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Authors: Ellen Hopkins

Tilt (68 page)

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to a murderous hag. Guess who

winds up roasted, sliced and

given

a prominent place on the table?

Shane

There Are a Dozen Place Settings

On our Thanksgiving table.
That, in itself, is remarkable.
The guest list is kind of crazy:
Mom and Dad
Gram and Gramps
Aunt Andrea and Dr. Malik
Steve and Cassandra
Harley, Chad and me
(Plus Shelby!)
It was Gram’s idea to include her.
An outsider could not understand
the meaning of that gesture. Shelby:
Never nibbled turkey skin
Never tasted pecan pie
(Did their magical perfumes
mean anything at all to a nose
completely uninfluenced
by a food-virgin tongue?)
I wish, just one time, I would have
touched some tiny taste of ambrosia
to her lips, some forbidden pleasure:
New York cheesecake
Crème brûlée
Pineapple sorbet
Hot fudge sundae
(With vanilla bean Häagen-Dazs
and homemade whipped cream)
And I wish, on more than one occasion,
she could have sat upright at our dining
room table, one of a family of four. Shelby:
Comfortable in a velvet chair
Holding her own silver fork
Over one of Mom’s good china plates
Wiping her mouth with a linen napkin
Talking about her favorite Disney show
(Or taking a drive with me)

I Fantasize About That

As the very much still alive
(at least in most ways) rest of the guest
list sits down to dinner. Even without
Shelby, it’s a very strange cast of players.
All of whom pretend it’s not. All
of whom, for whatever reasons, are grateful
to be able to pretend it’s not. And that,
for my own reasons, includes me.
The dialogue, stilted at first, begins
to pick up speed as the food arrives.
Gram (putting bowls on the table):
Sorry Alex couldn’t join us. How is he?
“He’s feeling better, but thought he should
spend Thanksgiving with his family.”
Gramps (spooning candied yams):
Hey, now. We’re his extended family.
Cassandra (passing the cranberry
sauce):
Yay for extended families!
Steve (slugging fine wine):
Yes.
Thanks very much for the invite.
Chad (eyeing Dad’s turkey slicing):
Ditto. Real food for a change.
Mom (quickly to avert a retort):
Everything set for your wedding?
Cassie (overjoyed):
I hope so! Only
a week away. You
are
all coming?
Mom and Dad exchange curious
glances with Gram and Gramps.
I ask the question they’re afraid to.
“Were we invited?” Pretty sure not.
Harley (panicked):
Oh my God.
Didn’t I mail your invitations?
Aunt Andrea:
Harley! How could . . . ?
The doctor puts his hand on her arm.
Cassie:
You didn’t? But you prom—
Chad (guffawing):
Way to go, Harl!

It Is Dad Who Comes to the Rescue

He bangs down the carving knife,
like a judge wielding his gavel.
Okay,
everyone, let’s fill our plates and say
grace. We will all be at the wedding.
The relief, at least on the far end
of the table, is palpable. The food
goes around at dizzying speed, a blur
of, as Chad called it, real food.
Now Dad motions for everyone
to link hands.
Heavenly Father.
Bless this table and all who sit here
surrounded by your presence.
Allow us to abandon our mourning
in favor of coming celebration.
Forgive our mistakes and please
let those who have been hurt by them
find the grace to forgive them, too.
We are thankful for this bounty,
each other, and you. In Christ’s
name we pray. Amen.
Echoed amens.

Waves of Food

And drifts of conversation make me
a little woozy. No one seems to notice
that I pick at my food, much like
Cassandra does. She probably wants
to make sure she can fit in her size-skinny
wedding dress, which I will,
apparently, see if Dad has his way.
Eventually nothing much besides
gravy is left on the dinner plates.
Gentlemen,
says Gramps.
Why
don’t we clear so the ladies can
bring out the pie. I’ve had a peek.
Hope you all saved lots of room.
There are a few groans and several
yum
s and with all the guys helping,
the dirties disappear quickly. I stash
a few bites of leftover turkey for Gaga,
who I had to leave shut up in my room.
Earlier, I caught her on the counter
sniffing the cooling fowl. Feline!
I take it to her, a peace offering, and
by the time I get back to the table,
it is covered with pies. Lemon. Cherry.
Pecan. Apple. And the requisite pumpkin.
The girls are busy cutting and taking
orders. I ask for a small slice of cherry.
Soon, everyone has a piece, even
Cassandra, who managed the thinnest
wedge of apple I have ever seen.
Now Gramps says,
I think the chefs
of this fabulous feast deserve a toast.
He pops a bottle of champagne,
then another. Mom and Dad find
crystal flutes in the hutch, Steve
helps fill them. Gramps glances
around the table.
How about the kids?
Generously (foolishly?), the parents
nod okay. Interestingly enough, it
is Harley who grabs a glass first.
Chad and I follow, and everyone
raises a toast to Mom and Gram
and Andrea, who brought the veggies
and the lemon pie. I sip the sparkly
slowly. No use calling attention
to myself. Besides, in my room I have
something stronger stashed for later.

It’s Really Sort of Surprising

That my parents haven’t missed
the alcohol that keeps vanishing
from the kitchen cabinet. To be
sure, there was a lot—bottles bought
and bottles gifted over the years.
I keep pulling them forward,
but sooner or later you’d think
someone would notice. Maybe
they will. And maybe that’s what
I’m hoping for, that Mom or Dad
will notice and care enough to say
something. Tonight was nice, I guess.
But you have to wonder where
this small sense of family retreats
to when it isn’t a holiday. I’m sure
part of the problem used to be Shelby.
Doesn’t seem fair that it took her
dying to bring us closer again.

Post Pie

The guests retire to the living
room. Gramps opens the piano
and this time decides to sing
amped-up Christmas carols.
The season is almost upon us,
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