Authors: Selene Castrovilla
Eleven
Joey
      The sign outside the
church
has a message posted in those
plastic
letters.
It's from Jesus.
It says,
When I was on the cross
I thought of
you.
      Say that's even
true. How's that supposed to make me
feel? Now I gotta
feel bad âbout Jesus dying
personally
for me
on top of everything else?
      Inside the rectory there's lots of
statues and crosses they're basically
everywhere
you turn. I ain't been here since my communion but I remember all them statues
and
crosses you don't forget stuff like that
things like statues and crosses they
loom.
      There aren't any
people
around but I hear
voices upstairs.
      I don't know if it's the
tiles on the floor or the
emptiness of the hall but my
sneakers they squeal awful
loud.
      I head through the door to the stairs. I go up up up
trying not to
squeak
but it's like I been
tramping through the
tide or something like my sneakers are
soaked
the sounds I'm making.
      My heart it's like a
sledgehammer all of a sudden
clobbering away.
      Stupid shit heart.
      I don't even know
why I'm here âcept
Doll she kept at me to
come and maybe I feel like I owe it
to her
even though she don't know
I'm
here.
      She can't know.
      This's all
bullshit
anyways
all this AA crap but she
really
wanted me to come.
I keep seeing her
eyes
that night I pushed her they were so
confused so
hurt like a dog that's been
kicked
by its owner.
      The light it went out of her eyes.
      It's been more than three weeks and I can't get them
dark
hurt
eyes
out of my mind
I lie in bed
all day
the summer's almost half over but I
barely seen the sun I only see them
eyes so I thought,
I can at least
do this â¦.
      Upstairs
they got the long tables around in a
circle. Someone says,
Welcome.
I stare at the smoky tiles I
nod.
      I scrape
back
a chair I'd like to sit in the
back
but there ain't no
back
to a circle.
      They start the meeting and they go through all the stuff âbout the way AA works blah
blah
blah.
      Then this guy gets introduced his name's Rich and he looks kind of like
me
like the kind of dude I am
I mean
âcept a few years older. He tells this story
his
story
âbout how his family life sucked
his dad
he hit him and told him he wasn't worth
shit he says the only relief he could get was in a
bottle or a
bong he says he was arrested twenty-six times by the time he was
twenty-one and it was getting so jail was more like
home than
home was.
      He says he went to AA when he was twenty-two âcause it was
court
ordered and he still drank âcause he thought it was all
b.s. all this talk âbout
surrendering to a
higher
power
there was no way he was handing over the little control he had.
      He says it went like that for almost a year he went to meetings
then he went out to
drink
and he figured
what the hell
this is my life
I'm gonna die young anyways.
Then one day he was walking to the liquor store
in the snow.
There was this humongous puddle of
slush at the
edge
of the curb and he
stopped and
stared into it.
      He saw his
sorry-
ass
reflection looking back and
suddenly
he thought of
surrender.
All this time he'd fought it and
look
where it got him.
All this time he thought it was
bad
that it meant
defeat
to surrender
that there'd be
nothing
left of him
that it'd be the end.
But just like that the word
appeared in his head like someone
whispered it to him and he
fell
into the
freezing
puddle he
splattered in
on his knees
he spoke to God he
surrendered.
And that's when he found
hope he found
faith that's when everything
changed
when he caved
when he gave up the
burden
of trying to control what he
couldn't
control
anyway
he felt it
lift from his shoulders and it all
changed.
      He says he went back
home
âstead of the liquor store that day and he's been
sober
a year.
He says with surrender came
serenity.
      He had me for a while and
damn he's a lot
like me
but he lost me with that
puddle.
      I ain't
surrendering to nothing I can't
see
these people they're wacked I think they pickled their brains a little
too long.
      Ole God
he had his chance to help me
long ago
didn't he? Me my
mom my
brothers we surrendered
all right
we surrendered to
Pop
we didn't have no choice and
where
was
God
then?
      So now I'm supposed to
trust him
I'm supposed to turn
myself
over
to some dude that let us get
tortured?
      I think,
Get
real.
      I have to
stop myself from saying it out
loud.
      Other people talk tell more stories âbout
surrender
âcause that's the topic Rich picked.
Me I'm kinda done
listening
I got more than my fill.
      To finish
everyone holds hands
they say that
serenity
prayer
that's stitched on pillows old ladies buy and lean against while they
sip their tea.
Then everyone says, Stay.
And that's
the end.
I wanna do anything but
stay I'm practically
twitching
to escape but Rich he comes over he
shakes my hand.
      He says he noticed I'm
new he noticed me
squirming
in my seat he says,
That was me
my first time.
He hands me his number
says to call
anytime
I wanna talk. Maybe he can
sense that I ain't gonna
call maybe he knows I'm gonna head right out and
pop
open a Bud âcause he asks,
What did you think?
And I tell him the truth
why lie
I tell him I saw a lot of
me
in him
and that was cool but that
surrendering to God shit that's gotta
go.
      He laughs he says he likes my
honesty. He says it don't have to be
God like in the Bible he says he don't even read the Bible or nothing. He says it's âbout faith in a power
greater
than
me
it can be in any form. He says it's âbout
yin and
yang it's âbout
karma it's âbout
redemption it's âbout
love.
      Love.
      That word
again.
      Fuckin' A.     Â
      I say,
Bro
I ain't dropping in no puddle for
no one.
      He looks at me dead-on his
eyes they're plowing straight into
mine.
      He says,
The puddle
it's in your
mind.
Dorothy
      I'm in my living room with Amy. We're watching a show about the life cycle of butterflies on the Discovery Channel. This is my life, my summerâwatching tv every night. What else can you do with an eight o'clock curfew?
      Not that there's anything to do anyway.
      I spent the first half of the summer waiting for Joey. Looking for him to show up, magically appear on the beach, on the street, at my gate â¦.
      Somewhere. Anywhere.
      It's August.
      I get it now.
      He's not coming.
      All across the wide-screen there's fluttering, colorful wings.
      I say, “All that talk about butterflies being free, but they only get to live three to four weeks. What kind of sick joke is that?”
      She says, “Maybe their deaths are merely transfigurations to another plane of existence, another metaphysical state of being.”
      I say, “I think they die. Period. ”
Twelve
Dorothy
      Here we are in Dunkin' Donuts again. Around here in the summer life's nothing but iced lattes and donuts after the beach. Thank god school starts tomorrow.
      All this noise, all this pinkâI'm ready to scream. Why are we here?
      But I know why.
      Because Amy likes to come here, and she's been a good friend since Joey left. She's listened to me recite my tale of woe over and over without comment or complaint, without one “I told you so.”
      Because I'd rather be surrounded by this bantering and blaring color than left alone with nothing.
      Because maybe I'll run into him here, it's where we met. I've tried so hard to forget him, think about all the bad things, the way he treated me. Every day I stretch out on my towel, close my eyes. There's sun pulsing warm into my skin. There's music coming from Amy's iPod, not loud enough to make out the songs, just a rhythmic jumble. There's the waves sliding and tumbling into the sand and then retreating as more move in. There's little kids giggling, squealing as they play, pure joy in their voices. There's seagulls cawing; there's the ice cream truck in the parking lot playing endless rounds of “Take Me Out To The Ballgame;” there's the smell of burgers and hotdogs grillingâbut when he comes into my mind there's nothing else. I think of him drinking, throttling Brian, shoving me. I think of him bloody and angry, demanding that I not say I love him. But those pictures, they fad fast and I'm left with one of him holding me, just holding me. We're lying together in Jason's garage, and he's wrapped around me tight so tight I can feel his body on me still â¦. Every day I have to roll onto my stomach, press my face into my towel, practically burrow into the sand to hide my tears. They embarrass me, and I wish they'd just leave once and for all, like him.
      I should be over him by now, but here I am on line at Dunkin' Donuts, praying he'll walk in.
      Jimmy and Jason are here, at their usual table in the front room. They saw us come in. Jimmy shot me a quick wave, Jason gave a nod. I'd go over, but what would I say?
      I'm staring into the grey tile waiting for the feet in front of me to move when someone grabs my arm.
      It's Amy.
      She says, “C'mere, I've got to tell you something.” She pulls me off the line, pulls me outside. She says, “I was waiting for them to finish mopping the back room, leaning on the wall near the tables.”
      I shrug. “So?”
      “I heard Jason and Jimmy talking â¦.”
      “Oh god, is Joey okay? Did hisâ” I stop myself before I say Dad, I'm honoring his secret no matter what. “Did he get hurt in a fight?”
      “It's nothing like that,” she says. She stares at me for a minute, then sighs. “Look, I'm no Joey Riley fan, and I think you're better off without him. But you're so sad all the time â¦.”
      “Would you just tell me?”
      “Okay, okay.” She leans against the glass Dunkin' Donuts facade. “Jason asked Jimmy what's up with Joey, why is he never around anymore.”
      “He doesn't hang out at the bridge drinking?” I interrupt.
      “Guess not. So Jimmy says that Joey stays in his room, barely does anything except boxing and workâhe got a job as a mechanic, apparently.”
      “He doesn't party?”
      “No, and there's more. Jimmy said he's not supposed to tell, but Joey's been going to AA.”
      “What?” AA? That makes no sense. The last time he saw me was back to the Bacardi. He broke up with me because I wanted him to stop drinking.
      Unless â¦.
      Oh my god. It does make sense.
      It all makes sense.
      “I've got to go,” I tell her. “I've got to talk to him.”
Â
      I run all the way. Across the busy boulevard, over the rail road tracks, through the main part of town.
      By the time I get to Joey's my chest is heaving, and I have to sit on his lawn for a sec or I won't be able to speak.
      I knead into grass, catch my breath. My heartbeat slows to normal. I hoist myself up, head to his door, knock.
      The door creaks open. The woman answering has dirty blonde hair, a worn out expression and a black eye. “Mrs. Riley?” I guess.
      She opens the screen door, steps out. She's slouched over, like there's some invisible weight on her back. “Yes?”
      “Um ⦠is Joey home?”
      She squints at me, kind of like the sun's in her eyes, except it isn't. Her right eye is encased in a swollen, purply mound. It reminds me of Joey's face the last time I saw him. “Joey's not home from his boxing lesson yet. You his girlfriend?”
      “Uh â¦.”
      Before I can answer, she decides I am. “I didn't know he had one, but I'm glad.” She perks up a little now, her back straightens a tad. “That boy, he's been moping around here like somebody died. Come inside and wait.” She holds the door wide for me. I'm suddenly hesitant. I don't like this house, not at all. It makes me cower inside, like there's a little kid in me all balled up in a corner, rocking.
      But the need to see him, it's greater than my dread.
      I go in, guide the screen closed so it doesn't bang.
      “Wipe your feet, dear,” she tells me as she heads to the kitchen.
      I slide my sneakers on the mat, then catch up to her side. “I'm Dorothy,” I tell her, thinking maybe she's heard of me.
      There's no sign of recognition at my name. He never told her about us, about how happy we were.
      He kept me to himself.
      “I'm cooking dinner,” she says. “Come in the kitchen. I gotta stir my potatoes.”
      We pass through the archway, pass from brown carpet to green linoleum. I think of all the things Joey's told me went on in here, and it's hard to force a smile. “Such a tidy home you have,” I tell her, because it's the polite thing to do.
      “Thank you, Dorothy.” She's stirring, stirring. “I try my best to keep it nice.”
      I'm standing next to her watching her stir, feeling my insides stirring too. I just want to talk to him already â¦.
      “My little one, Warren, he's at a friend's house,” she says. “And my James, he's having dinner at his girlfriend's. But my Joseph, he always comes home for supper.” She stops stirring for a second, thinks about what she said. “Of course, I won't mind if he eats at your house sometimes. I'm not one of those mothers who can't let go â¦.”
      “It's okay,” I say. All this small talk is about to send me out of my skin.
      The screen door slams. Suddenly it occurs to me that it might be his dad.
      I turn; I look for a back door or some exit. There's a window over the sink. Could I get up there and out before he got to me?
But it's him, it's Joey. His feet hit the linoleum twice, then stop when he sees me. He looks good.
      His face, it's healed.
      “Doll â¦.”
      It's there in his eyesâthe light.
      He lights up for a second when he sees me, before he can cover up.
      He still cares.
      I want to hug him, it's been so long, but he quickly masks his reaction. “What the hell are you doing here?”
      “Joseph!” His mom says. “Is that any way to speak to a young lady?”
      “Ma, I don't know any way to say this other than butt out,” he tells her.
      She turns back to her potatoes.
      To me he says sharply, “You gotta get out of here.”
      “We need to talk,” I say.
      He's wearing his wraps, his gym bag's slung over his shoulder. He notices me looking and says soft, “I just got a job. I'll pay you back for the lessons.”
      “I don't want your money, Joey. That was a gift, no matter what â¦.”
      My words trail off as we lock eyes.
      He's fighting himself, I can see it.
      Now, I see everything so clear.
Joey
      Here they are
again
these voices at
war
in my
head
they won't
shut
the hell
up. One's
wailing
for her to
stay one's
screeching
to make her
go â¦.
Dorothy
      He says, “You gotta leave.”
      “I'm not going until you listen,” I say.
      “I've got some laundry to fold,” his mom says. I sense that's how it's done around here, you walk away from other people's messes. She hands me the spoon. It's covered with a white potato-y film. “You'll stir?”
      I nod.
      She goes.
      I head to the stove, dunk the wooden spoon in, whirl it through the thick goop.
      Joey grabs my arm, squeezes. The jolt when he connects, it's so strong I let go of the spoon.
      I manage to catch hold again, hoist it out before it sinks.
      “What is wrong with you?” he demands. His eyes are wide now, in desperation, in fear. “Doll, please â¦. Go.”
      “No.”
      He looks like he's going to burst, like he wants to drag me out of here, but he can't bring himself to. “Don't you get it? Pop's coming home!”
      I should be afraid, but all I can register is how great it is to be touched by him again.
      How great it is to feel again, to feel anything again.
      I've been dead all summer.
      The spoon in my hand, it's dripping potato mush all over the linoleum.
      His hand quivers against my skin, I feel it through the soft cloth on his palm, I feel it even stronger through his fingertips. That vibrant power between us, it's undeniable.
      I say, “Joey, I know.”
      He lets go, his hand flops right off my arm. “What do you know?”
      “I know why you broke up with me ⦠to protect me.” I turn to the pot, dip back in, stir some more.
      “Bullshit â¦.”
      I stir and stir, round and round. How much do you have to stir anyway? “Joey, I know you don't hang out anymore at the bridge.”
      “Got bored with them, that's all,” he says, but his voice, it's shaking.
      I lift the spoon from the potatoes, tap twice on the pot's rim to knock off the excess, stick it on the spoon rest between the burners.
      I switch off the flame.
      Fuck those potatoes if they're lumpy.
      I take his hand, fold it in mine.
      I say, “I know you're going to AA.”
      “Who told you that lie â¦?” He tries to cover still, but he can't pull it off. The vibe flowing between us, through usâit's been denied too long.
      It's the truth.
      “Aw, Joey,” I say.
      It's all I can say.
Joey
      The truth it's
out.
      I
stop then I
stop fighting it
âcause there
is
no fighting it
how could I not know that?
      I stop
fighting I stop
listening to the
arguing in my
brain I just
breathe
it in I just
breathe in
the truth.
      There's this
pop
in my head
and then it's quiet.
      They're
gone
the voices
they're
gone.
      Finally
there's silence
finally there's
peace.
      Finally
they're gone.
Dorothy
      He's crying.
      He says, “You never seen what he does to her ⦠I couldn't take the chance, that he'd do that to you â¦.”
      I pull him against me, he doesn't resist. He's clammy, damp and sticky from the workout. He nuzzles against my neck, it's like he was never gone. I gulp his scent, I hear him suck mine in. His tears, they feel so good. It's like they're cleansing away all the muck I've been buried in since I lost him.
      He kisses me.
      Oh god, he kisses me. It's water in the desert, it's the most beautiful thing I've ever tasted, he kisses me he kisses me he kisses me and everything melts away â¦.
      Then a voice booms, “What's this?”
Joey
      He's got this big
smirk
on his face
goddamn
sleaze.
      I push Doll behind me.
      She was
just
leaving,
I say.
      Pop
says,
Don't look that way to
me.
He steps
closer
closer
closer. I'm shaking I can't believe I'm
trembling what a
wuss
I
am. Her fingers they're digging digging
digging
into my sides her pulse it's
racing her arms they're
tight around me she's pressed on my
back we're basically
molded into one.
      This
scumbag