

  As she pulls off the road

  Again

  Only this time

  Headed down their drive

  Asia’s mom comes flying out the back door

  In her mud boots and coveralls

  Just as we pull in

  “Hurry up, girls!”

  Our hoods go back on

  We’re out in the rain

  Chasing around in the mud

  “Hey! Hey!”

  Our voices mix together

  As we slip slide through the tangle

  Of cows

  Munching on the winter vegetables coming up in rows

  “Where’s Cow?” Asia calls.

  “I don’t know. I let him out this morning and he isn’t back yet,” her mom says.

  Asia’s hanging back now

  Letting her mom and I get in with the herd

  Oh, how I hate to deprive her of this fine opportunity

  I slap at the one of the cows’ hindquarters

  Dodging its tail

  Which flicks rain and mud at me

  Asia’s mom starts slapping too

  But they don’t even raise their heads

  My hood falls off

  As I run to an old red cow

  Fan my hands in front of her eyes

  Her head comes up fast

  A clod of dirt flies through the air

  From Asia’s direction

  Sticks to the cow’s back

  “Asia! That is not helping! Stop throwing and get in here!” her mom yells.

  Another clod of dirt flies through the air

  Misses the cow

  Thunks

  Between my shoulder blades

  I spin around

  More than halfway to mad

  Asia squeals

  Laughs

  Knows what’s coming her way

  As I lean down and scoop up a ball of sod

  She takes off

  Turns to run

  Not thinking about the way the mud will skid

  Beneath her hee
ls

  She goes down hard

  Right on her butt

  I shouldn’t

  Let the ball of sod fly

  But I do

  I miss

  What with laughing so hard

  “Girls!” Asia’s mom shouts.

  Because really we aren’t helping

  That much

  Anymore

  Laughing and throwing and slipping around in this mud

  Then Cow

  Comes out of nowhere

  Like cattle dogs do

  Barking and nipping at the herd’s heels

  Asia’s mom starts working him with whistles

  “You girls better get going. You’re going to be late.”

  My hair is so wet that I don’t even bother to pull my hood up

  Asia and I jog back to the truck

  “Truce?” Asia slows alongside me.

  Truce, I agree.

  Faux serious

  Offering my hand

  She goes to duck

  Too slow

  My muddy fingers smear streaks across her cheek

  Starting all over again

  This laughing and throwing and slipping around in the mud

  Warning Bell

  Kierra was the first person I saw this morning

  When I got to school

  Stepping into the middle of the year

  Easy as if she’s gone to school here forever

  Which she hasn’t

  Until today

  Leaning against her locker

  Looking like 4th-of-July Barbie

  In her freshly creased jeans

  And a red button-down shirt

  Laughing at Cody standing with his weight shifted to one leg

  The other at a jaunty angle

  Flying in through the front doors

  Late after the clothes change that came after penning the cows

  That had trampled and sampled Asia’s mom’s garden flat

  Before spilling into the road

  Maybe if I hadn’t been so late

  Running in with my blood already thumping in my chest

  I wouldn’t have cared

  About them

  Laughing

  Over the joke I didn’t hear

  Maybe if I hadn’t been so late

  I wouldn’t have thrown my backpack into my locker

  The books raining down from the top shelf

  Sending papers fluttering across the hall where they were ripped and muddied

  Because no one bothered to look down

  To see what their heels were grinding

  Maybe if I hadn’t pulled away from Cody

  When he leaned down to help

  Ducked in for a kiss

  That ended up as a mouth full of hair

  When I spun away

  Maybe if I hadn’t slammed my locker door shut

  Let Asia grab my elbow

  Pull me down the hall

  I would have heard what he said

  Before the warning bell drowned his voice

  But I don’t care

  I said it out loud, so Asia could hear it too

  I don’t care.

  “What do you mean you don’t care? He should have been standing at your locker waiting for you, not talking to her,” Asia says. “And since when does she go here anyway?”

  I look back

  Only this time Cody’s gone

  We’d been standing right across from his first period class

  I’ll see him second block

  But still

  It would have been nice if he’d waited

  Just for a minute

  Second Block

  Is too early for precalculus

  Too soon for me to have to confront Cody

  The tardy bell bleats as I step into the classroom

  This room smells stagnant

  Like a fish tank

  Which is odd

  Because Mr. Kraftner has never had one in here

  Cody smiles across the room at me

  Like nothing happened this morning

  Him sitting there

  Legs stretched out into the aisle

  I wonder if it did

  “Are you okay?” he asks.

  I slide into the desk next to his

  Sure. Why?

  My books and binder come out of my bag and onto my desk

  “Because you looked like you were mad this morning. I was going to go after you to see, but I didn’t want to be late. One more tardy and I’ll have detention.”

  Right.

  My throat tightens around the word

  “See, you are mad. I can tell from your voice.”

  No I’m not.

  Mr. Kraftner springs from behind his luxury-liner, teacher-sized desk

  Overflowing with coffee cups and books

  He reminds me of that guy on the popcorn commercials

  The one who wears a bow tie

  And little Grandpa glasses

  So hap-hap-happy!

  Mr. Kraftner paces in front of the classroom

  Thumbing through his copy of our precalculus textbook

  “Pair up and let’s do this! Section four, unit two. The more you get done in class, the less homework you have.”

  Cody slides his desk into place so it’s facing mine

  “It’s because I was talking to Kierra, isn’t it?”

  No.

  But that taste of bile in the back of my throat won’t let me deny it

  Even to myself

  “Because if you are, you shouldn’t be,” Cody continues. “Kierra’s the one who came up to me.”

  Which doesn’t make it better

  The fact that she

  Came up to him

  “She didn’t know where her first block was.”

  Cody opens his textbook

  Flips through the pages

  Until he finds it

  Section four, unit two

  “I would hate starting at a new school in the middle of the year.”

  Cody’s eyes fall back to his text

  My heart flinches

  Here I am

  I’m doing it again

  Turning into that girl

  The kind I hate

  Who cries and whines

  When her boyfriend talks to another

  Girl

  We’ve been together

  A year

  Known each other

  Forever

  And I’ve always been

  Fine

  Really I don’t mind

  Him talking

  To another

  Any other

  Girl

  Just not her

  Turn and Burn

  You can tell what horses have been worked over the winter

  Whose folks had indoor arenas

  With metal roofs that held the snow out

  But not the wind

  That blew cold through the walls

  Or the people like me and Asia

  Who’d pretended we didn’t notice

  The snow freezing to our eyelashes

  Or the balls of ice packing hard in our horses’ hooves

  As we loped through interminable months of gray

  Counting the days until the earth

  Frozen silent

  Beneath a crust of ice

  Was released by the warmth of spring

  Signaling the start of rodeo season

  Team practices

  Leaving the horses that had passed the winter

  Standing in pastu
res

  With their eyes blinked shut to the cold and their tails to the wind

  Huffing and lathered

  Sitting with my left leg dangling over Fancy’s neck

  Curled at the knee around the pommel

  Of the saddle with the rough-out seat

  Worn soft by my mom

  Smooth under me

  Asia and I watch

  Critique

  Compare

  Barrel racers

  Teammates

  One at a time

  Horses dance sideways through the gate

  Into the arena

  Champing at the sweet metal of their copper bits

  Exploding past

  Riders laid flat against their horses’ necks

  Breaking the stare of the electric eye

  Setting the clock in motion

  As they fly around the three-leaf clover

  I’m on deck

  Next to go

  Glancing across the arena

  At the road pounded into washboards by the trucks and trailers

  Bumper pulls

  Goosenecks

  filing into the fairgrounds—our grounds

  except for that one week a year

  when the Tilt-a-Whirl spins people so hard and fast

  they throw their heads back

  looking at the stars twirled into a kaleidoscope

  making them think they could be anything

  go anywhere

  somewhere that wasn’t born into them

  like here

  Hoping to see Cody

  Pulling his grandpa’s blue-and-white two-horse trailer

  Just as rusted and dented as the orange truck he’ll be driving

  With Micah slouched in the passenger seat

  Staring into the side mirror at the trailer

  Bouncing and swaying as one of the horses

  Micah’s horse

  The color of a chocolate bar

  Thumps his hooves against the trailer floor

  At the road jouncing the trailer beneath him

  But I don’t

  Show ’em Asia’s grinning

  As I swing my legs back into my stirrups

  Nudging Fancy awake with my heels

  Laughing as she stretches

  First one hind leg

  then the other

  Before walking slowly

  A leisurely equine iconoclast

  Into the ring

  Mr. Bradford

  A Mister because he’s our coach

  Because even if you’re only three years out of high school

  You’re a Mister in Salida Springs

  Chuckling and shaking his head at Fancy standing quiet

  Not feeling her muscles

  Quivering

  Gathering energy beneath the saddle

  Like I do

 

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