Authors: Kristin Elizabeth Clark
                  Centering
                  Centering
                  Centering
                  “C'mon, it'll be fun. Please?
                  Two blind mice doesn't make sense.”
Julie, Tanya, and I
have always
coordinated costumes.
When we were younger,
the three little pigs,
the three bears.
In high school we evolved.
Charlie's Angels,
the Three Musketeers.
Now we're regressing to the three blind mice?
“SorryâI promised Brendan
I'd go to Andy's party.”
And I'm not telling her but
I already bought my costume:
ooh la la, French maid.
Sexier than a hooded sweatshirt,
sunglasses, and a rope tail for sure.
            Julie rolls her eyes.
            “Of course you promised
Brendan
âI
            guess we'll do something else.”
                    Centering.
                    Centering.
                    Centering.
“Meet us at Andy's?”
The invite for showâout of guilt
because if all works out
we won't be there for very long.
            The clay
on the wheel goes
                        a little        side
                                            ways.
                                        “Whatever.” She's
                                        already turning away.
                                        “We'll see.”
At Home with Trick-or-Treaters at the Door
I grab keys to the Beamer,
hoping to escape while
Mom gives Snickers
to a warlock and a ninja.
She shouldn't get a good look
at what I'm wearing.
Her fashion sense
is more L.L.Bean than Ooh La La.
      (And for some crazy reason
      my dad doesn't seem to mind.
      So much for the widely touted
      French sense of styleâ
      I'd say he just left it behind
      when he moved to the U.S.
      but somehow he's managed
      to keep it for himself.)
            “Not too late!” Mom calls.
Pretending not to hear
is what I do best.
I'm picking up Brendan
and even though we've been together a long time
my rib cage has that great fizzy, funny feeling.
I've liked him since
I was a freshman.
He's a year olderâand the only wrestler
who was nice to me when I joined the team.
I've loved him since
I was a sophomore.
I got my license that Septemberâ
wasn't supposed to drive
anyone else for six months.
Oops.
Two weeks after I got it
I saw Brendan hunching
toward the bus stop,
his Miller Prep uniform
damp with October rain.
I offered him a ride.
We got to his house,
sat in the car for another hour
talking about
               everything.
He called when I got home
and we talked for three more.
He knows my secrets.
(When we visit my father's family in Cannes
I'm embarrassed for my mom.
My
tantes élégantes
talk about her in French
she doesn't understand.
I do, but don't defend her.)
I know his deep darks, too.
(He got superlethargic
when his parents split up.
Wouldn't get out of bed
on the weekends.
His mom thought he just
needed time to adjust.
His dad and the court disagreed.
Brendan's bitter about the compromise:
custody for Mom, Zoloft for him.)
For three weeks
we were just friends
until the night
of the crazy windstorm.
He was babysitting Courtney.
I stopped by to say hi
and she'd just gone to sleep
in spite of the wail
of a seventy-mile-an-hour wind
that snapped power lines
and slammed
Southern California
into darkness.
He got out flashlights    lit candles.
Our hands made
shadow puppets
on the wall.
First fingertip kisses    then lips.
The Santa Ana Wind
gusts down
desert canyons.
Hot. Dry. Electric.
Some say
            it ignites tempers.
I say
            it ignited us.
It howled around outside,
battering the house
with dried palm fronds.
Debris snatched up
flung down
snatched up again.
A wind so greedy
it couldn't bear
to discard the tiniest scrap.
A greedy wind that wanted it all.
And when
our lips touched
for the first time
I flamed up
greedy too
and the pounding in my ears
could have been
the rush of my blood
or the Santa Ana wind
shrieking
for more.
A Year Later
we still
remind
each other
of that
first kiss.
“It's windy,”
I'll say
every time
he comes up
behind me,
lifts my hair
off my neck,
gently blows
just behind
my earlobe.
“It's windy,”
he'll whisper,
arms wrapped around me.
And I'm still greedy. Greedier, in fact.
We've talked about itâ
kissing's not enough anymore.
We haven't discussed specifics, like
exactly when or where,
but I have a few ideas.
So, Mom?
              Tonight I could be home late.
How Do You Know When the Time Is Right?
(A) When you're in love?
(B) When your body aches for something more?
(C) When you've both decided you're ready?
(D) All of the above?
Hope my drive-your-man-crazy costume
keeps its promise.
In wrestling I'm hot
and sweaty
like the guys.
So off the mat,
I admit I tend to go
girly overboard.
But is it enough?
When I get to his house
he slumps into the car
and I taste his funky mood
in our kiss.
“You didn't dress up.”
Like he needs me
to point it out.
                                    “There's no law,” he says.
“But it'd be fun, right?
Last year you looked so cute!”
                        “Last year sucked.”
                        His flat voice shuts me out.
                        “Besides, I didn't have time.
                        I had to take Courtney out.”
Moody Brendan's in the house.
                        “What kind of a mother
                        schedules a boob job three days
                        before Halloween?”
“One with small tits?” I ask,
hoping for a smile that doesn't come
but he does reach over,
rest his hand on my leg.
I start the car.
We drive a block.
Then two.
Then three.
“C'monâwhat's wrong?”
                                  “Halloween's just
                                  not my thing.”
“So
that's
why
you didn't
mention my costume!”
I'm trying for flirty, and
                                        he looks over.
                                        “Nice.”
But there's no smile.
And it's no use.
I turn the corner,
a deflated French maid
in fishnet stockings
and a short skirt.
(E) Quiz postponed.
Gloom Seeps Over Different Expectations
Andy's house, a parent-free zone tonight.
Light spills out the open front doorâ
party's on downstairs,
upstairs windows are   Â
b l a c k
.
I park the car. Brendan
sits, doesn't get out.
I love him but know
there's no way to rescue his   Â
m o o d
.
If that were possible, I'd go in,
say hi, steal beer, and park
somewhereâtalk, laugh, kiss.
Whatever it   Â
t o o k
.
He's complicated. Sometimes
just shy. Antisocial. Or
depressed. And I'm okay
when it's only   Â
u s
.
Tonight the situation sucks.
I blew off fun with my best friends
to be with Brendan. I'd do it again but sometimes
I wish there was a way to be with   Â
b o t h
.
Still, if it came right down to it?
A forever choice?
I'd choose him.
Always.
Some Truths Don't Go Over So Well
Especially not with friends
you've had since fifth grade.
This past summer Julie and Tanya bitched
I never spent time with them,
but that wasn't true.
We hung out a lot
when Brendan went away
to see his dad.
But when I pointed that out,
Tanya said it didn't count.
And even though I DID
invite them to this party,
I know they're mad at me
for ditching our
trick-or-treat tradition.
They just don't understandâ
Julie's never been serious about a guy
and Tanya's never had a boyfriend at all.
I can't help it if
I'd rather be with him
than anyone else.
That's love.
(BRENDAN)
Last Night's Mistake
Throbbing music.
Throbbing bodies.
Throbbing headache this morning.
Wish we'd just gone in,
said hi, stolen beer,
parked somewhere.
But Vanessa wanted to party.
And I knew I wasn't good company.
Barely over the threshold,
it was Andy.
                  “You fag, you didn't dress up!”
                  Loud over booming bass.
“Good to see you, too.”
He couldn't hear me.
Instead, he handed me
a half-empty
bottle of Jack and then
pulled on his hockey mask.
                  “Dude, we're going
                  to the graveyard!
                  We're going to
                  have a séance
                  for Mr. Fredricks!”
Like this was a good idea?
Slasher movies aside,
didn't he think
kids
+
Halloween
+
graveyard
=
trouble of the police variety?
But how can someone who
doesn't speak up
be the voice of reason?
So I went along
with the crowd.
Bottle concealed
under my sweatshirt,
Vanessa at my side.
Trick-or-treaters were
home by that time,
counting their loot
or in bed already
and the two blocks
of asphalt
between Andy's house
and that of the dead
were empty.
Except for the fifteen or so of us,
a small mob of pirates, witches,
ghosts, and zombies, like something
out of the Charlie Brown
Halloween special.
The foggy mist felt
good on my skin
and oddly enough
(while heading to a cemetery)
my mood started to get better.
Over the wrought iron fence,
we scattered apart
in and around
the stone garden.
I pulled Vanessa along
with one hand,
held the bottle
with the other,
and tried to keep up with Andy
weaving between headstones and
jog-walking past the mausoleum.
Mr. Fredricks, the choir director,
had a heart attack my freshman year.
Now his grave's like
a Halloween tourist attraction.
He's buried in the corner
farthest from the road,
relatively safe
from a getting-in-trouble
standpoint.
Me and Andy and Vanessa
were the first to get there,
I thought. We stood, staring
at his name carved
on a metal-plated block.
“Alas, poor Fredricks,
I knew him well,” I said.
It wasn't true