Reckless, Glorious, Girl Page 13
“Vacations are for bad food, swimming pools,
extra cholesterol, extra calories, extra pure
joy. Cable TV turned on all the wrong channels
& you & me. Curled up soaking it all in.”
Happy Birthday, Beatrice
Last night of vacation.
Mom arrives finally.
Throws shoes off.
Cuddles us close.
Mamaw unwraps cookies.
Chocolate chip walnut.
Fancy new journal.
Fancy new pens.
Fancy new book.
Fancy new bookmark.
Marking my life.
Thirteen feels babyish.
Somehow still lost.
Say thank you.
Don’t say scared.
Don’t say lost.
Don’t say alone.
Don’t start crying.
Don’t lose control.
Hold the truth.
Trying so hard
to stay above,
eyes tearing up,
hold it in,
breath & all.
Don’t lose control.
Hold the truth.
Can’t stop now.
End of Vacation Life
Some days I wake up & I’m all sunshine.
All helium-filled balloons & dance parties.
Music turned up all the way.
But some days, I wake up & I’m thunderstorms.
Heat lightning—my whole self feels heavy & clunky
& unreliable. That’s how I feel today.
So I pull the covers tighter around me.
Try to be a cocoon
or my own life raft. Ignore the way my heart
is attempting to slip out of my body.
That’s how Mamaw finds me. Steaming cup of cocoa
from the lobby downstairs between her hands.
“Bug” & “flowerpot” & “lemon drop” is what she calls me.
Throws the shades open.
Tells me you can’t quit before you even start.
Wipes my eyes with her wrinkled hands.
Holds me still & calm.
Rocks me steady & ready & awake.
Sometimes in My Dreams
I am in the highest swing
on the swing set
& make every goal
& slam dunks are my life.
In real life,
I don’t even like sports
but dream gold medals,
the tallest trophies, ribbons.
The saying: “people choke on my dust”
is true
because I’m not just fast,
I’m a train straight
off the rails,
one hundred miles an hour.
The way Mamaw
drives when she’s full of fury.
The ways she says
she drove the night they called
to tell her my dad
(her son) died.
But in my dreams,
I am not full
of sadness like a lost boat.
Death is not my only story.
I am a fireball,
firecracker,
fired up
& other things that burn.
I kick the ball highest,
my legs the strongest.
The sheer amount
of push-ups I can finish in a minute
is straight-up bonkers.
Iron Woman.
Unstoppable.
Mind-numbingly powerful
& athletic
& so skilled at
e v e r y t h i n g
that other folks take notes.
But sometimes—
even in my dreams.
I don’t make it out alive.
I just sink
deeper
& deeper
& deeper
until
I
disappear.
Dreaming Another Me
California dreams
far away as possible
could I disappear?
Imagine mountains
homes that don’t belong to me
new identity.
Run, run, run away
been singing myself to sleep
but when I wake up
I’m still here.
The Way Home
Mamaw turns the volume
up high. Rolls the windows
all the way down. Riding
through a wind tunnel.
Says the cold air opens
your pores. Sings top volume
Sam Cooke & Loretta Lynn.
Mom belts it out too,
the two of them
conspiring against me.
Put my headphones on,
sound all the way up.
Feeling good finally,
no worries at all,
like I finally got away
with it. Thinking
maybe my days
of worrying are over,
so I kick back,
put my hands over
my headphones
& rock.
That’s when Mamaw
looks through the rearview
& must see the glint
off my fake diamonds
flurry in the mirror.
She says, “My goodness,
those look just exactly
like Bluegrass Bauble.”
Gaudy in sun-
light, they shine.
In an instant,
I remember, sliding
them on my fingers
this morning, full
of myself. “Oh!
My new friends,
they bought them
for my birthday,” I explain,
rolling them around.
“Pretty pricey gift,”
Mamaw says, shutting
off the radio & looking
even closer at me & my lie.
Arrival
I’m unpacking the weekend
when Mamaw shows up
in my doorway. Tells me
she’s disappointed. Says,
“Beatrice Miller,
I’ve never known you
to tell a tall tale,
but I just got off the phone
with Misty Cole.
& you know what?
She told me no young girls
bought one lick of jewelry
from her stand last weekend.
Fact is, she said someone
stole something special
from her. Described them
& everything. Gold-&-gem-
filled rings. Fancy & shiny
ones you couldn’t miss.
Described the ones
I saw in the mirror
on the way home.”
I Stole Them
“Big deal,” I say
& regret it instantly.
Mamaw is never
that mad. All Zen-like
& calm. She’s smooth
& laid-back, but now
she gets to shouting.
Says it’s high time
I apologize to her
& Mom, who’s standing
in the doorway.
“Spoiled & acting out,
can’t even tell
who it is
you’re trying to be.
Can’t even
recognize you,”
Mamaw says.
“Well, I’m standing
right here,” I shout,
mad at myself now.
Start packing my bag,
keep both stolen rings
tight around my fingers.
Mad at my life
& Mamaw & all her magic
feel-good-ness.
& Mom for working so hard
but still not making enough,
& me for feeling worthless
sometimes & not enough too.
& myself again
/>
for being a brat & a baby
& most of all at my dad
who left me too fast
& too soon
& who I miss today
& always
& now I’m mad
at my tears
& the way they slide
reckless
down my face.
Embarrassed
that I can’t even
be thankful
for what I have.
Storm downstairs,
slam the screen door
& ride.
Tree House
Zoom through the back roads
ignore the rushing cool wind
make it in record time.
Peel back the tree bark
sit in our makeshift hammock
& rock myself slow.
Who have I become
I’m not recognizable
to people I love.
Zip my jacket up
close my eyes & say a prayer
hope Mamaw hears me.
Apology
I must have fallen asleep
because when Mariella & StaceyAnn
pull up on their bikes,
they scare the bejesus
out of me.
“AHHHHHHHHHHH!!!
Holy crap,” I shout.
“Jeez,” StaceyAnn says. “Calm down.”
“Yeah,” Mariella adds. “It’s just us.”
“You don’t recognize us?” StaceyAnn asks,
cocking her hip & smirking at me.
“Remember us? We are, or, we were
your best friends.”
“I’m so sorry,” I say, suddenly aware
of how cold it is. The tip of my nose
frozen. Face still wet from crying.
“I messed up. Trying to be someone
I’m not.”
“We don’t forgive you,” StaceyAnn says.
Mariella nudges her. “Yes, we do. Just
don’t do it again. Act like you know us
next time. & get up,” Mariella says.
“You gotta get home. Your mamaw.
She’s been texting me like wild.
& she’s really bad at texting.”
Texts from Mamaw (from My Mom’s Phone)
Mrlla—cme gt Bea
Dang phne—not know txt
Crppp—phone—cant get no
Wherrrr s Beatriceeee??? Dangitt
Call bck. Npw.
Text from Mom
Come home
Sweet Beatrice
Come home
My Heart
Longing
& ruin
& pummel
& ache
& joy
& wishing
& pumping
& glowing
& flowering
& peeling
& hot pink
& blazing
& missing
& full
& rising
& trembling
& awake
& here
& far away
& inside
& glowing
& yours
& mine
& alive.
Poem of Forgiveness
You see me
& I’m enough.
I know this.
Sometimes I ache
figuring myself out
missing my dad
missing his life
could have been
might have been.
Sometimes I’m ashamed
of our life
& our garden
& our house
& my clothes
& our computer
& no phone
& your eccentricities,
I say, cringing
but being honest.
But most times
I love it
& you both.
Wouldn’t want it
any other way.
I’m a jerk
& I’m sorry.
I’m so sorry.
They hold me
in a hug
so tender & long,
that I appear
back to me.
See myself new
taking up space
being the girl
I was always
meant to be.
Truth Is
Mamaw starts in, looking straight at me,
“While you know I always appreciate a good
old-fashioned I’m Sorry, you & I both know
that’s not enough. I nod. It’s been that way
since I was a kid. Every time I messed up,
or made a mistake, Mamaw or Mom
(or both of them) would tell me
I had to make it right & most of the time
I had to figure it out on my own.
“Good thing I know Ms. Cole. Don’t worry.
I’m sure she’s made a few mistakes too.
I’m betting she’ll understand. Now get to it,”
Mamaw says, pulling out the basket of notecards
that sits on her desk.
“Don’t worry about all that fancy
cursive lettering this time.
Just tell the truth,
just speak from here,” she says,
putting her hand above my heart.
“That’s all that ever matters anyway.”
& all of a sudden, I know she’s right.
Dear Ms. Cole
I messed up. It was all me.
Seventh grade is way harder
than I thought it would be.
I stole the rings last Saturday.
Both of them.
All I wanted was to fit in
& have people see me as popular,
have them see me & wish
they could be friends with me.
Laugh at all my jokes,
wanna hang out with me,
ride bikes, work on my treehouse.
I’m not gonna lie,
I took those rings
so people would look at me
in a different way,
& when I showed them what I did,
I felt a kind of liftoff.
Floating.
They could see how wild
& daring I was.
But afterwards, all I did was deflate.
Out of air.
It felt like I’d have to keep taking risks
to just stay in their spotlight.
& then I felt guilty
& embarrassed
that I even wanted that so bad
in the first place.
Felt sick to think
I’d let someone else
make me feel not good enough
or not in place enough.
I’m sorry I stole the rings.
I thought they’d turn me into someone else.
I even wanted that.
But now I realize that being anyone other than myself
is the biggest mistake I could ever make.
Please give me the chance to pay for the rings
by helping out in your gallery this winter.
Thank you for considering.
Sincerely,
Beatrice Miller
One More Apology
Mom reads the letter
before I seal the envelope.
She smiles, while tears fill her eyes
& pulls me toward her.
“You know, my folks had me working
from the time I turned twelve.
Babysitting, helping around the house,
you name it, I was doing it.
Laundry, gardening, dishes.
Didn’t have much time for friends
or fooling around. I had to be tough.
By sixteen, I had two jobs,
and in college, forget about it.
I just worked and worked.
It was all I knew.
And then your dad died.
&n
bsp; After you were born
I just threw myself into work
even more. Worked to forget
and worked to give myself
something to do, ease my mind.
I guess somehow, along the way
I forgot what it was like to be a kid
and sometimes
I want you to grow up too fast,
to work too hard—just like me.
But I see you with StaceyAnn and Mariella
and Mamaw
and I see you laughing
and just enjoying your life
and working hard to help us
all at the same time
and I try to remember that you’re twelve.”
“Thirteen now,” I remind her.
“That’s right. Yes. Thirteen.
I want to say I’m sorry too.
For sometimes asking too much of you,
too fast. I’ve been thinking that sometimes
it helps to just get out of the way
and give you the space you need,” Mom says,
& as soon as she does, I pull her close.
“Don’t go too far though. Please?”
She holds me tight next to her,
& we stay that way until morning.
Friendsgiving
Mamaw & Mom
invite the whole block.
Our house stays open
for Friendsgiving.
Mamaw’s favorite holiday.
Fried turkey & Tofurky
for days.
Stuffing with sausage
& sage. Lemony
pound cake & cookies
made with rolled oats
& raisins, dark chocolate
& walnuts. Cranberry
sauce & green beans
loaded with ham hock.
Mariella’s family
brings elote & they help
make our house a feast.
StaceyAnn’s mom
& dad join us,
whip up mashed potatoes
& savory gravy.
Red-velvet cake
& lemon meringue
& coconut cream
& Shirley Temples
we mix with maraschino