Read Love Rewards The Brave Online
Authors: Anya Monroe
98.
Christmas Eve starts quietly
and it is exactly what I need.
Lying in my bed I keep the
blanket wrapped around my body
I have been at 6-Spot
everyday for the last five days
and I’m spent.
Ms. Francine has been constantly worried,
trying to talk to
me.
I wish she’d let me be.
Suddenly everything she does makes me mad.
The caring and sharing
suddenly feels overbearing.
I don’t need her sympathy.
God it has been such a week.
I haven’t given a second look to the note
Benji wanted to leave for me
because when I think about it
my soul bleeds.
I don’t need that.
Not when I need to be strong.
Strong so Mom will work
to get me back
even though Benji is making me pick
up his slack.
I can be everything my
mother needs
and I am going to prove that
when we celebrate Christmas
together.
99.
I do my best to remain hopeful
over the fact that Christmas Eve happiness
is dependent
on a woman I shouldn’t count on
yet still long
for.
I’m in Ms. Francine’s car.
I feel like half my life is spent
sitting in this vehicle
as she takes me from one place to the next
meetingstherapyschool.
Now
on the eve of Christmas
I’m sitting here like a fool
waiting for Mom to show.
“Louisa, it’s been fifteen minutes since you were supposed to meet, would you like to use my phone to call her?” Ms. F asks.
“No, just give her a few more minutes. She’ll be here.”
Come on
don’t forget now, after this week.
I’m on a losing streak.
Come on
I don’t want it to happen this way.
I somehow want Ms. F to be proven wrong.
Not like she’s told me she wants my mom to fail
to not follow through,
but somehow it’s like I think
she thinks
she wouldn’t.
Come on
I never need much
ask for much
tell too much
but right now I want to prove to Ms. F-
the one who is always a show
never lets go
or forgets or misses a beat
that my mom
remembers
me.
“It’s been thirty minutes, Louisa. What are you thinking you’d like to do?”
“I don’t care,” I say in the exact way I spoke to her a year ago.
The difference was, then
I really didn’t
care.
And now
I do.
But what does that say about
Mom
Dad
Benji
Ms. Francine
Margot
Me
if I admit that?
We sit in silence another thirty minutes.
I can’t bear to look at her
or say a word.
I want her to say what I’m thinking
so I can be mad at her for saying
the things I think.
Things like:
“Where the fuck is she?”
“What the hell is more important than me?”
“Why am I all alone again,
like every shitty day of my life?”
“Let’s go. She’s not coming,” I whisper.
Ms. Francine reaches over to take my hand
her olive branch to let me know
she understands.
I pull away
fast.
As much I hate my mom and all that
she’s done to me
as she sat by and
watched as my dad destroyed me,
she’s still my mom.
And I keep holding out hope
that one-day
she’ll find a way to pay me back
for the past.
I was hoping she’d start tonight.
Instead
I’m driving to Ms. F’s
cousin’s house, on our way
to pick up Margot.
A happy family dinner where everyone
can celebrate the fact
they all have more
than I’ve got.
100.
The cousin is KiKi and
she’s loud and in charge
and talking my ear off
the moment I enter her house.
I head to the bathroom
as fast as I can.
Avoiding the toddler tantrum
happening in the hallway
and the adults laughing as they
pour champagne.
I turn on the fan and I turn on the water.
And I just want to scream.
The noise is killing me.
I take off my coat.
I take off my gloves.
I sit on the floor.
Wanting to pinch myself
squeeze myself
illicit some sort
of pain
so that I can feel something besides
the throbbing feeling in my chest that
Will. Not. Go. Away.
There’s a knock on the door.
Another knock.
“Louisa, is that you?”
Shit.
Margot’s asking to come in and my option is
let her
or stand up and go out
and I can’t do that.
Not when I am in mini-crisis mode.
No, bigger-than-that
I’m in an about-to-explode
near-heart-attack-condition.
I lift my hand to the doorknob and turn it
just enough,
so it can crack open,
to
let
her
in.
101.
She sits
next to me on the bathroom tile.
Silent, just like Ms. Francine.
It’s like they’re in on a silent operation tactic
and I don’t want to be the first one to fold.
So I hold back.
“Louisa, do you want to talk about why you’re crying in a stranger’s bathroom on Christmas Eve?”
Do I really have to do this?
“Not really, Margot.”
I keep my head in my hands
not wanting to let her understand
me.
“Okay, look I get it, Louisa. I don’t
need
you to talk to me. But this is the second time in as many weeks I’ve found you huddled, alone, crying. That’s not a good sign. That’s like, a call for help. I don’t know everything that you’re going through, my sister knows way more than I do –– and not just because she’s your foster parent –– because she’s been through way more shit than me. But I feel like I get you, Louisa, and I care about you.”
That panic-attack
feeling is fleeing, fast.
I am So. Tired. Of. Trying.
“Let’s talk about something else, how’s Jess? Do you guys have any plans for break?”
I give her nothing.
I can’t
because I like Margot,
I don’t want to lose her.
If she knew me
really, really knew me
she wouldn’t stay.
I wouldn’t blame her.
“Did you ask for any Christmas gifts?"
I feel myself shutting
down.
“Um. Okay,” she tried again. “How’s the 6-Spot going? It’s been so busy I’ve barely been able to check in with you.”
I’m being difficult and I know it,
but I don’t want to own it
because then I’d have to
change.
I’d have to be willing to be
seen.
And I’m not ready to
be that sort of
girl.
The sort of brave.
“You know Toby? I guess he has a new boyfriend, they are going to see The Nutcracker tonight.”
That gets my attention.
“Really?”
I bite my lip,
not wanting to admit
that I’m a bit
jealous.
“I know, right? He’s got to be the most adorable guy ever, those eyes alone, right? But he isn’t up for grabs.”
I laughs and
she does too.
Shit.
She wins.
“Thanks,” I say.
“For what?”
“For, you know, saying those things to me. It’s just, it freaks me out. You know, the being cared about part.”
I look away
eyes stinging
heart clinging
to the good parts and the good feelings
that are flinging
around inside.
“I get it, Louisa. The being cared about part is scarier than most things. But you can be brave.”
And I don’t think I ever wanted
to believe anything as much
as those four words.
You.
Can.
Be.
Brave.
Margot
speaks the truth
I want so badly
to believe.
102.
I walk downstairs on Christmas morning
knowing that Ms. Francine was awake
from the banging in the kitchen and
the smell of coffee cooking in the pot
the music playing
yuletide carols
and whatever else sort of frankincense and myrrh
happens here on Christmas.
“You’re up!” Ms. F says.
I come into the living room and smile
even though I promised myself
I wouldn’t.
But how could I
not?
There’s a tree full of presents
and I knew it was just the two of us.
I’ve never seen that kind of loot.
At least a dozen presents
some for me some for her
it was all I could do not to stare.
“Merry Christmas, Louisa!”
She gives me a hug
and I return it
sheepishly.
I’m like a kid in one of those movies
they play on Christmas day over and over.
Where the kid gets a million and
one boxes
and they are all better than the last.
“Do you want some breakfast first?”
I do.
After my bathroom “episode”
I tried my best to be in “play nice” mode
for Margot and Ms. Francine.
It mostly just meant me sitting with
the little kids
helping them put together their
brand-new presents because it was too much
to be present.
The kids started driving me nuts
and that happens so rarely
to be annoyed like that with a person so small,
but they just kept screaming
that it was taking too long
or yelling that they wanted more candy
or fighting over who got the best new toy.
There was no joy.
In the small things.
Like the fact they were at this giant house and
crazy cousin Kiki was letting them all come here
open gifts
it should be bliss.
It’s so hard not to compare.
Tit for tat
How about that?
It never adds up
Equal
because if you add
nothing plus nothing it equals nothing
every.single.time.
I didn’t need to go down that line
not now, not then.
Instead I found Ms. Francine in the
kitchen
at Kiki’s, and stood next to her
letting her
get me a plate of food.
I sat, intending to chew
the honey baked ham
quietly,
but all the energy was out of me
so I just sat there
until it was time to go.
“I made bacon and French toast casserole.”
I look over at the tree again.
It’s so hard to look away and say, “No, let’s eat,”
when so many Christmas morning’s past
have waited to finally
see me be a kid.
But my stomach growls and the
kitchen smells heavenly.
So I follow closely behind her
a Christmas morning amateur.