--I'M GOING BACK TO THE START
I’ll Never Tell
The
house stayed dark but a looming moon helped me find my way past the rooms where
things were happening.
I could hear. I could hear Holly, my older brother’s
girlfriend, giggling and saying, “Not there, here.” In the other room, my brother was convulsing while
the hollow door rattled and bucked.
I
was supposed to be watching TV, but I had to pee. I didn’t want to hear them. This wasn’t my idea. They could have left me home. Eleven wasn’t that young. I’d already seen my mother kill
things—chickens and hogs. I’d felt the
burn of swinging leather on my ass.
When
they came out, it was dawn. My brothers
looked drunk and disheveled, yet, shirtless, their bodies were corded with
muscles that seemed even more engorged. The girls had reapplied their make-up. One of them smelled like molasses and brown
sugar.
“Hey,
Sweetie,” Holly said to me. “Wanna give
me a massage? I got a kink.”
My
brother sniggered. “You got a kink all
right.”
“We’re
going to do a breakfast run,” my other brother said. “You want anything?” He was asking Holly, not me.
Holly
had just lain down, smashing her face into the navy shag, so she grunted.
“Suit
yourself.”
The
screen door screeched before banging shut.
A whirl of chilled air tossed Holly’s hair, bringing up sheets of goose
flesh on both our skins.
“Any
day now,” she said.
I
put my palms together the way I did when I prayed. I left an opening and blew hot air and rubbed
so they wouldn’t be cold on Holly.
She
was soft bread dough. She was bags of
rice and my fingers trembled as they ran over the smooth grains. “Uh uh uh,” she said, pushing my hands from
where they’d slid. “Just the back.”
I
worked the gaps that lattered down her spine.
I pinched and twisted and smoothed.
“I hear you’ve got another brother, in prison.”
I
said, “I guess so.” I had never met
him. He was much older, and from another
of my Mom’s husbands.
“You
sure are shy,” Holly said. “Nothing like
Eugene and Gary.”
When
I started in on her neck, fluttering my forefingers and tugging with my thumbs,
she moaned. The sound made me
flinch. My cottonmouth was so bad that my
tongue had turned into a crusted sock. I
wondered if she could feel my pulse throbbing out of my knee.
“Tell me something,” Holly said.
“What?”
“A
secret no one knows. I’ll keep it. I’ll never tell.”
Movies
flickered in front of my eyes: horror films, chase scenes and déjà vu dream
sequences that were real.
“Come
on,” Holly said.
My
hands were still on her neck. It
wouldn’t be so hard to envelop her throat, choke her to death, but I didn’t
want to do that. I’d rather have kissed Holly,
right beneath the ear. Then, if she
persisted, I’d whisper every dark thing until she shivered and said, “Stop. Enough.”
“Waiting,”
Holly sang.
“Okay,
but you might not like me after.”
“I’m
the forgiving type.”
I
thought: I’ll just start. I’ll begin
with bits and work my way up to the really bad stuff.
“I
have a journal.”
“Like a diary?”
“Yeah, and it’s filled with secrets.”
“Then tell me one already.”
I knew the one to share, the one that would shock her enough
that she’d want the others.
“All
right, well, so, for example, two years ago I came home from school early. I had a stomach ache. No one had answered the phone when the school
nurse called, so I assumed nobody was home but then when—“
The door swung open, one of my
brothers out of breath. “Dingleberry
left his wallet at home. Do you have any
spare cash?”
Holly
sighed. “Seriously?”
“Yeah, sorry.”
She pushed me off and arched her
back. Her stomach growled. “You guys are a piece of work.”
“You
guys?”
“Hold
on,” she said. “I’ll get my purse. I’m starving.”
When
she came back, she said I could grab some juice from the fridge but the
chocolate milk was hers and not to touch it.
She didn’t say goodbye. She
didn’t ask if I minded being left alone.
She just left.
That
night I finished chores back at our house.
A minute inside my room, I could tell someone had rifled through my
things because the mattress was off kilter and I liked having my shirts and
underthings folded a certain way and now they weren’t.
The
same thing happened the next night and almost anytime I was out of the house.
Holly
had lied to me and now my brothers were afraid.
I decided to let them read the
journal and learn all of the secrets.
They knew most of them anyway, because they’d caused each one in some
form another. But I decided I’d parcel
them out, in stories tricked-up by fictitious identities and jerry-rigged with different
settings. I’d write every last story,
but make them have to do the work to figure out who they were, what they’d done,
and why.
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