Read Love Rewards The Brave Online
Authors: Anya Monroe
83.
We sit down at a table
built for two and
she brings it up again.
“What is it then? Markus said he saw you in the cafeteria the
other day and Jack, that senior who everyone thinks is totally gorgeous, you know the one who’s always playing his guitar outside?”
I nod, knowing who she’s talking about.
“Well, I guess he walked up to where you were sitting, totally checking you out, and said something. And instead of answering you picked up your backpack and left the cafeteria. Like, completely ignoring him.”
I don’t even remember this
taking place.
Apparently I’m
better than I
thought at
blocking out
the traumatizing
paralyzing
things
in my day-to-day life.
“Why did you do that, Louisa? Why wouldn’t you just talk to him?”
How do you tell
your
one and only
friend
the truth about your past?
What happens if it
freaks her out
or shuts her down?
What then?
It isn’t worth the risk
of losing
her.
“Jess, whatever, he was being a total creep, that’s why I walked away. Okay? Markus doesn’t know what he’s talking about.”
And that is enough.
For her, for now.
“Besides, Jess, weren’t we talking about how cool I am?” I ask.
Glowing outwardly
freezing inwardly.
I pick up my gyro
thankful to be distracted
by food
as I think about
the things Jess
just said.
84.
The knock on my bedroom door
wakes me up, I look at the clock.
Fuck.
I’m totally late.
Monday morning came fast
after last night with Jess
at the mall, the dinner and movie that followed.
“Louisa, got to get a move on,” Ms. F says. “You need to leave in about thirty minutes. Margot can drive you to school on her way back to her house.”
Brush teeth.
Dress fast.
Bagel in hand.
I jump in Margot’s car
thankful the heat’s
cranked up
as we pull out of the
frosty driveway.
“So, Louisa, one more week till Christmas break, right?” Margot asks, through her yawn, as she pulls into a coffee stand.
Two extra-hot
extra-whip-extra-shot
caramel lattes.
God, how is she so perfect?
“Yep,” I say, taking the coffee from her. “Thanks for the latte.”
“Oh, of course. But, so, I wanted to ask you, with Christmas break coming up and all, do you want a job?”
I don’t know what to say
so I do what I do best:
nothing at all.
“It would be a job at the record store. We need some extra people to work with the holiday rush and there was this girl who just flaked out, and anyways, I just thought you might like it?”
I bite my lip
self-consciously
aware of
saying yes too fast
or too slow.
“I already talked to my sister, and she thinks it would be great for you. What do you say?”
“You think I can do it? I mean, I’ve never had a job before.”
I want to confess
that I’m terrified
I’ll make a mess
of it.
But that I want to
try.
“You have to start somewhere. And this is better than working at a pretzel stand in the mall.”
I laugh.
“And the dress code at the record store is the best part. Come as you are.”
Come as you are.
I can do that.
God knows
I can’t do much
else.
“Okay,” I say.
“Okay, yes?” she asks.
“Okay, yes.”
She drops me off at school
and I can’t
help but
think maybe I woke
up late
and got a ride from her
today
for a reason.
I just hope
I don’t
fuck
it
up.
85.
The clock is moving so slowly
I want to scream
at Terry.
I have been thinking
it over the past few days.
Yes, she brought the journals to me.
Yes, she woke up forgotten memories.
Yes, she says she is trying to help,
but I have a bunch of questions now
And I want to
Call
Her
Out
On A Few Of Them.
“Louisa, you look like a ball of nerves right now. Do you want to talk about bringing your journals home? Did you get a chance to look at them?”
Terry’s been asking me some variation
of the same
question
for the past forty minutes
and I wonder what she thinks is going to
happen?
If she asks me one more time I just
might give her what she wants:
Truth.
“Louisa, I know you weren’t exactly happy when I gave them to you, do you want to talk about why?” she asks.
Again.
“Stop it. Okay? Just stop asking me. Okay?”
I speak louder than I have in..
Ever?
“You want to know how I felt when you gave them to me? I felt scared. Scared that you might have read them. Scared of where they’ve been hiding for two years.”
I’m screaming now,
the voice no longer mine.
It’s another girl.
A girl who is temporarily
speaking on my behalf
because I know I would never be
strong enough to
talk about the
aftermath
of getting those old books.
“I was scared of what I would remember. Scared that the pages will make the monster that is my dad come back to life and haunt in ways I can’t handle. Scared that the words would swallow me whole.”
The girl disappears
as quickly as she came
and I am left
gasping for
breath
with a shocked
counselor
looking like she’s
never seen me
before.
86.
I walk out of the office
pretty quickly after the
bodily takeover
alien encounter
case of the body snatchers
that just happened.
I walk straight past Ms. Francine
and leave through
the front door.
It takes her a while to catch up
probably a debrief with Terry
over what went
Wrong?
Right?
Was there a fight?
Ms. F comes to the car
drives us slowly to
a diner
not far from our house.
I’ve never been to this place.
“Sometimes we just need a change of pace,” Ms. F says.
As if
she was reading
my mind.
We order.
For me:
Fries.
Burger.
Shake.
She says, “I’ll have the same.”
I look at her a little
freakishly.
What’s going on here?
First the takeover
that happened with
Terry,
now Ms. F is forgoing a
green salad
opting instead
for a greasy sandwich.
“What?” she asks. “Sometimes you just need to let go, you know, let loose.”
“I get it.” I say, registering her metaphor.
Rolling my eyes for
some reason I can’t quite
place
because
Ms. F isn’t being showy
or bossy
or
I told you so.
It’s more like:
I know.
“So you decided to give Terry what she had coming?”
I look at her like
I don’t know what she
means.
Back to my old routine
pretend like you don’t know
then you won’t have to show
something
real.
“Just so you know, Louisa, I was wondering the same thing about where your journals came from, after all this time. I emailed Terry about it over the weekend, but I didn’t want to be the one to talk to you about it. It seemed like it was something between the two of you. I’m proud of you for talking to her.”
This idea of me
working things out with Terry
would have worked better
if I’d stayed
around and
found
out the answers.
“Do you want to talk about it now?” she asks.
The waitress
sets down the food.
I pick up a fry
breaking it in half.
I feel
divided
undecided
on which direction I want to go.
Do I say yes to her
and get shit out
or do I continue to live
in a make-believe world
riddled with doubt?
Why is this a hard question?
87.
“I want to talk about it, but it,” I say, then pause. “It’s really hard.”
I speak as
calmly as I can.
Wanting her to understand
that I can’t do this
on my own.
“Why don’t I help you then? Terry told me the journals have been sitting in a storage office in the police department for two years. Apparently someone went through the space last week and came across several bins, marked with your name, of things an apartment manager had taken there when you and Benji were first placed in custody.”
I stare down my strawberry shake
wanting her to take a break
before I decide whether
or not
I can look at her.
“Most of the stuff was old clothing, although there was an old blanket that had Benji stitched on it, so that was returned to him. Your caseworker was given the box of your journals, who then gave it to Terry. I don’t know if she read any of them, though.”
I breathe out.
It’s not as
scary
as I was anticipating
nearly hyperventilating.
“Why does it bother you if Terry read your books?”
I look at her.
Ms. F- a woman in her thirties
probably has a better place to be
then sitting in a booth with me.
Yet
Here
She
Is.
“I guess. Um. If she read them, she might, you know, see me?”
“And you don’t want to be seen?”
“Of course not.”
“Why, Louisa?”
She doesn’t like
my cryptic
way of attempting to
avoid
all those kinds of contact
I hate.
I close my eyes.
“People could leave me if they really see me. Like Jess. Or You.”
“Margot read some. She didn’t run away from you.”
Why am I doing this?
Why am I answering these questions?
The ones Terry has been asking
for two years?
“It doesn’t make it any easier, though, Ms. Francine. I’ve been undone in a thousand ways. I’m not going to be whole again in a day.”
“Do you think you can ever be whole again?” she asks.
“I hope so,” I admit.
I open my eyes.
Allowing
her
to
make
contact.