Fadeaway by E. Vickers (sight word readers TXT) 📕
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- Author: E. Vickers
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See if I could jump out and scare him
and then do my porg eyes
and my porg squawk
that always make him laugh.
I hid behind the construction dumpster
that looked like a drone barge,
that smelled like sawdust and cigarette butts,
and waited
waited
waited.
The plan was this:
I hide until
Jake gets in his truck, and then
I jump out and scare the crap out of him.
We both laugh like Jabba’s little monkey lizard
(that’s what Jake calls him).
We load my bike into the truck.
We go to the football game together.
And also this:
Jake sees me.
Jake laughs.
We’re together.
Jake sees me.
Instead, he stayed up there on the roof
f o r e v e r
and right when I was about to give up:
He closed his eyes.
He stepped to the edge.
He stepped off the edge.
I ran to him,
saw the bones of his leg
bent all the wrong ways
like the rabbit we hit with his truck last Halloween.
At first, Jake was mad
when I made him stop the truck,
because he was already late to pick up Daphne,
but I could hear the sorry in his voice
when he said to the rabbit,
“I didn’t see you there,”
and to me,
“It’s too late for her.”
I saw his eyes, sad and shining, when
we drove the truck
thump thump
over her small body
so she wouldn’t have to hurt anymore.
And I thought about that rabbit
at the construction site
as I knelt by my brother’s body,
both of us breathing hard,
and whether he was speaking the words
or I was just remembering them,
I heard his voice again.
“It’s too late”
and
“I didn’t see you there.”
But then
“I thought I’d land it better.”
I was crying, screaming
over Jake,
my heart all thump thump,
which made me cry harder,
and I knew it wasn’t helping.
I KNEW,
but it was all I could do.
Then there was a man
with the kind of face that could be
Jake’s age
or twenty years older,
and he was
making sure Jake could breathe,
calling 911,
telling him help was on the way.
All the things I should have been doing
when all I could do was cry.
When the ambulance arrived,
the man touched my arm,
whispered,
“They’ll let you go with him
if you can settle down.”
And because he looked at me
like he knew I could do it,
I could do it.
I buried my crying
and climbed in next to my brother,
and by the time I looked back,
the man was already gone.
When I came up the hill, I had a plan.
The scare part was meant for Jake,
but it was only supposed to last half a second.
Instead, I was the one who was scared
when I saw his body
falling from the roof,
crumpling, crumbling to the ground,
crying out like no animal I ever heard before.
I think I have been scared about my brother ever since.
Because the accident
wasn’t an accident
at all.
When I think about those words
I thought I’d land it better
I see
it wasn’t like the rabbit.
He wasn’t trying to make the hurting end.
He was trying to make it start again.
After they read it,
everyone is quiet for a minute,
and then the tall one asks,
“Are you sure, Luke?
Are you sure it wasn’t an accident?”
“I’m sure,” I say.
“And you said
you know why he did it.
Can you tell us?”
She asks this in a way
I think she might already know the answer,
but I tell her my answer
to see if they match.
“Because the tin was empty,”
I say.
“And after, it was full again.
He needed it to be full again.”
“Was the tin gone when he disappeared?”
the tall one asks.
I nod.
Then we all look to the corner
where Mom is
listening,
crying.
“I didn’t know,” she says
so quietly I almost miss it.
“People get really good at hiding these things,”
says the tall one,
and I wonder if maybe
somebody hid something
from her once.
“You think he robbed the pharmacy?” Mom asks.
The short one folds his arms.
“We think it’s worth looking into.”
Mom nods. “If he did it, he’s alive.
Or he was then, anyway.
If he did it, there’s still hope.”
Then her eyes go bright
and wild.
“Is there security-camera footage?
Can I see it?
Can I see him?”
They shake their heads.
“Cameras were down all week.
Probably because of the remodeling.”
The short one gets up to leave,
but the tall one leans toward me.
“Is there anything else you want to tell us?
About that day?
Or before?
Or after?”
“Only that,” I say,
already breathing easier,
like the story was something
hard
and small
that had been blocking my throat.
The officers leave,
and Mom takes me to the kitchen
for a glass of milk,
and I think about how
it’s easier to tell the hard things
on paper,
not in person.
And then I think about
all that blank paper
that covered this table
the morning Jake went missing.
The mess that really
wasn’t mine.
And I wonder,
Is it important?
But the cops are gone,
and my mom has stopped crying,
and anyway
how could blank pages be trying to tell us
anything at all?
The thing
hard and small
in my throat
is back,
so maybe it wasn’t the secret
after all.
But
I have learned to breathe
and swallow
and live
with it inside me.
Part of me has wanted
to stay home from school
every day since Jake disappeared
and especially
after they searched
and I told my story.
But Mom won’t let me.
Not until I’m
hot as Venus,
cold as Neptune,
aching everywhere,
coughing up chunks,
too sick to enjoy a sick day, even a little.
Then she lets me stay home and promises to check on me at lunch.
I try watching TV, but
all that light plus
all that sound
makes my head hurt.
So I’m lying there,
lights off,
blankets on
(current temperature: Venus),
wondering again
if I should have told the cops
anything after all,
when I hear it:
metal on metal,
key in lock,
soft footsteps crossing the kitchen.
I close my eyes and slow my breathing,
pretend to be asleep so Mom won’t bug me.
But the footsteps pass my door,
keep going down the hall,
and then they stop,
and another door opens.
A creaky one
that we never open anymore.
Jake’s room.
And there’s only one person in the world
besides me and my mom
who would know where the spare key is,
who would walk straight to that bedroom
where Jake belongs.
I’m not sure if it’s a dream
or the fever
or something,
so I tell myself to
wake up,
look for the droid or the Wookiee
that means
this isn’t real.
But it’s still just me,
sick and sweating under all these
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