Authors: Kristin Elizabeth Clark
(Angel)
The Second-to-Last Present I Got
from the Sperm Donor
was a pair of boxing gloves
                           Â
the bite
five years ago, handed over
with a sarcasm attitude, I thought,
                           Â
of the belt
on Christmas Day
in the morning
                           Â
stings but
That night he caught me again
this time in heels and eye shadow,
                           Â
doesn't cut
Wilderness camp didn't work. So he
beat me one last time. “No kid of mine”
                           Â
like words
â
and “Don't come back,”
the last present I got from anyone
                           Â
Freedom.
I Showed Up at TÃa Rosa's
one-bedroom apartment
on Christmas night.
                   Â
“Lo siento,”
Mama's sister
                    crooned over and overâ
                    warm washcloth
                    on my cuts. We
                    sat on the edge of
                    the tub.
My three little cousins
crowded into
the steamy bathroom
around us.
                    “
Lo siento,
Angel.”
                    Eyes huge at me,
                    my bruises.
She wanted to call the copsâ
I didn't let her.
Lord knows I hate
the Sperm Donor
but I love Frankie more.
And no one needs to see
their father taken away
in cuffs.
I begged my aunt to just
let me stay with her.
She worked a lot.
Hotel maid in the morning,
cleaning other people's houses
later in the day.
I watched my cousins
so she could quit paying
the crabby lady across the hall
to look in on 'em
and it was all good
till Rosa's fiancé moved in.
Gonna Ignore Those Bad Manners
'Cause Baby Jesus's birthday
is still the Most Wonderful
Time of the Year.
After I buy Frankie's present
(funkadelic PacSun sweatshirt)
I do a little holiday shopping
for the kids at the center.
YeahâI'm in schoolâ
part-time job,
counting my pennies.
But, Girl, I know how
it feels to not get
one single present
at Christmas.
Like the world forgot
you because you
weren't what it
was expecting.
And I know
one lip gloss tube | Â | if what you |
isn't gonna erase | Â | really wanted |
years of getting a | Â | was just a |
toy fire engine | Â | baby doll |
action figure | Â | Barbie |
football | Â | tutu |
plastic gun | Â | manicure set. |
I'm all for what they call
gender-neutral toys.
Girls can like football
boys can play with dollhouses
and it doesn't mean a thing.
But when you know you're a girl and
you ONLY get boy toys
(and not the yummy boy toys you can
play with when you're older)
then Christmas is
the Most Suckiest Time of the Year.
So I fill
my dollar-store bag
with little presents:
shiny bangles
nail polish
scented body lotion
trial-sized Christmas cheer.
For myself, three dollars' worth
of symphony carols
plus a pair of red-sparkle tights.
Just call me Miss Santa!
Back at the Center
everyone's checking out
the artist-type hottie
standing on a ladder
painting letters on the
window we replaced weeks ago.
Willows has to pay for thatâ
insurance only covered the glass itself.
I pray again the asshole'll get caughtâ
a regular prayer on my list now.
I start to feel like that Grinch
and I hate it,
so I snap myself out by asking a regular,
Daniella, to help me wrap presents.
I'll leave some without cards
for extra just in case
but there's a set of hair clips
I know have to go to Liberty.
They have hummingbirds,
her totem I guess you'd say.
Daniella cops an attitude.
                  “Why you give anything to
                  THAT skank? She pumps!”
Some girls do.
Not safe
but hard sometimes
to wait for hormones
to kick in
and even with their help,
you usually wind up a cup size
smaller than your mamaâ
so if your mama
had no tits to speak of,
you won't either.
Not without surgery
or pumping.
Some girls
think pumping
is trashyâ
judge those who go
to pumping parties,
strip down in apartments
or hotel rooms,
let someone with
no medical connection
inject that silicone
right into their
chests, hips, lips.
Dangerous, like I said.
Lopsided tits sometimes
aren't the worst of itâ
silicone gets in your lymph nodes
or lungs and shit.
I hand the tape to Daniella. I usually try
not to preachâbut sometimes â¦
“Girl? Don't you know
it's the season of kindness?
“Your tolerance would be the
best present for everyone.
“Including yourself.”
She's huffy, but quiet.
Thinking, I hope.
Because Honestly
is it trashy
to want something so bad
you go for it
even if it might kill you?
My opinion?
It's judging that's trashy.
Bad enough the world looks at us
under a (distorted) microscope.
Like the good Lord says,
we don't need to
judge each other.
(BRENDAN)
O
Christmas Tree.
“Wake up! Up! Up! Up!”
Courtney jumping on my bed.
I open one eye (the only one I can).
“Go away, squirt.” “Get up! We're getting
a tree!” Every year, even without Dad, Chase
Family Tradition. Four-hour
round-trip to kill a tree for Christ.
We wear flannel shirts, pose for the
holiday card: “Look! A family of lumberjacks
living in the wilds of Wisconsin” or
something. Mom fills a thermos:
hot chocolate. (It must get down to fifty
degrees two hours northeast of San Diego,
got to stave off hypothermia.) She's mad
about my eye. “It'll spoil
the Christmas card!” Claude claps
me on the shoulder. “It just shows the
world he's the man!” He's proud. Like he's
the one who got injured and still went on to
pin the kid from Lind High to the mat. Must be
hard to be a nerdy philharmonic
orchestra conductor when you have
the soul of a caveman. Still, I go along.
Flex my muscles, wield the saw, wipe my
brow, sniff my pits, smile for the camera, gulp
hot chocolate, burp without apology.
I AM THE MAN
.
No    Doubt
About    It.
Home from the Ordeal
Claude the Interloper uncoils
white twinkle lights while
Mom puts cinnamon rolls
in the oven.
Court settles in
at the coffee table,
an explosion of markers,
Mom's stationery and envelopes
a mess around her.
She's writing Santa a letter.
                                “Looky, looky!”
                                So proud.
“Very good,”
I tell her, though it's
just her name over and overâ
the only thing she knows how to spell.
                    “Can you help her?”
                    Mom calls from the kitchen.
“Sureâjust a minute.”
I grab a handful
of blue envelopes
to take up to my room.
I'll send
them to
Willows with
cash inside
and
some-
day
be
able
to
forget
about
that                night.
When I head back down
to take dictation
from a five-year-old
I'm feeling pretty good.
(Vanessa)
Early Christmas Present
from my mom.
We're in the kitchen.
I'm inhaling a plate
of apple slices,
she's keeping me company.
                          “Oh, I almost forgot!”
                          She grabs something
                          from her purse,
hands me
tickets to the
Nutcracker
matinee.
                          “I thought you could take Julie
                          or Tanya.” She's smiling.
Guess she hasn't noticed
I don't really hang out with them
too much anymore.
I called Tanya again to apologize
but she just repeated what Julie said,
like a parrot:
                                      “We like you and we like
                                      Brendan, but we don't
                                      like you together.”
and that's bullshit.
I'm sorry if they're mad
but there's nothing I can do about it.
It'll blow over eventually. Until then â¦
“I'll take Brendan,” I say.
As if he wants
to watch ballet
(like I want
to watch ballet?).
I get
that
look.
“What?”
Mom goes to the sink.
She rinses her paisley teacup,
part of a set I made for
her birthday,
then comes back
to sit with me.
                            “I'm glad you and Brendan
                            enjoy each other”â