How to Save a Life

First bell rang.

“To be continued,” Marnie said, and put her hand on my arm. “Until then, remember: Social. Poison. You start associating with Evan Salinger and even we can’t help you with the fallout.”

Adam nodded solemnly and the two of them headed off to their next class leaving me standing there with a hundred more questions.

I sighed. Fucking cliffhangers.

I walked to my next class, and recalled what Marnie had said about standing next to Evan. Like standing under power lines.

It’s not like that, I thought. Not an itchy buzz but a warm ray of light…even when he wasn’t looking at you.





All through Calculus, I didn’t stop thinking about Evan. Since I was thirteen years old, I’d gotten really good at not giving a shit about other people. But I sort of felt bad for him. Not for being institutionalized, but because he’d needed to be. He’d hit some kind of breaking point, I guessed. I could appreciate that. I’d been there too, and wore the scar to prove it.

That afternoon, while Jared was fumbling his way up my skirt behind the bleachers, I asked him about Evan.

“What?” Jared stopped, blinked at me. “What about him?”

“Why do you guys rag on him so hard?”

“He’s a freakshow, that’s why.”

“Seems pretty normal to me.”

“He’s a mental case and shouldn’t even be allowed at school.” Jared was intent on his prize, like a little boy rummaging in a cookie jar. “He’s a liar and a lunatic.”

Jared’s enthusiasm was getting rough and it was unspooling a sickening sensation in my gut.

“The fuck do you care, anyway?” Jared said, grabbing at me hard.

“I don’t,” I said, and bit down on his neck, harder.

Jared tore away from me. “What the hell?”

My terms. My call. Always, my call.

The mantra repeated in my head and I made my hand reach for Jared, not the other way around.

“You need to chill,” I said, and I reached for the zipper on his fly. Me. Because it was my fucking choice.

Jared eased back toward me. “I just don’t want a hickey. Laney will see.”

I slipped my hand down his pants. “I’ll try to be more gentle.”

“Good.”

He tried pushed me down to kneeling but I was already on my way.





I left the field at quarter to four. The sun was sliding toward the horizon, and the school was empty as I made my way to the bike rack. Mine was the only one there beside some rusted junker someone must have abandoned.

I unlocked my bike and was about to climb aboard when my stomach suddenly heaved. I nearly puked right then and there.

Jesus, calm down!

That had never happened to me before, and there had been a lot of before over the years. A lot of sneaking off; a lot of bleachers or storage closets or backseats of cars. So why was my body suddenly in revolt?

I sucked in several deep breaths, reminding myself why I did that shit with guys like Jared Piltcher in the first place. Because I wasn’t a victim. I got to say who and when and how much. Just like goddamn Pretty Woman.

I biked to the nearest corner grocery and bought a Gatorade and a tin of Altoids. I drank half the bottle and chewed up three mints before continuing to my house. I was calmer by then, my stomach had settled down.

Gerry was at work; the house was silent. I wended between unpacked boxes of our meager belongings to my bedroom. I shut the door, sat at my desk overlooking the neighbor’s chained-in yard and pulled out my notebook.

I had an idea for a poem. A couple sentences I might be able to work into something. I had to write it down before it fled my brain or burnt up in shameful memories.



My body is not my own

He showed me that

In the secret nights

private parts

now

Public property

And a lesson learned:

Give it away before they

take it

so you can pretend

it doesn’t

hurt.





If I never heard the sound of spoons and forks scraping against bowls and plates, I’d die happy. That was the background music to almost every breakfast, lunch, and dinner at the Salinger household. Every meal, scrape, scrape, scrape. The soundtrack of a family with nothing to say to each other. But for little Garrett. His little voice was like a flute piping up amid the scraping. Tonight’s dinner was no different.

Norma sat at one end of the table, lips pursed, surveying the scene and eating in silence. Harris sat at the other, shoveling in his food like you shovel coal into a furnace: for fuel only. A newspaper lay opened beside his plate. On the sides of the table, Merle and Shane sat beside each other, Garrett and I across from them.

“Hey, Evan, you want to play catch with me tomorrow after school?” Garrett asked. His sweet round face looked up at me with unabashed affection. It made my chest ache. My nine-year-old little brother was the only human being in Planerville who didn’t look at me like I was a leper.

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