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Authors: Jeri Smith-Ready

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BOOK: Bridge: a shade short story
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She unfolds the army-green T-shirt,

and the light spilling from the hall

reveals the skull-and-shamrock logo

of the Keeley Brothers.

 

I blink hard,

memories bathing my brain

like acid.

“He never wears that,” I tell her.

“Why does he have it with him now?”

 

She asks him.

 

Mickey slaps shut the suitcase,

but not before I see

the hint of

dull

black

metal

tucked into the corner.

 

“Don’t leave him alone,” I tell Krista.

“He’s got a gun.”

 

She steps back,

fear in her eyes.

“Is it loaded?” she asks him.

 

He stares at her,

making the connection.

“Not yet.”

 

She snatches the dry towel splayed across the bed.

“Turn around. Both of you.”

 

I watch him instead of her,

count the ribs showing

through his skin

when he changes his own shirt.

 

“Now what?”

Krista’s stuffing her wet bra

into the front pocket of her jeans.

Mickey’s shirt is huge on her

but not huge enough

to hide her curves.

 

I spy the guitar case in the corner.

“Ask him to play.”

We have to get something

into his hands

besides that gun.

 

Music was always my savior.

Maybe it’ll be his, too.

 


 

He tries a few tunes

by candlelight

on the living room sofa,

but his fingers seem numb;

his voice, starved.

 

Krista looks dubious.

 

“Mickey’s much better than this,” I tell her.

“He got accepted to a conservatory,

but don’t bring that up.

He’s not going.”

I answer her quizzical look with,

“Because of the money.”

 

Mickey stops

at the start

of the third verse.

“I forget the rest.

You should go.”

 

He looks through her,

toward the hallway,

toward the bedroom,

toward the gun.

 

“Wait!”

I jump out of my seat.

“Ask him to play my song,

the one he’s writing for me.”

 

“Play Logan’s song,” she tells him.

 

He glances in my general direction,

then focuses on her.

“Dylan told him?”

 

She nods when I nod.

 

“Brat can’t keep a secret.”

Mickey sets the guitar in his lap again,

tunes.

Tunes some more.

And then some more.

Tunes

tunes

tunes,

but never plays.

 

Krista shifts in her chair,

stretches her bare feet,

which are probably

falling asleep.

 

Her movement stops Mickey,

fingers on the guitar’s pegs.

He lowers the head

and lets the instrument

roll forward,

strings facing down

in his lap.

 

“I haven’t written it yet,” he says.

“Not one note, in all these months.”

 

Krista holds up her hand,

speaking for herself.

“Why not?”

 

He traces the curve of the guitar’s body

with his palm,

and I want more than ever to be him

for one moment,

touching the smooth wood.

I would make it sing.

 

Finally he says,

“Writing his song

would be too much like saying good-bye.”

 

I can’t believe I’m hearing this.

“That’s bullshit, and you know it!”

 

Before she can finish translating,

I point straight at his heart.

“You’ve been saying nothing

but
goodbye

since the night I died.

All you care about

is me passing on,

getting out of your life.”

 

Krista speaks my words,

inflecting them just like me,

and I wonder how much anger

is mine

and how much is hers.

 

Mickey says,

“I just want him to be at peace.”

 

“No!” I hurl back.

“You want
you
to be at peace.

And you think dying—

or at least not living—

is the best way to find it.

And I totally don’t get that.”

 

Krista says what I said,

then turns to me.

 

“I get that,” she chokes out.

“He thinks he could’ve stopped you.

He thinks he could’ve saved you.”

 

“I could have.”

Mickey grips the neck of the guitar.

“I could’ve kept the drugs

out of his hands.”

 

I shake my head.

“You saw me turn it down,

just like you and Siobhan—”

 

“I should’ve known,”

Mickey says over me.

“I should’ve known

that record company rep

would push him harder

when I wasn’t looking.

He was always so eager to please.

I should’ve asked later.

One question:

‘Did you keep the cocaine?’

But I was too busy

and too annoyed,

thinking, He’s a such a big shot now

he can take care of himself,

and if he can’t,

that’s his fault.”

Mickey closes his eyes.

“One question.

It could’ve saved his life.”

 

I turn my head

from the sight of the pain

that’s twisted Mickey’s memory

and broken his soul.

I did this to him.

 

“He knows that’s not true,” I tell Krista.

“He knows I would’ve lied.

I always lied

to keep from pissing him off.”

 

He gives a bitter laugh.

“Yeah, or to keep from pissing off

Dad.”

 

Then Mickey freezes,

his eyes creasing harder than ever.

“Oh God.”

He clutches his elbows,

bends forward like he’ll be sick.

“He was afraid of me.”

 

Krista raises her hand.

“He still is.”

 

“Why? When?

I thought…

I thought we were friends.”

 

I try to remember

when Mickey and I were friends.

Before we were

the Keeley Brothers

with a capital B?

Maybe when he was George Clooney

and I was Brad Pitt.

 

“So what do you want?”

 

I realize Krista’s talking to me.

 

“Huh?”

 

“What do you want?” she repeats.

“You brought us together

so you could talk to him.

What do you want him to know?”

 

Mickey braces himself,

hands squeezing his knees,

eyelids squeezing each other,

like he’s about to be sprayed

with poison.

 

After 233 days,

I have no eloquent speech,

no moving lyrics.

 

“Besides being alive again,

I want…more than anything…”

 

I wait while she translates,

then continue,

so she won’t have to stop

through this next part.

 

“I want you to know

that I love you, dude.

And no matter what you think,

it wasn’t your fault.

It was mine.

But I forgive you

for not saving me

from myself.”

 

I wait for him to explode with,


You
forgive
me
?

That’s a good one.

You should beg
me

to forgive
you

for ruining my life,

for hurting

Mom

and Dad

and Dylan

and Siobhan

and everyone else

stupid enough to love you.”

 

But instead,

Mickey’s shoulders rise

and fall

in the longest,

fiercest

breath

I’ve seen him take in months.

 

He closes his eyes

and pulls the head of the guitar

toward his own,

presses the pegs

against his forehead,

so hard,

that when he turns

to look straight at me,

not through me,

there’s a dent

in his skin.

 

“Thank you.”

 

And then.

 

(Uh-oh.)

 

He starts to cry.

 

I haven’t seen this

since the night I died.

I don’t know what to do.

 

But Krista does.

 

She kneels before him

and takes the guitar from his lap.

He sinks forward

into her arms,

adding his tears

to the water from her hair

speckling her new shirt.

 

They cry together

for their

loved

lost

dumb

brothers.

 


 

Kurt Cobain

didn’t die in the bathroom,

because he died on purpose.

Anyone with a plan

wouldn’t choose the bathroom,

unless they’re super considerate

and thinking of the mess.

 

I don’t know

if Mickey was thinking of Cobain

when he decided

Ocean City would be the last stop

on the road trip of his life.

I don’t know

what he was thinking

when he packed

that gun

and that shirt.

 

But the important thing is,

Krista now has both.

 

When the rain ends,

we take Mickey’s guitar

to the beach,

find a spot where I sat

when I was alive.

He plays

with trembling fingers

and a voice

rough from weeping

but stronger than before.

 

Others gather around,

in twos and threes.

Mickey takes requests,

but mostly he plays

our old favorites.

For once, I carry the harmony

instead of the melody,

since Krista’s are the only ears

that hear me.

 

Siobhan and Connor appear,

fiddle and guitar in hand,

summoned by a text from Mickey.

And now it’s like

a Keeley Brothers

acoustic reunion gig.

Perfect.

 

But after a while,

I fall silent

and just watch

my brother and sister

sing without me

smile without me

live without me.

They’ll be okay.

Without me.

 

I give Krista a soft “Thanks”

and brush her shoulder

with a hand she can’t feel.

She watches

as I stand and turn away.

 

I’m pretty sure

what she’s done tonight

wouldn’t count as

an official Senior Week

“Play It Safe” activity.

But Mickey was long past

being saved by safety.

 

I walk to the edge of the water

where I can still hear their voices

mixed with the ocean.

The lifeguard stand beside me

is empty and bare

except for one thing:

 

A long black ribbon

faded to gray,

the name
Cindy

printed in gold-turned-yellow.

 

The girl who drowned at spring break.

That’s how she’ll be remembered—

for her death,

not her life,

as people our age always are.

 

Did she become a ghost?

Is she standing next to me

right this second?

Has she already passed on?

 

My own trip to peace,

too long and too strange,

is nearing the end.

Mickey was my last,

biggest,

scariest

detour.

 

Behind me I hear Krista say,

Something-something “lifeguard stand,”

and I want to run

or swim

or just disappear.

But I stay.

 

As the next song starts, it’s missing

one voice.

Soft feet thump the sand behind me,

one pair.

 

I don’t turn,

don’t hope,

don’t dare.

 

My brother stands beside me,

alone.

He takes a deep, soft breath,

and speaks my name.

 

The End

 

About “Bridge,” Logan, and Jeri

 

“Bridge” is a companion short story in the Shade trilogy. The full-length novels in the series are
Shade
,
Shift
, and
Shine
, all currently available (click the links to buy Kindle version).

 

“Bridge” is also the first in the “SHADEboys Trifecta of Awesome,” which continues later in 2013 with “Shattered,” a novella from the point of view of Zachary Moore; and a to-be-titled short story from the point of view of Martin Connelly.

 

For updates on new books and stories by Jeri Smith-Ready, as well as opportunities to win prizes and request autographed bookplates/bookmarks,
sign up for her quarterly newsletter
.

 

Shade
Chapter 1

 

Shift
Chapter 1

 

Shine
Chapter 1

 

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,
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,
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, or
Goodreads
.

BOOK: Bridge: a shade short story
8.93Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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