Read The Sound of Letting Go Online
Authors: Stasia Ward Kehoe
It is not until I see Cal
in jazz band on Tuesday morning
that I realize I’ve booked myself an awkward afternoon:
a three o’clock Dave-and-Cal-and-me library triangle
that certainly won’t fit into the oval egg chair.
I slide the mouthpiece onto my trumpet,
wishing I’d realized this soon enough to call Justine
and get some advice on unraveling the mess I’ve made.
But no, I am on my own,
trapped between Cal’s quick grin
and the back of Dave’s messy-perfect head
leaning against the band room window.
Time always goes too fast in jazz band.
Today is no exception.
We wrap with a swing medley of Christmas tunes
I usually enjoy,
though I pretty well trash my feature in “I’ll Be Home
for Christmas,”
rushing through like a squawking beginner.
I am trembling from my lips to my toes.
Cal is careful packing up his instrument,
so it’s easy to shove my trumpet case on the shelf,
escape the band room before he has the chance to talk
to me.
Dave is smiling, eyes closed, earbuds in,
listening to a tune, softly mouthing the words
as though this hall were empty
of the throngs of hair-swinging,
style-judging, ball-tossing,
book-worming high schoolers.
Hey, la-la. It’s gonna be okay today.
Hey, hi-hi. It’s gonna be all right tonight.
I recognize the refrain.
It’s a song by one of those folksy rock groups
whose name is some random combination
of nonprimary color and funky notion:
Black Rainbow,
Gray Fantasy,
Shining Obsolescence.
Not unlike the Irish ballads
Dad used to sing for my lullabies:
The lyrics are a mixture of anger and reassurance,
hurt and heart,
and if they have no conclusion,
they just fade the tune away.
I envy rock musicians’ escape into refrains,
into mantras of easy words
to validate their drumbeats and oft-simple melodies.
Sometimes, it seems to me that lyrics turn pure sound
to lies—
the words forced to fit music that says so much more
when left
unexplained.
I tap Dave’s shoulder.
He doesn’t startle as he opens his eyes,
takes in my made-up face,
my somber sweater and jeans.
“Hey there, Daisy-brains. You’re looking dark today.”
“I can’t meet you in the library this afternoon.
I mean, I’ll be there,
but I’m supposed to do some tutoring and . . .”
My tumble-rush of an excuse
for something that’s really perfectly innocent
comes with the heat of a rising blush
that turns my shivers to sweat.
“It’s okay,” he says, grabbing my damp hand.
“How about we pick up again Saturday night,
back at the lake?”
I nod.
It’s that easy.
“Catch ya at lunchtime, too, maybe.”
Dave pushes away from the wall,
slides his hand behind my neck,
brushes his mouth against mine just as Cal comes out
of the band room.
I see the Irish edges of his upturned lips go straight.
He turns the opposite way from Dave and me.
Never that easy.
In A-PUSH, Justine passes me a folded magazine page.
A model poses in torn black tights and a plaid pinafore.
“Goth and Prepster meet in the middle?”
is scrawled in Sharpie across the top.
I turn from Mr. Angelli’s unemotional recounting
of the horrendously bloody Battle of Antietam
to give her a giant smile.
Justine—my best friend—child of divorce,
expert in compromise,
all-around hilarious girl.
If she likes Ned, I’ve got to give him a chance.
I know she’s already doing the same for me and Dave
even without my asking,
even without my knowing
what “me and Dave” really means.
“Dave asked me out for Saturday night,” I whisper.
A squeak emerges from Justine,
loud enough to draw Mr. Angelli’s attention.
But he just shrugs and returns to his map.
“Your AP scores will not be enhanced
by gossiping during class.” The Angelli-style reprimand
is delivered in the same dry tone
he uses to detail gruesome Civil War atrocities.
His eyes don’t flare with Mrs. Pendleton’s irritation,
passion, which I don’t like but I get.
For a second I try to imagine a Mrs. Angelli—
I’ve heard there is one—
but all I can picture
is a woman in a long brown prairie dress and bonnet chastely reading history books;
nothing HBO at all.
Justine waggles her finger, murmurs,
“Will
not
be enhanced,”
and we shake with silent giggles.
“Where are you and Dave going?” Justine asks.
“To . . .” I don’t want to say the pits.
I have asked Dave for very little and now I see
he’s given me exactly that:
a chance to lock lips again underneath a chill sky.
Maybe I want Dave to pick me up at the door,
take me to a meal, ask me to a dance.
“We’re working on a plan,” is all I can think to say.
“La Parisienne was awesome,” she replies lightly.
I’m certain there’s no way Dave could afford such a tab.
Since his folks broke up, he’s lived in the older part of town
where seventies split-levels pepper squat lots
with postage-stamp backyards too small for swing sets
and sandboxes.
I think of Cal’s holey jeans,
Steven’s high-priced tracksuits,
Shirley’s extravagantly feminine bathroom.
How many La Parisienne dinners would it take
to match the price
of a year of residential care for my brother?
How many elegant pink prom dresses
might buy a daughter’s forgiveness
for a father who left his only child?
I wonder if Justine knows her restaurant suggestion
is out of Dave’s reach
but needs, despite her love for me, to twist a knife,
prove there’s a guy out there who wants
to spend time with her.
I don’t like the way boys have driven
little wedges into our friendship, pushed Justine and me
to instances where we treat each other
with Ashleigh Anderson–style unkindness.
Maybe, though, this is one of those times
that I should use my talent for quiet,
for acceptance—
let my best friend have her moment
to flounce her pleated skirt and walk away.
“He your boyfriend?”
are Cal’s first words to me in the library.
“Who?” I reply dumbly as if I don’t know,
buying time to think of the answer I don’t have.
“That Dave fella.”
His gaze is clear, his lips set straight.
He is holding a spiral-bound notebook in his right hand.
A pencil is tucked behind his ear.
“I don’t know. You wanna get started on some history?”
I walk toward the row of private study rooms at the back
of the library.
Cal follows me.
Cal sets biographies
of Harriet Tubman and Frederick Douglass,
Harriet Beecher Stowe’s
Uncle Tom’s Cabin
,
and half a dozen other books
on the study room table.
I look at the names, the titles on the covers,
all familiar to me, people and stories
about which I have been taught since grade school,
but books I have never read.
“Have you read all these?”
“Some. Others, just pages here and there.
I am wonderin’ if we should try writin’ about a lad
or a lass,
someone stuck on a Southern plantation
or someone who’s made it on that Railroad to freedom.”
There’s something about the way his voice breaks
on that word,
freedom
,
that makes me look up from
When I Was a Slave
with its frightening cover illustration of a bleak-faced family standing before an endless field of cotton.
I picture Cal, alone, on an airplane from Ireland;
imagine slave children being sold from their parents, shipped away to other plantations,
to strange, unfamiliar worlds.
When I look back down, the faces on the book’s cover
have all turned to Steven’s.
“Let’s make it a boy.”
My voice struggles for its don’t-pity-me tone;
my lips tighten
as if I’m about to buzz a high C on my trumpet.
Even after I’m able to swallow,
my eyes feel embarrassingly wet.
“And let’s make him . . . free.”
“Right then,” Cal replies softly.
He sits down in one of the wooden chairs.
I sit down, too.
The dusty library air is electric with secrets
almost palpable in the thick quiet that bounces between
Cal and those books and me.