I flip to the sports section. Boys varsity basketball. He’d been sitting there
in the back of my mind like someone incessantly tapping on my shoulder.
Ever since the night I found myself outside his house. I shoved him back into
his corner where he belongs. But now I have to look. I can’t ignore him
anymore. Not when I’m this close. I trace my finger over the faces. And there
he is. In his Number 12 jersey. Josh. My heart thumps hard and fast the way it
used to. I force my eyes to close. I force my fingers to turn the page. So I can’t
look at his face again, so I won’t see his name listed there, so I can go back to
forgetting all about him for the rest of my life.
Instead, I flip to the ninth-grade section to visit the ghost of that girl I used
to be. And there she is, right between
Maureen Malinowski and Sean
Michaels. Glasses and all. A stupid innocent smile plastered on her stupid
innocent face. That picture was taken on the very first day—the first day of
high school—the day I thought her life was about to begin. How could she
have known her stupid, pathetic, flat-chested days were numbered?
I
envy her, that awkward, not-quite-ugly-not-quite-pretty girl. Wish I
could start over. Be her again. I look deeply into her eyes as if she holds some
special secret, a way to get back to her. But her eyes are just pixels. She only
comes in two dimensions. She doesn’t know shit. I start out grinning,
grinning
because of the irony, and then I snicker a few times, shaking my
head back and forth. Then I’m laughing, laughing
because of the absurdity,
and then I have to use both hands to cover my mouth because I’m laughing so
hard. And then I have to use both my hands to cover my eyes, because they’re
crying, crying because of the atrocity of it all, of regret and time and lies and
not being able to do anything about any of it.
Only now I can’t remember, damn it, where the lies ended and I began. It’s
all blurred. Everything suddenly seems to have become so messy, so gray, so
undefined and terrifying. All I know is that things went terribly awry, this
wasn’t the plan. The plan was to get better, to feel better, by any means. But I
don’t feel better, I feel empty, empty and broken, still.
And alone. More alone than ever before.
I feel these forbidden thoughts creep in sometimes without warning. Slow
thoughts that always start quietly, like whispers you’re not even sure you’re