First, he straightens his back,
   builds himself real tall, tilts
   his chin toward his nose. Red
   alert: serious stuff headed this way.
   Now, you probably think
   you’ve experienced love,
   but unlike the men many
   of you have known, Jesus
   doesn’t ask for favors in return,
   at least not that kind of favor.
   All he requires of you is to
   accept him into your heart,
   and to pray for forgiveness
   for your sins. You can do that,
   can’t you? The robots group-nod.
   Then let us pray. Heavenly Father,
   please search our hearts, and
   find repentance there. We admit
   we have sinned. Forgive us and
   allow us to walk forward cleansed
   of our transgressions. Infuse us
   with your light. Fill us with your
   love. In Jesus’s blessed name, amen.
   We. Us. Our. All-inclusive.
   Why Does Everyone Insist
   On lumping us all together
   under the “troubled youth”
   label? I guess our stories
   might sound similar,
   but to us, they are unique
   and personal, despite
   the ugly things we have
   in common. Most of our
   childhoods were marred
   by rape, often by older men.
   But those might have been
   a stepfather, grandfather,
   older brother, neighbor,
   teacher, priest, doctor,
   foster parent, policeman,
   or complete stranger.
   Faces. Bodies. Odors.
   Skin textures. Voices.
   Mannerisms. Methods
   of attack. All different,
   and scratched into our
   memories and, worse,
   our psyches. We are who
   we are because of them.
   Post Prayer
   We attend classes. I balked
   at first, knowing I’d be leaving
   House of Hope before I’d complete
   a semester, but my counselor
   did her job and convinced me
   I shouldn’t get any more behind
   than I already am. She even got
   hold of my high school in Barstow
   and found a way for me to finish
   up the classes I was most of the way
   through when I ran away last spring.
   I worked a little magic. That’s how
   she put it when she told me I could
   complete geometry, world history,
   and sophomore English and receive
   credit for them. When I go home,
   I’ll take online classes, work at
   my own pace and hopefully complete
   my junior year pretty much on schedule,
   or at least by the end of next summer.
   I could then, if I wanted, go back
   to high school for my senior year
   and graduate like a regular kid.
   But how do I pretend to be normal?
   To Be Perfectly Honest
   I’ve never exactly felt “normal,”
   thanks to the circumstances
   of my life. And, to be even more
   honest, I actually feel more
   normal now, knowing how many
   other girls’ lives don’t fit the usual
   definition of the word and yet
   share so many strange facets.
   There are more imperfect diamonds
   than flawless stones. So, what
   the hell? I’ll give it a try, and do
   my best to keep moving forward.
   Hey, with luck, maybe Pastor
   Martin’s shtick will rub off and
   I’ll make the journey “cleansed
   of my transgressions.” Wouldn’t
   that be brilliant? Meanwhile,
   I’m working diligently to finish
   my assignments quickly and earn
   decent grades. It’s the first time
   since I was a little kid that I’ve
   felt compelled to excel at something,
   and I’m discovering my mind
   is every bit as important as my body.
   My Love for Language
   Has been rekindled. I first found
   it back in Barstow, in Ms. Felton’s
   creative writing class. The one
   where I met Alex—all spiky hair
   and heavy eyeliner and I thought
   she was amazing before we ever
   hung out together. And maybe
   I’ll have to write that memory
   for Ms. Cox, who teaches English
   with a heavy lean toward creative
   writing. Every one of you has stories
   to share with the world, she says,
   and you must tell them the way only
   you can. If I asked you all to write
   the same story, still it would be
   different from one another’s because
   each of you will tell it in your own way,
   choosing specific words and syntax.
   That is your voice, and it’s as unique
   to you as the voice you speak with.
   In reply, most of the girls groan,
   but they claim to hate writing,
   anyway. A few of us take up
   the challenge, and I embrace it.
   We Write
   Happy memories. I struggle
   to come up with one of those,
   and find it buried beneath
   a deep pile of resentments.
   It was the first Christmas
   we spent with Gram, and there
   was a tree—a real tree, our first!—
   with ornaments we made ourselves.
   Not beautiful by any means,
   but spending that time as a family,
   stringing popcorn and cranberries
   and making paper chains, was new.
   We also write sadness,
   and I don’t have to look too hard
   to pull a short chapter from
   my personal history. I only had
   to go back a few weeks ago,
   to the day Alex and I parted
   ways. Although, as I admit
   in my paper, she and I had truly
   split quite a while before our
   formal goodbye, and that’s where
   I found the true wellspring
   of my sorrow. Faded love.
   This Morning
   Ms. Cox has a new assignment.
   Today let’s write about fear.
   First, an exercise. I want you to
   concentrate on sensory details.
   So take out a piece of paper
   and tell me how fear smells.
   How it tastes. How it sounds.
   How it looks. Feels. One or two
   sentences for each sense, and
   be creative. You are artists,
   painting pictures with words.
   Fear isn’t pastel. Be bold. Brave.
   This should be easy. For all
   the sadness I’ve experienced,
   fear is a more present companion.
   I have to take a couple of deep
   breaths to breast stroke through
   the recollections. Now I pick up
   my pencil and write. Fear smells
   like nicotine-tainted fingers, playing
   with an unwashed pecker poking
   from piss-damp boxers. Bold?
   I think so. I continue. Fear tastes
   like the whiskey-soaked lips of your love,
   whispering a long goodbye.
   That one is fresh, and personal.
   Fear is the sound of fingernails,
   scratching linoleum, seeking escape
   from the monster clawing behind.
  
					     					 			  Nothing brave about that,
   but it’s something I know well.
   Fear looks like a crow, circling closer
   and closer until its black pearl eyes
   come even with your own. Heavy
   with symbolism, but also drawn
   from experience. Fear feels like
   waiting for the phone to ring,
   certain the caller will inform you
   that your little brother is dead.
   Definitely not pastel. That memory
   is bloodred, and though I try
   really hard not to let it surface,
   sometimes it does—a sharp photo
   of Sandy lying in the street after
   being hit by a motorcycle.
   I should have been there, watching
   him instead of hanging out downtown.
   Thank God he survived, and healed.
   We Go Around the Room
   Sharing what we’ve written.
   Some girls clearly didn’t get
   it, and their papers are mostly
   blank. Others scribbled madly.
   From Lena: Fear is the sound
   of my father’s belt, unbuckling.
   Plenty to think about there.
   Sometimes I’m glad my father
   didn’t stick around long enough
   for me to get to know him well.
   If he was married to Iris, he must
   be the world’s biggest loser.
   From Brielle: Fear tastes like
   the oily, smoky barrel of a gun.
   Another bold picture for you,
   Ms. Cox. Is that what you expected?
   And from my roomie, Miranda:
   Fear feels like a snake, wrapping
   around and around your throat
   and squeezing tighter and tighter
   until the light goes all the way
   out. And after that comes a gang
   rape. Wonder if Ms. Cox might
   prefer something more in sepia.
   If So
   She doesn’t mention it, or
   even look surprised at the things
   she’s heard, including what
   I wrote. The other girls aren’t
   shocked, either, although
   my “fear smells like” sentence
   does elicit a fair amount of laughter,
   mostly because the majority
   of girls here have been in that
   exact situation. Which makes me
   wonder about Ms. Cox and her
   relative lack of reaction. Was she
   ever in the life? Thinking about
   it, I’m guessing no, or she probably
   would have changed her last name.
   That makes me giggle, so I’m glad
   the other girls are still laughing
   about unwashed pecker and piss-damp
   boxers. But now, Ms. Cox reins us in.
   Okay, since you’ve got solid
   sensory details to bring this story
   to life, I want you to write about
   a time when you were frightened.
   Make your readers feel your fear.
   Won’t That Depend
   On who my readers are?
   I mean, if I wrote about
   my “breaking in” by one
   of my mother’s men,
   the story wouldn’t bother
   these girls, though it might
   scare the hell out of some
   innocent virgin somewhere.
   Oh, well. Ms. Cox never
   mentioned audience, so I’ll go
   with whatever first comes
   to mind. I have to think for
   a few minutes. Fear. I close
   my eyes, fall backward in time.
   Way, way back into childhood.
   I was a kid once, wasn’t I?
   And there was a time long
   before moving in with Gram
   when Iris was still “Mommy.”
   We moved around, spent lots
   of time on military bases,
   living with a lineup of men,
   and I find myself on a lopsided
   sofa, watching cartoons.
   I Start My Story There
   Mommy says I’m a big girl, so I’m in
   charge while she’s gone. Mary Ann’s
   asleep in her dirty old crib. Her diaper
   smells like poo, but it’s dark outside,
   and the light is burned out so I can
   only see by the TV. Scritch-scratch.
   What’s moving across the floor? Ew!
   Giant brown bugs, two of them, with
   clicking shells and antennas that twitch
   sideways. I pull my feet up onto the couch,
   which smells like cigarettes and beer
   and something I don’t have a name for,
   but it stains the cushions crusty white.
   Suddenly, there’s banging on the door.
   Iris! Let me in! It’s Wes. Where’s his key?
   I start to get up, but with a loud crash,
   the door flies open. Where the fuck is Iris?
   That makes Mary Ann wake up, crying.
   Wes stomps closer, eyes wide and weird,
   reflecting the TV’s glow. His mouth leaks
   booze-stinking spit and he screams, I said,
   where’s your fucking mother? I draw back
   against the arm of the sofa, try to crawl
   into the crack there, but Mary Ann’s wailing
   makes Wes mad. Shut up! he yells, shaking
   the rail, which only makes her cry harder.
   He reaches into the crib, but I know he’ll hurt
   her. “No! Stop. I’ll take care of her. Mommy’s
   next door at Steve’s.” Ken spins, and I think
   he’ll leave us alone, but he grabs hold
   of me, tucks me under one arm, and now
   I smell onion sweat. I’m facedown, watching
   the ground move below, dizzying. Tread
   the steps, across the dead grass, toward
   the neighbor’s, Wes’s anger beating palpably.
   Hey, Iris! I’ve got your little girl! Bam!
   He kicks in the door, and there’s Mommy,
   and now I notice the knife in his hand.
   You been screwing around, whore? He puts me
   down, but doesn’t let go. Instead, he holds
   the blade to my throat. Come here, Iris. It’s you
   or her. I see Mommy smile. Feel a sharp sting.
   Look down as red dollops fall onto my shirt . . .
   The story ends with shirtless Steve, who
   went out the bedroom window, around
   the house, and sneaked in from behind,
   resting his pistol against Wes’s temple.
   Iris laughed and laughed and laughed.
   A Poem by Bud Parnell
   My Story Nears Its Conclusion
   Not quite two years
   since my sweetheart let go
   of her pain, emptied
   these rooms of love, and
   I
   still hear her whispers
   fall soft against my pillow
   in the deep indigo sea
   of night. How do I ignore the
   hunger
   to hold her again, spend
   just one more hour together?
   And my son, my Seth.
   If I could change a thing
   it would be the need for you
   to leave
   the path to damnation
   you chose. I sit, drowning
   sorrow in a bottle, look out
   over the fields, harvested
   and soon fallow, consider
   the coming freeze and
   this
   I wonder: is the blossoming
   pain in my chest more than
   just a broken heart? I pull
   a weary breath, knowing
   my time is short in this
   world.
 &nbs 
					     					 			p; Seth
   Choreographing a New Show
   Is apparently time-consuming.
   David has been working overtime,
   which bothers me not at all. I enjoy
   his company, but I’m not lonely
   without it, and when he comes home,
   despite the long hours he puts in,
   he seems energized. Maybe it’s just
   passion for creation, or maybe it’s got
   everything to do with white lines
   snorted in dressing rooms. Probably both.
   I’m glad he refuses to maintain a stash
   here, or I might be tempted to indulge
   far more often than I do. I like the cool,
   numbing escape; love the delicious rush
   of goose bumps and shivers. But not
   enough to lose the “me” I’ve worked hard
   to find and encourage in a more positive
   direction. Coke is more addictive than
   alcohol, and that’s saying a lot. I’m trying
   desperately to keep a handle on both.
   At First
   I thought the reason David won’t keep
   drugs in this place was because he worried
   about getting ripped off by his staff
   or me. Turns out, he’s just paranoid
   about losing the house in a raid. But,
   if he were to think about it logically,
   law enforcement must have some idea
   about what goes on here at the parties.
   Seems like all the city’s movers and
   shakers attend them, and that probably
   includes a politician or ten, and maybe
   even a keeper-of-the-peace or two.
   Even without actually witnessing
   him use, it’s not much of a stretch
   to conclude famed choreographer
   David Burroughs has a tidy drug habit
   himself. Ah, show business, especially
   Sin City show biz! Sexy girls. Sexy boys.
   And enough stimulation to keep both
   going all hours of the day and night.
   To Keep
   From falling into the same trap,
   I have to stay busy, and not just with
   Have Ur Cake entertainment. I need
   something wholesome in my life, so
   I’m volunteering at a center serving
   LGBTQ youth. At eighteen, I’m old
   enough to work here, but young enough
   so queer teens will feel comfortable
   hanging out with me. I can’t officially
   counsel them, but I can share my own
   experiences and try to help them become
   more at ease about living in their unique