Read Love Rewards The Brave Online
Authors: Anya Monroe
160.
I beat Benji in Ping-Pong
and he beats me in checkers.
The afternoon wasn’t long
enough.
Benji is different somehow.
In a good way.
In a grown up way.
I see him like I never have before.
A person who’s going to be okay
without me.
I’ve been trying so hard to save him
make him
whole.
I can’t offer salvation when I
haven’t set myself free.
I can’t offer salvation to a
boy who I see
is becoming more whole than me.
Whole in his imperfection
because he’s finding
a voice
in his introspection.
In his dissection of his
story.
And God,
that sounds like a salve-made-for-glory.
He’s still hurting, that’s for sure.
A nurse came in once
and gave him his meds
a cupful of pills
pinkbluered.
He swallowed them fast
they must be what
is giving him this last
ing
effect of calm and collected.
It’s working.
I wonder what my mom would have
been like
if she’d gone to a
doctor for help
for her head
instead of lying in bed
self-diagnosing
self-medicating in a sicktwistedway.
Crazy how Benji’s attempt on his life
is the very thing
saving
him.
I put on my coat
Ms. F’s here to pick me up.
“Are you going to be okay here, Benji?”
“Yeah. I’m more worried about you, sis.”
I scrunch up my mouth. “You keep making me cry, Benji. Stop it, will you?”
“Louisa, did they give you the note? The note I wrote the first time…time I tried?”
I nod
thinking of the crumpled piece
of paper
I put in my palm.
“Do you remember the stars?”
“I remember the stars, Benji.”
And I did.
I do.
I remember the nights that came after
the dark.
The dark that broke us.
I see how they stole
so much from us
but here
right now
in the clean white facility
I can see that
they never took what mattered most:
Brother and Sister.
Lou-Lou and her little Benji-Boy.
The dark
is pushed out by
the light.
The sickness they carried
that they tried to pass along to us
didn’t survive.
But we did.
We Are
.
We Are Survivors.
161.
Suddenly I’m on a roll.
Rock n’ Roll inspiration from the 6-Spot’s
not quite what I mean.
More like rolling down a hill
suddenly feeling free.
Finding words for my poetry performance
that makes me believe
in change.
I take a break from the words I write
to go to the hill by the side of the house
the one still covered in snow.
The February chill
still setting in deep down to my bones,
but somehow I just
know
what I need.
I need the rolling down a hill
feeling of free.
Jess is with me
and I know I need to tell her
a piece
so the
rest doesn’t come like a shock.
We ditch our sleds
as we act like kids
rolling in the snow.
We get to the bottom and we laugh
loud
our make-up smeared in the
tiny creases of our eyes.
Surprised
it’s as fun as it is.
We lie on our backs
snow angels under us
the wings flying with us
we look at one another
both knowing there’s so much unspoken
ground
I
we never had the guts to tread.
She speaks first.
“Louisa…?” Her voice cracks.
Maybe it was the exhilaration of the
downhill motion
or maybe it was the part of her that was scared
to utter words that would
ring true.
“Are you okay?” she finishes.
I hear the hitch in her voice.
I feel the catch in my throat.
“Not really, Jess,” I say.
Before I can turn away
she makes me stay
by grabbing my hand.
Wrapping it around
hers.
And the contact that I spend forever running from
hits me full force.
I can do this.
I can be like Benji.
I can find words.
Even if it’s hard.
I can be brave.
“What happened to you, Louisa? To make you like this?”
“It started before I can even remember. My dad. Taking pieces of me until there was nothing left.”
162.
I keep talking,
telling the story of my childhood.
She stays by my side
in the freezing white snow
as I recount the times my dad
took away my innocence
causing me to be ambivalent
about my own life.
There are parts that make her cry and parts
where I do, too.
I realize with the telling
that this is what it means to
be real
to be known
to have a friend
who is willing to hold
you when you fall.
And I wish
I just wish
like I used to wish
on the stars at night
that I had
told her sooner
because the telling is what makes
you heal
be real
be known
and being known is just like I thought
but was too scared to try.
Being known
is so much better than
being alone.
Later that day
while the wet clothes dry
and I’ve had a chance to say
almost
everything
Jess stands in Ms. F’s kitchen
hands me a mug of hot cocoa.
“Louisa, I’m so proud to be your friend. You’re the strongest person I’ve ever known.”
She
will never understand
that my strength comes
from people like her ––
the ones who are here
after.
The ones who are there even though they know the
ugly
dark
secrets.
The ones who choose to stay.
163.
There are so many clothes on the racks
at the mall. I should have
found a way to stall
because getting a cool outfit, special to wear
for the show
is ramping it all up too much
it makes me feel like I might
blow
it all.
“I don’t know, Ms. Francine. I can just wear something I already have. I don’t need anything new.”
“I know you don’t
need
anything, Louisa. But I want to do this for you.”
I puff out my cheeks as I think
about the pressure mounting.
The competition is tomorrow
and I’ve rehearsed non-stop
trying to block
out any negative thoughts.
Just trying to think about
what I am.
Ignoring what I’m not.
That’s what Margot told me to do.
“Jess said I could borrow her black leather pants. Maybe I’ll just do that.”
“Is that what you want to do?” Ms. F asks.
“Uh, I don’t know. I’ve only been to one of these things and it was all adults. Adults who like looked like they knew what they were doing.”
“Well, I’ve been to lots of these things over the years for Margot and I know that the most important thing is to be comfortable and be
yourself
.”
“Is this like a pep talk or something?” I roll my eyes.
“No, but I do know that skin tight leather pants in a crowded room might make you pretty sweaty, which might make you feel less then amazing.”
True.
Not to mention Jess is at least
two sizes smaller than me.
Sucking in all night to
pull that off
might be
less than
ideal.
“I guess that makes sense…in that case, what I’d really love to wear is this.”
I hold up a dress from the rack
with a vintage look of lace on the
hem but purposefully sewn in
crooked.
“You never wear white,” she says.
“No. This one. This one is perfect.”
I hold the white dress
up to myself
in a mirror
seeing everything
more clear.
164.
Shit.
I keep smudging my eyeliner.
Not on purpose.
More like in mini-freak-out-mode
what the hell do I know
about standing on stage?
Why did I
agree
choose to do this?
Margot comes to my rescue
as she walks into my bedroom
grabbing a tissue to
help fix
my misuse
of a black gel pen.
“Are you doing okay? I heard a scream from up here.”
“I don’t know. Do you like this dress? I keep messing up my makeup and I don’t think I can even remember the words anymore. Can I write them on my hand?” I ask.
She taps her forefinger
on her lips
listening with intent
to my rant.
“And Margot, I should have listened to you and Jess and just read my poem to practice, out loud, to you guys. I don’t know why I didn’t. Can we go through it now? We have time!”
Margot doesn’t give into my
meltdown so I try
again.
“Also, do you know who all is going to be there tonight? I know Toby and his boyfriend said they were coming. And Ms. F’s friends from book club. And shit, Jess texted saying Markus was coming with her. Do you think you could just call everyone and tell them the show was cancelled. Or pneumonia. I think I have pneumonia!”
I fall on my bed.
Face down.
“Stand up,” she says.
“Huh?” I eek out.
“I said, stand up. You heard me.”
I roll over
to look at her while I clutch
my stomach
feigning my newly-discovered
illness.
“Louisa, in the time I have known you I don’t think I’ve ever, ever seen you act so…so…normal.”
“You don’t think I’m normal?”
“No, not that you aren’t
normally
normal- just like, you are
so
acting like a
teenager
right now. It’s hilarious. Usually you’re so reserved. This is good. You need this emotion for tonight.”
I roll my eyes.
Knowing I’m playing into what she said
about me
but trying to
repress the smile
twitching at the side of my mouth
it’s near impossible.
“Can you please call them and cancel?” I try one last time.
“Absolutely not. You are going to rock this. I don’t even know what you’re going to say and I still know you will.”
“Can’t we go through it once, together, before we go?”
“Nope. You got yourself this far, you can do the rest. I’m excited to hear this just like everyone else. As a fan.”
“Fine.”
I huff and go back to the mirror
to reapply the liner
on my eyes.
“Would you tell Ms. Francine I just need another minute.”
“Of course, and you know, Louisa, I always find the best way to fight my jitters is to have the person who calms me the most talk me down.”
“I don’t know who that is,” I answer.
“I think you do.”
She walks out of my room
leaving me alone.
I turn back to the mirror
blowing out my cheeks.
165.
Margot drove her own car
so it’s just the two of us
in the car together, like so many
days before.
Ms. Francine always taking me to where I need
to go.
“You doing okay? You hardly ate all day, Louisa,” she asks.
“I’m fine. Just nervous. I don’t know why I’m doing this.”
“Yes, you do. You know why, Louisa. Because your heart is telling you
this is exactly
what you need to do.”
“But why do you believe in me so much when I’ve never done this before?” I ask.
At a red light she stops
and looks over,
choosing to see
me as I am.
“Because I
was
you, Louisa. I was a girl, with a story to tell, who was never free until I learned to use my words.”
“You went onstage, like Margot?”
“No, I didn’t go on stage. But I did spend years and years keeping the truth a secret from the people who wanted to help help.”
“It was the story Margot told at the poetry night, on New Years Eve, right? When you were crying?”
“That was part of my story. And it isn’t in me to share it on stage, but Margot is made to do that, so I want her to share that part of our past. To help someone else be strong, in ways that I can’t.”
“But maybe I’m like you, Ms. Francine. Maybe it
isn’t in me
either. Maybe someone like Margot is better for this job.”
“I can’t answer that for you. But I do think if you’ve gotten yourself to this place –– to sign up for this on your own, to write the words without any help, to practice every day –– that something inside of you knows ––
really knows
–– this is the right thing, for you.”
She’s right.
I feel it in my bones.
The shaky bones
that
deep down know
this is the
way for me
to find a way
out
of the secret hiding place.
“Ms. F?”
“Mmhmm?”
“Who is your new room mate going to be?”
“Louisa, I’d love to talk to you about that, so much so –– but can we wait until after the show?”
She pulls in a parking space
turns off the car.
She leans over to me
kisses my forehead
and I see
that she’s the one
who calms me most
and that she
was just able to
talk
me
d
o
w
n
.