The Truth About Alice(39)



I stood there for a second after the swinging door shushed shut, and I walked into the Slut Stall.

Killer Alice did it with Santa Claus. Merry Christmas HO HO HO!

I sat on the toilet and I pulled my legs up under me. I put my chin on my knees. I cried so hard, and it felt so good. It felt so good. I cried until snot was just pouring down my nose and into my mouth. I sobbed and I sobbed and I sobbed. Someone whose voice I didn’t recognize came in and asked me through the door if I was okay, and I didn’t answer. I didn’t even try to stop sobbing. I just kept crying.

Finally, when I realized whoever came in might go get a teacher or something, I pulled it together and came out and washed my face. I walked down the hallway and out of one of the side doors of the building and started walking toward my house. It’s so easy to cut school at Healy High. I don’t think my Chemistry teacher even noticed I never came back. I just walked toward home. I didn’t even have my backpack or my coat—I left them both in my locker—but I didn’t care. The only thing that mattered was leaving that building as fast as I could.




I feel like the baby was a boy. I don’t know why. I just do. I have no reason to think that or anything. Maybe I feel that way just because I wanted it to be.

If I ever get pregnant again, I hope it’s a boy. I would say I’ll pray it’s a boy, but I don’t know if God listens to me anymore. It’s scary to say this, but I don’t know if God exists, to tell you the truth.

But if I do end up having a girl, there are so many things I’ll do for her. So many things I swear I’ll do for her.

I’ll never walk into her room without knocking.

I’ll never read her personal stuff without asking her permission.

I won’t fake emotions in front of her.

I’ll tell her she’s special just because she’s who she is.

I won’t act like I’m perfect.

I won’t scare her. I won’t let her be scared of me.

I won’t tell her I know all the answers.

I won’t lie to her.

And if she ever feels awful or scared or alone or goes through something terrible and miserable and horrible, I won’t leave her in her room all by herself. No, I’ll crawl into bed with her and hold her in my arms, and I’ll let her cry and cry all she wants, and I’ll press her little head into my neck and let her sob tears on me, and I won’t tell her I know it will get better, and I won’t promise her she won’t always feel this bad, and I won’t make her stop crying. I’ll let her cry for as long as she needs to. As long as she needs to. As long as she needs to.





Kurt

When I arrived at Alice’s house that early spring evening, Alice greeted me with a smile at the door and said, “So, I have a surprise!” Oh, to have a quick wit about me, to be able to respond with some clever answer. But I just followed her into the kitchen and asked, “What?”

“Look!” Alice said, pulling out a math quiz from her binder. Her face was gleeful. “An 88! Do you know how crazy this is for me? An 88!” Next to the circled grade Mr. Commons had written “Much Improved!” and underlined it.

I was thrilled and also upset. Upset that this 88 meant Alice would most likely no longer be requesting my help in mathematics. Gone would be our once or even twice weekly visits together. Gone would be the nights I could soak in her face, her eyes, her smile, the way she grips her pencil and bites her bottom lip as she works, the way she grins to herself when she gets something right.

Gone would be our conversations. The ones that—ever since the day we had lunch together at my house—have more frequently started meandering away from talk of constants and variables and begun entering into other territories. Our families. Our likes and dislikes. Our favorite things. Our funny habits.

I know, for instance, that Alice still holds her breath when she walks past the historic city cemetery on the way home from school, even though she knows it’s a silly superstition. And Alice knows, for example, that elevators make me claustrophobic. (“So I suppose it’s a good thing that we only have two of them in Healy,” Alice observed with a laugh.) And I know, for instance, that Alice’s mother is dating a man over in Clayton and sometimes leaves Alice all alone for a week at a time. (“Once she forgot to pay the power bill and I had to get ready for school in the dark, if you can believe it,” she confessed with a shrug, like she was used to such annoyances when dealing with her mother.) And Alice knows that back in first grade I liked to imagine that young, pretty Miss Sweeney could somehow become my mother since my real mother was gone. When I told that to Alice, she smiled at me.

“You know what? I kind of used to imagine that, too,” Alice had admitted.

But now, all of that sharing will be going away. Because of a wonderful, terrible 88.

I supposed my expression must have given away my sadness because Alice’s face—her beautiful face—turned from excited to confused.

“Oh,” she said, her voice soft. “Do you … you think I … I mean, I should be getting As?” Then she smiled. “Kurt, it’s nice to have your faith in me, but come on. An 88! You’ve got to be happy over this. We worked so hard.”

“No, Alice, I am,” I said. “I’m very happy for you. But I’m just…” I took a breath. I could tell Alice how I felt. I could do it. “I guess I’m just worried that maybe you won’t need my help anymore.”

Jennifer Mathieu's Books