Authors: Sarah Dooley
PHYLLIS
Says she'll still love me
even when the other kid
comes to stay next month.
I have no rights to Phyllis,
so I don't know why I'm sad.
UNSAID
There are many rules
to writing good poetry.
I don't always know
how to fit inside those rules.
Sometimes things get left unsaid.
MICHAEL
Why do all the things
I write come back to Michael?
Why do all the things
I write come back to Michael?
There is no one named Michael.
HARLESS HOUSEHOLD
Nobody is sleeping.
Most of us are weeping.
There are secrets not worth keeping.
NIGHT FIGHTS
Hubert and Shirley scream and howl,
yell some words that are very foul,
then one or the other throws in the towel.
FALLING APART
Hubert finally goes back to work.
The girls are bouncing off the walls, berserk.
Even Shirley's lost her smirk.
AUGUST
Summer waves the edges
of Phyllis's trimmed hedges.
We're all balanced on ledges.
MIKEY
I miss baking muffins and playing with the dog.
I can't think clearly with him gone.
I am lost in a fog.
MICHAEL
When I think of my older brother
dying of smoke inhalation,
I can't breathe and I can't rhyme.
BACK TO SCHOOL
For the first two days, everyone is thrilled
to see each other as the doors are sealed.
Even in the warm air, I feel chilled.
WHAT I DID
on my summer vacation
by sasha harless
i forgot how to use
the following things
punctuation
capitalization
and the sound
of my voice
i forgot how to
cook muffins
i forgot how to babysit
and how to clean out sheds
and how to save money for guitars
and i forgot again and again
which house i live in
THERE IS A NEW KID
next door, and she is
Mikey's age, and she is
beautiful, with
calm, combed hair
and sweet, dimpled cheeks
and, as far as I can tell,
normal eating habits.
Phyllis shines with love.
The two of them invite me over,
but I shake my head and stay on Hubert's front porch,
alone except for his work boots.
ASSIGNMENT
Now that school's in
and I still won't talk,
Mr. Powell asks me to
write something down,
and my new English teacher
asks me to write something down.
Mr. Powell wants my goals for the year.
Mr. Hart wants my goals for English class,
and what I think a fair grading system would be,
and what I hope to learn and accomplish.
It seems like a lot of faith to put
in a silent eighth grader.
Isn't he the one
who went to college
for this?
THE STORY OF MY LIFE
This is the assignment
for the second week of school:
we are required to write our history,
the story of our lives. I watch
my classmates folded over their notebooks.
I watch pencils scratch. I watch heads get scratched.
This boy in black, he is looking at the ceiling
and smiling
as if there is a great secret written there.
I think his life has been interesting.
I think I would like to read his story.
The girls in the corner
look lost. You can't understand
what makes a good story
if you've never starred in one,
or at least been a particularly memorable
(sometimes tragic)
supporting character.
INTERVENTION
At least that's what it feels like
the day Jaina and Anthony corner me
by the lockers in the English wing.
“We're worried about you, Sasha.”
“You still haven't given me a poem for the contest.
We all lost the one in May. We've got to
kick butt in the August round!”
“Right . . .” Jaina looks at him
like he's grown another head.
“And also, you don't talk anymore.”
They maybe should have planned
their intervention a little better.
I don't say anything,
and Jaina shrugs, and walks slowly away.
“I'm here if you need me,”
she says as she goes,
but she gets farther away as she says it.
When she's gone, Anthony waits
and does this half smile, like he already knows
what I'm about to hand him.
He gives my notebook back after class the next day,
with a note written on the first blank page:
Unless you stop me, I'm sending three of these to the contest.
Please don't stop me.
I'm glad it's still you in there.
Now that summer's over,
there's no newsletter to help.
I have to figure out for myself
how to say what needs to be said.
âSTARTED AUGUST 26
ON WEEKENDS
We look for two Michael Harlesses
on the streets of Beckley
(the kids throwing Frisbees,
and popping balloons,
and chasing each other,
splashing through the fountain).
We look for Mikey and we lookâ
I look
for my Michael,
who can't possibly have left me
this alone
for this long.
POINTLESS?
Search
without end.
Kicking through stones,
peering into every face.
Failing.
THERE IS A COLLEGE CAMPUS HERE
And I dream of graduating
and I dream of seeing Mikey graduate
and I dream of both of us living life happy,
free of our sad past.
Today is not that day.
Today I hang flier after flier after flier
on power poles.
AUTHORITIES
They say they have not given up on him,
but every week the spotlight continues to dim,
and hope spreads thin.
WHAT I HEARD SOMEONE SAY
“Poor folks,
thinking that kid
will ever come back.
That kid is dead, man.”
SECRET
I am secretly a bad person.
I am secretly a bad cousin.
I am secretly awful.
Let me tell you why.
I have come
to expect, to rely on,
to enjoy,
our trips up
Beckley way.
STEPS OF THE BECKLEY COURTHOUSE
I sit and wait to be picked up.
Hubert is checking on some things
he doesn't want me to hear.
There are fluffy springtime clouds
in the late summer sky,
and kids shuffle by
like they have all the
time in the world.
A kid about fifteen or sixteen
walks from the Go-Mart with a
Snickers bar and a Coke.
One bite gone. Then, later,
a sip. Like the treat
and the perfect afternoon
will last
forever.
I have been too wild.
I will rein in my poems.
I will write haiku.
âSEPTEMBER 2
NOT ME
We got grades today.
It is the moment of truth
for people who care.
C-MINUS
I was supposed to
write about my own life, not
other people's lives.
NOTES
Jaina passes one
to Lisa and Lisa laughs
and writes her one back.
TODAY
Windowpanes rattled
with anger and thunder when
the sun went away.
JAINA'S QUESTION
“Sasha, why don't you
talk no more?” she asks again.
Wish I could tell her.
âSEPTEMBER 9
This
is the
worst day I've
had in a long
time.
Darkness
is everywhere.
In the sky.
Here in my head.
Midnight.
Home
was Mikey.
Home was Phyllis;
was Ben, Judy, and
Michael.
Teacher
in math
thinks I'm stupid.
She tells me she
cares.
Rules
of poetry
insist I shouldn't
break the cinquain pattern.
Who the hell says?
Panic
is sneaky.
Creeps up slowly
like a hunting cat.
Pounces.
âSEPTEMBER 16
VISITORS
A knock at the door!
Sometimes the police visit
to keep us informed.
Sometimes it's Pastor Ramey,
who brings toys for my cousins.
SCHOOL HALLS
Anthony walks me
from English to my locker
in total silence.
“You okay?” he asks at last.
I nod a quick lie at him.
SCHOOL HALLS (PART TWO)
Jaina walks with me
from Spanish to my locker,
nervously speaking.
She tries to fill the quiet,
but does not know what to say.
SCHOOL HALLS (PART THREE)
I walk my own self
from my locker to the bus,
my head full of words.
They rattle around in there,
but they refuse to shake loose.
How many lines? Write three.
The middle is different. It doesn't rhyme.
The middle one is me.
âSEPTEMBER 23
THE ORANGE BOTTLE
It's for anxiety. I'm supposed to take it every day.
It makes my mouth dry and my head ache.
I still don't have anything to say.
WHAT THEY MEAN BY “ANXIETY”
is that sometimes the classroom gets too loud
and I'm afraid Mikey will call for me and I won't hear him,
so I get up and leave, and that's not allowed.
THE POLICE COME AGAIN
On foot, I leave school, a place I'd rather avoid.
It's dark outside and in the house when I get home.
The police should be worried, but instead they're annoyed.
SHIRLEY'S PUNISHMENT
“We tried being nice so's you wouldn't go roam.
We had the patience of Job, but the Good Lord knows that didn't work.
You're grounded from writing them
poems.”
I Â Â Â Â need
my
words
It   is   too
dark   to   see   too   dark   to
    write   but
      this way
shirley won't catch
me
IN TROUBLE
Days and days, I walk,
not talking and not writing.
I am a shadow.
SHIRLEY
I think she thinks she's
helping when she tries to be
strict like a parent.
CRAZY
Yesterday I thought
about following in the
footsteps of Aster.
The orange bottle has my name.
The ones in the cabinet have other names.
OCTOBER 2
Grounding
is supposed
to be a
week, but Hubert takes
pity.
SAVED
Hubert makes Shirley let me off the hook.
I'm glad. It's time for poetry club.
I'm going to need my notebook.
RELIEF
I'm relieved to have my notebook.
I'm relieved to have my pen.
I'm relieved that when I have a thought
I can write it down again.
ANTHONY TRIES
And tries and tries and tries
to get some words out of me.
I try, too, but they will not rise
from down in the depths of me.
MY SCHEDULE
Work around the house
with Hubert on Mondays
Mr. Powell on Tuesdays
Beckley for therapy Wednesdays
Thursdays are poetry club
Fridays I work at the pawnshop
to replace the window
I don't remember
breaking while
I was barred
from writing
poetry.
SPY IN THE GRASS
Hubert says,
“We're treading water, Phyllis.
She's working off the window uptown,
and the only reason they didn't suspend her
for leaving school that day is she's . . .
special.
That's what they're calling her.
Special.
She's taking them dang pills
that are supposed to calm her down
and I don't see them making a
danged bit of difference
and she still ain't spoke a
word.”
There is silence while, I'm sure, Phyllis is
patting Hubert's hand or
squeezing his shoulder.
I scratch at the window frame
and rotted wood comes off under my fingernails.
Underneath are termites.
“Keep treading,” Phyllis says.
“That little girl needs us
to keep her head above water.”
Then I am deeply embarrassed
and deeply grateful
and I stop listening at the window
and follow Stella through the grass.
OCTOBER 8
Today is Mikey's tenth birthday.
I want to bake muffins.
But the pilot light
won't stay lit
and then there is a
sopping mess of batter on the stove
and a sobbing mess of girl on the floor.
I HAVE STOPPED
corralling
my poems
by form.
They run
loose like
wild dogs.
SIX DAYS OF BEING LEFT IN PEACE TO MOURN MIKEY
Shirley takes the babies
and goes to stay
with her mother
for six days.
When she comes home,
I am lying on the couch
watching the fruit flies
circle the broken ceiling fan.
She shakes her head
and walks into the kitchen,
where she throws out the black bananas
and the green wheat bread.
She has to see the tears rolling
sideways into my hair, and how Hubert
will not hold his head up, but she
does not ask us if we are okay.
She pushes back the curtains
and opens the window
to dump the moldy coffee,
six days old, from the pot.
She mutters under her breath,
“This is a shame,
is what this is.”