Read Love Rewards The Brave Online
Authors: Anya Monroe
103.
“This last one’s for you, Louisa.”
She holds it out to me
lovingly.
I take it from her hands
gingerly.
I had just opened the gifts from my “Mom”
although I know it was foster kid
program purchased
and most of these gifts are here
due to
angel tree
poor little me
teachers at school
pitch in
to fork up
cash to help Ms. F buy the
goods,
but it feels
good
nonetheless.
Last place I lived, those angel tree gifts
most likely
ended up on eBay
because they were certainly never
seen or used or worn by me.
Chose for me.
That’s why this is all so different.
It’s like, the things under the tree
are there on purpose
picked out, thinking of the size of my foot
and the length of my hair.
Picked out considering the clothes I liked to wear.
It was about me.
And so I take that last gift from Ms. F.
The one who’d already been so generous.
Feeling known and understood
in the freakiest
kind of way.
A way I never understood before today.
I untie the red bow and
open the little box and inside there’s
a key.
A key to the front door
and I’m floored.
I didn’t know what to expect,
but it wasn’t this
Because a key to her house means
trust
and concern
it means I can
always return
if I need
or
want
or have nowhere else to go.
And my heart-shaped hole
feels more whole.
“This key is your key, this house is your home.”
“But my mom, she’s making a home too, for me, Ms. Francine.”
“I know that, Louisa. But you can’t have too many places you call home.”
I give her a hug,
then I hand her the present I picked out.
The one Jess thought would be lame,
but Terry said would be great,
the one I knew would be right.
I knew
Ms. F
would know I care.
It would also remind me each time I looked at it
that it was okay to be scared.
Two balls of the softest wool yarn.
One white.
One black.
I wonder what they will look like when their
Crosses
Path.
104.
Ms. F drops me off.
“You sure you’re going to be okay? Did you want to try and call Jess one more time? I could still go pick her up?”
I don’t have the
heart
balls to call her
and apologize
can’t look in her eyes
and say what’s really been going on
all along.
“No, she’s out of town I think. Anyways, there will be people from work here I know.”
“Alright. Call if you need anything. Otherwise, I’ll be back to get you in two hours. And be careful, New Year’s Eve always brings out the crazies. I know Margot will look after you, but really, call me if you need anything at all.”
The club is loud.
Why was sound freaking me out
so bad?
I used to want to blare my music loud
wanting the noise to pound
out any sense of feeling.
Wanting to be left alone from reeling
in reality.
These days the reeling in the feeling
was the pounding sound I found
comfort in.
Is that a sin?
To suddenly want to let some of that
in
side?
Not wanting to hide
the same way I used to?
The idea of
not hiding
is eating me alive
because it’s all I’ve let in my mind.
Somehow since I got that key
to the door
the lock (to my heart) was opening a bit more.
So when Margot
asked if I’d wanted to come
to listen
to hear
what this slam poetry
thing was all about
FEAR
was the farthest thing from my mind.
105.
There’s a girl on stage
speaking
fury and pain
written on her face
and I wonder why the rage
and I can’t even look around to find Margot.
The words coming from the girl’s lips
sound like truth.
You can tell because the words she speaks
are little arrows
piercing different places
through the room.
“We are a memory
frozen in time.
One little line I used to know.
But the book we wrote
isn’t the kind you quote.
Shakespeare or Hemingway
or Emerson, Thoreau
just names that we know.
We can’t remember time and place
place and space
space and the faces.
disappear because they aren’t
our beginning or our end.
You were good to me
and I was good to you
but the everlasting wasn’t us
it was just a piece of me.
Just a piece of you.”
The room erupts, clapping.
I clap too,
for the girl taking a bow.
The guy on keyboard next to her
kisses her cheek.
Giving her the affirmation
we all seek:
that we’re enough.
106.
I look around
mesmerized by the crowd.
Thinking to myself, this is the place
I was looking for
all sweet sixteen years of my life.
Margot finds me. “You made it!”
She gives me a great big hug
as we look one another up and down
and then she frowns.
“Where’s Jess?”
“She couldn’t make it. Out of town, I guess.”
“Well, I’m thrilled you’re here, Louisa! Did you hear Leah?”
“The girl who just went? Yeah. She was amazing. The room was totally silent listening to her.”
Margot wears a white blouse
with hearts
lining the sleeves, skintight leather pants,
she looks like
she’s got it all
figured out.
“So talented, right? I want you to meet some of my peeps, follow me.”
She winds me through the maze of people
all ages
but all
the same.
Each one
here
hoping to
hear
something
that would mean something
to them.
And you could just tell by the way they stood
or held hands
that they somehow land-
ed here for a reason.
I’m glad I wore knee-high boots
instead of two-inch heels because it’s
standing room only.
The noise still electrifying
and it isn’t music, it
is the sound
of pure energy pulsing around the crowd.
“This is my co-worker and darling friend, Louisa.”
Margot introduces me to
Lindsey and Tabitha, Jacob and Carly.
All people I won’t remember except
for the fact
that they all smile at me.
Look me in the eye.
The part that avoids contact
pulls toward it.
Grabs hold of it
like a lifeline.
Toby was there with his boyfriend
and he introduced me as his “Work BFF”
which made me blush
like I had a sugar rush.
What would these people think if they knew
I’m a girl who spent her childhood
locked in a room
giving my due
for all his misdeeds
that I paid for?
God, I’m glad they know me
as:
Margot’s friend.
It’s the safest place to be.
It’s the safest place to stand.
107.
She goes on stage last
the final act
the grand finale
the bee’s knees
the queen honeybee
the one most free.
She’s looking at me.
“I wanted to give a shout-out to my friend, Louisa, who’s here with me tonight. She’s a talented poet herself and thank you for making her feel welcome in this magical community of spoken word performers. Also, I’m honored to give the last performance of the year!”
The lights go off
and the room goes still
save for the guitar player on her left
who offers a beat to the moment
a beat to the current
that flows around
us
all.
“She lays still.
Still enough to hold
but instead she folds
over
and under
and in between.
Life and death
“Don’t want you to resurrect
me,” she says when I try.
Try and find a way to help her stand.
She won’t let me hold her hand.
The beginning started off so well.
The two of ‘em, boy meets girl.
He looks nice and neat
makes her wanna talk sweet.
Never thought he’d put her in a livin’ Hell.
Hell on earth is what it feels like
when you are just the sister
trying to find a way to hold
on tight.
Wanna give a good fair fight
for the one
who had faith in you
gonna see you through.
When she starts breaking
into pieces
too many to find, some pieces so small
shards broken again by the fall.
Doesn’t feel like I will ever win
her back to the side of life.
I was just a girl back then. Dropping out
never wanting to finish
gypsy girl heart of mine
never knew what I’d find
when I stopped for a minute.
I had my mind set on playing hard to get
get it quick
in and out never thinking about
the power of being around
for her.
That night when she was found on the ground
bruised and beat
body so weak
lying in the street
after her boyfriend of too many years
decided he didn’t care
about how the night might end.
The only way he felt power was to crush her
hurt her with his hands.
No wonder that now she’s broken
she won’t let me hold her fragile hand.
Won’t let me help her stand.
No.
When you get hurt like that
broke like that
you can’t fight back.
All you can do is hide down low
deep inside, how low can you go?
She found out.
When I went to get her in the hospital,
before you may have thought the broken heart
was the worst of it;
but honey that’s the first of it.
There is:
Broken ribs
Leg
Head
Hand
How could she even withstand
the injury?
Thank God they found her and
brought her to me.
I’ll take care of her forever, it seems.
‘Cause she’s ripped at the seams.
Broken bodies
and souls don’t get fixed overnight.
We have no Mom or Dad to help us,
no, those fuck-ups were gone a long time ago.
It’s always been the two of us
and now she’s in my care.
All I can do is stare
at this broken woman before me.
Who, when I was little, was always
my safe hold
my gatekeeper
my lighthouse
never leave the house without
person.
And now she’s too broken for me
to hold.
She just lays there
still
as I fight for her recovery
the whole time she’s in my custody.
I don’t know the first thing about fixing
broken people.
I spent my life wandering around
never keeping my feet on the ground
lost not wanting to be found.
Now it’s different.
I have her
and she needs me
and in her brokenness
I become whole
in my wholeness
she can be healed
in her healing
we can be strong
in our strength we
rediscover our greatest defense:
One another.”