Read Love and Leftovers Online
Authors: Sarah Tregay
press his fingers to my ribs, and feel my beating heart.
Then I’d know.
I know I’d know.
I’d know
I was in love.
On a Monday
in mid-September,
J.D. brings me a Boston cream doughnut
and coffee in a pink-and-orange Styrofoam cup.
He tells me not to worry,
“Carbs burn off at practice.”
“Yeah,” I agree with a shrug.
“Thanks for breakfast.”
J.D. smiles down at me
and doesn’t notice Sam
passing us in the crowded hall.
She rolls her eyes skyward
and shakes her head.
Later, I’m shaking mine too
because I can’t quite believe
that J.D. thinks
I am skinny enough
to be a runner.
Then I remember
that ever since we ran away,
the fridge hasn’t always
been full of carbs.
I am not some horrible person.
I was just talking to him—
not batting my eyelashes
or pulling some
CosmoGirl
how-to-hook-a-hottie move.
A lot of girls (and some guys)
would think J.D. was cute.
Any girl with a pulse
would’ve wanted to brush that
powdered sugar from his lips.
Sure, I have a boyfriend.
A wonderful, sweet, talented boyfriend.
But Linus isn’t here right now.
So give me a break.
Talking to Linus Is Depressing
Linus tells me about his music lessons,
then puts me on speaker and strums his guitar.
I can hear him singing softly to keep the beat.
Hmm, hmm come September
Hmm, hmm I’ll remember
All those sunny days I spent with you
Hmm, hmm come October
Hmm, hmm I’ll be sober
Every lonely evening without you
Hmm, hmm come November
Hmm, hmm I’ll reconsider
Walking down the highway to reach you
Hmm, hmm come December
Hmm, hmm I’ll be dismembered
by the snowplow passing through
“Linus!” I shout into the phone. “Stop it!”
“Those aren’t the real words,” he promises me.
“I forgot the words and made something up.
What did you think of the guitar, sans words?”
All I can say is that it sounds nice,
and I really miss watching his fingers move over the strings
because that was my favorite part
of having an emo-rocker boyfriend.
“Favorite?” he asks.
“I also liked the kissing,” I say.
It doesn’t come out funny, or flirty, or however I meant it.
It just reminds us that we’re having
a long-distance relationship.
The kind everyone says
is doomed from the start.
Sometimes I want
nothing more
than to be writing poems
in my blue notebook
while Katie doodles
anime ninja girls
battling bat-winged
skeletons with vampire fangs
in hers.
I want to
trade notebooks with Katie
so my poems will grow emo vines
with bloodthirsty flowers
and her ninja girls will voice
their anger and
odd romantic attractions
to the homely monsters.
Missing Katie,
I tell my mother
that I want to go home.
But all she does is ask me
what kind of mother she would be
if she left her daughter
to fend for herself
2,700 miles away?
I wonder if
I shake her hard enough,
will all the pieces
of her scattered thoughts
fall into place?
EmoK8: | if u weren’t going out w linus, whose bones would u jump? |
MarsBars: | hello 2 u 2 |
EmoK8: | i think i need a boyfriend. |
MarsBars: | All this talk about falling in love, now u want some? |
EmoK8: | u got me thinking. |
MarsBars: | as long as ur not worrying abt it. *grin* |
EmoK8: | i’m not worrying. i need advice. |
MarsBars: | good-looking guys are, well, nice to look at. but homely ones can be sexy too—so don’t rule em out. |
EmoK8: | i need some lovin. who’s a good kisser? |
MarsBars: | i kissed angelo in 8th grade. it was slobbery. |
EmoK8: | who’s better looking, angelo or garrett? |
MarsBars: | naked? |
EmoK8: | u’ve seen them naked? |
MarsBars: | no. overactive imagination. angelo. |
EmoK8: | but garrett shaves his legs when he races. |
| u don’t think that’s hot? |
MarsBars: | angelo shaved everything when he made it to the state swim meet. |
EmoK8: | everything? |
MarsBars: | well, everything that wasn’t under his Speedo. |
| remember his bald head? |
EmoK8: | that was soooo funny! |
MarsBars: | i wish linus had to shave. |
| i think i’d like scruffy kisses. |
EmoK8: | nah. japanese guys are really hot and they don’t shave much. |
MarsBars: | if you think asian guys are cute, ask ian out. |
EmoK8: | ian? |
MarsBars: | yeah, you two hang out all the time. |
| you’d make sweet rock n roll. |
EmoK8: | you’d go out w Ian? |
MarsBars: | yeah. ian minus the drumming can b really sweet. |
EmoK8: | ian’s a geek. |
MarsBars: | so are you. *wink* |
EmoK8: | i see being in solitary confinement in the NH wilderness has not done anything for ur sense of humor. |
MarsBars: | very funny. |
| speaking of solitary confinement, i should get back to my jailer b4 she realizes i stole her Mac. |
EmoK8: | luv ya bye |
MarsBars: | luv u 2, nite |
On the fourteenth Boston cream,
I tell J.D.
that I prefer
glazed sour cream,
or jelly with powdered sugar.
And he says
he might bring me one
if I’d be his date
for the homecoming dance.
And before I say anything,
he goes on to explain
that all school athletes
are strongly encouraged to attend.
“Tradition,” he rambles, “is big here
and since you have to go too,
we might as well go together.”
“Yeah,” I agree,
as if I wasn’t totally thrilled
to be asked to the dance.
I had to come clean
so I sat across from J.D.
over slices at Wildcat’s,
the UNH game blaring.
“I’m not on the track team,”
I said,
figuring he’d hate me
and save me from saying
the next thing
on my list.
He mumbled through mozzarella
that it was okay.
Which wasn’t exactly
what I wanted to hear.
A conversation-halting touchdown
rumbled through the pizza parlor
before
I told J.D. that we’d be going
to the homecoming dance
as just friends.
Which,
now that I think about it,
would have been
a really stupid thing to say.
Because we are
just friends.
so I ask Mom to take me to the mall in Manchester.
“Even better,” she says, and plans a day trip into Boston.
I imagine Filene’s Basement
overflowing with satin gowns
and strapless velvet dresses.
I am so happy
to get Mom
out of the house
and weaving
swerving
down Boston’s
curvy streets,
that I hardly
notice we’re in
Aunt Greta’s
neighborhood
instead of the city.
Greta greets us with a smile
as wide as mine.
The three of us giggle like girlfriends
as Aunt Greta empties her attic
of every dress the Otis/O’Grady girls have ever worn:
Great-Grandmother Gigi’s black one
she wears to funerals
Grammie Iris’s baby-blue prom dress, circa 1963
Aunt Greta’s collection of bridesmaid atrocities
Mom’s ivory wedding dress.
Cautious,
because I don’t want to ruin the mood,
I skip past the funeral blacks and the bridal whites
to the blue satin one,
saying that everyone always said,
I look most like Grammie Iris, except for Dad’s dark hair.
I slip it on
zip it up
and fluff it out.
In the mirror, I look a bit like Cinderella
crossed with Snow White.
My mother says
it brings out my eyes.
Greta shows me
how a tulle petticoat
fills out the skirt.
Mom and Greta giggle
and squeeze into sassy dresses
just to be silly.
Still wearing our sneakers,
we hop the T at Harvard Square
and ride downtown
to treat ourselves to dim sum.
Careful not to drip
sweet and sour sauce
on our
evening gowns.
wearing a tuxedo and driving a Jeep.
Mom gives me a look
mixed with admiration
(because she agrees that J.D. looks like a prince)
and concern
(because she thinks that J.D. looks like a player).
I tell her not to worry
and kiss her on the cheek.
(I won’t be getting kissed anywhere else myself.)
“Hey,” he says as he turns onto the main road.
“Thanks for coming with me tonight.”
“No problem,” I reply. “It’ll be fun.”
“You haven’t been to an Oyster River dance.
They’re a drag if you don’t have someone to talk to.”
“I was wondering why you asked me.”
“Really?” J.D. glances over at me and smiles.
“I thought that much was obvious.”
“What’s obvious?” I ask.
“I want us to be friends,” he says.
“That’s why I bring you breakfast.”
Duh!
I say to myself.
God, I’m so stupid—
just because J.D.’s totally hot
doesn’t mean he wants to date
every girl who stumbles
into his life.
is more like a pep rally
with a little lame music
and dancing thrown in.
J.D. doesn’t dance so great.