Read Kiss of Broken Glass Online
Authors: Madeleine Kuderick
Tags: #Juvenile Fiction, #Social Issues, #Self-Mutilation, #Emotions & Feelings, #Friendship
Because somehow I just knew
we would always come back.
No matter what.
And that meant Dad would be Piglet forever,
and I would always be the bottom of Avery’s shoe.
I didn’t realize it back then,
but I guess it’s kind of true,
what that poet said.
How once you lose your dreams,
it’s like a snowstorm rolls in,
even if you live in Florida,
and the fields freeze over,
and you feel like a bird
with broken wings,
until pretty soon
you can’t even
remember
how to
fly.
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He’s gonna be a marine biologist one day.
But he’s not like most eight-year-olds
who want to be a biologist today,
a firefighter tomorrow,
an astronaut the week after that.
Ever since his Cub Scout troop visited
the Tampa Aquarium, he’s been saying
he’s gonna be a biologist and that was
almost two years ago.
Anyway, he’s always talking about
these random deep-sea creatures
he sees on the Discovery Channel,
like the Atolla jellyfish that lives
thousands of feet underwater
in total blackness. But whenever
it wants to, the Atolla can turn its
body into a big blue lightbulb,
and not the Kmart special kind,
but a beautiful, brilliant blue.
Glowing.
Luminous.
Unexpected.
Sean says when it happens,
the whole sea stops to watch,
and God looks down and smiles,
because that jellyfish
just goes to show
there can be light
even in the darkest places.
But what does he know.
He’s only eight.
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I plop down on the couch
to watch a daytime talk show
through that scratched-up Plexiglas.
Donya’s yelling HOOYAH
every five seconds because
there’s this girl on the show
with a coin-round face
and hair the color of pennies,
who just told her boyfriend
she doesn’t love him.
Never did.
Even though he’s the kind of boy
most girls would drool for.
Even though he’s got eyes
like slices of summer sky.
Even though he can sink a free throw
all the way from center court.
None of that can make her love him,
not for all the corn in Indiana,
because she’s in love with someone else.
A girl.
A girl who’s like cinnamon apples.
Spicy and sweet.
“I knew it,” Donya says.
She hops off the couch and struts
around the room with her boobs
flat as pancakes in that ultratight
underarmor sports bra.
“Hooyah.
Hell, yeah!”
But when the girl’s father appears,
Donya starts to grind her teeth
just like she does at night.
“Parents are hazardous to your health,” she says.
She twists her plastic wristband
around and around
until I see the red letters
printed on the underside.
The ones that say
suicide watch.
“What are you looking at?” Donya asks.
But before I can answer she’s up in my face.
“I wasn’t trying to kill myself,” she says.
“It was just a buzz gone wrong.
That’s all.”
I nod and tell her that I get it.
That I believe her.
Even though I don’t.
Then we flip through the channels
until that fat Hoosier daddy
is booed off the stage.
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I notice a piece of paper on the wall
with those little tear-off tabs
dangling from the bottom.
The paper says:
ARE YOU LOOKING FOR SOMETHING?
TAKE WHAT YOU NEED.
And the tabs say words like:
Love
Acceptance
A second chance
I look around to see if anybody’s watching.
Donya and Jag are arm wrestling.
Skylar’s dumping her uneaten tray.
Nobody’s paying attention.
So I pull off a tab.
It feels strange in my hand.
Oddly heavy.
Like the paper is holding
something bigger than itself.
The same way an acorn
holds a full-grown oak tree
inside its tiny shell.
I want to put it in my pocket.
But then I stop and think.
What if this idea sprouts?
What if it gets pink and purple with promise
but instead of growing strong like an oak tree
it just flops over and dies like my coleus plant
in the first grade and leaves me with
nothing but a dead word
and a Styrofoam cup filled with dirt?
Screw that.
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Skylar flits over and points
at the frayed edges of paper
where three tabs are missing.
“I picked
will power
,” she volunteers.
“And
discipline
.
And
self-control
.”
Her arm is outstretched and for the first time
I can see her wormy scars close up.
They look like pink leeches sucking on her skin.
I’ll never get like
that,
I think.
My cuts are so much prettier.
Thin as spider silk.
Laced around my wrists like bracelets.
In a week they’ll start to heal
and I’ll watch as they fade
from rubies,
to ripples,
to smooth opal skin.
When they’re gone,
I know I’ll miss them.
I wonder if Skylar ever had cuts like that.
Pretty as pink pearls.
Before the leeches came.
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I look away
but not fast enough
and her fragile smile melts.
“Sorry,” I say.
“I’ve just never seen scars
like that before.”
She studies me.
Traces a finger across her arm.
Tells me they’re her babies.
She’s even got names for them.
Fat baby.
Ugly baby.
Lonely baby.
Failed- a-test baby.
Dissed-at-school baby.
Argued-with-mother baby.
Why-don’t-you-just-kill-yourself baby.
My cuts don’t have names like that.
But if I gave them names, they’d all be Rennie.
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Where do I begin?
I guess we met around
the second week of sixth grade.
Right about the time I was discovering
that in middle school there’s no such thing
as being a wallflower.
You’re either popular or ridiculed.
Accepted or abandoned.
Worshiped or crucified.
There’s no in-between.
No place for invisible.
Nowhere to hide.
I was a little unprepared for that,
having been a houseplant all my life.
Comfortably nonexistent.
But Rennie took me in.
Introduced me to the black-booted,
purple-haired dress-code violators
who would one day be
the Sisters of the Broken Glass.
And for the first time,
I belonged to something.
was seen as someone.
was popular somehow.
I belonged . . .
Even though I knew that meant
I’d have to cut too.
Sometime.
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Elbow on the sink.
Right hand trembling.
Drag–––––the–––––glass–––––across–––––my–––––wrist–––––
chalky–––––dotted–––––lines–––––
don’t–––––even–––––break–––––the–––––skin–––––
Lungs are feeling tight.
Heart is thumping hard.
Rennie’s words are swirling in my head.
Just one cut to feel alive . . .
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Whoosh!
The skin tears
and I feel this rush
swirling in my brain
like a waterspout.
A finger-tingling,
tongue-numbing,
heart-pounding
rush.
And the pain doesn’t feel like pain
but more like energy
moving through my body
in waves.
Rushing.
Cleansing.
Pulsing.
Purging all the broken bits out of me
like a tsunami washing debris to the shore.
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I feel the calm,
the bliss,
the sheer weightlessness
of zero worry.
I’m floating on a smooth glass pond
with bottle-nosed endorphins
swimming all around,
splashing their tails,
smiling their perpetual smiles.
And I want this feeling to last forever.
Because if the feeling lasts,
it won’t matter what Avery says,
or what my mother doesn’t say,
or how twisted I feel inside
because I know for sure
that on this calm, tranquil pond
nothing and I mean
nothing
can ever make a ripple in my heart.
But here’s the bad thing:
The feeling doesn’t last forever.
It
never
lasts forever.
In fact, it barely lasts ten freaking minutes.
Before the guilt sets in.
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Hope.
Because part of me really hopes I can quit.
So I can stop feeling guilty all the time.
Like when I’m washing laundry in secret.
Or wasting my allowance on sterile gauze.
Or lying to my little brother, Sean, about
why I can’t go swimming with him.
Those are the times I fumble around
looking for
hope
.
I
hope
Rennie will still like me if I quit.
I
hope
I can stop wearing concealer on my arms.
I
hope
Bio-Oil really works.
I
hope
I won’t miss my scars (too much).
But then I remember those ten mind-blowing minutes,
and I think about how it feels the next day,
when everyone crowds around me at lunch,
looking at my cuts, rubbing my shoulders,
dabbing me with
I-feel-so-bad-for-you
ointment.
And I remember the spotlight of Rennie’s grin
and the way her approval makes me feel special,
and I gotta say, that’s a pretty ginormous feeling.
Like an over-the-top, Sears Tower kinda high.
And just thinking about that
makes my little wad of hope
fell like a spitball
slipping through my fingers
103 stories down
to the bottom
of
my
pocket.
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It’s been 24 hours since I got to Attaboys.
Donya says they have to give me
my official psych evaluation
in the first 24 hours,
or they’ll have to let me go.
That’s part of the Baker Act.
I guess that’s why Roger’s waving me over now.
He introduces me to this pinched-up
Pomeranian face with a clipboard.
Dr. Annoyed-To-Meet-Me
doesn’t even look up.
She just drones off
the same pointless questions
they asked in the ER.
1. Do you know why you’re here?
2. Do you think you need to be here?
3. What would you do if we let you out?
Hmmm. Let me see.
I’m here because Tara-the-Two-Face
is a big drama queen who peddles gossip
like Girl Scout cookies, and opening
that bathroom door was like selling
a thousand boxes of Thin Mints.
Do I think I need to be here?
Are you kidding me?
NO. I don’t need to be here.
But this works perfect for Tara,
because she’d do
anything
to have Rennie all to herself.
And what will I do when I get out?
First off, I’m gonna strangle Tara
with a fat wad of dental floss,
now that I know how dangerous
waxed string can be. Then I’ll friend Jag