Read Love and Leftovers Online
Authors: Sarah Tregay
making her toast,
washing her clothes,
buying her groceries,
and bringing her Kleenex.
My mother sleeps late
almost every day
because being asleep
is better than
being depressed.
On Saturday she forgets
that the fridge is empty,
our clothes are dirty,
and the towels smell
from too many dips in the bay.
So I pilfer change
from the cup holder of Dad’s car
(which Mom drove here to make him mad)
and walk three miles into town
with a pillowcase of laundry
over one shoulder.
Filling a washer
with my clothes, the towels,
and a few of Mom’s underthings,
I line up eight quarters
and slide them in all at once.
I sit outside the Laundromat
and watch the college students
walk by in UNH T-shirts,
miniskirts made from jeans,
and form-fitting sweats
with
wildcats
printed on the ass.
They seem dislocated—
as if they hope
that a large cappuccino,
ten pounds of art history books,
Jane Eyre
, and Toni Morrison’s
Song of Solomon
will help them find their way.
And looking at them,
I understand how they feel.
Lost.
Every Time Dad Calls and Mom Answers
she tells him that she doesn’t want to talk
but she doesn’t hang up.
She asks him: How? Why? When?
As I listen in on the other phone,
he tries to explain
that he felt alone
in their marriage—
that they hadn’t been
close in a long time.
Mom informs him
that he is a husband
and a father
and that maybe he should
think about the people in his life
a little more.
He says
he wants to
see his daughter
and maybe she could think
about driving his Mustang back to Boise
sometime soon.
My mother goes ballistic
shouting swearing crying
until the mechanical voice
informs us,
“If you’d like to make a call,
please hang up and dial again.”
I Want to Ask Dad Questions Too
Why is he gay now and not before?
Why is this bartender guy so special?
Why did he start down one road,
only to take the left fork
at the last minute?
Why did he break up our family?
But when we’re talking on the phone,
my brain churns and my mouth opens,
but no questions come out,
as if my words are swept away by the tide.
“Are you there, Marcie?” Dad asks.
I let a few waves tug at the dock,
before I say, “I’m here.”
Even though I’m not.
I’m not home. I’m not with him.
I’m not even sure I understand.
“I love you, Sugar Cookie,” Dad says.
My eyes sting with almost tears,
and I want to ask him to say it again,
because I’m not so sure anymore.
“I love you too,” I say
before we say good-bye.
My mother is awake,
making me pancakes
on the one burner
that still works.
I sit by the fire
in the potbellied stove,
fluffing my short brown hair
so it will dry faster.
“I can drive you to school,” she says.
But because she has adopted
that I-don’t-care-what-men-think approach
and is wearing two T-shirts
but no bra,
I say, “No thanks.”
I walk down our lane
and wait for the school bus
in solitude.
But the bus driver
doesn’t stop for me.
I contemplate running after it.
Then decide
that would be more embarrassing
than my mother.
I apologize to the principal
for my mother’s
airheaded moments,
like not registering me for school.
I tell him we drove to
the free clinic in Manchester
after the school secretary explained
that I needed a physical.
And that my mother
had forgotten
my immunization records
(back in Idaho)
and they had to be faxed.
And that is why
my first day of school
is everyone else’s
second.
People from Idaho
don’t really have accents.
We could all be news anchors
because we sound so vanilla.
People from New England
are another story.
My mother grew up here
with her sister, Greta.
She used to leave the
r
’s
off the ends of words that needed them (like
New Hampshire
)
and add them to words that don’t (like
idea
).
Yep, Mom used to say “I got an idear!
Let’s go to New Hampshah.”
Now, she just gets in the car and starts driving.
Mom got tired of people
not understanding what she said.
So she learned to talk
like a news anchor from Idaho.
that I have messed up
their seating charts,
their textbook counts,
and the neat, alphabetized
list of names
in their grade books.
They ask me my name. | “Marcie Foster.” |
| |
“Mahcie Fostah?” | I nod. |
| |
“That’s not what it says heah.” | “I know.” |
| |
“It says Mahtha Iris Fostah.” | Named after two grandmothers. |
Each time I hope
that they will mangle
my old-fashioned name
so badly that no one
will know
what it really is.
a voice asks
in the hall
while I am trying
to find my history class.
I turn to say hi to
the first person my age
to acknowledge my existence.
A goth girl
with maroon lipstick
and once-black hair
that has faded to shades
of purple, gray, and blue
looms over me.
“Uh, hi—”
“Sam.”
“Hi, Sam. I’m Marcie.”
“I like Martha Iris better,
it sounds so eighteenth century.”
“Uh, thanks?”
I Know I Shouldn’t Put People in Boxes
or classify them into cafeteria table categories,
but I can’t help myself.
I can tell
Sam isn’t the type to sit with the jockettes.
Maybe with the drama freaks or the stoners.
Or maybe she is like me
and my friends back home
who don’t fit in anywhere.
Leftovers.
Maybe Leftovers can spy Leftovers
one hundred yards away.
And that is why she said hello to me.
But the problem is
I don’t want to be just any old Leftover.
If I can’t sit with my friends,
I don’t want to be a Leftover.
I want to fit in.
So, even though I spy
Sam’s multicolored locks
on the other side of the cafeteria,
I find a different table and ask, “Is this seat taken?”
hoping for the best.
Everyone is friendly,
but I can’t follow a single conversation.
It’s like they are continuing
their discussion from yesterday.
The girls talk about modeling class
and dressage horses imported from Ireland.
The boys reenact a soccer game
play by play, in excruciating detail
like sportscasters caught in an infinite loop.
Things I Left Behind in Boise, Poem 1:
MY BEST FRIEND
Katie is adopted.
And her parents are really cool about it.
They always told her that it’s okay
to be different—
from your parents,
from your peers—
and Katie took this to heart.
She has a collection of wild-colored socks.
She’ll wear one striped one,
and one argyle,
and look at you cross-eyed
if you say something.
She plays the bass guitar—
sometimes so loud the floor joists hum—
but mostly because it’s not a chick instrument,
and therefore totally different.
She’s taking Japanese for her foreign language
instead of Spanish like the rest of us
because she loves reading manga,
drawing pictures of the characters,
and writing and illustrating her own graphic novels.
Katie has blond hair, wide blue-gray eyes,
and the kind of figure guys notice,
which is all too ordinary for her tastes.
So she dyes colored streaks in her hair,
sometimes blue, sometimes pink.
And her very cool parents
even let her get a tattoo.
So one of Katie’s butt cheeks
has the Japanese word for love
gracing its curve.
Things I Left Behind in Boise, Poem 2:
MY BOYFRIEND
Linus is not adopted.
But sometimes he wishes he was
(by a different family).
He has three older brothers
two are in college (majoring in drinking and girls)
and the oldest, Roland, is a manager at McDonald’s
(who leaves his daughter at his parents’ house
for Linus to babysit).
Linus walks in his brothers’ shadows,
but he isn’t loud and obnoxious,
nor a jock on the football team,
nor scraping by with Cs.
Unlike his brothers,
Linus is quiet, and genuinely sweet,
prefers music to team sports,
has a 4.0, and doesn’t have to shave.
This makes him the perfect boyfriend because he
holds my hand in the halls
and whispers little secrets in my ear,
writes me songs and sings them softly
while we rock Roland’s baby to sleep,
helps me with my math homework
and rewards right answers
with smooth-cheeked kisses.
Oh, and youngest siblings are the best because they
are never on their parents’ radar
and can do whatever they want,
are missing that switch
that turns them into bossy, older-brother jerks,
wear hand-me-down clothes
that are all soft and huggable.
Things I Left Behind in Boise, Poem 3:
MY FATHER
My father has always been
a little too good-looking
cleft chin | floppy bangs | clean-shaven
blue eyes | white smile | a touch of a tan
a little too well-dressed
cotton shirt | gabardine slacks | silk tie
wool sweater | cashmere scarf | leather jacket
a little too neat
knives | forks | spoons
paper | plastic | aluminum
a little too gay?
good-looking | well-dressed | perfect.
Things I Left Behind in Boise, Poem 4:
THE LEFTOVERS
My friends and I don’t fit
into any high-school sitcom caste system.
And we really don’t care.
We have each other,
even if the others think we’re:
too smart to be jocks,
Angelo is a geeky numbers guy
who is also on the swim team.
He’s both sincere and funny,
and a blast to be around.
too pretty to be losers,
Emily is a beauty.
She had a baby freshman year
and gave him up for adoption.
I used to want to be Emily.
Now I’m glad I’m not.
too nice to be popular,
Olive is a Girl Scout.
She goes camping with Brownies for the fun of it.
She’s happy and bubbly, and will be the best
camp counselor ever.
too self-conscious to be cheerleaders,
Carolina is compulsive about what she eats.