Authors: Kristin Elizabeth Clark
are higher than Denai's
and, Girl, you'd be right! Ewww,
some of the boys
she's put up with!)
But part of it's
what you could call
a difference in philosophy.
Nothin' to do with standards at all.
When (or if) to Disclose Birth Gender
Such a controversy.
The arguments go back
and forth. Ping-pong.
Denai passes really wellâ
doesn't see it as an issue.
          “I'm not gonna ask him
          what he was born with
          so there's no reason
          to talk about me.”
And that works for her.
Some say it's a question of safetyâ
if he finds out later and freaks
she could wake up dead.
Others say choose smart,
suss it out, then tell. Or don't.
Chantal says it's my combat attitude
contributes to dateless Saturday nights.
Whatever. It gets me less boyfriends,
but I like to ask up front
if a potential date's a transphobic bigot.
Leave the disclosing to him.
I Pass Really Well
but there's one thing â¦
After I got out of the hospital
Veronica said her no-illegal-drugs policy
extended to hormones.
So I had to go see a shrink
for three months
in order to get the legal kind.
Dr. Hendricks gave me
a personality test.
I could tell the results weren't
what he expected.
          (Shrinks always think they're
          better at hiding their thoughts
          than they are. Either that or God
          has given me psychic abilities.
          'Cause I can always tell.)
          “You have astonishingly
            healthy self-esteem.”
His “professional” opinion.
I shrugged.
I'm blessed to like me
the way I am
even if I like my body
on hormones better.
Not my fault the
world just isn't ready to
stop defining gender
the way it always has.
Nothin' to Be Ashamed Of
There's way worse things
to be than transgender,
let me tell you.
Rapists who rape
thieves who steal
racists who degrade
cowardly haters who
do shit like burn crosses or
throw rocks through windows.
        “Take it easy, Girl!”
Denai's laughing brings me back
into the kitchen.
        “You're gonna scrub a hole
        right through that pot!”
I look down at the bristles
of the brush in my hand.
They're flattened out.
Usually I know my own strength
but sometimes I don't.
(BRENDAN)
It Turns Out
moving through life
pissed
is better than
moving through life
sad and
wanting what I'll never have.
I keep my distance from Court,
who always wants a story. I
snap at Andy, who says,
                    “Whatever, Dude.”
Snap at Mom, who says,
                    “Watch it, mister.”
Snap at Claude, who says,
                    “That was out of line.”
Snap at Vanessa, who says
                      nothing.
And just before a meet on Saturday
I even
snap at Coach, who says,
                    “That's my boy, go get 'em.”
He cups a hand on my shoulder
before sending me onto the
mat to crush my opponent
from Jefferson High.
My wrestling's getting wilder,
technique less refined.
I'm on the verge
and my adversaries know it.
                    “Take it easy, Brendan.”
But there's no stopping me.
Even the fact that I've come to
really hate touching other guysâ
swarming over and around their bodiesâ
takes a backseat to the unleashing
fury of this body,
this body that isn't mine.
My new maniac style
impresses Coach.
Bad luck.
Because now he thinks
he can depend on me.
(Vanessa)
Dateless, Friendless on a Friday Night
Thank God Grand-maman
isn't here to witness it.
She got on a plane
back to France yesterday
and my mother
looks relaxed for the first time
in weeks.
I'm flipping through the channels
trying to keep my
mind off Brendan,
who texted me
at six to say he
couldn't go out.
And I'm wrestling temptation
to drive over to his house.
Dad's out with clients
and Mom comes in with a
bowl of popcorn.
                        “What are we watching?”
                        she asks.
“Nothing,” I say.
Flip, flip, flip.
She sits next to me.
Asks point-blank what's going on
and I'm pretty sure she
wants to know about Brendan.
I don't want to
talk about itâso
I tell her about
getting into a fight
with Julie and Tanya instead.
I don't tell her it was about him.
            “Friendships can be
            complicated sometimes,
            especially at your age,”
            she says, and
            strokes my hair,
            tucks it behind my ear.
            “But, honeyâthe truest ones are
            worth the ups and downs.”
That's easy for her to sayâ
she's had the same best friend since
she was in elementary school.
They're like sisters.
Aunt Jennifer lives in Washington
but they still visit each other
and talk on the phone
and laugh at weird inside jokes
that no one else gets.
I'm sure the best-girlfriend thing
isn't Grand-maman's idea of paradiseâ
she's all about the guys,
but it's something
when you consider that my mom
has that AND she gets to have Dad, too.
(BRENDAN)
“People, People, Settle Down”
Dean Johnston is trying to get
all 900 of us to shut up
for monthly assembly.
The gym is loud
but that word is quiet
and I woke up today
feeling almost okay.
Andy's sitting next to me
bragging about how far
he's gotten with Lindy
now that they're together.
“So you really like her, huh?”
He looks confused for a minute.
          “Of course!”
Damn, he's a big mouth.
I just can't picture talking about Vanessa,
or anyone I cared about,
that way.
We sit on hard benches
divided into classes
to listen to whatever
antidrug motivational speaker
the administration's
dragged in today.
Lillian Bruner
climbs up the bleachers,
steps over my legs,
and sits down between me and
her girlfriends.
She's the queen of Miller Prep,
star of the drama department,
popular, and surprisingly cool.
I glance over.
She and Elise Hart
are checking each other's teeth
making sure nothing's stuck.
A wave
of weirdness
washes            over me.
Dean Johnston is still
trying to get people
to shut up.
Lillian says something low,
her friends crack up,
and my tenuous okay feeling
sinks into something else.
I notice the way they talk and
laugh and touch one another
and I can't help it.
Everything makes me jealous.
The clothes they wear,
the way people treat them.
God, I'm even jealous
of their little vanities.
(You don't see guys
brushing their hair
between classes.)
I'm jealous of the way
they hug in clusters,
the way they always
seem to have something
to say to each other.
Contrast that
          (even accounting
          for occasional mean-girl
          bitcheries)
with
sweat-stained shoves,
murmurs of “Faggot,” “Queerbait,”
and “In your face, asshole!”
I glance at Andy,
who seems to have finished
providing me with the
intimate details of his sex life,
try to imagine hugging him.
It's a good thing I don't want to,
he'd probably pound the crap out of me.
“Quiet, People!”
Dean Johnston
repeats into the mic
for the third time.
          “We have a really special
          presentation for you this morning,
          brought to you by Plus Healthcare.
          “Later today
          your homeroom teachers
          will pass out”â
Lil leans into me.
“Give them air!” she says,
even as Dean Johnston
continues his sentenceâ
        “packets of information.”
It's funny and I laugh,
one of her entourage
for a delicious
minute
in time.
(Vanessa)
In the Bleachers
Flannigan nudges me,
points across the gym.
            “Check it out.”
I look over to where
the seniors sit.
“What?” I ask him,
scanning the rows.
            “Look who your boyfriend's
            sitting next to.”
Sheahan looks, too, shakes his head.
            “Flannigan, you're such a shit-stirrer.”
And it takes me a minute
to see what they're talking about
because Brendan's sitting
almost sideways,
his back to Andy.
            I'm sick, he says
            I'm depressed, he says
            I'm just not in the mood, he says
and I've accepted his lame excuses
for the distance,
unreturned phone calls,
short temper with me.
And there he is
laughing it up
with Lillian Bruner,
looking anything
but sick
or depressed
or not in the mood.
“Shut up, Flannigan.” I strike a bored tone,
                                            outwardly calm in the
                                            din of the gym.
Why doesn't he laugh
with me anymore?
What happened to our
Nation of Two?
Is it about to include
the state of Lilliandia?
There's no way he'd
cheat on me though.            Skin prickles.
Is there?
Thank God
ceramics is
right after assembly.
Julie is at the table closest to the door.
She nods at me when I walk past.
I nod back, too preoccupied
to think very hard about this subtle thawing.
I settle in at my table
to slam the hell
out of a block of clay.
Push and work
knead and fold.
            “Take it easy, Vanessa,”
            Mr. Mathews says
            when he walks by.
            “Be carefulâI think you're
            working air bubbles into that.”
I ignore him,
pound and push
knead and fold.
All tail
no tongue.
Oh, God.
What if Brendan
just doesn't love me anymore?
(BRENDAN)
The Closer Finals Get