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The Truth Project

Page 5

by Dante Medema


  on my tongue.

  He who must not be

  named.

  He who must not be

  remembered

  or acknowledged

  or even discussed.

  He.

  The evil thing

  that must be expelled from our lives.

  Banished.

  Trashed.

  And I’m just the girl

  who lives

  because of it.

  I let his name rest on my tongue,

  stretching my teeth

  around those four little letters

  I’ve been holding inside

  for days.

  “He’s like Jack?”

  Mom takes too long

  before the realization hits her face.

  Like it had to travel

  from her ears

  to her brain

  and then

  finally

  her

  mouth.

  She starts to talk

  a dozen times.

  Parting her lips

  to choke on

  words she probably never

  dreamed

  she’d have to say.

  “Did you just—”

  She can’t even repeat

  his name.

  I want to feel

  bigger

  stronger somehow

  for breaking her apart

  the way I feel broken.

  Shattered,

  and splintered

  like fallen icicles on pavement.

  But I just feel little

  and littler still

  next to her.

  “How?”

  Mom asks,

  a single word

  caught

  at the edge

  of a whisper.

  “GeneQuest.”

  She crumbles.

  And part of me,

  just part,

  feels bad.

  “You have to understand

  things were different.

  Your dad and me—

  We were going through

  a rough time—”

  “Which one?”

  “Oh my god.

  Cordelia.

  I mean your father.

  Jack—he was a mistake,

  my beautiful girl.”

  All emotion welling

  like fish swimming

  beneath the surface

  of ice.

  I can see just

  enough

  to know its danger.

  “If he was a mistake,

  then I was a mistake.”

  When you looked into my eyes

  and told me I wasn’t his.

  I cried.

  Not because you took away the only

  father

  I’ve ever known.

  But because I was relieved.

  I always knew there was something different about me.

  When you looked into my eyes

  and told me not to tell him

  I cried.

  Not because you wanted me to lie.

  But because you deepened the gap between me

  and the only

  father

  I’ve ever known.

  It will never be okay.

  I will never be able to hug my dad without a voice in my

  ear

  as loud as the Russian River during peak salmon season,

  screaming wild rapids, hissing.

  He’s not really yours.

  This isn’t real.

  You are living a lie.

  Heart.

  Explosion.

  Like the Fourth of July

  when it’s midnight

  and still light outside.

  I can see everything

  without the mystery of darkness.

  What should be magical

  is only daytime

  and the vague outline

  of what might be fireworks.

  I’d give anything

  for my magic back.

  To hear my father,

  my Shakespeare-loving

  father,

  tell me she’s wrong.

  Heart.

  Implosion.

  “The thing about Jack,

  he’s not a good guy.

  He’s not a dad

  kind of guy.”

  “How could you?”

  I’m hissing,

  like a lynx protecting

  its baby.

  Only my mama is the thing

  that threatens.

  “Were you ever

  going to tell me?”

  “I don’t know.

  It doesn’t change anything,

  does it?

  Your dad is still your dad.

  This guy is just

  a guy.

  Honey.

  Please.”

  “It.

  Changes.

  Everything.”

  When Dad knocks,

  we both jump.

  He does that thing

  he always does.

  Happy, cutting through

  our tension when he asks,

  “What are my girls squabbling about?”

  He ruffles my hair,

  nuzzles Mom,

  and when she

  looks into my eyes

  she’s pleading.

  Please.

  Don’t tell him.

  Mom looks like she’s

  about to lose it.

  Her skin, red and veiny

  like skinned moose meat

  left open

  to rot.

  She brings a fingernail

  up to her mouth,

  chewing on the corner.

  Even her eyelashes

  quiver.

  Kodiak Jones

  Kodiak: Pretty crazy day

  Me: You have no idea.

  Kodiak: Is it just me

  or did it almost go too far?

  It’s probably a good thing your mom called.

  Me: What?

  Kodiak: Come on.

  You know we couldn’t come back from something like that.

  Me: Oh.

  Yeah. No, I agree.

  Kodiak: Did you get in a lot of trouble?

  Me: Probably not as much as I should have been.

  I asked her about Jack.

  Sort of a distraction.

  Kodiak: Holy shit!

  Delia!

  Are you okay?

  What did she say?

  Me: Ohhhh.

  Nothing crazy.

  Just that I was right.

  And my dad doesn’t know.

  So yeah.

  Pretty crazy day.

  Kodiak: Shit.

  My friends just showed up.

  I’ll call you in a while.

  Sana-Friend ♥

  Me: What are you doing tonight?

  Sana: That party at Fletcher’s I told you about.

  I’m gonna go find out exactly what Emma Daniels means by “It’s complicated” on her Facebook.

  Me: You still use Facebook?

  Sana: Nope.

  But it is part of my 32-step internet sleuthing process.

  Me: Take me with you.

  Sana: To internet sleuth?

  Dude.

  I do it right here on my computer.

  It’s a dark dirty path though.

  I don’t know if you’re up for it.

  Me: No.

  To Fletcher’s.

  Sana: Are you kidding me right now?

  No. You’re joking.

  Don’t be a tease.

  That’s messed up.

  All you straight girls.

  Me: I had a bad day.

  Pick me up at nine?

  Sana: No way I’m going out before ten.

  Won’t your parents care?

  Me: Not tonight they won’t.

  Jack Bisset has an Instagram.

  I find it when I sear
ch for his name

  plus “Seattle.”

  Two thousand

  two hundred

  eighty

  miles

  away.

  His pictures show a life

  like a rock star’s.

  There’s one of him

  with a cigarette in his mouth

  where smoke conceals most

  of his features like fog

  above the mountains

  outside my home.

  Girls hanging on his arm

  in one photo.

  Another has him on a

  motorcycle

  probably driving away from

  the history

  I live in.

  Then the one I saw before

  on his Facebook.

  Him playing guitar

  and with a tattoo

  of a woman

  on his chest.

  She’s got devil horns.

  I’m seeing it now,

  her long brown hair,

  hazel eyes,

  and a smirk,

  like she’s got nothing to lose.

  And I guess she doesn’t.

  A striking resemblance

  to the woman a room over

  who shares the other half

  of my DNA.

  GeneQuest

  Genetic Family Conversations

  To: Jack Bisset (last online 2 minutes ago)

  From: Cordelia Koenig (online)

  Hi Jack,

  Sorry it took so long to message you back.

  As you can imagine, this week has been a little crazy, and I’m still trying to unpack everything. It’s weird to think that a week ago, I didn’t know about you.

  And now here you are.

  So, for the sake of getting to know each other, what’s it like to live in Seattle? I’ve only ever been once when I was really little.

  GeneQuest

  Genetic Family Conversations

  To: Cordelia Koenig (online)

  From: Jack Bisset (online)

  Wow. I didn’t realize you just found out. I assumed you knew, and that’s why you took the GeneQuest test.

  That’s got to be hard, kid. I’m sorry. I’ve wondered about you every day since, but I didn’t know what to do. I took the test hoping you might look me up one day. I hoped we’d get in touch and be able to talk, but I didn’t want it to be like this—a total surprise for you. I can’t imagine. It’s crazy that it’s happened now. You must have been pretty upset. I can’t believe your parents didn’t tell you.

  Seattle is amazing. I’ve been here 18 years now. I guess it’s home. The city has become my playground. I am a music producer, so it’s a perfect place for that. Lots of young musicians and incredible bands. How are things back in Alaska?

  How is your mom? Does she know we have been talking?

  GeneQuest

  Genetic Family Conversations

  To: Jack Bisset (online)

  From: Cordelia Koenig (online)

  Hello Jack,

  A music producer? I don’t think I’ve ever met (much less been related to) someone that cool. Have you worked with anyone I might know about? Mom’s good. Her real-estate business really blew up a few years ago, so she’s been busy. And she knows we talk. I asked her what happened after the big message you sent. She’s for sure cool with it.

  I know this is kind of weird, but can I call you?

  Cordelia

  “For sure”

  Mom knows.

  But Dad still has no idea.

  I wonder if he knew

  there was even a Jack Bisset

  in existence.

  If asked,

  would he draw a blank?

  Ponder if it’s a Shakespearean actor

  he should know about?

  While Mom knows

  I found Jack,

  she never asked

  if I messaged him

  or wanted to talk to him

  or planned to talk to him.

  But she’s got to assume

  that my curiosity

  and yearning for truth

  would lead to inevitable contact.

  So yes,

  she knows.

  Or at least,

  she should.

  It’s 7:22 pm

  when I call the number

  he gave me.

  At first the other end

  is crackling in and out

  of service

  and I have to say hello

  three times

  before I hear anything

  back.

  “Hi.

  Yeah.

  I’m here.”

  His voice is higher pitched than I imagined.

  And I wonder if he is thinking

  my voice doesn’t match my pictures either.

  If he even looked up my pictures.

  My heart is jumping around my chest,

  ping-ponging from side to side while I figure out what

  to say next.

  “This is weird,”

  I say,

  and when he doesn’t respond

  right away

  I think I must have said the wrong thing.

  But then,

  “Yeah, kid.

  This is weird.”

  We talk for an hour.

  He tells me about his band.

  And that his recording studio

  is right downtown—

  he sees the ocean every day

  on his way home.

  “Yeah, I work with a lot of local artists.

  Ever hear of Pentalux?

  They were in the studio last week.”

  I tell him I love poetry.

  How the sound of acoustic guitar

  makes my heart thrum,

  and he chuckles on the other end of the phone

  and it sounds melodious,

  like he’s wrapped in delight.

  “You get that from me.”

  He tells me I should check out

  the MTV Unplugged album with Nirvana

  and that he never

  got over Kurt Cobain’s death.

  I want to say my nirvana

  is daydreaming a life

  where my mom didn’t lie

  and I got to know him

  while I was growing up.

  But instead,

  I keep my daydream,

  writing a secretive story in my head

  that I can visit

  anytime

  the pain gets

  too real.

  If I told Kodiak

  I was talking to Jack

  he’d do the right thing.

  He’d come over

  and let me sing a poem,

  and when we got close enough,

  he’d remind me what a bad

  idea it is

  for us to kiss.

  If I told Sana

  she’d make a joke,

  and forget

  that not everyone

  administers comedy

  for pain.

  I want to tell someone

  my secrets.

  About the father I never knew.

  Anyone.

  But it’s all too messed up.

  I’ll just keep it in,

  holding fragile eggs

  with barbed fingers.

  Jack Bisset

  Me: Back then.

  When you had to leave.

  How did you get it to stop hurting?

  Jack: I didn’t.

  It still hurts.

  But at least now we can know each other.

  Me: We can.

  9:55 pm

  As I leave

  for the party

  Iris is sitting in the hall

  playing on her phone.

  Hashtag bored.

  She doesn’t look up,

  but I crawl next to her,

  resting my chin

  on her soft brown hair.

  “I’m sorry
/>   I didn’t remember

  to get you.”

  “It’s okay,”

  she says.

  “But you’re being weird.

  Weirder than normal.”

  Tears in every corner of her eyes

  like pools of raindrops,

  she’s waiting for me to say something.

  “You’ve got to be nicer to Mom.

  All your fighting.

  She cries every day,

  did you know?”

  I cringe,

  hold Iris’s hand in mine

  careful

  like she’s the most brittle layer of spruce bark

  I’m peeling away from a tree.

  She’ll never know her mom,

  and my mom,

  are different people.

  One loves,

  the other lies.

  If Jack was my father

  maybe we’d split time

  between here and Seattle.

  Maybe Alaska would be our summers.

  Seattle, our rainy winters.

  Maybe Iris wouldn’t be here,

  and maybe she would.

  Maybe Mom would’ve

  dyed her hair a bright color—like green—

  and quit real estate to follow Jack.

  Maybe Mom wouldn’t be so uptight,

  and maybe Bea wouldn’t be so uptight either.

  Maybe Dad wouldn’t tease

  and run fingers up Mom’s side

  or look so happy all the time.

  Maybe he wouldn’t have his Shakespeare

  or his smile for me only.

  Maybe Dad wouldn’t be Dad,

  but a guy Mom used to know.

  And this realization paralyzes my heart,

  like it’s been kicked out of my chest.

  When Sana arrives

  it’s like cool pine

  wafts through

  our windows.

  She’s the breath of freshness

  I needed after a day

  filled with anger

  and sadness.

  Mom sits on the couch

  tearstained eyes

  with fingernails between her teeth

  and doesn’t say a word

  about me leaving.

  Dad has his arm around her,

  and nuzzles her like a puppy.

  He’s got no idea

  the reason she’s crying

  isn’t because I’m being awful.

  It’s because I caught her

  in the only lie

  that could tear us apart.

  “Where goeth thee?”

  Dad bellows.

  “Out,” I say.

  “Okay,” he says,

  watching me,

  as I fight back the fear

  he’s expecting something more.

  I miss him already,

  this man,

  missing from my “Maybe” life.

 

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