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The Sky Between You and Me

Page 17

by Catherine Alene


  About

  Monday Morning

  I’d padded downstairs this morning

  To find the coffee

  Poured into the white plastic pitcher

  Stained brown around the spout

  A plate of eggs shrouded with a napkin on the table

  Love you, Rae

  He’d written it on the napkin in ballpoint pen

  First blue

  Then black

  Because the ink must have run dry

  That’s why he always carries two

  Sometimes three

  In the breast pocket of his snap-button shirt

  I bypassed the eggs

  Yolks melted into the napkin

  Oiling the paper clear

  Reaching

  Into the wooden carousel rack beside the toaster

  Packed with spices and extracts

  For the blue packets tucked behind the vanilla

  Pouring the contents

  Twice as sweet as sugar

  Into the coffee

  Blue’s at my feet

  The plate of eggs goes on the floor for him

  He looks at me

  At the plate

  At me

  Wondering

  If this delicious doggie dream is for real

  Go ahead.

  My dog

  The fool-proof vault

  Pushes the plate with his nose across the linoleum

  Vulches the breakfast that scares me

  It doesn’t scare me

  Recheck mental thesaurus

  Delete “scare”

  Insert “interest”

  I’ve been so good since Saturday

  The belt buckle might be

  Must be some sort of talisman

  Because I’m on my longest stretch ever

  Food-free

  X hours

  And counting

  I Should

  Get ready

  Go to school

  But the thing is

  Asia’s truck

  Won’t start

  She called

  Let me know

  I go for the coffee

  A second cup

  Straight up

  Black

  And onto the couch

  Extract

  The remote

  From between the cushions

  Flipping through the television channels

  Balancing the coffee cup on my knees

  Watching

  Two boys rolling plastic tanks and trucks

  Through a miniature army base

  Lakes—sand traps—camouflage tents

  Never mentioning how different the game looks

  Played on the dirt floor of a barn

  A trio of girls posing maternal

  Cuddling dolls

  Never mentioning how easy it is to lose

  The miniature shoes-clothes-jewelry

  Or how odd the dolls look

  When they’re half-naked

  Falling forward onto their large chests

  Unable to relax their heels against the ground

  Coming to rest on the neighbor I wish I had

  Curling up at the end of the couch as he slips into a cardigan

  Ties his denim shoes

  Welcoming me into his home with his nursery-rhyme voice

  Showing me

  His neighbor

  A film flickering in a picture-frame screen

  About how pretzels are made

  I notice for the first time that the clock

  Inhabited by the tiger wearing a watch

  Has no hands

  Freeing the trolley to come and go as it pleases

  Never late

  I wonder how attached Dad is to the gold arms

  Circling the face of the clock above the stove

  With pictures of cowboy hats for numbers

  Somehow that neighbor

  The one I wish I had

  Gets me to thinking about Lacey

  My teddy bear buddy

  The thought of her sitting stiff and straight on a carpet square

  Staring at her shoes

  Pulls me off the couch

  Sends me upstairs to get dressed

  Not really caring what I put on

  Even though my legs look bigger

  Fatter

  Are they?

  I could

  Should

  Weigh myself

  But the coffee in my stomach

  Will register

  As pounds

  A sweatshirt over my head

  Shoes on my feet

  I won’t weigh myself, because if I’ve gained

  I’ll be in a bad mood

  I can’t, won’t, will

  I am quick, quick, super quick

  Into my bathroom

  Onto the scale

  And I’m down

  Two pounds

  Down

  It feels so good

  I’m so good

  Flying down the stairs

  Out the door

  Into the ranch truck

  With primer-gray doors and the vinyl-backed calendar stuck to the dash

  A complimentary gift to Dad and me

  Cattle sellers

  Valued customers

  Awarded a year in miniature

  Looking into the rearview mirror I realize I forgot

  To conceal

  The circles beneath my eyes

  To thicken-lengthen-strengthen

  My lashes black

  To smooth my hair

  Rumpled by my pillows on the couch

  Nothing a ball cap wouldn’t cover

  That a kindergartener would notice

  Halfway down the road

  With the dust and gravel blowing from under the tires

  Shooting behind the tailgate in a plume of dirt and granite

  Blue’s head pops up

  From the truck bed

  Where he’s been hiding

  Laid flat in the middle of the soda cans and rope

  Baling twine and tools

  Teased to his feet

  By the rumbling and the moving

  Tasting the air flying by with his tongue

  Lolling out the side of his mouth

  Stump of a tail wiggling back and forth

  Standing tall on the wheel well

  Destination unknown

  Safety First

  According to the numbers

  On the clock

  On the dash

  I have a few minutes

  To spare

  My head

  Started to hurt

  On the drive in

  So I duck

  Into the drugstore

  Walk down aisles lined with toothpaste and feminine hygiene items

  Around the carousel displaying postcards

  With scenic images of Salida Springs

  Or someplace that looks a lot like here anyway

  Kept in stock in case a tourist ever came through

  Not that they’d be entirely welcome if they did

  And find the shelves

  At the end of the aisle with

  Plastic toy soldiers

  Squirt guns

  And yo-yos

  That holds what I am looking for

  Ibuprofen

  Extra strength

  Because a minimalist

  I’m not

  My hand grabs a bottle

  But my eyes linger

&nb
sp; On the first aid supplies

  That fill the shelf

  Below

  Snag on the row of tiny brown bottles

  Between the bandages and the gauze

  “For emergency use”

  The label reads

  “To cause vomiting in case of poison”

  I grab one

  Plus a box of Band-Aids

  Just to make it look

  Right

  This purchase

  That now includes

  A bottle

  Of ipecac syrup

  Not that I’ll take it

  I’ll keep it on hand

  Just

  In

  Case

  The box of Band-Aids falls from my hand

  Clatters to the floor

  Perfect opportunity

  To bend down

  look behind

  Over my shoulder

  To make sure no one sees

  As I slip

  This little brown bottle

  Into the pocket of my Carhartts

  The Band-Aids go back on the shelf

  And I head toward the front counter

  Hand in my pocket

  Fingers wrapped around

  This thing

  I can’t be seen

  Buying

  “Playing hooky today?”

  Harley grins from beneath his ball cap

  As he takes the cash from my hand

  No. Just a late start. Truck broke down.

  “That’s no good,” he says as he throws in a candy bar

  for good measure.

  “Something to sweeten your day,” he says, chuckling at his own joke.

  Twin

  His black lab

  Born the only dog in the litter

  Comes around from behind the counter

  Wiggles his stump of a tail

  The rest of it left behind in a barbwire fence when he was a pup

  I scratch his ears

  Grab my bag

  Walk out of the store

  Secret

  In hand

  I Better

  Lacey sits forward on the carpet in the reading corner

  Wants a better look

  At my belt buckle

  I’ve pulled the bottom edge of my sweatshirt up

  But she actually wants to hold it

  I unbuckle my belt

  Slide it through the loops of my jeans

  Lacey lays the belt out full-length on the carpet between us

  It looks so long that way

  There are three notches

  Worn wider

  Darker than the rest

  Small

  Medium

  Large

  Extra small

  Just

  One

  More

  Notch

  My jeans are slip-sliding down my waist

  I roll the top down

  Lacey notices and laughs

  “Your pants are too big. You need to go shopping for some right size ones.”

  I guess. Maybe I should put my belt back on.

  “Yeah, you better.”

  I better

  Stay focused on

  This goal

  That’s obviously

  Paying off

  So Brave

  Blood turns black

  When it’s dead

  That’s how Lacey describes it

  Gently pulling the Band-Aid back

  Careful to leave half stuck to her skin

  Partially covering the scab

  Where the gravel tore into her elbow

  When the wheels of her bike went sideways

  Throwing her against the road

  That’s what her scab is

  Blood turned black

  Hidden beneath an antiseptic strip of plastic

  Decorated with black-and-white spotted dogs

  Smooth as the beanbags crunching beneath our weight

  Lacey smooths the Band-Aid back into place

  Pressing it firm

  Pointing out how her fingernails

  Painted glittery and pink

  Match the puppy’s tongues

  “It didn’t hurt. Very much.”

  You’re so brave, I say.

  Did you do any art this morning? I ask.

  Because I never ask what I’m actually wondering

  If I did, I’d ask Lacey how it is

  With Kierra

  If she’s the kind of big sister who hugs Lacey when she falls

  Or the kind who finger-pokes words that make Lacey feel small

  For not having been more careful

  “Yes.” She walks over to the table covered with papers lined up edge to edge

  Four down, six across

  I don’t know why I remember that

  But I do

  The dimensions of a classroom table measured in construction paper rectangles

  Lacey shoves her hands into the back pockets of her jeans

  Looks for her square of paper

  It’s on the edge

  The last one on the bottom row

  She touches the paint with the tip of her pointer finger

  It must come away clean

  Because she picks up her picture

  Carries it over

  There is a black crayon line

  Bisecting the paper

  “Do you like ballerinas?” she asks.

  I nod

  Wondering why she’s pointing

  At the crayon image with her index finger

  Pressing the tip into the chest of the caricature’s triangle body

  Suddenly caring more about this ballerina

  With a featureless face and matchstick legs

  Than her shoes

  “Because if you don’t like ballerinas, you can look at the rainbow.”

  She lifts her finger

  But not her eyes

  Pointing to the other half of the page

  At the rainbow

  Black and gray

  Layered one on top of the other

  I lay my hand on the page next to Lacey’s

  Covering up the rainbow with my palm

  I love them. Both.

  “Do you know what?” she whispers.

  What? I’m whispering too

  Lacey’s hand finds my knee

  Balls up a fold of my jeans in her fist

  “I already knew about blood.

  How it turns black when it’s dead.

  I saw it before.

  On the rug.

  Under her head.

  My mom’s.”

  Your mom—

  “She’s gone.”

  Looking at her looking at me

  With eyes that won’t ever forget

  All I can see is her scream

  Hanging in the air

  Falling

  Because her mother isn’t there to catch it

  Hooky

  I watched my feet walk down the hall

  Out of the conversation I broke in half

  Without even meaning to

  I just couldn’t listen

  Couldn’t focus

  On what Asia was saying

  I thought I could

  I intended to

  Meet Asia at the door of the classroom

  Fifth period

  Where Kierra sits across the aisle from me

  Blood turns black

  Blood turns black

  Blood turns black

  Stop thinking<
br />
  Instead I walked

  Minus five

  Across the asphalt

  Minus five

  Felt the sun on my neck

  Minus five

  My shoulders

  Minus five

  The small of my back

  Minus

  Rinsing away the smell of peanut butter and disinfectant

  Five

  I rolled down the window in the truck

  As I pulled out of the parking lot

  Felt the wind

  Sharp with dust

  There were my feet

  Stepping out of the truck

  Out of my sandals

  Across the gravel driveway and onto the grass

  The wet cold of Blue’s nose nuzzling my hand

  Twisting and wiggling around my legs

  When my hands find Fancy’s neck

  Rubbing her around the ears

  The fingers threaded through her mane almost look

  Feel

  Like my own

  Connected to the body

  Straddling her back

  Inhaling the grass and the sky

  Moving toward the lake that’s more like a pond

  Edged with sand and silt

  Feel the water climb up my calves

  As we splash away from the shore

  Step until the sand and silt fall away

  Leave her hooves to churn the water and the emptiness beneath

  Swimming

  The water lifts my body off her back

  To float

  Here in the now

  That is my arms

  Moving through her mane

  Swirling on top of the water

  I can almost

  Believe

  This body

  Is my own

  Hindsight is Better

  It’s a flat-footed statement

  An accusation

  “You’re okay,” Asia says.

  I’m okay.

  Glad we’re on the phone

  Because I’m cleaning, cleaning, cleaning

  Organizing my closet

  “You walking out of school today is okay?”

  I’m sorry, I know I should have—

  “People worry, you know, when you disappear. I mean, you’ve been so—”

  What?

  My fingers find my collarbone

  minus five

  Because I’ve been so

  minus five

  Frustrated

  That my closet

  Is

  So

  Full

  “Different lately. You just take off, in the middle of school, the middle of lunch. You never eat anymore. You act like no one notices, but—”

  My hands move fast

  Pull sweatshirts out of my closet

  Send them flying

  Across my room

  Onto my bed

  I’m not doing this.

 

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