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    Burned

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      hold, tug hard, and allow

      them to enter heaven.

      As I sat through that sacrament

      meeting, observing those women

      smile and nod and kowtow,

      my warped little mind

      wondered if any of them ever

      dreamed about really hot guys.

      Somehow, I Couldn’t Reconcile

      Any of the LDS viewpoint

      with a “wake up, tingly all

      over, and bathed in a cool

      sheen of sweat” kind of dream.

      I considered talking to Jackie

      about it. We were really each

      other’s best friends.

      What else could we be?

      Thick as mud, Mom always

      said, and why not?

      We shared siblings,

      cohabited a double bed,

      confided concerns,

      divvied responsibilities.

      Traded secrets.

      Plotted the future.

      Besides, who else

      but my closest sister

      could understand

      the uncertainty of our lives?

      Still, I was pretty sure

      she couldn’t relate

      to spicy dreams about

      Justin Proud.

      Mom was out. Jackie

      was out. I tried to

      think of a friend who

      might understand.

      Oh Yes

      I had a few friends,

      upstanding Mormon girls all.

      Becca and Emily

      lived just around the corner.

      We’d known each other

      since primary, and

      before too many sisters

      made it nearly impossible,

      we used to play together.

      In grade school we walked

      to the bus together, sat as if glued

      together, giggled together.

      Confided hopes and dreams.

      But our moms knew each

      other, our dads held

      church callings together.

      Once things at the Von Stratten

      house started to dive south,

      I didn’t dare talk to Becca

      or Emily about them.

      Once baby detail fell more

      and more to me, I didn’t

      have time for outside activities.

      Becca played outstanding

      soccer. Emily sang outstanding

      soprano. I was an outstanding

      diaper-changing machine.

      So we’d chat a bit at church,

      walk to class together,

      discuss a hunk du jour,

      without believing he might

      ever belong to any of us.

      Sometimes we’d go to church

      activities together, but in

      the final analysis, we had

      very little in common.

      Not like Jackie and me,

      who had almost everything

      in common and no secret

      worth keeping from each

      other. At least not then.

      But Neither Becca

      Nor Emily could possibly

      answer my questions about

      maintaining all manner of decency

      while a person dreams.

      So I decided to pose the question in seminary.

      Wait. Do you know about seminary?

      See, come high school, Latter-Day

      teenagers spend an hour each weekday

      morning, before the first bell rings,

      being reminded of Who We Are.

      We met at Brother Prior’s house.

      Dad drove me on his way to work.

      Afterward, I could walk to school

      with other good Mormon kids,

      the “right kind” to have as friends.

      Brother Prior repeated scriptures,

      though we’d heard them a thousand

      times already. It was his job to reinforce

      our values and keep our testimony strong.

      He did not encourage hard questions.

      Once, after one of Dad’s really bad

      Saturday nights left Mom too battered to chance

      Sunday services, I arrived at Brother Prior’s

      on Monday morning, weighted heavily.

      I didn’t hear more than a select few words:

      respect…

      expect…

      require…

      Finally, I jumped up. “Excuse me,

      Brother Prior, but is it okay for a man to…”

      Nine of my peers turned and I caught

      something strange in their eyes,

      something…

      knowing.

      Did They Know

      About Dad and his deepening

      relationship with Johnnie

      Walker Black scotch whiskey?

      How, despite the church’s

      prohibition of all things alcoholic,

      he only drank more and more?

      Did they know why Mom rarely

      left the house and often wore

      dark glasses to services?

      How she never said a word,

      and neither did we, though

      we knew we really should?

      How, no matter what happened

      the night before, the next day Mom

      and Dad would be tandem in bed?

      How Jackie and I would get up,

      straighten up, dress the little ones

      and take them outside to play?

      Did they know how maybe once

      a year Dad would confess to

      the bishop, promise to do better?

      Or how every time he fell

      back off the wagon his rage

      only seemed to grow deeper?

      I tried to find answers in their

      eyes. But all I found behind

      their blinks were blank walls.

      I couldn’t cough out the rest

      of my question. Instead I decided

      to look like a total dolt.

      “…Never mind. I forgot

      what I was going to say.

      It wasn’t important, anyway.”

      Later, However

      My cowardice came back to haunt me,

      wrapped in Mom’s muffled screams.

      And now, the dream thing preyed on my mind.

      I’d never been so impressed by a dream.

      I mean, it wasn’t a nightmare, not at all.

      But its honesty ran chills down my spine.

      Was it really something I wanted, deep down?

      Would I rot in the grave because I wanted it?

      So I stood up and dared to ask Brother Prior,

      “Are we responsible for our dreams?”

      Serena’s jaw dropped. Marla giggled.

      Mike and Trevor poked each other.

      Brother Prior looked completely perplexed.

      I’m sure I don’t know what

      you mean, Pattyn. Let’s get back

      to our scriptures, shall we?

      Maybe It Was the “Shall”

      Maybe it was just his obnoxious tone,

      but I decided not to let it drop.

      “But are we? I mean, if we dream,

      let’s say, about killing someone,

      will God hold us responsible?”

      Did you dream about

      killing someone?

      “No…” I fixed my eyes on his.

      “…but I did dream about sex.”

      The girls gasped. The boys laughed.

      Brother Prior turned the color

      of Mom’s rhubarb-cherry pie.

      Uh. Um. Well, that’s fairly

      normal for someone your age.

      “What do you mean, ‘fairly’?

      And how does God feel about it?”

      I was center stage, everyone

      waiting to see what came next.

      But for once I didn’t care.

      Uh. Um. Well, I can’t really

      speak for God, Pa
    ttyn.

      “Really?” Then what, exactly,

      was I sitting there for?

      Journal Entry, March 23

      Brother Prior is an idiot. And I’m

      supposed to swallow his garbage

      like it doesn’t even taste bad.

      Well, it stinks! Ask him about

      Joseph Smith, he can recite

      an entire oral history.

      Ask him about dreams,

      he pretends like he

      doesn’t have them.

      Ask him about God…

      I’m not sure he even believes

      God exists.

      Do I?

      Does Mom?

      Does Dad? I mean, really?

      I know his past haunts him.

      But if he truly believes

      he and God are brothers,

      meant to live together

      in the Great Beyond,

      can’t he ask for a hand,

      a way to silence his ghosts,

      without Johnnie WB?

      Or is his drinking sin

      enough to make his Heavenly

      Sibling turn His back?

      The Next Day in Chemistry Lab

      Mr. Trotter partnered

      me with Tiffany Grant.

      Her style was low-ride

      jeans, belly-baring tops

      and designer tennis shoes.

      Oh good, she cooed. I get

      the smart one. Guess I won’t

      start any fires today.

      Tiffany and Bunsen

      burners were incompatible.

      One time she singed the ends

      of her perfect hazelnut hair.

      My life was in danger!

      Tiffany poured water

      into a beaker. You light

      the burner, Pat.

      Pat? That’s what you did

      to a dog’s head. Part of me

      wanted to say something

      nasty. The cautious part won

      out. “Please call me Pattyn.”

      That’s actually a pretty name.

      Her carrot-colored fingernails

      tapped against the counter.

      Actually? As I added salt

      to the beaker, Mr. Trotter

      stepped out of the room.

      Not two minutes later, guess

      who walked through the door?

      Justin Sauntered Over

      Totally

      defining the word

      “saunter.” For

      one completely

      insane

      minute, I forgot

      about my lab

      partner and actually

      thought

      he was coming

      over to talk to me.

      A fine, prickly

      mist

      of sweat broke

      out all over my body,

      chilled by a jolt of

      reality.

      Justin barely glanced

      at me before turning

      to Tiffany.

      Hey, gorgeous.

      Still on for Saturday?

      Zap!

      I was

      nobody. So

      why would I think

      he wanted to talk to me?

      And why wouldn’t he want

      to talk to Tiffany, who had

      everything I would never have:

      beauty, money, confidence (okay, conceit)?

      Justin

      slid his arm

      around her tiny

      waist, walked his long

      fingers along her exposed

      skin. I couldn’t keep from watching

      out of the corner of one eye, jealousy

      seeping from my pores, sourdough perfume.

      Tiffany

      pretended to be

      offended. “Stop it,

      Justin. Everybody’s

      watching. And what if Mr.

      Trotter comes back right now?”

      But she didn’t try to move his hand

      and in fact, curled tighter against his torso.

      Zap!

      I was nobody.

      Someday, would

      another nobody slide his

      arm around my substantial waist,

      walk his hand up under my homemade

      blouse? And would I draw back into the curve

      of him, close my eyes, and take pleasure in his heat?

      Daydreams Bite

      At least in chemistry lab.

      As my body broke out

      in a bone-chilling sweat,

      Mr. Trotter snuck up behind me.

      Don’t add the oil yet, Pattyn.

      Pay attention!

      I jumped, knocking over

      the beaker of salt water,

      with an oil float.

      Exxon Valdez in miniature!

      I’m surprised, Pattyn.

      Usually you’re so careful.

      Usually I wasn’t confronted

      by sex dreams in the flesh;

      living, breathing sex dreams,

      with a Tiffany twist.

      Clean up your mess. Then

      perhaps you’d better start over.

      I turned to apologize to my lab

      partner, but she and Justin

      had slipped out the door, no doubt

      before Mr. Trotter returned.

      Timing is everything.

      Timing Was Poor

      The next afternoon—Friday

      afternoon. Mom asked me

      to run out back to the storage

      shed to get a jar of spaghetti sauce

      from our stash of emergency supplies.

      Imagine, storing enough

      food and water to nurture a family

      of nine for a year, “when the shit

      hit the fan and it all came crashing down.”

      Another Latter-Day Saints edict.

      Dad’s aged Subaru was already

      parked out back. Some Fridays he

      got off early from his job, working

      security at the state legislature.

      He saw it as a decent occupation,

      which paid the bills

      and provided insurance and retirement.

      I saw it as kind of boring most

      of the time, with the odd takedown

      to provide a rush of adrenaline

      and a blush of importance.

      Anyway, somewhere between stacks

      of batteries, boxes of bullets,

      and countless cans

      of tuna, Spam, and beans

      was Dad’s stash of Johnnie WB.

      Weeknights, he’d duck outside

      for an after-dinner belt. Just enough

      to allow sleep. But come Friday

      afternoon, he’d head straight for his

      good buddy Johnnie. They partied hearty.

      And the party had already started.

      As I Approached the Shed

      I heard his voice, thick

      as caramel on his tongue.

      Leave me alone. I

      can’t help you now.

      Part of me wanted to run.

      Part of me had to listen.

      Goddammit, Molly,

      go away. Please.

      Molly. His first wife.

      The true love of his life.

      I miss Dwight too,

      you know I do.

      Dwight, who carried soldier

      in his genes.

      I couldn’t tell him not

      to go, could I?

      Their first son, killed in a

      firefight in Somalia.

      What’s that? Fuck Douglas,

      the friggin’ fag.

      Their second son, until he

      came out of the closet.

      No, dammit. No son of mine

      will take it from another man.

      So he told him never to show

      his face nearby again.

      But you didn’t have to do

      what you did!

      One son dead, the other

      shunned, Molly folded.

    &
    nbsp; Don’t you know how

      much I miss you?

      Put a .357 into her mouth,

      pulled the trigger.

      Oh God, Molly,

      please stop crying.

      The Long Pause

      Told

      me it

      wasn’t

      Molly who

      was sobbing.

      I’d never heard

      my father cry

      before.

      How

      many

      times

      had I tried

      my best to hate

      that complicated

      man. But this

      tiny piece

      of me

      kept

      thinking

      back to another,

      happier time, when

      Mom loved Dad.

      And me. And

      Dad loved

      Mom.

      And

      me. At

      least as much

      as he could with

      that dead, cold space

      growing inside him,

      that place no

      amount

      of love

      could

      ever settle into.

      That impenetrable

      arctic land where his

      ghosts had carried

      his heart.

      I Sort of Remember

      Crawling up into Daddy’s lap,

      when Dad was still

      Daddy,

      nodding my head against

      his chest, soaking in

      the comfort of his heat,

     

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