At stake were both our worlds.
   I didn’t care, but it was
   a risk she wouldn’t take.
   Now That I’ve Opened
   That bottle of memories,
   they’re pouring out like wine,
   crimson and bittersweet.
   Ignoring the throbbing pain,
   I think back to a crisp fall
   Saturday morning, my parents
   and sister hundreds of miles
   away in California.
   Cara is my twin, though
   we’re about as alike as
   snowflakes—a general
   resemblance, but peer under
   a microscope, and we’re
   completely different. Cara’s
   in-your-face, while I handle
   things much more discreetly.
   You might call me sneaky,
   though I’d call me clever,
   and on that particular
   day, all by myself, clever
   me was in need of company.
   Emily and I had not
   yet been together, but
   she was most definitely
   on my radar. She was
   far above the usual
   objects of my lust—sleek
   and bronzed, fearless of the star
   raining radiation on
   this ozone-deprived planet.
   The only thing she ever
   feared was our short-lived love.
   I Knew None of That Then
   I only knew she was the
   prettiest thing ever to run
   by our house. She was a falcon
   on the wing, and I wanted
   to fly along. She jogged
   past every morning, around
   eight. That day I stood like
   a fisherman waiting to cast
   his line and reel in something
   worth trawling for. I watched
   her sinewy body run by
   before calling out her name.
   “Emily.” She turned and gave
   a probing look, as if she’d
   never seen me before. And
   here I’d been disrobing her
   regularly in my over-
   active imagination.
   I guess she was lonely too.
   Unseemly fascination
   made her do an about-face.
   Panting gently, she drew even.
   Hello, Conner. How can I
   help you this enchanting day?
   Several things came quickly
   to mind, things to save for later.
   My eyes poked hers. “I just wanted
   you to know I find you quite
   beautiful.”
   Tony
   Dinner’s a Little Late Tonight
   Guess there was some kind
   of problem in the rec room.
   Figures it would be a night
   when I could chow down
   a horse. Okay, maybe not
   a horse. But half a cow.
   Food’s a funny thing.
   When I was a little kid,
   we never had much food,
   but I don’t remember
   being hungry. Wonder
   how Ma managed to feed
   me when I was an actual
   baby. Formula, I hear, costs
   major bucks, and I just
   can’t see her letting me
   snuggle up against her
   titties. Those things
   were bait, and not for
   babies. No sir, I can’t
   imagine how I made
   it past the mewling stage.
   I feel like mewling now.
   At least here, they can’t
   slap you around to shut
   you up. Not that they
   don’t ever touch you
   at all. Takedowns.
   Cavity searches after
   visits from home.
   Once in a while, when
   someone “in charge”
   is in a bad mood, you
   might even catch a “playful”
   kick in the seat, or a teeth-
   rattling shoulder shake.
   But Bloody Cuts and Bruises
   Are not something you’re
   going to see here. No sir.
   Except maybe for Vanessa’s.
   And why is she in my thoughts
   again? I have to admit I’d like
   to peek beneath that bandage.
   I’ll probably see her at dinner
   tonight, not that they let
   the guys and the girls sit
   anywhere close to each
   other. I guess they think
   crappy food is an aphrodisiac.
   A time or two or three,
   I have seen some serious
   make-out sessions—
   male/female, male/male,
   female/female. Love.
   Lust. The need to feel close.
   The need to feel safe
   because someone dares
   to wrap their arms around
   you in this cold, sterile place.
   The need to feel. I even
   half-believe the story
   about Dahlia and Dr. Starr.
   What better way to grab
   preferential treatment?
   Oh my lovely, deep-creased
   psychologist, let me stick
   my tongue dorwn your throat.
   Nothing new for Dahlia.
   Would be nothing new
   for me, either. What’s
   new is that I haven’t
   strayed down that path
   since I’ve been here.
   Mostly Because
   For once in my life, I
   don’t have to have sex.
   No one demands it in
   exchange for drugs,
   ten minutes of disgust
   for a well-deserved rush.
   No one expects it in
   exchange for food,
   just a burger and fries,
   please; for a hot shower
   to wash off the streets,
   a warm bed to crash in.
   Most of all, no one is
   forcing me to. I try
   not to look back on
   the moment when
   my pitiful life turned
   unbearable. Unthinkable.
   Try to blot it out, scrub
   it out, rip it out of my
   brain completely.
   But you can’t forget
   something like that,
   no matter how much you
   drink, snort, or shoot into
   your veins. The memory
   stalks you forever and
   creeps up to maul you
   like a rabid dog, when
   you least expect it.
   Like now.
   Vanessa
   Thank God
   The intercom squawks.
   Okay, Happy Campers,
   dinner is served.
   Happy Campers?
   Must I join that sorority?
   Doesn’t much matter.
   My days of dinner
   arriving by burly butler
   have come to a Level One end.
   My (non) performance at group
   today has netted me a trip
   to the communal dining
   room. Mmmmm. Can’t wait
   to share meat loaf or fish sticks
   with a table of friendly, smiling faces.
   Like Dahlia’s and Lori’s.
   I wonder how you make friends
   with people who think
   everyone is out to get them.
   What is friendship, anyway?
   I have no clue, never
   lingered long enough
   in one place before,
   not with Dad in the military.
   We only settled down
   in Reno when Mama got so bad
   she couldn’t find enough white space
   to grocery shop or get us to school,
   l 
					     					 			et alone make sure we
   bathed and brushed.
   Grandma, the fool, stepped up
   to the plate, volunteered to look
   out for Bryan and me.
   Poor woman had no idea what
   she was getting herself into—
   that Daddy had not only
   married a gear shifter
   but fathered one too.
   I Didn’t Realize It Myself
   Until a couple of years ago.
   Interesting, considering
   I’d watched Mom
   straddling that seesaw
   for as long as I could
   remember. Except her highs
   and lows lasted for days.
   So when I started shifting
   gears three or four times
   in a twenty-four-hour period,
   at first I blamed hormones.
   Didn’t PMS make
   you irritable? Didn’t boy
   trouble drop you to your knees
   (in more ways than one)?
   Normal adolescent
   feelings, right?
   Well, no, see … not
   when your mother’s
   a stark raving psycho.
   For years she went
   undiagnosed.
   “Bipolar” had no
   meaning when I was
   a little girl, and “schizo”
   wasn’t short for
   schizophrenic, not
   in the clinical sense.
   It only meant that some
   days Mama was fine—
   eyes not muddied, hair
   combed into submission,
   speech precise.
   Those days, her hugs
   and kisses were warm
   as summer rain,
   washing away the hurt.
   The hurt that was sure
   to fall again.
   We just couldn’t guess
   exactly when.
   When It Fell
   It was a rock slide,
   crushing, smothering,
   bruising, bone twisting.
   By the time I was ten,
   I knew to hide when Mama
   started talking to the air.
   Don’ worry, Nessa,
   He’s an angel. Can’t you see
   him, standing just there?
   I figured if someone was
   there, invisible and all,
   he must be more demon
   than angel, especially
   when Mama started yelling.
   Go away, you bastard. I’m tired
   of listening to you.
   You make my head hurt.
   That was the thing
   about her manic phases.
   They didn’t always make
   her feel what you might
   call good. Sometimes
   they made her head hurt.
   He’s pounding nails
   into my brain. Stop!
   Make him stop!
   Angel. Demon. Whoever
   he was, inside her head,
   his pounding made
   her rage. Rant. Weep.
   Sometimes, to make herself
   feel better, she took
   to hitting things with her fists.
   Walls. Doors. Herself.
   Me.
   Conner
   Ten Days Now
   All by myself in this
   peppermint green room,
   nothing to do but read,
   eat, collect lint, reflect
   on afternoons lazily
   spent, in the arms of my
   Emily. Yeah, yeah, I’m
   focused. Bent. Obsessed.
   I have to see her again,
   which means I’ve got to lie
   my way out of here, make
   the perfect self-sales pitch.
   Dr. Starr will never buy
   into “Conner the saint,”
   but Dr. Boston might
   award me that honor.
   I’ve almost got her right
   where I want her—on her
   knees, my hands caught in
   her silky blond hair as she
   whispers, I want you, Conner.
   Let me chase away thoughts
   of your Emily. Come to me
   when you get out of this place.
   I’ll show you how a real
   woman makes love to men
   such as you, and I don’t give
   a damn how high the stakes are.
   Think it’s all smoke and
   mirrors? Perhaps. But at
   our last session, I noticed
   a small lapse of judgment.
   It Was Our Second Session
   The first session, I’d pouted,
   told her nothing except that life
   was tough at home, and I
   was sick of being controlled.
   She didn’t give much ground.
   Rules are a pan of our lives,
   Conner. Only children and
   fools believe they’re immune.
   I also noticed her slate
   gray eyes and how they kept
   assessing me, in an intensely
   provocative way.
   I mulled that over for two
   days, decided it must have
   been sexual attraction,
   plotted the coming chase.
   I arrived at our second
   session prepared to win
   her sympathy. I opened
   my head, bared my brain—
   or what was left of it after
   a major dose of Prozac.
   “When Emily refused to see
   me anymore, it almost
   broke me in two. I loved
   her like Romeo loved his
   Juliet, and I know that
   lightning won’t strike again.”
   Her eyes held sympathy.
   Feeling loss is normal.
   Conner. Attempting suicide
   isn’t dealing with it so well.
   She Wanted to Know
   All about Emily, exactly
   what made her so outstanding,
   so necessary, that I’d rather die
   than unknot myself from her.
   “She made me feel like the world
   turned in my hands, like I could
   walk on clouds.” Talking about
   her, my body churned desire.
   Dr. Boston took notice,
   on one level or another.
   Her own hands trembled,
   and she spun her chair toward
   the bookcase. When she turned
   back around, the top button
   on her Jaclyn Smith blouse
   had found a way to open.
   A hint of cleavage drew
   my stare. Why disguise my
   obvious interest? I
   swear she did it on purpose.
   Lots of guys lose girlfriends,
   Conner. Most just go out and
   find someone new. Please try
   to trust me enough to explain.
   I closed my eyes, ignoring
   both request and décolletage.
   “I can’t think about her
   anymore.” Distressed, I stood.
   Dr. Boston rose, neck-
   line dipping. It ’s hard to share
   secrets. Trade, next time? One
   of yours for one of mine.
   Right.
   Tony
   Today, They Tell Me
   My dad is coming to visit.
   Wanting an accounting of
   what his money’s buying, is
   my best guess. No doubt
   he’ll be disappointed.
   I’m still just crazy Tony.
   I remember the last time
   I saw him. I was nine,
   and peeing my pants,
   waiting for the judge
   to tell me what a bad
   boy I’d been. Oh yes.
   I’d been very bad, and
   Dad stood at the back
   of t 
					     					 			he courtroom, hat
   in hand, a tear in his
   eye. ’Course, if he’d
   really cared, I wouldn’t
   have been there to start
   with. He never once
   came to visit after he
   heard my sentence:
   Nine years (the max) in
   a juvenile detention facility.
   They let me out early due to
   good behavior and funding
   cutbacks. Seemed the voters
   didn’t give two cents about
   feeding and schooling hardcore
   kids. Rather than build
   bigger facilities, so they could
   lock up more kids longer, as
   space was needed, they cut
   delinquents loose early.
   Lucky me, they didn’t care
   who the kids happened to be.
   I Learned a Lot
   In juvie, before they sprung
   me. Learned when to shut
   my mouth, when to scream;
   how to glom on to the guys
   with power, tap into it and
   suck real hard, suck them
   inside out. Learned to play—
   sports, people, the system;
   learned that there was no
   such thing as love, only
   lust. I knew about lust
   already. I’d grown up
   immersed in it, and it was
   at the core of my young
   incarceration. Ma never
   admitted her part in that,
   never even acknowledged
   that the whole thing happened.
   Larry is a decent man,
   she said, when I told her
   about it the first time.
   A bit rough around the edges,
   yes, but he’d never ever