--I
JUST WANTED TO KNOW IF IT WAS A CHOICE
Flight Risk
I am six and I am sad and I am on an
airplane by myself because Mother has sent me away again, this time to Uncle
Daryl’s farm in North Dakota where there are more cows than people and where
Uncle Daryl will make me cut my hair, put on overalls and tell me, Toughen up,
Little Shit, even though I am six and a girl.
The lady, Susan, with the blue uniform
and name tag seems nice and I want to ask her if she’s a mother and if she ever
sends her children away whenever she bring a man over for a long stay, but I’m
too shy and nervous and my stomach is growling like the mean black lab the
neighbors have and I’m worried the fat-bellied man next to me will hear. I don’t want him to notice my stomach sounds
or me at all but he keeps stealing looks at me whenever I open up my Anne of
Green Gables book. I don’t know much but
I know it’s best to stay away from men because a lot of them are bad men who
want things they shouldn’t. The
fat-bellied man is so large his thick, hairy forearms are almost over in my
seat, same as his gut which is pushing hard against his shirt buttons. If he touches me for real or even says
anything I am going to scream until the lady, Susan, comes.
I have seventy-five dollars rolled up
inside my knee highs. Ten of it came
from Mother and the rest from Pop Pop, my granddad who likes to call me Fruit
Loop and pat my bottom. I’ve never had
so much money in my life and it makes me nervous though I am rich now and
should be feeling on top of the world.
From my window seat I can see the land
below so flat and neatly scarred up, laying there like the stretched out animal
hides Mother’s last boyfriend had hanging in the basement where all the crates
of puppies were lined up one after the other, cute puppies mewling like they
wanted out in a hurry, which I couldn’t blame them.
I don’t understand how airplanes work,
all these people on board, all this weight lifted up into the sky, but then I
don’t understand a lot of things like why I haven’t started first grade or why
Mother calls me “special” then laughs and laughs, especially when she’s drunk,
which is most of the time.
The lady, Susan, comes down the aisle
and asks if everything’s all right, so I nod and try to make my lips grin,
though I’m not sure if it works. She
says we’re going to land soon, which makes me even more nervous.
I look out the little door window again
and find a cloud that looks like a floating elephant. I give it the special power of granting wishes
and I cheat and make it grant me one and so now I know it’s okay to get a cab
at the airport instead of calling Uncle Daryl as I’ve been instructed to do. I’ll be strong and sure for once and tell the
cabbie to take me to a place where they treat little girls nice. I’ll give him a big tip if he does. Then when I get there I’ll show the kind
people some of my scars. I’ll tell how I
got them. I’ll tell them all the other
stuff, too, even if it makes me cry.
Then I’ll say, “I’m not ever going back,” and I’ll really mean it this
time.
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