Read I Heart You, You Haunt Me Online
Authors: Lisa Schroeder
Tags: #Juvenile Fiction, #Social Issues, #Death & Dying, #Love & Romance, #Horror & Ghost Stories, #General
Independence Day
I watch
the festivities
from the window.
Kids running,
waving sparklers.
Dads lighting
firecrackers.
Moms pulling kids back,
saying, “Don’t stand too close.”
The sky
fills with
red,
white,
and blue.
Into the darkness comes
light,
joy,
and freedom.
Tomorrow I go home
to Jackson.
I consider
what freedom
really means.
And I realize
maybe I’m not so free
after all.
It Doesn’t Make Sense
As the car moves
toward home,
my thoughts
don’t seem
to want to go there
just yet.
I didn’t
want
to leave
the place of
salty air
and kite rooms
and lyrical boys.
Not only
did I survive
the days
which I didn’t think
I could,
they refreshed me,
revitalized me,
reminded me
of what I’ve been
missing.
What does that mean
exactly?
My thoughts
don’t seem
to want to go
there
just yet
either.
Back Home
It’s late
when we get home.
I feel my pulse
quicken
as I think
about Jackson,
hoping he won’t be too upset.
The house is quiet.
Dark.
Normal.
Mom and Dad go to bed.
I make a PB&J sandwich.
I wait for movement
or music
or mind messages.
But there’s nothing.
I eat,
then go to my room.
My room is quiet.
Dark.
Normal.
I go to the bathroom, where
I stand at the mirror
long after I’m done
brushing and washing.
Finally, I go to bed,
wondering if he’ll find me
in my dreams,
and sort of praying
he won’t.
Light the Way
I wake up
in the middle of the night
to candles
lit up
in the darkness.
“Jackson,” I whisper,
“that’s sweet,
but you can’t do things like that.
What if my mom or dad walks in?”
A gust of wind
blows across the room
and in an instant
the room
turns
black.
Sorry.
“No, Jackson.
I’m sorry.
I’m sorry this is so hard.”
And I wonder when I’ll finally
stop having things
to feel sorry about.
What’s Going On?
No one called
while we were away.
No one calls
after we return.
I spend time
watching TV,
playing solitaire
on the computer,
and reading magazines.
Jackson hangs around
some of the time.
But I still wish
someone
would
pick up the
phone
and
talk
to
me.
To Go or Not to Go
Days go by
and I finally
call Cali.
Why have I been
such a bad friend?
What happened to the good friend
who’d pick a bouquet of daisies for Cali
or make peanut butter cookies for Jessa
or burn a CD of songs for Zoe?
I miss flowers
and cookies
and music.
I want to feel
like a friend again.
“What’s up?” I ask.
“Uh, I’m getting ready to head out,” she says.
“Gotta hot date?”
“Sort of.”
“Really?
With who?”
“A bunch of people are going to-”
She stops.
I wait.
She doesn’t finish.
“Oh no,” I say.
“Not there.”
“Ava, it’s time.
It’s not an evil place, you know.
Kids are hanging out there as a tribute to him.
It’s like you can feel his spirit there.
Really.
There’s even been talk of changing the name.
You know, to Jackson’s Hideaway.”
“But Cali, he died there.
How can people have fun at the place where he
died?”
“I’m going,” she says.
“You could come too.
It might be good for you, actually.”
“Cali, I called because I need to talk to you.
Please?
Can we go have a mocha?
And I’ll think about going.
I will.”
Well,
Cali never could
turn down a mocha.
No Secrets
We sip on our mochas
at Starbucks,
where we’ve
spent hours upon hours
talking
and giggling
like girls do.
My heart tells me
it’s time to spill my guts.
After all,
I used to tell her
everything.
I told her about the time
I snuck out one night
to meet Jackson
down the corner
so we could make out
on the back porch
of the vacant house.
I even told her about the time
I kissed Nick
at midnight
on New Year’s Eve
when I was still going with Jackson
but he was out of town
and I was lonely.
And now I tell her about how
Jackson is in my house
and how he turns the CD player on
and how he appears in mirrors
and how he sends me messages
in his own little ways
and visits me in my dreams.
“Are you saying he’s a ghost?” she asks.
“Basically. Yeah.”
And then she gives me
the look.
That
look
that says,
“Girlfriend,
you have totally
gone off the
d
e
e
p
e
n
d.”
Stop It!
She rolls up
the corner of her napkin.
She fiddles with the
packets of sugar.
She looks around,
like she wants to escape,
but doesn’t know how.
“I’m not crazy,” I say.
“He’s gone, A.
I know you miss him.
But you’ve got to move on.”
“Maybe you should come and see for yourself.”
“So, you see him?” she asks.
“No. Well, yes, in my dreams I do.
But in the house, he’s just there.
I feel him.
I smell him.
He lets me know he’s there. In little ways.
Even Mom says she’s smelled him.
Sandalwood shaving cream, you know.”
“So your mom thinks he’s a ghost, too?” she asks.
“No. She just mentioned that she thought she smelled him.
An observation.
But don’t you see, it’s because he
is
there.”
She shakes her head,
stands up,
and grabs her purse.
“You want to go with me or should I take you home?”
I don’t know
what I want to do.
It scares me to think about
going there again.
I look at Cali.
That look is still
on her face.
I’m
not
crazy!
Maybe
there’s only one way
to prove it.
“Okay. I’ll go.”
Absolutely Perfect
We named it
Heaven’s Hideaway.
Who knew
that name
would take
on a whole new
meaning.
Hidden back
behind the
towering green trees
is a place
right out of
a fairy tale
with a cascading waterfall
and a large, deep pool of water
surrounded by
rocks
and grass
and ferns
and plants
and flowers.
I told Jackson,
“This must be
what heaven looks like.”
And so, it had a name.
I’m the One
Jackson and Daniel
discovered it one day
on a hike.
He couldn’t wait
to show me
the special place.
We packed a lunch
and it wasn’t long before
I found myself
having the most
perfect picnic
ever.
I loved the place
so
much.
I’m the one
who came up with the idea.
I’m the one
who said it’d be the perfect place
for the School’s Out party.
I’m the one
who’s wished
a million times over
I never
ever
did.
What a Surprise
Cali and I arrive,
and the party’s
going strong.
Someone’s set a
boom box
on a rock,
and the heavy thumps drown out
the peacefulness
of the place.
The peacefulness
that Jackson and I found
the first time we came here
together.
I want to focus
on that time,
not the other time, the last time,
but it’s too hard
to keep the memories
from cascading
into my brain.
I shouldn’t have come.
It’s too soon.
Way
too
soon.
“Cali—”
But I don’t get a chance to finish.
A chance to tell her
I shouldn’t be here.
“Oh, there he is,” Cali says,
grabbing my arm.
Squeezing it.
He?
Who’s he???
And then she’s off
to greet him.
I watch
and wait,
to see who
he
is.
Lyric!?
A Rush of Emotions
Cali wraps her arms
around Lyric’s neck and
hugs him.
They do not kiss.
So, that means
a) they haven’t known each other long
or
b) they’re just friends
or
c) she likes him, but he doesn’t necessarily like her.
She pulls on his arm
and they walk toward me.
“Ava, do you know Lyric?
He was a senior last year.
Running back on the football team.
Number 11.”
Lyric? At our school?
How come I never noticed him before?
Ummm, yeah,
probably because
he was a senior
and way out of my league
and I had a boyfriend
who made me
deliriously
happy.
“Hi.”
“Hi.”
He smiles that beach boy smile of his,
and right then I discover
a person has the ability
to feel
a hundred different emotions
all at the same time.
Feeling Woozy
I look at Lyric
and hope he knows
he shouldn’t say
anything
about me and him.
“I need to sit down,” I tell Cali.
“Catch my breath.”
“Are you okay?” she asks.
“I’m fine.
Just a lot, you know, to take in.”
“You’re white as a ghost,” Lyric says.
How appropriate.
“Want me to sit with you?” she asks.
“No. Go! Have fun.
I’ll come find you guys in a minute.”
They head for the crowd
while I head away from it.
I don’t want to talk to anyone.
And I’m pretty sure
no one really
wants to talk to me.
What do you say
to the girl
who was the dead boy’s
girlfriend?
What do you say
to the girl
who is looking at the place
where it happened?
What do you say
to the girl
who dared her boyfriend
to jump
that deadly day?
All. My. Fault.
I traveled to Hawaii
with my parents
when I was twelve.
We went to this place
where people dove
off the cliffs
into the
cool
blue
waters
below.
For some
totally random reason,
on that partying
day in May,
I thought of those
adrenaline junkies
who were so much
like Jackson.
Then I said those
three
stupid
words
and Jackson’s eyes
moved toward the sky,
like a vulture eying his prey,
as he considered
the greatest
challenge
yet.
He climbed up high.
Way high.
He spread out his arms,
like Jesus on the cross,
and shouted,
“This is going to be so great!”
Suddenly
I knew.
I knew it was a
bad
idea.
I screamed, “STOP!”
just a
second
too
late.
When Two Became One
We waited
for him to
pop up
laughing,
SHOUTING,
b r e a t h i n g.
We didn’t hear
his head
hit the rock.
We didn’t hear
his cries
of pain.
We didn’t hear
his last breath.
Deadly
silence
floated
on the water
like an empty raft.
Rescue instincts
kicked in and
I rushed to the water,
hit it hard,
and began to
stroke
stroke
stroke
like my life depended on it,
because my life
SO
depended on it.
As I swam,
brain-photos
appeared.
Whirling,
swirling,
twirling
images
of football games,
of starry nights,
of carnival rides.
I wasn’t the
only one
in the water.
A mob
of people
took hold of him
and then I
was
whirling,
swirling,
twirling
in the sea of red
left behind.
The water,
my friend forever,
enveloped me,
whispering,
Stay here.
Let me take care of you.
Rest in my comforting arms.
It knew.
But other arms
grabbed me
and pulled me
from heaven
into hell.
I lay on the ground,
frozen from fear.
Trees towered above me,
shaking their wooden fingers at me.
Screams
of hysteria
flew through the air,
slamming into
each other.
“Call 911... He’s not breathing ... Oh my God, oh my God ...
Do something ...”
Three big words
drowned them all out.
I killed Jackson.