Authors: Ellen Hopkins
we can hel—”
No! No more lawyers. No more
money. No one can help me now,
so I’m going out with a bang. Ha-
ha. Bang, get it? My only regret
is your uncle isn’t catching
this freight train with us.
Us? Holy shit. He means to take
me with him! I start backing up
slowly, but when I see his hand
move again toward his pocket,
I turn and run and
Where Am I?
I’m awake,
at least I think I am.
Everything’s dark.
Everything’s silent.
Dead silent. Dead.
Wait. Am I dead?
The last thing I remember was . . .
Percussion! An incredible
blast of noise and a mad
thrust of energy. It was . . .
Gus. I must be dead.
But I can’t be dead.
I’m conscious.
Concentrate.
I’m lying on something.
Firm, not hard.
Not the ground.
Bed?
Try to move.
Can’t, not much, but now
I’m aware of my hands.
I can feel my fingers.
Pretty sure they’re all there.
I’m breathing. Yes. Inhale.
There’s a smell, familiar,
but not of home. Antiseptic.
Bleach. The odd scent
of oxygen. Hospital.
That’s it! I’m in the hospital.
Awake. Aware. In the hospital.
I can feel. I can think.
So why can’t I see?
Am I blind? Oh, God,
did he make me blind?
And why can’t I hear?
No chatter. No footsteps.
No
whoosh
of machines.
No squeak of bedsprings.
What else did he take from me?
I try to move again,
but I must be strapped down.
Either that or all that’s left
of me is my fingers. No pain.
That’s good. I can unhinge
my jaw. But when I open
my mouth, no sound comes out.
At Least, I Don’t Think
Any sound came out, because now
there’s movement around me.
Someone touches my hand,
and I know it’s Mom, the feel
of her skin so familiar, plucked
from recollection. “Help me,”
I want to say, and maybe I do.
But I can’t hear my voice,
can’t see Mom’s face. I’m desperate
to know what’s wrong with me,
but all she can do is stroke my arm,
and I imagine her talking to me,
telling me everything will be okay,
be calm. And I try. For her.
But I’m scared. So scared.
Do I have legs? I work real hard,
and my right foot jerks.
Oh my God, is there a left one?
“Help me, Mama.” Instead,
I feel her move away, replaced
by someone else, and now
comes a rush of contentment.
Not quite pleasure, but close.
At least they’ve got good drugs
in here. Going, going . . .
Time Has No Meaning
Not in this place.
I rise up into soundless,
sightless consciousness.
Have no clue how long
I’ve been in suspended
animation. I find I can lift
my hands and I bring them
to my face, most of which
seems to be covered with
gauze. Bandages swaddle
my head, cover my eyes.
Maybe I won’t be blind
when those are removed.
Or maybe I’m still going to die.
I lie as motionless as possible
so they don’t put me back
under. I swear if I make it,
the first thing I’m going to do
is tell Alexa I love her.
I think she’s been here.
I can smell her perfume
afloat the antiseptic.
Will I ever see her face
again? Damn. Popped
my own bubble. Why would
I think Alexa—or any girl—
would want a sightless me?
I consider life minus eyes.
I could never drive again,
never shoot, never ride
my bike along the river.
And that makes me think
of Hayden on a blanket . . .
No. Not Hayden. Alexa.
My sweetest Alexa, hot and
luscious in my bed. I’m crazy
with need for her. Kissing
her face, her neck, down
over her belly, close to that
special spot between those
beautiful legs, and almost there
when “Back in Black” interrupts
us. Now it’s Luke I see and
always will, with or without
functioning eyes, his own eyes
forever sightless, and I know
redemption is lost to me. . . .
And I Ascend
From the depths again.
Up, up, into awareness.
But there’s something
different this time,
somewhere in the darkness.
Sound. A slight vibration.
a-a-a-a
I focus, give it my complete
attention, and it grows into
a low rumble.
A-a-a-a.
It’s the first sound of any
kind I’ve heard since . . .
whenever, and I rejoice.
A-A-A-A.
What is it? Not mechanical,
I don’t think. More vocal.
“Hello? Is someone there?”
Can you hear me if you are?
A-A-A-l
I wish I could see. “Can you
come closer?” I do think
the rumble is a voice. A man’s?
A-A-A-l-l-f
Low. Familiar. I know it.
Dad? No. Uncle Jessie? No.
Younger.
A-A-l-l-f-f-a
And suddenly it sinks in.
“Luke?” I’ve either gone crazy
or they’re upping my meds.
Alphatryptonites
It can’t be! “Luke? Where
are you? I can’t see you.
It’s too dark. Luke! What
is it? What do you want?”
Everything falls completely
silent again. “No! Don’t go!”
Comes a whisper,
Alphatryptonites forgive.
Stunned
I can only pretend to process
what just occurred—or didn’t.
I don’t believe in otherworldly
anythings. There was no Luke.
So why did I call out to him?
I’ve got some major shit embedded
in my psyche, that’s for sure.
Who knows what opiates might
dislodge? On the other hand,
a low haze of pain shimmers.
When was the last time they gave
me anything? I need answers,
damn it, not hallucinations. “Luke?”
But of course, no answer will come.
Whatever that was has deserted me.
Although, wait. If that was, indeed,
a piece of my psyche, I hope it left
the good stuff behind. Is there good stuff?
As I lie here, surrounded by suffocating
darkness digesting possibilities,
I may not be able to see, but a couple
of things have become very clear.
I can hear something, and not some
inexplicable thing, but some external
corporeal noise. It’s muffled, almost
a whisper of conversation or maybe
a television. I’ve exited the well
of total silence. The other thing is
even more important. No, it’s vital.
Either some ghost of my little brother
just traveled light-years, traversing
the wilderness of death to forgive me,
or I have forgiven myself.
After
It’s been three months since Augustus
Lee Swanson went out to the Turner
Shooting Range looking for some
warped form of justice. Experts have
profiled him, and while they might
have argued exactly what set him off,
they all agreed post-traumatic stress
disorder was a contributing factor.
I could’ve told them that. What
saved most of the building—and me—
was his triggering the device while
still inside the locker room, containing
most of the shrapnel and much of
the explosion’s force. Had I not chosen
to run in the opposite direction, well,
who knows? That’s the good news.
Not so good? Major mistake, and
one I’ll remember in case I’m ever
again hauling ass away from a bomb,
was glancing back over my shoulder
just about the exact second everything
blew. I remember none of this, of course,
but when shards of wood and metal
went flying, my face became a target.
Small splinters hit my left eye, while
a larger projectile punctured my right
cornea. With a transplant, my vision
will improve immensely, at least
that’s the promise. Right now, it’s like
peering through sheer dark curtains.
As for my hearing, I’m not completely
deaf. I mean, if you shout at the top
of your lungs, I can pick out a few
key phrases. It may get better with time,
but maybe not. But, hey, technology
has done wonders with hearing aids.
So what if I look like a decrepit old man
when I’m barely old enough to vote?
I’m slowly getting used to the idea
that I’ll never exactly be normal again.
But Maybe Normal Is Overrated
Because abnormal me
has discovered that I’ve got
a lot to live for. My family—
near and extended—has rallied
around me. As I recovered,
both pairs of grandparents
spent many hours reading to me
Yes, the Creswell coots read
from the Bible, but I couldn’t hear
most of it anyway, not even when
they AMPLIFIED. And, much to
my amusement, Grandpa Coot also
read James Bond—his “guilty pleasure.”
What was truly important, lying
there in the semidarkness,
was the company, and I also found
that with aunts, uncles, cousins,
and friends, many of whom
I’d thought lost to me. Funny
how a near-death experience
brings perspective, both to the guy
who almost died, and also
to those who just about lost him.
Best of All
Abnormal me has a stellar
girlfriend. Alexa is my bedrock,
and as I work on dressing myself
in the clothes Lorelei laid out for
me (color coordination was never
my best thing, but now it’s ridiculous),
she’s in the living room, waiting
to drive me (in the Ford, which needs
a good romp that I can’t give it at
the moment) to Uncle Jessie’s wedding.
He and Quin delayed their nuptials
until I could get on my feet again.
He probably wouldn’t have, as anxious
as he was, but Quin insisted.
It’s kind
of the least we can do, considering
he got blown up on your behalf,
don’t you think?
Not much he could
say to that. Weirdly, his heart attack
might very well have saved his life.
What probably salvaged mine
were the first responders who pulled
me from the rubble and stanched
the bleeding. Glad they finished
their doughnuts and got there when they did.
Near As I Can Tell
From the intensity of light through my
window (muted though my traitor
eyes might interpret it), it’s a gorgeous
spring day. Perfect for saying “I do”
on an old covered bridge, family
gathered round. I’m including Lorelei
in that description. She has also
been wonderful to me, and though
I still question the way they went
about it, I have come to terms with
Dad’s relationship with her. Mom
has forged ahead with her new life,
as I must with mine, whatever the end
product might be. I’ll probably never
be a shooting team star, but I will
go to college and hopefully discover
my passion. Who knows? Maybe it
is
politics, but until I go looking,
how can I ever find it? I might even
study comparative religion.
I’ve Thought and Thought
About what happened
in the hospital, and I still
have no clue if my close
encounter was real or imagined.
But it has unlocked my mind
to possibilities. And those
are something I’m eager
to explore. The door opens
and Alexa glides across
the room, at least, that’s
how it looks to me. Now
she straightens the buttons
I’ve managed to get crooked.
Then she lifts up on her toes
to give me a kiss, and it is soft
and warm, filled with promise.
When she breaks away, I pull
her back close, promise, “I love
you.” Because if there’s one
thing I’ve learned through all
this, it’s to have faith in love.
* * *
Author’s Note
The idea for
Rumble
germinated a couple of years ago. It was right after the second of two mosque burnings here in the US. As a card-carrying liberal Lutheran whose beliefs run more toward the spiritual than the biblical, I posted on Facebook:
We all serve one Creator
, meaning Christians, Jews, Muslims and, in fact, all human beings. I was prepared for a negative backlash, but not for the comment that came from a sixteen-year-old girl.