Authors: Ellen Hopkins
I see,
he says, and leaves it there.
Maybeâor maybe notâbecause
apparently we have arrived.
Isn't overflowing, but we are here
ninety minutes early, and it is half
full already. “Wow. Who knew so
many people liked poetry? I'm
impressed.” We follow the human
stream into the gym, where we're
directed to the judges' green room.
Jonah greets a pretty brunette
with a kiss to one cheek. My face
heats, and when he turns to
introduce me, I hope neither
of them notice.
This is Heather
Marshall, who teaches English
here. She's wholly responsible
for this event. And this is Ashley
Patterson, one of my favorite
students, and a very good poet
herself.
The jealous wave passes
and Heather hands us a sheaf
of papers, pointing out the judging
rubric. Jonah adds a few words
about what he looks for and I absorb
all that, despite thinking about poetry
and changing lives and how teachers,
not just social workers, do that, and
about a major shift of direction.
My reasoning for choosing
my grad-school path, I'd probably
have to start with the way I felt
after finding Lara's letters. I came
home from Wyoming, already
reassessing my life. Changing
career paths seemed like a brave,
new start. Until then, social work
hadn't even been a consideration,
but when I went over the SDSU grad
school web page, that's where I
ended up. Psychology had always
fascinated me and the idea that you
could manipulate that for the better
was appealing. There were kids
at the preschool whose families needed
interventions. And it was becoming
clear that so many returning soldiers
would need services. The damage wasn't
always obvious. Sometimes it hid
for years before surfacing. I wanted
to help those already home. Those
coming home soon. One day, Cole
might even be among them. I wanted
to be able to recognize the signs, know
what to do if I saw them. Because,
as furious as I was with Cole, I really
needed to believe he loved only me.
For shaky faith. Cole would be
deploying to Afghanistan in just
a few months. Meanwhile, he would
spend some weeks at Pendleton's
sniper academy, if that's what you
could call the obnoxious tract of
swampy coastal land he crawled
through, across, and over. I did get
to see him on his off-hours, and that
was crucial to our survival as a couple.
I needed every fiber of me to believe
he would come home. Not to Lara, ever.
Always, to his Ashley. What bothered
me most was my eroded certainty in
his code of honorâthat intrinsic
element that had first pulled me to
him. My inner cynic had long insisted
that no man truly respected such
a thing. Cole had changed that for me.
Or had he? I just wasn't sure anymore.
And in that fertile ground of doubt,
a garden of nightmares took root.
Sometimes pick up the phone, certain
their man will be on the other end,
speaking to them from wherever it is
his spirit now wanders. Sometimes,
I'm told, they even hear his voice.
My nightmares were kind of like
that. Cole would come to me in
the middle of the night, and even
though I knew he wasn't really there,
he was. We would talk about lifeâ
his, mine. Ours, together. We would
plan. Remember. Commiserate.
When he touched me, my skin grew
warm. When he kissed me, he wetted
my lips. When he made love to me,
orgasm came easily. And it was real.
The nightmare was waking up, sure
he was there, and not finding him
beside me. When he finally went
off to Afghanistan, the dreams grew
scarier. Sometimes when he came
to me, he would describe a kill
in all its gore and glory. Sometimes,
he would show me the shrapnel-
strewn landscape. Once in a while,
when he talked, his voice sounded
foreign. And on more than one occasion,
he tried to kiss me without a mouth,
because he was missing half of his face.
Must have come from one of the many
video clips I watched about the war.
Okay, it wasn't a brilliant thing to do,
but I wanted to know what he would
be facing in Helmand Province.
It became something of an obsession.
Truthfully, as Cole's third deployment
approached, I was more afraid than
ever before. Afghanistan wasn't Iraq.
Fed by al Qaeda, the Taliban claimed
much of the country, teaming with
the drug trade in the poppy-rich land.
There was more money there, more
resources, and a deep-seated hatred
of the American infidels. Used to war-
fare and shifts of power, the Afghan
farmers simply went with the flow,
tending their crops and pretending
friendship to whomever wandered
their fields with weapons. Charged
with identifying insurgents, detaining
or removing them, American soldiers
might have been better equipped
than their enemies. But they were dying.
Of course, but 2010 would prove
to be the most deadly of the war
up until that point. All I knew in
the few months leading up to
Cole's deployment was the casualty
counts were high. Rising. President
Obama had ordered thousands more
troops into the region. Cole was one
of those troops. And he was raring
to go. I flew to Hawaii to say good-bye.
He could only give me a few hours.
And, though I understood, it made
me incredibly sad. Made me angry,
because his excitement eclipsed
my disappointment. He was leaving,
and I didn't want to let him go. I stood
glued to him, kissing him as if I had
some sort of insider knowledge
that he would not return all in one
piece. He dismissed my fear.
How many times must I promise
that I will always come home
to you? I love you. And that's
a magical force field, all around me.
But then he had to go. When he tore
himself out of my arms, I thought
I heard the
chink
of a new crack
in our plaster. Splintering hope.
With the dearth of communication.
The battalion was split by company,
and moved to different operating bases
within the Helmand Province.
Conditions, according to the battalion
newsletter, were “spartan,” computers
only available at a few locations. The men
would rotate between them, and a satellite
phone would get passed around, but
we were told to expect long periods
without hearing from our soldiers.
On top of that, “River City” often denied
communication. This happened when
a secret operation was in the works,
or if there was a casualty, to allow
time for the family to be notified
before the press could get wind of it.
And there were casualties, and the press
let us know, sometimes with photos
of flag-draped coffins. As I finished
my senior year, my BA mattered
a whole lot less to me than knowing
I wouldn't spend an afternoon
in Arlington National Cemetery,
mourning for my beloved Marine.
Combing the desert, as if navigating
California's heat-shimmering sand
could somehow bring me closer
to Cole. I even borrowed his truck
from Uncle Jack, who seemed to
understand my growing obsession.
I did not chase rabbits, though
they were plentiful enough. I did
pick late wildflowers, pre-annual
wilt. Determined to avoid any echo
of the summer beforeâno Jaden-
type temptationâI didn't go out
much. In fact, I became quite
the hermit. My only real human
contact was at my job, where
most of that was with young kids,
who I did not have to worry about
crushing on. I did take a special
interest in one little girl. Soleil
was extremely quiet, and had a hard
time making eye contact. It took a lot
of work, but when I won enough
trust to be able to push her on
the swings, it felt like a real victory.
With me at home, via sat phone.
It had been some seven weeks
since I'd heard a word, and when
the call finally came, the words
I heard were disturbing. Not:
The Afghani people are so happy
we're here. They say they'll feel
safer with us patrolling their fields.
More like:
Bastards can't even
thank us for keeping their women
and kids safe. Probably wish
they'd die so they don't have to
feed them. I'm not allowed to tell
you what all kind of patrols we're
doing. Suffice it to say we've wiped
our fair share of Taliban assholes
off the face of the earth. Praise Allah.
Lost a good buddy last week, though.
Motherfucking IED. I swear I'll get
the guy who did it and if not him,
his brother or father or fucking
grandfather. Sight. Lock in. BLAM!
Oops, there goes another hajji head.
Hey. I have to go. Keep the home
fires burning. I love you, Ash.
And he was gone. The voice
of a ghost. I didn't even get to tell
him I loved him, too. So I sent that
off in a letter. Hoped it reached him.
A noise brought me up out of sleep.
Was it a door? My bedroom door?
I couldn't quite tell. Wasn't exactly
awake. So I stayed very still. In
the silence came the whisper
of feet. “Who's there?” I asked,
but when I tried to see, the room
was empty except for the sound
of footsteps, soft and sinking into
the carpet. I wanted to move but
crushing fear kept me pressed
against the mattress. “Go away!”
It came out barely a whisper.
The foot of the bed compressed,
as if someone had dropped there
on their hands and knees. I saw
no one, and yet the presenceâ
ghost?âcame crawling toward me.
I tried to scream, but the weight
of something invisible and needy
fell against my body, cutting off
all sound. “No!” I tried. “No.”
I choked on the “n.” Then a hand
covered my mouth and the thing
whispered,
I love you, Ash. I'll
always come back to you.
This
time noise escaped my mouthâ
the high, anguished keen of a new
widow. I woke, certain Cole had
just returned for a final good-bye.
Lurks there, just this side
of the battlefield, at the fringe
of the poppy field. If I were
a romantic, I might call it
evil
but that would signal intent.
It's more like invitation,
a test of will. It is what
remains
when hyenas and buzzards
have finished their work,
picked the bones
clean, and it
calls
with the voice of the siren,
the song of wind-tossed
sand. It is a ripple
of enlightenment, teasing
the weak
into its embrace
and squeezing the air
from their lungs, pressing
them to their knees
to worship.
Cole Gleason
Is an amazing experience. First
of all, the gym fills up completely.
As Jonah and I take our seats
at the judges' table, I whisper,
“This is like the
American Idol
of poetry. Why are they all here?
Only twenty-six kids are performing.”
He smiles.
Some teachers give
extra credit. And some kids
strong-arm their friends. No
one wants to be the only one
who doesn't get cheered for.
That is not a problem. Everyone
cheers as each poet finishes
reciting a memorized piece.
Some are more theatrical, but
that doesn't necessarily make
for the best performance. In fact,
we're supposed to deduct points
if theatrics outweigh the correct