โIย spend the rest of sixth period and all seventh reading the walls of Poetโs Corner. The poems here are silly, heartbreaking, hilarious, sad, and many are absolutely incredible. Theyโre about people who donโt care enough and people who care too much, people you trust and people who turn on you,โ
hating school, loving your friends, seeing the beauty in the world. Sprinkled among them are heavier ones about depression and addiction, self- mutilation and various forms of self-medication. But most of them are about love. Wanting it. Missing it. Actually being in it. I read some of those twice.
None of the poetry is marked with anything that makes its author identifiableโaside from the fast-food wrappers, which appear to be Sydneyโs trademark. Hard as I try, I canโt figure out which ones Caroline penned, but AJโs proved to be fairly easy; as soon as I found that first song, I had no trouble finding more of his right-slanted, narrow handwriting.
By the time the final bell rings, Iโve read hundreds of poems. As eager as I am to say I covered every square inch of this place, Iโve already been alone down here for over an hour. AJโs sitting at the table, waiting for me to return, and I still have a poem of my own to write.
My backpack is still sitting in front by the couch, so I take a seat and thumb through my notebooks. I skip the red one because Iโm not angry, and the blue one because Iโm not thinking about the pool. The poem thatโs building inside of me is a yellow one. My head falls back into the cushions, and I let my gaze travel around the walls one more time before I take my pen to the paper. I tap it three times. Then I let everything go.