in front of a bus.
Some people phone
leave messages
I heard what happened
Iâm so sorry
If thereâs anything I can do...
Do what?
Hand us fresh tissues
when ours are so wet
they shred?
Do what?
Pat our backs, nod sadly
say, Tomorrowâs tomorrow will be
easier.
Or are you thinking of practical
things:
dusting the family photographs
or maybe sorting through my
sisterâs clothes
to see if something fits your daughter
because obviously Hannahâs stuff
wonât fit me.
What a shame to waste such pretty
things.
Some bring
food that freezes well
lots of cheese and potato
too many calories
or sweet beyond belief.
Others hide
behind the safe walls
of distance and time.
I heard the news
but thought it best to leave you
alone.
So many people know
our business.
So many forms to sign
payment plans to think about.
How can it cost so much
to put someone in the ground?
Donât you know that sixteen-year-olds
donât have burial plans?
What if we canât pay?
What should we do with her?
Stash her in the basement
until she gets fed up
and moves on?
In the recycling box
a headline
and a photograph:
An ambulance
pulling away from the curb
the empty bus waiting for a
new driver.
I free the newspaper from the blue
plastic box
to save Hannah from strangers
stop her from being shredded.
She must not disappear
with all the other news of the day.
They lean back in their chairs.
âWow,â Maddy says.
Ebony nods. âThatâs a good one. Powerful. All these Hannah poems are powerful.â She takes a swig of coffee. âNo offense, but I canât decide if I wish Iâd known her or Iâm kind of glad I didnât.â
How am I supposed to take that? Maybe I should add a couple of lines to the poem.
Then Ebony says, âGet rid of the first two lines. You donât need them.â
I reread the opening.
I fainted when
it sank in what Hannah had done.
âSheâs right,â Maddy says.
The lines disappear with a strike of my pen.
They say Hannah probably had a drinking problem. I think of this every time I pour myself anything stronger than a cup of tea with honey. Her secret drinking was only one of so many secrets. How could we not have known?
Out here on the balcony of my tiny apartment itâs still muggy at two oâclock in the morning.
Thereâs an empty garden chair beside me. I imagine David sitting there enjoying a beer. If I close my eyes I can almost hear his slow, steady breathing.
David sitting in the empty chair may not be likely, but it is possible. I canât say the same thing about Hannah. Why do I torture myself by imagining her beside me? I do it all the time. Sometimes Hannah laughs and goofs around and tells terrible jokes the way she used to. Sometimes she tells me about school, her return to riding, some new boyfriend. The details are different every time. It gets harder and harder to picture what might have been. Would she have gone to university to study sports medicine like sheâd always planned? Might she have fallen in love and had a baby? Or bought a Great Dane? She always wanted a dog.
âYou want to hear a poem, Hannah?â I ask the empty chair. I raise my glass in her direction. âNo, this time it isnât about you. I wrote it a while back, before I left the coast. Yes, itâs about David. Too bad you guys never got along.â
I speak softly, as if I really am confiding in my sister.
Leave him, cut him loose
send him
into his bright future.
Look at me. Twenty-five pounds more
miserable, sucking back the booze
lusting after double chocolate-chip
cookies
Extra Crisp potato chips
whipped cream waffles and bacon
sandwiches.
Look at him, looking at me, thinking
heâs stuck with twenty-five bonus
pounds
of difficult to swallow.
Leave, and we can finish falling
land where we will land
broken or bent.
Iâm tired of trying to fit two