Authors: Ellen Hopkins
divorcing Spencer. I can't tell him
long distance, though. So I guess
I'm stuck in limbo for now.
“And if you decide to split up,
will it be because of Kenny?”
In a way. I didn't fall out of love
with Spencer because of Kenny.
But I did fall in love with Kenny
because of Spencer. Kenny treats
me with respect. Simple as that.
Sadness seeps into me. Through
me. And still, “I guess I understand.
I'm just sorry, you know?” I give her
a hug. “I'm fading fast. Guest room?”
She smiles.
Clean sheets on the bed
and everything. And there's a new
toothbrush in the medicine cabinet.
Morning-after-tequila breath is brutal.
As I start down the hall, she calls
after me,
So you know, I'm sorry, too.
Still, I find it hard to sleep.
The bed is bigger and softer
than mine. I sink down into
the pillow top. Eyes closed,
I could be afloat in a calm sea.
Then up blows a wind. Spiraling
impatience for the impermanent
nature of love. Can it endure?
Grow? Flourish? I love Cole more
now than I did our first year
together. Is it because I know
him betterâhave investigated
beyond exterior shine, discovered
the facets underneath, strong,
pure, impenetrable? I hear Darian.
What if he was around all the time?
Would seeing him every day change
the way I feel? Is my heart fonder
because of his absence? Does proximity
breed discontent? The last thing
I want is for Cole and me to become
like my parents, one finding some
slim measure of satisfaction in
the other's failures. But what about
loyalty? Faithfulness? Promises kept?
Would sharing a home make it less
welcomingâto Cole, or to me?
Was mostly a year apart. At first,
while Cole attended SOI, we saw
each other when he got weekend liberty.
Sometimes on base, other times off,
but only if he wasn't in the field, and only
if his platoon sergeant was so inclined.
We didn't know for sure if or when it
would happen, and anticipation built
to an insane degree. Cole could
use his cell phone only on Fridays,
after training. I'd wait breathlessly
until I got a definitive yea or nay.
Even then, there were restrictions.
Luckily, Uncle Jack lived within
the prescribed radius and also had
a daughter cute enough to lure
Cole's “battle buddies.” SOI
infantrymen did not leave base
alone. The Corps believes in
chaperones. We did manage some
alone time, though. Sex, ever better,
was my reward for patience, and
“liberty” for Cole meant plummeting
toward commitment for me.
Lasted not quite two months.
By the time Cole's graduation
loomed, I was over-the-top in love
with him. My own schoolwork
suffered more than a little, not so
much because of time spent with him,
as because of too much time
fantasizing about being with him.
Daydreams are distracting. Then
came the very real threat of
losing him. As commencement
day marched ever closer, anxiety
took seed. Sprouted. Grew like
the spring weeds outside my door.
I didn't eat much. Food had no taste.
My brain fought sleep and when
exhaustion forced it, desolation
framed my dreams. And snapshots
of war. I couldn't get past those
images. They were everywhereâ
television, magazines, the Internet.
Finally, I went to a counselor
who sent me to a therapist, who
prescribed tiny pills that allowed
me some measure of deep night
respite.
Non-narcotic
, he promised.
Then he amended,
But could cause
dependency.
I still depend on
them to silence the nightmares.
My body has learned to work in sync
with them, sleeping straight
through the night, waking on time
and mostly refreshed. But those
first weeks, Ativan fogged
every morning. The alarm couldn't
fight the daze. I ended up missing
my morning classes, and as
someone who had always been
in complete control of my life
up until then, I felt like a puzzle
that couldn't be solved because
pieces were misplaced. But then
would come Cole's Friday call,
and all those pieces started to fall
right into place, except for the most
important ones around the edges,
the ones that completed the puzzle.
Those appeared when Cole did.
Wasn't working out much better
for Darian, not that she saw Spence
much more than I saw Cole. And
not that she worried any more
about him, either. In fact, she slept
fine, sans medication. Her problem
was lack of motivation.
The only thing
I'm good at is singing,
she said.
So why
bust my butt, working for grades?
The only classes she kept up with
were music and screenwriting.
Spence's MCT school was only
four weeks, no liberty the first two.
By the third, he and Dar were in
regular heat for each other. They
had only a few hours together,
but made the best of it at Uncle
Jack's. The fourth week, Spence
was allowed overnight liberty, and
partway through their all-night love
fest, they began making wedding
plans. After his MCT graduation,
Spence's MOS training would continue
at Pendleton. He wanted a wife
before any chance at deployment.
And Darian wanted a husband.
Spence received special liberty
to walk down the aisle. Cole
was granted it, too, to serve as best
man, opposite my maid of honor.
The wedding night was incredible,
at least for Cole and me, who had
our own honeymoon suite right
on the beach, waves serenading
us as we made love. It was our
first time alone with no pressure
to hurry since those first days
after we met. We were starved
for each other, barely through
the door before tux and dress
fell to the floor in an inelegant
heap. There was nothing elegant
about what came next, either.
It was desperation, made flesh.
He picked me up with steel-
muscled arms, kissed me, bit
me, licked me. Tried, it seemed,
to swallow me. And I screamed
for him to climb inside me and
he did, with his lips and tongue
and fingersâone, two, three.
And then he filled me up with fire
and stone and when he poured
into me, I cried. Because I knew.
That would be our last night
to join in such a way before
the Marine Corps ordered him
to a place where touch would not
be possible. Unfair, when I had
just tapped into this wellspring,
need I never knew I thirsted for.
Unfair, to strip me of him, just
when I realized he was intrinsic
to the “me” I'd become. Who would
I be when he was gone? Later,
I would realize that distance was not
at the heart of my pain. It was time,
dissipated. Vanished into the ether.
Moments lost cannot be resurrected.
But, whether or not I knew the reason,
I ached for him, for us, though he held
me in his arms. When I confessed
my fear and he made love to me
the second time, it was tender, driven
by tears. And he whispered into my ear,
my hair, the plush skin of my breasts,
my belly, my thighs:
Don't be sad, Ash.
As long as you want me, I will always
come back to you. And, no matter where
I am, you will be the first I think of every
morning, and this will be the last thing
I remember as I fall asleep each night.
Was the best one of all.
Something to remember,
for sure. For him. And me.
Exhausted, but not close
to satiated, we poured
memories into the predawn
hours, enough to last
for the long months apart
dangling on the near horizon.
Afterward, he held me
so tightly I could barely
breathe. But when he mumbled,
I love you, Ash,
I could have
happily suffocated right there
in his arms. It was the first time
he'd said it. I half-suspected
he was delirious, wasn't sure
I believed him. Nor was I certain
he heard me when I dared
admit out loud, “I love you,
too.” I'd never uttered those
words, to him or anyone. But
I realized, just as I nodded
off, how very much I meant it.
It can also destroy you. The day Cole
graduated SOI, love annihilated me.
By then, I was helplessly, ridiculously,
out of my mind crazy about him. And
they gave us exactly fifteen minutes
to say good-bye before loading him up
to send him off to his permanent duty
station on Oahu. I don't know why they
call PDSs “permanent.” “Regular” is more
accurate, at least until the brass deploys
their grunts elsewhere. Cole would have
four months in Hawaii before heading to
Iraq. San Diego felt a million miles away,
and as summer closed its fists around
spring, I felt the squeeze. Finals were
a nightmare. Despite the vastness between
Cole and me, I was every bit as distracted
as when he was “spitting distance,” to borrow
a Wyoming colloquialism. Later, when
my parents wanted to know what happened
to that semester, I told them I was sick,
which wasn't a total lie. I was heartsick.
They always started pretty much
like this:
Hey, sweetheart.
What's up in the real world?
And, since I always answered,
“Not much going on here. What's
happening in
your
world?”
I got a regular rundown
about barracks cleaning
and physical training before
the poet in Cole started talking
about,
The perfume of plumeria,
fighting the scent of sweat
in the air,
or how,
The ocean's
singing reminds me of our last
night together. Remember?
How could I possibly forget?
And that made me even
hungrier to see him or touch
him or taste him. His voice was not
nearly enough, so I'd go get his shirt
and bury my face in it until time was up
and he had to tell me,
Good-bye. Love
you.
And,
I'm in need of some serious
Ash time.
Before long, our mantra.
To Spencer being assigned a local
PDS. He had requested Pendleton,
which is home to several helicopter
squadrons. With that likely, he put
in for on-base housing, knowing
it would take a while for approval.
Meanwhile, his housing allowance
would pay for the off-base apartment
he could come home to after completing
training. With SDSU out for summer
break, I packed up my stuff, left Darian
in San Diego, and went home.
Despite my growing feelings for Cole,
I hadn't mentioned him to my parents.
I had a pretty good idea of how they
would react, especially Mom. The only
thing that surprised me was how calm
she remained when we sat down to dinner
my first night back and the conversation
almost immediately went to if and who
I was dating. At that point, lying seemed
ridiculous, so I admitted, “Actually, I am
seeing someone. And it's kind of serious.”
All silverware action came to a halt.
Why didn't you mention it?
asked
Dad.
Is he, like, twice your age?
I smiled. “Well, he is an older man.
Twenty-one, in fact. And he's kind
and smart, and really good looking . . .”
It was then or never; at least
that's how it felt, so I went ahead
and added, “And he's in the Corps.”
Mom's jaw went rigid.
Surely you
don't mean the Marine Corps?
When
I looked away, she knew. Yet she kept
her voice low.
Are you actively seeking
heartbreak? Have you heard there's a war
going on? I can't believe you're that stupid.