is exceptional—and move on to
   the perfectly seasoned steaks.
   I keep stealing glances at Jonah,
   who cuts his meat delicately.
   Gracefully. Some might find it
   borderline feminine, but he is all
   man. Enigmatic, because despite
   a definite hippie gene influence,
   he maintains the self-assurance
   of a soldier. Nurture, nature, or
   both. He is utterly fascinating.
   Teacher. Wine connoisseur.
   Rider of the Banzai Pipeline.
   “So, where did you learn to surf?”
   He takes the time to swallow.
   In Hawaii. My dad was stationed
   at Fort Shafter when I was in high
   school. It was the first place I really
   felt at home. Like I belonged there.
   I went to a public high school, and
   pretty much everyone surfed. Not
   only did I pick it up right away, but
   when I discovered riding, I found
   myself. Right there in the ocean.
   Riding big water? That liberated
   me. It’s something my brothers
   would never do. And it takes almost
   as much courage as facing bullets.
   LIBERATED
   I like the sound of that. I think
   I need to ride bigger water.
   We finish dinner. Turn down
   dessert in favor of getting to
   the theater a little earlier.
   The poetry slam is similar to
   the spoken word competition,
   except the poets perform their
   own original work. Some of it
   is funny. Some of it is sexy.
   Some of it reflects the time—
   unemployment, foreclosure.
   War. Depression. Loss. A couple
   of times as people take the stage
   Jonah lets me know they were
   in his classes at some point.
   See that guy there? he whispers.
   He actually gets paid to teach
   performance poetry at schools.
   Pretty cool gig, don’t you think?
   I do, actually. Making a living
   doing something creative, not
   to mention something you love,
   has immense appeal. It’s a great
   evening, topping off a fabulous day.
   On the way home, I find myself
   happy. Why does that strike
   me as strange? How long has it
   been since I’ve felt content?
   What’s even more interesting
   is this feeling has nothing to do
   with alcohol—two glasses of wine
   at dinner, and that was hours ago—
   or pills. It’s all about the activity,
   and the company, and the idea
   that life brims with possibility.
   When we get to the apartment,
   Jonah walks me to the door.
   “Thanks so much for today.”
   Suddenly, I’m afraid to go inside,
   back to the isolation I’ve created
   for myself. I put my key in the lock,
   wishing I could invite him in for
   a nightcap. But that could go all
   kinds of wrong. Jonah smiles.
   Reading my mind again? Thanks
   for helping out today, and for your
   company tonight. I really enjoyed
   the day. See you in class Monday.
   Before he can turn away, I give
   him a quick hug, more thank you
   than invitation. He looks surprised,
   but pleasantly so. “Night.” I go inside,
   surprised by myself. In many ways.
   INSIDE, ALONE
   I find myself wishing I had
   taken Jonah’s hand, coaxed
   him in for that nightcap.
   Sometimes it’s just so tiresome
   playing the martyr role.
   Before I really understood
   what sex could be, it was
   easy enough to convince myself
   I didn’t need it. I mean, if you
   don’t enjoy it, shun it! Cole taught
   me how to love it. And I do,
   with him. But every now and then
   I wonder if it’s only because
   I’m with Cole, or if the lessons
   he’s taught me could make me
   love it as much, or more, with someone
   else. Is an orgasm the same with
   every partner? Sitting here, buzzed,
   I imagine being with Jonah.
   My hand slips down between my legs
   where fantasy has made me wet.
   When I finish, I write it as a pantoum.
   GHOSTS
   by Ashley Patterson
   Even a small bed is too big, alone.
   She lies half-awake, draws stuttered breath,
   listens to memory’s bittersweet drone,
   wonders if silence comes cloaked in death.
   Not quite awake, she draws stuttered breath,
   promises shattering on her pillow.
   She wonders if silence comes cloaked in death,
   as her storm clouds begin to billow.
   Promises shattering on her pillow,
   she conjures the image she cannot dismiss,
   seeding her storm clouds. They billow
   with the black remembrance of his kiss.
   She conjures the image she cannot dismiss,
   summons the heat of his skin on her skin,
   the black remembrance of his kiss,
   desire, abandoned somewhere within.
   She summons the heat of his skin on her skin,
   opens herself to herself, in disguise,
   recovers desire, abandoned within.
   Heart beating ghosts, she closes her eyes
   And opens herself to herself, in disguise,
   listens to memory’s bittersweet drone.
   Heart beating ghosts, she closes her eyes,
   knowing her small bed is too big, alone.
   Rewind
   SLEEP STUDIES
   Suggest the belief that someone
   is in your room, in your bed, where
   you can hear them breathing and
   feel their hands at your throat,
   even though, in reality, no one
   is actually there, can be explained
   by coming up out of REM sleep
   too quickly. This produces a state
   of sleep paralysis. Part of your brain
   is aware, the other part is still dreaming.
   You can’t move, can’t speak, can’t
   chase away the imaginary monster.
   There was a time when sleep paralysis
   could only be explained through
   the paranormal. Some people still
   believe it is the presence of evil
   and if you only pray hard enough,
   God will chase it away, allow you
   to wake completely and go about
   your day. I’d rather accept science.
   The morning I woke up, positive
   Cole’s ghost was in my bed, needing
   to say good-bye, was the scariest
   experience of my life. I deal with fear
   by research, and what I learned was
   sleep paralysis can be linked to periods
   of high anxiety. Anxious? Me? Well, yeah.
   COLE WAS IN AFGHANISTAN
   Where they were ramping up security
   ahead of the coming elections.
   A Taliban spokesperson warned,
   Everything and everyone affiliated
   with the election is our target—
   candidates, security forces,
   campaigners, election workers,
   and voters. All are our targets.
   Cole’s unit was one of several
   c 
					     					 			harged with keeping those targets
   safe, and it would not be easy.
   Pre-election, three candidates
   and at least eleven campaign
   workers were killed, and his unit
   lost a soldier. During the voting,
   across the country, dozens of bomb
   and rocket attacks led to even more
   deaths at the polls. But the district
   Cole was protecting suffered no
   casualties. The official word on
   that credited good communication
   between the locals and the Marines
   who oversaw their safety. According
   to Cole, it had more to do with
   the accuracy of the sniper squad’s
   scopes. I pretty much believed him.
   HE TOOK PRIDE IN THAT
   But he was not exactly
   enthusiastic about it being
   his mission. He e-mailed:
   WHAT THE FUCK ARE WE DOING?
   THESE ELECTIONS ARE A FARCE.
   THAT FUCKING KARZAI STOLE
   THE PRESIDENCY LAST YEAR.
   THIS ELECTION IS STINKO, TOO.
   ALL WE’RE HERE FOR IS SECURING
   THE PLACE FOR MORE FUCKING
   FRAUD. PEOPLE ARE AFRAID TO
   VOTE. YOU CAN BET THE ONES
   WHO DO WILL STUFF THE BOXES.
   He was right, of course.
   Widespread fraud tainted
   the election. A fifth of the ballots
   were tossed. Winners eventually
   lost, and losers took their seats
   in the Afghanistan parliament.
   None of that mattered to me.
   All I cared about was knowing
   Cole was not among the reported
   casualties. They continued to swell.
   At that point, he was over half-
   way through his deployment.
   I was counting down the weeks.
   Checking them off the calendar.
   Obsessing about dates.
   CHRISTMAS 2010
   Was still up in the air.
   Some from his battalion
   would be home. Others
   would have to wait for
   January to take leave.
   I started thinking about
   holidays and birthdays
   and other celebrations,
   how the Marine Corps
   defined those for us,
   and for every military
   family. Would their
   soldier make it home in
   time? And if not this year,
   then next? No promises.
   As bad as that was for
   me, what would that mean
   to a child, waiting for Daddy,
   only to be told, sorry, he
   won’t help you blow out
   your birthday candles this
   year? You turn four only
   once. And what if you turned
   five without him there, too?
   And what if an insurgent’s
   bullet meant you’d never
   share another birthday
   with your father? And why
   did I decide to worry about it?
   I HAD ENOUGH
   To worry about. Besides Cole, flushing
   insurgents, and largely incommunicado,
   I was starting grad school, unsure
   about the program and the direction
   it was pulling me in. My summer hermit
   phase had made me uncomfortable
   in new situations or around large crowds
   of people—like on a university campus.
   I was definitely anxious about pretty
   much every facet of my life. And sleep
   paralysis was only one manifestation.
   I also started having mild panic attacks.
   Sleep paralysis, only totally awake
   and even on my feet. I’d be walking
   along, all good, and suddenly it was like
   the world began to shrink, everything
   closing in around me. Too many people.
   Too many voices. Closer. Smaller. Tighter.
   Suffocating. I’d freeze in place, unable
   to move. My heart would race, crowding
   my lungs. All I could manage was shallow,
   breaths, ragged and pitiful. A hollow
   ringing in my ears disallowed balance.
   I had to sit or fall. I learned to drop
   my head between my knees and close
   my eyes until the world began to grow
   wider again. After the fourth “event,”
   I went to my doctor and asked for
   chemical help. He prescribed Xanax,
   told me to avoid alcohol while taking it.
   I thought that was probably a good
   idea anyway. I’d been drinking more
   than I knew was wise. I needed
   an excuse to stop. And I did. Mostly.
   I wasn’t an alcoholic. I didn’t drink every
   day, didn’t often drink to excess or binge.
   And could leave it alone completely
   for large swaths of time. But I did drink
   to be social. To have fun with friends.
   Sometimes, to sleep. Sometimes, to forget.
   WITH THE XANAX
   School was okay, though I was glad
   I had only two classes that semester.
   There was a lot of reading. A lot of writing.
   A lot of research. I learned more
   than I ever wanted to about human
   behavior. Unfortunately, it made me
   very aware of some very bad things.
   Especially at my job. I still loved
   taking care of the little ones, teaching
   them things that would jump-start
   their regular school experience.
   Colors. Letters. Numbers. Telling time.
   But every now and again, I couldn’t
   help but notice signs. Things that
   made me uncomfortable. With Soleil,
   especially. Over the summer, I’d broken
   through the barrier she’d erected
   between herself and the rest of the world.
   I could even make her laugh once
   in a while, chase the thunderheads
   from her eyes. And when she finally
   conquered a difficult concept,
   her face lit and she transformed
   into the prettiest child, ever.
   But some days she retreated
   to a place inside where I couldn’t
   reach her. A place she created
   where no one could touch her.
   I started watching the interaction
   with her mother, a stiff young woman
   who rarely smiled and seemed to
   communicate by snapping and
   barking. If Soleil didn’t move
   quickly enough, sometimes her
   mother would grab her and jerk.
   One day, I finally had enough.
   I stepped in front of her. “Excuse me,
   but do you think that’s an appropriate
   way to deal with a child?” When I
   looked into the woman’s eyes,
   there was something scary there,
   and it went beyond how dilated
   her pupils were. How I handle
   my daughter is really none
   of your business, now, is it?
   She stepped around me, yanking
   Soleil out the door. The little
   girl had to run to not get dragged.
   A WEEK LATER
   Soleil arrived at school dressed
   in jeans and a long-sleeved shirt.
   Not so unusual, except it happened
   to be unseasonably warm. All
   the other kids were in shorts.
   I already had my suspicions, so
   I decided to set up the easels for
   some painting. The kids all slipped
 
					     					 			
   into smocks. When I helped Soleil
   into hers, I told her we had to roll
   up her sleeves. I’ve never seen
   anyone look quite so scared.
   I can’t. Mommy will get mad at me.
   “But if you get paint on your shirt,
   she’ll really get mad,” I coaxed.
   “We’ll just turn them up a little.”
   She let me, and the finger-shaped
   bruises on her arms were apparent
   immediately. I prodded one gently.
   “Does that hurt?” In answer,
   an obvious wince. “Are there more?”
   She trusted me enough to give
   a small nod. “Can I see, please?”
   Fear clung to her like sweat. I soothed
   it as best I could. “Soleil, honey,
   I don’t want anyone to hurt you.
   Ever. I can stop it if you let me see.”
   Her eyes, which had been focused
   on the floor, turned slowly up
   to meet mine. She must have
   found what she needed there
   because she took my hand, led me
   to the bathroom, closed the door.
   She turned away from me, lifted
   her shirt. The bruising began
   in the small of her back, disappeared
   beneath the waistband of her jeans.
   It was dark. Fresh. “Who did this?”
   Her voice was mouse-quiet.
   Mommy. She’s very sorry.
   Of course she was. “Okay, honey.
   You want to go paint now?”
   Anger seethed. Red. Frothy. How
   could anyone do something like
   this to a child? We returned to
   the playroom and I gave Soleil
   a paintbrush. Then I went to call
   Child Protective Services. It was no
   more than my duty, but it felt
   really good to report what I saw.
   Later, however, it hit me that
   Soleil’s mother would probably
   blame her for the trouble coming
   their way. I went home. Popped
   a Xanax. Washed it down with tequila.
   I NEVER SAW HER AGAIN
   Once Child Protective Services
   stepped in, it was completely
   out of my hands. I knew I’d done
   the right thing, but I was concerned
   about her safety. Especially as I learned
   more about what happened after
   someone—like me—reported abuse.
   Often the child remained in her home,
   if the parents seemed cooperative
   and mostly sane. I had a hunch
   Soleil’s mom was using some
   sort of controlled substance. Crystal