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    Saving Red

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      “I’m gonna cat-sit the heck out of you.”

      Sequoia Yawns in Response

      Then she hops off

      Red’s lap,

      strolls across the grass to the empty bowl

      next to the bathroom door,

      and looks back at us

      accusingly.

      We snap into action, locate the sack

      of cat food in the garage, and fill up her bowl.

      As we watch her scarf it down,

      I suddenly realize how hungry I am.

      “Gosh,” I say. “It’s two thirty already,

      and we haven’t even had breakfast.”

      “We’re starving!” Red says.

      And at first I think she means that we are.

      But then she tells me that The Duke

      is demanding high tea,

      and that Lana says she had

      a foreboding premonition of famine.

      And I’m starting to worry

      that Lana might be right . . .

      Because after paying the hotel bill,

      all I have left of my Hanukkah gelt is $2.54—

      not even enough for a couple of bagels

      with cream cheese at the Nosh.

      So I Suggest

      That we stop by my house

      to get some of my babysitting money,

      and then go over

      to Hot Dog on a Stick.

      But Red nixes that idea

      with a “No thanks. I better not.”

      Then she suggests we search through

      the trash bins in the alley for soda cans.

      She says they pay a nickel apiece for them,

      over at the recycling center.

      But I nix that idea—

      far too many cooties involved.

      Then I offer to loan Red some money.

      Just until Cristo gets back and pays her.

      But she says she’s decided

      not to take any money from Cristo.

      She says, “I should be paying him.

      I mean, look at this place!”

      She leaps up

      and dances around the lawn.

      Then she flops back down again,

      and for a while,

      the only sound in the yard

      is our stomachs—growling a duet . . .

      Somehow This Sound Triggers a Memory

      A memory of a Sunday afternoon

      a few years ago

      when me and Rosa and Jasmine

      were at the Promenade

      and we were practically

      starving to death,

      but all of us had used up

      our allowances for the week.

      So I texted Noah.

      He showed up ten minutes later

      and taught us how to get plenty of food

      without having to spend a dime . . .

      “Hey!” I say to Red. “Why don’t we

      make this a get-something-for-nothing day?”

      “What the heck is that?” she asks.

      So I explain:

      “It’s when we wander around the city

      seeing how much free stuff we can get.”

      “I like where you’re going with this,” she says,

      flashing me a smile.

      Before We Head Off

      I talk Red into

      posing cheek to cheek

      with Sequoia and Pixel and me,

      for a big group selfie.

      Then I send it to Cristo with this caption:

      My friends and I think your backyard is cool.

      But it would be way cooler

      if you were in it.

      A minute later,

      Cristo sends back a photo of himself—

      posing cheek to cheek with a little stuffed bear

      dressed like a New York Yankee,

      along with these words:

      My bear and I think NYC is cool.

      But it would be way cooler

      if you were in it.

      And Cristo looks so ridiculously cute,

      cuter than his bear, even,

      that I have to just stand here

      and stare at him for a minute . . .

      Red Peeks at the Picture Over My Shoulder

      Then, before I can stop her,

      she grabs my cell

      and types:

      What kind of weirdo

      poses with a dumb little stuffed bear

      to try to impress a girl?

      I scramble to grab it back from her.

      But it’s too late.

      She’s already clicked send.

      That horrible message

      is hurtling through cyberspace

      like a nuclear missile.

      My fingers fly over the keys.

      Ack! No! That wasn’t me. That was Red.

      She grabbed my phone.

      I stare at my cell.

      But I don’t see those three pulsating dots

      that would mean he was texting me back.

      I’m So Mad

      I’m literally seeing red.

      The irony of which does not escape me.

      “Jeez!” I hiss. “Why’d you do that?”

      She shrugs and then starts giggling.

      “I’ve got a problem with impulse control,” she says.

      “Especially when I’m manic.”

      “You sure do,” I growl. “And it sucks.”

      Red’s face falls.

      She bites her lip.

      Then she says,

      “The Duke thinks

      I owe you a royal apology.”

      “Oh yeah?” I snap.

      “And what does Lana think?”

      “Lana thinks I’m a bitch,” she says.

      And even though I’m still mad,

      I can’t help laughing at this.

      And then Red’s laughing too,

      and she’s telling me she’s sorry

      and promising she’ll never

      do anything like that again.

      And I’m accepting her apology

      because I know she couldn’t help it.

      It was just her mental illness talking.

      And then—Cristo calls!

      I Dash Across the Lawn

      So we can talk in private,

      glancing back over my shoulder at Red.

      She lifts her chin at me

      to let me know she understands.

      As soon as I pick up, Cristo says,

      “That’s okay. Red’s right. I am a weirdo.”

      “No you’re not.

      You’re funny and generous, and—”

      “And I’m a weirdo,” he interrupts.

      “But that’s what you like about me, right?”

      “I like everything about you,” I say.

      And then I instantly wish I could unsay it.

      Because it made me sound

      like one of those gushy girly-girls.

      Which I totally am not.

      Or at least I haven’t been . . . until now.

      A mortifying silence follows.

      But I guess if God hadn’t

      wanted silences to be mortifying,

      he would have made them . . . unmortifying?

      Then,

      finally,

      Cristo says,

      “I like everything about you, too, Molly.”

      And when he says that,

      I have to flop down onto the grass

      and just lie here on my back for a while,

      trying to catch my breath.

      Then He FaceTimes Me

      And when Cristo’s eyes

      pop onto my screen

      I feel like I just drank

      a ton of caffeine,

      and my heart turns into

      a jumping bean,

      like it thinks that my chest

      is a trampoline . . .

      Oh man . . . That face

      that’s on my screen—

      it’s the handsomest thing

      I’ve ever seen!

      And We Just Sort of Gaze at Each Other


      Grinning

      these goofy grins,

      till someone calls

      Cristo’s name.

      Then he sighs and says he has to go,

      because his parents are taking him

      skating at Rockefeller Center

      and they’ve got to hail a cab.

      I say I have to go too,

      because I’m taking Red

      on a get-something-for-nothing day

      and we’ve got to catch a bus.

      He doesn’t

      even ask me what

      a get-something-for-nothing day is.

      He just says,

      “Well, the first thing

      you can get for nothing is the use

      of the two bikes in my garage—rent free!

      Forget about taking the bus!”

      Honestly. I don’t think I could

      like this guy any more if I tried.

      Having him in my life

      is kind of like dating Santa Claus.

      I mean,

      if Santa Claus

      were young and cute and single,

      instead of old and fat and married.

      Though I’m not sure that one date,

      forty-seven text messages,

      two FaceTimes, and three phone calls

      exactly qualifies as “dating.”

      Not that I’m counting or anything . . .

      The Bicycles Are Perfect

      All tricked out with headlights for night riding.

      One of them even has a big basket

      mounted on the front

      that’s just the right size for Pixel.

      We head to Trader Joe’s first.

      But Red seems a little worried about going in.

      So I tell her, “If you act like you belong

      somewhere, they’ll never kick you out.”

      Then I lead her through the door

      and right over to a plate of free samples.

      Now that Red’s all cleaned up,

      no one even looks twice at us.

      We come back for seconds

      (and thirds . . . and fourths!)

      of those scrumptious little

      pig-in-a-blanket thingies.

      Then we ride over to Bloomingdale’s

      for free Bobbi Brown makeovers.

      And after that, we hit the food court,

      for a fast-food-sample rampage.

      And I guess the makeup

      makes me look as old as Red,

      because two cute guys in their twenties

      offer to buy us tacos at Pinches.

      But Red says, “No thanks. We better not.”

      And as she steers us away from them,

      she whispers, “Never accept tacos—

      or candy—from strangers.”

      On the Way Back to Cristo’s Backyard

      We spot one of those

      Little Free Libraries

      in someone’s front yard.

      “Whoa . . . ,” Red says.

      “Until today, I never noticed how much

      free stuff there was in this world.”

      She chooses I’ll Give You the Sun.

      And I reach for a beat-up old copy

      of Fifty Shades of Grey.

      Pixel gives me a look like,

      “Do you really want to read that smut?”

      And I give him a look back, like, “Yes. I do!”

      But the second I crack it open,

      my phone rings.

      And it’s my mom.

      I slam the book closed

      and shove it back inside

      the wooden box.

      Maybe

      she really does have eyes

      in the back of her head.

      She Always Used to Say She Did, Anyway

      Though, if she does,

      she hasn’t exactly

      been using them much lately.

      At least not since Noah disappeared.

      Ever since then

      she’s been pretty much checked out—

      with the aid of all the medical marijuana

      her doctor prescribes for her migraines.

      I personally

      don’t even think she has headaches.

      But she sure gives me headaches.

      Like the one she’s giving me right now—

      bugging me, out of the blue,

      with all these questions:

      like where am I and who am I with

      and when am I coming home?

      I tell her I’m with a friend

      and that it’s the same friend

      whose house I slept over at last night

      and that she’s invited me to sleep over again.

      But Mom says it’s the third night of Hanukkah

      and she needs me to come home

      to help her light the candles on the menorah.

      I say, “Can’t Dad help you?”

      She’s quiet for a minute, then she says,

      “Dad’s out with a client.”

      “That figures,” I say.

      “Yeah,” she says. “It does.”

      And her voice sounds so shaky,

      so small and lonely and sad,

      that I don’t even try to convince her

      to change her mind.

      Though I Sort of Wish I Had

      Because now that Red and I

      are pedaling down the alley,

      getting closer and closer

      to Cristo’s backyard,

      closer and closer

      to the moment

      when I’ll have to say good-bye

      and leave Red there all by herself,

      I can feel my throat

      closing up,

      my fingers

      starting to tingle,

      the samples in my stomach

      swirling around

      like soggy clothes

      in a broken dryer.

      I Know I Should Just Say Good Night

      And head home to be with my mom,

      but I find myself following Red

      into the yard and asking her

      if she thinks she’ll be warm enough.

      And even though

      she says she’ll be fine,

      I search every cabinet in the garage

      until I find some blankets and a pillow for her.

      Then I lug them over to the lounge chair

      and start plumping up the pillow and tucking

      in the blankets and basically doing anything

      else I can think of to delay saying good-bye.

      “Look,” Red says. “I know you’re afraid

      that when you come back in the morning

      I won’t be here. But I promise you—

      I will be.”

      Even so, I make her pinky swear on that.

      Then I give her a bone-crushing squeeze,

      put Pixel into the bike basket,

      and head toward the gate.

      But before I push it open,

      I turn to take one more look at her.

      Because I’m still scared to death

      that this might be the last time I ever see her.

      When Pixel and I Get Home

      The house doesn’t smell like latkes.

      It smells like pot.

      Mom’s sitting on the couch as usual,

      staring at the TV.

      Only tonight

      it’s not on.

      Which sends

      a shiver up my spine.

      I give her an awkward hug.

      She gives me one back.

      We say the blessing, light three candles,

      and sing the song:

      “I’m spending Hanukkah in Santa Monica,

      wearing sandals, lighting candles by the sea . . .”

      It used to seem

      like such a jolly little tune.

      Tonight

      it just seems tragic.

      Maybe it’s because Dad isn’t here.

      Or because Noah isn’t here.

      Or because

      neither of them are.

    &nb
    sp; And it’s all my fault.

      God I Miss My Brother Tonight

      When I was a little girl,

      I practically thought

      he walked on water.

      If I could have sewn myself onto him,

      like that shadow in Peter Pan,

      I would have.

      Noah was the kind of guy who loved little kids.

      Even when he was still

      just a kid himself.

      Whenever we saw a lemonade stand,

      he always made a point

      of stopping.

      And he wouldn’t just buy one cup either.

      He’d buy three—one for me

      and two for him.

      Then he’d guzzle down both of his

      and tell the kids it was the best lemonade

      he’d ever had in his life.

      And before we left,

      he’d always ask them

      for their recipe.

      That’s

      the kind of guy

      Noah was . . .

      And That’s the Kind of Guy Dad Was, Too

      Maybe it’s hereditary.

      Maybe Noah got all that

      nice-to-kids-ness from him.

      Before Noah disappeared,

      before Dad turned into

      a workaholic,

      he was the father

      that all the other kids used to wish

      was their father.

      In the summertime,

      he’d leave work early once a week,

      just so he could chase

      Noah and me and our friends

      all around the yard with the hose,

      pretending to be Robot Sprinkler Man.

      And in the wintertime,

      if Dad heard about snow falling

      anywhere within 150 miles of home,

      he’d skip work, load the family

      into the car, and just keep driving

      northeast till we found it.

      It was so magical—

      like suddenly being

      inside of a snow globe . . .

      But those days are long gone.

      Noah’s disappearance

      shattered that globe,

      and everything else.

      I Toss and Turn for Hours

      And when I finally manage to drift off,

      I have another coffin nightmare.

      Only this time, it’s Noah and me

      who are trapped inside that dank, airless box,

      both of us pounding

      on the lid with all our might,

      pounding and pounding,

      our knuckles bruised and bloodied,

      making

      no noise at all . . .

     

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