Hold Me Tight

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Hold Me Tight Page 14

by Lorie Ann Grover


  I press the marker

  until it bleeds in

  as much ink

  as the paper can hold,

  and my hand cramps

  and shakes,

  and there’s not a speck

  of white

  left.

  Then, with black,

  I make one tiny heart.

  That’s me,

  pressed all around

  by red.

  I drop the marker.

  Everyone’s out at recess.

  Ms. Dryden comes over.

  “Finished your abstract portrait, Essie?”

  I nod.

  She takes it.

  “Do you want me to try again?” I ask.

  “No, Essie.” She wipes her eyes.

  “I think you did

  one fine job.”

  Spelling Test

  “Realize,” says Ms. Dryden.

  I write the word.

  How can

  I decide not to be a victim,

  when people do horrible stuff

  to me?

  I couldn’t stop Dad.

  I couldn’t stop Mr. Paul.

  ” Reconsider.”

  I write quickly.

  They did bad stuff to me.

  What I have now

  is a bunch of hate.

  “Responsible.”

  The hate is mine.

  At least it’s better

  than being

  a scaredy-cat.

  “Regard.”

  But it hurts all my insides.

  Hate is burny.

  “Reaching.” Is there even a way

  to get rid of hate?

  If I ever felt like it?

  “Remember.”

  Would I still feel

  like a victim

  if I got rid of it?

  “Pass your papers forward.”

  A Little Room Left to Be Scared

  A hand on my shoulder.

  I yelp.

  “Hey, Essie.” Wally steps

  around the swing.

  “You need to chill like a Vulcan.

  What’s wrong?” he asks.

  I shiver

  and look over my shoulder

  across the playground.

  “I-I don’t know.

  I just didn’t hear you walk up is all.”

  Wally sits down on the seat

  next to me.

  I push back

  and we swing real slow.

  He keeps looking at me.

  “No one’s going to kidnap you,”

  he says.

  “I know.” I try to laugh.

  “I know that.”

  But someone might try

  to hurt me again.

  I tug my braids.

  “It’s okay, Essie.”

  I nod.

  With him here,

  it almost feels

  like it is.

  Sitting Out

  “Come on” says Wally.

  I follow him to the monkey bars.

  “We are doing

  this super cool play in drama.”

  “Sweet”

  “Yeah.”

  He climbs to the top.

  I swing myself up next to him.

  “It’s a short scene

  from The Odyssey.

  You know that really old Greek story?”

  “Maybe.” I grip the warm bar.

  “Well I’m Cyclops.”

  “Who?”

  “The giant guy with one eye.”

  “Gross!”

  “Totally. I hope my parents

  can come. They promised to.

  Maybe they’d pick you up

  if you wanted to see it too.”

  “Sure! That’d be cool!”

  We watch everyone

  running around playing.

  Up here I can see all the way

  to the bus lot.

  There’s no one around

  to hurt me.

  I could see that if I

  were a Cyclops.

  Presentation

  “And you chop them.”

  Jarin cuts through the tomatoes.

  Pink juice and slimy seeds

  run off the cutting board.

  “You add these to the lettuce,

  and toss.”

  She makes a big show

  of stirring up the salad.

  I roll my eyes at Wally,

  and he does it back.

  Jarin presents the bowl.

  “That looks delicious,” says Ms. Dryden.

  “You can have it for your lunch,” says Jarin.

  “Thank you. It’ll taste wonderful,

  I’m sure.

  Class, you can have reading time

  while we clean up the table”

  I pick up my book. Like making a salad is such a big deal

  it counts for a presentation?

  Unbelievable.

  Wally’s potato clock

  was so way better.

  And my clay ziggurat pyramid

  with all the cool stairs

  I built with Dad

  back in October

  blows her salad away.

  I wish I could tell Dad

  how lame Jarin’s presentation was.

  He loved our ziggurat.

  We had a blast making it.

  Does he remember

  having fun

  with me?

  In the Reading Corner

  Just because

  there are divorce papers

  and Mom is looking for a lawyer

  doesn’t mean Dad won’t ever come back still.

  Oh, give it up

  and get back to the fairy tale.

  Help

  Mom makes chocolate chip cookies,

  then goes and asks Ms. Ruthie over.

  “Well, hey,” she says, coming in

  behind Mom.

  “Hi.”

  “Why don’t you run along, Estele.

  I need to chat with Ms. Ruthie.”

  “Okay.”

  I hide in the hall.

  While the teakettle burbles,

  I hear Mom ask,

  “Ruthie, I was thinking,

  well, that you might have time,

  or,

  I mean,

  would you even consider

  being my labor partner?”

  She goes on without letting Ms. Ruthie

  say a thing.

  “I have acquaintances in our church, of course,

  but they’re busy with their families.

  I can’t ask the pastor’s wife.

  Her schedule is so full.

  And coaching requires time.

  So, I guess I’m asking

  if you would be interested

  in helping me?”

  Sweeeeeeee, the kettle shrieks,

  so I can’t hear Ms. Ruthie’s answer.

  Yes, yes, yes,

  I beg silently.

  The kettle is quiet.

  Sip.

  Sip.

  Sip.

  “Yes, I would be happy to,” says Ms. Ruthie.

  I let out the biggest sigh.

  “Estele?” Mom calls.

  I skitter to my room

  before she knows for sure

  I listened in

  on the best news we’ve had

  in a super long time.

  Fast Friends

  They talk for hours.

  I wander around acting like

  I’m not listening in,

  but I finally just sit down on the couch

  and neither one even notices.

  Ms. Ruthie is real kind

  about our sensitive situation, as she calls it.

  Mom is sweet, listening to all about

  Ms. Ruthie’s husband dying.

  Sounds like they’ll never get done

  getting to know each other.

  Breaking News Flash

 
After Ms. Ruthie finally leaves, I click on the TV.

  “To recap: Chris Crow has been found. A local family rescued the child, who was lying on the roadside in the Everglades with multiple burns and gunshot wounds. Chris is currently under protection in the intensive care unit at Baptist Hospital. To the great relief of his family and the community at large, Chris Crow has been found.”

  The Goodness

  “Mom!” I yell.

  “Mom!”

  She and Dale rush into the living room.

  “They found Chris!

  Alive!”

  The goodness of it

  zaps us.

  We hug each other

  and jump up and down.

  Chris is found!

  Statistics

  “Wally, they found Chris!”

  I yell into the phone.

  “I heard!”

  “Can you believe it?”

  “Yep. I knew they would.”

  “Even with Rock saying all that other stuff?”

  “What good are statistics

  without the exception?”

  What?

  Sometimes I just don’t follow Wally.

  “Well, the news is coming on.

  I’ll see you tomorrow,” I say.

  “See ya!”

  Five O’Clock News

  “Cigarette burns covered Chris’s body, and the child had been shot twice from behind. One bullet entered his back and exited the front torso below the rib cage. The second bullet went into his head and exited through the right eye socket. The child has lost one eye, is dehydrated and emaciated, and has suffered blood loss. Initial surgery has been successful.

  “The parents presented the reward with thanks to the family who found Chris in the Everglades. The Crows express gratitude to the community for their prayers, concerns, and support. Again, our top story tonight: Chris Crow has been found. Alive.”

  How?

  “Incredible!” Mom says.

  “Wow! A bullet can go into your back

  and squirt out your front—,” says Dale.

  “That’s enough.” Mom cuts him off.

  “And another can slam into your head

  and then shoot out your eyeball—”

  “Dale—”

  “His eyeball is totally blasted out.

  What would that big hole look like?”

  “To your room, Dale-o.”

  Mom steers him down the hall.

  I sit there wondering

  the same things

  Dale said out loud.

  One Prayer Answered

  God brought Chris back to his family.

  Shot and burned,

  but He brought him back.

  One prayer answered.

  God hasn’t brought Dad back.

  One prayer unanswered.

  Or maybe …

  maybe I’m getting an answer

  I didn’t want.

  Maybe

  Dad’s not coming back.

  And what about

  Mr. Paul?

  The police can’t find

  a trace of him.

  He’s definitely long gone.

  That Family

  That family found Chris.

  There was a mom,

  three kids,

  and a dad.

  Did one of those kids

  pray for extra money

  for their family?

  Because they got it.

  They got the money

  and they already have

  both parents.

  Man. What a deal

  for them.

  And Chris, of course.

  January 8th

  I draw a big yellow smiley face

  on the 8th.

  The very day

  they found Chris.

  Perfect.

  The star on the 28th

  tries to get me to look at it.

  Nope.

  I’m just going to smile back

  at the 8th.

  A great day.

  He’ll Pay

  Mom comes into the kitchen

  and grins at the smiley face I drew.

  “They really found Chris,” she says.

  “Yeah.” I drag my toes over the linoleum.

  “But what about them

  not finding … Mr. Paul, Mom?”

  She puts her arm on my shoulder.

  “I truly don’t believe

  he’ll ever come back, Estele.

  He wouldn’t be able to look us in the eye,

  not after betraying so many years of friendship.”

  “Or maybe he won’t come back

  because he’s too afraid of getting caught

  and punished.”

  “I’m sure,” she agrees.

  “But what if he doesn’t ever get punished?”

  “Oh, he’ll pay eventually, Estele.

  One day, he will be severely punished.

  Just like Chris’s kidnapper.

  Even if they don’t get it on earth,

  they’ll have to face it afterward.”

  That

  is very good news.

  A Miracle

  All the classes are running around

  before school starts,

  buzzing with Chris’s news.

  “Did you see the report?” asks Wally.

  “Yeah,” I say.

  I lean against the tetherball pole.

  Wally slaps the ball back and forth.

  “I heard one bullet came out his eye,” he says.

  “Yeah, through the back of his head

  and out his eye.”

  “Gross,” he says. “Just a hole there now.”

  I nod. “And another bullet

  went through his chest,” I add.

  “It’s like a miracle or something,” Wally says.

  “And the way that family found him

  by the road,” I say.

  “A miracle,” says Wally.

  “Yeah. I bet they could use

  that reward money.”

  “Who couldn’t?”

  “Really.”

  My Own

  It’s kind of a miracle to me

  Mr. Paul

  didn’t hurt me more.

  He could have done that worse stuff.

  There’s no way

  I’m telling Wally

  about my miracle.

  But it’s a real one too.

  Very real.

  And mine.

  Wonderful News

  Before we get to our desks

  Ms. Dryden says,

  “Have you all heard that Chris has been found?”

  Everyone says, “Yeah.”

  “What wonderful news,” she says.

  “Wonderful, wonderful news.”

  She rubs her amber between

  her thumb and finger.

  “Chris has been found.”

  We look at his desk,

  and there’s a moment of silence

  even though Ms. Dryden

  didn’t tell us to have one.

  Our Class

  Everyone makes

  Get Well

  and Welcome Home cards.

  There is so much glue, paste, and glitter

  going around that

  we are sparkling

  for Chris.

  His Friends

  “I can’t wait till he gets back!”

  “When’s he coming back?”

  “I don’t think they’ve said yet.”

  “He’s got to get out of the hospital first.”

  “Right.”

  “Well, when he does get back,

  we are going to start winning

  basketball games again!”

  “And kickball games!”

  “It will be so cool to have Chris back!”

  It will be cool

  to have him sitting safe

  right in front of me

  like normal.

  She
Knows

  Mrs. Lyon waves from her car

  as we pull into our driveway

  after school.

  I stay in my seat.

  “Hi, Mrs. Lyon!” yells Dale

  as he leaps out

  and runs over to her.

  She gets out and gives him a squeeze.

  “Here, help me with this, Dale.”

  She hands him a grocery bag

  to carry in.

  “Hi, Jayni.” Mom walks over.

  “I didn’t expect to see you today.”

  “Oh, I wanted to pop in for only a second.

  The ladies made you a few desserts.”

  “How generous! Estele,” Mom calls.

  “Come say hi.”

  I get out

  and knock the car door closed

  with my behind.

  I can’t move anymore.

  Mrs. Lyon knows

  about Mr. Paul.

  But I don’t have to move.

  She hurries over

  and puts an arm around my waist.

  “Let’s go see what’s in the bag, Essie.”

  I nod. “Isn’t it great about Chris, Mrs. Lyon?”

  “Answered prayer!” she says.

  We follow Mom and Dale inside

  and dig into some brownies

  before we even eat dinner.

  They are so sweet.

  Mrs. Lyon stays and visits for a while

  and never does say anything

  about Mr. Paul.

  She’s as sweet

  as the brownies.

  Every Night

  Mom, Dale, and I

  never miss the news.

  It tells us how Chris is doing.

  If he’s had surgery,

  how it went,

  and when they hope he’ll get to go home.

  Which keeps getting delayed

  because of complications.

  I’m always hoping to hear that the kidnapper’s been caught.

  Hoping,

  hoping,

  and praying

  about him

  and Mr. Paul.

  A Good Day

  A on my capitals test,

  kicked the ball—

  got to second base in PE,

  scrubbed our desks,

  finished The Wizard of Oz,

  dissected a lima bean,

  saw the baby plant inside,

  planted another,

  got to feed Scurvy,

  found a baby mango on the tree,

  Dale took a bath,

  scrubbed behind his own ears

  while I cooked

  scrambled eggs in ketchup for dinner,

  rubbed Mom’s puffy feet,

  and had a cool breeze at bedtime.

  Won’t Be Long

  “It won’t be long,” says Mom.

  I look up from my cereal.

  “Till Chris can leave the hospital?”

  “Well, I don’t know about that.”

  She wipes her mouth with her napkin.

  “I meant it won’t be long

  till the baby comes.

  I’m seeing the midwife weekly now.”

  Dale and I look at each other.

  “Cool,” he says.

  I just work on

  getting the raisin

 

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