We give our weight to the ancient decay of this familial brick building the blades of our razor shoulders just barely grazing it all as a part of our clever façade of ice cold leaned back sunglasses on our heads attitude cool radiating off of the sparse, tattered patches in our jeans the walls still warm from the sweltering July heat the moon watching us quietly, red in the face the night still simmering in seventy degrees smelling of dust and trash cans and our extra-large cerulean slushies. She sets down her roller skates to divulge the little treasure she had been hiding in her pocket. Do you want to try one? My mom let me have a pack. In this uncertain instance, I decide that cool is greater than safe, as I chew my lip and dart my head around every corner to ensure that disapproval isn’t lurking somewhere in the dark. I gradually slip one out of its snug packet with a shaky embrace twirl it between my fingers as I watch her light one on fire uttering and stuttering: are you sure we should be doing this? attentive to the way the tiny embers glow and dance off the tip each time she flicks it with her chipped nails the smoke turning pink from the neon sign that flashes above our heads and I’m not sure if I’m sick with anxiety or sick with chemical vapor as we cough until our stomachs are empty and the street in front of our feet become drenched in blue.
We would both end up watering our roots just to see how far they could grow how many miles they would stretch even from the dry dirt of our little Southern street then drown them so that they would rot and forgetting would be easier. She would end up in Washington state where she would wear out her bright yellow rainboots and I would end up surfing the wind of the Midwest and we wondered how we could have gotten here how our miniscule seeds could have blossomed into trees big enough to cast shadows. After adulthood had kept us apart at more than an arm’s length for a few weeks she would call me on the phone at one a.m.: I think I found the one her voice fluctuating like the sound waves of a child finding their first Easter egg I would kick my feet up choking on my laughter and letting my tears have free range like we were twelve again when we would sing our own rendition of “Chapel of Love” in Mrs. Peters’ class everyday our biggest worry then would be tying our satin bows in our hair just right. We would talk until dawn until we would drift off into the dark of sleep the white noise of the other end of the line still breathing into our ears dreaming of pixie sticks.
The sound of her body collapses onto the floor as if she forgot how to fly waking both of her parents as one treks the speed of God up the stairs and she wishes the fall would have snapped her neck that the flush of death washed over a face didn’t have to look so gruesome. Before she could re-tie the noose into its perfect donut with slick and hurried fingers her dad flings the door open and you’d think he left a hole in the wall or a hole in her chest in the way he says what the **** do you think you’re doing free-falling along with the thick saliva foaming from his lips that were swollen with sleep although he hasn’t slept since. The first time she did it, she apologized but this time she was only sorry for unstable ladders.
At recess that day I drew lilies on my hand with her sparkly pen and I realized later that I had lost it as if it had grown shovels for arms and buried itself at the bottom of the sandbox. I shriveled up my tiny face and spewed tears all over my dress, I hadn’t known a greater tragedy, but she said she liked the lilies on my hand better than her pen anyway as the ink bled and into sweat and faded into something watered-down pink and abstract she wrapped a medicinal arm around my shoulder and told me it was okay that everything was going to be okay.