Read Love Rewards The Brave Online
Authors: Anya Monroe
41.
Jodie Lynn Cratchett
found them
both.
Both crying.
Both scared.
Two little boys not knowing how the world
could be so cruel
as to not prepare
them for this kind of pain.
Both broken.
Both bending
in two
as they sat so confused
about what had just happened.
42.
After that Jodie Lynn Cratchett
closed up shop.
We were her only form of employment,
but the kids had to go
someplace else.
She was “traumatized.”
Not really understanding that
Benji was just a kid
confused
a boy beaten by his dad,
not knowing what to use
when his fists stopped giving him the
feeling he sought after so much abuse.
43.
I ended up at Ms. Francine’s.
A far cry from toddlers and chores.
Benji wasn’t so lucky.
No home would take a boy like him
had to protect the other kids.
So he went to a group home
lock down
alarm bells
no one to hurt
no one to hold
him
if he cried out at night
from the nightmares
that clouded his
life-long
fears.
And Samuel?
I can only pray
to a God
I have no faith in
got no reason
to believe in.
I hold out hope
to this day
that he got out
okay
alive.
44.
The Christmas tree gets cut down
after many
talks on the best
sizeheightvariety.
I’m mostly trying
hard
to
be
noncommittal.
Because every time
I seem to act
involved
Benji chooses that moment to
withdraw
himself from the
situation
conversation
which makes me feel like
I’m doing everything wrong.
Like he needs me to stay strong.
And to him that means
Us against Them.
It means walls up
guard up
made up
our minds to be
One
Won.
The thing is
the real thing is
that I like
cutting down a tree with Margot
and Ms. Francine.
And every time I let my walls
down
or guard
down,
Benji
thinks
I’ve let him down.
45.
“Let’s go for a walk,” I say as soon as we get back to the house.
Ms. Francine’s looking
for the decorations.
And even though
their tradition seems fun
to me,
I know Benji’s too angry
to participate
and not willing to fake
his enjoyment
any longer.
The street’s empty.
The November air
turns my breath white
my hands clasp tight
ly
to one another.
“Benji, are you having a good time here? You like Ms. Francine’s?”
“Yeah, she’s cool, Lou-Lou. I mean, you know, for someone getting paid to take care of you.”
“Well, yeah, it’s better than Jodie’s house.”
“No shit. I hated being there.”
Benji speaks with such authority,
like, over me.
This sense of superiority.
“Yeah, I like Ms. F a lot better. She has nice friends and seems, you know, put together. Like a grownup.”
I say that because I mean it.
Ms. F is different from anything
I’ve ever known before.
But saying it out loud
makes me feel like a whore.
You know, someone who’s been going around
looking for the best opportunity.
Possibility.
“She’s fine and all, Lou-Lou, but we have to get out of here. The place I’m at–– you’ve been there. It sucks.”
“That’s what I wanted to talk to you about. I saw mom the other day. She looked good. Better.”
“So? Why are you telling me this?”
His eyes go black,
like he was expecting
or hoping
wishing
or wanting
me to say something
different.
“Benji, she’s getting her shit together. She’s going to get us back. We can be a family again.”
“Did you tell her you wanted that?”
“Well, yeah. I told her we both did.”
Benji takes out a cigarette.
Lights it up with a yellow flame.
The air suddenly charged with
blame.
“Where did you get that? I thought Ms. F took them away?”
Why is my baby boy,
my little Benji Boy,
acting so big and tough?
Where’s my
chubby
fingers
kiss
me goodnight
as I wipe his wet
tear-stained
cheeks lullaby
boy?
“You gonna start telling me what do, Lou-Lou? What’s your problem?”
“I thought you’d be happy. Excited or something. What’s
your
problem?”
He storms off
cuts through the neighbor’s yard.
Jumps over a fence
and then I can’t trace
him against
the gray
backdrop
anymore.
Calling out
his name
to the night sky
makes no difference.
He can’t hear anything
over his decided
ignorance
to the fact
I tried so hard
to make him happy.
46.
Ms. F is pissed.
And rightfully so.
It was on her watch that
he ran
away
from me on the street
away
from her house
and that means
she’s the one
deemed
responsible for
the paperwork and
the phone calls.
As the social worker
and caseworker
and who the hell
knows what else kind of worker
goes to find
Benji.
The evening
becomes middle of the night
becomes morning.
47.
“So you really have no clue why he just up and left like that?”
Margot asks as she cooks me breakfast.
Ms. F left to take Benji’s
bag of clothes
to his new
temporary home.
Back to the place they took him
after the cops found him at
4:30 am
on the side of the road
after everyone spent the night
stressed out
put out
bent out
of shape
because a twelve-year-old boy
in the custody
of the state
is not the kind
they want missing.
“I don’t wanna talk about it okay?”
And I don’t.
I know I have an appointment
with Terry on Monday
and I know that will be bad enough.
Relaying the facts of the
conversation
giving a good enough
explanation.
I wasn’t about to say
anymore than I needed to.
“Okay, we can talk about something else.” Margot shrugs, easily. “Do you think I should dye my hair black?”
She smiles at me.
I have no clue
how to read this
girl
woman.
I smile anyway.
“It’d look cool. I mean, especially with your green eyes.”
“I’m pretty sick of bleaching it out so much. Black seems easier.”
“My friend, Jess, she’s super good at dying hair. She’s the one who does mine.”
“Does she live nearby?” Margot asks with a sly grin.
Like we’re doing something
we shouldn’t.
Committing a sin.
But we all know
coloring your hair
is not what hell-bent girls are made of.
At least not entirely.
48.
By the time the color is bought
and Jess comes over
and a dripping wet Margot is
laughing in the bathroom,
Ms. F returns.
She comes up with her phone
and takes pictures
of us as we strike
our best
glamour girl poses.
We sit around waiting
for the minutes to pass
for the color to set.
Jess becomes enamored
by everything Margot.
Like her job at the 6-Spot
the only record
store in town.
Asking questions about her
sleeve of tattoos.
Jess showing off her own
hoping to hear something
new
about how awesome it is
and how she picked something cool
for a girl so young.
But Margot
doesn’t do any of that.
Margot is almost too
cool
to
say something
so
typical.
Margot asks Jess questions about
Markus
and why she likes him.
Jess squirms a bit in her chair
while I laugh
knowing the truth behind the no-good answer.
That it mostly starts with a booty
and ends with a call.
Just when I start to regret
having Jess come over
because I’m scared it’s going to be
all about her
and never about me
(just thinking that way makes me feel gross)
that’s when Margot stops
and grabs a brush
and she starts smoothing out
my hair.
I don’t know why
the moment she
pulls my hair up with her hands
and starts brushing through
the strands
as we stand looking in the mirror
at one another
why it’s that moment
that makes my
heart
feel
seen?
But it does.
And by the time Margot dries her hair
and Jess cuts her bangs
a little crooked on purpose
so that they look just right
it’s like
last night never happened
and that
these two
have been a part of my life
since
day one.