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Authors: Gabrielle Prendergast

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BOOK: Audacious
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Samir's father's words

Rattle around my head

Love is a blessing and a gift

Not for us to question
.

But

Of love

I have so many questions

It would take to the end of the universe

To ask them all.

LEARNER'S LICENSE

I need a canvas

A big one

And Dad has taken the car.

My fingers ache to call Samir

I know he loves the art-supply place

But somehow, it's David I dial.

He arrives, driving, his brother beside him

I got my learner's license,
he says with glee.

His brother is so painfully gorgeous

That my words get tangled as I say hello

I sit in the back, contemplating

How David and his brother look very alike.

I'm glad you called,
David says

I'm so sorry about all the…that was NOT cool.

Beside him, his brother whistles.

I'm grounded beyond Pluto

But this is “homework” so we can hang out.

Michael will wait in the car, right?

Michael grunts and pulls out an iPhone

I stroll with David, looking at paint

And marveling at my capriciousness.

I heard you broke up with Sam,
David says

God, I say, is someone blogging my life?

Genie told me,
he says,
she's moving in for the kill.

It's so funny I nearly laugh

That at the same time I want to murder Genie

I want to kiss David.

NOT FOR US TO QUESTION

Quaint, the idea that love is

Unquestionable undefeatable

Endless fathomless

Strong as time and

Tenacious as space but

If love is never to be tested

Or challenged then it is worth

Nothing.

AUDACIOUS ANGEL

Because you believed

In yourself

Your tiny self

Because you knew

There is no greater accomplishment

Than making someone love you

You only needed three minutes

Your footprints

Like your memory

Larger than life

Larger than you

Or me.

FREEDOM WALL

Time passes,

Like music floating though an open window

And spring arrives.

Mental clarity returns to me piece by piece

And I think I've said all I can say

To my poor shrink.

I'm going back to school after the break

I stop by to pick up some things

David skips, and meets me by the wall.

We have been “hanging out”

Since he has returned from Pluto

And once, he kissed me.

He's not my boyfriend

I think even he senses Samir

Lingering in the corners of my heart.

I've even apologized

He says he doesn't mind

But by my wall, he takes my hand

Territorially

I'm glad they left this up

He says of the Freedom Wall

All the other art

David's, Samir's and of course

Sarah's have been taken down.

But the Freedom Wall remains

This is the first time I have seen it

In real life.

I can barely take it in

I'm overwhelmed by the honesty

And simplicity of the sentiments

I decide,
someone has written

And
He made us ALL perfect,
writes another

And then I see it.

Small and tucked in a corner

A scrawl of Arabic

That I recognize

I googled it once, before Christmas

Thinking I might write it on a card

I practiced it about a hundred times

But gave up and went with English.

I know it says:
I love you

Beside me, David sighs

Impatient, and lets go of my hand

'Sup, Sam?
he says

Samir doesn't answer

He gazes in his unraveling way

And David kisses my ear and leaves.

Are you two…?

Just friends, I say, not that you should care.

My heart is pounding.

How is Jibreel? I say to change the subject

He weighs six pounds

Like he was born yesterday

But beautiful, so beautiful

Like his uncle, I think

And Samir says,
I miss you.

TRUTH

I could miss him too

But my ear remembers David's kiss

David is in Students for Secular Humanism

And Samir in the Islamic Students' Alliance.

I could have David as a “boyfriend”

Tolerate his low-slung jeans

And his hockey friends thinking they know me

Because they've seen a picture of my snatch.

I could make love with Samir

Right now, baptize him inside me

Spirit him back to the mudroom door

And take him on the narrow stairs.

I could walk away

From both of them

From another school, another crisis

I could walk away from myself.

Be Ella again, finally

Measured and careful

Popular and successful

Ella would choose

But Raphaelle

Wants what she wants

She can't think of a reason not

To have her baklava.

And eat it too.

THE QUESTION

So just because I can

I'm going to have two boyfriends

One for Ella: the popular rich boy

Hockey jock with an artistic streak

One for Raphaelle: the moody, pious Muslim

Handsome and hot-blooded with a body to match

One for movies and parties

One for furtive tumbles and soul-searching

One for my head

And one for my heart

I will try to keep them from each other

I don't want anyone to get hurt

Although both of them hurt me

I'm done with vengeance

I know it's capricious, maybe selfish

But in the end that could be

                                        the
                                                  whole
                                                        truth
                                                             about
                                                                     me.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

It started with Sonya Sones, who introduced me to the idea of a verse novel for teens and got me addicted to the form. Ellen Hopkins was and continues to be an inspiration and cheerleader for novels in verse and verse novelists.

Carrie Gleason read this manuscript first and sent me a soul-nourishing email that I read over a bowl of Vietnamese noodles. Kris Rothstein and Carolyn Swayze listened to my big wish for this book, then made it come true. Sarah Harvey and Andrew Wooldridge weren't at all fazed by the four-letter word at the heart of this story.

My sister, Monica Prendergast, a poet and scholar, gave me a confidence-building reality check when it all started to seem a little scary. My other sisters, Tess and Kathy, just believe in me, no questions asked. Mum's perplexity about my love of young-adult literature makes me laugh. Dad, wherever you are, I know you noticed, eventually.

My husband, Len, and daughter, Lucy, tolerate my moods, poor housekeeping and general nonsense.

To all of you, thanks.

GABRIELLE PRENDERGAST
is a UK-born Canadian/Australian who lives in Vancouver, BC, with her husband and daughter. She holds an MFA in Creative Writing from the University of British Columbia. A part-time teacher and mentor, Gabrielle blogs and rants at
Angelhorn.com
and
VerseNovels.com
.

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