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I Am Water Page 7

after all.

  An anchor

  digs into

  my chest.

  Fine.

  I trade Renny

  my best

  flannel shirt

  for a day

  with

  his truck.

  Renny takes

  the shirt and

  I head off

  to surprise

  my

  flaky

  art student

  of a

  boyfriend.

  159

  Surprise Visit, October

  The campus is

  so much bigger

  and fancier

  than I ever thought.

  Marble pillars and

  cobbled paths.

  Definitely not out of

  an old dairy

  and lumber town.

  The women here wear

  heels and leather jackets.

  Makeup that

  makes them look French

  and cat-like.

  I have no idea

  which dorm is his.

  I’m counting on him

  being in the library,

  cramming. But,

  as I cross the courtyard,

  I hear, “Hannah?”

  I turn. And say,

  “Victoria?”

  160

  In the flesh.

  She wears

  a bright red

  miniskirt and

  a sheer midriff shirt.

  A kerchief

  tied around her neck

  to complete

  the outfit.

  Blonde hair

  puffs out

  to her shoulders

  as she stretches

  her long

  model legs

  beside a man-made

  pond.

  I’m planning on

  just giving her

  a grade-A

  stink eye and

  walking by.

  Then I do

  a double-take.

  There’s a boy sitting

  so close to her.

  Too close.

  He’s wearing

  a button-up

  161

  black shirt

  with the V

  opened up

  on his chest.

  Neatly trimmed

  Beard.

  Close-cropped

  haircut on the sides

  with

  the top longer

  and slicked back.

  But

  those eyes.

  Those

  bright green

  eyes and a

  stray dark curl

  poking out on

  his temple.

  “Ezra?”

  162

  A Betrayal

  Now I’m

  walking fast.

  Straight

  toward them.

  I can’t

  help it.

  Ezra jumps up

  in surprise.

  Victoria just

  looks me

  up and down

  in my

  oversized

  sweater,

  loose

  jeans,

  and

  ratty

  beanie.

  And

  laughs.

  “You look

  just like

  your brother,”

  she snickers.

  163

  “So

  what’s

  wrong

  with

  that,

  princess?”

  I shoot back.

  I look

  to Ezra for

  some form

  of support.

  Now it’s

  my turn

  to be

  surprised.

  Ezra looks

  nervous

  and

  embarrassed.

  “Jeez,

  Hannah,”

  he says,

  under his breath.

  “Do you have to be

  such a boy

  sometimes?”

  Before running,

  wordless,

  to Renny’s

  164

  truck,

  I throw

  my whole

  stack

  of paintings

  right

  into

  the

  pond.

  I hope all

  the colors

  run together.

  And

  the pictures

  all blur

  beyond

  recognition.

  Like

  his memories.

  Like

  how I

  must have

  always been

  in his

  memory.

  165

  Quarry, New Moon

  I skipped

  Coffee Shop

  Friday.

  That night

  the drought

  breaks.

  Everything

  the sky

  has been

  holding back

  thrashes

  and

  floods.

  Rain

  beating

  down

  on the land

  as I sit,

  sopping wet

  and

  not

  caring

  at

  all.

  It feels

  good

  to see

  166

  the water

  wailing

  and

  commanding

  the earth

  like

  the sorceress

  it always

  was.

  That’s right,

  I think

  to myself.

  Water is

  the

  strongest

  force

  on

  earth.

  I am

  more

  powerful.

  And

  I will

  erode

  him.

  I realize

  all the women

  I know

  are rivers.

  Peaceful.

  167

  Beautiful.

  Able to

  calm

  a man

  with one

  look.

  Fierce.

  Stormy.

  Able to

  destroy

  a man

  in one

  blow.

  Men have tried

  to navigate them.

  Use them for

  their own purposes.

  But, when it

  comes down to it,

  the rivers are

  the true force

  to be

  reckoned with.

  Men gain

  safe passage

  by learning

  to respect

  a river.

  168

  Because

  the river

  gives

  and takes

  as it chooses.

  And,

  after all

  these years,

  I’ve decided

  the river

  is

  a woman.

  Yes.

  She must be

  a woman.

  To allow

  so many

  men

  in her waters

  and still be

  as strong

  as she

  is.

  169

  An Uprooting

  There is still dirt

  under my fingernails

  from ripping up

  half the plants in

  his greenhouse.

  The ginkgos

  because

  I don’t want

  to remember.

 
; The jasmines

  because

  we’re not

  in love.

  The clovers

  because

  I don’t want

  to think of him.

  There is still dirt

  under my fingernails

  from him.

  There is still him

  under my fingernails.

  170

  An Offering

  The night

  quickly

  grows cold

  and dark.

  But

  I can’t

  move.

  Can’t

  leave.

  So I

  lie down

  and fall

  asleep.

  I awake to

  a wool blanket

  draped across

  my body.

  Logs

  crackling.

  The smell of

  smoke and

  a pile of wood

  stacked neatly

  behind me.

  A reflector fire.

  171

  Laying in

  the dirt,

  next to the

  makeshift pit.

  Glowing

  in the

  orange light

  is

  a

  purple

  lighter.

  172

  Voicemails I Don’t Leave #1

  I know

  in the beginning

  you wanted

  more of

  a label.

  A banner.

  A cry to rally

  behind.

  I didn’t know

  how to do that.

  This was

  the best I had.

  The woman

  in me

  loved the man

  in you.

  Loved the boy

  in you.

  Loved the woman

  in you.

  Loved the woman,

  the boy woman

  in me.

  The boy

  in me

  loved the woman

  173

  in you.

  The woman

  in me

  loved the woman

  in you.

  In you, in you,

  in you.

  The lines blur,

  but

  I know I loved

  in you.

  I didn’t know what

  to call that.

  Or me.

  Or us.

  I didn’t know I had

  to call it anything

  in particular.

  That,

  like a dog,

  it would

  only answer to

  a specific name.

  I never wanted

  to collar it

  anyways.

  The woman

  in the boy

  in the woman in me

  loved the woman

  in the boy

  174

  in the woman in you.

  But

  I do know that,

  in the end,

  it was

  the man

  in you

  that left

  the woman

  in me.

  Yes.

  In the end,

  it was

  the man.

  And that,

  in particular.

  In naming.

  In calling

  it out for

  what it is.

  Is what

  is so

  hard to

  forgive.

  175

  Voicemails I Don’t Leave #2

  Horoscope for tomorrow:

  Time is in

  the house of

  your head.

  Your heart is of

  its own rising.

  Do not forget

  the stars

  from which

  you come.

  But

  make

  your

  own

  darn

  future.

  176

  Voicemails I Don’t Leave #3

  And in the end,

  it comes to this.

  People are at once

  endlessly

  more complicated

  and

  remarkably

  more simple

  than

  I

  ever

  thought.

  177

  November

  The night of my

  art show arrives.

  And no one has seen

  my new paintings.

  I holed myself up

  in my room for

  the last month

  to make them

  after drowning

  my entire exhibition

  in the pond at

  Ezra’s school.

  I’m wearing a

  billowy blue dress,

  a plaid shirt,

  my usual Converse sneakers,

  and a nervous smile.

  One by one,

  the town piles in.

  Teachers.

  Classmates.

  My river rafting boss.

  Renny.

  Sam.

  They circle the room

  without speaking.

  178

  Take in

  my portraits.

  Portraits of my

  water dreams.

  A painting of

  a single flame

  lit inside

  a waterfall.

  Portrait of

  longing.

  A painting of

  waves crashing

  through the open doors

  of a half-ruined barn.

  Portrait of

  misplacement.

  A painting of

  a violinist

  fiddling underwater in

  a hidden bog.

  Portrait of

  fantasy.

  And so on.

  179

  A Recognition

  The coffee shop

  eventually empties.

  Sam and I

  sit down

  to split

  a chocolate banana

  milkshake.

  He’s still looking up

  at the paintings

  in the kind

  of trance

  I first found

  him in

  all those

  years ago.

  Then,

  he turns to me

  and says,

  “Your titles

  feel right.

  But

  they’re also

  missing something

  important.”

  “And what’s that?”

  180

  I ask,

  shooting my

  straw wrapper

  at his chest.

  “They’re

  self-portraits,

  too.”

  181

  January

  I’ve been

  talking

  to Renny

  lately

  about college

  next year.

  About

  going away

  to school

  on the

  other side

  of the

  country.

  Leaving is

  a scary thought.

  But

  never leaving

  scares me, too.

  I want to be

  in an

  outdoor program

  where I can

  learn to guide

  bigger water.

  Plus I’ve

  never lived

  by the ocean.

  182

  And,

  well.

  Like all water,

  I kind of

  always knew

  I’d find myself
/>   ending up there.

  I’ll come home

  to visit

  as much

  as I can.

  I’ve already

  promised Sam

  I’d write

  every week.

  He’s staying

  in town

  to learn

  welding.

  He’s

  all excited

  about getting to

  play with

  fire

  for a living.

  183

  A Brother’s Advice

  Last night

  I brought

  the stool in.

  Talked

  the idea

  over with

  my brother.

  I told him

  I was

  scared.

  “What

  if

  I

  can’t

  do

  it?”

  He adjusted

  his ball cap

  and leaned

  forward.

  “You know,

  Hannah.

  Someday

  someone

  is going to

  184

  tell you

  you can’t

  do something.

  And then

  you’ll go

  and do it.

  It’ll be

  a great

  feeling.

  But

  it’ll make

  you wonder

  all the things

  you didn’t

  do before

  because someone told you

  you couldn’t

  and you

  could

  have.

  I believe

  in you,”

  he added.

  185

  Wind

  Renny,

  I’ve decided,

  is air.

  Wind.

  He’s the breath

  you need when

  everything else

  feels like

  too much.

  He’s the gentle push

  in the right direction.

  The nudge forward

  to help you along.

  Wind and water

  together

  make for either

  a smooth day

  of sailing or

  a perfect storm.

  Not

  a bad

  team.

  186

  Quarry, Crow Moon

  The moon

  is full

  tonight.

  For the

  first time,

  I burn

  a bundle

  of

  sage.

  I pray

  for Renny.

  For Sam.

  For my

  last months

  of school

  and for

  the big

  trip

  west.

  Then,

  I

  pray

  for

  Ezra.

  I pray

  that someday

  187

  he’ll learn

  to love

  a river.

  To respect

  the water.

  Because then,

  maybe,

  he’ll know

  how

  to

  treat

  a

  woman.

  188

  Water Dream #4

  Somehow I know

  it is 10 years

  or so

  in the future.

  I’m not sure how.

  Because

  we look older,

  sure. But