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Ghost

Ghost I. She does not come till later, not that summer, my twelfth, not until after Camp Kanata’s mess hall where I nibbled at grilled cheese, vegetable soup, sipped the watery bug juice. I popped Dexatrim at wooden tables, popped them sitting thick in grass, on a hill overlooking the lake, where the kids push each other into cold water, muddied a milky, silt-soaked tobacco color, water to which many have lost me. II. Many have lost me or I become lost to them. Later I might have thrown bags of peanuts at you, hit you square in the temple. Maybe I’ll throw my 32-ounce Mountain Dew in your acne-scarred face. Perhaps I’ll drink too much, make out with too many boys, forget you exist. Then, underneath you, my face hidden from yours, cradling you the way a bird’s nest cradles her delicate eggs, I’ll breakdown, tell my hysterical tale of betrayal, answer every question honestly. III. Question honestly how “a” gets to “g,” how we move effortlessly between moments, navigating ourselves from the present to eighteen years ago, back to today, and then to later, when I have no questions, and I am in your arms. IV. I am in your arms, face buried in your shoulder, staining your shirt with my salty regret. I listen anxiously every time your phone rings. My family does not call. I spend a lot of time sitting alone in a plastic lawn chair, on the concrete block you call a porch. Lively, lit voices carry from inside but I don’t hear them. My knuckles are white from gripping my beer bottle, my hands unsteady. They shake like a Parkinson’s patient’s. I clench the bottle tighter, afraid I’ll drop it and everything will break. V. Everything will break: while I’m on a Greyhound bus, sipping bourbon and apple juice; while flipping through fashion mags, earphones on, mountain music playing at the beginning of green foothills; while I arrive at the bus station in Asheville; while I sit on Annah’s front porch, the phone clutched in my clenched fist; while Jordan, Justin, and Dave walk up the porch steps; while my face, in shock, is streaked with mascara tears; everything will break. VI. We will open the other pint of Maker’s Mark, a bottle of red wine. We will cook vegetarian fajitas and burritos. I will struggle to choke them down. I will struggle to smile at my saviors and still She does not come till later. VII. She does not come till later, until apologies are made. Until the harsh words, criticism, raised voices, are forgotten. Until I begin to see her silky silver hair, to remember her creased hands turning creased pages of worn books, and the chintz sofa I lay on, my head in her lap. She does not come till later. copyright 2006 Katherine Andrews
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