Authors: Kelsey Sutton
After lunch,
someone new joins the class.
He stands up front,
fidgeting nervously,
and tells us about
life in New Orleans.
The boy is beautiful.
His voice is a soft drawl
that I could wrap around myself
like a blanket.
His face
is a story
waiting to be told.
Afterward,
as I gather my books,
he turns in my direction.
“Hi, I'm Matthew,” he says.
I glance over my shoulder.
Heart poundsâ
I realize
no one else is there,
he is looking at me.
Suddenly
I miss being invisible
yet suddenly
I never want
to be unseen again.
When I say nothing,
he asks for my name.
“Fain,” I whisper.
“Fain,” he repeats.
But I hardly hear him;
I am a balloon
filling with air and light,
floating up
and up
and up.
When I look down,
Matthew seems so small.
I hover in the air,
realize I want to hear the words
coming out of his mouth.
My feet touch the ground,
and it feels more solid
than ever before.
I am rushing,
whooshing over and under
this way and that
eager to escape the school walls
and get to the quarry.
I burst through the doors,
stop short at the sight
of Carl sitting on the lawn.
He looks so content,
even as everyone walks around him
like a current slipping past a stone.
He bends over his sketchbook,
drawing with such fervor
that the river of rumbling buses
and shouting students
doesn't hinder the strokes
of his pen.
I begin to take a step toward himâ
a car honks.
Carl closes his sketchbook,
stands,
hurries off.
I stand there,
alone on the shore,
and watch the waters run.
It is one thing
to be alone
because there's no alternative.
It is something else entirely
to choose this isolation.
I stand in the quarry,
gazing out at the water.
“How are you?” I shout
into the vastness.
“How are you?”
it screams back.
I don't know what to say,
not quite sure how I feel,
so I don't respond to the quarry's call.
In this place,
it's much easier
to believe that someday
I might have an answer.
I sit down
open my notebook
and write.
The scribbles of my pen
bring close everything
that is out of reach.
I write
about a girl
who is great at basketball.
I write
about a girl
who sits with others during lunch.
I write
about a girl
with a loud voice and a smile that beams.
I write
about a girl
who has no time or need
for solitude and quarries.
I write
about a girl
who demands to be seen.
These stories
might be realistic for some.
For me,
they're only fantasy.
She lies still;
the setting sun casts
a dark silhouette
onto the couch and floor.
“Mom?” I ask.
Silence
is her reply.
She's become a statue,
permanently frosted
like the winter glass.
Then a voice so faint,
as though it's folding
back inside of her
like a flower hiding from the cold:
“It's just so hard sometimes.”
“What is?” I ask.
Another second of quiet,
full of so much unsaid
that it feels as though
we're drowning.
Then Mom
utters a strange laugh,
disappears into her room.
She doesn't come back
with a rope or a life jacket.
I sink slowly into the depths.
That night I soar
through the ocean deep,
a world as powerful and blue
as a tear.
My hair
billows around my head
like golden seaweed.
Bubbles flow from my monsters' mouths
as they shriek and laugh and play.
“Treasure, treasure!” I know they are saying.
We are whale riders
explorers
hunters
until suddenly
we are not alone.
Mermaids croon in my ear,
voices soft as their scales are hard.
Together
we are a parade
of danger and beauty.
We swim to where
a ship waits for us,
buried in sand and time.
We explore every part of it,
grinning with excitement
when we find piles of gold coins
sparkling jewels.
Without greed or intent,
the mermaids and monsters and me
sift through the treasure,
watch it float around us,
rich and triumphant in every way.
Time seems to slow,
and I know
I'm running out of air.
The sun is coming;
I must return to the surface
where I belong.
After class on Monday,
Mrs. Olsen pulls me aside.
My story
rests quietly
in her hand.
She tells me about a contest
I should enter,
a magazine that publishes
the best short stories,
that I need a teacher to sponsor me,
she'd be happy to do it.
A lump grows
in my throat,
until I can hardly
ask the question
burning on the tip of my tongue.
“Is it really good enough?” I say
around the flames.
Mrs. Olsen
puts her fingers on my shoulder
and squeezes.
“No,” she answers.
“It's
better
.”
“Hi, Fain.”
The sound of that voice
jerks my head upward.
The pain
is worth it.
Matthew stands next to my tree,
smiling down at me,
shifting from foot to foot,
hair falling into his eyes.
“How are you?” he asks.
It feels like
I was born without a tongue.
I clutch my notebook tighter,
wish I was clever or dazzling
like Mary Mosley and her friends,
and mumble the answer he expects,
something shapeless and simple.
Matthew sits on the grass
without invitation,
startling me so badly
I almost run.
Matthew leans back,
closes his eyes.
I pretend to write,
steal glances at him through my lashes.
My heart races fast and loud;
I wonder if he hears it.
“What are you doing?”
Even though he's now the second person
to ask me this question,
I still feel the shock of it
his curiosity
his sincerity
in my bones.
“Writing,” I whisper.
He grins,
tells me that's cool,
and for the rest of lunch
we sit together,
talk about my stories.
Matthew confesses
his difficulty with writing and English.
“I can help with that,” I say
eagerly.
He grins again,
we both grow quiet.
He enjoys
the breeze,
I enjoy
the view.
But I keep wondering
why he would want to sit beside
someone like me?
Matthew turns his head,
catches me staring,
reads the confusion
on my face,
hears the unspoken question.
“They're just so loud,” he says,
glancing toward our peers
doing cartwheels on the lawn,
hiding their insecurities
behind cheer
laughter
superiority.
I smile,
almost tell him that if silence
is what he likes,
I'll never say another word.
The sky fills with gray
and I know
walking home
or to the quarry
would be foolish.
I call my mother;
she surprises me by answering.
I wait by the curb
until she pulls up
in a burst of smoke and sound.
Time alone with my mother
has always been rare.
Now, finally,
I have her attention.
I could ask her anything,
about the future or the past.
But all I want to mention
is the contest.
“Mom?” I say.
She takes a second too long
to respond.
A moment
is all it takes
to lose courage.
Without taking her eyes
off the road,
she says, “Yes?”
Even the growing darkness
can't hide the weariness
in her voice.
I give in,
hear myself ask her
what's for dinner.
“Macaroni,” she says.
I force an excited smile,
as if we haven't had it
twice already this week.
Then I turn my head away,
watch rain quiver
down the glass.
My brother asks for a snack,
so I walk to the fridge
open the door
bathe in its light.
Scant shelves
peer back at me,
begging to give them
purpose again.
I open a drawer,
find some forgotten fruit
green oranges
brown apples.
I feel a kinship
with these perishable things,
these foods that have waited,
been neglected for so long.
And I wonder
if my family knows
that when we're not careful
not quick enough
things will fall to rot and ruin
so far
so badly
they can't be saved.
I cut out the bad parts,
hand what's left of the apple
to little Peter.
He beams at me
as if it's the sweetest thing
he's ever tasted.
From our place
on the faded carpet,
Peter and I balance blocks.
The stillness is disrupted
by a rumbling of thunder
a trembling of everything.
I look to the window
but the sky is clear,
a serene shade of orange
that fades into pink.
My father bursts into the room
like a clap of lightning,
whooping and waving the phone around.
“I have an interview!” he shouts.
Without warning
he drops the phone
picks up Peter
grabs my hand
and begins to dance.
Mom stands in the doorway,
grumbles, “About time.”
Peter's tower
tumbles down.
Dad's hips swing
from side to side;
Mom looks on
without smile or cheer.
Hers is the face of lightning,
threatening to strike,
destroy our hope.
My lips twitch
with uncertainty
and Dad's eyes are so bright,
they are painful to look at.
But this storm of happiness
soon sweeps over me and Peter
until all three of us
are drenched.
We spin in dizzying circles,
and I secretly pray
we won't need an umbrella.
Tonight my friends
greet me with a request.
“Tell us a story,” they beg.
In my backyard
transformed to sandy beach
we sit in a circle
by the glinting sea,
listen to air whistling through the rocks.
“Once upon a time,” I begin,
because that's how the best stories
always begin,
“there was a girl.”
“You!”
“It's you!”
“The girl is you!”
“Shhh,” I say, grinning,
and tell them a story
of hope and trees and New Orleans.
As my mouth moves I gaze up at the moon,
thinking of how similar we are.
One side always hidden
while the other
shines so bright.
Every day this week
the boy from New Orleans sits with me.
His eyes are sunlight,
my stomach is a garden in bloom.
Sometimes our words
float light as air;
sometimes our quiet
sits heavy as stone.
There are days
we work on
his English homework,
sitting so close
our elbows nearly
touch.
Afterward
I am so full
of thoughts about Matthew,
the pages of my notebook
remain empty
in my lap.
After class the next day
I ask Mrs. Olsen
if she's heard anything from the magazine
about my story.
“Patience,” she says
with a wink.
Frustration bubbles up
inside me.
I want to tell her
that I'm tired of waiting,
that all I do is wait
for my peers to notice
for my family to hear
for the moon to rise.
It feels as though
I'll be withered and gray
by the time this wait is over.
But I smile at Mrs. Olsen
like nothing is wrong
and walk away.