Read Love Rewards The Brave Online
Authors: Anya Monroe
122.
They’re standing in the empty hallway
when I walk in.
Toby let me off at the curb.
He told me to
keep my chin
up,
to
stay strong.
He said
the fight isn’t worth it
if the battle isn’t long.
He is the first
kind
man
I’ve ever known.
Margot. Ms. Francine. Terry. The social worker guy.
Talking about the girl of the hour
the one they urged to show
up
and wouldn’t you know
I’m here.
“Well, you all win,” I say.
There is a collective sigh from the group.
I know they
don’t think my sarcasm is helpful.
But what am I supposed to do
but stay removed
from all this shit?
“No one’s winning,” Terry says, firmly. She continues, “The situation has turned. I’m sorry to be the one to tell you, but the termination trial has been cancelled for this afternoon.”
“Why would they cancel it?”
“Your mother still having a hearing, but she’s being tried for….” Terry hesitates, tears gathered in her eyes. “She’s being tried for child abuse, Louisa.”
My mind has gone blank, numb.
I remember seeing my dad in his
orange jumpsuit, cuffed,
black shoes.
I didn’t want to see him.
But for some reason I went there
once.
That bitch Jodie Lynn Cratchett
made me go.
It was before, before the trial and the verdict
I still remember when I heard it
twenty-five years no parole.
Jodie Lynn said I should go
and see my dad for one last time.
What a fucked-up thing to do to me
couldn’t anyone see there was a
reason
we were taken away
in the first place?
“Louisa, did you hear Terry?”
Ms. Francine has her arm
stretched out
towards me.
“We don’t have to watch, it might be…too much for you.”
“No, I’m going in.”
I say it loud and clear
and as intense as the day feels.
People go to jail for the black and white
no one goes to jail for the gray.
That’s why she got away the first time
the time when Dad got put away.
But if things have changed
they have for a reason.
And I need to understand.
“Louisa, why don’t we pause and think about this,” Terry says.
“Why are you trying to protect me? I’m going in. I want to hear with my ears why she’s being convicted.”
I swing open the big wooden doors
people stop for a moment, heads turn.
I see her sitting in a chair, handcuffed.
She is:
Jumpsuit.
Stringy Hair.
Hollow Eyes.
Empty Stare.
She looks past me
or beyond me
not able to recognize me
as her firstborn
daughter
as her champion and fighter.
Last time we went through this
courtroom scenario
I was the first to defend her
and the first to condemn him.
And in some
sickdisgustingconvoluted
way I still believe in
her innocence.
I want to believe.
If I don’t believe that
then I’ll be forced to accept
the very thing
that will crush me to my core
even more.
Is that possible?
My tribe follows me in.
We take up a row
in the near empty fluorescent-lit room.
The powerful people begin to speak.
I listen
to the words they have to say
as they talk and explain
use details to put pieces in place
about what my mother did to
My Benji.
How she hurt him in the same ways my dad hurt me.
How I never protected him like I thought I had.
How we are all more messed up than I thought we could
be.
How my family is the most fucked up thing this courtroom has ever seen.
And I crumble.
I no longer feel like
I am breaking.
Suddenly
I.
Am.
Broke.
123.
When it finally ends
they look at me and see a
huddledcryingmess.
No one speaks.
What do you say after you’ve listened to
all
that
?
That sad girl is gone.
The mad,
fierce girl is gone.
When someone is broke they are blank.
That’s me.
The judge uses his gavel to drive the point home:
I AM A BLANK BROKE JOKE
WTHOUT
A HOME
HOPE.
I AM HOMELESS AND HELPLESS.
PARENTLESS AND
POINTLESS.
Margot and Ms. F take my arms
pull me up to stand
and I just wonder
where
am I supposed to land?
124.
My life is on
125
.
autopilot
126
.
automatic
127
.
re-run everyday
128.
same plot
129.
same routine
130.
school
131.
sleep
132.
work
133.
avoid
avoid
avoid.
134.
All contact at all costs
135.
unless absolutely necessary.
136.
I’ve found most everything is
not.
Not necessary.
137.
I’ve spent the last month
doing my best to avoid Jess.
If I see her at school I purposefully
walk
the other way.
In P.E., the one class we share
I always stand along the wall
alone
always find a way to get there early
or leave late.
Always make sure I am looking
straight
ahead when she’s around.
But today she’s waiting for me when I leave
the locker room.
She’s wearing my favorite T-shirt.
It reads: Find Your True North.
The one we bought together.
God, I miss her.
“Louisa. Wait up.”
She follows me
doesn’t want to avoid me
she tries to stop me.
“What?” I say, tired.
“I just wanted to talk to you about something.”
I don’t answer so she goes ahead.
“I read in the newspaper about a woman with your last name. Your mom. I had no idea, Louisa. I knew it was bad –– but I never knew that you and Benji went through all
that
. I’m so sorry.”
I don’t have anything to say.
To her
or anyone.
So I just find the wall
(the one I suddenly need to help me stand)
with my hand
and use it to guide myself
away
from everyone and everything
that is causing the
blindness, the numbness.
The throbbing pain
inside of me that will not go away.
Fuck.
Now the only friend I ever had
figured out
the piece of shit
place I come from.
I look back
over my shoulder
knowing that whatever may have been left
in me
is gone with one article in the paper.
138.
Ms. Francine is the first to try with me
in the kitchen before school.
“Louisa, how about you and I go shopping after school today?”
I look past her and see
the list she made for the New Year
mocking me.
139.
The next attempt comes from Terry, at our weekly date.
“Louisa, I’ve noticed you withdrawing, more and more, since you learned about your mother.”
No shit, Sherlock.
I wasn’t going to talk before but this
sure as hell is the wrong
approach
to try and
broach
the subject.
I don’t soften.
I don’t try and see her side,
as she tries
to ease me out of the hole
I dug myself in
the moment I learned
the truth of my mom.
Even the night sky
goes dark sometimes
and those stars never shine for me.
I’ve always wanted to live in
the black and the white
where trust and doubt and truth
and lies
have no place to hide.
Where everything is clear one way
or the other.
Good or bad
right or wrong
there is no in-between.
It’s either a lullaby or a good-bye.
A place where there’s no space
for lukewarm
love songs.
But maybe girls like me
were made for the gray.
Maybe girls like me
don’t belong anywhere
anyway.