Read I Heart You, You Haunt Me Online
Authors: Lisa Schroeder
Tags: #Juvenile Fiction, #Social Issues, #Death & Dying, #Love & Romance, #Horror & Ghost Stories, #General
I Need Dorothy’s Shoes
The memories
literally
make
me sick.
As I hug the tree
and lose my mocha,
all I can think about
is how I want to go home.
I need to go home.
Only problem is,
I left my cell at home,
so I can’t call my mom
to come and get me.
I gather myself
and my thoughts
and look for Cali.
I find her in the middle
of a group of kids
grooving it,
shaking it,
moving it.
“Cali,” I shout, “I need your phone.”
“How come?”
“Just because.”
“It’s in my purse.
Over there,” she says
as she waves her hand
in a big, generic swoop
in no particular direction.
I turn around
and run
right into Nick,
who’s holding hands
with a pretty little thing.
“Hey, Ava!
So great to see you!”
He gives me a quick hug,
then turns to the girl.
“This is Krystal.”
“Hi there,” I blurt out.
“Nick, can I use your phone?”
“Sorry, it’s in my car.”
“Crap.”
My head is spinning,
my stomach is churning,
my heart is aching,
and I don’t know
what to do.
And then, Lyric’s there,
pulling me away.
Away from
the music,
the laughing,
the noisy noise,
and into the quiet
of the forest.
“I have a phone you can use,” he tells me.
“Who do you want to call?”
“My mom.
I need a ride.
I shouldn’t have come.”
And before I even know what’s happening,
I’m in his sweet red jeep,
heading home.
Tears of What?
You’d think
riding in a jeep,
feeling the wind across my face,
and listening to Black Eyed Peas jam it out
with a cute guy by my side
would make me
happy.
No.
It makes me cry.
Or maybe I’m crying
for other reasons.
It’s hard to tell
when there are a hundred emotions,
all mixed up together.
He reaches over
and holds my hand
and something about that
calms me down
and the tears
stop flowing.
When we get to town,
he pulls into
the parking lot
of Taco Del Mar.
“I thought maybe we’d get a bite to eat
before I take you home.
I want to make sure you’re okay.”
I nod. “Sure.”
And so we go inside.
He orders.
I sit.
When he sits down
across from me,
he says, “I’m sorry I didn’t put it together
at the beach that you were
that
Ava.”
“Sorry?”
“I just mean, you’re going through a lot.
And I should have been, you know,
more sensitive, or whatever.”
“Are you always so
nice?”
I ask.
He smiles.
And when I get goose bumps
all over my body
because of that smile
and I think about what
a terrible girlfriend I am to Jackson,
I start to cry
all over again.
My Nose Rejoices
It’s hard to cry
in a restaurant
with napkins
as tissues
and people staring.
But Lyric
comes over to sit beside me,
puts his arm around me,
and lets me bury my face
into his soft
baby blue t-shirt
that smells like
soap
and deodorant and
real,
live
boy.
A Real, Live Boy
Friend
When I finally pull away,
he looks down at me and says,
“You were pretty brave to go back there.
Do you want to talk about it?”
I shake my head.
“I think we need to change the subject or something.
Unless you like your shirt
really
damp.”
He laughs. “Okay.
We’ll talk about something else.
Let me get you something to drink.”
He comes back
with the order and some drinks,
and sits across from me again.
No more touching
the real
live
boy.
“So, I’m curious about Cali,” I say.
“Where did you two meet?”
“The bookstore.
Where I work.
Just a couple of weeks ago, actually.”
“Are you going out?”
“Nah.
I don’t really know her.
There’s this other girl I like.
But she won’t give me her number.
So, I guess we’ll just be friends.”
It makes me smile.
He smiles back,
and it feels like
we’ve been friends
forever.
A friend is good.
A girl can
never
have too many friends.
So Long, Again
He drives me home.
We say good-bye.
Nothing else really.
I don’t have to tell him.
He seems to understand
it’s just too soon.
It is.
And what I know
is this:
I have
Jackson.
But is Jackson
who I really
want?
Thinking Too Hard
I shouldn’t even be thinking that question,
but it keeps popping up.
It’s there
like a dull headache
that won’t go away.
I sit on the couch
and turn the TV on
and think about
my dilemma.
I still love him.
I will always love him.
But him is the Jackson I knew.
The walking,
talking,
breathing
Jackson.
I’m just not sure
I can wholly
and completely
with everything I am
be satisfied
loving
a ghost.
And then I feel the coldness.
“Jackson,” I whisper.
“You’re here.”
Can he hear my thoughts?
Does he know?
An image of Lyric
darts in.
I shake my head.
It doesn’t help.
What is
wrong
with me????
Forever in Debt
The thing is,
I owe it to Jackson
to be here
for him.
I owe him that much.
If it weren’t for
me
,
he wouldn’t even be a ghost.
Whatever he wants,
I have to give him.
It sounds
so
easy.
It should
be
easy!
But repaying a debt
means giving up things.
Making sacrifices.
If I sacrifice my heart
for Jackson,
will I be dead
too?
Normal Is Nice
Jackson sits with me.
He plays with the TV
from time to time,
making the channels turn.
At first it makes me smile.
Then it gets on my nerves.
Big time.
Because he can’t talk
like a normal guy.
He can’t hold hands
like a normal guy.
He can’t kiss
like a normal guy.
Unless it’s in my dreams,
and then we do those last two things.
But dreaming about them
isn’t the same
as actually
doing
them
and
experiencing
them.
All he can really
do
are the strange ghostly things
that let me know
he’s here.
Don’t worry, Jackson.
I know you’re here.
Believe me.
I know.
He flicks the gas fireplace on
even though it’s like ninety degrees outside.
“Jackson,” I yell,
“stop being so
weird.”
And then
it hits me like
a fast,
open-palmed,
stinging
SMACK
in the face.
Having a ghost
for a boyfriend
is
weird.
I Want to Know How
The phone rings
as Mom walks in the door
carrying pizza
for dinner.
“Are you okay?” asks Nick
when I pick up the phone.
For some reason,
it makes me laugh.
“Is that the only sentence you know?”
He doesn’t laugh.
“It just seemed like you were upset.
When I saw you earlier.”
“Yeah. I was.
But I’m okay.
Thanks, Nick.
I guess you’re not so bad after all.
And Krystal’s really cute.”
“She’s great.
You’d like her.”
He pauses for a second.
“You know, I didn’t want to let you go,” he says.
“I liked you a lot, and I’m sorry I hurt you.
I held on, hoping things might change.
Then New Year’s Eve gave me more hope.
I held on, longer than I should have.”
“So now you’ve let go?”
“Well, I still care about you.
But yeah, I think I finally have.”
“Was it hard?” I ask.
“Letting go?”
“Not as hard as holding on to something that wasn’t real.”
I gulp. “Can I ask how you did it?”
“I just decided, Ava.
That’s all.
I just decided.”
No Rest for the Weary
This time,
I stay awake.
I avoid sleep
like my life
depends on it.
And maybe,
life,
true life,
does depend on it.
If Jackson comes into a room,
I leave
and go
someplace else.
He follows me
more than he ever has before.
Maybe he senses
the uncertainty
that has crept
into my heart.
As always,
he leaves me alone
when Mom or Dad
are there.
At night,
I curl up
in the corner of their bedroom
and listen to
Dad’s faint snoring noises
and Mom’s soft breathing sounds
and wish
I could sleep
peacefully
like that.
But I’ve got to stay awake.
I’ve got to keep distance
between Jackson
and me.
Thanks, Mom
On Sunday,
I curl up
with Mom
on the couch
and we watch
Steel Magnolias
on TNT.
When I was younger,
I always
spent Sundays
with Mom.
She’d paint my toenails.
Braid my hair.
Rub my back.
Nothing extreme.
But
so
completely satisfying.
“This gets sad,” she says.
“I know. It’s okay.”
“You look tired.”
You’d look tired too
if you hadn’t slept a minute
in two whole days.
I lay down
with my head in her lap
and she strokes my hair.
“I wish I could make it better,” she whispers.
And as I drift to sleep, I think,
You are, Mom.
You are.
A Million Apologies
He is there,
in my dream,
but I don’t let him
touch me.
Not this time.
This time,
he has to let me say it.
“Jackson, do you know how sorry I am?
Do you know if I could change places with you, I would?”
He comes closer.
I step back.
“You have to listen to me,” I tell him.
“You have to understand.
It’s my fault,
and I’m
so
sorry.
So terribly sorry!
sorrysorrysorrysorrysorrysorry
sorrysorrysorrysorrysorrysorry
“Jackson, please forgive me.
Please!”
“It’s okay, Ava.
Ava?
AVA!?!?”
A Real—Life Nightmare
Mom is shaking me
and yelling my name
to wake me up.
“Ava, are you all right?
You were thrashing around and crying out
like someone was hurting you.”
“Mom, it hurts
so
much.
All of it.
I just want it to go away.”
I want to tell her
so
bad.
I want to tell her everything.
Except she won’t believe me.
Just like Cali didn’t believe me.
And if Mom and Dad
don’t believe me,
they’ll think I’m Crazy Girl
and send me away.
I sit up
and burst into tears
while I dissolve
into her arms.
“Shhhhhh,” she says
over
and over
again.
And then I know
there is something
I have to tell her.
I pull myself away and
look at her.
“It was my fault, Mom.
I dared him. What was I thinking? I wasn’t thinking.
Don’t you see?
He did it for me.”
Hard to Believe
I want to believe her
when she tells me
it wasn’t my fault
and that I have to stop
blaming myself.
She says, “It wasn’t you, Ava.
He made the choice.
Do you understand?
You did
not
push him off that ledge.”
I want to believe her
with every bone in my body.
But that is pretty much impossible
when every bone in my body
feels
so
incredibly
guilty.