Knelt in front of me, laid his head
   in my lap, wrapped his arms
   around my hips. I stroked his hair
   and at practically the exact same
   instant, we both said, “I’m sorry.” I’m sorry.
   He looked up at me, and there
   was nothing in his topaz eyes
   but apology, and a question.
   My favorite question. I didn’t
   have to speak my answer.
   He stood, pulled me to my feet,
   led me to his bed. Wait. Let me
   lock the door. They’ll be home
   soon. When he turned back to
   me, I had taken off my sweater,
   thrown it to the rocking chair. He
   whistled. Jesus. What did I do?
   He traced the bruises, patterned
   exactly in the shape of his fingers,
   and turning the gunmetal gray
   of night, lifting over the ocean.
   “It’s okay,” I promised. And only
   a tiny disbelieving sliver of me
   kept whispering that it wasn’t.
   THERE WAS SOMETHING FRANTIC
   About the way he made love
   to me then. It had nothing to do
   with hurrying to finish before
   his mom got home. It was more
   like he thought I might change
   my mind midstroke, decide to leave
   forever. He pinned my wrists over
   my head. His mouth roamed my body
   freely, and every time his tongue
   made me squirm, he gripped harder.
   His kisses were laced with lust. Only
   later did I question the stimulus of
   his passion. I don’t know if I’ll ever
   trust him completely, but I did in that
   moment. I had to. He was taking me
   places I’d rarely been before, even
   with him. He plunged his face between
   my legs, driving into me with tongue
   and teeth and fingers until I begged
   him to stop. No. It was a growl.
   Give me your cream. I had no choice,
   he made me come, but then I pleaded
   for, “More. Fuck me.” I’d never said
   those words before. Not to Cole.
   Not to anyone. He hesitated, and I
   worried I’d made him angry or turned
   him off. Not even close. He smiled.
   Say it again. Louder. I did, and when
   I did, in a single strong move, he slid
   one arm under me, flipped me over
   onto my stomach, tugged me to
   the foot of the bed. He stood there,
   just looking at me, for what seemed
   like a very long time. Suddenly,
   he was inside of me, driving into me
   with animal ferocity. Wilderness,
   personified. There was lust there,
   yes. And more—the fear of a soldier,
   flushing an enemy he cannot see.
   The anger of a man who has watched
   his buddy blown to bits. The tension
   of a sniper, waiting endlessly for
   an uncertain outcome. The brittleness
   of a boy, trapped in a man’s uniform.
   In one gigantic shudder, it was all
   released, right there in me. We crept
   up onto the pillows, covered our nakedness
   with quilts. And, snug in each other,
   we escaped into the haven of dreams.
   HAVEN
   So much I want to say,
   wish I could confess,
   but silence swells,
   black
   as midsummer
   clouds, stacked upon hills
   between us. Black as the
   demons
   shrieking inside my head.
   My heart rumbles, heavy
   with snippets of memory
   that must not be
   conjured.
   Alone in this untamed
   empty place, I free
   a relentless volley
   of words. They
   rage
   against the pages, a torrent
   of what was, what is,
   what yet may come.
   And when at last the spirits
   recede,
   I find echoed
   in their retreat, stories
   I dare not give voice to—
   nightmares set adrift
   in my paper harbor.
   Cole Gleason
   Present
   SOME THINGS YOU DO
   Whether or not you want to. Especially
   when a friend is involved. Case in point.
   Darian promised to go to Lodi with me
   over the holiday break. We’re supposed
   to check out wineries, even though she still
   insists I’m crazy to even consider getting
   married to Cole. Not only that, but she
   agreed to be my matron of honor, even
   though she said the word “matron”
   makes her sound like a prison warden.
   We discussed colors. I was thinking
   sort of pale green, maybe with lavender
   accents. Oh, no. Check out the purple
   dresses on this website. Dark is in
   this year. And purple is memorable.
   I have to admit, she was right. So, I’m
   thinking purple, with turquoise accents,
   to go with Cole’s dress blues. We’ve still
   got time to decide, though. Darian’s got
   lots of great ideas. I told her she should
   consider becoming a wedding planner.
   I’m definitely better at making plans
   for other people, she said. Every time
   I try to plan for myself, something
   always fucks up forward motion.
   SEEMS TO BE THE CASE
   For my forever friend. That makes
   me sad. Sometimes it’s all her doing.
   Sometimes it’s just the fickleness
   of the gods or whatever. And I suppose
   at times everyone feels the same way.
   But without a friend to prop you up,
   see you through the tough periods,
   it could start to feel overwhelming.
   So, because we’re best friends, and
   since turnabout is fair play, I’ll support
   Dar’s decision to stay with Spencer,
   at least until he’s able to care for himself,
   or agrees to move home. When his mom
   brought it up, he was as resistant as Darian
   to the idea. Oh, hell, no. Go back home
   so Mommy can feed me and change
   my diapers? Not on a dead damn bet.
   I’ll do this all on my own if I have to.
   It was about then we all figured Spence
   will recover. It’s been a slow, painful process.
   But he is progressing. He’s scheduled
   for an artificial skin graft right after
   the first of the year. Artificial, because
   he doesn’t have enough undamaged
   skin to serve as his own donor. And as
   organs go, I’ve learned, skin is among
   the pickiest, almost always rejecting
   donations from other people or animals.
   Spence’s face, neck, shoulders, and arms
   were burned the worst. Somehow,
   his hands mostly escaped. The doctors
   believe he tucked them under himself,
   protecting them instinctively. Beyond
   the burns, there is some impact nerve
   damage to his spine. They’re not sure if
   he’ll walk again. But, supine or straight
   up and down, the part of Spencer that
   makes him uniquely Spence is alive
   and kicking inside him. That gives
   everyone h 
					     					 			ope that he’ll find his way
   back onto his feet. Yes, no, or maybe,
   he’s going to need all the help he can
   get, both medically and emotionally.
   I really hope Darian is up to the task.
   EITHER WAY
   She and I are going out tonight
   for a belated birthday celebration.
   I’m officially twenty-five. (Is that all?)
   Dinner. Drinks. And slam poetry.
   She was a little resistant to the last,
   but hey, it’s my party and I’ll do what
   I want to. Argh! More sixties-era
   lyrics. I pull into Dar’s driveway
   a little before six. When I ring the bell,
   she yells for me to come inside, make
   myself at home while she finishes
   her makeup. The TV is on, so I sit
   and wait for a commercial to finish
   and the local news to fire up,
   They flash a picture for the lead story,
   and my stomach drops. I know this
   woman. I haven’t seen her in well
   over a year. She’s thinner. Rougher
   around the edges. But it’s definitely
   Soleil’s mother. New developments
   in the drive-by shooting that claimed
   two victims in Santee on Tuesday,
   says the announcer. 10News has learned
   that twenty-two-year-old Chandra Baird,
   who resides in the bullet-strafed house,
   allegedly has ties to a Mexican drug cartel.
   A large quantity of methamphetamine
   was recovered. Baird’s boyfriend, Max Lemoore,
   was killed in the incident. Her four-year-old
   daughter remains in guarded condition . . . .
   NO!
   The blood drains from my face. I feel it
   turn white and cold. “No-o-o-o.” It escapes
   my mouth in a single protracted whimper.
   The next is a shout. “Why, goddamn it?
   How could they let her go back?” Didn’t
   anyone notice? Did they even bother
   to look? Isn’t that what Child Protective
   Services is supposed to do? What the hell?
   Darian materializes suddenly. Ash?
   What’s wrong? Hey, are you all right?
   You look like you just saw a spook.
   “Can I have a drink?” I don’t wait
   for an answer. Tequila. And a lot of it.
   I pour a fat glass for me. “Want one?’
   Not until you tell me what in God’s
   name the matter is. She watches
   me down a long, slow swallow.
   “Did you hear about a drive-by in
   Santee? The little girl who was shot
   went to the preschool for a while. I
   noticed some problems and called CPS.
   What good did it do, Dar? What good
   did I do? What’s the point of a so-called
   safety net if it can’t catch kids who are
   are obviously falling?” I think about
   how long it took to convince Soleil
   to let me push her on the swings.
   The trust she finally gifted me with.
   The trust her own mother shattered.
   “I knew, goddamn it. I knew she was using.
   Now they’re saying it was drug related.”
   Darian puts her hand on my arm,
   which is shaking enough to make
   the drink look dangerous. It’s not
   your fault. You did all you could.
   I’m sorry it wasn’t enough. So much
   of the system is broken. They want
   to keep families together. Sometimes
   it works. But when it doesn’t, you can’t
   always fix the outcome. It sucks,
   but you’d better get used to it. You’re
   going to see it a lot as a social worker.
   I set my drink on the counter.
   “Maybe, maybe not. I’m not sure
   I could handle stuff like this all the time.”
   So, do something else. It’s not too
   late to change your mind. Look.
   I’m going to finish getting ready.
   Then we’re having some fun, okay?
   Don’t forget you’re driving, though.
   She eyes my drink and goes to put on
   her shoes. I reach for something
   close to belief, toss a prayer toward
   heaven. I couldn’t save her. Will He?
   I TRY TO PUT AWAY
   All thoughts of Soleil,
   but I keep picturing
   her spindly legs
   pumping air beneath
   the swing. Kicking.
   I sip my tequila, relish
   the slow warm trickle
   down my throat. See
   her thin lips, coaxed
   into a small gap-toothed
   smile. Fleeting.
   One more small taste,
   wishing the slender
   buzz could make me
   forget about
   her purpling back,
   the way she reached
   deep for courage, showed
   me the corded welts. Lifting.
   I close my eyes, but
   the darkness behind
   the lids can’t obscure
   the nightmarish pictures
   forming in my mind of
   her, beaten, bruised,
   and crying out for help
   she could never find.
   Of her, lying still and
   quiet in a rivulet of blood.
   THE DISEMBODIED VOICE
   Of another newscaster pulls me
   from my self-absorbed reverie.
   He’s . . . on the TV. Darian’s TV.
   And he’s saying something about
   A strong unexpected Taliban
   offensive in the Helmand
   Province of Afghanistan.
   Not that. Not more. Turn it off.
   Hurry. I try not to listen, but I
   can’t help but hear
   . . . numerous casualties among
   the civilian population, as well
   as coalition forces . . .
   A flick of the remote. Blessed
   silence. I can’t watch the news.
   Too much information bloats
   the omnipresent fear, floating
   like high, thin clouds on the far
   horizon. Better not to wonder
   or suspect. Better simply to know,
   even if that knowledge brings pain.
   Finally, Darian sweeps back
   into the room. Okay. Let’s go.
   You’re still good to drive, right?
   “If I’m not, you still remember
   how, right? Anyway, when did you
   become an adult?” Necessary banter.
   BANTER AS DISTRACTION
   Works well, as does an evening
   out, away from the confinement
   of home, where I know I’d do nothing
   but stress over bad things beyond
   my control. It’s good, being with
   Darian, who has somehow found
   her way back into her comfort zone.
   Since it’s my birthday dinner,
   I get to choose the restaurant, and
   settle on a favorite Mexican place
   on the beach. Glad you went cheap,
   since I’m buying, says Dar. Happy
   birthday. Oh, keep it around five
   bucks, okay? I think she’s kidding
   but I’m not sure until she laughs.
   It’s the high, pure Darian laugh
   I know and really appreciate tonight,
   because it’s been a while since
   I’ve heard it. She orders drinks—
   margaritas on the rocks, with pricey
   tequila that flashes me back to
   Jaden, but only momenta 
					     					 			rily.
   At least it’s a pleasant snapshot.
   We decide to share a huge platter
   of sizzling fajitas, con guacamole
   y salsa verde, and as we wait for
   the food, I consider asking for details
   about her and Kenny. Decide not to
   risk it. I don’t want to spoil the mood.
   I AM, IN FACT
   A little surprised when Dar brings
   up the subject herself. Sort of, anyway.
   We’ve been talking about the wedding,
   and maybe going shopping for a dress.
   If you want something kind of unique,
   I know a great, little boutique with
   decent prices, she says. Sabrina and I
   picked out her prom formal there.
   “Sabrina is Kenny’s daughter,
   right?” She nods, opening the door.
   “So, what’s going on with you two?
   You’re not still moving in together.”
   The last sentence was a statement.
   That decision had been made.
   No. But he did still buy the house
   at Hermosa Beach. I’m glad.
   I loved that little place. Her voice
   is sad, and now I’m sorry the subject
   came up. I keep telling myself things
   happen for a reason. I’ll always love
   Kenny. No man has ever been that
   good to me. But I still love Spence,
   too, despite the water stagnating
   under our bridge. And right now,
   he needs me. Funny, but when you
   mentioned I became an adult, you were
   right. Don’t know if that’s good or bad.
   But it had to happen sooner or later.
   GROWN-UP OR NOT
   I’m having a great time with Dar tonight,
   despite brief flashes of Soleil’s face
   intruding now and then. We finish dinner,
   take it relatively easy on the tequila,
   and I feel totally capable of driving
   the short distance to the coffee house
   that’s hosting the slam tonight.
   It’s not quite as crowded as the last
   one, and much more informal.
   A gig more for fun than a chance
   at prizes. We arrive a little before eight,
   when it’s supposed to get underway,
   and are looking for a place to sit
   when I hear my name over my shoulder.
   Ashley. It’s Jonah. I’m glad you came
   tonight. Darian and I both turn,
   and Jonah kisses me on the cheek.
   Darian shoots me a look meaning,
   how about an introduction? “Oh.
   Sorry. Darian, this is Jonah. Uh . . .