I’m Convinced You Actually Liked the Whole Wheat Pancakes

for Mom

Remember the first apartment we chose? When it was time
for us to finally live together and we had to find something fast
 
and imperfect. With the landlord who barged in every time we were too
loud—I think she had an 8 p.m. bedtime. It was stomaching that,
 
and then the new school, where I had to wear a uniform
and listen to classmates brag about how much money
 
daddy spent on them. In Spanish class, we were assigned
to draw a diagram of our homes, labeling each space.
 
I thought nothing of our four rooms, until hands started
to rise, small voices asking, “What’s the Spanish spelling
 
for movie theater?” Apparently, some of them had skate
parks. That’s when it got hard to get me to school. I
 
remember it well: your relentless hands around my relentless
ankles. Every morning, you pulled, and I fought, until
 
it was too late to catch the bus, and you had to drive me.
And every morning, you gave me a bowl of Agave syrup, with
 
some whole wheat pancakes swimming inside. You acted
like you hated them, but each morning, when I held the bowl
 
in my hands like just being near them was wrong, you’d
have me pass them up front and you’d suck them down in seconds.
 
I’ll never forget when I asked you one of my first sex
questions, and you replied with, “I don’t know, Google it.”
 
But it was that morning of 6th grade when I didn’t want to
 
go to school, so you wrote a note that began with,
“Danielle’s under the weather,” and justified it to me with,
 
“Well … there’s weather happening above us,” that I first knew
living together was going to be an adventure, which is always
 
what I wanted most of all, not love, or happiness, just something
to talk about, which (at some point) translated to writing.
 
I wasn’t sure where anything would take us, but look at here.
What we have built together. I can say anything, and
 
nothing rattles. You can say anything, and what we
have stands still. We can climb on it, threaten it, light
 
it on fire, but the beast we built just yawns, and we go
quietly on, in our (sometimes covert) little ways of
 
loving one another. I’m twenty-five, and you push me
onto the sidewalk when a car comes. Always desperate
 
to save my life, not knowing you already did.
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