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    Ghosting

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      And people around me

      try to do it for me.

      I even yelled at Bobby once for that,

      which made me feel like shit afterward.

      Getting the car with hand controls

      made a big difference.

      I mastered it pretty quick

      and right away felt more independent.

      And I’m still good at faking most people out,

      in order to get what I want.

      The main thing I want right now is to numb the pain

      and I figured out a good way to do that.

      The only other thing

      I care about is Bobby.

      Don’t want him freaked out by

      his crippled big brother.

      So he’s my first passenger

      in the new nifty handicapped car.

      I can feel him watching me closely

      as I work the hand controls.

      I take him to his favorite fast-food place,

      drive-through, which is a godsend for crips.

      We sit in the car, munching french fries.

      And it feels good.

      I wanted to go to the hospital, Bobby says suddenly.

      It’s okay, I start to say, but he interrupts.

      Dad didn’t let me.

      I think about that.

      And I guess Dad was protecting Bobby.

      Which could be the one thing

      that he and I agree about.

      I think Dad was hoping he could make me better before you saw me, I say. But it turned out he couldn’t.

      But you’re going to be okay, right? Bobby asks.

      Yeah, I say, with a reassuring grin. Not exactly what I was planning. But I’m good.

      Are you still going to college?

      Dunno, I say. You need some more fries?

      He shakes his head. I heard you tell your girlfriend once that you really wanted to go to college in Colorado.

      You did? I ask, surprised.

      Yeah, he says, and I think you still should, even if you can’t ski anymore.

      I reach for his fries.

      ’Sides, Bobby says, persistent as ever, I looked it up on the Internet and there is some way people in wheelchairs can still ski.

      I feel some weird lump in my throat,

      like I may throw up or cry.

      That’s bullshit, I say, my voice coming out rough and angry.

      Bobby shuts his mouth then,

      looking at me with a confused expression.

      I swallow hard,

      trying to dislodge the lump.

      I’m sorry, Bobby. It’s just that sometimes I get tired of all the pretending, I say.

      I wasn’t, he protests. I did see it on the Internet.

      I’m sure you did, I say, feeling suddenly exhausted.

      So, he says, his words halting, does this mean you won’t be taking me ice-skating this winter?

      Before, when I wasn’t in this chair,

      ice-skating was one of our favorite things to do.

      We’d go every winter,

      just the two of us.

      No, I mean, yes, of course, I’ll take you ice-skating, I say, forcing enthusiasm I don’t feel. Are you kidding.? I wouldn’t miss it.

      His face lights up and we high-five,

      me with a big fake smile on my face.

      Like I’ve just made a promise

      I intend to keep.

      Tuesday, November 16

      MAXIE

      Ever since

      that night

      I’ve been going to

      the hospital,

      regularly,

      to visit Felix.

      Still in a coma,

      hooked up to machines.

      I sit by his bed

      and read to him.

      Felix’s mom is there a lot.

      She’s very friendly,

      likes to chat,

      and I learn that

      Felix’s dad came home

      from Afghanistan

      right after the shooting.

      But then he went back

      when it looked like

      Felix wasn’t going to wake up

      soon.

      She says he had to go

      because they need the money.

      She’s had to quit her job

      to be with Felix.

      But she seems okay,

      strong even.

      Not the depressed mom from before

      who couldn’t get her act together

      to pay bills

      and cook meals.

      Now she’s more like the mom

      I remember from when we were

      kids.

      When his mom isn’t there

      I read to Felix.

      At first I read him

      random things,

      like homework

      assignments, but then

      I remember

      those Joey Pigza books,

      his favorites

      from 5th grade.

      I get all four books

      from the library

      and after I finish

      the first one,

      I decide to read them

      all straight through.

      And I begin to have this

      superstitious belief

      that Felix will wake up

      when I come to

      the last word of

      the last book.

      I get my hopes up

      way too high.

      And keep looking at him

      after practically every sentence

      during that last chapter.

      But he doesn’t

      wake up.

      The machines just keep

      whirring.

      So I pick up the very first book

      and start over,

      from the beginning.

      Tuesday, November 30

      EMMA

      One afternoon I go to

      visit Brendan and he is

      playing a video game.

      It’s the kind where you

      track people down

      and shoot them.

      I can’t believe he’d want to play

      a game like that, not after

      that night.

      Seeing the splattered blood,

      hearing the muted death cries,

      makes me feel sick.

      I struggle to tune it out,

      cold sweat prickling my skin.

      I ask how his Thanksgiving was.

      It was okay, he says. Though I passed when it came to the whole what-have-we-got-to-be-thankful-for routine. For obvious reasons. Patting the arm of his wheelchair, he gives me a sweet, dimpled smile.

      Then he blasts a guy in a tan raincoat

      and blood fountains out onto the sidewalk.

      My breathing gets ragged. I want to go.

      But I find myself wondering;

      is Brendan imagining that each of these

      guys he’s blowing away is Walter Smith?

      Before that night I would have asked him,

      I would have made him tell me

      what’s really going on with him.

      But I can’t now. And I don’t know why,

      except I think it’s because I’m afraid,

      afraid of what I’ll hear.

      Brendan sets down

      the game controller and

      wheels himself around to face me.

      So, Emma, he says, looking me straight in the eye, it’s really nice of you to make the effort to come see me. It’s more than a lot of kids have done. And I do really appreciate it and all. But I’ve been thinking, it’d be better for me, if you didn’t, anymore.

      I stare at him.

      I’m sorry to be so blunt, but I . . . I mean I guess it’s just not working anymore. Guess I need time.

      Okay, I mumble, if that’s how you feel.

      It is, he says, picking up the controller again.

      Brendan, I blurt out, are you okay?

      Which, the minute I say it,

      sounds so unbelievably


      lame.

      He looks at me,

      and his mouth twists up into

      a smile.

      And for a minute I see something dark,

      a deep black rage,

      underneath that smile.

      Then he just turns back to his video game

      and blasts some guy in a cowboy hat

      to hell.

      Thursday, December 2

      MAXIE

      It’s a quiet Thursday afternoon

      and it must be somebody’s birthday

      because a couple of

      Mylar balloons are bobbing

      over the nurses’ station.

      And a dark-haired nurse

      gives me a cheery smile

      as I walk by.

      Felix looks the same as usual,

      the right side of his face

      swathed in gauze,

      covering his

      missing eye.

      The machines are whirring away,

      the IV bottle doing its continual

      dripping thing.

      I sit down,

      staring at the steady

      rise and fall

      of his chest,

      and suddenly I am

      overcome with

      sadness.

      What if Felix

      never

      wakes up?

      Tears prick at my eyes

      and, determined not

      to cry,

      I pick up Joey Pigza,

      and start where I left off

      the day before.

      Then I come to

      one of my favorite bits,

      when Joey Pigza’s dad talks

      about the bad stuff he

      did in the past when

      he was

      drinking

      too much.

      Joey’s dad says, “My past. . . gets sort of scary and ugly and to tell you the truth I’d just rather have, you know, the new times to talk about. The now times. I’d rather just show you Storybook Land and play baseball and work on making new memories.”

      And I can’t help thinking about

      my dad

      and his beers this summer and

      also about

      Felix’s dad

      and what he did to Felix’s mom,

      and then about MoonBuzz and

      the bad things that happened

      that night.

      And I begin to start wondering

      if there can ever

      be any

      new now times

      to replace the

      old bad ones.

      Tears come.

      Blinking them back,

      I take a few deep breaths

      and start reading again.

      But all of a sudden

      I hear

      a little

      noise.

      I automatically look

      at the machines

      hooked up to Felix

      to see if something is

      wrong,

      but they’re all

      humming along,

      same as usual.

      Then I look at Felix

      and his eyelid,

      the one that isn’t

      covered with bandages,

      is

      twitching

      all over

      the place,

      which I’ve never seen

      it do before.

      Then the noise

      comes again

      and I see his mouth

      move

      and that the noise

      is a little grunt

      coming from

      HIM.

      My heart starts

      hammering.

      Felix?

      FELIX

      joey pigza and i are walking down the sidewalk, past bonnie’s sweet shop, and he’s bouncing along, like a springy crazy rubber ball, like he might bounce himself straight up to the sky.

      but i pull him back down, and tell him we need to talk, about what happened, and he turns to me, all serious, and says he doesn’t want to talk about the past.

      The past is messed up, Joey, he says.

      i get confused because i’m not joey, he is.

      but then he’s telling me about his drinking, about how when he drinks too much he does stupid stuff. and now i’m really confused, because he’s not joey, and i’m not joey. instead, he’s my dad, or else he’s joey’s dad.

      then he says:

      I’m sorry.

      and that’s when i wake up.

      MAXIE

      Felix is really groggy

      and confused,

      like he has no idea

      why he’s in

      the hospital.

      Max? he says in a hoarse raspy voice.

      Yeah, Felix, I say, my heart ready to burst out of my chest.

      I know I should be calling

      the nurse,

      or

      Felix’s mom,

      but for

      just this moment

      I want to gaze back into

      that open,

      wide-awake,

      no-more-coma

      eye.

      Then,

      even though it’s like

      a line out of

      a dumb movie,

      I can’t help myself

      and say,

      with a big, beaming

      smile on my face,

      Welcome back, Felix.

      And guess what.

      Felix looks at me

      and smiles.

      Friday, December 10

      FELIX

      when i woke up my whole body ached. and my vision was weird. i couldn’t figure out for a while that it was because my right eye was gone.

      mom went nuts when she came in the hospital room and saw i was awake. and max’s smile couldn’t have been any wider. so even though my body felt weak and useless, like all my muscles had been vaporized, it still felt good, to be back.

      here’s the amazing thing, though. i have no memory of that night. zero. zilch.

      i remember getting high in the suv outside that party, hearing anil’s telescope story and max talking about her day at the beach with the sea glass and sandcastle. but after that, nothing.

      mom and the doctors didn’t tell me right away what happened. just said there had been an accident. i assumed it was a car accident. but when i got stronger, when i wasn’t so freaked out about my eye, mom told me the whole story.

      it was unreal. didn’t even sound familiar, or like it could actually be true. i mean, i believed her. i had to. but faith almost dying, brendan in a wheelchair, and a guy named walter smith in jail awaiting trial, i couldn’t wrap my mind around it.

      the doctors said that my amnesia about that night was completely to be expected. and that most likely i’d never remember any of it. it kind of bothered me to have this big fairly crucial chunk of my life be missing, along with my eye. but max said i was lucky.

      max even said she’d give anything to have that night wiped from her memory, forever. and seeing the pain in her face, i realized that maybe i am lucky.

      at least about that.

      CHLOE

      “One Thing I Wish I Hadn’t Seen”

      When I’m doing

      my volunteer shift

      at the hospital

      sometimes I spot

      Brendan in his wheelchair,

      arriving for, or leaving after,

      outpatient rehab.

      One day I see him chatting up

      Suzie, this cute young nurse

      with curly brown hair.

      They’re laughing

      and flirting and

      I’m thinking it’s really nice

      to see Brendan smiling

     


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