Authors: Ellen Hopkins
The Bible counsels an eye for an eye.
Wonder how many eyes Cole has plucked.
I'm sure his debt to his cousin has been paid.
Comes marching out of the cerebral
prison I've confined it to. I've invested
five years in our relationship, and Cole
has rewarded me with his amazing love.
If something were to happen to him
now, would that half-decade have been
worth it? And if we get married, ride
yet another wave of time together, only
for me to lose him to a bullet, would
I celebrate those years, or curse them?
I need to talk to Celine. Almost four
months since she buried Luke, the shine
must have worn off the pain by now.
I give her a call, ask if I can interrupt
her Sunday for a short visit. She gives
me directions to her house. On the way,
I stop off for flowersâa huge spring
bouquet, yellow roses and orange daffodils.
I sent an arrangement to the funeral,
but it likely got lost midst the dozens, most
of them red, white, and purple/blue.
Thus the yellow and orange. No reminders.
Of him everywhere. Small flags
decorate the white picket fence
protecting Celine's immaculate
front yard. They flap, red, white,
and blue, in the breeze. Inside,
framed photos of Luke hang
on the walls, and take up space
on end tables. Luke, in uniform.
Luke, holding his girls. Luke,
kissing Celine. Luke, Luke, Luke.
A shadow box holds the folded
flag that had draped his coffin.
That sits on the mantel of the little
stone fireplace that takes up most
of one wall of the living room.
I'm not sure I could look at Cole
like this. Not if he was never
coming back to me. I'm not sure
how to open the conversation.
Celine saves me the trouble.
Sit, please. Can I get you some
coffee?
When I decline, she says,
Okay, so tell me. What's up?
Still planning a June wedding?
“That's just about all I've been
doing . . .” I give her a quick rundown
so we can push small talk to one side.
I finish with, “Cole's being transferred
to Pendleton. He wants MARSOC.”
Ah. And that's counterintuitive
to planning for a future together.
I understand completely. Luke and I
had a similar discussion once.
“But you encouraged him to stay
in, right?” Of course she did. That's
what all military wives doâsupport
their soldiers, no matter what.
Celine shakes her head.
I told him if
he reenlisted, it would be the end
of us. Obviously, he convinced me
otherwise. Love can be stubborn.
“So . . . I don't know how else to ask
this, other than straight out. And I'm
sorry, but you're the only person I know
who can answer it. Was it worth it?
I mean, if you had it to do over, would you?”
I've thought about this a lot, Ashley.
Every day with Luke was a better
day than one without him. But there
were way too many of those days.
I'll always love Luke, and what
we were together. But I'm watching
my children suffer. And when I'm
alone at night, I get so mad at him!
How could he do this to us?
Her eyes
brim. Spill.
Was it worth it? Probably.
Would I do it again? No fucking way.
Tying up loose ends. Finishing
my time at the women's shelter.
Finding a replacement volunteer
for the VA hospital. After all, I'm
getting married. Probably.
I should be ecstatic. Barely able
to control my excitement. Counting
down the days. Somehow, I'm not.
But how could I call it off now?
All the plans are finalized. Except
for the honeymoon, which will
have to wait until after Cole's training,
assuming he'll be accepted, and no
one believes he won't be. People
are coming from all over to witness
our “I do's.” Even Dad's parents,
all the way from their retirement
heaven in Alaska. Weird to retire
in Ketchikan, yes. But they are
the tree my father fell from.
Mainstream is so not the family
thing. At least, not on my side.
Cole's side? Well, they'll just have
to get used to us, I guess. I hope.
I've spent a lot of time hoping lately.
Jonah calls.
A couple of things. One,
I would really like for you to help out
with the lit mag next year. We need
an assistant editor. Interested?
I'm flattered he thought of me.
“Absolutely, if you're sure
I'm capable.” I wait for the second
thing.
More than capable. You'll
be a great addition to our staff.
I also need some help screening
the poetry contest entries.
Most of them will go to the judge,
but we usually don't send the ones
with obvious problems. Like, not
actually qualifying as poetry.
I laugh. “People pay an entry fee
to send nonpoems to a big contest?”
You'd be surprised, my dear.
Can you invest a few hours this
afternoon? I'll buy you dinner.
“I'm a starving student, with time
to kill. When do you want me?”
He doesn't let that one go.
Only
every time I think about you. But
if you could be here by three,
that would be great. See you then.
He thinks about me? Joke or no,
that makes me warm. Makes me
blush, most of the way to his office.
Luckily, the walk from the parking
lot cools me off just enough. We spend
close to three hours screening contest
entries and tossing obvious rejections
into a pile after pulling their entry-
fee checks. Some have obvious
misspellings or grammar problems
(and since it's poetry, that means
lack of grammar of any kind). Others
are simply very weak. “I kind of like
this one. âYou make me go weak in
the knees. Like the birds make the bees.'Â ”
Jonah looks at me with disbelieving
eyes.
You've got to be kidding, right?
“Yeah, actually, I am. I'm about
finished here, though. And hungry.”
I leave my car, ride with Jonah.
We settle on a brewpub. Order giant
burgers and dark beer. Not my usual
thing, but Jonah convinces me to try it.
You've got to live large once in
a while. Veer from the norm, away
from what is or isn't expected of you.
Yeah, like being here with him.
But it's been such a hard week,
tossing stuff back and forth in
my head. I really need to let it all
go. And I'm starting with dark beer.
We eat. Drink. Talk. Joke. Laugh.
Drink some more. And before I know
it, evening has slipped well into night.
“The wai'ress is givning us funny looks.”
Wow. I'm buzzed. Jonah smiles.
Probably time to get you home. Darn
dark beer. I think I should drive you.
I think he's right. I don't dare drive
like this. But, “Wha' 'bout my car?”
I can pick you up tomorrow and
bring you to get it. Not a problem.
He settles up, steers me to his car.
Drives me home without a single
swerve, missed stop sign, or other
indication he's feeling anywhere
near as messed up as I am. “Glad you
can hol' your beer better than I can.”
Just takes practice. And body mass.
I've got a few years on you. A few
pounds, too. Okay, a lot of pounds.
We're there in less than ten minutes.
Jonah walks me to the door, waits
while I fumble for my keys. I find
them and am just sliding the correct
one into the lock when a familiar
truck comes screeching to a halt
in the parking lot, right behind
Jonah's car. The driver's door jerks
open, and out jumps Cole. It isn't
the first time I've seen him crazy-eyed,
but never has he directed those eyes
toward me in such a menacing way.
He moves like a soldier. Confident.
Fast. And pissed off at the world, or
at least this particular island of it.
Jonah reacts quickly, moving in
front of me just as Cole reaches
the sidewalk, hands clenching.
Where the fuck have you been?
And who the fuck is this?
He reeks
of whiskey, tobacco, and anger
sweat. “Cole! What are you doing
here?” His eyes focus on me, and
just for a second, seem to soften.
But when he looks at Jonah, fury
glazes them over.
What are you
doing here?
He mimics, slurring.
Didn't expect me, did you? Didn't
think I'd be watching you, huh, bitch?
Watching me? A cold wave of fear
washes over me. Jonah feels it, too.
His body tenses. But somehow
he keeps his voice steady.
Wait
a minute. Don't talk to her like that.
Cole takes a step toward him.
He's wearing a tight khaki T-shirt,
and I can see his biceps twitching.
Or what? You gonna kick my ass,
queer?
He gives Jonah a hard push
with two hands, knocking him
backward, into me. “Cole, please.
Stop it. You need to quit now.”
Unlike Jonah's voice, mine is
quivery. Cole moves back as if
he might listen, but now Jonah
says,
I think you should go. Come
back tomorrow, when you're sober.
It's enough to set Cole off again.
I'm not taking orders from you,
motherfucker!
He's screaming
now.
You either, you goddamn whore.
I knew you were fucking around!
The neighbor flips on her porch
light and now everything is in motion.
Cole comes at Jonah, who does
his best to defend himself. But he
is no match for a Marine trained
in hand-to-hand combat. Jonah goes
down on one knee. Cole circles to do
more damage. I move between them.
“Please, Cole. You don't understand.
Nothing's . . .” My jaw explodes.
Pain shoots through me and now
I am falling. Someone catches me,
keeps my head from snapping back.
Jonah lays me down, covers me
with his body, expecting more blows.
But Cole freezes. I look up at him,
through a haze of red. Blood. From
me or Jonah, or both of us. I'm not
sure. I try to say something, but
my mouth won't work. And, oh God,
it hurts.
Don't move,
says Jonah,
and don't try to talk.
He reaches
for his cell phone, dials for help.
Still, Cole doesn't move. Just stares
at me, shaking his head, as if he can't
believe what he just did. That
makes two of us. “Go,” I manage
to tell him. “Get out of here.” I don't
know if he understands. But he runs.
The paramedics arrive, I am
sitting up, propped against
the wall. Jonah keeps asking
if I'm okay. I must not look it,
or he'd probably quit asking.
I reach up, touch my cheek,
which feels like someone shoved
a volleyball inside it. My jaw,
I'm sure, is broken. Along with
my heart. Once Jonah and I both
swear it was not Jonah who did
this, the EMTs want to know what
happened. “My ex,” I say, then
point to my jaw. “Hurts.” I don't
want to talk to them or anyone.
Don't want to say who's responsible.
Classic battered wife syndrome.
The EMT whose name badge reads
Alvarez
is unsympathetic.
I see this
shit all the time. You'd better file
a police report. Get a restraining
order. Especially
âhe gives Jonah
a straight-out once-overâ
if your, uh,
friend here is going to be around.
Meanwhile, your jaw is busted up
pretty good. We can take you into
the ER, or he can drive you. Cheaper