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Emma N Boyer Apr 2016
1) I left a book on her porch and she stole it, skipping through each page. She loves to boast of worlds she lacks the courage to explore.

2) She hates her dad for leaving but when he was home she turned away. She redefined “cold shoulder” and opened up a bit too late. She keeps a tin jar in her dresser of the medals that he wore, she always hated camo but on him it just made sense. I guess the pins weigh down her jacket so they know all about neglect, I hear they talk about it when her headboard plays the drums.


3) People listen to her ramblings, more interested in her lips than what she has to say. Someone should’ve mentioned there’s no real Mirror on the Wall.

4) Every morning there’s a boy. His Converse vouch for half the markings on the concrete court beside the school, and the bend in the broken hoop spits vengeance at his arms. One day a green Toyota took his parking spot and his black eye picked his brain. When he reached into his bag he chose the gun and not the ball.


5) Someone told me once that wishes wander off. You have to leash them and restrain them or they go picking through your hair. They’ll search under your pillow for a way to tease your dreams but as soon as they stop whispering all you see is black. Maybe the toxins that she breathed in pushed the worst out from her head, but I don’t think she ever had the strength to accept that some will always stay.

6) When we were six she wore the same red shoes every day for a week. The laces were never tied. She left them in the mud.


7) There’s a table in the lunch room that all dated the same girl. They all have different jackets but none know her middle name.

8) She used to walk through mountains and talk about their clothes, but since she’s lost her chapstick her lips don’t care about the heights. Now she drives her green Toyota everywhere she goes, and when the wheels wear down my guess is that she’ll leave it in the mud.
Emma N Boyer Apr 2016
Don’t be confused. Don’t be afraid. Don’t think it’s your fault. Don’t stay up wondering. Don’t stay up wishing. Don’t ask about me. Don’t cry. I have your rose and it’s rotted but so was I so don’t worry. The scent that follows with decay was always under my skin. Hold on to the bruises and showcase the neglect. If you remember the dark days you won’t dream about light.
You didn’t know me but tell yourself you didn’t want to. I’m half of you, yes, but not the half that you would like. When you wake in cold sweat or sneer at someone you love the green eyes I gave you will glitter and gleam. Your mother will have told you that I liked to sing. Your voice is your own and the resemblance is eerie but mine was all minor, not worth the strain.
The blood in the basement was only a hoax. I’m fine I’m just hiding; it’s for your own good. There were so many voices in my head and they all want to know you, but I was afraid of what they might say so I murdered them. The problem with that is mine was too close, so when silence ensued I couldn’t speak either.
I know there’s an undeniable urge to fill in the blanks, but you’ve heard that ignorance is bliss and it’s a bliss you can’t ignore.
Emma N Boyer Jan 2016
12/16/15 6:26am

A sliver of color through the back window. The same peach as blushing cheeks and the fading blue of a baby's blanket. Trembling silence and clouds of breath mingling with each other in the newborn morning. Headlights taking snapshots of tired eyes; whispers tender enough not to wake the napping stars. Trees designing window panes clearly in a hurry, blurring in and out with all their arms stretched towards the sky. The road is stretching, too. The pavement stern and silent, clutching at the cars that dare disturb its sleep. The horizon hints at fire burning far away; a soft orange glow with wisps of grey feigning smoldering smoke. A train track breaks the tree line, headed off to god knows where. Its rails are far too drowsy to share their story now. Emergency exits, shy and unsure, boast red block letters and cringe with each overpass. As if anyone awake at this hour would bother escaping. The world rises grey, sore, soft, and insane. Not willing today to put on a show; driven into depression by each pair of feet; abused and misused and fed up to say the least. It yawns and stubborn concrete stays solemnly in place, decorated with plastic bags and stained with struggling weeds. Red leaking in the distance, igniting the belly of the vapor that is painted on the edge; the blaze already mentioned gaining confidence, it seems. Canary yellow losing faith and retreating beneath the flames, the first slivers of sea green peeking through at last. All of this behind, a different canvas up ahead: a vision of the clogged confusion not worth description or dedication. A rainbow on the right rebelling against the sky, bringing hope in desperate effort when infant hours threaten dawn.
Just a morning I hate to write about
Emma N Boyer Dec 2015
I was in the back of my dad’s grey pickup truck, the summer sun stinging my skin through my favorite blue hoodie. My sisters sat on either side of me, fighting over an ice cream cone that had found its way to the floor. I shoved away their sticky hands as they grasped at each other and tried to find out who was to blame. My dad was complaining about the reek of our hockey gear, oblivious to the harassment I was being subjected to behind him. We were going about 60 down highway J back to Minocqua, sweaty and exhausted from a morning practice. I rested my head against the seat and let my sisters fade away, and my aching muscles stopped screaming long enough to let me fall asleep.


I woke up to a different atmosphere, both my sisters still and silent. My dad’s hands strangling the steering wheel, and the speedometer off the grid. I thought I was imagining the tension thick enough to sever with a sword, but when I tapped Suzi on the shoulder she put a finger to her lips. In the rearview mirror I saw a nightmare, in the form of salty tears. I’d never seen my dad’s green eyes stained like this before. The highway home was merciless; every red light held us up. I was anxious for the race to end although I didn’t know the finish line.


My heavy lids betrayed me and I fell asleep again, woken by a sudden jolt and a car door’s ruthless slam. The picture in the window was a pretty one, a sunset masterpiece with reds and yellows and every shade of beauty in between. It didn’t seem right that the sun was down, it wasn’t even noon when we’d left the rink and it was only a half an hour from home. I realized then that my seat was cold, and my sisters nowhere to be found. The ice cream on the floor had turned to a puddle of warm milk. I rubbed my eyes and looked out front, and my heart leaped to my throat. The windshield framed a neon sign that no one wants to see. I stumbled from my napping place wearing just one shoe, searching for the other in the red glow on the blacktop, eerie and unsettling in the hospital parking lot.


It didn’t take me long to find my grandpa’s van. I knocked on the window a few times before someone grabbed my wrist. “Don’t wake them.” My grandma Donna whispered. I couldn’t see anything through the tinted black glass.


“Don’t wake who?” I whispered back.


“Your sisters. And Luci, he’s here too. Your mom is on the helicopter, and your dad is leaving soon.” I couldn’t see my own expression, but I’m guessing it reflected the confusion that was clogging up my throat.


“Why? What do you mean on a helicopter? How long have I been sleeping? Where’s Nik?” At the sound of my older brother’s name a hot flow of tears washed her cheeks. My twelve year old mind started spinning, and I clutched at my grandma’s elbow, my ice cream stained fingers leaving tracks on her worn leather jacket.


“Listen, honey,” she said gently, her voice shaking like the thin evergreens lining the road behind her, “Nik was fishing with a group of his friends on the highway this morning.” I nodded. Nik always rode his bike home from his workout, and there was rarely a day that he didn’t stop at the bridge on 71 to play catch and release with his friends.


“What happened?” I asked. My voice seemed too loud in the cool air; it echoed off the grey buildings around me, seemingly taking forever to fade into the night. She cleared her throat.


“He was hit by a car, honey.” Everything went cold. “It was going really fast, he was dead when they found him. They managed to restart his heart, but there’s nothing more they can do for him here. Your mom is on the helicopter that’s taking him to Madison. You’re going to stay with us until your dad comes back.” I opened my mouth; shut it again. I stared at my untied shoes. Well, Nik’s untied shoes. I’d stolen them the night before. They didn’t fit me, and they were my least favorite colors. I hated the design on the sides; I hated the pointy toe and I hated the frayed laces. The last conversation I had with my brother was that morning, when I was lugging my hockey bag up the stairs to the parlor, and decided to swing it into his gut when I passed him in the hallway.


He proceeded to give my ponytail a solid tug, and use the momentum of my swinging bag to shove me down the stairs. I’d abandoned my gear on the floor and chased him into the kitchen, when both of us were dragged out by our ears.


"Is Nik going to come back too?" I locked eyes with my grandma, silently pleading her to be straight with me. The air was cool but I was sweating, I struggled to hold my hands steady. Out of the corner of my eye I saw my grandpa Barry emerge from the sliding glass doors at the entrance of the emergency room. His face was a blank slate, with no more emotion than the most dedicated of the guards outside the Vatican.


"Is Nik going to come back too?" I asked again. I knew it wasn't fair to ask her. I was young but I understood that she had no way of knowing. She stared back at me, her chocolate eyes soaked with sadness. She never got the chance to answer. My grandpa grabbed me firmly by the wrist and led me back to my dad's truck to get my stuff.


"Don't say anything to Luci. Not until we know." He didn't need to explain himself. My 9 year old brother Luci was closest to Nik. In my mind's eye I could see him break down, his small heart forgetting to pump blood instead of wishes. I held his hand the whole car ride home. His eyes never opened but his fingers locked around mine, and squirmed a little every time one of my sisters moved their legs. My grandparents said nothing until we got to their house, then they shook everyone awake and led us downstairs. All four of us, Suzi, Isabelle, Luci, and I, piled into one of the guest rooms. We settled into one king bed, Luci snoring softly.


It wasn't until all of them were asleep that the tears really came. I stared at the ceiling and tried counting sheep but they all played too close to the road. When I woke up my phone was on fire and I think that's the worst of it, people that didn't even know him pretending to care. I threw it at the wall so I missed my mom's call, it wasn't until after lunch that I heard Nik's vitals were normal.


My grandma said there were pictures, but I wasn't allowed to see. When she was washing dishes i looked anyways. I ran outside shaking. Along with the pictures there was a list. 9 broken ribs, a shattered elbow, 2 cracked vertebrae, a broken spleen. I squeezed my eyes shut and knelt in the driveway, pretending that the colored stones didn't hurt my tiny knees. There were pieces of skull that had caved into nik's brain, and over 40% of his chest was a ****** mess. I guess my mom has nightmares about his screams when they pulled the gravel out.


Two weeks later he said his first words, when his spine let him sit up and the drugs subdued the worst of it. I was the only one allowed to see him. When I walked into the hospital room, he was playing with the chords hooked up to his chest. He smiled big and I lost it, running to his side. He promised he was fine and I shouldn't worry, all this with bandages on his head and a monitor in the corner. I watched the green lines jump on the screen, the same color as the veins on my big brother's wrist. I stared at his arm and wondered what it would be like if he were dead. If those veins had lost their color and his eyes their midnight blue.

"You okay, Em?" My mom was asleep in a chair but she woke at the sound of his voice. It was fragile and unnerving, Nik was never anything but strong. He remembered nothing of the accident except a brilliant golden light, and I wonder if it filled his dreams when I thought that he was gone. It's hard to explain what happened next, but eventually he came home.

We share a wall between our beds so in a way I shared his dreams. I think there was more scar tissue than anyone could see. I tried to help but he kept his door locked, so I sat with my back against the wood and talked to myself instead, his cold-sweat screams  burning me like sticky snow against bare feet.

He started lashing out, forgetting things, lying all the time. He snuck out at night and changed his mind and stopped eating like he should. He was trying to escape, and he thought if he slipped out after daybreak it would all start to make sense. I don't think he recognized that the world he wanted to leave was between his ears, lovely but so lonely. The only thing is he didn't want me close anymore. His sky blue eyes met thunder clouds and the rain was drowning him, I could see and I could've handled it but he wouldn't let anyone in. It's not that I'm not close to him. I mean he still pushes me down the stairs. But his heart was stopped for quite some time and since then it's been offbeat.

My mom said the part of his brain that was most damaged connects actions to consequence. That might be why yells at me, or why we haven't spoken since June.

I remember when we lived in Utah, before my dad died, there was a field that he would take us to to watch the mountains and the moon. One time Nik asked him why the moon moved and all he had to say was "just because." He said if everything beautiful stayed forever people would eventually stop caring. Reminiscence is so deceiving I wonder if it could be all be true. Maybe next time I see Nik he won't flinch when I ask how he's doing, and I can pretend that I don't notice that his head hurts all the time.


I don’t long for the things I know of him, but the things I’ll never understand. I think there are parts of him still on the pavement and I think he’s forgotten them. The best day of my life was finding out he was alive, but I think all the worst ones after that have been spent wondering if he's living.
Emma N Boyer Dec 2015
You don’t have to be careful just conscious. There’s a lot of pressure on my heart and I’m not very good at predicting the times when it bursts. It’s not always bad. Sometimes my face hurts from smiling and I dance in the rain and I get senselessly sick of the sound of my laugh. You’re allowed to hurt me; you get your turn. Yeah there’s aches that bring me to my knees and nights when my pillow soaks up sobs but that doesn’t make me fragile. I can handle all the heartsick; I can handle “kiss don’t tell.” I’m awake and I can feel you; I can tell you want to dream. You don’t have to be careful just conscious. I have scars that hurt some days. There’re some wishes on my lips that you can taste if you come close enough, I won’t be the one to tell you that I want this love to last. It’s a bore to bleed from bruises that should’ve been long gone, but my healing process takes some time and I think I broke the clock. I’m just saying there’s a time and place. There’s a time to err on the cautious side and there’s a time to start a fire; you know thinking straight can’t save us all when lust is in the air. I wish I had the guts to say that i only need myself; that the strength of my own bones is enough to keep me whole. But I learned a while back that dishonesty is dangerous and I can’t lie to my own chest. He said a lot of stuff and I guess I thought he meant it and it should hurt him that he hurt me but I don’t think it’s crossed his mind. You don’t have to be careful just conscious. I wanna tell you everything and you should listen if you can but if you need to kiss me harshly I’ll give in and pull you near. Yes there’s parts of me still mending and there’s parts of me I hate but I forced myself to leave it all and I feel like I’ve moved on. Even when I didn’t love him he was home to me and leaving home is hard; there’s a hole where all the comfort was and I’m scrambling for a pulse. Please understand that you will damage me and I’ll survive the shaking palms but the swells of pain will join the waves til the tsunami comes again. It’s not you that needs to save me; don’t hold back or bite your tongue. There are things I haven’t said and if you knew them you would laugh. You don’t have to believe me just back up; keep your blue eyes to yourself. I don’t even know what I’m saying but there’s this: I will pretend that I’m okay. It’s because I’m broken that the light gets in and I’ve been tired of the dark, so hold my hand and touch my waist and please steal all my breath.
Emma N Boyer Dec 2015
You moved on I watched you go
That's fine with me but you should know
I miss you when I'm up alone
I still have your number in my phone
Sometimes I get lost in what used to be
Not the only one but it's hard to see
Whether or not you wanted me
Whether or not our love was free
If it's right that you make it hard to breathe
If you purposely haunt my daydreams
I don't understand how you could pretend
I thought you were into me up 'til the end
It always aches when I catch your eyes
You caught my sore heart by surprise
You held my hand during gentle nights
And I fell for you from dangerous heights
We didn't argue we didn't fight
Seemed to me everything was right
To be honest I've got some scars inside
I thought with you I didn't have to hide
I misread your promises, misread your pride
You didn't budge when I started to cry
I see you with her and my stomach drops
Do you have the same arguments, have the same talks?
I keep my head down now when I walk
Try not to hesitate, try not to stop
Hard to be invisible and noticed as well
You put me through heaven I know all about hell
You say not to tell them there's nothing to tell
The one that got away but I don't wanna chase
Just a flower for Romeo, a rose for his vase
Not exactly tragic but can't be erased
If anything I'll admit I'm still ashamed
I thought you were different and I was naïve
Because my head spun with you and I couldn't breath
There was something so fragile about calling you mine
I remember rehearsing "it'll be fine"
Emma N Boyer Dec 2015
Didn't love him but I could've
Didn't touch him but I should've
Everything fragile has an identity
You need to stay you need to love me
I'm not lonely but I miss you

Check your pulse for time bombs
Stop thinking beyond the here and now
I promise you've seen the last of me
I promise you don't fill my dreams
I'm not lonely but I miss you
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