Read Love and Leftovers Online
Authors: Sarah Tregay
would put her smack
in the middle
of an awkward situation.
Maybe my attraction to J.D.
is just physical.
Or maybe there is too much distance
between Linus and me.
Or maybe all this loneliness
and no security blanket
has messed with my head.
I know
I need to call Linus
and tell him about J.D.
or at least let him know
that maybe we should see other people,
since
I’m far away
and probably not
coming back.
I told my mother she was
self-centered
stubborn
bitchy
and
stuck in a rut.
I told my mother she should
put on a bra
see the colors on the trees
eat lobster at Newick’s
and
take Dad’s Mustang for a drive up the coast.
I told my mother she couldn’t
go on moping about Dad’s boyfriend
sleep all day and all night
eat only sourdough toast
and
pretend that the rest of the world does not exist.
I told my mother that I
didn’t mind chipping in and doing my chores
but doing all the housework was another story,
especially
when my social life was picking up
and my morals were falling down.
I asked her (in a near-hysterical shriek),
“Since when am I the parent and you the teenager?”
I feel guilty
for being the big, bad, mean grown-up
when all she needs
is a
friend.
The Next Best Thing to a Security Blanket
The box springs creak
as I climb into bed with my mother.
My tears dampen her pillow.
She pushes my hair back
and pulls me close.
I sob that
I am sorry
I must be a bad person
if I can’t love my own mother
(or even my boyfriend)
if I can’t understand another person’s loss
and only think of myself.
She shushes me with quiet disagreements, telling me that
it is wrong
for an adult to burden a child
with personal problems
that are best discussed among adults.
On the other hand, she explains,
it is okay
for a child to turn to an adult
when things get complicated.
And it would be better for both of us
if she were the mother and
I were the teenager,
and if I wanted to talk about things
she’d be happy to listen.
I decline.
She doesn’t need my problems
on top of her own.
I awake
to the smell of
my mother
making pancakes
with little
round slices
of bananas
fried into them.
Peeking from Behind My Locker Door
I watch J.D. come down the hall,
saying hello to cheerleaders,
to guys on the soccer team,
and nodding politely to teachers
as if he is the eighth wonder of the world.
His hair is wet, darker than usual,
he’s wearing an OR school sweatshirt
over loose, worn jeans, and Adidas
and he looks as appetizing as he did in a tux.
“Mahcie?” he asks, pulling the locker open
so he can see my face. “Doughnut?”
“No thanks.”
“You’re mad at me,” he says.
“Nah. I ate breakfast.”
“So you’re ignoring me?”
“Yeah, kinda,” I admit,
because I had purposely
not run into him yesterday
by skipping lunch.
“Look, I’m sorry about the kiss,” he says.
“Don’t be. It was nice—more than nice.”
“You just looked so beautiful. . . .
All I’m sayin’ is that if you don’t wanna—
you know—it’s okay with me.”
“Yeah, all right. Thanks.”
“But you can’t say no to coffee.”
“Of course not, you’ve got me addicted.”
brushing J.D.’s fingers
before he turns to go.
Anger flashes over me
and I tilt the cup back,
gripping it like a football.
I stop myself
before I throw it at him.
Dammit, I want to shout
why the hell do you
have to be so nice?
You just apologized for kissing me?
Guys don’t apologize for things like that.
You’re too goddamned perfect.
Stop it.
Before I hate you.
Before I like you
too much.
Stomping into homeroom,
I toss the coffee into the trash can
and swear not to think
about kissing J.D.
ever again.
My Sweaters Arrive Parcel Post
Snuggled among soft sweaters,
fleece-lined hoodies,
jeans,
and leather boots
are three little boxes.
Not
good
little boxes,
like that hold jewelry,
but logo-emblazoned,
drugstore boxes—
slick and shiny,
and glued shut.
I don’t even want
to look at them.
I don’t want
to think about them.
I can’t believe
my
dad
sent me them!
Because inside the boxes are
individually wrapped condoms:
1. In a rainbow of neon colors
2. In latex-free for sensitive skin
3. In fruity flavors
There’s also an envelope
with a letter from Dad.
Dear Marcie,
I miss you. I hope school is going okay. Everything’s all right here, a bit quiet.
I know that we’ve had this conversation before, but I was thinking about you and your friendship with J.D. Sometimes good friends become more than friends, which is normal because our friends understand us best and we are comfortable around them. That’s why I’m sending the condoms. I want you to be prepared if the special moment comes along.
Your mother has encouraged you to wait until marriage, and if that is right for you it is a great decision and I will support it. Then again, I don’t want you rushing off to get married the minute you turn eighteen. That isn’t a good decision. Instead, think carefully about sex and what is right for you. Always, always protect yourself.
Sex, like alcohol and drugs, can have life-altering consequences. Unlike beer and meth, it can be wonderful and special.
I know you understand that you can get pregnant and if you do, there are options like abortion, adoption, and keeping the baby. Your friend Emily gave her baby up, while Linus’s brother and his girlfriend kept theirs. I’m sure you have witnessed the hardships brought on by these decisions.
STDs are the other risks you take. Some are curable, others will change (and maybe shorten) your life. As a father, I don’t want any of these things to happen to the daughter I love very much.
Please be careful, very careful. I love you.
Dad
My father thinks
I’m falling for J.D.?
I’m not.
He’s too
perfect.
To cheer myself up,
I take a neon-green condom from its candy wrapper,
feeling the slippery softness with my fingers.
I tuck it under my pillow,
and sneak to the kitchen for a banana.
Reading the instructions
(and gawking at the pictures)
I roll my lime-green condom
over the perky yellow banana,
which cracks me up
beyond reason.
I howl with laughter
as I dial Katie’s number.
Tears squirting from my eyes,
I try to explain how funny it looks.
But all she says is,
“Marcie, why’d your dad
send you condoms?”
about how J.D. looks
like David Beckham in his soccer uniform
but smiles like Prince Harry
with boy-band dimples—
that he’s just too goddamned perfect.
“I can’t believe you dumped Linus and didn’t tell me!”
“I didn’t
not
tell you, Katie! I swear!”
She is, after all, my best friend.
And I’d never keep a secret like that from her.
“I haven’t dumped Linus.
It was just a birthday kiss,
nothing more.
I don’t even like J.D.
I swear.”
Katie
gets
righteous
on my
ass.
Threatening
to tell the sweetest
brown-eyed Leftover
boy
on planet Earth
that
his
long-distance girlfriend
isn’t watching
his YouTube videos,
but rather
kissing
another
boy
good night.
how lonely it is here
without any friends.
My mother is so distant
I need a telescope to see her.
My father is a stranger
whom I no longer know.
My Gigi has gone loopy, old-lady crazy
and tells me to wash my hair with mayonnaise.
My aunt Greta buys me panties
the size of South Dakota.
J.D. is the only person here
who makes any sense.
But I got swept up—
J.D. invited me to homecoming.
He wore a tux.
And I, a blue satin prom dress.
It was just like in the movies.
My mother forgot my birthday
and J.D. planned a party,
invited all his friends,
had his sisters make a cake.
It was just like in the movies.
So when he kissed me good night
it felt like part of a script.
I got wrapped up in the plot—
just like watching a good movie.
It was dumb.
I know.
Katie seemed to understand
that J.D.’s good looks
and sweet gestures
would be too much
for any girl
to turn
away
and
that if it
was just one kiss—
nothing more than a moment of weakness—
she guessed she could live with the whole idea,
and keep it a secret from Linus. She promised.
“Just one kiss,” I repeat. “Because I can’t stand
how stupid perfect J.D. can be.”
The shades have not been opened,
the dishes have not been washed,
and my mother has not left her bed.
At least when she did this over the summer,
I could sit on the dock, explore the woods and marsh,
soak up some sunshine,
and ignore her.
But here there are four walls,
a bookstore below us,
and another apartment above.
Trapped.
Today
I can’t bear it.
I can’t go inside
that dark,
four-room tomb.
I hang out downstairs
in the bookstore,
sunk on my haunches,
reading college textbooks
among the stacks
with plenty of time
to think.
I need a change.
Not an Idaho > New Hampshire kind,
but a change in attitude.
All summer,
I didn’t talk much with the townies.