Read The Opposite of Geek Online
Authors: Ria Voros
and Ms Long hugs me
before walking to her car,
I know she’s right about one thing
at least.
Being this angry
isn’t working for me.
I need to find
an exit.
I am sitting on the bus
in an area of town I don’t know,
have never been to on my own
(small lie told about being with Ms Long),
going to a thing
I’m hoping can give me the key.
Rain lashes the bus windows
like a car wash.
I sit close to the back, opposite side to last time,
behind a couple with dreadlocks and huge army boots.
It’s louder, more crowded, more crazy this time.
I feel smaller, less sure I should have come.
But when the slam starts, I relax into the words,
into the banter and murmuring crowd,
the way the woman in front of me keeps squeezing her friend’s hand under the table.
The friend gets up to read, and her face — tired, wrinkled, but beautiful —
reminds me of my mother’s.
I feel impossibly homesick. I feel drowned.
She begins to read.
It’s her son, dead of cancer at eleven,
who fills the spaces in and between her words
and jumps off the stage
as she brings him to life,
as she makes him
make us laugh and cry.
I see him standing there, listening.
He is James. He is this woman’s son.
He is anyone who died too soon.
And it feels conceivable
that there is hope
at the bottom of all this.
a walker,
a step-at-a-time person.
An enjoyer of flowers,
clean air, good running shoes.
The other day I walked
for two hours, just through
the neighbourhood.
The places we used to think
were so boring and everyday.
Today I walk a new route,
along streets I’ve never seen,
and decide which house
I’d like to own. Cream with
dark blue trim. Front porch.
Bird bath in the front yard.
I stop at an intersection
and a mother with a stroller
pauses beside me. I glance
into the stroller, wondering
how cute the kid is,
and do a double take —
it’s full of wriggling puppies.
The woman tells me the puppies’ mother is missing. Someone stole her two days ago and the puppies are going to another dog who only has two babies so she can feed them.
The woman has pretty auburn hair and freckles and lets me pick up one of the pups. He squirms against me, warm and alive.
“We need to find their mom — they’re not ready to leave her for another three weeks. And we miss her.” The woman smiles sadly. She holds out a flyer, a lost poster, with the dog’s name, Sasha, boldly on the top and a photo of her.
Under it are the usual details: age, last seen, friendly, affectionate.
Something clicks in my brain. I put the pup back with its siblings, thank her, and take a poster home.
I speak to no one,
hunch over my computer,
type, cut/paste, download
and with all the artistic talent I possess,
create.
I feel skittish and small
walking into school,
my backpack stuffed with lost posters
to be taped to walls.
My hope is they stay up for a few hours
until Mr. Cunningham, the principal,
sees them and takes them down. By then,
maybe someone will learn something
they didn’t know before.
Ms Long meets me at my first class, English, to tell me that if I feel sad or ill I can leave to find her. It’s a little like kindergarten, but I feel safe. The bell hasn’t rung yet and there are five people in the class. None of them will look at me. I grit my teeth and step into the hall. It’s full. I stand there for a minute feeling like wallpaper. Nothing has changed.
Then Garth/Thor from the cooking club walks up to me, makes some D&D hand signal I can’t interpret and says somberly, “Gretchen, that poster is really cool. I literally almost cried. I’m sorry for being a loser that one day about you and —”
“It’s okay,” I say, trying not to sound like I ran up a flight of stairs. “Thanks.”
And even though I don’t hear a word of the English lesson, it feels not bad to be back.
most of the posters stay up for Tuesday, Wednesday, and by Thursday I’m getting looks in the hall, glances I can’t quite place.
I hear James’s name in the halls, and not as a point of ridicule. Mr. Marchand takes me aside to weep his gratitude that his star student has been immortalized with his favourite subject.
Mr. Cunningham calls me into his office and quietly congratulates me on a creative memorial. He commends me for using social media to get the word out. I stare at him blankly, think:
That would have been a good idea
. He shows me his computer screen, a page with photos of my posters, comments from people, dozens of likes.
Ashlyn meets me after French
and we walk to the cafeteria to get juice.
She fills me in on bake sale news —
“and Gerry’s got his aunt who owns
a bakery to donate some muffins, and
Julia will have a flat of doughnuts —
don’t ask me where they’re from —
and Mohammed’s mother will make
these special cakes …”
She goes on and on, not even stopping
to drink her apple/cran. “So that’s why
we’re meeting at three —
to go over logistics.”
I blink stupidly.
She grins at me. “That’s a ton
of baked goods. We need more tables.”
I sip my O. J. “But why are we getting donations?
I thought it was just us baking.”
Ashlyn looks at me kindly,
like a grandmother
telling a toddler why rain falls.
“Gretchen, this is bigger than us.
It’s bigger than The Foodies, even
this school.” She grins. “Trust me.
We need more tables.”
By P. E., almost the whole cooking club — and some people I don’t even recognize — have come up to offer condolences and smile secret smiles about “three o’clock.”
No one will tell me what this means. I feel blindfolded.
And it’s not really a secret. Mr. Cunningham knows. The grad class knows (they smile at me too, but in a sad, I’m-glad-it’s-you-and-not-me way).
Ms Long knows. She hugged me in the hall. People saw. I didn’t care. I hugged her back.
playing something
that might resemble
field hockey. Mud
finds its way
into my socks, shorts,
ears and nose.
I manage to hit the ball
to someone who can score,
and then notice
Shay and Nemiah
talking behind the fence
at the edge of the field.
They look at me,
talk some more.
Shay shakes her head
and walks away. Nemiah
stands there for a second,
watching me
watch her.
She looks so small, so kidlike.
Someone yells behind me.
I run after the ball as it passes.
When I look back,
she’s gone.
Ms Long, little Ms Long
with horse teeth and perching, bird body
takes the floor. Her voice carries
around the room like she’s got
a microphone.
The money from the bake sale
will go into a chemistry scholarship
in James’s name.
She tells us how proud she is
of everyone, who has been working
on this for days.
Everyone looks so excited — more excited
than you’d think they would look
to be selling baked goods
for a dead boy’s scholarship.
I glance at Ashlyn, who’s beaming.
Suddenly I’m seeing her
from a different angle. Light is hitting her
in exactly the right places.
I’m treated to a welcome committee when I get home late
from organizing baked goods — Layla, Mum and Dad are setting the table, tossing salad, pulling something spicy out of the oven.
“Gretchen, we want to say —”
My mother is interrupted by Layla’s bulldozing me against the wall.
“You’re so talented! I showed my class what you did.”
“You showed what?” I ask.
“The posters! Mum and Dad got copies from Ms Long and they printed some.”
“You printed some?” I watch my parents’ faces go from proud to nervous to bashful.
My phone is beside my head — I’ve been
expecting Ashlyn to call in a tizzy
about missing cream puffs —
and it rings me out of dreamless sleep.
His voice is low and scratchy.
I bolt awake. “Where are you?
Are you okay?”
There’s music playing in the background.
“Look, I’m sorry for not calling,” he says.
“I was an idiot when you were here.”
He clears his throat. “I’ve really missed you.”
We sit in silence, attached
by the phone, and even though I’m not the same
and he’s not the same
and this conversation is awkward,
I miss him too.
“I need to see you,” he says.
“Tomorrow’s the Spring Fair.”
“And you can’t get away?”
I start to explain, but stop.
He clears his throat. “Can you meet me
in the morning? Just for a minute. I’ll pick you up.”
Something crunches on his end —
gravel underfoot.