Book Read Free

Hold Me Tight

Page 5

by Lorie Ann Grover

Math Scratch Paper

  Mad

  Sad

  Mad

  Sad

  Mad

  Sad

  Never

  Glad

  Bad

  Dad

  Mad

  Sad

  Before Bed

  I scrounge in the cupboard.

  There!

  In the way back.

  An opened bag of crackers.

  I sneak it past Dale

  under my shirt

  to my room.

  Click.

  I lock the door.

  Crinkle, crunch.

  Stale.

  I eat every crumb.

  Bedtime Prayer

  “Don’t forget to pray,” says Mom.

  “Okay.”

  She flicks out my light and leaves.

  God, please don’t let us starve.

  Please keep the baby inside Mom safe.

  Please bring Chris back safe.

  Please bring Dad back

  or punish him good.

  Overheard

  Going for a drink of water, I stop.

  Mom’s on the phone.

  I peek around the corner.

  “I know. Thank you for saying so.”

  Her voice is all melty.

  She’s curled in the chair

  and holding the phone tight.

  Dad?

  “You don’t need to say that, Paul.”

  Yuck! It’s her friend.

  “It’s just so hard on all of us.

  And I’m so angry.”

  She starts crying.

  “Thank you. See you soon.

  Me too.”

  Forget the water.

  I hurry back to bed.

  Me Too

  I kick the covers off my bed.

  They tumble to the floor.

  Me too.

  Did Mr. Paul say,

  “Love you,”

  or something lame like that?

  Is that what Mom said

  “Me too” for?

  But she always yells that

  to him after he calls out,

  “Love ya!” to her and Dad

  as he drives off in his old Porsche.

  That’s always seemed so fake

  and creeped me out.

  And now

  it’s creepier.

  Mom

  She’s crying again.

  Her sobs

  seep through the concrete walls.

  There’s no way she knows it,

  or she’d stop.

  But I hear it.

  I know exactly how she’s feeling.

  I turn my pillow over

  and feel for a dry spot.

  Red Xs

  “Here you go, Essie.” Ms. Dryden

  drops a pill in my hand.

  She closes my fingers over it.

  Her warm hand

  makes my pain less

  for a second.

  “Hurry to the fountain

  and come right back.”

  “Okay.”

  My head thuds when I stand up.

  Ms. Dryden holds on to me

  until the pounding fades

  and I can walk.

  I aim for the door

  without looking at anyone in class.

  I think it was Wally

  who patted my back.

  I’m so glad

  Mom’s given Ms. Dryden

  a bottle of medicine

  for my headaches.

  The office even made it

  so I don’t have to go to the nurse.

  I can just get the pill

  and start feeling better

  without missing class.

  Mom might have told Ms. Dryden

  about Dad leaving while they were talking.

  Maybe.

  But I’m not going to say anything,

  and I bet she won’t either.

  If she actually does know anything.

  At all.

  If I get a headache,

  Ms. Dryden marks a red X on the calendar

  and gives me one pill.

  It usually works.

  The pounding stops

  till the next day.

  Lunch

  Gary laughs

  and leaves

  half his sandwich

  on his desk.

  Buffy didn’t eat the crumbs

  left in her chip bag.

  I ball my trash up.

  Every speck of my

  peanut butter sandwich

  is gone.

  I’m almost drooling

  for Wally’s granola bar.

  “Want a bite?” he asks.

  “Well, sure. If you

  aren’t really hungry.”

  “Not very.”

  He snaps off a piece for me.

  Mmm.

  I suck it till it turns soggy

  to make it last

  as long as I can.

  Thanks to the Sumerians

  So we made

  pretend cuneiform letters

  and pressed

  the shapes onto

  a round clay cylinder.

  My make-believe message says,

  “My dad left,”

  over and over

  around the whole thing.

  Now I get to roll

  it out across

  a big piece of soft clay.

  My dad left.

  “How beautiful,” Ms. Dryden says.

  “What does it tell us, Essie?”

  “Dad loves me.”

  “How nice.” She moves on.

  I roll out

  another row.

  Friends

  Wally and I

  sit on top of the monkey bars.

  “Are you okay?” he finally asks,

  covering my hand with his.

  “Yeah,” I say.

  “Sure?”

  I nod.

  “I don’t believe you,” he says.

  Me either.

  I don’t pull my hand

  away.

  Pretty Scary

  “Your mom having a baby

  is pretty scary, isn’t it?” he asks.

  “What?”

  I shade my eyes

  to see his face better.

  “You know,” he shrugs,

  “they’re so little,

  and noisy,

  and smelly.”

  “So?”

  Wally swings his legs.

  “It just seems like

  when babies arrive,

  bigger kids disappear some.”

  “Yeah?”

  “That’s what happened

  when Wilhelmina was born

  a couple years ago.”

  “Really?”

  “Yeah. That’s when I started drama.

  My parents never could both make it

  to my plays.

  One had to stay with the baby at home

  or walk her out in the hallway.

  It seemed like

  I wasn’t as important anymore.”

  “Hmm.”

  “This year they’ve promised

  to leave her with a sitter

  and both come to my play.”

  “That’s great.”

  “We’ll see.”

  Zap

  “There’s the buzzer.

  Come on.” Wally climbs down.

  I jump.

  Shooty pains

  zap my legs

  when I land.

  I shake out the tingles.

  I’m

  not

  going to disappear.

  Chatter

  “The cops think

  the kidnapper is someone

  Chris’s dad

  put in jail a while ago.”

  “Whoa.”

  “I guess you can make a lot

  of enemies

  when you’re a lawyer.”

  I wonder if Chris’s
dad

  feels like it’s his fault.

  But it’s not.

  Absolutely not.

  By the Side of the Road

  Mom takes the turn

  and we drive by

  a home

  with a bunch of stuff

  put out on the curb.

  There’s one old stuffed chair

  that stands out from everything,

  sitting on the tippy edge of the cement,

  alone.

  A FREE sign is stuck to it.

  And nobody is even taking it.

  Mom picks up speed.

  I watch it out the back window.

  That’s what you do when you don’t want something.

  You stick it out on the curb

  and leave it.

  The garbage man will take it

  if no one else does.

  Those people sure don’t want

  that chair anymore.

  It doesn’t look that bad

  to me.

  Ahhh

  The automatic doors

  whoosh open

  and the library air-conditioning

  blasts us.

  “Ahhh,” Mom, Doozerdude, and I say.

  We take off in different directions

  to find our books,

  but we are all

  smiling.

  Really Cool

  I search the kids’ fiction shelves

  and fill my bag.

  Then, really cool like,

  I wander over to the YA section.

  There’s an author’s name I’ve seen before.

  I pull the book down,

  waiting for the children’s librarian

  to rush over

  and make me put it back.

  I glance over my shoulder.

  She’s not even looking at me.

  Dale waves,

  down in front of the little kids’ books.

  I wave back,

  feeling very grown-up

  in YA.

  Checking the Calendar

  How do days and nights

  keep happening

  when a huge chunk of my life

  is missing?

  How can Friday just zoom by

  like nothing?

  It’s been five days

  without Dad.

  Can a clock keep running

  if the battery is taken out?

  Can a computer run

  without a hard drive?

  How can days and nights,

  our family,

  keep going

  without Dad?

  Chris has been gone eight days.

  Is his family still going

  without him?

  Ring!

  “Yes.

  No.”

  Mom squeezes the receiver.

  Her hand is white.

  “Fine.

  See you then.”

  She hangs up.

  “Your father’s coming

  tomorrow afternoon.”

  “Whoop-de-doo!” Dale yells.

  “This Saturday would be his day off,” she says,

  “because last Saturday he worked.

  Even though it was Thanksgiving weekend.

  If he really was working.”

  She rambles on and on.

  Thinking It Through

  He really wasn’t missing.

  To us he was.

  But not to him.

  Dad’s always known

  where he was.

  Does Chris know

  where he is?

  He’s the one

  really missing.

  That’s why

  the police

  have to find him.

  Dad

  can make it home

  all on his own.

  If he wants.

  Waiting

  “Mom,” I say.

  She doesn’t answer

  and keeps mumbling

  while looking out the window.

  Dale leaps around the room.

  “I’ve got to find

  that Corvette for Daddy to play with.”

  He digs through his can of cars.

  “He always likes to play with the Corvette.”

  Mom’s still stuck at the window.

  What’s she thinking?

  That she’ll see Dad driving up

  any second?

  He’s not coming till tomorrow.

  That she hates Dad?

  That she loves him?

  “It’s not here. Maybe it’s in my room.”

  Dale zips off.

  I tiptoe away,

  embarrassed I was staring at Mom.

  Pretty soon

  she’ll be crying.

  I don’t want her

  to have to disappear

  to her room

  like she’s been doing lately.

  Pretending she

  doesn’t cry.

  Midnight

  “Es.” Dale shakes me awake.

  “What?”

  I pull away. “What do you want?”

  He squeezes the tail of his rubber lizard, Izzy.

  “He’s coming back.

  Just like I said he would.

  He’s coming back tomorrow

  for forever.”

  “Maybe, Doozerdude.

  Go back to bed.”

  “Okay.”

  His feet pad across the terrazzo to his room.

  I snuggle down.

  Maybe Dad is coming back

  for forever.

  Even Later

  When he comes back,

  will it be for keeps

  or just be some stupid visit?

  How can someone visit

  their own home?

  What will it be?

  What will it mean?

  When is tomorrow

  going to get here?

  All Day

  Dale drives his cars

  around the braided rug.

  The Corvette is in a special

  parking place

  on top of the TV.

  I read two books

  as the clock hums above the couch.

  Mom paces.

  Does laundry.

  Mops.

  Paces.

  She showers.

  Does her hair up.

  Puts on her best maternity dress

  with the polka dots.

  Paces.

  I turn pages.

  Dale drives in circles.

  All day long.

  All afternoon.

  Until the sun sets.

  And we each end up in the living room

  staring at the floor.

  Too ashamed to look at the clock

  for the millionth time.

  Too ashamed to look at each other.

  Because

  we believed him.

  In the Bathroom

  I go to ditch my tissue

  in the trash can

  and see it in there.

  The Corvette.

  Doozerdude

  chucked it.

  I fish it out

  in case he changes his mind.

  It’s hidden way back

  behind the washcloths now.

  Tucked in Bed

  I press my lips

  together

  as tight as I can.

  I try to hold it in.

  Not to cry,

  because I know Mom’s listening in the hallway.

  And she’s beat from taking care of Dale’s bawling.

  But my face is burning up

  keeping the tears inside.

  My eyeballs are going to catch fire.

  I have to act

  like I don’t care

  he didn’t show up.

  If I care,

  I might see

  that he doesn’t.

  I’m Not Worth It

  Obviously.

  Sunday Morning

  “Hello?�
� Mom answers.

  Dale and I look at each other.

  “Where were you?” she hisses,

  then heads to her room with the phone.

  I bet she has some more hissing to do

  at Dad

  for not showing up,

  for not coming back for forever,

  for not giving us money,

  for leaving in the first stinking place.

  “What about the house payment?”

  Her door slams on the question.

  “I’m glad she went to her room,” says Dale.

  “Me too, for once. I don’t want to hear about it.”

  I hope

  the baby can’t hear it

  either.

  An Inch

  Dale pouts.

  “How come

  he doesn’t ask

  to talk to us, Es?”

  “I don’t know.

  What would you say, anyway?”

  “Well.” He crushes some cereal

  with his thumbnail.

  “That I was first in the fifty-yard dash last week.”

  He starts picking at a scab on his knee.

  “And that I’ve probably grown like an inch

  since he was here.”

  “Since he left,” I say.

  “Since he was here.”

  “It’s not the same thing, you know.”

  “I know.” He picks and picks till it bleeds.

  I pass him my napkin.

  “Just stop already.

  It’s only been a week, anyway,” I say.

  He shrugs,

  flicks the scab onto the floor,

  then presses the napkin

  to his knee.

  We watch the blood seep through.

  “Since he left here,” Dale admits.

  Church

  Mom hauls us to church.

  After Sunday school

  we sit in the same pew

  like always,

  the three of us.

  Of course

  Dad’s not in the back

  ushering,

  making me proud.

  He’s not here at all,

  making me embarrassed

  when folks ask,

  “Where’s your daddy, Essie?”

  I slouch down

  and look away without answering,

  and they don’t say much else.

  On the way out,

  I slip right by Pastor Lyon

  and his wife

  so they won’t look at me

  and know something’s wrong

  with me

  or my family.

  Back Home

  I lift my legs from the poky fat grass.

  Dad said this kind would be best

  for our yard.

  But it’s so prickly,

  until you stop moving all around.

  The clouds hang heavy and poochy.

  Dad loved to lie in the grass

  with me

  and figure out all the cloud types.

  We’d argue if it was cumulonimbus

  or just cumulus.

  Or if it was just a big cat floating

  through the sky.

  I’d always bounce my head on his stomach.

  And he’d laugh and bounce my head more.

  “Ow!”

  Red ants swarm my legs!

  I leap up

  and beat my calves.

  The ants bite hard

  and hang on.

  “Stop it! Mom, help!”

 

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