Audacious (10 page)

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Authors: Gabrielle Prendergast

Tags: #JUV014000, #JUV033000, #JUV003000

BOOK: Audacious
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Was right.

But I guess I was wrong.

chapter eleven

SNOWFLAKES

IN CASE ANYONE IS WONDERING

By the way

Mom has checked in

It's a “private clinic”

She's going to stay

Because she's so thin

And very sick.

PHONE CALL

I heard what happened

Did you try to call?

There's no reception at my uncle's

I'm so sorry

I should have been there for you

Are you okay?

His voice is like ambrosia

It fills me up

And before I can stop it

Tears are pouring down my face

It's just so good to hear your voice

I say, trying not to sob.

Me too

I wish I could come over

But

Well

I'm hiding in the downstairs bathroom

Just to make this call.

This is the worst Christmas ever, I say

That's why I don't celebrate it

He says, and I laugh.

That's the sound I love

I'm going to sneak out and see you

I promise.

Come over anytime, I say

I'm never leaving the house again.

I'll leave the mudroom door unlocked

You can come right up to my room.

Then I just listen to him breathe

Before he says:
see you soon.

REPORT CARDS

In the midst of it all

Two letters arrive

End-of-term report cards.

Mine is ironic

Decent grades

Glowing comments

Especially in Art.

Ella has a real gift in art,

Her technique is excellent

Her vision is confident and meaningful.

Well done.

And yet, here I am, under arrest.

Kayli's on the other hand

The perfect normal daughter

Looks like this:

Math: F

Kayli is not grasping the basic concepts

French: F

Kayli has not completed any assignments

History: F

Kayli rarely hands in work or participates

English: F

It's obvious that Kayli has not done the readings

Biology: F

Kayli has not passed any of the quizzes

Dad studies the reports for a few minutes

Then goes into his den and closes the door.

NEW YEAR'S EVE

Kayli is grounded

And I'm on self-imposed house arrest

But Dad's going to the clinic

To be with Mom.

They're having a little New Year's thing.

Before he goes

We have

“The talk”

I have to say

I'm disappointed

I thought we'd be happy here

New house

New city

A new beginning

But instead we're falling apart

Something has to be done

But I don't know what it is

And I need you girls

To help me figure it out

Because clearly something is not working.

Then he straightens his tie and leaves.

Kayli turns to me and says

He noticed.

MIDNIGHT: PART TWO

Popcorn

And a movie

Kayli falls asleep

On the couch

Boredom

And cheap champagne

I tuck a blanket around her

And go up the narrow stairs to bed

Midnight

And fireworks crackle

In the distance

The mudroom door clicks open

Footsteps

And the stairs creak

I sit up, listening

Samir appears in the shadows

Silence

And snowflakes in his hair

He shrugs off his coat

And lies down next to me

DESIRE

We kiss

And more

His hands are soft and warm

And strong.

Gripping my thighs

Through flannel pajamas.

We still haven't spoken a word

Since he arrived.

But he has taken off his sweater

I caress his bare arms

And slide my hands inside his T-shirt.

His muscular body is unexpected

Dangerously sexy.

And soon

We are both breathless

With desire.

DECISION

I have condoms,
he whispers

I note the optimistic plural

And lean back

To look into his eyes

Do you want to?

He asks, twisting a strand of hair

Around his thumb.

Yes. No. Do you?

Yes. No. Yes.

I've never done it before. Have you?

Yes. I mean, no!

Yes or no?

He's smiling

No. I've never done it.

So…

I'm in enough trouble already.

Is it okay if we wait?

No. I mean, yes. Of course.

I've waited sixteen years

I can wait a little longer.

Do you want to stay? Do you want to leave?

Yes. I mean no. What?

We giggle in the dark

Tired and happy

And fall asleep

Like spoons in a drawer.

WAFFLES

This far North, deep in winter

Dawn arrives late

Accompanied by the smell of waffles.

Samir is still curled around my back

Asleep, his breath on my neck

I open my eyes

In the doorway blinking

Stands my father, in a flowered apron

Breakfast,
he says.

Samir and I

Appear in the kitchen

Five minutes later.

Bacon?
says Dad.

Just a waffle, thanks,
says Samir

I don't eat bacon

Dad serves a waffle

Are you vegetarian?
he asks

Muslim, sir,
says Samir

Dad freezes over the juicer

Good,
he finally says
. I hope that means

You respect my daughter's virtue.

Dad! I say, and Kayli dissolves into giggles

But Samir is earnest

Of course,
he says.

VIRTUE

It's an old-fashioned word

That means “asset” or “value”

Like that's all a young woman

Is worth.

Maybe it came to mean

What it means

Because people couldn't bring themselves

To say “vir-gin-i-ty.”

Samir is contrite

When he heads out into the cold

I feel bad about bringing condoms

Your father is right.

I can take care of my own virtue, thanks

I say, I don't need my father's help,

Or yours for that matter.

Though it's nice that we agree.

He kisses me

And clomps off to the bus stop

Leaving deep footprints

In the new snow.

BAD-NEWS DAY

I expect a lecture

But instead I get

The four worst words

I have bad news

Dad delivers them gently

But has the sense to preface them with

Mom's okay but

I have bad news

Charlotte Connelly died last night

Who?

I say.

She froze in the park

Drunk I suppose

Who can blame her

It was New Year's Eve after all.

Then I realize

I never knew her name.

The Phantom is dead.

Picture the scene:

The red socks

The gaping eye hole

The smell of whiskey

I can't help smiling

When I think of Father Martinez

Identifying her

And finding

The Koran

Clutched in her cold dead hand.

She got the last laugh

Audacious until the very end.

FINAL REST

Mom cries when we tell her

Dad said that she would

She's with Jesus our Lord now

Mom says,
God is good.

When I tell Samir about it

He feels basically the same

But he says,
All
hu Akbar

Same God, different name.

PARADISE LOST

And yet looking for

The Phantom in paradise

I still see darkness.

The French get it right

They have one word to mean both

Heaven and sky too.

The Phantom's last breath

Rose up in the winter wind

And made the sky home.

chapter twelve

BLACK INK

PLEA BARGAIN

Mom's suit, bought on sale

Almost fits me

But My Lawyer makes me change

You need to look young,
she says

Inscrutably,
but not cheap

Nothing sexy

I settle on the purple Levi's

With a pink T-shirt and gray hoodie.

It has a duck on the pocket

Perfect,
My Lawyer says

You look about twelve.

And mentally challenged.

Funny.

That's exactly how I feel.

I put on the mismatched shoes.

The prosecutor

An assistant of David's dad

Has a proposal

A lesser charge

Contributing to the delinquency of a minor

A fine and probation

My Lawyer thinks I should accept.

And if I don't? I ask

You could do time
, she says.

And leaves me

To talk to

My dad.

IN MY OWN DEFENSE

No because

I haven't done anything wrong

No because

I am a minor myself

No because

It was David who posted the photo

No because

It's my body to do with what I like

No because

The photo isn't pornographic

No because

Ms. Sagal liked it

No because

Samir liked it

No because

It's the best and most true thing

I've ever done

I'm sorry Dad

But no.

THE REALITY OF SINGLE PARENTHOOD

I look up Ms. Sagal on 411.com

I know she lives near the school

Because she walks to work

She's not hard to find

Even though I didn't know

Her first name is Veronica

2874, Suite 12

Gray apartments by the strip mall

I think for a moment

This must be the wrong place

But then I see the hand-built ramp

Into the ground-floor patio

She's surprised to see me

Behind her, Marika is watching
Nova

Something about the Hubble telescope

Ms. Sagal invites me in

And pours tea

In mismatched cups.

The lumpy sofa, the vague smell of damp

The books and art things crammed on shelves

And medical-looking machines

Bottles of pills on the counter

It all coalesces into something:

Ms. Sagal can't help me.

Marika's school must cost a fortune

Not to mention her therapy and drugs

And there's no Dad to help out

And Ms. Sagal is just a teacher

Not a plumber, after all

Oh my god, what have I done?

NEGOTIATION

Can you make them

Give Ms. Sagal her job back?

I ask My Lawyer.

It's the school's decision

The court can pressure them of course

But in exchange for what?

JUSTICE

I want to scream

But instead I say

If I accept the plea bargain

And do whatever community service they want

And pay the fine

Will they give her back her job

Because her daughter is disabled

And she needs the money?

I can't guarantee that

Says My Lawyer

They are two separate issues

So I could accept their offer

And Ms. Sagal, who is innocent,

Could still lose everything?

How is that fair?

How is any of this fair?

Says My Lawyer.

PURGING : PART ONE

When I get home

I throw up in my new bathroom

Which is ironic

Because Mom comes back today.

She's put on weight

And looks much better

And hugs us girls

Like she will never let us go.

We follow her

As she moves through the house

Throwing away secrets

And bulimic's accoutrements

Toothbrushes, Ziploc bags

Laxatives and diuretics

Stashes of candy bars

She lets Kayli eat one; I decline.

It's a new start,
says Mom

Hauling the load out to the trash

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