Authors: Alma Fullerton
Walking on Glass
Alma Fullerton
For Jessica,
Chantale,
and Claude
for always being there
when I need them. Love you.
Date of journalâ
between the start and finish
I begin this
under protest.
The further you read,
the more you invade my mind.
Take something from me
I don't want to give.
My thoughts.
You will enter a place
I don't want to be.
My conscience.
Writing a journal
for some shrink
won't make me
feel better.
It won't change
what happened.
It'll just make me think,
and I don't want to think.
Mom thought too much.
Look where it got her.
Shit happens.
We have to
deal with it.
We can't
change it.
Why pick it apart
like a detective
dissects a suicide note.
Only girls
and wusses
write journals.
If Jack finds out
I'm writing one,
he'll hassle me so much
I'll have to beat the crap out of him
just to prove
I'm no wuss.
I know Mom hates him.
He hangs around
with the King's Crypt
and shows up
at our house
wasted.
But I don't care.
Jack has always been
my best friend.
He knows how
to have a good time.
Jack pulls up in a kick-ass
Mustang convertible.
He whoops as he gets out
and grins. “Not bad, hey?”
“Damn right,” I say,
wishing I had the cash
to buy a car
like that.
“Come on,” he says.
I jump in and we head downtown.
We pass some girls we've seen
at some parties,
so he turns around
and pulls up beside them.
“Want a ride?” he asks.
They jump in.
We speed through the streets,
blasting the music
and flipping off people who glare.
And for a while
I forget all about Mom.
I slouch in a chair
across from Dr. Mac.
He takes my journal
and flips through it
without reading,
like he promised.
“I'm glad you're writing.”
He hands it back.
“How's your mother?”
I spin my chair, lean back,
and put my feet up on his desk.
“Same.”
He nods, waiting for me to say more.
I don't, making him ask,
“How are you?”
I shrug. “Same.”
I took the photograph
from the mirror in my mother's room.
Her at the age of eight,
perched high in a tree,
arms stretched out like
an untamed eagle,
prepared to take on
the world.
I keep the picture
in my pocket
so I'll always
remember
the way she was
before she was caged
by a baby
she never wanted.
Dad says,
“Come and see Mom.”
So I do.
Mom,
tucked tight in the bed,
empty minded.
No longer herself,
or anyone else.
Wires force life into a body
left hanging
like a marionette
with no one to pull
the strings.
Dad leans close to her
and whispers,
“You'll come home soon, dear.
Everything will be better.”
I know he really
wants that
to be true,
but the thought of her
coming back
into our lives
makes my insides
flip.
Mom's mood swings
always coincided
with whatever
Dad and I did.
Up and down.
Up and down.
Pulling our strings,
like big yo-yos.
And even now,
when she can't move
or talk,
she's still pulling
those strings.
I don't want her to die.
I just want
it all to
stop.
Does that make me
so terrible?
Mom loved
her roses.
They grew into
prizewinners,
nurtured by her long hours
and tender hands.
They brought her
a sense of fulfillment.
I just let her
down.
I wait outside
on the step for Jack.
Vines tangle
around Mom's roses
like bad times.
I yank at the weeds
and chuck them far
from the garden,
yelling, “Get Out!”
The nosy neighbor,
Mrs. Wingert,
peeks around her curtains.
She glares at me,
like she thinks
I've gone over the edge.
Maybe
I have.
I throw a handful of dirt
in her direction and scream,
“Mind your own damn business.”
She drops her curtain closed,
but I can still feel her eyes
on the back of my head.
By the time Jack arrives,
weeds are scattered over the yard,
my hands are caked with mud,
and I have a headache
from clenching my teeth together
so tight.
Jack pulls into a
parking space near the lake.
He taps my chest and points to
a scrawny kid sprawled
across a bench reading.
“Want to have some fun?” he
whispers.
“Oh yeah,” I go.
He struts over to the kid
and kicks his foot.
“Nice shoes.
Your mom buy them for you?”
The kid jumps to his feet
and glances around,
but the rest of the park
is deserted.
“I asked, did your
mom pay for them?”
Jack barks.
“IâI guess so.”
The kid clutches his book
to his chest.
Jack shoves him down.
“I want them shoes.”
“I d-don't have another pair.”
“You hear that?” Jack says.
“He d-don't have another pair.”
My laughter mixes with Jack's,
and he plows the kid in the face.
The kid covers his nose
as his blood gushes
through his fingers.
Jack turns to leave,
but that kid is staring at me
over his bloody fingers,
and I stand frozen.
I wish that kid would
stop.
But he doesn't.
He stares
like he knows
what my mother did.
He stares
like he knows
why
she did it.
He stares,
like he's expecting me to be nice.
He just keeps staring.
I shift my feet
and look away.
But I can feel him
staring
with eyes the color of
Mom's.
Staring.
“Stop gawking,
you freak!” I say.
But he doesn't.
“Stop looking at me!”
I shove him hard against the bench.
The kid's head snaps back,
like someone pulled an elastic
attached to it.
Jack turns around.
He pounds the kid
across the chin.
The kid falls onto the grass,
bawling
and gripping the sides of his face.
Things slow down in my head.
A movie,
paused,
scene by scene,
as Jack stands over him,
kicking at his ribs,
without giving in.
All because I didn't like the kid
staring.
The look in Jack's eyes
scares me
because I know
the kid has had enough,
and no matter what I do,
Jack won't stop.
“Loser!” Jack rips off the kid's shoes.
He leaves him lying on the ground
bleeding.
He trots to his car,
carrying the shoes
over his head like a trophy.
I see the kid stagger to his
sock feet.
He wipes the blood
from under his nose.
That kid has to go home
and tell his mother
two guys beat him up
and stole his shoes.
And I want to puke.