Read Kiss of Broken Glass Online
Authors: Madeleine Kuderick
Tags: #Juvenile Fiction, #Social Issues, #Self-Mutilation, #Emotions & Feelings, #Friendship
since the second grade?
If they had to take away my cell phone,
they might as well have amputated my head.
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“Exercise time.”
I follow her to the rec room.
But there’s not much there.
Just some crumbly old floor mats,
a stationary bike, and a treadmill.
It’s not like the fitness center back home
with rows of stair climbers
and elliptical machines
and a rack of blue balance balls
just waiting to be squeezed.
I get on the treadmill and dig in my heels.
The conveyer grinds an inch. Maybe two.
Like there’s sandpaper on the bottom of the belt.
When I look up, a boy is standing inches away,
staring at me with his army-green eyes.
I notice his tangled hair, his crooked nose,
and the little scar above his lip that
makes it look like he’s about to snarl.
“I can fix that,” he says.
I step down and let him yank on the belt
just so I can watch his biceps curl
and study the small of his back
as his white shirt rises up and down.
“There,” he says, wiping his hands on his jeans.
I feel a little tickle bubble inside. Then I think—
That’s the nicest thing anyone’s ever done for me.
And if I wasn’t already in love with Chase,
I might just give this boy my number,
or maybe I’d ask him to meet me at the grocery store,
in the organic aisle, because nobody shops organic
and it would be sort of private there
and maybe standing in that secret space
right beside the flaxseeds and granola
he’d lean over and kiss me
with those sexy scar lips.
But I don’t say any of that.
I just ask his name.
“Jag,” he answers.
And I figure that means his real name
is something embarrassing.
So I tease him about it.
“No way,” I say.
“I bet it’s Stanley.
Or Leonard.
Or Marion.”
And I love how he steps closer to answer me.
“It’s Jag,” he insists. “For real.”
He looks over his shoulder,
makes sure Bullhorn isn’t watching,
then bumps the inside of my palm with his knuckles,
soft and playful, until a warm blush crosses my cheeks.
Then he says his name again.
His
whole
name.
And this time it thunders off his tongue
fast and hard like a bullet train.
Jaggernaut Mancuzzi.
And for ten star-spangled seconds,
Chase Grayson ceases to exist.
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I’m sitting in my room.
Wanting to be alone.
Daydreaming about
Jaggernaut Mancuzzi.
Bullhorn pops her head in the door.
“Are you okay?”
Five minutes later.
“Are you okay?”
Five minutes later.
“Are you okay?”
Five minutes later.
Are you freaking kidding me?
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We’re allowed to draw at Attaboys,
which just goes to show how stupid they are
because a pencil is way more dangerous than a toothbrush.
My yellow #2 is whispering to me.
About that pretty pink eraser tip.
I can almost smell it.
The scent of rubber on raw skin.
I imagine slipping my arm under the table,
and rubbing the eraser
faster
faster
faster
until my arm catches fire
and the skin splits open
and blistery liquid
drips down
to my elbow.
Like mercy.
But I don’t do it.
Even though I want to.
Because Rennie says eraser burns are for losers.
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At first my lines are soft and gentle.
A wispy willow branch weeping
at the corner of the page.
But then my strokes grow heavy.
I draw a girl with eyes closed, chin down,
and lips sealed in the smallest of pouts.
Her arms end abruptly at the wrists
and her legs trail off just below the knees.
A body unfinished.
“Is that you?” Skylar asks.
I shake my head no.
“I wish I could draw like that,” she adds.
“I just write. Poetry mostly.”
I tell her I’m no good but she doesn’t let up.
“You could be the next Salvador Dalí,” she insists.
“You know? The guy with those melting clocks.”
I do know.
I know a lot of crazy things about Salvador Dalí.
Like how he was afraid of grasshoppers
and how he kept mustaches in a cigarette case
and how he slept with a spoon in his hand
so he’d wake up to the clatter of tin
and remember all his dreams.
I know he had freaky dreams too,
with tiger-eating fish,
and giant eyeballs,
and full-grown men
hatching from elastic eggs.
And I know about
The Temptation of Saint Anthony
.
That’s the painting with the gruesome, white,
wild-eyed horse rearing on stilted legs.
I feel the hairs rise on the back of my neck
as my own dream begins to resurface.
I try to push it down, but it’s like holding
a basketball underwater—
slippery, buoyant, strong.
It won’t go away.
I curl my fingers around the edge of the paper
crushing the corner as I clench my pencil tight.
Then instead of sketching hands and legs and feet
in all the places where the girl’s body is interrupted,
I make dark, dripping lines that
bleed
off
the
page.
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Is the bathroom.
I draw there, too.
In the extra-wide handicapped stall
where I can rest my head against
the cool maroon tiles and line up
my pens like little soldiers.
It’s quiet in there and peaceful
with a sliver of light
that shines through the window.
It’s okay to be myself
in that handicapped stall,
even if being me feels
sort of like a blank piece of paper.
I don’t have to come up
with any colorful lies in there,
or force a smile until my cheeks hurt,
or roll up my long cotton sleeves,
and show off my scars,
just to fit in.
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I’d eaten my lunch there yesterday.
In that handicapped stall.
Instead of going to the cafeteria
and sitting at the back table with
all the Rennie wannabes.
Then I wouldn’t have heard how they cut
while their mothers got manicures
and how they burned squares in their skin
using salt and smooth ice.
If only I’d looked the other way
when they took off their bracelets and
lifted the cloth of their tight cotton camis.
Then I wouldn’t have seen
the angry, square welts
or the crisscross of red
that triggered me so bad.
If only I’d put in my earbuds
and cranked up the volume
to drown out the gnats buzzing
cutcutcutcut.
Then maybe,
I could’ve left school
on the 340 bus
instead of in a squad car
wearing zip-tie plastic handcuffs.
If only.
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You can’t trust anyone.
Especially not guidance counselors.
Like the phony hair flipper who acted
all buddy-buddy in the backseat
of the squad car but then left me
with Creeper in the emergency room.
She made all kinds of promises like:
You can go home as soon as your mom comes
.
But I bet she knew all along that I was hosed.
She probably signed those Baker papers herself,
right next to the rent-a-cop who dragged me
out of the bathroom and the prehistoric principal
who couldn’t stop staring at my arm.
So that just goes to show.
Even if someone says things like:
I feel your pain
I’ve been there too.
And even if that someone
wears Aéropostale and still has pimples.
And even if
she puts her arm around you
and makes you feel good for a whole wide minute.
It’s all an act.
She’s full of it.
Just like everyone else.
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That’s all we get.
My mother sounds annoyed
when she answers and that
makes it almost impossible
to put on my Oscar-winning
two-ounce voice and say:
“I want to come home.”
She doesn’t talk at first,
and I pinch the metal cord
between my fingers
like I’m trying to wring
the answer out of her.
“It’s out of my hands now,” she says.
“There’s a legal process to follow.
A psychological evaluation.
A family meeting.
A 72-hour mandatory hold.”
I wish my mom would say she’s sorry
so I could wrap her words around me
like a towel still warm from the dryer.
But she doesn’t.
Instead, we talk about orange juice pulp,
and scrambled eggs, and how Dad reacted
when she told him I was here.
I can just imagine that conversation.
Mom with her hand on her hip,
elbow out, like a bossy teacher.
Dad on the other end of the line,
shoulders slumped, like Piglet.
“Kenna was caught cutting at school today,” Mom says.
“Which class?” Dad asks.
Then Mom rolls her eyes. Roller-coaster big.
Like Dad’s a complete idiot.
“Not cutting class,” Mom says. “Cutting
herself.
”
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Then maybe he would’ve noticed
the twisted black hair ties wrapped
around my wrists like bracelets
and the leg warmers that
covered my ankles in June.
And then maybe he would’ve realized
that hair ties and leg warmers aren’t
some new fashion trend
and he would’ve demanded
that I show him all that hidden skin
and chased me up the stairs
when I stomped off screaming
how it was none of his business,
and pounded on my bedroom door
when I slammed it in his face
and ripped it off the hinges
just like Superman
to save me.
I bet I wouldn’t even be here now.
If I had a dad like that.
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Like the year Mom drove to Johns Hopkins
so Avery could visit her dead dad’s family
and talking about a dead dad was so fun
they stayed all summer and never wrote,
which is why
my
dad decided
to take me and Sean away.
I remember how he would crank
up the engine on this
old, rented motor home
and we’d drive till we burned
up like two tanks of gas,
and we’d pass the RV park
and pull off the highway on impulse
just to follow some dirt road
that led to nowhere.
Then we’d watch like a million identical
stars wink at us from the sky
for finding their secret spot,
and Dad would give us a glass
of bubbly white-grape juice
for pretend champagne toasts,
and he’d do these stupid card tricks
where the ace disappeared
and Sean couldn’t stop laughing.
There was no mother-father fallout
for skipping the five-star hotel
and sleeping on pine needles.
And everything was absolutely perfect
until Dad turned around
and drove us back home.
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I dreamed about Dad being Superman.
Or flying off the top of the Sears Tower.
Or driving an old RV into a brand-new life.