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    Far From You

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      She will use

      the flashlight

      to find a sheltered spot

      where she can sleep

      for the night.

      She will

      think of us,

      and that will keep her strong.

      She will

      miss feeling her baby in her arms,

      and that will push her on.

      She will

      find help tomorrow,

      and that will get us home.

      still breathing

      In the middle

      of the night

      the bitter cold

      took hold of us,

      squeezing us so tightly,

      I shivered in pain.

      The car

      was dead

      again.

      As I cuddled with Ivy

      in the sleeping bag,

      trying to keep her warm,

      I thought of Cobain,

      my oxygen tank.

      God, I missed him.

      I missed his warm, silky fur,

      his smelly dog kisses,

      but most of all,

      the way he calmed me.

      I tried to pretend

      he was there with us.

      I breathed.

      She breathed.

      I breathed.

      She breathed.

      My hand

      stroked her little head

      full of dark hair.

      She let out a big sigh,

      and although I couldn’t see her

      in the blackness of the night,

      I knew she was calm.

      And with that

      realization

      came another one.

      It wasn’t

      about me

      anymore.

      a light

      Drifting in and out of sleep,

      I heard a soft voice

      whisper my name.

      I sat up,

      startled to hear something

      aside from Ivy’s

      baby noises.

      A soft,

      glowing light

      appeared

      outside.

      I squinted my eyes,

      straining to see

      who or what

      it was.

      Was it Victoria,

      coming back?

      I couldn’t tell,

      but the light

      floated closer to me,

      literally floating

      through the nighttime air.

      An intense feeling

      of comfort

      and warmth

      washed over me,

      as if God himself

      had joined us.

      I longed

      to be closer.

      But as I reached down

      to open the door,

      the light disappeared,

      leaving us in the

      cold,

      lonely

      darkness

      once again.

      all alone

      No.

      Victoria!

      Don’t leave me.

      Oh God,

      no.

      Am I all

      Ivy

      has left?

      what was it?

      An angel.

      Coming to check on us.

      Coming to check on

      her baby.

      It’s all

      that makes

      sense.

      I stayed awake

      last night,

      with only my memories

      to keep me company,

      waiting for her

      to return.

      She never did.

      part 2

      with angels we will fly

      day four, continued

      Like the North Star,

      ever present in the sky,

      regret shines brightly

      in my soul.

      That regret,

      combined with the recent events,

      make me cry and cry

      until there are

      no tears left.

      As I look back

      over the past weeks,

      I wish I could change

      so many things.

      But I can’t.

      The past is gone.

      Uncertainty

      about tomorrow

      hangs in the air,

      now even more noticeable

      than the cold.

      I hold Ivy close,

      thinking of her mother,

      wanting to believe

      last night

      didn’t happen,

      and that she’s still out there,

      alive and well.

      But I know it happened,

      as sure as I know

      there is only one thing

      we can do

      now.

      I whisper into Ivy’s ear,

      “Take it one minute at a time.

      That’s all we can do.

      Hang on one minute at a time.”

      really empty

      I fasted at church one time

      for twenty-four hours

      to raise money

      for the local food pantry.

      They wanted us to know

      what it feels like

      to have that pain deep inside you

      and no way to make it stop.

      Of course,

      that was ridiculous

      because we did make it stop

      at the end of the twenty-four hours

      when we had a huge

      pizza fest.

      But now I really know

      what it feels like.

      And it sucks.

      A lot.

      I think of Vic,

      who was out there,

      stomach gurgling

      as she walked alone

      in the frigid air.

      And I know

      I’ve got

      nothing

      to complain about.

      are you there, God?

      Luckily

      I’m able to get the car

      started again.

      I decide

      I can’t turn

      it off

      anymore.

      It must stay on

      until every last drop

      of

      gas

      is

      gone.

      Please let someone find us today.

      Before it’s too late.

      a glove-box breakfast

      Desperate to find

      something else to eat,

      I empty the

      glove compartment,

      hoping some food

      will magically appear.

      A pile of napkins

      proves my theory

      that Dad has a

      serious addiction

      to Jamba Juice.

      I find two packets of ketchup

      and an old, green Life Savers candy.

      It’s not coffee and doughnuts,

      but I’ll take it.

      After I suck the ketchup

      out of the packets,

      I reach for my

      tasty dessert,

      only to

      d

      r

      o

      p

      the candy

      between the seat

      and the center console.

      I push my hand

      deeper and deeper,

      oblivious to the pain.

      I want to laugh at

      the irony

      of feeling like

      my life is dependent

      on a candy called

      Life Savers.

      coming undone

      I can’t reach it,

      no matter how hard I try,

      and the tears come

      because I want that candy

      so damn bad.

      The wave

      of emotion

      grows

      bigger and bigger,

      becoming a

      tsunami

      as I pound the seat

      with my fist

      over


      and over

      and over

      and over

      and over,

      harder

      and harder

      and harder

      and harder

      and harder,

      until my hand hurts

      and I SCREEEEEEEAAAAM

      from the pain

      of the moment

      and all of the

      horrific,

      painful moments

      leading up to this one.

      When my screams

      become more of a whimper,

      I hear Ivy bawling,

      and look back

      to see her

      bright red face,

      and her whole body

      shaking.

      And suddenly

      it’s all too much,

      and I wonder

      if we shouldn’t just

      GO.

      Maybe we would find help.

      Maybe we would make it.

      Maybe it’s the only chance we have.

      I scoop her up

      and sit in the front seat,

      rocking her back and forth,

      back and forth,

      back and forth,

      talking as I rock.

      “Should we go, baby?

      Should we?

      Would we be okay?

      Would we?

      I don’t know what to do.

      What do I do?

      Stay here and die?

      Go out there and die?

      What?

      WHAT SHOULD I DO?”

      The weight of everything

      is so much,

      I can’t even hold us up

      anymore.

      I crumble to the

      cramped space

      in front of the seat,

      both of us

      crying

      shaking

      broken-hearted

      fed up

      ready

      to be rid

      of it all

      for good.

      it’s a deal

      In a ball

      curled up

      holding tight

      feeling sad

      praying hard

      feeling mad

      making plans

      feeling bad

      reaching deep

      underneath the seat

      trying

      one

      last

      time.

      If I get it,

      we stay.

      If I don’t,

      we go.

      deals were meant to be broken

      My hand

      touches something.

      Something bigger

      than a Life Savers candy.

      Something better

      than a Life Savers candy.

      A true

      lifesaver.

      The car’s cigarette lighter.

      ignited

      I use my

      sock-covered hands

      to carve out

      a place

      in the snow.

      When the orange light

      touches the paper napkin,

      it creates a flicker of a flame,

      which creeps up the side,

      somewhat hesitantly,

      but still, it moves,

      until finally

      the flame

      grows larger.

      Slowly I add more napkins,

      pine needles,

      and wrapping paper.

      It smolders,

      burns,

      and finally,

      ignites.

      Fire.

      I quickly collect sticks

      and sprinkle them

      with brandy.

      The fire crackles

      and grows,

      bigger still.

      More sticks.

      More brandy.

      I search the car

      for burnable items.

      My eyes

      land on the book,

      and I think,

      there must be

      something bigger.

      The stool is there,

      full of memories

      and dreams,

      ready to create more

      in the coming

      years.

      I reach for it,

      hesitation swirling

      through my fingertips.

      How can I turn

      those dreams

      into ashes?

      And yet,

      do I have

      any other choice?

      A child

      without a stool

      is much better

      than

      a stool

      without

      a child.

      in the eyes of the beholder

      Orange and red flames

      dance cheek-to-cheek,

      making me want to dance,

      and so I do.

      I twirl,

      twist,

      jump,

      yelling while I do,

      “Take that, you freaking frosted monster!”

      For the first time,

      I am controlling

      the monster

      more than it’s

      controlling me.

      I search for something

      that will create

      lots of smoke.

      Smoke that

      will reach the sky

      and let people know

      we are here.

      I spy

      the small pile

      of used diapers

      by the tree trunk.

      Underneath the

      big fir branches,

      they’ve stayed fairly dry.

      One by one,

      they’re thrown into

      the snapping

      flames.

      Dark,

      gray

      smoke

      floats

      to the sky.

      Ugly to many.

      So very

      beautiful

      to me.

      what’s in a name

      I watch the fire burn

      from inside the car,

      my warm breath

      creating a foggy spot

      on the window.

      I write my name

      with my fingertip,

      like I did

      when I was little.

      A L I C E

      It’s then I notice

      the word

      “ice”

      in my name.

      How

      appropriate.

      lost

      As the fire burns,

      Alice

      and the Caterpillar

      and the White Rabbit

      keep us company.

      My mother

      told me her favorite part

      of the book one time,

      but I can’t remember

      what it was.

      I flip

      the pages,

      looking,

      searching

      for a piece of my mother

      in the story.

      It feels

      hopeless.

      As I watch

      the sun

      slip away

      for the night,

      and the flames

      of the fire fade,

      hopelessness

      is

      a

      feeling

      more

      and

      more

      familiar

      to

      me.

      I reach

      for my guitar.

      My constant companion

      through the sad and lonely times.

      As I think of Victoria,

      my dad, and Blaze,

      the hopelessness is so strong,

      I can taste it.

      My fingers strum,

      and I hum a tune.

      There are no words

      for what I’m feeling

      inside.

      Smoke

      and music

      fill the air.

      There is

      no choice.

     
    In the morning

      they’ll be one,

      rising together

      to create

      a beautiful

      melody

      called

      Hope.

      by the numbers

      VICTORIA:

      one bottle of water

      four layers of clothes

      ten frozen fingers and toes

      forty-eight hours of icy hell

      US:

      one fire burning

      two warm bodies in the sleeping bag

      six bottles of formula

      forty pages of Alice in Wonderland

      Numbers don’t lie.

      She should have stayed with us.

      We made a mistake.

      A mistake

      we will all pay for

      one million times over.

      I am…

      Tired

      of the

      cold

      Tired

      of the

      hunger

      Tired

      of the

      deadly

      silence

      I am

      so

      very

      tired

      I

      want

     


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