Authors: Ellen Hopkins
That smarted, but I didn't want to
argue, or even defend myself.
“Love is stupid sometimes, I guess.
Look, Mom, I didn't go looking to fall
for a soldier. Yes, I know there's a war.
Cole's heading that way very soon.”
Stating it so matter-of-factly sucked
all bravado out of me. My shoulders
slumped and my eyes stung. “And
I'd really a-a . . .” A huge wad of
emotion crept up my throat. I choked
it back. “Appreciate your support.”
Mom shook her head, dropped
her eyes toward her plate. It was
Dad who said,
Ashley, girl, I think
this is a huge lapse of judgment.
But I can see you're upset. We'll
talk about it after dinner, okay?
But our appetites were crushed
beneath a relentless blitz of silence.
The plain is still,
emptied
of even the thinnest
soundsâthe murmur
of creeping sand;
pillowed spin of tumbleweed;
susurrus of feathers trapped
in thermal lift.
The well is dry,
drained
to weary echo
above desiccated silt.
Thirst swells, bloats
every cell until
the body arcs
beneath its weight.
The page is blank,
scrubbed of
metaphor, flawless
turn of phrase. Parched
within the silence, hungered
in a desert without
words,
I am stranded
in your absence.
Cole Gleason
For this trip couldn't be a whole
lot worse. The semester has barely
started, and I'm just settling into
my classes. I'll only miss a few days,
though. Hopefully my professors
will be understanding. I'm not so
sure about Mr. Clinger, who wears
austerity proudly. I wonder if he writes
poetry, too, or if he only analyzes it.
You can't teach poetry without truly
loving it, can you? Guess we'll see. Class
is over for the day, the room deserted
except for Mr. Clinger and me.
“Excuse me.” I muster my prettiest
smile, but when he looks up, he scowls,
and I almost change my mind.
Yes, Ms. Patterson? What can I do
for you?
His voice is flat, though
his blue glacier eyes seem curious
enough. I study his face, subtly creased
beneath a surfer's tan. He might
be handsome, if he could find a smile.
“I won't be in class on Friday or Monday.”
I see. And where, if I might ask,
will you be?
He taps his fingers
on the metal table top. Drumming
impatience. “I'm flying to Hawaii
on Thursday. Coleâuh, my boyfriendâ
is deploying to Afghanistan. He'll be gone
seven months and . . .” Suddenly, it hits
me that Cole will spend the holidays
overseas. Again. Flimsy celebrations
this year. “It's his fourth deployment.
We'll have a few days to say good-bye.”
I see.
His tone is not especially
sympathetic.
You'll miss a test, but
I suppose I can let you make it up.
“Thank you, Mr. Clinger.” I saved
some ammunition, just in case.
Apparently, I don't need it, but I'll
use it anyway, if only for punctuation.
“By the way, Cole writes poetry.
I was wondering what you thought
about this.” I hold out the crinkled paper
like it's a special gift, which it is.
He reads Cole's poem, “The Weight
of Silence.” Reads it twice, I think.
Finally comments,
This is good.
“Really? I thought so, too.
I'll tell him you saidâ”
I wasn't finished. I'm almost sorry
it's this good. I hate to see talent
wasted, and, one way or another,
the military will squander it.
How to respond? I want to say
something, but can't find words.
“I . . . um . . . don't . . .” He stares
intently, dissecting me with
those translucent, cool eyes.
Behind the frost, there's a story.
“I'm sorry. I don't understand
what you mean. Waste it, how?”
Now he's searching for his own
words. That's gratifying. Finally,
This is a military city. Teaching here,
I've seen a lot of what the service
can do. Not much of it is good.
People lose autonomy. Lose dreams.
Worst of all, they lose other people.
People who are important to them.
I nod, because it's largely true. Still,
“I try not to think about losing him.
I know it could happen, sure. But if
I let myself worry, I'd be wrecked
all the time. Cole was a Marine
when I met him. That's who I fell in
love with. I have no way of divorcing
him from the Corps, so I cope.”
I understand. To a point, anyway.
I was an Army brat, so no divorce
was possible. My father dragged
us halfway around the world and
back. I never had real friends. Never
knew what it meant to set down
roots until after I came here. Once
I finally sprouted some, the taproot
grew deep. I doubt I'll ever leave.
That turned out to be a problem
for my wife. Or, should I say, my
ex-wife. She was hot to travel.
Ah, the story behind the frost.
Two stories, actually, or maybe
a pair of epic poems. “So far, Cole
has only been assigned to one PDS.”
Except for deployments, you
mean. Not like they'd send families
chasing their soldiers into Iraq
or Afghanistan. With the coming
draw-down, who knows where
he'll go? Are you ready to follow
him wherever? Especially if you have
kids one day? It's worth thinking about.
The military is a highly engineered
machine. It's only as good as the sum
of its parts, however, and its parts
are fragile. But easily replaced.
Cole, fragile? Not so much.
But I'm not about to argue
the point. “Thanks, Mr. Clinger.
Guess there's a lot to consider.”
Ms. Patterson? Er . . . Ashley?
You forgot this.
He offers me
Cole's poem.
I'm sorry if I seemed
unsympathetic. This really is good.
Tell your boyfriend when he's done
defending freedom, he really should
do something with his writing.
The tension between us dissolves.
“Thanks. I'll be sure to let him know.
He'll probably freak that I showed
it to you, but I really wanted to get
your opinion.” I reach for the paper
and our fingers brush, initiating
a totally unexpected electric jolt.
Holy crap! What was that? My hand
jerks back, zapped, and my cheeks react
with a furious blushâhalf shame,
half ridiculous lust for a man who is
my professor. A man who is several
years older than I. A man who most
definitely is not Cole. “S-s-sorry,”
I stutter. Stupid! What am I, twelve?
Is, why am I apologizing? And,
to whom? Mr. Clinger smiles
at my obvious consternation.
Oddly, I smile back, despite
my discomfort at what just
transpired between us. Or,
maybe nothing at all did. Maybe
I imagined the whole thing.
But I don't think so. There
is some weird chemistry here.
Travel safely, Ashley. Let's find
a good time next week for you
to make up that test. By the way,
we're moving to spoken word
poetry next week. Here . . .
He scribbles some names on
a personalized Post-it.
If you have
a few minutes before I see you
again, check them out on YouTube.
He offers the paper, and I take it
gingerly, hope he doesn't notice
the way my hand is shaking.
I glance at what he's written.
“Oh, I know Rachel McKibbens
and Taylor Mali. Alix Olson, too.”
His grin widens.
Of course
you do. Have a great trip.
To make it through the rest of the day
without getting turned on by another
professor. Or fellow student, campus
policeman, or janitor. To be fair to myself,
it has been a few months since I've seen
Cole, but I've successfully sequestered
the thought of sex with him, or anyone.
Until today. But to say what happened
earlier meant nothing at all would be
a lie. In that moment, I wanted to fuck
Mr. Clinger. Jonah. That's the name
on the Post-it, above the slam poets.
Some tiny, niggling splinter of me
was desperate to fuck Jonah Clinger
and all the rest of me believes that
shard is a no-good traitor. And tonight
that's what I'm obsessing about.
Not research. Not writing the paper due
Wednesday. Not packing bikinis
and sexy nighties to wear for Cole. Nope.
Instead, I'm trying to drown every
recurring image of Jonah in a huge glass
of Chardonnay. Doesn't seem to
be working. Maybe if it was tequila
I'd have half a chance. Instead, I keep
flashing back to ice blue (not golden) eyes.
I need someone to talk to. But who?
Darian, my forever friend, who's likely
dumping her Marine husband for
a guy who's definitely dumping his Air
Forceâfocused wife? Probably not
my best choice. My other local friends
are UCSD students with no military
ties. I already talked to Sophie today,
and got her to agree to watch
my apartment. After all the hype
I just fed her about
needing
to see
the love of my life before he leaves
for Afghanistan, how could I possibly
discuss the seedier side of my psyche?
Brittany, who's all sass and easy sex,
no desire for commitment,
ever
(at least
until she finds someone actually worth
committing to?). Another wrong call.
Putting out of place things back
into place. Tossing stuff that needs
tossed. Seeking order in disorder.
I dust. Vacuum. Clean counters,
sinks, and the toilet. At least when
I get back from Hawaii, everything
will be in its place and I can dive
straight back into my class work
without having to do this stuff first.
Finally, I refill my glass. Turn on
my computer. Cruise over to YouTube
and some of the best spoken word
poets in the world. I'm not familiar
with a couple on this list, but before
I'm through watching, I will be.
There is order in this, too. I can read
my poetry out loud, but this is pure
performance. Rhythmic. Bold. Passionate.
Sort of like great sex. The kind I'll
have in a couple of days. With Cole
Gleason. Not Jonah Clinger. Stop it,
already. I turn off my computer, reach
for my pen and the notebook I write
poetry in. Find order in formal verse.
by Ashley Patterson
What happens to kisses never kissedâ
those we pretend not to have missed?
Do they fall from our lips and settle, silt,
compress into fossils, layered in guilt;
Do they crumble like wishes, their magic lost,
or wither and curl, seedlings chewed by frost;
or perhaps they take flight, buoyant as screams,
to tempt us again in the heat of our dreams.
What is the ultimate cost of kisses not kissed?
What becomes of passion we choose to resist?
Does it sink like hope on a cloudy morning,
mire us with doubt, muted forewarning;
Does it rise from the groin, seeking the brain,
creeping like quicksilver, vein into vein,
to bewilder, an answer we cannot discern,
or smolder, a candle condemned to slow burn?
What can we say about passion dismissed,
or the import of kisses consciously missed?
Scorned passion is truth we're doomed to forget,
kisses wasted, the weight of final regret.
Right before Cole shipped out
for his first Iraq tour, his enthusiasm
was almost contagious. Almost.
When he'd call, he'd talk about
a hundred klicks (military speak