things would be worth the cancer even if I was outside the walls, if no one was going to come and take me away.
She unbuttons her gown. Takes my shirt off. Next my pants. My underwear. She pushes me down, onto the bed, her palms cold against my skin. I feel her lips, her hot breath, on my stomach, my belly button, my groin. . .
âClose your eyes,â she says.
âYouâre sure? You donât usuallyââ
âPlease close your eyes.â
I close my eyes and moan quietly. I donât want her to stop, but I force myself to say, âAre youââ I leave the thought hanging. When she doesnât answer, I donât ask again.
When sheâs done, I do her. Then I roll out of the bed and say, âDonât move a goddamn inch.â
She moves her toe a goddamn inch, her eyes twinkling mischievously.
Downstairs I make blueberry pancakes, because Alice and her grandma would eat them on summer evenings, out on the porch. Grandma would sprinkle sugar on top. It would go dark and her grandma would teach her the constellations, Big Dippers and Little Dippers. Her grandma writes sometimes, and Alice writes back, of course she does; they reminisce about celestial silverware.
I kick open the door to Aliceâs room, struggling with the tray of food. Pancakes, jam, scrambled eggs, two glasses of milk. Three steps into the room I catch my foot on a pair of Aliceâsshoes and everything that comes up must go down. I want to jest, to make light of the situation.
Instead, I begin to cry. She made these sucking noises, and I let her make them, the girl whose grandma taught her the constellations, the same constellations I told her I was uninterested in, and there is the lingering taste of her in my mouth. I tasted Alex, once. He tasted betterâlike salty-sweet potato chips. The truth is I didnât like returning the favor for Alice; the truth is it made my neck hurt.
She hugs me, I get a whiff of her strawberry shampoo, and I feel nauseous. She mustâve taken a shower while I was preparing thisâ mess.
âWhy did youââ I hesitate, canât get the words out. I look at AliceâAlice, who believes, who read an article on AwayWeGo about Coca Colaâs alleged anti-union activities in Latin America and now wants to kick it off campus, she wants to save Latin American union workers, and she wants to save me, too, to have me counseled into happiness. I taste vomit in the back of my throat as we clean up the floor together.
âNoah?â she asks as I throw a wet paper towel in the trash and head for the door to grab another roll.
âIf Iâd known this would happen, Iâd have made sandwiches,â I say, wiping at my eye with my arm.
âYou still can,â she says, missing my joke. âWhen we do our picnic. If you can suspend your nothing-matters-everything-is-futileââ
âA tall order,â I say, to humor her.
ââyou might actually have fun! I promise you will.â
Iâm waiting for her to tell me that talking to someone about my feelings would help. To tell me that crying over a spilled breakfast is. Not. Normal.
âLove you,â is what she says. Her eyes flick away from my face.
âLove you, too,â I mumble back, and my heart cramps up. Good liars have stone hearts. I donât have a stone heart, but that doesnât make me a good person.
It does, however, make me a bad liar.
âNoah,â she says, her voice hesitant. âItâs coming up, isnât it? Itâs very soon now?â
She means my birthday.
âYes,â I admit. âSoon.â
I can still drink Pepsi though right?
In light of Coca Colaâs history of human rights violations, we, the undersigned, are resolved to demand an immediate end to Westingâs affiliation with Coca Cola. It is our duty, as citizens of a global community, to act in a manner that is commensurate with the
Billy London
S.D. Thames
Mick McCaffrey
Robert Leader
Mike Kupari
Jana DeLeon
Brenda Rothert
C.N. Lary
Erica Stevens
Lynn Richards