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by Laurie Halse Anderson


  raised on the same fairy tales and lies.

  My mother, my sister, and I ate strawberries,

  sprinkled with sugar, swimming in cream,

  as we cooed like doves watching the fantasy

  come to life. I’d long ago selected myself

  as Prince Andrew’s bride,

  cuz Charles was too much work.

  My sister reserved herself for Prince Edward,

  and our mother looked forward to tea

  with the Queen.

  Cinderella’s country cousins, we giggled,

  our parsonage a small island

  in whispering fields of corn.

  That morning gave me the only peek

  I ever had inside my mother’s imagination,

  and thus planted me eternally on #TeamDiana

  in the hopes I’d be allowed to visit again.

  But recessionals play in a minor key;

  the princess pricked her finger on a spindle,

  was shattered by mirrors, cursed by fairies,

  banished from the kingdom, and hunted

  down by dogs. Trolls hide under bridges

  and that’s where she died.

  Sixteen years after the wedding

  I woke in the darkness for the funeral.

  My mother self-exiled to Florida

  sister long lost to us both, I watched alone,

  no strawberries, no sugar, no cream,

  sipped coffee as black horses pulled the coffin

  through the weeping city.

  Rich people scorn the way the poor

  buy lottery tickets,

  but what would you pay for an hour

  of untainted hope, of happiness unfettered?

  If the ticket had my mother’s name on it

  I’d dance across minefields for the chance.

  manure

  Living on a pig farm did not motivate

  me to go to college

  not picking stones from the fields

  nor burning off crop stubble

  nor penning up ducks trying to escape

  nor plucking their feathers after slaughter

  so they could be served at Christmas.

  Working on a dairy farm didn’t motivate

  me, either. I liked the sound of slow-breathing

  cows, bruises from kicking hooves

  shoveling manure, herding the girls

  in from the green, chased by a bull once

  I sprinted and slid to safety

  under an electric fence,

  freezing, sweating, muscle-burning work

  made me grateful

  I wasn’t stuck inside.

  No, it was my job in hell,

  I mean, at the mall, selling shirts

  folding sweaters, moldering into a minimum-

  wage service clone, clothing store sorter

  of boxes of socks of urgent priority, avoider

  of the manager, my mom, momager of a different

  kind, she had high hopes for me,

  business school for sure,

  then the chance to follow in her footsteps

  and be every bit as miserable as she,

  circling from mall to television set,

  television set to the mall.

  For years I thought that was her plan

  but recently I’ve begun to doubt it,

  remembering her proud satisfaction

  when I made a better life for myself.

  I think that giving me the most boring job

  in the history of the world

  was my mom’s way of loving me.

  lazer focused

  I woke up at three thirty a.m.,

  was in the barn milking by four,

  headed home for a long shower,

  then drove to school

  Onondaga Community College,

  home of the Lazers,

  went to all my classes and stayed awake,

  asked questions, did my homework, studied hard

  and always sat in the front row.

  When you are shoveling

  cow poop to pay your tuition,

  you want to get your money’s worth, every dime.

  Some people grow up knowing what they want

  to do: they color inside the lines,

  study at the right school,

  check off the boxes, and

  in the end

  they are handed the grown-up life

  they’ve dreamed of.

  That’s mostly bullshit, for the record.

  Trying to figure out what you want to do,

  who you want to be, is messy as hell; the best

  anyone can hope for is to figure out

  the next step.

  For me the first step was to try college,

  then a university, if I could get a scholarship,

  to study translation: the art, science, and magic

  of distilling meaning from one language

  to another

  but complications ensued

  and the plot twisted, hard.

  drawn and quartered

  At community college we had a professor

  sweet and fangless

  he was known as “the widow”

  raising nine kids on his own.

  Cancer ate most of his wife

  but her pregnant womb

  was the fortress resisting the final bite

  long enough to breathe

  life into their phoenix child,

  who was born in bitter grace.

  That professor taught anatomy

  breastbone connected

  to ribs, pelvis to spine

  and so on

  he waxed rhapsodic about the form

  of the female leg. Drew one on the board,

  a small, high-arched foot wearing

  a stripper-pole stiletto. The angle

  of the heel tightening

  the gastrocnemius muscle

  of the calf, he traced the action,

  contraction of muscles, drawing,

  climbing the leg’s ladder until he reached

  his favorite part: the gluteus maximus.

  My sweet, fangless professor drew

  big, bulbous buttocks

  like heavy, low-hanging fruit

  he patted them fondly, wanting

  to take a bite, he told us

  that this sweet curve of ass

  was why Barbie dolls’ feet

  were formed for shoes

  with ridiculous heels

  plastic foot-binding

  for girl children,

  objectification

  served with mother’s milk

  He never fondled, never hit

  on any of us students, that old man,

  but still

  we left his class

  feeling a little dirty.

  calving iceberg

  and then it was time to say goodbye

  again

  we packed the station wagon

  for my last leaving, for the predawn trip

  to Georgetown; me, my sister

  Daddy and Mom,

  all of us knowing

  none of us saying

  that I’d never live in their house again

  though I’d visit when I could

  the drive to D.C. hurt

  the unpacking of my suitcase

  positioning my alarm-clock radio

  gooseneck study lamp

  hot-air popcorn popper

  everything hurt

  as a transfer student I had a single,
/>   no roommate to break the suffocating

  silences, the awkward fumbling

  for tissues, Daddy making jokes

  sprinkled with bad puns so we could groan

  out loud and pretend to laugh

  I had no microwave or fridge or TV

  but I had my dictionaries

  and a phone for local calls

  and envelopes with stamps

  my mother cried all day long

  I tried not to look at her because

  it hurt

  it all hurt so much

  the necessary, impossible goodbye

  that had suddenly, in slow motion, arrived

  weakening our knees

  we leaned on each other

  putting my T-shirts in the drawer

  hanging up my towel

  unwrapping a bar of soap

  opening the new toothbrush

  sharpening the pencils and placing them tip up

  in a plastic cup next to my typewriter

  Mommy brought extra bottles of Wite-Out

  cuz she knew how many mistakes I’d make

  they had a six-hour drive home

  so we didn’t have time for dinner

  we limped down the stairs

  down the stairs we limped

  cuz it hurt

  it still hurts

  my father and my sister poured

  the wet ocean of my mother into the car

  buckled her in, then limped to their own doors

  the melting begins at the waterline

  as young icebergs prepare to calve from glaciers

  the breaking off is always preceded by a rift

  rarely seen by outside eyes

  but felt inside the heart of the ice

  the eruption, the split makes a noise

  heard for miles across oceans

  of salt water and time

  the ripples are still washing ashore

  sweet-and-sour tea

  I went shopping with a new sorta-friend

  my first semester at Georgetown, aliens

  warily circling each other, sniffing for clues,

  both of us desperate and lonely

  cuz she was British boarding schools

  and flying first class while I was a hillbilly

  who worked on farms, chopped wood,

  shoveled manure, and milked cows.

  But we smelled some possibility,

  so she led, I followed

  and after hours of watching her buy things

  (I’d never seen someone my age with a credit card)

  she announced we should have a proper

  English tea, her treat,

  which sounded good to me.

  We floated into a restaurant, perched

  on Cinderella couches, spread cloth napkins(!)

  on our laps, and she ordered tiny sandwiches and

  a high-class blend that came with its own pedigree

  I asked for plain tea, regular folks’ tea,

  the waitress asked me, “Cream or lemon?”

  and I said, “Both.”

  It was the first cup of tea of my entire life.

  Tiny, crustless sandwiches arrived

  you needed two to make a mouthful

  and the waitress poured our tea

  into skin-thin china cups

  we spooned in heaps of melting honey

  added thick cream, already heated

  and stirred silver spoons in an arpeggio

  of satisfaction, tink, tink, tink

  I was a glowing, sparkly unicorn

  in love with a life that suddenly included

  tea and cute sandwiches. I picked up the slice

  of lemon and I squuuuuuuuuueeeeeezed

  it into my dream cup

  It curdled instantly, it damn

  near turned into cottage cheese

  for a horrified moment

  we both stared in my cup

  I waited,

  praying for a friendly laugh to bridge

  her world and mine, the way I’d laugh

  sweetly

  if she ever tried to milk a cow

  and screwed up, which she would,

  cuz it’s hard, but my laugh

  would ring warm like a copper bell

  and I’d help her

  She snorted, her lip curled.

  Scorn dripped from her chin

  and burned holes in the tablecloth

  torching any hope we could be friends.

  Most relationships come with expiration dates

  just like milk and bread. Some go sour

  before you can taste them.

  offending professors

  Young flesh perfumed with trust

  smells like fresh meat

  to stalking professors

  dreaming of the feast

  it happened to me

  twice

  One: at community college, my health professor

  invited me to celebrate the A+ he gave

  me for a paper I wrote about LSD

  he said we could drink wine at a motel, his treat

  he said we would have awesome sex at the motel

  he said his wife was totally cool

  with him fucking students at motels

  when I declined the offer

  and tried to leave, he chased me around the desk

  he blocked the exit

  bullying me to at least make out with him

  I didn’t

  Two: at Georgetown University,

  my department head

  invited me into his office to discuss my need

  for a special scholarship to study in Peru.

  To be able to translate Spanish, I’d need to live

  in a country where it was spoken

  I brought notes to the meeting, all my pla—

  he lifted his hand to interrupt me

  the department head said that we had been lovers

  centuries earlier

  we’d been Aztecs, had sex in the jungle

  he said that we were cosmic soul mates

  and needed to have sex again, unite our bodies—

  I walked out before the ritual chase

  around the desk

  Shielded by ivy curtains, tenured lions

  force their prey to sprint from the water hole

  in any direction that seems safe

  even if it takes them far afield from their goals

  he didn’t give me that scholarship

  I never studied in Peru

  never studied in any country

  where Spanish is spoken

  never became a translator

  unless telling stories counts

  grinding it out

  I sailed to Georgetown University on a rowboat

  kept afloat by student loans and

  working twenty-five hours a week

  water rushed in the holes at the bottom

  so I bailed day and night,

  just fast enough to stay above water

  worked as a lifeguard,

  stayed in D.C. every summer

  rented a cot in a hallway, stored my clothes under it

  then shared a small house with five people who

  hated each other

  good times

  sold Time Life books over the phone, a gross job

  but they let me call my grandmother every day

  and talk to her for an hour for free,

  instead of the thirty dollars

  that daytime calls to Florida cost back then

  w
hen minimum wage was $3.35 an hour

  you better believe I worked hard for them,

  I loved my nana

  at college I skipped breakfast, ate an apple

  and granola bar for lunch

  and feasted at dinner; thank you, meal plan buffet

  at Georgetown I stewed my brain

  in German and Spanish

  when Peru was taken off the table

  cuz of the predatory department head

  I earned a degree in linguistics, charting

  the transformation of languages

  over time, vowels waltzing, consonantly flirting

  words flinging open windows to the past

  I avoided studying literature and writing class

  married the sweetest guy I met there

  who loved overseas adventures and politics

  and looked really good in shining armor

  the marriage didn’t work; we were way too young,

  but he is still my dear friend

  I loved the ancient magnolia tree

  that grew next to the library

  shading anxious students, perfuming the air

  inviting us to stand in her cool shade

  and breathe in: inspire, breathe out: expire,

  catch hold of our trueselves,

  sew them tight to our shadows

  before the pressure of performing blew us all away

  magnolia leaves are huge, waxy,

  shaped like rowboats

  the perfect escape for a mouse

  or a small-feeling person

  I didn’t need one, not anymore

  I was in way over my head at Georgetown

  but at least I knew how to swim

  scratching my throat with a pen

  After college, our wedding, after the babies came,

  we were so broke I had to get a night job

  cuz we couldn’t afford child care:

  I became a reporter

  perfect work in the dark for a shy child

  beginning to clear her throat

  Sewer board meetings—oh, the glamour!

  and the stench of government corruption,

  small-stage culture wars on school boards,

  union officials who lied to me, straight-faced

  just like the mom who said her kid cut

  up his mouth on glass shards in his cereal

  total bullshit, she later confessed

  she just wanted attention and some cash

  I asked questions, took notes,

  wrote, wrote, wrote, wrote, wrote, wrote

  revised, sniffed out lies, unburied

 

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