Authors: Lisa Schroeder
Tags: #Juvenile Fiction, #Social Issues, #Death & Dying, #Family, #Stepfamilies, #Action & Adventure, #Survival Stories, #General
I got my guitar.
We played.
We kissed.
We danced.
We kissed.
We talked.
We kissed.
We sang.
We kissed.
I almost forgot
everything else.
Almost.
Finally
I told him.
“I think I’m a sister today.”
“You think?”
“Dad called.
I didn’t answer.”
He looked at me
with his
chocolate brown eyes
and it’s like
his love
radiated through me
so strongly,
I started
to sweat.
“Want me to listen for you?” he asked.
That is why I have
more love
than my heart
can possibly hold
for Blaze.
He is
better than warm fall colors,
better than beautiful music,
better than doughnuts and coffee.
At that moment,
I couldn’t think of one single thing
better
than Blaze.
We went to his room.
He listened to the message.
When he was done,
he kissed me softly,
with such tenderness,
it almost brought me
to tears.
Then he wrapped
his strong arms
around me
and whispered in my ear,
“Her name is Ivy.
And she has the best big sister ever.”
Blaze and his mom
were going out to dinner
with Blaze’s older brother and his brother’s wife.
I wanted to go too.
But Ginger didn’t invite me.
It was hard to for me to leave,
because I knew
it’d be a while
before I’d see Blaze again.
We don’t go to the same school,
and I’m so jealous of the girls
who kiss their boyfriends
before every class.
Lucky girls.
So, after we said good-bye,
I headed home,
thinking it would just be
me and Cobain
eating mac ’n’ cheese.
But Dad was there.
He looked happier
than I’d ever
seen him.
“I thought you could come to the hospital,” he said.
“We can all spend the evening together.
You can meet your baby sister.
She’s adorable, Al.”
Perfect.
The kid wasn’t even a day old
and the one big, happy family thing
had already begun.
“I have homework, Dad.
I can’t.”
He tried to convince me
I could skip it,
or bring it with me,
or do it in the morning before school,
but I played the part of
concerned student,
and finally
he let up.
“You want something to eat?” he asked me,
and suddenly
it was like it was before.
Before
she
came along.
“Yeah.
I’m hungry.”
I had visions of us
at the counter,
making dinner
together.
We’d boil the noodles
and mix up the sauce,
throwing in a little bit of this
and a whole lot of that.
And then we’d sit down
at the table
together.
Just me
and him.
I thought, Maybe he’ll ask about school.
Maybe he’ll ask about my music.
Maybe he’ll ask about Blaze.
He reached for his wallet.
“Why don’t you have a pizza delivered?
I have to get back to the hospital.”
He handed me a twenty.
“We’ll be home tomorrow.”
And then he left,
taking any hunger
I might have had
right along with him.
When I came home
from school that day
so long ago,
Mom told me to sit down
and she’d get me some
milk and cookies.
She was a morning kindergarten teacher
and was always there
when I came home.
But she was also an artist,
and in the afternoons
she’d usually be in her studio,
painting.
At that time,
she’d been busy
painting pictures
for the owners of
a bed and breakfast
who wanted an
Alice in Wonderland room.
Mom loved the project because
Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland
was her all-time
favorite book.
She even named me
after Alice.
The snickerdoodles,
fresh from the oven,
were warm
and comforting,
just like
a mother’s love.
She sat and
watched me eat
while I babbled on
about this thing
and that thing.
When I saw
a single,
lonely tear
escape
before she could
reach up
and catch it,
I stopped talking,
suddenly aware
of how the cookies
were made
to soften the blow
of whatever
was coming next.
I don’t remember
much of anything
after she said
the words
“pancreatic cancer,”
but I do know she kept saying,
like, every other sentence,
I’m going to fight this,
I’m going to fight this,
I’m going to fight this.
She had surgery,
and she went through chemo,
and she drank green juice every day,
and she
just
got
sicker.
I know she fought.
She fought hard.
But she didn’t win.
The cancer won.
It didn’t just win,
it basically
beat the shit
out of her.
Beat the shit
out of all of us.
a song
by Alice Andreeson
It’s not supposed
to happen this way.
You’re supposed to be here
each day and every day.
Like the leaves on the trees,
the stars and the moon;
they may disappear
but they come back soon.
Why’d you have to leave me?
Why’d you have to die?
I’m lost without you,
like the sun without the sky.
Lost without you,
I don’t want to say good-bye.
People around me,
they just don’t understand.
They think time will help,
like it’s a helping hand.
Time just hurts
’cause the memories all fade.
I want to see your face
and your lovely hair grayed.
Why’d you have to leave me?
Why’d you have to die?
I’m lost without you,
like the sun without the sky.
Lost without you,
I don’t want to say good-bye.
I don’t want to say good-bye.
Don’t make me say
good-bye.
I played my music for a while,
and when I stopped,
I sat on my bed
and soaked in
the silence,
realizing that soon
the house would be filled
with the noise
of a baby.
I got up
and stepped
into the hallway.
I closed my eyes
and I could almost see Mom
coming from her bedroom,
on her way to give me
a good-night hug.
Every night,
for as long as I could remember,
she’d hug me
and whisper in my ear,
“Sweet dreams, my love.”
It reminded me…
I turned
and went back
to my room.
Tucked in my closet
was a hidden secret,
underneath
the pants that were too short
and the sweaters that were too tight.
A painting
she gave me
two weeks
before she left us.
I didn’t tell
anyone.
It’s all mine.
Her final gift
to me.
I pulled it out,
and it was like
the day she gave it to me
all over again.
In the painting
the sky is dark,
with twinkling stars
and a glowing moon,
and down below
is a house
with a girl,
her chin resting in her hands,
looking out the window,
up at the sky.
And if you look closely,
the stars
form an outline
of an angel.
The words in the corner
of the painting say,
Find the gift in the little things.
And remember, Alice, I am with you always.
They turned her studio
into the baby’s room.
They didn’t say anything
to me.
They just did it.
I would have taken
that room
on the first floor.
The room
that was so much
like Mom.
But they didn’t
ask me.
I didn’t speak to them
for days
after I found out.
I remember
walking in,
seeing the crib,
the changing table,
and the pink-and-blue
baby quilt
hung on the wall.
It all looked
so different.
Except for the ivy.
Mom had painted
delicate ivy
all around the walls,
just below the ceiling.
Then it hit me.
Is that where they got
the idea
for her name?
Seriously?
When I got home
from school on Monday,
no one seemed to notice
when I walked in the door.
I went to the kitchen
and got myself
a Diet Dr Pepper and
some chips and salsa,
hoping to
spice up my mood.
Newborn cries
came spiraling
down the
stairs.
I checked the label
on the jar.
Extra hot.
Good.
I needed all
the spicy
I could get.
Eventually
they made their way
downstairs
and found me.
Victoria held
a little pink blob
in her arms.
“Do you want to hold her?” Dad asked me.
“I’m coming down with a cold.
I better not.”
I got up,
put the dishes in the sink,
and started to go
to my room.
“She’s your sister, Ali,” Victoria said.
Was a statement like that
supposed to flip a switch
inside of me,
so suddenly
a bunch of sisterly love
would just come
shining through?
I turned around.
“She’s not my sister.
She’s my half sister.
There’s a difference.”
“Ali—”
But I didn’t let him finish.
I left.
Because last time
I checked my math book,
half
does not equal
whole.
The next morning,
I was a sloth,
tired
and
slow.
The baby cried
all
night
long.
I considered staying home
until I realized
at home,
there was a baby.
At school,
there was no baby.
So
I went.
Even at school
I couldn’t get away
from the baby.
At lunch
Claire drilled me.
Is she cute?
Who does she look like?
Does she have hair?
I finally said,
“Claire, just stop, okay?
I don’t know, because I don’t give a crap.”
“Sorry,” she mumbled.
“Let’s talk about something else.”
So she told me
about the latest designs
she was working on,
and showed me
some sketches.
Who knew
I could be so interested
in fashion?