Read I Heart You, You Haunt Me Online
Authors: Lisa Schroeder
Tags: #Juvenile Fiction, #Social Issues, #Death & Dying, #Love & Romance, #Horror & Ghost Stories, #General
Jessa
I’ve always been the quiet girl.
I’m the good girl
who does
what she’s told
(most of the time).
Jessa is the loud girl.
She’s the bad girl
who makes you
want to be bad too,
because it looks
so good
on her,
with her pierced nose
and her wild hair.
She’s the youngest
in a family
with six kids.
I think she had to be loud
and bad
so she wouldn’t
be forgotten.
Jessa loves the movies.
We went to the movies together a lot,
while Cali and Zoe
played volleyball.
The first time we went,
Jessa said,
“Let’s stay and see another one.”
“I don’t think we’re supposed to do that.”
“Why not?” she said.
“No one will know.”
Then she pulled me into
another theater
to watch
another movie.
And then we went to her house,
where she showed me
the book of drawings she keeps.
Fairies,
elves,
dragons,
and wizards.
She is
such
a talented artist.
“When I turn eighteen,” she told me,
“I’m going to get a bunch of these
as tatoos.”
Yeah,
I don’t think Jessa
needs to worry
anymore
about being
forgotten.
Jessa is definitely
unforgettable.
In the very best way,
of course.
The Truth Hurts
“Wanna shower? Go somewhere?” Zoe asks.
“We could cruise around in my new car,” Jessa says.
“You got a new car?” I ask.
“What’d you get?”
“Well, it’s used, but new to me.
It’s a Mazda Protégé.”
Wow.
Guess things are happening
out there
in the big, blue world.
“Come on,” Cali says.
“Let’s split this joint.”
“Nah.
I’m not really up for anything today.”
Jessa stands up.
“Ava, this isn’t healthy.
It’s beautiful out. Come on.
You’re not the dead one, you know.”
“Jessa!” Zoe yells.
“Oh, God,” Cali says.
“Nice, Jessa.”
“Sorry,” Jessa says.
“I’m so sorry.
Forgive me?”
“You guys just don’t have a clue what I’m going through,” I say
as I pick at a loose thread on my robe.
“So tell us,” Jessa says.
“We’re here. Help us understand.”
I stand up.
“I have stuff to do,” I tell them,
which is a total lie
and they know it.
“Thanks for stopping by.”
I walk to the door, open it, and wait.
“Bye, Ava.”
“Bye, Hon.”
“I’m sorry, A.”
“Yeah,” I tell them, in almost a whisper.
“It’s okay.
See ya later.”
I go to the front window
and watch their beautiful, tan bodies
get into Jessa’s cute car.
They wave
and then the car
zips out of the driveway
and down the street
in a flash of silver.
The room gets cold.
Jackson is there.
“How come you can’t go out, Jackson?
Do you
want
me here with you all the time?
I feel like you do.
Will you get mad at me if I go with my friends?
I mean, I have a
life,
Jackson.
Or, I should anyway.
Do you get that?”
No answer.
“Why can’t ghosts TALK!?” I scream.
The Closest Thing to Talking
I sit on the couch
and cry
because everything is so
confusing
and mixed up.
Suddenly,
the music stops.
Oh, no.
No, please,
don’t go!
I shouldn’t have
screamed
like that.
This isn’t his fault.
Does he hate me now?
I stand up
and call his name.
“Jackson?
JACKSON!?”
“Please come back,” I shriek,
crying and pacing.
“Please don’t leave me
by myself!”
When I feel the cold air
flutter around me
like a butterfly’s wings,
I know he’s back,
and I collapse on the
couch in relief.
“I’m sorry for yelling, Jackson.
I didn’t mean it.”
There’s a whisper
inside my head
so soft,
I almost don’t hear the first words.
There are ghost rules, Ava.
I’m not allowed to answer your questions.
I don’t want to keep you from your friends.
I’m sorry I got mad before.
More than anything,
I want you to be happy.
I love you, Ava.
Be happy.
Road Trip
A few days before
the Fourth of July holiday,
they don’t ask me,
they just do it.
Mom and Dad
whisk me away
to the place of
sand and sea,
with the never-ending sound
of waves
thrashing,
lashing,
crashing.
I love that sound.
I love the beach.
I’ve packed my windbreaker,
my sun visor,
my flip-flops
and tank tops.
What I couldn’t pack
was my ghost of a boyfriend,
Jackson.
We’re about to leave
when I say,
“Wait! I forgot something!”
I grab my key
from my purse,
run inside the house
and up the stairs.
“I’ll miss you, Jackson,” I say
to the still, quiet air
around me
as I walk toward
the bookcase in my room.
“I’ll be back soon.
I promise.”
I return to the car
with a stuffed
yellow snake
stuck in the pocket
of my hoody.
Let’s Dance
I walk barefoot next to my mom.
The seagulls dance
across the sand
as the waves crash
on the shore.
The seagull waltz.
I dance around my mother’s
topic of conversation.
“You don’t talk about him.
Are you sure you’re doing okay?”
“Yes.”
“Ava, I’ll just say it.
I’m worried about you.
It seemed like you were doing fine.
But lately, I don’t know.”
“I
am
fine, Mom.”
She grabs my hand.
Squeezes it.
“I think it might be good for you to talk to someone.”
“A shrink?”
“A grief counselor.”
I stop walking
and let my eyes rest
on the blueness of the ocean,
thinking of Jackson,
wondering if he’s sipping my lemonade
or drinking my cocoa
or frolicking around
in my panty drawer.
“Isn’t it just so amazing, Mom?”
I put my arm around her
and put my head
on her shoulder.
“Sometimes, I think I smell him,” she whispers.
I don’t say anything.
The mother-daughter waltz.
Ghostly Tales
It’s hard
to fall asleep
in a room
that isn’t mine.
In the kite room
of the beach house,
kites are on every wall.
Blue ones,
red ones,
yellow ones,
and even one
shaped like a bird.
I quietly get up
and move over
to the computer.
I turn it on.
I Google “ghosts.”
I click and read
click and read
click and read.
A website claiming to be
“The Number One Resource on Ghosts”
says that if a person dies with “unresolved issues”
or “emotional baggage,”
he can’t move on
to “the higher plane.”
Does Jackson have unresolved issues?
Or emotional baggage?
Do I want to know if he does?
I find a message board
on another site
where people share their experiences
and ask questions.
It seems like each ghost is different.
Some only appear once a year.
Some only appear in dreams.
Some only haunt houses.
Some only show up in mirrors.
Jackson seems to be
a do-anything
kind of ghost.
That makes sense
because he was pretty much
a do-anything
kind of guy.
Lost
The walls are thin.
My parents are talking.
Talking about
me.
I tiptoe back to my bed.
Dad says, “The three girls and Nick
have been checking in with her, right?”
“Yes. But she still just sits at home most of the time.”
“She needs to talk to someone.”
“How do we get her to see she does?” Mom asks
“She doesn’t have to see it.
She just has to do it.
We have to make her do it.”
Oh. My. God.
My parents.
My friends.
They all
must think
I’m mental.
And Nick,
was he hitting on me
only because
he felt sorry for me?
I turn over
and cry into my pillow.
Jackson,
why aren’t you here?
I need you!
If I sleep,
will you visit me?
Can you find me?
Please.
Find me.
Flying Alone
The kites
lift me up
and take me away
to a place where I sleep.
I sleep without dreams.
Without Jackson.
Finally,
I rest.
Good Morning
Sunday morning
I wake up early
for the first time
in a long time,
feeling refreshed.
I head to the beach, where
I want to run barefoot
on the sand,
feel the sea breeze
on my skin,
hear the ocean sounds
in my head.
Maybe it will help
me forget
all the mixed-up stuff
going on
in my life.
But I’m not the only one
who is up early.
A black Lab
runs over to me.
I bend down to pet him.
He drops a stick
at my feet.
“Sorry.
He loves to play fetch,”
says the tan guy
with short, blonde hair.
I laugh and say, “Okay.”
Then I throw the stick into the ocean
and watch the dog
chase the stick
with everything
he’s got.
Like if he loses that stick,
his life will never be the same.
The waves cover him
for a second,
but he bobs to the top
with the stick in his mouth.
And soon he is at my feet,
ready to play again.
“Good boy,” I tell him.
His owner moves closer to me and says,
“His name is Bo.”
“Good Bo.” We laugh.
“And I’m Lyric.”
“Lyric?
That’s a cool name.
Do you sing?”
He breaks out
into an opera-style
rendition of
You Are My Sunshine.
I laugh and applaud.
He takes a bow.
“Wow.
So you’re not shy,” I tell him.
“Not shy at all,” he says
as he sits
on a piece of driftwood
and pulls on my arm
so I’m sitting
right
next to him.
Silly Nothingness
We people-watch
and talk
and laugh
about silly things,
like the Dallas Cowboys cheerleaders
(he likes football)
and how he thinks that’s the easiest job in the world
and how I think, no way can that be even close to easy!
I wonder if he knows
I’m not capable
of anything more
than this.
I wonder
if he would care?
In the Moment
I am
talking,
and laughing,
and listening,
and talking some more.
Lyric is totally flirting with me,
which feels so weird
but flattering,
I guess.
He tells me a story
about a crazy friend of his
who’s trying to beat
the pogo stick
world record,
and the way he talks about
bounce bounce
bouncing
on that pogo stick
makes me laugh
hysterically.
And for the first time
in a long,
long
time,
I feel
ALIVE!
So Long, Farewell
Then I remember.
I remember him.
The one I will love forever
and the one who loves me so much
he can’t leave me behind.
“I have to go,” I say.
“Can I get your number?” he asks.
“I can’t.
It’s complicated.”
I turn and walk away.
I don’t want to say good-bye.
So I won’t say anything.
Bo barks.
He says it for all of us.
“Drop me an e-mail,” he calls out.
“It’s [email protected].”
I know he wants me to turn around
to say “okay”
or give a thumbs-up.
Something.
Anything.
I should turn and say,
I have a boyfriend.
I belong with him.
But the words refuse to come.
“I’ll see you in my dreams, Ava,” he calls to me.
I stop.
I get goose bumps.
I turn to make sure it’s really Lyric,
and not
Jackson.
He waves,
and I wonder who I’ll see
in my dreams
tonight.