Read Love Rewards The Brave Online
Authors: Anya Monroe
19.
Benji and I sit on a park bench
trying to “connect.”
A scheduled appointment is what our relationship has
become.
It’s not fair.
Being stared
at by a court-appointed adult
who watches us the entire time we talk.
God–– do I really need a babysitter at sixteen?
"So what’s been happening with you? You keep leaving me
hanging."
I ask a question he can't answer.
The answer is something too hard to transfer
to phonetic sounds and syllables
some sort of complicated lulls
in time and space.
And even if he could say why he acts this way
I know it would do no good,
not when the real question isn't
for him or me
or Ms. Francine.
Not for Terry or Jess-
It’s for the man and woman who left
a long time ago.
"At the group home, they're so hard on me. It’s like every time I try and do anything or go somewhere, they make me stay in my room. It sucks. I'm a prisoner, Lou. Take me with you. Please."
His knuckles crack as he shifts
his feelings to his fingers.
Hoping the sensation will make him
feel more alive
ready to dive
into this hard conversation.
"Benji, I wish I could. It just isn't time yet. And maybe mom will show up this month. And then things would change."
That makes him fidget
tap his fingers more
focus his eyes on the floor.
"Nothing’s gonna change, Lou-Lou. Not as long as we sit here waiting on them. Why are you being such a bitch about it? We could just leave. No one would ever need to know where we went. We could be a family again."
I flinch when he calls me out
for not being the person he needs.
As if I’m choosing this life-long reprieve
from normal.
I WANT NORMAL.
I don't want to be living with Ms. Francine.
But I have something Benji never got.
The understanding that sometimes
the life you are living
is your lot.
"Benji, I'm not picking anything or anyone but you. I
want
to be with you. That’s why you need to do your best and be real good and then they’ll let you live with me again, in Ms. F's house."
I want to believe in him.
But I know the way he’s knocked over the tables
in the social worker’s office.
I know how school won't let him come back because
he’s a learning disturbance.
I know that at twelve years old
the only time he was told
NO
and accepted it
was from me.
Scratch that.
NO is not a part of our history.
We were always taught to say
YES.
20.
He’s scratching his face now.
Fighting hard to breathe now.
Screaming about the way it used to be now.
And the lady at the park
the one who watches our moves
and makes us talk in whispers
so she will approve
is making her way to the bench on which we sit.
Making her way through the sand
to tell him it’s time to go.
I just wish she’d see
that he’d do so much better if
you just let him have his fit.
Let him get all those feelings out
instead of making him push them back down.
Way down.
We get in the car.
Benji screaming at everything.
Because he can't handle
anything
the truth
that he’s alone
And that everyone left him
to stand on his own.
Own two feet.
He doesn't believe he can
bear the weight of his body.
So instead
he
crumbles.
21.
Ms. Francine is in the kitchen when I get home.
"How was your time with Benji?"
She asks in the sort of way
that makes you feel
like she already knows the whole deal.
The whole story from someone else's mouth.
Like someone is in more control
of you
than you are.
It makes me feel like I’m living
behind prison bars.
"Benji was Benji. But, um, I was wondering if maybe he could come stay for a few days. Like, over a weekend?"
"I don't know, Louisa. I know his caseworker has been pushing for him to return to a foster home, but I just don't know if here is the best place for him."
"Whatever. I know you don't like him anyways."
"That isn't what I mean at all. I work and he can't be left alone unsupervised."
"Fine."
I finish eating my buttered peas
and listen to her talk about the library’s
new book fees
and how her Tai-Chi
class was cancelled.
All I want is this night to be cancelled.
I go out on a limb for him.
Try and make it good for him
right for him
and somehow
that mostly means getting shot down
and it makes me wonder
if he’s right.
Maybe we should just
leave
retreat
otherwise we
will always live in
defeat.
And I want more than that.
For him
and me
and my family.
22.
It’s always the same.
I show up at the office where Mom is supposed to be.
Right time, right place,
trying hard to get a steady look upon my face.
It never works out well.
And there’s one thing I’m feeling sick of:
showing up
right time, right place
and leaving the office
sixty minutes later with a sad look
on my trying-hard-to-be ready
steady
face.
But today it’s different.
She’s there before I arrive.
She has makeup on
her hair clearly
curled.
She looks like the mother I remember
when I was a very little
girl.
The mother I remember before everything
decided to
unfurl.
“Louisa,” Mom says.
I can tell the inflection
is forced.
I look at the social worker sitting in the corner
waiting.
For me?
“Honey, your dad couldn’t be here today, but I’m here. For you.”
As she says it I want to scream.
Scream so loud
so someone
will hear.
But all I do is look at her
in the hollow empty way I hate about myself
and say
nothing.
I stand there
for what seems
like never ending moments of eternity
and I wonder where are her feelings of
maternity?
23.
My father isn’t
“Busy.”
He’s incarcerated.
Terry told me about the petition
and the filing
and termination
of his rights.
He couldn’t show up here if he wanted to.
Not that he does.
Not that my mother would remember
the twelve months straight he never went to a meeting.
An appointment.
He’s what I call a
disappointment.
Never once did he
make a phone call
to the people who could
Help
Him
Help
Us.
Not like I want
anyone’s help
to see him.
Him: the man who made my life a living hell.
Him: the man who spent his life making me promise not to tell.
Tell the truth about what happened
in the bedrooms of our house.
Tell the truth that it was the very definition
of abuse.
He made me promise to keep his secrets.
I knew what he’d do if I told.
He’d hold my throat
hold my neck
until I was gasping for breath
then let me fall to the floor
where I’d lay
until morning.
That is, unless he decided that that night
he wanted to
play hide and seek
with my most private parts.
And no, I’m not talking about my heart.
Terry always asks me
to tell her what it was like.
She wants me to open up and say the things
I
was
told
for
a
decade
not
to
mention.
Not to whisper.
Not to tell a soul.
Even if I wanted to
tell Terry or Ms. Francine the truth
about the things
that happened in the dark
that happened when the lights went out
and the moon was out
I couldn’t.
The paralyzing fear of what would
or could
happen if I utter
the sounds
that turn into words.
I would
always be scared
to turn around
because
he
might
be
waiting for me.
24.
But I don’t say that to my mom,
she sits here expectantly.
Waiting for me.
She makes the first move.
“Louisa, I’m getting things sorted out. I’m getting a place of my own and the judge, he says I’m doing well, you know, better.”
Better?
Does she know how low the bar was to start with?
Does she remember the
ways she repeatedly broke my heart?
Does she remember
the days in the foster home I waited?
Benji waited.
For her to come for us?
What am I supposed to do
or say to that?
Just because a court didn’t find her guilty for the abuse
just because a court chose to point the finger at someone else
I’m supposed to believe she’s innocent?
“Say something, Lou-Lou,” she says to me. “Don’t you want us to be a family again?”
Again?
My heart knows
what my voice can’t say:
We. Never. Were.
Still, my voice says, “Okay.”