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    Three Things I Know Are True

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    that was the highway

      for the logs,

      the place to dump

      the sludge,

      the hydropower

      for the paper machines

      my father used to fix.

      I can walk to the river

      from the house.

      The river is the same

      as it always was,

      wide, shining, moving

      in spring, summer, and fall,

      frozen in winter.

      I ask Mom

      why we don’t sell

      Number 23

      and move off DEAD END.

      She says that since the mill closed,

      no one is looking to buy a house

      in Maddigan.

      I don’t know if that’s the real reason

      or if it’s a game of chicken.

      We don’t move

      and neither does Clay’s family.

      It’s like moving

      would be saying

      we take the blame.

      Coffee

      Hunter is back.

      I guess it fit

      into your music schedule,

      I say.

      I’m not doing this for college,

      if that’s what you think,

      he says.

      Sometimes I’d rather be here

      than home.

      It’s quieter here,

      and I can think better.

      Got it,

      I answer,

      and I do.

      I haven’t yet seen

      soup in the soup kitchen.

      Tuna noodle casserole,

      mac and cheese,

      beef stew

      are all popular.

      And coffee.

      The coffee urn

      is like a statue in a church,

      not that I go to church.

      People gather around it

      and worship.

      I never drank coffee before,

      but I try my first cup

      and I’m hooked.

      The Eddy

      Sometimes a word gets through

      to me in school.

      Like watching a show in Swedish

      and an actress says okay.

      It was like that in world history today.

      Demilitarized zone.

      It makes me think of the eddy—

      the bend in the river

      where Jonah, Clay, Rainie, Piper,

      Justine, and I used to meet

      on Saturday nights.

      Mom always said,

      Don’t go down to the river

      in the dark.

      It’s not dark, we’d say.

      It’s half dark.

      It was always half dark,

      once our eyes adjusted.

      When it’s half dark

      on Saturday,

      I go down to the river,

      and it’s all still there.

      The cement boat ramp,

      the aluminum dock,

      the roiled river,

      full with the winter’s

      ice melt,

      running fast and muddy

      the way it does every March.

      “Demilitarized zone.”

      How could I have forgotten?

      It’s cold at the ramp,

      the wind rough off the river.

      There’s still patches of snow

      along the banks.

      Clay is there.

      Even in the half dark,

      he looks skinnier,

      his hair longer

      like he’s trying to hide himself.

      I can’t guess how I look

      to him.

      I came down here

      every Saturday

      the last five months,

      Clay tells me,

      I wanted to know

      how you were doing.

      Sorry, I say, I was busy.

      Clay looks out at the river.

      I texted you about

      a thousand times,

      I say.

      I got rid of my phone

      five months ago,

      he says.

      The bend in the river

      has places where the current

      reverses itself.

      Maybe it is a place where time could go backward

      and forward at the same moment.

      Here at the eddy with Clay,

      like the old days,

      it feels possible.

      I speak,

      playing our old game—

      Tell Me Three Things.

      There is only one rule.

      You have to tell the truth.

      I think about Clay’s father’s

      Bugz Away van.

      Tell me three things

      about bedbugs,

      I say.

      Clay holds up

      one finger.

      Bedbugs do not fly.

      Second finger.

      They can survive for a year

      without a blood meal.

      Third finger.

      Adult bedbugs

      are about the size

      of an apple seed.

      I forgot how good Clay is

      in science—

      in middle school,

      he did an experiment

      measuring pollution

      in the river

      downstream from the paper mill.

      My father

      was alive then,

      and he still had his job

      at the mill.

      Millwright

      on the night shift,

      keeping the big machines running.

      When Clay asked,

      my father told him all about

      the chemicals

      they used.

      Methanol

      Ammonia

      Hydrogen sulfide

      Hydrochloric acid

      The hydrogen sulfide

      gave our town

      its smell.

      When the smell

      went away,

      so did the jobs.

      The paper mill

      sponsored the school science fair.

      You can guess that

      Clay didn’t win a prize.

      How is your mother?

      Clay asks me.

      (That’s what I mean

      about Clay being nicer.)

      Scary, I say,

      and he looks away.

      I don’t ask about Gwen.

      My hand reaches out to his

      and holds it

      for the first time,

      like I hold Jonah’s now.

      This is my science experiment.

      Do all boys’ hands feel the same?

      His is cold

      yet a little sweaty

      in a nice way.

      It squeezes back.

      That never happens

      with Jonah.

      Since Jonah came home

      from the hospital,

      I’ve gotten to know every inch

      of a boy’s body.

      I thought there were

      no mysteries.

      But holding Clay’s hand

      is like hearing

      a foreign language—

      I can only guess

      what is being said.

      Hippies

      I peel carrots away from me.

      Hunter peels them toward himself.

      It’s not supposed to be

      a contest,

      but I know I’m right.

      Peeling away goes faster.

      Why are you here?

      Hunter asks.

      Tray art.

      I don’t elaborate.

      It’s good to leave something

      to the imagination.

      Maybe we can get together

      sometime,

      Hunter says,

      you could come to my house,

      if you don’t mind a crowd

      of kids.

      How many is a crowd?

      I ask.

      Oldest of six.

      First they created the

      babysitter,r />
      Hunter taps his chest,

      then the rest of the babies.

      Like a blended family,

      his kids, her kids,

      their kids together?

      I ask him.

      No, my mom

      really loves babies.

      My parents are kinda

      back-to-the-land

      hippies.

      My father used to say

      there were two kinds of

      hippies

      in Maine.

      The trust-fund hippies

      and the don’t-know-what-they’re-getting-into

      hippies,

      I say.

      I guess then we’re the

      don’t-know-what-we’re-getting-into ones.

      It occurs to me

      that even repeating something

      not so nice

      is not nice.

      Sorry, that’s just something

      my father used to say.

      He was born in Maine.

      So were my parents,

      Hunter says.

      Memory Metal

      Every day in chemistry class,

      I open my textbook

      to the same page.

      It lists the names and numbers

      and nicknames

      of the elements

      that make up everything

      in the world.

      Antimony, 51, Sb

      Tantalum, 73, Ta

      Californium, 98, Cf

      They don’t make any more sense

      than the rest of the sounds

      I hear in class.

      Ms. Roy fits red and green balls

      on the ends of plastic sticks.

      They’re called molecular models

      but to me

      they look like dog chew toys.

      She holds one up,

      her mouth moves,

      and these sentences break through:

      A memory metal is an alloy

      that remembers its original shape.

      If the material has been de-formed

      it will regain its original shape

      when it is reheated or left alone.

      Does Jonah remember

      his original form?

      We can’t ever

      leave him alone.

      Team Meeting

      Team Meeting for Jonah.

      All his nurses

      Me

      Dr. Kate

      making a house call.

      Mom can’t take the time

      off work

      again.

      We crowd in the messy kitchen.

      I don’t have an urn,

      but I make coffee

      in the coffeemaker,

      set out sugar and cream.

      I guess I learned something

      at the soup kitchen.

      Coffee makes a bad situation

      better.

      Team Meeting is:

      discuss what’s working,

      what isn’t.

      What the sounds Jonah makes

      mean.

      Nurse Johnny gives me a

      shout-out.

      Liv understands Jonah

      better than anyone else.

      Dr. Kate speaks up,

      You’d make an excellent nurse,

      Liv, think about it.

      Thanks, Dr. Kate,

      but I’d rather be a doctor.

      Oh, really?

      Dr. Kate tries not to look surprised.

      Yeah,

      I’ve seen how hard

      the nurses work.

      Vivian covers her mouth

      behind Dr. Kate’s back,

      but I can still hear the snort.

      Fiddle Music

      Hunter and I are both serving.

      Beef stew

      Yeast rolls

      Sliced carrots

      Peach cobbler

      It’s not like at school.

      In the soup kitchen,

      I can hear the words people in line say.

      Mostly the talk is about food.

      “I was hoping it would be stew.”

      “No peach cobbler for me,

      I’m watching my sugar.”

      “My mother made the best yeast rolls.”

      I ask Hunter something.

      Can you play fiddle music

      on that violin of yours?

      What do you mean—

      fiddle music?

      Hunter makes a face

      like I asked him if he

      could shovel snow

      with his violin.

      Ya know . . .

      And I take a clean ladle

      from the drawer,

      put it on my shoulder

      like a fiddle,

      tap my foot, and sing.

      Old Joe Clark, he had a house

      Fifteen stories high

      And every story in that house

      Was filled with chicken pie.

      There is applause, and smiles.

      The food line stops moving

      but Elinor doesn’t look mad.

      I smile back

      and take a little bow.

      This is the silliest I’ve been

      in five months.

      That back-to-the-land

      baby-loving mother of his

      taught Hunter some manners.

      He doesn’t laugh

      at my bad singing.

      I suppose if I had the

      sheet music, I could.

      Why?

      My brother Jonah

      always liked to listen

      to the fiddlers

      at the fair.

      See, I learned something else

      at the soup kitchen.

      Music

      makes a bad situation

      better.

      Fleas

      I don’t lie.

      I tell Mom,

      I’m going down to the river.

      She makes a

      faraway face

      when I say river.

      I know all about

      how Dad proposed to Mom

      in the middle

      of the swinging footbridge

      over the Kennebec,

      before the last big flood

      washed it away,

      and how they used to

      go out in an old rowboat

      to pick wild blueberries

      along the banks of the river.

      Clay is there

      in the half dark

      at the end of the dock.

      It’s not windy this time,

      and the river is calm.

      The Kennebec is very deep,

      my dad told us,

      eighty feet in the middle.

      Clay has a funny smell

      like the weed-killer aisle

      at Agway.

      Something smells weird.

      Does your dad have you

      spray the poison?

      No, it’s the truck.

      Do you want me to

      jump in the river

      and wash it off?

      We both know

      it’s about forty degrees

      in the water.

      Since the Three Things game rule is

      you have to be truthful,

      I could say,

      Tell me three things

      about your father

      or

      Tell me three things

      you wish you could undo

      but I don’t.

      I say to Clay,

      Tell me three things

      about fleas

      First Finger.

      Fleas are flightless.

      Second Finger.

      Fleas don’t have wings.

      Third Finger.

      Fleas can jump.

      I don’t point out that First Finger

      and Second Finger

      say the same thing.

      I’m practicing to be as nice

      as Clay.

      Clay doesn’t ask me

      three things

      but he reaches out for my hand

      and hold
    s my three fingers

      with his three fingers.

      He doesn’t ask

      Three things about Jonah.

      I’m not sure if I’m glad

      or not.

      Cold

      When Jonah gets a cold

      he is restless.

      His nose runs

      but he can’t wipe it,

      doesn’t know to cough

      up the gunk.

      He doesn’t even have the strength

      for loud cries.

      Cu-rah cu-rah cu-rah

      He can’t have

      tea and honey.

      He’d choke

      on a cough drop.

      I get into bed with him

      in my sweatpants

      and unicorn T-shirt.

      Liv, I can look after Jonah,

      Johnny says.

      You need your sleep

      for school tomorrow.

      That’s okay,

      I say,

      I don’t need to be awake

      in school.

      I scrunch up between Jonah

      and the metal bedrail.

      I hear Jonah’s chest noises,

      feel the warmth of his fever

      through his pajamas.

      Johnny spreads Jonah’s blanket

      to cover both of us.

      Jonah is less restless

      when I’m there.

      It’s better to be miserable

      together.

      After Jonah’s cold,

      his Suck-It-Up machine

      gets a playmate—

      Zombie Vest.

      Zombie Vest jiggles Jonah’s

      lungs twenty minutes

      twice a day,

      and Suck-It-Up

      gets rid of the gunk.

      Dr. Kate tells Mom

      Jonah can go to a nursing home

      if it is

      too much.

      He would get

      good care.

      It would be

      round the clock.

      No one would

      judge her.

      Dr. Kate would

      fully support her decision.

      We could visit

      24/7.

      Jonah would be in

      good hands.

      Dr. Kate waits for Mom

      to say something.

      When Mom doesn’t answer,

      she adds,

      And you could personalize

      Jonah’s room.

      Personalize?

      Mom repeats.

      You mean like a banner with his name?

      Mom says banner

      like it’s a curse word.

      Dr. Kate is starting to look sorry

      she brought this up.

      Not necessarily a banner,

      though of course

      it could be a banner.

      Things like posters,

      or sports trophies,

      or family photos.

      Posters?

      Mom gives Dr. Kate

      her blank look,

      the one that means

      “Why are you telling me this?

      How about not.”

      And I know right then,

      there is no way

      Jonah is going

      anywhere.

      Ears

      The school counselor

      wants to have a chat.

      He does most of the chatting.

      Your teachers say you are not

     

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