Saturday, July 12, 2014

Testimony

Saturday morning at the ungodly hour of 8 a.m. and I am awake, yanking open the stubborn doors of the Des Moines City Courthouse to testify against my mother for child neglect—a kickass start to the weekend. I hold my seven-year-old brother’s hand because he asks me to. Not with words, but his eyes. Steven and I could both be classified as unintentional children. Heck, one of the random men in the courtroom pews today could be my father or Steven’s father for all we know
I can tell Steven is frightened. The last time we saw our mother was three months ago. She was in the midst of a psychotic break after my Aunt Pierson and I went to the police station to turn her in. She pounded on the doors of her sister’s house—where Steven and I were placed in those months before the trial— begging for a chance to fix a pretty screwed-up-beyond-repair situation.
“Kaitlyn, where’s mommy?” Steven asks.
God, if I got paid for the number of times I’ve heard that or thought that myself, I’d be living somewhere pretty badass; certainly not the corn-infested state of Iowa.
I turn eighteen this upcoming summer, freeing myself from the custody of my mother. Steven’s fate falls in the words of my testimony this morning; he is the reason I’ve finally decided to address the neglect. So whatever I say today will decide whether or not he is taken out of our mother’s custody. If I play the neglect off like it’s nothing, maybe nothing will change, but if I tell things how they are Steven will likely go to live with my Aunt Pierson. My words have never had to carry so much weight in my life, and nothing in the future could possibly surmount to the pressure I feel pounding in my head at this moment. Talk about reality hitting you in the face like a cold, slimy-ass fish.
I’ve practically raised Steven these past five years when my mother’s absence has been a shit ton more common than her presence. My aunt Pierson always kept a watchful eye on us, but she’s kept from blabbing until now. She knows as well as I do that my cooperation is what carries this case. I guess my aunt had deeper fear too; that Steven and I could have been separated in foster care if she wasn’t granted our custody.
Giant support beams line the courtroom like some columns from ancient Egyptian times, or wait, maybe Roman. Something of that sort. The room is something like a white Catholic cathedral without any statues of Jesus. Some pretty classy shit if you ask me.
Steven sits beside me at the outstretched table, tugging at the pastel blue tie I adjusted pitifully around his neck this morning. Even with the YouTube tutorial, I felt like a caveman trying to tie that shit. I suppress a chuckle looking at how pathetically it lays, crooked across his tiny, wrinkled suit.
In the chair beside me sits this nerdy-ass prosecuting attorney with his year-round Thanksgiving belly and a bald-spot on his head that perfectly resembles Mr. Clean.
One aisle over, at a different table, sits my mother. While she is a basket-case, her defense attorney is the opposite: calm and confident. His suit fits so flawlessly, you’d think he was going to a photo shoot rather than a courthouse. He’s clean-cut and fit enough to be a classified as one of those crazy gym-rats too.
I notice my mother’s nails, bitten down to the nub, her tongue and fingers wrestling in her mouth with the nail she has bitten off. I remember she’d do this when taxes or bills were due. Looking at her is like looking at an older reflection of me (minus the fact that my mascara isn’t giving me raccoon eyes): silky, long black hair, lengthy tan legs and beautifully bright brown eyes. Although her once perfectly curvy body now reveals all the alcohol she’s poisoned herself with over the years.
I wriggle in my seat and feel my heart throb in my throat. My light blue dress—which I bought from Goodwill three years ago because I had to for school—hugs my thin waist securely and flares out just above my knees. The Nerdy Lawyer Man, Mr. Walter, told me that this look was modest, sweet and innocent. Basically saying that by giving the jury the impression that I’m a lovely little school girl, I will win their sympathy. The thought makes me gag and dresses irritate the shit out of me. I could equally win their sympathy in sweats. But Mr. Walter would probably keel over dead from a heart attack if that happened. The poor guy already has a lot working against him, beyond his washed-up, 50-year-old-man-with-a-bossy-wife look, so I didn’t want to be rude.
The entire time I’ve been sitting here, the judge and lawyers and other random people have been going through these weird pre-trail routines or something like that. I tune them all out just as easily as my teachers who blabber endlessly about highly unnecessary subject matter. I’m sorry but where on earth will the quadratic formula, Napoleon, and Ernest Hemingway get me? But of course when I say this in class my smart-ass teachers are happy to reply, “You won’t need it in your McDonald’s training.”
I pull away from the back of my chair and press my lips to both of my fisted, white-knuckled hands. My eyes find my tightly crossed legs as a tense pain wrenches in my gut.
Finally, after an ungodly amount of time, Mr. Walter stands, attentive to the judge. “Thank you, your honor,” he begins. “I would like to call Kaitlyn Dockson to the stand.”
“For the love of God, I was starting to think they forgot me,” I mumble to Mr. Walter, surely irritating the hell out of him.
The courtroom seems vaster from the front: high ceilings, open space and the overall emptiness of the room seem to swallow me.
Get your shit together, Kaitlyn, I coach myself.
I sit upon what feels like a pedestal with the jury to my left. The few people filling in the church-like pews include Aunt Pierson, my nosy neighbor Mrs. Stephen, strangers, and some of those awkward distant relatives. You know, the ones that blabber on and on about how you’ve grown and say crap like, “Do you remember me? Probably not. Last time I saw you, you were itty bitty.”
As an officer approaches with the Bible, my heart, still beating in my throat, grows heavy enough to tear down my chest, through my stomach and straight into the bottom of the stupid heels Mr. Walter made me wear. As the officer swears me under oath, the pit of my stomach drops, my head pulsing. I refuse to look at my mother, who was blubbering when I came in. Yes, she’s a screw-up, she knows nothing about me, she’s hardly ever around, but she’s my mom, no matter what the judge will say.

“Ms. Dockson,” Mr. Walter says, “tell the jury about your experience with Mrs. Mellissa Dockson? How often is she around the home or around you?”
I heave a heavy sigh. “She was there when she needed to be,” I say, pausing to recollect my memories.
***
The first ten years of my life, my mother only came around as needed to keep me from going hungry or stinking too much. I powered-through until I could care mostly for myself, so I think she felt accomplished. Heck, she even showed up to my Kindergarten graduation. Sure, she was in a tight black skirt and a busty pink top with her boyfriend of one week, but she came. I even remember on some mornings when I woke up alone, she would still leave me a packed lunch in a plastic grocery bag: a peanut butter and marshmallow cream sandwich on white with the crust cut off, Scooby-Doo fruit snacks and a beyond ripe banana, how I liked them. But when her gut started swelling beyond her belt with Steven, any small act of endearment stopped. She was around more often, but she wasn’t the same. Going out to bars was off of her agenda, so she spent most of her time curled up in bed watching re-runs of Law and Order: Special Victims Unit. Sometimes I’d crawl in bed with her, but then she’d freak out even more, so I stopped.  She went off the deep end when Steven came around, trying to raise the both of us. Four days after his second birthday is when shit got real.
            I had woken up the morning of that fourth day, as an 11-year-old, listening to the eerie, creepy-ass silence of the old house. The wooden floorboards seemed constantly irritated: moaning, soon coupled by Steven’s irritated cries. I’d be pretty ticked too if I’d been sitting in my own shit all night.
            I forced myself from my warm bed, the rest of my body instantly chilled to the bone. I didn’t remember the last time that god forsaken house was heated and in the dead of a mid-western winter, it made each morning hell. Slipping on some socks, I snuck past Steven’s room, but of course the snitchy floorboards made it apparent to him that I was awake. So naturally his cries grew louder. I raced downstairs and searched each room with a timid, “Mom?” Each room I checked left me more disheartened than the last. Then finally, nothing.
            That’s when it struck me. In my upbringing, two days was the longest she’d taken to return (without calling my aunt to watch me) and that was when she took one of her bullshit-boyfriends—as I called them—on a spontaneous, romantic trip to Detroit. This time, I sensed she wasn’t coming back.
            So I tore through that ancient, crappy, moldy house and by some miracle found a space heater. I first moved Steven downstairs, taking off my socks for friction, and approaching each step with great care. Once I had secured him, I brought down his crib. The heavy thing was stubborn as ever but with patience, and only a couple bruises, I got that son-of-a-bitch downstairs too. I took several breaks to thaw my freezing fingers, each bright red like a gross newborn baby. Once make-shift Camp-Kaitlyn—as I called it—was established, I scoured that rickety house like a rat in a Cheeto factory, my fingers collecting dust in the pantry and my nostrils burning from the dry and grimy air. Expired and stale food became my dear friend for that first week.
***
            The image of my mattress, the crib, and the mountain of blankets piled in the corner by that tiny space heater, snow flurrying in the window behind, fades. I don’t know how long I’ve been rambling, or what exactly I’ve said to answer Mr. Walter’s question, but at this point the eyes of the jury have all grown wide and sad from my sorry-ass sob-story. My gaze wanders back to Mr. Walter.
            “So after Steven’s big two-year birthday, I didn’t see her very much,” I say, my words finding traction again. “I only saw her every once in a while.”
            “Every once in a while,” he repeats. “Can you please elaborate what you mean by ‘every once in a while?’”
            I know it’s Mr. Walter’s job to ask these questions and to keep asking and prying and digging to win his case, which is ultimately what I want too, but I can’t help but to feel irritated.
            “Yea, sure,” I say.
            The truth is my mother came around the house only a couple times during the weeks. She was usually in and out as quickly as rotten chicken in your guts. Sometimes she’d drop off some diapers and baby crap or groceries. The food tasted like ass: usually bread, eggs, cereal, peanut butter, and some Rice-a-Roni.  It was the cheap stuff and Steven and I got sick of it real fast, but it was food nonetheless. Learning how to cook was a damn joy. I still have a c-shaped burn on my arm from the first time I made eggs. They turned out more brown than white and stunk up the house more than Steven’s poopy diapers. But getting Steven to eat what I cooked was a nightmare spawned by Satan himself.
Another time my mother stopped by, she left me an overly modest, floral print dress fit for a Granny. No note or anything but I knew she meant for me to wear it to my eighth grade achievement night. I did, despite my distaste for the hideous thing, hoping I’d see her out in the crowd. A couple times I thought I may have spotted her, but I’m still not sure.
            The first time she came back after taking off that winter, when Steven was two and I was eleven, was in the middle of the night. By some godly mercy, I was passed out on my mattress by the space heater, the warm breeze making my bundle of blankets feel like a tropical beach. Steven was out cold too. That little snot was fussy a lot, but that night, we were both exhausted to the point of drooling. But adrenaline is a pretty harsh wake-up call; woke me up from my puddle of drool because I heard the front door squawk open. The floorboards alerted me of every step this person was taking. My body buzzed with electricity. I have never felt more alive at my limbs, yet all I could do was lay there. I heard the downstairs bedroom door open (no doors opened unannounced in that house, let me tell you). My brain talked to me at a rate that I still can’t wrap my mind around. In a minute, a thousand different explanations or scenarios racked my mind. Standing up from my tropical bed was easily the bravest decision of my childhood. The douchey floors tattled on me when I neared the bedroom. Since whoever was in there surely heard me, I pulled out one of those cool tricks I remembered from the re-runs of Law and Order and kicked the door open, flicking the light switch as I did. Expecting to see a ski-mask and chainsaw and instead seeing my mother brought instant relief. She sat on the edge of the bed, slouchy posture, swollen bags under her eyes; empty. Like she wasn’t even inside of herself and something or someone else was.
            “Mom?” I said through a mixture of relief, fear and whatever other emotion grabs your guts by the hand and twists them to no relent.
            “Yes, sweetie,” she said.
            “What happened?”
            Her head tilted to the side. “What do you mean?”
            “I mean, where’ve you been?” I say, unmoving from my spot in the doorway, my hand grasping the door frame.
            “What are you talking about?” she asked, in the same position on the foot of the bed as she was when I flicked the light switch.
            “You’ve been gone,” I said, “for over a week now, mom. Don’t you remember?”
            “It’s okay, sweetie,” she said. She had never sounded this motherly. Yet, for some reason it terrified me. None of it fit.
            “You’re scaring me, mom,” I said through the tears I felt coming.
            “It’s fine, honey. Everything’s fine,” she said, like I was the one being unreasonable.
            If it wasn’t for her eyes, I just might have believed her. But her eyes didn’t belong to her. They felt wrong on her, just like that granny dress felt shamefully wrong on me.
             I don’t remember what happened after that. She went to her closet and I stood in that doorway, delirious, for an unhealthy amount of time.
            “Go to bed, sweetie, it’s late,” she told me. Even those words felt wrong coming out of her, but I listened. I cocooned myself in my blankets with my eyes unblinking until dawn. Eventually I conked out again, waking to the hellish ringing of those ancient tick-tock clocks, which I hated. But missing the bus meant missing school altogether, so I had to find something to wake me up. To my distaste I had to wake up extra early to get Steven ready for daycare and myself ready for school.
            But that morning, Steven’s diaper wasn’t oozing with crap and I wasn’t forced to burn another breakfast for the two of us. On the counter sat two peanut butter and marshmallow cream sandwiches on white, crusts cut off. In the garage, no car.
***
            Behind my eyes, these memories reveal themselves to me and me only. But Mr. Walter and the jury need them to be audible; spoken. The truth, which I’ve sworn to tell, would win this case for me. But winning is a shitty term to use. I didn’t come here to win. I came to do what is right. But staring at my mother’s empty eyes knowing she loves me and Steven more than she is capable of expressing, makes me question what right is.
            “She was just around every once in a while,” I repeat. “She gave us groceries and things we needed and she stopped by. I just didn’t see her that much.”
            Mr. Walter’s eyes narrow. “How many hours a day would Mrs. Mellissa Dockson be home?” he asks.
            I notice my short thumbnail being gritted between my teeth. I pull it away. “Some days she wasn’t there at all,” I say sadly. My head drops like a pathetic puppy by a window waiting for his owners to return. “Other days she was there for a few hours…three maybe.”
            This response seems to satisfy Mr. Walter. He starts hammering a shit ton of questions my way. Short-response ones to keep me answering quickly. My eyes find Steven, who has left his seat at the front table and found Aunt Pierson in the pews. He holds tight to her, her arm securely around him. He needs her, not mom, I convince myself. I know it’s the truth though. I don’t need the convincing.
            Mr. Walter begins to speak again.
            “So how did Mrs. Dockson’s absence affect you and Steven’s upbringing?”
            In my head, I want to say, her absence affected me a fricken  ton. Her not being around is the reason I am who I am. It defines me as a person, for good and bad reasons. But I can’t seem to make those words audible.
            You see, not having a mother around, along with the task of raising a two-year-old is some crazy shit. A two-year-old alone is some crazy shit. So when my mom left me and Steven, all I could think was: so I have to raise this little snot—I mean I love him and all, but he’s a handful—and raise myself, make food and go to school to learn about Napoleon and crap too? This made finding friends and being, quote on quote, normal, a priority that I didn’t have. Steven and I both made acquaintances in school but we could never go to birthday parties or have people over to the house. And anyway, the house was embarrassing; overgrown with weeds and tall grass in the yard. It was always best to keep my friends distant and Steven close.
            I take in all the memories that talk to my brain and start comprising them into words. “Well, Mr. Walter,” I say with yet another sigh. “My mother not being around taught me to be selfless, resourceful and to put family first. I couldn’t have friends over because Steven had to rely on me. I had to learn to cook and clean instead of learning history or geometry. If I was stressed to the point of yanking my hair out and Steven got a scrape, I had to get him a spider-man Band-Aid and just get over my own shit.” I stop talking abruptly, but that’s all I have to say. “Is that good enough?” I ask.
            The one second of silence after I ask this seems to last for eternity.
            “No further questions,” Mr. Walter says.

            I hop down from the witness stand and only allow myself a moment’s glance at my mom, her eyes as haunting as that first night she came back; lifeless, liked what I’ve said sucked the life she had inside. I sit in my seat, zoned out for the rest of the trial, my fists tightly clenched in my lap. I’ve done my job and that’s it. The judge eventually says something about standing by, which my ears pick up. To the right of me, the jury filled with average-Joes deliberates. I look behind me at my brother, nestled under Aunt Pierson’s arm. She kisses his forehead and sends a reassuring nod my way. But her gesture can’t resolve the emotions shredding my brain like its thin paper because all I can do is hope and pray that I actually did the right thing.      

Alpha




Arms: I sit in this new white room and the men and women in coats are staring at me from the other side of a one-way mirror. I cross my arms and I know that it sounds strange that a woman like me would be worrying about my arms with scars and tattoos and burns. But I can feel their eyes. I can’t help but grab my arms and pull them into me so they can’t see what I’ve let myself become. I can almost hear them, and hell that’s bad enough. I want to go home.

Back: If there’s another mirror behind me I don’t want to look. The eyes are heavier, almost painful back there and I press my back against the chair until my spine grinds against the cold metal. It feels like I’m back during my first day on the humid, suffocating island of parrots and tribes and war, where I got these beautiful patterns and markings in days where time had no meaning and five years was nothing. But the eyes across the glass are different and colder and darker and judging and I wish I could tear them from their sockets.

Collarbone: There’s a line of scars there and I uncross my arms to touch it. I have a lot of scars but these are different. Each one is a line I drew with a knife I had used to kill a stranger and the islanders cheered me on as their own. To them these scars were the claws of tigers and lions sewn into a warrior's necklace, but to me it’s a reminder of what my eyes have seen and how ashamed they think I should be.

Digits: One of my fingers is missing. It’s my left ring finger and I had used to think about how I’ll never be able to wear a wedding ring. But it’s not like anyone will want to marry some girl who was taken in by an island after climbing from the wreckage of a Boeing, then torn back to this country by men with grease paint, guns, and American flags emblazoned on their shoulders. The people in coats thanked them for ‘saving’ me and now they write on their little clipboards and their eyes bore holes in my skin. It’s almost as if they’re afraid I’ll kill another one of them. They should be.

Eyes: Theirs are even worse than mine. It’s been three weeks and their eyes are like little pinpricks against my skin and I pray that I will go numb and they will finally declare that they have found where the devil has touched me like the witch doctor and the priestess of my jungle. But instead I stare at the mirror and hope that my eyes meet theirs and they are unnerved enough to look away. They know I’m sick and angry. I know it, too. But they thought I wanted to come back and they can go to hell.

Face: They’re waiting for me to break, I know it. There are tattoos on my face, curling around my eyes and down my cheeks to strike fear in the heart of my enemies. I remember reading somewhere--long ago, before the island--that people who had tattoos on their face had given up all hope of ever being a normal person. I haven’t given up yet, but yet means I will and that’s what they’re waiting for. Their eyes are heavy enough that I’m going to crack under their weight and it’s only a matter of time.

Gums: I haven’t smiled in a long time. My gums started bleeding my third week on the island and everyone there said it was normal for foreigners. But I picked at the base of my teeth with my nails and did my best to clean up. But the dirt of the jungle and the salt of the ocean and the sand of the bay has a way of getting everywhere--in your mouth, your nails, your hair, your eyes. Maybe it’s better that I killed them. I’ll never do what they ask. I’m angry, tired, and hungry. They’re scared of me. I want to go back to the island.

Hair: I let it grow out over the years. Women would tie feathers and grass into my braids and one of the men had given me a bone bead to thread between a few loose strands. I had always thought it was the most beautiful thing. But now that I’m in this room it’s greasy and dirty and stuck to my forehead and their eyes are pulling apart what I had once thought beautiful. I tried to undo the old braid but my hands shook so hard I gave up. I don’t think any of my college friends would recognize me anymore. And I had been looking forward to my senior year, too.

Iris: The island children had cooed over my blue eyes and I let them stare and smile when they asked me to say something in my silly American accent. The priestess had blue eyes and the first time she saw me she had taken a knife and tried to tear mine from my skull with a screech that reminded me of that jaguar I had helped kill that day. Her eyes were just as wild, her claws just as sharp. I hate the color of my eyes now. They said that if I don’t start complying, they won’t give me any food. I’ve had worse threats. I’m not scared of them.

Jugular: My second week on the island I saw an islander tear out the throat of a rabbit with her teeth. Or maybe that was me. Everything is twisted into a cold, delirious fever dream and my eyes can pick out of green leaves and scarlet blood and sun-beaten skin. I’m slowly losing pieces a bit at a time. I know I would do the same to those eyes on the other side of the glass. One of them says something about tying my hands so I can’t tear out my own throat. I won’t give them the chance to.

Knuckles: I busted my knuckles punching a rock in a bloody rage. I was lucky I hadn’t broken my fingers because I didn’t like the idea of the witch doctor taking my hand in hers and snapping the bones back into place with sickening cracks that still ring clear in my mind next to her watery eyes that stared at me as if I were the most intriguing thing she had ever seen, a girl with smooth flesh instead of thick, sun-beaten skin. I might have been for all I know.

Legs: I pick at the dirt marring the inked carvings on my legs. The swirls like wind and waves are supposed to mean swiftness or something like that. The translation I got was a bit shoddy but no matter what they mean they are a work of art and every time I run I wonder if they actually work. They probably don’t, though, I like to pretend they do. But the eyes couldn’t believe in that sort of thing. I want out of here and I will scream until they listen.

Mouth: I don’t remember what I’ve said to them or if I’ve said anything at all. Their eyes say all they need to but they insist on the intercom above my chair asking me to move or do something else inane and mundane. I wonder if they know who they have holed up in this facility. I have climbed to the top of the tallest trees and fought the bravest warriors and stood at the edge of cliffs and closed my eyes and breathed the scent of war, and that I would rather die than never see my jungle again. Maybe I will.

Epoch


Everything started, as most things do, with good intentions.
One of the worst days of Joey's life was supposed to be the day of his little sister's birth. He woke up, put on his well-worn jeans and orange Boy Scout Camp t-shirt, and brushed his hair. Would his sister have black hair like him and his father? Or would she have red hair like his mother? Whose eyes would she inherit? Would they be blue like his? He checked the clock. At 7:02 exactly he hurried down the hall, sock feet sliding on the hardwood floor. He poured Captain Crunch into a bowl, then carefully measured the milk to be sure the ratio between milk and cereal was perfect. What foods would she eat? Would he be able to help feed her? His legs, which barely touched the floor, swung so wildly that he bounced in his seat and spilled milk down his shirt. He hoped it would dry before Mom found out. He glanced at the clock, frustrated that he wouldn't know when his sister was coming home.
"Mommy went into labor yesterday at noon, shouldn't she be done by now?" he asked his babysitter. She looked up with surprise from her phone. Joey rarely talked to her. He usually tinkered with various appliances and old computers. Joey's parents had told her that this was normal behavior for him.
"She may be done, but there's other stuff they have to do. They have to clean the baby and make sure she's healthy, and make sure the mom is healthy enough to go home. I'm sure she'll be back any minute."
Joey's mother came home, her stomach a little smaller but no baby in her arms. His father stood next to her, a hand clasping her shoulder in a comforting gesture. The babysitter, sensing the tension about to unfold, quickly excused herself and drove home.
"Where's my sister," Joey asked.
"I'm sorry, honey," his mother said. "She's not coming home."
"When can I see her? Is she still in the hospital?"
Tears flowed down his mother's face. "She's... she's... never coming home."
The news hit him like a punch in the gut, and it took him a minute to process what she said. He stormed upstairs to his room, calling over his shoulder, "Why didn't you tell me she was dead?" Alone in his room, the world spun in confusing spirals. It whirred like the motor that lay on his cluttered desk; the motor was his latest invention. The glow in the dark stars on his ceiling swam before his eyes. Orion seemed to merge with Scorpio, Casseopia and Andromeda danced together. Joey closed his eyes. What kind of world did he live in, where babies died before they were even born? How did this happen?
He walked down the hall like a ghost, as if everything were happening in slow motion. He sat on the pink carpet in his sister's room. An old wood crib, which used to be his when he was little, now sat collecting dust under the window. The cartoon animals parading across the blue walls looked like a funeral procession. The cabinets, changing table, and framed family pictures sat useless against the walls. A rocking chair creaked in the breeze from the open window. How can she be gone? All her stuff is already here! He picked up a rattle and imagined what the smile on her face would look like as she discovered what it sounded like for the first time. This was a joke. Mommy was playing a joke on him. She would be coming tomorrow.
But he couldn't lie to himself. This was definitely not a joke. He curled up on the floor, shivering as tears streamed down his face. He had felt her kick, heard her heartbeat, saw her face on the grainy picture of the ultrasound. How could she just... die? What was wrong with his mother that she couldn't keep a baby safe?
Eventually, Joey woke up on his own bed. He realized that his father must have carried him there. It couldn't be his mother, who had a bad back. He felt numb, and as he passed his mother in the hallway he asked, "How?" No more words were needed.
"Nobody knows," his mother responded in a flat voice.
"Was it your fault?"
"Nobody knows, dammit!" His mother stormed past him. Joey could hear his parents having a hushed conversation.
"Janice, he's nine. And autistic. You can't just snap at him like that!"
"He outright blamed me for..."
"I know, but he's grieving too."
Joey wondered if they knew he could hear them. He felt tears prick his eyes and held them back. He couldn't help letting a few escape as he walked past his sister's empty room. The furniture was still there, since nobody could bring themselves to remove it. But it was empty. The silence had changed. It was once charged with anticipation, but it was now more like a vacuum, sucking all life into it until everything around it was nothingness. The red-brick house seemed to crumble. Even the irises and golden daisies in the flower beds wilted.
Joey woke up at noon. What was he supposed to do? He had slept through the morning. At noon he always ate lunch, but he hadn't even brushed his teeth. The world was a jumble of confusion. He sat up, and the memory of yesterday knocked him down again in a tidal wave. He was still lying listlessly in bed when his mother came in, holding a plate with a quarter of a PB and J sandwich on it. No crusts. Joey hated the crusts.
"Try to eat this," she said softly. "I know you're upset but you still need to eat. You're still growing."
Joey glared at his mother but couldn't refuse food. He took the plate, nibbling at the sandwich as his mother walked down the hall with the footsteps of a woman fifty years older than her.
The next day Joey tried to reestablish his routine. But no matter how he worked around it, the emptiness was always there. He barely ate, just played with his food. He had to be reminded every day to brush his hair and teeth, take a bath, and put on clean clothes.
Joey grew tired of the nothingness. He grew tired of walking past the empty room that now held nothing but "what could have been" and "if only." He needed something to fill the vacuum. So he visited the library and came home with a stack of books, which he read for hours on end in the basement, making notes and gathering supplies as he did so. He took apart computers, RC cars, anything electronic. Then he rearranged the parts. Books and printed-out computer articles littered the small space. Electronic components covered the workbench and the fold-out table. On an old desk, a computer screen glowed, illuminating the dull white walls and concrete floor. In the center of the organized chaos was a metal skeleton beginning to take shape. Joey was building a metal human from the inside out. A person that would never die.
One of Joey's proudest inventions was the android's eyes. Using technology related to CD players, he used a complex system of lasers and mirrors to help the android "read" its surroundings. He covered them with white porcelain and added brown plastic irises that matched the color of his own eyes.
The hardest part was the brain. Getting it to fit into a child-sized head was somewhat a problem, but the major ordeal was making algorithms that changed as constantly as a human's brain changed. Many times, Joey's mother came in and said, "Those welding fumes will kill your brain cells. Get outside and play with your friends," "It's gonna be 75 today," or "Henry just got a new swimming pool!" Her voice became more cheerful and lively as the months wore on. Meanwhile, in Joey's mind there was nothing in the world but the basement laboratory. He worked all day, slept for the recommended ten hours, went upstairs to eat quick, small meals with his parents, and went back to work. During the school year, he would get home at 3:00, have a snack, and retreat back to the basement.
After almost a year of this, his project was finally complete. Happy birthday to me, he thought proudly as his android took its first steps. It opened its eyes, which to him looked exactly like a human's, and said, "Hi." His sister's first words. The android had pale, metal "skin" that was cold to the touch, and she wore a pink metal dress. Joey ran upstairs, his heart thudding with excitement. "Mommy, Daddy, I created life!"
"That's not something a normal parent hears from their son, is it?" Joey's father asked. He followed Joey down to the basement, where the small android child looked up with a confused expression.
"This is your daddy," Joey explained. "Daddy, this is Harriet." That was going to be her name, had she ever been born. He had helped his parents decide.
"Hi, Harriet," said Joey's father, stupefied.
"Hi," Harriet replied.
"Harriet is a completely sentient, self-aware, android who can develop just like a human."
"Oh, Lord," was all his father could say.
"He actually did it?" Joey's mother called from the other room. She ran to the basement to see Joey's latest creation.
"Wow," she said quietly.
"Hi," Harriet replied.
"Her name is Harriet?" Joey's mother asked. Joey nodded proudly. Joey's mother rubbed her temples like she had a headache.
"It-she's very nice," Joey's father said at last.
"Hi," Harriet said cheerfully.
"I'm going to take Harriet outside," Joey decided. "To try to teach her about the world."
"Good idea. We'll go with you."
All four got into the car and drove to the park. The tree-dotted field was criscrossed with winding gravel paths, all centering around a large, duck-filled pond. The family sat on a wooden bench overlooking the pond. A duck walked past them.
"Dog!" Harriet squealed.
"No," said Joey patiently. "Duck."
"Duck!" Harriet said cheerfully, pointing at Joey. He laughed, and his parents laughed along with him. Harriet laughed too, or tried to. It came out sounding like a rusty doorhinge. Joey covered his ears, cringing. He was going to have to fix that later.
"Let's go for a walk," Joey's mother suggested.
"Good idea," Joey said. "Come on, Harriet."
Harriet got up from the bench with a mechanical whir and held Joey's hand as they walked down the gravel path. Her hand felt cold and hard, but she walked with an almost natural skip in her step. Joey pointed at the tree that stretched its branches above them.
"Isn't the tree pretty?" he asked.
"Tree!" Harriet squeaked. "Pretty!"
They continued walking. Harriet's eyes followed a pair of butterflies dancing through the air. They flashed red as a mirror adjusted. Joey thought he saw a spark of intelligence, or maybe it was just a reflection. He decided it was intelligence. After all, he had designed her to be intelligent.
After the day at the park, Joey and Harriet went everywhere together. They rode their bikes down the country road one day, stirring up dirt, though Joey got annoyed when the dirt caused her to glitch out and he had to spend the next day repairing her.
They went on the swingset together every day. Harriet knew the perfect time to swing her legs to get maximum momentum, and Joey copied her movements. He was nearly parallel with the ground, and he let out a whoop of laughter. But there was something missing in the laugh. Something genuine.
Harriet had almost a full command of English very soon, in fact it was only a month later that she could hold coherent conversations. On the last day of summer, the family picnicked together in the park. Joey wished they could pack something for Harriet, but she had no need for food. He saw her move out of the corner of his eye. She caught his eye and her eyes flashed red. She seemed to grin.
"Am I your sister?"
Was she? Joey didn't know the answer. He had created her to be his sister. All the programming was there. She acted just like a sister would. But was it how the real Harriet would have acted? Joey remembered the times they played together. That was fun, and he saw his friends playing with their siblings in the same way.
"Joey," his mother said gently, "I think you know the answer."
He realized that he did know the answer. He knew it all along. The emptiness he had ignored for so long now pushed itself forward, as if it were an animal sick of being caged.
"No!" Joey screamed. He tore out a wire in the back of the android's neck and it immediately slumped over. He tore out piece after piece, hot tears burning down his face. Wires. Hard drives. Microchips. Motors. Gears. Scraps of metal. The pieces lay strewn across the yard until they were unrecognizable as anything other than random junk.
I'm sorry, Harriet. I promise I'll be a better big brother, Joey thought as he knelt in the middle of the wreckage.

Hollowness Enduring



          The beautiful doll’s small plastic eyes stared back at me.  In real eyes you can see your dark reflection in the pupils, but these were opaque.  Beautiful, but dead.  Just glass. Miniature beacons in the shadows of my abuela’s bedroom.  She wore a pale pink dress, almost the color of my own, made of a fine taffeta covered her white, gleaming figure. I wasn’t really supposed to be there, but when I saw the white peeking out through the dark sliver of the open door while counting lines on the wooden floor of Abuela’s apartment, I could not resist.  My parents took extra care to keep the doors in our house shut so my siblings and I wouldn’t get into trouble.  I was at the age at which avoiding the exasperated tone in my mother’s voice was as likely as wishes on first stars at night coming true.
Curt limbs at her side, curt limbs keeping her upright against the bed frame.  Dead limbs.  Fake limbs.  I reached out towards the doll, but my little eight-year-old fingers stopped just before reaching her artificial ones.  She was untouchable.
-
Nothing seemed to change over the years—Mom still yelled and my wishes remained suspended in the air.  Days, years of gray unchanging.  A change was needed.
I took the vodka with the intention to fill the hole.  The overbearing emptiness in my heart.  It didn’t come from a bad break-up; it didn’t come from the scarlet D scribbled atop my last Chemistry test.  The emptiness simply was. I ignored it at first, when it had started to stretch the walls of my atriums in sixth grade.  Typically wounds heal themselves; I thought it would scab over.  But at seventeen years old, that the numbness was still there, festering in my veins.  I was tired of just being.  I was tired of Friday nights of wondering why stars are and Sunday nights of wondering why I am and weekdays of struggling to breathe.
So one Saturday night I grabbed the old bottle of vodka stored away with the fine Argentinian wines my dad brought from his last trip, stuffed the bottle into my backpack, and swung my car key around my forefinger as I climbed up the stairs from the basement.  Nonchalance was something I had mastered over the years.  Years of hiding.
“¿Adónde vas, Marisela?” My father’s voice sounded from the family room.  I was in the kitchen, staring indecisively at the abyss that is our refrigerator.  Maybe some of the leftover alfajores sitting on the top shelf—buttery cookies with a nectarous layer of dulce de leche sandwiched in between.  Snacks for afterwards.  The tapping of the keyboard of his ancient computer informed me he was working, and thus he did not care as much as his tone implied.  My mother was out with my two brothers, helping them find new clothes for the winter.  One of them had grown two inches taller since last year, thanks to puberty, and the other two inches wider, thanks to college life.  
Fuera." Out.  The word itself was liberating.  "Elaine y yo vamos a ver una película en su casa."  We had decided that our cover-up movie would be A Streetcar Named Desire, because 1) Elaine did not read the play, despite the fact that we had a test on it the coming Monday, and 2) Elaine had a bit of a weird crush on Marlon Brando.  She was convinced that had he lived in our generation, he'd totally go for Asian-American chicks like her.  I had already seen it, and I was glad that we weren’t actually going to do what we told our parents.  Black and white movies annoyed me.  Too much gray. The copy Elaine had borrowed from the library, however, was going to remain in her car the entire night because we were going to Cody-the-Quarterback’s down on Anchor Place to participate in the age-old tradition of celebrating the last-first high school football game we would ever watch as students with sex, drugs, and alcohol.  The Tuckerton High Sharks were likely to get beached by the Neptune Pirates on the Jersey Shore around the block from my high school, but at least it was an excuse for Elaine and me to finally say we had somewhat of the typical high school experience.  My dad would not even care if I told him I was going to Cody's; he would assume that we were in a group project for Euro or something.  He was so pleased with the fact that I worked so hard to get fucked every night by my homework.  The lack of high school adventures I’d had did not bother me until after I took my final attempt at the SAT.  Experiences and experimentations were miscarriages I didn’t even try for.  This time, I needed to try.  Try to be something.
No cookies, I decided as I closed the door.  As I walked past my dad towards the door to the garage, I hitched my backpack up a little higher, hoping he couldn’t smell the forty-three percent concentrated booze from the bottle rolling up and down my back.  My parents could only handle a glass of wine a week between them.  Would I be any better?
I shut the door, and the night was mine.
-
Abuela’s doll had black lashes that were curled like in make-up advertisements, reaching up towards the ceiling in perfect form.  Not a single one was out of place.  No mascara needed.  Painted eyebrows sat above them, the shade of the coffee my dad drank that morning.  I had tried a sip, but it was too bitter.  He laughed and smiled, thankful that his eight-year-old hadn’t yet been corrupted by adult drinks.  My grandmother teased him in Spanish that was too quick for me to understand.  The tea kettle stopped screaming and she poured the scalding water into the gourd, swirling the yerba leaves.  Aging spots filled the crevasses of the wrinkled skin and veins on the back of her careful hands.  The supersaturated liquid was flecked with the green and brown leaves, like dirt.  Mate.
The doll's hair was blonde, like the sun suspended high in the sky overlooking the park we had gone to earlier that week down the street from the apartment.  I breathed out a stream of air like the Pennsylvanian breeze that had whipped my hair while racing my brothers across the field.  The plastic strands remained stagnant, twined together in tight coils that might have tickled her elbows if she could feel.  I wondered if she was hollow.  Empty.  A plastic shell.
I didn’t drink the mate.
-
The whirring of the engine of my car drowned the whirring of my mind.  My headlights illuminated the road, filling the growing dark with its intense fluorescence.  A buzzing accompanied by a series of whoops notified me that I had received a text.  My keychain spun around the ignition as I hit it while reaching into my back pocket to retrieve my phone.  The trinket clinked an angry metallic tune as it collided with the plastic around the ignition.  It had been a last-minute purchase from the department store during the road trip to the funeral in sixth grade.  The white stars were imperceptible dots on the royal blue square, white and red stripes extending from it to form an American flag.  It had been the Fourth of July.  We didn’t get to watch the fireworks that year.  Too busy at the Spanish mass.  Not true Americans.  God isn’t kind to foreigners.
Where are you?/ Party’s star ed. thought yo were co ming.  Elaine had an old phone because her parents still weren’t too pleased with her borderline Bs barely tiptoeing over the ninety mark.
No.  Gotta study for the hell that is Richter’s class. Sorry.
I dropped the phone into my lap, hands returning to the steering wheel like anchors.  The wheels on the asphalt had murmured to me that maybe I wasn’t so interested in going to the party.  Texting while driving wasn’t something I condoned, but then again neither was drinking, really, and while I wasn’t going to get drunk with Elaine, I was going to get drunk.  For a moment, I felt alive.  Dangerously alive.  Maybe the scattered puzzle pieces in my body would fit again.
The hidden, abandoned road was still there, nearly overgrown with greenery.  I pulled my sedan under the protection of a willow and got out, backpack in hand.
Some more whoops and vibrations, but I didn’t pull my phone out again.  Elaine was probably pissed at me for ditching her and our plans, and I felt a little bad for that, but mostly I felt bad for other things.  Regret for leaving her didn’t wring my throat like the overbearing emptiness.  I wasn’t sure if I hoped that Elaine had gotten wasted already or that she continued to be the cautious, over-analytic girl that I had been best friends with for years.  We were supposed to experience our first drunken adventure together, but I’d rather not do it at the mercy of uncouth high school boys and senseless girls.  At the mercy of myself.
My definition of partying that Saturday night became sneaking through the woods my older brother had taken me to a few years back, a secret passage to the rough, unused side of the beach.  Not so secret, though, since his best friend, who had learned about it from his cousin, had shown my brother, but secret enough that I was confident I’d be alone.  The sun sang her last notes against the pink sky fading to dusk ahead of me.  Stars cut into my back with celestial knives, reminding me of how small I was.  Insignificant.  I trudged through the rough terrain covered in a blanket of rocks, despite the protest my flip flops were staging.  The trees were thinning, revealing a large body of water before me.  The beach.  I sat down with my back touching one of the trees on the border.
The clear liquid dribbled down my chin as I took my first swig.  Wow.  Fire blazed down my throat, its distinctive warmth resonating in my chilled fingertips. I breathed.
-
Abuela was standing in the doorway.  I didn't realize she was there until my ears picked up on a barely audible creak of the wooden floor. My foot had fallen asleep while I sat there staring at the doll for God knows how long:  my knees scraped against the floor I got up. More cuts and bruises to add to the collection of scabs tattooed on my knees, relics of other childish adventures.  Adventures I hadn't necessarily been allowed to go on.  Too many enticing open doors.
The light of the hallway illuminated her smiling face. The gilded cross necklace on her chest twinkled   "¿Te gusta la muñeca?"  You like the doll?
"Sí, abuela. Es muy linda."  Yes, it's very beautiful.
"Es como ti.  No parece como ti, pero ustedes son de gran belleza en diferentes maneras.  Pero...tu tienes vida.  Vida es la belleza más grande del mundo.  Nunca lo olvides, sí?"  It's like you.  It doesn’t look like you, but you both are very beautiful in different ways.  But you have life.  Life is the greatest beauty of the world.  Never forget it, okay?
"Claro." Okay.
-
The drink undulated in my stomach like the placid ocean before me that night.  A breeze caressed my skin.  Cold.  Like Abuela lying on the snowy white velvet in the mahogany coffin—no, casket, my mother had corrected me when I asked her if I had to look at Abuela in there.
I had also asked her why it was so cold in there.  La muerte le gusta el frío, Mari, she had answered in flat voice.  Death likes the cold.
I looked at the body anyway.  She was like a doll.
The bark of the tree was pressing uncomfortably into my back.  A restlessness seized me: I got up.  A patch of pink flowers encircled part of the tree, their delicate petals spread like stars.  I picked six.  Six for the years she’d been gone.  Six for the hollowness enduring.  The world swam before me as I walked towards the ocean, my bare feet sighing into the sand.  Salt water gave my toes chilly kisses, then my ankles, then my knees.  I looked at the flowers in my hand.  Their beauty.  Pale pink petals skimming the rolling indigo surface.  One by one, I let them drop, fragile circles floating beside me.  There they remained for seconds, minutes, hours, maybe.  I’m not sure how long I stood there for.
I woke up back by the tree, curled up in a tight ball.  It was colder, darker than before.  Sand clung onto the moisture drying on my shins as I got up; salt stung my nostrils.  When I stepped out into the sea again, the petals were gone.  I couldn’t see the moon.
The emptiness had returned, but without its vivid presence.  It was not filled, but fading.  Evaporating. I walked back to the car, my feet steady now, but tired.

I could be beautiful like Abuela’s doll, but not empty, like Abuela’s casket now, save for her clothes and bones.  Perhaps filled with some emptiness, yes, but with appreciation as well.  Acceptance.  Acceptance of stars and hollowness.
I swore to the stars sprinkled on my smudged-up windshield that I would leave them be.  Maybe let myself be, too.