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Authors: Gabrielle Prendergast

Tags: #JUV014000, #JUV033000, #JUV003000

Audacious (9 page)

BOOK: Audacious
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Ms. Sagal has been suspended indefinitely too

I'll tell them she didn't know about it

This is true after all

She's a single mother; she needs her job

Maybe they'll go easier on me, since I'm a kid.

SAMIR'S SIDE

My parents are furious

Remember I said that Hala

Secretly loved it?

Well Yusif, her husband,

Was somewhat less enthused.

Khalid goes to a prayer group with him

And told him

About you

And he told

My parents

And…

They were talking

About sending me to the Muslim School

You know the one, out on the prairie?

It's a forty-five-minute drive each way.

They said they'd buy me a car

That's how mad they are.

Hala managed to convince them

That you are just misguided

And need direction

And that we should be charitable

But I should not seek to be alone with you

Or be intimate in any way.

They actually said that

“Don't be intimate in any way”

I'm not sure what ways they have in mind

Although I can certainly think of a few.

It's nice to see you smile

Still, a car would be cool.

Oh, my father wanted me to give you this.

A SMALL BLUE BOOK

Penguin Editions

With Arabic and English

The Holy Koran

Perhaps I'll read it

And mend my rebellious ways

See the light, maybe

It's his father's gift

I'm speechless but understand

He thinks I'll convert

Samir's face shows me

Embarrassment but some hope

Our love will prevail.

See, I'm forbidden

So when Samir looks forward

He sees us apart.

Now is not enough

I suppose I should be touched

Yet I want to laugh.

Me as a Muslim

Is just as funny as me

As a Catholic.

For in that instant

In that flash of clarity

Something starts crumbling.

LOST IN DECEMBER

Are you coming to Mass tonight?

Mom says after Samir leaves.

(His departing kiss still tingles on my lips)

Why? I say

I'm pretty sure it's not Saturday

And anyway I hardly ever

Go to Mass anymore

Mom looks at me

Something in her expression

Exasperation?

It's Christmas Eve,
she says.

CHRIST IS BORN

We put on quite the show

The felon

I walk as though shackled

Just for fun

People actually look at my ankles

NO ONE GETS SHACKLED ANYMORE

I want to yell

But I can't

Because it's church.

The skeleton

Mom looks extra thin

In her black church dress

And two days without sleep

Haven't helped her sunken face

The consumptive

Kayli wheezes through the sermon

Sucking on her inhaler

Shaking

Sucking

Shaking

The drunk

Near the end, Dad

Who had a brandy

Before we left

Gets the hiccups.

DEAR SANTA

Please make this a dream

Please make me a different person

One who would not do something

So stupid.

Please make Mom start eating

And stop barfing

Please make Kayli breathe better

Please make Dad stop pretending

Like nothing's the matter

Please Santa

Make me

Believe

In you

Again.

AFRAID OF THE DARK

Sometimes the dark is velvet comfort

Soothing the chaos in my head.

Sometimes the dark is as menacing

And cold as a locked steel door.

Sometimes the dark brings slumber

And escape from the drama of my day.

Sometimes the dark awakens

The things that seek to trap me.

Sometimes the dark relaxes

The nerves that coil around me.

Sometimes the dark paralyzes

The muscles that would rescue me.

Sometimes the dark is as quiet

And familiar as a library on Sunday.

Sometimes the dark rings and echoes

With mocking jealous voices.

Sometimes I ride the dark

Like a deep blue wave to dawn.

Sometimes in the dark

I drown.

MARION HOUSE

For as long as I can remember

Mom has disappeared

On Christmas morning.

After the croissants

And fresh-squeezed juice

And presents of course

She loads up a box and drives off

Leaving Dad to entertain us.

But today I ask to go with her

We cruise through the quiet streets

Deserted but for the odd cat or sparrow

Huddled (not together) by a heat outlet.

Marion House is attached to a church downtown

It's a bland building

That looks a lot like my school

Inside, ghosts and wraiths, invisible ones

Society's rejects line up politely

For Christmas brunch

Turkey, stuffing, cranberry sauce

Potatoes, yams, corn and peas

It's my job to prepare dessert

Christmas cake made by church ladies

With a dollop of whipped cream

Flavored with artificial brandy

After dessert there are presents

A local bookstore has donated books

And socks and hats have been knitted.

THE PHANTOM

I remember you

Camera girl

Come to take my picture again?

She reeks of whiskey

Unbelievably

It's barely 11 AM.

Do you have any red socks?

Red is the color of love you know

It's passionate

The word “passionate”

Is lispy and slurred

Because of missing teeth and liquor.

What's this book about?

Shopaholic? What's that?

Don't you have that vampire one?

I go and check.

But all the books have been given out

And tucked away in bags and shopping carts.

What about something serious?

You know. Literature!

What do they think we are, children?

Without knowing why

It just seems right

I give her the little blue Koran.

What's this? Arabic and English?

Read it, I say.

It will change your life.

THE WORST CHRISTMAS EVER

When we get home

Kayli is wearing the nebulizer mask

While she and Dad

Watch
The Wizard of Oz

The turkey is glowing gold in the oven

And filling the house with

A sleepy, winter smell

The smell of hibernation

That's what Christmas is, I think

It's some primal memory

Of ice-age winters

When the family settled in

Never leaving the cave

Until the snow melted

Living off fat reserves

And stories in the night

Now reduced to one day per year

Though the fat and the stories

Still figure prominently

In our Christmas sojourn.

We eat copiously but this year

Quietly, because the conversation

Will naturally stray to topics

Best left for other days.

Mom eats and eats and we watch,

Grinning until she goes upstairs

I follow and wait and eventually

Force the door and see.

SIRENS: PART TWO

I have heard the Sirens singing

On Christmas Day

Calling me

Urging

Me

To sail mindlessly into the rocks

To doom my shipmates

To crush my ship

And then give

Myself

To

Their beauty, their promises

Their tantalizing lies

Their false joy

Their song

Is their

Trap

The sirens' truth is so hard to look at

An ambulance is on the way now.

I hold Mom's clammy hand

While Kayli cries

And Dad

Cries

Too

Mom threw up too much and fainted

And hit her head on the way

Down to the floor

Beside the

Toilet.

Where Christmas colors, green, white and red,

Are bile
Clean tile
And blood.

chapter ten

LIES

ALONE

And by the time the ambulance arrives Kayli

Is in a full-blown asthma attack so

They bundle her away too with

Dad riding shotgun

Call a cab
he says to me

Urgently I call and call and

Call there is no answer I

Try Samir but no one is there either

David lives nearby but of course he

Is out of the question then

I remember a row of loopy letters and

Numbers scrawled on my math homework

Genie
says one it rings and rings and my

Ears ring with it but no one's home or they

Don't answer on Christmas Day I try

The other
Sarah
trembling until I hear

Hello
Puffy says It's Ella I say I'm

Sorry to interrupt your

Christmas she's not concerned
we're

Jewish we just ordered Chinese food

I tell her everything hardly

Caring I'm crying hysterically minutes

Later she's at the front

Door with her mother

A round soft woman who

Folds me in her arms and lets

Me cry all over her cashmere before

We rush away.

EMERGENCY ROOM

Mom's going to live

That's all I can remember

About the ER.

CLEANING SUPPLIES

Kayli is discharged

Four hours later.

Puffy's mother,

Who asks me to call her Rachel,

Comes back to drive us home.

Kayli feels much better

They've juiced her up with steroids

So she's wide awake

Flip you for cleanup

Heads you choose, tails you lose.

I get heads, and choose the bathroom

Kayli takes the dinner table gratefully.

Mop and bucket

Gloves and bleach

I survey the damage

Sponging, wiping

Squeezing pink-tinged water

After everything looks like nothing

Happened in here

I sit down on the toilet lid

And reach over and lock the door

I decide I like this little room

It's quiet and there are no windows

I could be anywhere

Or anyone.

KAYLI THROUGH THE BATHROOM DOOR

Are you coming out?

Ever?

Great Christmas huh?

This is totally beyond Britney

What a family.

LOCUM SOCIAL WORKER

How we got through the next day

I'll never know

But on the morning of the twenty-seventh

A social worker shows up.

She's flustered and anxious

And frequently checks the file

Asking Dad to leave the room

And speaks to me alone.

Where is your mother today?
she asks

I tell her and she scribbles some notes

How do you feel about that?

I shrug, and don't tell her

I feel terrified

And helpless

And guilty

And angry.

And also, I realize, bewildered.

I ask her why she's come

She glances at her file

Because of the pornographic photo.

It's art, I say, not pornography

I was thinking she was here

Because of Mom

Apparently not.

Why did you take the photograph, Ella?

I barely recognize the failed name

It's Raphaelle
,
I say

Causing her to check her file

But she hardly misses a beat

Do you want to be someone else?

Yeah, I'd like to be you

You're obviously a great success.

A second goes past

Before I realize I've said this out loud

Finally she clears her throat and says

Do you feel like a failure?

And so our awkward little dance continues.

I think I might fail art, I say

Getting my teacher fired, getting arrested

Not my best work.

Was all that intentional?

No.

You took the photograph by accident?

No.

But it's not a dance is it?

It's a hunt, and I'm the prey

You had some idea of the outcome?

I guess so, not Ms. Sagal getting fired.

But you knew you'd be in trouble

Yes. I suppose.

You knew it was wrong?

No. Weird. Not wrong.

Do people get into trouble for being weird?

I do, obviously.

Why do you want to be weird?

I shrug again and don't say another word.

Although of course I know the answer.

WEIRD

Because if I'm weird

And ostracized and friendless

It's not personal.

FALLOUT

Later the lawyer calls

And says the social worker

Told the prosecutor

That I know right from wrong

Which is news to me

Because I thought

Staying true to your artistic vision

BOOK: Audacious
12.9Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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