“Ready?” Amy says. “You guys are up next.”
“Ready as I'll ever be.” I like the way Ebony and I have worked this poem out. Ebony only has one word to say. She repeats it over and over. That creates a kind of rhythm, the beat for my story. We step onto the stage.
My mouth is so dry my tongue sticks to my teeth. We have up to three minutes. Three minutes can feel like forever, especially when things aren't going well.
And if you go overtime? Well, the audience lets loose with a chant of:
You rat bastardâyou're ruining it
for everyoneâ¦
But it was weeeelll worth it.
I push my palms into the folds of my skirt and step up to the microphone. Ebony does the same thing a few feet away.
Ebony starts.
Ring. Ring.
Her voice is clear, beautiful. I speak next.
Sister, where were you when you
called?
The words take over. I move in ways I do not move unless I am in the grip of a poem.
Right on time, Ebony's voice comes in again.
Ring. Ring.
Sister, where were you when you
called?
What would you have said if...
Ring.
If I had answered the phone
turned away from the easy heat of
summer
the splash of water against
the how-much-fun-is-this slide?
Ring. Ring. Ring.
If I had answered
would you have told me
your current location?
Coffee shop?
Street corner?
Parking lot outside the liquor
store
where you smiledâactually
smiledâ
at that young man whose name
you probably never knew
though I know
and can never forget
Kenyon.
Ring. Ring.
Kenyon who had no idea
the fragile glass
the Smirnoff in the brown paper bag
would somehow survive the impact.
Kenyon. An innocent guilty young
man
saw a thirsty girl
balanced on crutches
alone, a little sad. Nothing a drink
couldn't help. Nothing a favor for
a stranger
or a kind word
couldn't fix.
Here, we begin to speak together. Ebony's
Ring Ring
overlaps with my own.
The phone rings and rings.
Ring. Ring
â¦
Her ringing gets louder and louder until, at the end of the next section, we are speaking together. Our voices are loud and harsh and ugly.
If you had told me where you were
would I have left behind
my beach bag, sunshine, hot dog
loud music, playground of
The Now and come to you?
Rings and rings and rings and
rings.
And if I had found you,
would you have told me what you
were about to do?
Ring. Ring.
If you had spoken
would I have believed you?
Ring.
If I had believed you
could I have stopped you?
Ring.
Even now, three hundred and
sixty-five
days later
and counting
that phone rings
Ring.
and rings
day and night
Ring.
rings through my dreams
Ring.
rings in my morning
Ring ring ring
ringsringsringsrings
Will it ever stop, sister?
The applause is loud when we step back from the microphones. Ebony wraps me in a tight hug.
“Good job!” she says in my ear. “Perfect.”
“Will you be okay, walking home alone?”
“I'll be fine.” I wait with Ebony until her bus comes.
Ebony and I both did well tonightâ she was third and I took fourth out of ten competing poets. The scores we got for the poem we did together don't help us against each other since we both got the same number of points. But the judges usually like good teamwork, so the higher scores are helpful against the other poets.
There were a lot of good things about tonight.
Licking whipped cream from my upper lip.
Giggling at a poem about cats and dogs running big banks.
Ebony whispering “Perfect” in my ear.
My good mood should have carried me all the way home. Instead, my phone rings somewhere deep in my purse. It's so late!
I've changed the ringtone at least twenty times in the last year but it doesn't help. If I hear the phone, something in my gut squeezes tight. No matter whose number flashes on the display, if I hear the ring I must answer.
“Hi, Mom.”
“Honeyâhi. How are you doing?”
She sounds like she's out of breath.
“Fine. Busy.”
“How is work?” she asks.
“Fine. Busy. How about you?”
“I'm leaving for a conference in Denver tomorrow. I wanted to make sure weâtalkedâbefore I leave. I'm taking two of the senior sales guys⦔
I tune out while she goes on about work. Then she switches to how she had an offer on the house that fell through. “The wife was diagnosed with breast cancer. Such a shame.”
I hold the phone a little away from my ear and keep moving through the dark streets of my neighborhood. She keeps blabbing.
She has no clue she has ruined the end of my evening. Will she say something about Hannah? She almost never does. How can she go along with her oh-so-important life and never mention her other daughter? You know, the one who died? Doesn't she miss her?
“Are you still doing your poetry?”
“Hm.” Mom doesn't care about poetry. She and Dad never went to my slams back when I lived at home. Mom said it gave her a headache to listen to people yelling about all the terrible things that happen in the world. “None of it rhymes!” she complained. Except for the rappers. She hated them too. They talked so fast she couldn't keep up.
After Hannah died, I knew Mom wouldn't want to hear what I had to say. I stopped inviting her and she never invited herself. Then I moved to Ontario.
She'd probably kill me if she heard the poem I performed a couple of weeks ago. Then she'd have two dead daughters she wouldn't talk about.
I can say this because you aren't here
you're in San Francisco, New York
Saskatoon, God-knows-where
with your Yes, boss
how high, boss?
yes-men
standing at attention by your side.
“I worry about you, Tara.”
I bet you do.
Does it make you feel better
taller?
smarter?
to jet off
set off
piss off
anyone who dares say
What about this way?
instead of your way?
How do you pack so much
into a carry-on bag
and a slim briefcase?
This month's sales targets
right on track.
“It seems such a waste not to be going to university.”
Does it hurt to fill
your data slots
with bottom-line-driven
customer relationship management
tools?
Forget about the mess back home.
Ignore the empty bedrooms
keep forwarding your husband's mail
ex-husband's mail
call your daughter
remind her of her duty to succeed
coach her in the ways of the world
No degree? No future.
“You can't defer your acceptance forever.”
Forever is a very long time, Mom.
Move on without the life
you left behind
the day you hauled your
ass
back to the office and said
I'm fine. Let's get on with it.
Is she going to deliver the whole “such a waste” lecture? Not going to school is a waste. Me working at a bookstore is a waste. Me not living at home and spending my money on rent is a waste. How dare I waste my life when I, at least, still have one?
“Are you still there, Hannah?”
The shock of hearing her name stops me in the middle of the sidewalk.
“I meanâoh, TaraâI'm sorry. Are you still there?”
“Yes, MomâI'm here.”
“I guess I was thinking about her. I was moving those boxes in the basement into storage. One of them wasn't closed properly⦔
An empty whiskey bottle stands on top of the newspaper box at the corner. It's too late and too dark to be here by myself, but my feet won't move. Now that Mom's talking about Hannah I want her to stop.
“It was a heavy boxâ”
“Mom, why are you telling me this?”
“Because I had to repack the stuff into two smaller boxes. One of the things I found was her riding journal. I thought you might want itâas aâas a⦔
Souvenir? Could that possibly be the word she's groping for?
“Something to remind you of Hannah. Maybe I didn't do the right thing. I sent it to you.”
“You what! What's in it?”
“IâI don't know. I opened one page and when I sawâwhen I tried to readâ there were photosâI couldn'tâ”
At the other end of the line she sucks in a breath. Then she sighs and continues.
“What's done is done. The package is in the mail. It should arrive in a week or so. I thought I'd better warn you so you didn't get excited and think it was chocolates or something.”
Chocolates? I've been living in Ontario for six months and Mom has never sent me chocolates.
“MomâI should go. I've got to get home.”
“You're still out? Are you alone?”
“I'm fine. But I should go. You're okay?”
“Yes, yes of course. Very busy. I'll call you when I get back from Denver.”
We swap goodbyes and the line goes dead.
In bed the next morning I lie very still. My head pounds. A brown tabby cat jumps into the flower box outside my window. She looks a lot like Mishka, a cat we once had at home.
The line between here
and nowhere
is a fine one.
Remember Mishka?
One minute a cat crossing a lawn
following somethingâ
How did I get from a cat at the window to a memory? And how did I get from there to a poem? The poem links one death to another. It fills the page in my notebook.
Dead in the middle of the road
thin trickle of blood
oozing out of his delicate nose.
Press his still-warm body
to my nine-year-old chest
Wait for the rise and fall of the living
wait for the stillness to burst back
into flame
wait for the rake of claws across my
arms
let me go let me go let me go.
Nothing moves.
Breathe, I whisper.
Breathe.
On the line
between here and nowhere
I wait for Hannah.
On my side of the line
my sister's seventeenth birthday
appears with the turn of the
calendar page.
On her side of the line
the first anniversary
of her death.
I never saw my sister's body.
Never had a chance
to squeeze the breath
back into her.
Never had a chance
to feel the warmth easing away
to whatever place warmth goes
when no longer needed.
That place on her side of the line.
There are so many mysteries about Hannah's death. The one I cannot wrap my head around is how she pushed her body across the line. Wasn't there a struggle?
For the next three days I carry around the poem about the cat and the line between life and death. I cross things out, move stuff, and squeeze in new lines and extra words. Then I start to memorize and plan how to deliver it at the next slam.
The crowd at the Xpress Yourself Espresso Bar is silent until the last words are done.
The applause folds around me. I'm still wondering about Hannah's final moments, how she found the strength to take that last step.
Clarissa, tonight's emcee, gives me a quick hug. “Good!” she whispers. Then she gently guides me off the stage.
“You're doing great,” Maddy says. “How are you holding up?”
Maddy and Ebony stand on either side of me in the hallway leading to the bathroom.
“Okay,” I say, though that's a lie. I am so tired I can hardly stand. Four of us are through into the last round of the evening. The points we earn tonight will keep us all in the running for the team.
I met Maddy and Ebony right after I moved here. We're in a writing group along with three other girls. The other girls don't always show up. But me, Maddy, and Ebonyâwe'd have to be in comas before we missed a meeting.
Ebony and I have done a few poems together, like the ringing phone we performed last week. But we're also competing against each other. Maddy doesn't have a competitive bone in her bodyâat least, not for herself. She's pretty loud when it comes to cheering for us.
It would be so great if both Ebony and I made the team. More likely, one of us won't survive these early rounds. It would almost be better if neither of us got to go.