by Creed Kidney
I open my eyes. I am standing in front of my house, 55 Timmi Lane, and everything is
tinted a pale, cornflower blue. The grass shifts gently beneath my bare feet as the trees that
cradle my home rock themselves to the bidding of the breeze. Their sound has always
comforted me, a gentle white noise against all the mental cacophony, but there’s none of
that right now. No extra sounds in my head, no wayward thoughts and anxieties bouncing
back and forth. I take both of my hands to my ears to cover them. I can still hear the trees.
My hands themselves are not in any way blue, and I appear to be as I always have
been. I proceed toward the front stoop of my home.
I gently turn the knob and the door gracefully enters into the home, no push
required, and no wooden screech of obstinance; it just easily lets me inside. Curious, I close
the door behind me; it was naturally just as easy and entered back into its pocket quietly,
though I can still hear the trees.
Without thought, I make my way up the stairs, turning left at the landing and
making my way down the hall, looking longingly at the closed, ghostly blue door.
Everything is still blue, but it seems to be only the bare bones of the home I once knew.
There are no badly taped pieces of magazine or cardboard to my door, and no decorations
adorn the walls of the second floor, nor the rooms of the first. As the whispers of the trees
soothe me further into a state of hypnosis, I clutch the doorknob to my room.
The foundation of my time here is all that remains: a bed, a nightstand, a dresser and
wardrobe, and a bookcase. My closet doors are gone, revealing rows upon rows of
labeled cardboard boxes.
“Early Memories,” “Mom,” “Competitive Swimming,” “The Marshall County
Fair,” all compartmentalized individually and neatly. I don’t know if I’m able to speak, but
there’s nothing I really want to say; I feel an itch on my face for a need to be reactionary, to
be excited or confused, but all I can hear are the trees.
My eyes are drawn to a particular row of boxes, the first one labeled, “Zachary.” I
slowly move towards it, my body moving with the pulsing sway of the forest around my
childhood home. I gently remove the box from its space in the assorted wall. I hold it in my
hands for a moment, sliding off the top with an air of caution.
*
I open my eyes. I am sitting in the chapel of the high school I attended as a
freshman, Wheeling Central Catholic. I can no longer hear the trees. My vision unclouded
from the cornflower hue, I look at him. Zach. He’s sitting next to me. I like to think that
he’s my friend. We eat lunch together with his two twin brothers. They say I am a good
friend to have. I am very happy.
It is Day as a Knight, where eighth graders are allowed to come to the school to shadow
other students, participate in fun activities, ask questions, and be sent home with free
stuff knowing full well that it would be the last free thing that school would ever give them.
I had been ostracized by what felt like all my friends for even considering the notion of
going to Wheeling Central, as it broke the natural pilgrimage all Marshall County
students must take, that which ultimately leads them to the holy city of Moundsville,
West Virginia, basking in the glory of John Marshall High School.
I am out of place. A sore thumb in a catalog of perfectly manicured fingers, but he talks
to me. We get along very well, and it makes me excited to think that I have a friend.
We spend the day together, side-by-side, and he explains many things to me, and I, him.
At the end of the day, when people are finding their parents and shuffling into
minivans, we seem to get lost in the mix. My ride isn’t there yet, so I look for him,
possibly for comfort, or maybe for a ride; I also desperately want to get his number
so we can talk over the summer and further prepare for high school
together. I can’t find him.
*
I feel myself being drawn away from the memory, sliding the lid of the box back
into place. I don’t enjoy the ending.
The next box is labeled “Ethan P.” I smile to myself, trading the box I have for the
one still in the mix.
*
I open my eyes. I am laying in my bed at home. The walls are only starting
to be filled up with different clippings, drawings, and notes. My first bookcase broke,
so a random assortment of books and other various tchotchkes are piled on the
floor, lining my wall. I hold my phone above my face, waiting for an answer;
the screen lights up and it vibrates in my palms; a message from Ethan flashes
across the screen. I smile.
He has the same name as my best friend, and he makes me laugh. He’s very
talented and we’re lucky to have a lot in common. He goes by Chip, for some reason;
I think it’s cool and different, but I always call him Ethan. I started calling him
Pondie—Pond Scum, when I’m upset–he thinks it’s funny.
I stay up until the wee hours of the night to Skype him. We both want to
make sure that our parents aren’t awake to hear us. We laugh and joke with one
another and change our profile bios to each read “997 miles” because it’s how far
apart from one another we are. I absentmindedly scroll through Greyhound bus
ticket listings as he talks about his friends from school.
I make him a birthday present and ask my mom to help me ship it to him.
She’s very confused and upset, yelling at me in the car about how I’m going to die
alone of AIDS and burn in hell. I hope he likes the gift.
*
I close the box slowly, half-wanting to remember but always longing to
forget. I miss him.
I reach for the next box, “Henry,” and almost stop myself. I look around,
as if hiding something, and easily draw the box out.
*
I open my eyes and I’m looking into his. They’re deep brown in color and
handsome, but I can’t go any deeper, I’m only able to take him in on a surface level.
His olive skin is gleaming under the neon lights, the bridge of his strong, Roman
nose, catches flares of pink and green from the ceiling. He smiles softly as he holds
my waist in his hands, the only thing keeping me from melting into a puddle on
the floor. John Legend’s, “All of Me,” plays in the background.
There’s a group of girls on the other side of the room, watching us intently,
even two of the counselors for the camp stand on their toes on stage to look at us.
“Should we just get this over with,” I ask him, nervously, not knowing how to
initiate absolutely anything.
“What?” he asks.
I kiss him, wanting to pull away fast when all I can hear is the sound of girls
screaming, but sink deeply into it when he pushes back towards me. I get nervous
and put my head in his chest, laughing.
I felt love in the basement of Marshall’s Student Union that night.
*
I quickly shutter the box before I’m reminded of anything else, perfectly content
in that being all there is to remember about Henry.
I keep the box out, thinking I might return to it, as I draw out the next,
reading “Ethan H.”
*
I don’t open my eyes. I’m immersed in a passionate make-out session in the front
seat of Ethan’s Toyota Tacoma. It smells atrocious. An olfactory cocktail of sweaty
soccer equipment and mango Juul pods seem to exhaust all my senses, but I don’t think
Ethan would have it any other way. Thankfully, he smells amazing. His cologne battles
all the scents of the truck in my nose as I lose myself further and further into his
intoxication. My brain is on fire.
He takes a hand and puts it up my shorts. I pull away from him, surprised,
asking him why, sprinkled with interjections of no and how I thought we were having fun.
He reassures me that we are having fun, but that we could always have more. I ask
if we can keep kissing.
We’re focused entirely on each other again. He reaches over. I’m half expecting him
to put one of his hands up my pants again, but instead takes my hand in his. I smile,
clasping his hand tight as I kiss him deeper.
He takes my hand and moves it over to his side of the truck, putting it on his
crotch. I open my eyes, confused, as he whispers in my ear, “Do something with it.”
*
I take a minute to process the memory, always getting caught up in the last
few minutes before I ask him to take me home. I struggle to move the box from my lap.
There’s one box left in the row. I recognize it as being freshly organized,
with new bits and pieces being added every day. I smile, reassured, as my mind
drifts away from the night with Ethan H., the heartbreak of Henry, or the longing for
Ethan P. and Zach. I brush my fingers against the label “Ean.”
*
I open my eyes. The room is dimly lit, a soft pink emanating from behind the TV
across from me. The soft pitter-patter of rain can be heard as each drop meets the
roof of the condo, sliding down the gentle slope to kiss the Tudor windowpane.
I’m in his bed, covered and warm by a plush new bedspread I like to think he
bought for us. He sleeps quietly beside me. I look at him in the rose-colored light,
tracing his silhouette with my eyes.
I shift my body closer to his, putting my head on his chest and laying a hand
on his left shoulder; he awakes for a second, accommodating me, and gives me a
gentle kiss on the forehead. I feel safe.
I lie upon his chest and think of everything he is to me, how important he is to
my life, my story, and how very lucky I am to have found him. Never would I have
imagined that I would be able to have someone like this, to have someone like him.
I close my eyes. I can hear the trees.