You Are Not Here Page 2
 is to talk to a girl
   they’d probably never heard of.
   “Annaleah?”
   “Yeah. I’m gonna go.”
   “Do you want me to come over?”
   “No. I’ll talk to you later.”
   I hung up the phone
   and looked around my room.
   There were pages from magazines
   and posters on the wall,
   photos of friends,
   piles of dirty clothes,
   and all of it seemed absurd.
   It was absurd
   that I had dirty laundry
   and that Brian
   was dead.
   Idiopathic hypertrophic subaortic stenosis.
   That’s what the Ledger said
   was the cause of death.
   The wall between the chambers
   of Brian’s heart became thickened
   and blocked the flow of blood.
   The article said there was no way
   to prevent it,
   that there would have been
   no symptoms,
   and that it would have happened
   lightning-fast
   and without any pain.
   They saw IHSS clearly in the autopsy.
   There was no doubt about it.
   All the rumors that Brian had overdosed
   or that there was an outbreak of meningitis
   were ruled out.
   The thought of Brian on an autopsy table,
   cold and alone,
   except for a doctor,
   makes me want to throw up.
   The thought of someone
   looking inside of Brian,
   holding his heart,
   is surreal.
   How can a person be
   filled with life
   and then be empty?
   Where does it all go?
   I wonder
   how many people
   are walking around
   with something silent
   and terribly wrong inside them.
   Our bodies are so complex.
   So many opportunities
   for something to go wrong—
   it’s amazing that people
   aren’t dropping dead
   on the streets all day long.
   I wonder if Brian knew
   what was happening.
   Was he scared?
   Was he in pain?
   Did he see his life
   flash before his eyes
   like in the movies?
   I wish I had been there
   to hold his hand,
   brush the dark hair
   away from his cloudy blue eyes,
   whisper to him over and over
   that he was loved.
   But I doubt my face
   was the very last one
   he’d wanted to see.
   Brian and I met
   on the first really warm day in March.
   The kind of day where you feel
   as if your bones are thawing out,
   and all you want to do
   is be outside.
   So I went for a walk
   and found a sunny spot by the bay,
   where I sat and stared at the water.
   I don’t know how long I was there,
   but it was a while.
   When I finally got up,
   I heard someone say,
   “But I’m not done yet.”
   I quickly turned around.
   Not twenty feet behind me
   was a guy about my age.
   He was holding a sketchbook
   and smiling.
   He was cute,
   really cute,
   with dark brown hair
   and blue eyes.
   I couldn’t believe
   that I hadn’t heard him
   come up behind me.
   I couldn’t believe
   that he had been drawing me
   the whole time.
   I suddenly became self-conscious.
   Had I done anything embarrassing
   while I was sitting there,
   like pick my nose
   or fix a wedgie?
   I walked toward him
   and looked down at his sketchbook.
   There I was,
   sitting in profile on the hill.
   It mostly looked like me.
   The only thing that was different
   was that he had put
   an imaginary gust of wind in my hair
   so that it floated behind me.
   “I’m Brian,” he said.
   “Annaleah,” I replied.
   He asked which way I was walking,
   and I pointed in the direction of home.
   “I’m going that way too,” he said.
   As we walked, we talked.
   We were both juniors.
   He went to the nearby high school
   and I told him that my school
   was a few towns over.
   We tried to see
   if we knew people in common,
   but it didn’t work.
   Most of my friends
   were from school and didn’t live nearby.
   Most of his friends
   were from the neighborhood.
   Before we split to go different directions,
   he asked for my phone number.
   I couldn’t believe
   how easy this was.
   Guys in my school acted
   like I didn’t exist.
   And random guys this cute
   never asked for my number.
   So I gave it to him.
   But he never called.
   The next time I saw him
   was kind of like the first.
   We ran into each other
   two weeks later by the bay.
   It was only sort of by accident.
   After we met,
   I started taking walks by the water,
   hoping to run into him.
   When we talked this time,
   it was as easy
   as it had been before.
   We discovered
   that as kids we’d both been obsessed
   with Arlene’s, the local candy store,
   that had since turned into a travel agency.
   I told him, “During the summers when I was little,
   I hung out at the pool with my friend Marissa.
   We were always wandering around barefoot,
   and sometimes, without even realizing,
   we’d start walking and end up
   at Arlene’s, more than half a mile away.
   That place was magnetic.”
   “I know. That candy was like crack.
   They had everything: Sugar Daddies and Babies,
   Charleston Chews, Laffy Taffy, Swedish Fish—”
   “And candy lipsticks and cigarettes,
   Now ’n’ Laters, Nerds, Fireballs, jawbreakers—”
   “The Lemonheads were the best,” he said.
   “I was more of a Candy Button girl.”
   “Gross. You ate paper,”
   he said, giving me a little shove.
   I tried to imagine an eight-year-old Brian.
   He’d have been scrappy.
   Rail thin with scabbed knees.
   “Maybe we fought
   over the last Laffy Taffy,” I said.
   “Maybe…”
   This time when we parted,
   he promised to call
   and he did.
   Our first date
   wasn’t much of a date.
   Not that Brian ever actually
   used the word “date.”
   When he finally called,
   he asked me to “hang out.”
   That afternoon, our conversation
   was like an epic road trip—
   but with no map to guide us
   and all the time in the world
   to get where we were going.
   We meandered, lost our way,
   doubled back.
   It was nice not ha
ving
   any friends in common.
   I felt like I could be me
   without all the crap
   that came with me.
   I could just show Brian
   the parts of me that I wanted.
   So I didn’t mention my dad,
   or that my longest relationship
   had been for three weeks
   in camp to a boy who kissed
   like he was searching my mouth
   for something he’d lost,
   or that even though senior year was looming,
   I had only skimmed the college catalogs
   my mom had been stacking on my desk.
   Instead I said,
   “I’m reading The Bell Jar by Sylvia Plath.
   But it’s going really slowly.”
   “Why?” he asked. “Too boring?”
   “No. The opposite.
   It’s so amazing that I have to stop
   every few pages to read passages twice.”
   The topic of crazy people reminded Brian
   of the hysterical laughing fits
   he has while watching Family Guy.
   “I can watch that show for hours
   without even taking a bathroom break.”
   “I’m that way about documentaries—
   especially ones about ancient Egypt or the ocean.”
   That led us to talking about vacations.
   “A few years ago, my mom and I
   went to Mexico, and while I was snorkeling,
   I got the worst sunburn of my life.
   A few days later, my back started peeling.
   I looked like a molting reptile or something.”
   “That’s freaking disgusting.
   But get this: I was at a concert last month
   and this huge, tattooed guy
   had an iguana on his shoulder.
   I almost barfed up my beer.”
   “Do you go to concerts a lot?”
   The only concert I had ever been to
   was the American Idol tour a few years ago.
   And that was with Marissa and both our moms.
   Not something I wanted to brag about.
   “Yeah. I try to.
   Nothing’s better than leaning against a speaker
   and feeling the bass vibrate
   through my body.”
   Which eventually led him to
   “This one night, my friend Peter and I were
   at a show in the city and missed the last train home.
   So we wandered around the Lower East Side,
   bought bread still hot from a bakery oven,
   and watched the sun rise up over the East River.
   I think it was one of the best nights of my life.”
   That afternoon felt like
   one of the best days
   of my life.
   Brian and I went on like that for weeks.
   We’d go for walks or hang out
   at whoever’s house had no parents.
   We’d listen to music,
   rarely do homework,
   and mostly hook up.
   He never drew me again
   after that first day at the bay,
   and I always wished
   he had.
   At home, I can’t stop
   looking in the mirror
   at the circles under my green eyes,
   the splotchy skin, matted curly hair.
   Today is definitely not
   a day for mascara.
   It’s not even a day
   that I should be thinking
   about my face
   or what I am going to wear.
   I look in the mirror again
   and think, Brian
   will never cry again
   or have red eyes.
   He will never laugh
   or kiss
   me again.
   We had our first kiss
   on the sidewalk
   in front of my house.
   As Brian leaned in,
   things disappeared
   one by one.
   The trees.
   The houses.
   The cars.
   The sidewalk.
   Gone.
   There was just
   my breath
   and his.
   His lips
   on mine.
   I’ve never been to a funeral,
   unless you count all the times
   I buried pet hamsters
   or baby birds that had fallen
   from their nests.
   But I’ve been visiting this cemetery
   since I was little.
   I don’t know how old it is,
   but the oldest date legible
   on the gravestones is 1831.
   Some stones are so old
   that I can’t read the writing—
   time has rubbed them clean.
   I like running my hands over those,
   and wondering
   what they once said.
   But it’s different
   when I see gravestones for babies
   that had barely lived.
   When I see those,
   I can’t stop thinking
   about how tiny and light
   the caskets must have been
   or how their mothers must have sounded
   as they watched those caskets
   disappear beneath the earth.
   It’s getting late.
   I need to take a shower
   and get dressed.
   The shower is a good place to hide.
   You can’t hear the phone ring in there
   or see that you have seven new texts
   and four new voicemails.
   Your friends cannot ask how you are.
   They cannot look at you
   with their pity faces.
   They cannot hear you cry.
   No one can see your tears,
   not even you.
   Brian is the only person
   that I’ve ever taken a shower with.
   It hadn’t occurred to me
   how different it would be
   from being naked while lying down.
   In the shower, the lights are on,
   your makeup is running off,
   your hair is flat against your head.
   There is nowhere
   and nothing
   to hide.
   After a few minutes,
   I got over it
   and we took turns under the showerhead,
   splashed water at each other,
   and washed each other’s backs.
   It reminded me of being a kid at the pool—
   the playfulness, the games,
   the water in my eyes
   making everything blurry.
   When Brian looked at me
   and said, “Turn around,”
   I did, but I was wrong
   about what he wanted to do.
   I could feel his mostly hairless chest,
   warm against the back of my shoulders,
   as I waited
   for something to happen.
   I was surprised to hear the sound
   of shampoo squirting out of the bottle
   and to feel a cold blob of it
   landing on my head.
   I turned around and gave Brian a squinty look.
   “What do you think you’re doing?”
   I asked playfully.
   “Turn around,” he said with a smile.
   How could something I do
   almost every day without thinking
   be so amazing
   when someone else did it for me?
   “That feels nice,” I said
   as he massaged my scalp
   and lathered the shampoo
   through the tangle of dark hair
   that fell to the middle of my back.
   “Lean your head into me,” he said
   as he guided my head under the water
   and rinsed off the shampoo,
   being careful
  
; not to get soap in my eyes.
   Next he put in the conditioner
   and combed it through with his fingers.
   He rinsed my hair again, then wrung it out.
   He did this
   without saying
   a single word.
   But I didn’t need any.
   I understood his silence.
   After my shower,
   I start to get dressed for the funeral.
   I know I’m supposed to wear black,
   but that seems too ordinary.
   Everyone will be wearing black
   and I
   am not
   everyone.
   I start with underwear.
   I open my drawer and see
   the light blue ones with bumblebees.
   I smile.
   Brian liked those.
   That was one of our jokes.
   The first time we really hooked up,
   he was wearing boxers
   with lobsters on them.
   The second time,
   he had on ones with polar bears.
   I couldn’t stop laughing
   because I thought he only wore
   boxers with animals on them.
   He swore it was a coincidence
   and that those were his only two,
   but I always made fun of him for it.
   I look in my closet
   and settle on wearing
   a dark purple skirt, a black shirt,
   and the bumblebee underwear.
   Marissa is waiting for me
   in front of my house
   so we can walk
   to the funeral together.
   She’s way more freckled from the sun
   than the last time I saw her.
   She is wearing a black skirt,
   black shirt, and sporty silver sandals.
   Her thick, straight, blond hair
   is pulled into a simple ponytail.
   I bet she didn’t have to think
   about what to wear.
   She’s a pro.
   Both her grandmothers died last year.
   I push open the screen door
   and walk outside.
   Marissa has been meeting me
   at my front door
   since we were little.
   But never
   for something like this.
   “Annaleah…
   are you ready?” she asks.
   I hang my head down,