hints
we missed?
What we wanted to see was
what she wanted us to see.
She was getting better
sheâd turned that corner into the light
right into the coffee shop where
oh, yes, her friends are waiting
because thatâs what normal girls do
chat over lattes
hold the foam add the whip
skim mocha soy extra hot.
Sometimes they give each other
gifts, donât they?
Only for that extraspecial
tell ya anything, hon
never let you go, BFF.
For her, the world
the silver horseshoe earrings from
Nana.
A small gift the least you can do
a thank-you
for being there when it mattered.
Jackie told me they were glad to
hear from Hannah
she seemed more like the old Hannah
the can-I-have-a-bite-of-that?
Hannah
the youâll-never-believe-what-he-
said Hannah
the Hannah we knew was in there
somewhere, right?
Jackie insisted she should have
known
was closest
knew Hannah bestâ
Didnât we all think we knew her
bestâ
should have known that earrings
were more than earrings
that small gifts in the hands of
someone on the exit ramp
are not small at all?
On the night the relatives start to
arrive
Jackie hands me the earrings.
Nestled in their blue velvet box
like tiny sleeping memories
they curl tight into silver slivers
so sharp they bite through my mask
send
hairline cracks pulsing through
my carefully made-up calm.
Chapter Ten
Round three is brutal. Iâm up last and have to listen to everyone else. When itâs my turn I clutch the mic and bring it close to my mouth. Too close. Thereâs a squeal of feedback.
âOwww!â
âTurn it down!â
Not a good start. I hope the crowd remembers enough of the poem from the last round that this one will make sense. Itâs risky to continue a story from one poem to another. Each should stand aloneâbut these are part of a series and I donât dare change the plan now.
The relatives arrive
trailed by small bags.
Bump up the stairs
trundle down the hall
into the den
the family room
my room
any room
but her room.
They come in clumps
mother father brother
cousin uncle aunt grandmother
fold their arms around me
because now, after her death
suddenly itâs okay to touch the one who
doesnât like to hug.
They ask, without asking
What the hell happened here?
Is it true what I read about the
bottle of booze?
Is it true she didnât look back when
she stepped
out
into the road?
They came because
thatâs what happens
when someone dies.
They gather to tell stories
slide trays of food into the fridge
because food poisoning at a time
like this
would be unfortunate.
Who would attend the funeral?
Unspoken questions like
Should there be a funeral?
lurk in the corners
inhabited by God.
Nanaâs God
who apparently doesnât admit
that some of his fallen angels
jumped.
What about the casket? she asks.
Open or closed?
The guest list? How public
do we want to make this thing?
This thing?
Hello?
But how can I say anything
when she sees the blue velvet box
on the kitchen counter
folds her polished fingernails
over its curved lid and
hands shaking
stares as if it might
reveal secrets
only she can understand.
Tears wobble, glassy and fragile
on her lower lids.
I reach out.
Touch her hand.
The next morning I jolt awake. Someone is pounding on my apartment door.
âDonât let it get to you,â Ebony says when I let her in.
âEasy for you to say.â Last night the judges didnât like the âRelativesâ poem and I didnât make it into the fourth round.
She grins and holds out a travel mug full of coffee. âThis should perk you up.â
âSmells good,â I mumble. Ebony did well last night. Sheâs third overall in the standings. Iâm hovering in and out of fourth place. After last night, Iâm out, though not by much.
âIf you have a good week, youâll make it,â she