Read Love Rewards The Brave Online
Authors: Anya Monroe
88.
“So let me get this straight, she actually offered you a job?”
I look at Jess, sitting so close
to Markus you could start a fire
and I don’t think a match will be
required.
“Yeah. I start this weekend. You know with the holidays and all.”
I try and sound casual,
like this is a normal thing
not a dream gig
for a high school kid.
Markus whistles.
“Man, you’re so lucky. My parents keep bitching at me to get a job. But all the jobs at the mall suck. But to work at 6-Spot Records? Killer.”
I smile.
Liking how it feels
when someone is
impressed with
me
the place I’m going to be
working.
“So, you’re basically going be too busy for me all of Christmas break?” Jess pouts.
But I doubt
her sincerity.
“I think you’ll be fine without me.”
I stand up and throw my trash away
look back at them and say:
“You’ve got each other.”
And for the first time
in a long, long
time
I’m okay to be doing
something
new
because I know I won’t be
alone.
89.
I feel
like a fish out of water
or however the saying goes
when you’re
the only person who
has a question.
And the asking is terrifying
but not asking
is worse because then you’re going to
be stuck looking stupid
when you pretend you know
what the hell you are doing.
Not to mention the music blares at
a million decimals (is that what it’s called?)
the entire shift where I’m
“In Training”
obliterating
whatever it is I am
supposed to be doing.
Margot comes over to me
always saying something nice
like, “Isn’t Toby the best?”
Toby’s my supervisor,
the one teaching me what button to push
and what shelf to stock
and where to take out the trash
what door to lock.
My head spins.
And not just at the influx of information
but also the assimilation to
the fact that everyone around me
looks album cover cool.
Toby?
God. He’s a cross between
Hipster-everything
and I-don’t-care-about-anything
and eyes so fucking blue
they will sear into your memory.
I sit down to take my first break of the day.
Finally a chance to let myself cool
down in the afternoon lull.
Ms. F packed me a granola bar and an apple.
I’m thinking more like Snickers and Snapple.
Margot comes into the back room
fast
goes right past
Toby
and comes to me.
“Louisa, there’s been an emergency. You need to get your things, Francine will be here in a minute for you.”
Her eyes scan mine.
I turn away
my instincts run strong
deep down and long.
“Louisa, can I help you get your coat? Did you bring anything else?”
I guess I’m frozen in place
and looking like a nut case
because Toby is helping Margot put my coat over my shoulders
and I am still trying to find words that are stuck in
my throat.
I grab for Margot when I feel a word
lodged between thought and sound
lost and found.
“Benji?”
She nods her head.
My heart drops.
90.
The hospital is just like it seems
in TV shows.
A recreated safety zone.
I always find myself
in the gray,
but here it’s all white
and big bright lights.
I like the idea of that,
all that white.
But white is scary, all I’ve ever known is
cloudy and muddled
dark storm brewing nights.
I know nothing about clear sky days.
Snow started dumping on our drive
over.
All white on the road
and wouldn’t you know, snow’s what Ms. F
fears the most.
She said so as her hands clenched the
steering wheel,
snowflake knuckles.
“Over here, Miss.”
The nurse ushers me into a room
the social worker guy here, too.
And my
Benji
Boy.
I’m dizzy, need the wall to stand.
The bright white snow is falling
lights in the hospital
room are glowing
I can’t see much
I suddenly feel blindfolded.
Black.
Black is the color of his eyes
and that is with them closed,
but I know what’s hidden behind
without
him even opening them
up.
His wrists are wrapped in more white.
Nice and tight
looks like the bandages gave a fair fight.
I’m scared of what I might
hear
if I ask questions
about why he’s
here.
91.
On the way over Ms. Francine tried
to prepare, make me aware
of what had happened.
The details still unclear.
But one thing was certain
blood dripped where it shouldn’t have been
the ambulance running
the moment someone found him
still.
But still
breathing.
And now he’s sleeping.
Strapped down for safety (his own).
I want to wake him up and yell in his face
I know our lives have been
shitty and fucked up
but what is he thinking?
He is trying to leave
me
too.
All I want is us to go back
to the room we occupied so many years ago
sleeping under the
moonlight
after we gave up our fight.
Back then
we were at least in it
together.
We promised we would be
forever.
But now Benji’s is trying hard to go
alone.
I sit in a chair,
not knowing what to say
to the social worker guy who clearly
wants to
“talk about it.”
I ignore
his looks in my direction
I’m not looking for a
connection.
Right now I need to focus my eyes
my thoughts and
my
no longer
half-assed prayers
up to the great beyond
so that Benji
will wake up
Whole.
92.
“Benji?” I whisper.
I’ve been sitting ready
steady, feeling heavy
on this still same chair
scared to go anywhere.
Watching the clock tick-tock
wanting him to wake so we could talk
it out.
I’m not wanting to shout
I just want to know where he went
what it meant
for us.
“Lou-Lou?”
He looks at me and I see that boy again.
The one I was scared I’d lost forever
the one I promised to be beside whatever
the weather.
For better or worse.
I know those kind of promises can be hard to keep
I know that most people wouldn’t expect it,
but
Benji and me?
We’re not most people.
“Benji, you scared me. So much. I can’t lose you.”
I choke out the words
hoping they’ll
reach
him somewhere
inside.
But I can tell he wants to hide
because he turns
his face from me.
I take his hand.
The hand I want to hang onto
thinking if it is wrapped in mine
then he’ll never
find
a way to leave.
“Why did you try to go?” I ask.
Trying to keep my blurry
heart from getting caught up
in my eyes.
He doesn’t answer.
“That might be enough for today, Louisa, Benji needs to rest. He’s had quite a day and they are going to be discharging him from the ER soon.”
I look over at the social worker guy
wondering when he got here?
Wondering if he never left?
I swear the world had emptied for a minute there
as I confessed
my fears.
“Where will he go?” I ask.
“Somewhere where he’ll be safe. I’m sorry, Louisa, I’m not permitted to tell you more, until we have the plans worked out. You won’t be apart of the decision because you’re not his guardian.”
Maybe not his guardian,
but the only one who can
Guard Him.
“Fine. I just need to hear him say something, anything, before I can go.” I try again, “Benji, I love you. We are going to be okay, okay?”
He flinches at those words and
pulls his hand from mine
and those blurry tears appear and suddenly
define
the moment for
me
us.
Unclear.
“No, Lou-Lou, we’re not.”
His head is still turned from mine
and I can’t see his face,
but I can recount
the times Benji has said no to me.
Not once.
93.
I’m a wreck
walking out of the hospital room
and find Ms. Francine
waiting
for me.
Patiently
always here for me.
She’s knitting me gloves
to match my scarf.
She opens her arms
and even though I think I don’t want it,
I let her wrap her arms around me
anyway.
Suddenly, those feelings of
unclear
are swept away.
And nothing feels gray.
Everything suddenly
feels very
black and white
and that is
terrifying.
I want
familiar.
She’s been sitting ready
steady, feeling heavy
on this still same chair
waiting for me before she goes
anywhere.
I am to
Benji
what she is to
me.
There for me.
Taking care of me.
Wanting the best for me.
And I give into
her hug
I don’t turn away
or hide my face away
or pretend to look away-
I stay.
It makes me think that maybe
it’s what I wanted
all along.
Maybe it’s exactly
where I belong.
And once again, I feel sick inside
disgusting inside
just want to hide
because giving into her
kindness
is giving into
blindness.
Because now I am walking into the
black
and
white.