Authors: Kelly Bingham
Progress? Yes. I think.
I mean, that thing
there definitely resembles a paw.
That, a fish.
And the horse,
well, at least its legs are connected
with the ground line.
But the faces? Skewed, shifty;
lifeless eyes.
When I sketch
the lumpy, bumpy things that are animals,
I can feel love —
joy,
hovering, dangling,
over my cup.
If only I could create a pair of eyes
to look back into mine.
Then maybe,
the cup
would fill up.
This is how it could go.
Max will ask me out.
Somewhere quaint,
like the aquarium perhaps.
We’ll eat vanilla ice cream
while watching squid probe.
At the shark tank
he will suddenly realize
we shouldn’t be anywhere
near
a shark tank.
By the flounder, our hands touch.
In the jellyfish room,
our shoulders brush,
a manta ray drifts past
and we turn to each other —
he’ll kiss me
while giant red crabs
scale pink coral behind thick glass,
and crowds of people shuffle by,
consulting guidebooks.
Maybe I’ll cry.
“I’m so different, Max.
Can this work?”
He’ll take my face in his hands,
his skin blue from the fish lights,
and say,
“Don’t you get it? I love you
because of who you are
inside.
”
Tears.
Embrace.
I discover I always wanted
to be a ballerina;
Max wins a swim scholarship
to Harvard.
“We’ll always have the kelp forest, Max.”
Happy ending, roll credits,
pick our way out, over
crushed pieces of popcorn,
to emerge
into the glaring light of day.
At lunch one day,
I tell them about the phone call
a few weeks ago, the one
from the TV station.
Rachel is horrified.
Trina repulsed.
Elizabeth stares.
Angie speaks up.
“
Why
did you say no?”
She waves her sandwich
around as she talks.
“You could have had a free trip
to New York.
They would have given you
a makeover, maybe.
New clothes or something.
You could have seen a play.
You could have had a lot of fun!”
“By being on display?”
Rachel demands.
Angie rolls her eyes.
“Jane. Did you ever think
that maybe you would do someone
some good
by talking about your story?”
Elizabeth jumps in.
“I was thinking the same thing.”
She shrugs apologetically.
“There may be a lot of other kids out there
like you. Or that boy
you talk about, Justin.
Maybe if they could see you,
they’d feel better.”
“Why? Because I’m doing so great?”
I ask, sounding totally old and sour.
I try again.
“I mean, what can I say
that is so inspirational? It’s because
of doctors I survived. Now I just . . .
I don’t know. I just go on.”
“Yeah, but you’re high profile,”
Trina adds. She shrugs, too.
“Not that I’m saying you should do it.
I’m just saying.”
We wait.
“Saying what?” I ask.
Trina digs into a bag of chips.
“I don’t know. Nothing.”
Rachel gives me a look,
a
Don’t listen to them,
you did the right thing
look.
That is why Rachel
is my best friend.
Angie: “Jane, you might want to try mascara.
Why don’t you wear mascara?
Mascara would help your eyes stand out.
You should wear your makeup . . .”
Different.
Angie: “You need something with a V-neck.
Turtlenecks make your chin look big.”
Different.
Angie: “You could use a shoe with a heel, too.
And have you thought about wearing more silver?
It might make you look less pale. You’d look . . .”
Different.
In her eyes,
everything about me that has always been me
isn’t good enough —
anymore.
Justin and I hook up again,
which is not easy,
because every time I call
he’s going over to a friend’s house.
But today, we’re here.
Side by side,
we walk two blocks from his house
to a playground. It reminds me
of walking the hospital halls with
Justin in his wheelchair, beside me.
He’s come a long way.
Justin steps along steadily
on his leg,
only swaying slightly,
but he is careful
when we pass over uneven
breaks in the sidewalk.
“Sometimes I still fall down,”
he explains. “But not much.”
At the park, rocking on swings,
a spring breeze whispering,
Justin tells me that he is
playing softball with his friends,
in a league, even.
“They give me extra time to run the bases,”
he says. He sighs. “But I still
get out sometimes.” He leans back,
pulling his weight against the chains
of the swing. “But that’s okay.
I’m getting really good at hitting.”
I can’t bear the image.
What kind of idiot kid
tags out someone who
can barely run? Don’t they care?
Justin breezes on. “I want to play
soccer again. With my friends.
My dad and I
are working on it.
He may take me to the World Cup
for my birthday.”
Good job, Justin’s dad. Way to go.
I drag my toes through the wood chips
beneath us. Spot, tethered to a tree,
rolls on her back.
“By the way. When is that?” I ask.
“The cup?”
“No, your birthday.”
“May 28. Are you
going to buy me a present?”
“Of course. What would you like?
More LEGOs?”
“No. I have lots of those.
Let me think. Hmm.”
I wait. Then I wait some more.
Justin, swinging, with half his
leg gone forever,
a prosthesis that still causes him to trip,
and soccer just out of reach,
can’t think of one thing
he wants for his birthday.
Which is why I love you, Justin.
So much.
Physical therapy followed by
icy cold lattes at Starbucks,
a hot cinnamon scone to share,
Mom’s lipstick left on the rim of her cup.
Her wrist flicks
as she checks the time.
“Got a date?” I joke,
but she just shakes her head at me,
with a wistful smile. “Seems only yesterday
I walked you to kindergarten.”
We come home,
Mabel barking in the dark,
and there
in the corner, a massive lump,
impossibly shaped.
“Surprise!”
Rachel, Angie, Trina, Elizabeth
explode from behind the sofa,
leap from the kitchen doorway;
my knees buckle,
a flash goes off.
“You should have seen your face!”
“Were you surprised?”
“Happy Birthday!”