Authors: Kelly Bingham
Maybe if you were normal-looking, Max would actually like you, instead of feel sorry for you.
He doesn’t feel sorry for me.
Everyone
feels sorry for you
.
They do not.
If only this hadn’t happened. None of this crap would be going on. You’d feel normal. Remember normal?
I think so.
Maybe you’ll never feel that way again.
Stop.
If only that shark had been swimming anywhere else that day. Anywhere.
Anywhere else.
Anywhere.
Angie and I walk through the halls;
I’m going to art,
she’s going to English.
“Anyway,” she is saying, “I have
to tell you. I think Matthew
has a crush on you.”
“Matthew from science class?”
Angie nods, glowing.
“Uh-huh. Have you noticed the way
he finds reasons to talk to you lately?
About homework and stuff?”
“Yeah, but that’s about homework.”
“I don’t think so. I saw him
looking
at you
a couple of times this week. I think
he may ask you out.”
We reach art class and pause
at the doorway.
“I doubt it.”
Angie sighs. “Jane, you can’t
hold out for Max, you know.”
Stung, I fall back on pretense.
“Huh? Who says I am?”
Angie leans against the doorjamb,
lowering her voice as students
squeeze past us.
“Come on. I know you’re, like,
in love with him. But he’s with Megan.
And he’s kind of out your league.”
“Thanks a ton.”
“
My
league, too,” Angie says,
hurt, confused.
“I’m not saying it has anything to do
with your arm, so don’t go there.
I just meant, he’s, you know.
Max.
He’s got girls his own age
all over him, and he’s got Megan.
I’m just saying, you need to open
yourself up to other possibilities.”
“Got it, Mother.”
Angie huffs. “You are so pissy sometimes,
you know that?”
She stalks off.
I rip into class,
ready to plunge my hand into some clay,
pretend it’s Angie’s mouth,
and I am mashing it, mashing it shut.
But today,
we are doing string art.
Maybe I could make a noose
and hang her.
Waiting for the bus,
Angie picks at a scab on her elbow.
“God, look at this.
It’s disgusting.
I’m never going Rollerblading again.”
“Hey, what are you guys doing Saturday?”
Rachel asks,
trying to ignore the tension
that sits like an elephant between Angie and me.
I know I should say something,
make a joke,
something witty like,
“Yeah, scabby elbows suck.
That’s why I got rid of my arm.”
But I don’t feel like being the glue.
To hell with being glue, as a matter of fact.
Angie should be more aware.
She doesn’t look at me
as we board the bus.
She knows I’m right.
Dear Ms. Arrowood:
I am shocked and saddened by what has happened to you, and I send my deepest sympathy for your loss.
I am sure your recovery will be long, but I wonder if you will find this all makes you stronger in a way. It is my personal experience that sharing your story with others can help in the healing process. Which is why I am writing today. Ms. Arrowood, we would so love to interview you for our series, “American Inspirations.” In case you haven’t seen it, this is a weekly feature in our magazine about Americans who have overcome huge obstacles in their lives and gone on to triumph. I am sure your story would be inspirational and powerful, and who knows? You may very well help someone else who is suffering, too.
Please contact me at your earliest convenience. I sincerely hope you will say yes.
Best wishes,
Barry Epson
Mom could have
tucked away
my pencils,
my bottles of nail polish,
the ball of half-knit yarn
before I came home from the hospital.
Did she stand in my room,
and wonder if she should?
I think
she must have.
She’s that kind of wonderer.
But she left it as it was.
I look over at her on the couch,
watching TV.
I’d like to thank her,
but I’m not sure how.
Emily bumps her tray into mine
as we negotiate the
cafeteria line.
She gives me a look
that could wilt lettuce.
Eating, listening to Angie
give me mascara advice,
I think about Emily and the girls
around here,
the popular ones. Boys, too.
They want to flatten everyone
all the time.
Anyone who challenges
their own feelings of self-worth.
“When someone is jealous of you,
they make themselves your enemy.”
That’s what Uncle Ben told me once.
But I’m Shark Girl.
Why would anyone be jealous
of
me
?
He glances over,
but he’s too busy talking
to Megan Dalloway
to really see me.
I stand there,
ridiculous in the wake of
Megan’s long, sleek hair, perky nose,
and slim, perfect body.
You know the part in Cinderella
when everyone goes to the ball
and she sits at home, crying?
It wasn’t because her gown was ripped.
It was because she knew
she was an idiot
for thinking
she could grab a prince.
I know how she feels.
“Jane, I have to tell you,
red is not your color.
You wear too much of it.”
In the cafeteria,
chewing around a stick of celery,
Angie announces this in front of my friends.
“It makes you look kind of,
I don’t know. Pale.”
“Since when are you my fashion consultant?”
I say. I’ve had it. “Who asked you?
Who the hell do you think you are?
Stop picking on me, Angie! Just STOP!”
Tears burst out, run down my cheeks.
I run out of there like a baby.
Crying in the restroom.
Trying to erase Angie’s stunned face,
Rachel’s stricken stare,
the jeering “Tell the bitch,”
from Emily Morrison
as I ran past.
Angie knows she’s hurting me
when she talks like that,
and she doesn’t care.
We’re through.