โMomโs buttering toast for Paige, drinking her coffee, and replying to a message on her cell phone, when she says, โDo you want to talk about what happened yesterday?โโ
โNah. Iโm good.โ I down my orange juice. โI talked to my friend Caroline last night.โ
Momโs typing again. โWhoโs Caroline?โ she asks without looking up. โJust someone I met at school. Sheโs nice. She came over after I got
home from the spa.โ
Now I have her attention. โReally?โ Her eyes grow wide.
I try to act nonchalant about the whole thing, like this happens all the time, but then I picture Caroline sitting on the floor in my room, helping me with my poetry, and I feel a little bit giddy. โYeah, I would have introduced you, but she had to leave before you guys got home.โ
โHave you told Sue about her?โ
โYep.โ I grab the toast with one hand and punch Paige lightly on the arm with the other. โIโm going to the pool.โ
The next day, Olivia and I are walking to Trigonometry when I see AJ heading right for us. I almost didnโt notice himโI probably wouldnโt have if the dark ski hat hadnโt caught my eyeโbecause heโs looking down at the ground and keeping pace with everyone else. He walks right by me.
Carolineโs words have haunted me since Saturday night: โHe doesnโt hate you, but you hurt him.โ I canโt figure out what I did, and somewhere around two thirty this morning, I decided I was going to find out the first chance I got.
โI left my trig book in my locker,โ I say to Olivia. โIโll meet you at class.โ
She waves me off and I do a 180 and start following the ski cap heading in the opposite direction. AJ turns the corner and stops at a locker. Keeping my distance, I watch as he rests his backpack on one knee and swaps out his books.
When he sees me, he tilts his chin in my direction. โHey.โ No smile. No wave. Just the chin tilt. He swings his locker door closed.
โHi.โ I gesture toward the main corridor. โI saw you in the hall, butโฆI guess you didnโt see me.โ
He shakes his head.
โI wanted to say hello.โ I dig my fingernails into the back of my neck.
One, two, three. One, two, three. One, two, three. โAnd, you know, say thank youโฆfor letting me join you guys last week.โ
AJ checks the area around us and steps in closer. Heโs a full head taller than me, and when he tucks his chin to his chest and stares down at me, I feel guilty, even though I havenโt done anything wrong. His eyebrows lift accusingly. โYou havenโt told anyone, have you?โ
โOf course not. I wouldnโt do that.โ
Heโs still close. Heโs still staring at me like heโs trying to decide if Iโm telling the truth. I square my shoulders and straighten my spine. โI told you I wouldnโt, and I havenโt.โ
โGood,โ he says. Another long pause. โDonโt.โ โI wonโt.โ
He steps out of my personal space and I have a chance to look at him. Really look at him. His dark blond hair is poking out from under the cap, and his eyes are this interesting brownish-green thatโs almost the same color as the T-shirt heโs wearing. Heโs not clean-cut, like most of my guy friends. Heโs scruffier, but in a sexy way. I try to read the expression on his face, but I canโt, and it bothers me because thereโs something about the way heโs looking at me right now that makes me feel sorry for him. He looks sweet, maybe even shy, and nothing like the confident guy I watched perform on that stage last week.
The questions are spinning in my head, and I want to spit them out and get it over with. How do I know you? How did I hurt you? How do I tell you Iโm sorry if I have no idea what I did? But I push the words down, searching for new, safer ones.
โI really loved your song. Itโs kind of been stuck in my head.โ He takes another step back. โThanks,โ he says.
โIโve been trying to remember all the lyrics, butโฆโ
Invite me back. Please.
I look around again to be sure thereโs no one within earshot. โThat day downstairs, I guess it kind of inspired me. My poems arenโt very good or anything.โ I pause for a moment, waiting for him to say something, but he doesnโt, so I keep blabbering.
โI barely slept last weekend.โ Now he looks at me sideways like heโs trying to figure out why this is his problem. โI havenโt beenโฆโ I stop short, realizing I was about to admit that I havenโt been taking the prescription sleep meds Iโve popped every night for the last five years. I keep forgetting. Or maybe I donโt forget. Maybe I make a choice to keep writing despite how exhausted Iโll be the next day. โI havenโt been sleeping. Once I start writing, I kind ofย needย to keep going.โ I let a nervous laugh escape.
The corners of his mouth turn up slightly. Not much, but enough to expose that dimple and catch me off guard.
โYouโre writing?โ I nod.
โYou?โ AJ crosses his arms like he doesnโt believe me, but at least now I can read the look on his face. Heโs surprised. Maybe even intrigued. โYouโre writing poetry, and not because you have to for a class?โ
I shrug. I think he expects me to be offended, but Iโm not. I get it. The whole poetry thing shocks me, too.
โOf course, itโs total crap,โ I say, hoping more self-criticism will elicit some kind of reaction, like an invitation to come downstairs and say those words on stage so they can pelt me with paper and, later, glue sticks.
AJ uncrosses his arms and transfers his backpack from one shoulder to the other. โI bet your poems are better than you think they are.โ
Itโs not true, but itโs a nice thing to say and he looks like he means it. I start to reply, but then I look past him, over his right shoulder, and see Kaitlyn walking in our direction, taking measured steps, hanging back like sheโs timing her arrival so she doesnโt interrupt the two of us.
Invite me back. I want to hear more poetry, more of your songs.
โIโve got to get to class,โ he says. โIโll see ya later, okay?โ
And with that, he takes off, leaving Kaitlyn the opening she was waiting for. She lengthens her stride and as soon as sheโs close enough, she grabs
me by the arm with both hands. โHoly shit, was that Andrew Olsen?โ she asks.
โWho?โ
She lets go of me so she can point at him, and together, we watch AJ open a classroom door and disappear from sight. โThatย wasย him! God, we were so brutal to that kid, werenโt we?โ She shakes her head as I turn his name over in my mind.ย Andrew Olsen. Andrew Olsen.
โWho?โ I ask again, and she slaps my arm with the back of her hand. โAndrew Olsen. Remember? Fourth grade. Mrs. Collinsโs class?โ
Kaitlyn must be able to tell by the look on my face that Iโm not connecting the dots, because she breaks into this huge grin. She shakes her hips and sings, โA-A-A-Andrewโฆโ to the tune of the Chia Pet jingle, and then she starts cracking up.
โHow can you not remember Andrew? That kid stuttered so badly he couldnโt even say his name. We used to follow him around singing that song.โฆYou have to remember this!โ
Oh, God. I do. Itโs all starting to come back to me, and when she sings that horrible song again, I can see Kaitlyn and me in our skirts and ponytails, trailing behind him on the playground while he covered his ears, tears streaming down his face, trying to run away from us. We never let him get far.
โAndrew?โ Thatโs all I can get out. I want to throw up. Andrew. Thatโs what Caroline meant.
โRemember? We even made him cry on that field trip to the museum?
His mom had to come all the way into the city to pick him up.โ
I donโt want to remember, but I do. I remember everything. How it all started. How it finally ended.
Kaitlyn singled him out early on. Eventually, I joined in. We teased him at every recess, during lunch, after school when he was waiting for the bus. We looked for himโlooked forward to finding him. I can even picture his face when he saw us coming, and I remember how it made me feel guilty, but not guilty enough to stop, because it also made me feel powerful in a weird way. And there was always a look of approval on Kaitlynโs face.
When school started the following year, we found out heโd transferred, and Kaitlyn and I were actually disappointed, as if our favorite toy had been permanently taken away from us. I never thought Iโd see him again. Iโm
sure he hoped heโd never see Kaitlyn and me again, but I assume he didnโt have a choice since this is the only public high school in the area.
Caroline was wrong. He hates me.
Kaitlyn stops talking, but I guess the horrified look on my face doesnโt register with her, because sheโs still lit up as if this whole thing is hilarious. โSo why were you talking to him?โ She pops her hip and plays with her
necklace while she waits for me to answer.
It takes me a second to pull it together. When I finally do speak, my voice is shaking and the words come out in fragmented whispers. โWe have a class together.โ Does Poetโs Corner count as a class? Probably not.
โHe was in my P.E. class last year,โ she says, โbut we didnโt have to talk much, so I never got to hear him. Does he still stutter?โ
I picture the way he stepped on stage and perched himself on that stool. How he threw his guitar over his shoulder and stated that his song sucked, beaming as he gestured toward his chest, confidently inviting his friends to throw things at him. He sang and his words were beautiful and clear, not broken in any way. Nothing about him was broken.
โNo, he doesnโt.โ
Heโs long gone, but Kaitlyn points in his direction. โSee, we fixed him,โ she says proudly. My cheeks feel hot, and when she elbows me, laughing, my hands ball into fists by my side. โYou know what they say, โThat which does not kill us makes us stronger.โโ
Iโm unable to speak or breathe or move. I canโt believe she just said that, and I know I should defend him, but Iโm frozen in place, totally stunned. Saying nothing, as usual.
โBesides,โ she continues, โthat was a million years ago. We were little kids. I bet he doesnโt even remember us.โ I feel a huge, uncomfortable lump in my throat. How could I do that do him? To anyone?
โHe remembers,โ I say under my breath as I walk away.
Carolineโs at her locker after last bell, and I stall, waiting for everyone to clear out. When the coast is finally clear, I race over to her.
โI know what I did to AJ.โ My stomach turns over as I say it. โNo wonder he doesnโt want me downstairs. Caroline, what do I do?โ
โYou can start by apologizing,โ she says.
Heโll never forgive me. How could he?
โHe must think Iโm a horrible person.โ
Maybe heโs right. Maybe I am.
โDo you want my help?โ
I nod. Caroline turns on her heel and gestures for me to follow her. โCome on,โ she says. โI know what to do.โ
She leads me to the first row of the theater and we spend the next three hours working on a single poem. I write. Caroline listens. When I get stuck, she feeds me word after word until we find the perfect one that sums up what I want him to know. When Iโm done, we have a poem that doesnโt say โIโm sorryโ in so many words, but it talks about regret and second chances, a fear of not belonging that runs so deep it changes you into someone you donโt want to be. Itโs about seeing what youโve become and wantingโ cravingโto be someone different. Someone better.
Itโs me, asking him to let me in. Asking all of them to give me a chance to show them that, deep down, Iโm not who they think I am. Or, maybe Iโm exactly who they think I am, but I no longer want to be.