Authors: Ellen Hopkins
But his infrequent calls were vaguely disturbing.
Not so much because of what he said.
Because of how he didn't say much
of anything. “Are you feeling okay?”
I always asked. “Headaches gone?”
Mostly,
he always answered.
Except
when they're not. Sometimes they're
regular motherfuckers.
He was manning
up, I thought. But I wanted the truth,
not that I knew how to pry it from him.
I checked out his Facebook page
more regularly than at any other time
in our relationship. His posts remained
few and spare. From time to time, I saw
replies from his mother. From Spence.
Other grunts he knew, or didn't. A school
buddy or two. But from Lara, just that
one post for weeks and weeks. And then
came a second.
YOUR MOM TOLD ME YOU
WERE INJURED. PROMISE ME YOU'RE OKAY
.
Cole's response was nothing more
than congenial.
AH, YOU KNOW MOM
.
SHE WORRIES WHEN I GET A BLISTER
.
I'M ONE HUNDRED PERCENT EXCEPTIONAL
BUT YOU KNOW THAT ALREADY, RIGHT?
Nothing in the exchange sounded
like anything but a concerned ex-girlfriend,
stress on the “ex,” asking about Cole's
welfare. His reply was rather ambiguous.
A little flirty but with no overt hints
of romantic entanglement. My jealous
reaction to their ongoing communication
was totally unreasonable. Probably.
And my anger at Rochelle was completely
off the charts. Why were she and Lara
in such obvious touch? Rochelle knew
about me. Had welcomed me into her home,
let me stand next to her son as witness
to her vows with Dale. Did she prefer
Lara? Maybe even want Cole to break
up with me so he could get back with his
ex? I thought about the letter stash, especially
the most recent one, which had to have
been mailed in care of Rochelle, and
suddenly I felt like a fool, caught up in
some soap opera conspiracy. Since
Rochelle and Lara were on speaking
terms, had they spoken about me at all?
Left to fester. Truthfully, I might have
said something except just about
the time Cole touched down in Kaneohe
Bay, we got the news about Dale.
Those bouts of indigestion and heartburn?
Well, everybody got those, right? And
what was a little nausea but a bad case
of the flu? Okay, several bad cases.
Bloating. Middle-aged spread, and maybe
he should eat a little more fiber. But then
the blood in his stools became regular.
It was probably just an ulcer. His dad
got ulcers. Cured them with cream.
But even drinking all that cream
didn't help the burn or keep the weight
from dropping off. Finally, Rochelle insisted
he go see the doctor. And by then it
was much too late. When Cole took
his leave, we went back to Wyoming
together. The cheerful ranch house
was shrouded with sadness. Cancer.
It struck viciously. Without regard
for the life it had already made ragged
once. Rochelle had lost her daughter
to it, and now she would lose her husband.
Oh, they would try radical treatment,
but Dale should have gone in sooner.
He already looked wraithlikeâghostly
white and skeleton thin. I barely recognized
him. And I didn't know what to say.
To a man you've met only onceâ
one you like, but don't really knowâ
when it's obvious his time is short?
What do you say to his wife, your
boyfriend's mother, who might be
subtly interfering with the relationship
you're trying to build, when worrying
about that seems trite and petty, in
the shadow of her tomorrow? What
do you say to your boyfriend, who
is struggling to shore up his mother,
when it's clear she's crumbling, but
determined not to show it because
that would mean she's acquiesced
to the will of fateânot God's will, no,
because the God of love could not
be so capricious or cruel? There was
nothing to say. So I kept mostly quiet
for the best part of three days. I held
Cole when it seemed he wanted me
to. Gave him space when he required
that instead. It was boring, and the silence,
oppressing. Maybe that's why when
things finally blew, they blew wide.
Turned gangrenous with a chiming
of the telephone. Rochelle and Dale
had gone to church. Cole was outside,
tossing hay to the livestock, when the call
came. It wasn't my phone. Not sure why
I answered it. Maybe I was starving for
two sentences of conversation, but I did
pick up, and a woman on the other end
inquired,
Is Rochelle there?
When I told
her no, she said,
Will you please tell her
that Lara called? It's not important. Just
wanted to ask how Dale is doing.
She must
have thought about who had answered.
Uh . . . may I ask who this is?
A big part
of me wanted to tell her to mind her own
damn business, but then I realized it was
a golden moment. “This is Ashley. Cole's
girlfriend.” I waited for that to sink in,
wondering if she'd be gracious or bitchy.
Neither, actually.
Oh. Well, is Cole there?
It was a non-reaction, and I couldn't
gauge its meaning, but the wound
threatened to bleed. I started
to say no, but just then I heard
the front door close as Cole returned
from the barn. “Just a minute. Cole!”
I called, and when he came looking,
I mouthed, “Lara,” and handed him the phone.
His face flushed, and as he talked
into the mouthpiece, closing the distance
between Lara and him with words,
his eyes closed and his hand lifted against
his temple, as if his head had begun
to throb. He told her about Dale's condition,
and said his mom wasn't taking it well.
Please do,
he said at one point.
I know
she'd like that.
As Lara talked into his
ear, I felt like gum stuck on his shoe.
Finally, he finished the conversation
with a not unexpected,
You, too.
Which,
no, didn't have to mean, “I love you,
too.” But that's sure what it seemed
like to me. By the time he hung up,
my own head was pounding blood.
Inside me was intense, and even though
I knew it was the wrong time, wrong
place, I opened the release valve wide.
“How would you feel if I kept an old
boyfriend holding on? How can you tell me
you love me, then keep in touch with her?
Up until this minute, she still didn't know
about me, did she? What the fuck, Cole?
How can you do this to me? How can . . . ?”
Stop it!
His hands cinched my shoulders.
Squeezed.
I'm sick of you bitching
about Lara. Goddamn it, just shut the fuck
up about her, hear? I don't keep in touch . . .
“Liar!” I shouted. “You do. I've seen
her posts on your Facebook page.
What do you think I am, stupid?”
He squeezed even harder, started
to shake me. My head snapped back
and forth.
Don't you ever call me a liar.
Fury shaded his golden eyes red.
“Cole, stop. You're hurting me.”
Tears spilled down my face. “Please.”
Some piece of Cole snapped back
into the proper place. He let go.
Oh, Jesus, Ash, I'm so sorry. I . . .
He stepped back and I did, too.
The space between us was a billion
times wider than those inches.
On legs as unsteady as a newborn
foal's. I thought they might buckle,
so I sat in the rocking chair by
the window, staring at the Wyoming
terrain. Sparse. Ice choked. Alien.
That place didn't belong to me, nor
I to it. It could have easily been
another planet. As the froth of fear
and anger inside began to dissipate,
for some reason I thought about Cole,
forced into alien environments,
and charged with taming them, all
the while knowing that, despite
every effort, they would likely return
to wilderness once left to go fallow.
His call to duty was greater than mine
could ever be. I understood that
before, trusted his motives implicitly.
How could I let this phantom girlâ
a whisper of his pastâquake my faith?
Knelt in front of me, laid his head
in my lap, wrapped his arms
around my hips. I stroked his hair
and at practically the exact same
instant, we both said, “I'm sorry.”       Â
I'm sorry.
He looked up at me, and there
was nothing in his topaz eyes
but apology, and a question.
My favorite question. I didn't
have to speak my answer.
He stood, pulled me to my feet,
led me to his bed.
Wait. Let me
lock the door. They'll be home
soon.
When he turned back to
me, I had taken off my sweater,
thrown it to the rocking chair. He
whistled.
Jesus. What did I do?
He traced the bruises, patterned
exactly in the shape of his fingers,
and turning the gunmetal gray
of night, lifting over the ocean.
“It's okay,” I promised. And only
a tiny disbelieving sliver of me
kept whispering that it wasn't.
About the way he made love
to me then. It had nothing to do
with hurrying to finish before
his mom got home. It was more
like he thought I might change
my mind midstroke, decide to leave
forever. He pinned my wrists over
my head. His mouth roamed my body
freely, and every time his tongue
made me squirm, he gripped harder.
His kisses were laced with lust. Only
later did I question the stimulus of
his passion. I don't know if I'll ever
trust him completely, but I did in that
moment. I had to. He was taking me
places I'd rarely been before, even
with him. He plunged his face between
my legs, driving into me with tongue
and teeth and fingers until I begged
him to stop.
No.
It was a growl.
Give me your cream.
I had no choice,
he made me come, but then I pleaded
for, “More. Fuck me.” I'd never said
those words before. Not to Cole.
Not to anyone. He hesitated, and I
worried I'd made him angry or turned
him off. Not even close. He smiled.
Say it again. Louder.
I did, and when
I did, in a single strong move, he slid
one arm under me, flipped me over
onto my stomach, tugged me to
the foot of the bed. He stood there,
just looking at me, for what seemed
like a very long time. Suddenly,
he was inside of me, driving into me
with animal ferocity. Wilderness,
personified. There was lust there,
yes. And moreâthe fear of a soldier,
flushing an enemy he cannot see.
The anger of a man who has watched
his buddy blown to bits. The tension
of a sniper, waiting endlessly for
an uncertain outcome. The brittleness
of a boy, trapped in a man's uniform.
In one gigantic shudder, it was all
released, right there in me. We crept
up onto the pillows, covered our nakedness
with quilts. And, snug in each other,
we escaped into the haven of dreams.
So much I want to say,
wish I could confess,
but silence swells,
black
as midsummer
clouds, stacked upon hills
between us. Black as the
demons
shrieking inside my head.
My heart rumbles, heavy
with snippets of memory
that must not be
conjured.
Alone in this untamed
empty place, I free
a relentless volley
of words. They
rage
against the pages, a torrent
of what was, what is,
what yet may come.
And when at last the spirits
recede,
I find echoed
in their retreat, stories
I dare not give voice toâ
nightmares set adrift
in my paper harbor.
Cole Gleason
Whether or not you want to. Especially
when a friend is involved. Case in point.
Darian promised to go to Lodi with me
over the holiday break. We're supposed