Authors: Ellen Hopkins
where we'll live?” It vaguely creeps
me out that he's thought so much
about this without consulting me.
Well, sure. It's just, I want us to
start out ahead of the game. Mom
could use some help, and Dale
made sure the ranch was paid for.
Cole's stepfather passed away last
April, leaving his mom alone again.
No rent would be a good thing, right?
I can't exactly argue with that.
“Well, sure. And, hey, we've got lots
of time to work out all the details.”
Comforts me the rest of the day. Cole
had that all worked out, too. After
our bubbly-soaked afternoon, rather
than risk driving back to Honolulu,
he has us booked at a bed-and-breakfastâ
type room here on the North Shore.
Nothing
fancy, and we have to share a bathroom,
but it's just overnight.
We make the best
of it, and the celebration continues
with local mahi burgers, the last bottle
of champagne, and Cole's crazy idea
for dessertâbanana cream pie, using
our bodies as plates. I shudder to think
what sort of magazine or movie might
have made him come up with that.
But I have to admit it's kind of fun,
especially since I don't have to wash
the sheets. The bed is a small double,
and after we finish, we lie sticky (in more
ways than one) in each other's arms.
It will be our last night together
for several months. So we don't waste
a lot of time sleeping. Toward morning,
totally spent, Cole dozes. I'm wasted tired
but the tornado of thoughts twisting
inside my head defeat sleep for me.
By checkout time, shadows semicircle
my eyes and I'm mostly incoherent.
Have done wonders for Cole,
and he chatters all the way back
to the Waikiki hotel. We return
via the East Shore route, which
takes us past Kaneohe Bay.
The base sits on a jut of land
surrounded by ocean. “You know,
some people would kill to work
in a place like this,” I observe.
Some people have.
The offhand
comment bears a lot of weight.
It's more like many men, and maybe
even a few women stationed here
have taken lives. Innocent people,
no doubt, dropped right along with
deserving insurgents. “Does it ever
bother you? The death?” I've avoided
prodding him for details. Once in a while,
my curiosity won't leave me alone.
Not when I'm over there. Death
is a part of the landscape. Dead dogs,
dead donkeys. Dead camels. Dead
people. The only thing you don't get
used to is the fucking bloat-rot smell.
He steers around a pothole.
When
I get home, the memories get to me
once in a while. You see things . . .
the things humans do to each other
sometimes are downright sickening.
“I can only imagine.” Not that I
want to. Except I have this morbid
need to understand. “Even guys
you know?” I expect him to deny
it. Unfortunately, he doesn't.
Oh, yeah. Even guys I know. One
time, I saw an MP let his dog go
on a prisoner. A kid, really. Maybe
sixteen. He acted all tough, but not
for long. After the fourth or fifth
chomp, his thigh looked like sausage.
When the dog aimed for his personal
sausage, the kid talked.
Cole laughs,
with neither malice nor genuine humor.
Not sure his information was any good,
though. If I were that boy, and someone
sic'd his dog on my huevos, I would
have come up with some information,
accurate or not. It is a problem with
that particular method of interrogation.
Cole seems so comfortable talking,
I decide to try a more direct approach.
“So, you're saying the boy was innocent?”
This time derision laces his laughter.
Nope. I'm not saying that at all. No one
over there is innocent. Every single one
of them is guilty of wanting us dead.
He almost sways me. I haven't been
“over there,” so it's hard for me to
dispute his obviously heartfelt opinion.
However, his callousness remains, and
maybe always will, a wedge between us.
Because I simply can't
not
believe that
a common string of humanity ties meâ
usâto the Iraqi and Afghani people. Some
of them are hell-bent to serve evil, yes. But
so are plenty of Westerners. Hard to tell
who is who sometimes. And when one
of the ones you're unsure about is someone
you loveâuh, someone you just agreed
to marryâthings get really watery.
Arguing would serve no purpose, though.
Maybe asking this question won't, either.
But I'm going to, anyway. “Have you done
things over there that you're not proud of?”
Everyone has, Ashley. It goes with
the territory. You get bored, you get
scared, you go looking for an outlet.
But the thing is, for the most part,
I can sleep just fine at night. Not
everyone I know can say that.
And I'm not really sure I want him to,
so I lean back in the seat, close my eyes.
Next thing I hear is the sound of a city
bus shifting gears. I jump awake right
about the time Cole maneuvers the Jeep
into a tight parking space. “You're good
at that.” My voice is husky from sleep.
I'm good at a lot of things, as I would
hope you know by now.
He glances
at his watch.
I have to be back on base
by five. It's a little after three now.
Are you hungry, or . . . ?
We agree
to the “or.” It will be the last time for
many months, so we take special care
to make it memorable. I even wear
my engagement ring, though I have
to put it on my middle finger so it
doesn't fall off. By the time we finish,
exhaustion has claimed meâmuscles,
bones, brain. I want food, but I need
sleep more. I sit against the headboard,
watching Cole get dressed. “Did anyone
ever tell you how graceful you are?”
Like a gazelleâbuilt to escape death.
Uh, no. And I hope that isn't in
any way questioning my manhood.
Somehow, I doubt it. He comes over.
Kisses a bittersweet good-bye.
I'll be back
before you know it. I love you.
Behind him, leaves me here,
counting tears. They brim, fall,
splat in syncopated rhythm.
The door is closed. Cole is gone.
I will never get used to this.
Hollowed. Emptied. Drained.
I put the pillow over my head.
Inhale the darkness, pungent
with the smell of Cole's sweat
and our sex. How
would
it be
to see him every day? Is it even
possible that we can be a regular
married couple, both of us off
to work in the morning. Dinner
at home together each night?
And children. Babies? Am I
the only girl my age who hasn't
thought about having a family?
I'm still figuring out what I want
to be when I grow up. Wife and
mother is not at the top of my list.
Then again, neither is childless
spinster. It's just too much to think
about right now. Sleep deprived.
That's what I am. Once I'm rested,
the answers will come easier. Right?
So many crystals of sand, reflecting
the high, hot sun. No shade to speak of,
no shelter from the inexorable heat
lifting off the rutted street. Footsteps
slap behind me. I turn, ready to fight.
No one. The sidewalk is empty. Silent.
Where am I? I'm hungry, and looking
for the marketplace. Did I take a wrong
turn? I walk faster but don't know
which way to go, and there's no one
here to ask for help. Suddenly, I hear
yelling. Dogs barking. Laughter. The noise
is to my right. I follow it down a deserted
avenue. And now I see kennels. Men.
Soldiers. Standing in front of wire
enclosures. Laughing. “Hello?” I call,
but they can't hear me past the barking.
Snapping. And now, someone is crying.
Praying. I reach the first pen. Two soldiers
stand back, let me look inside. A boy
is chained there, on his knees. Naked.
A huge Doberman is mounting him.
And the soldiers laugh. “Bastards!”
I run along the chain link, eyes in front
of me. Suddenly, a German shepherd
lunges at its gate. When I turn, I see
it has something in its mouth. Red
drool drips, and the dog bites down,
crunching bones. “Drop it!” I scream,
and the shepherd obeys. What falls
to the ground is a hand. A lady's hand.
On its third finger is a diamond ring.
“No, no, no, no!” The keen of my own
voice yanks me from the nightmare.
Pale light leaks in through the window.
Evening? Morning? I lie, panting like
the dogs in my dream. My stomach
growls and I reach for my cell to check
the time. Seven eighteen. Morning.
I slept for fifteen hours. No wonder
I'm starving. I put the phone back on
the table and when I do, the glint
of a two-carat diamond catches my eyes.
All of a sudden, I don't feel so hungry.
I clean up, get dressed, and start
to pack, I'm famished again.
Checkout is eleven. My flight,
barring delays, is a little after one.
I've got time for room service.
I think about steak and eggs.
Order an omelet instead. Cheese.
Spinach. Onions. Bell peppers.
No meat. While I wait, I organize
my suitcase. Cosmetics in the middle.
Running shoes at the bottom. Tank tops,
shifts, and shorts, folded in fourths,
placed around the sides. Flat over
all, the sweater I brought, just in case.
I've never needed to use it here.
But what if I did, and didn't have it?
Breakfast arrives and I eat it
out on the lanai, watching white-
tipped Pacific waves break gently
in the distance. That same ocean
is breaking against California
cliffs and sand. Connecting here
and there. Connecting Cole and me,
at least until he leaves for Afghanistan.
And then, the sky is what we'll share,
the earth's spin, forward movement
of time. That, and the love that makes
all things seem forgivable. Most of the time.
On my way to the airport before I check
my cell for messages. The first is from Cole.
WOULD HAVE CALLED BUT
DIDN'T WANT TO WAKE YOU
.
I LET MOM KNOW ABOUT
THE ENGAGEMENT. SHE SAID
TO GET IN TOUCH IF YOU NEED
HELP PLANNING. IT'S THE BEST
I'VE HEARD HER SOUND SINCE
BEFORE SHE GOT SICK. WEDDINGS
ARE GOOD MEDICINE, I THINK
.
FLY SAFE AND LET ME KNOW
WHEN YOU GET THERE. I ALWAYS
WORRY UNTIL YOU'RE OVER THE
OCEAN AND STANDING ON SOLID
GROUND. SPEAKING OF OVER THE
OCEAN, WE LEAVE ON FRIDAY
.
DON'T TELL THE TALIBAN WE'RE
COMING. I WANT IT TO BE A SURPRISE
.
I LOVE YOU ASHLEY, GIRL. ALWAYS
.
He told his mom. Guess I'll have to tell my
parents, too, which will make the idea legit.
I need a few days. The second text is from Dar.
WHEN WILL YOU BE HOME?
I NEED YOU, ASH. IT'S SPENCE
.
THERE WAS AN ACCIDENT
.
HE MIGHT NOT MAKE IT
.
Returned early from his second tour
in Iraq, and he did qualify for sniper
school. Cole was a crack shot. No
brag. Just fact. What I didn't know