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Hennie works instinctively, rather than academically. He wants to draw out emotions, not academic discussions. He has a great love for what he does, and there are few things as satisfying to him as a good, productive day in his studio.
“The Visitor”
Find more of Hennie’s work at
Non-Fiction
Sam Wallace
Simon A. Smith
Wendy Weitzel
The Cat Doesn’t Die (I Promise)
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Sam Wallace is a writer from New Jersey. She is a graduate from Virginia Tech, an activist, and an animal lover. She primarily writes scripts and non-fiction short stories. Her television pilot, VICES, was selected in the Winter Edition of the New York Screenwriting Awards.
Like every other high schooler in this country, I had the pleasure of doing many shooting lockdown drills. We did actually have some where there was a possible threat, but none of them ended up being anything real. Just slightly traumatizing. The craziest one had to be when we ended up in lockdown at 2pm. School got out at 2:45. None of the lockdown drills we’d ever done took place later than 11am, so we immediately knew it was serious. I felt good about that though, I was in the TV studio which was in a room at the back of the library. There were two entrances to the studio and two rooms in the studio, meaning we were between 4 locked doors on either side. Plus, if there was a real shooter, we’d be impossible to find since there’s no signs indicating where the TV studio was. So we joked that if there was a shooting, we were the safest ones in the building.
My teacher was an EMT, and so was one of my classmates. They pulled up the police radio and we were listening. There wasn’t a whole lot of information about what exactly triggered this event, but we heard on the radio that SWAT was coming—and there was a helicopter flying overhead. That wouldn’t happen if this was a drill. We all collectively realized it wasn’t a drill and nearly shit our pants.
We spent the next almost two hours in fear. Then, SWAT released us. It was 3:45 when we got out. Nobody knew what happened until the next day. Turned out this kid Charles that had been expelled for drug shit was dating a freshman girl against her moms wishes. Her mom went on her laptop while she was at school and read a text from Charles saying he was gonna pick her up from school. She didn’t like that. She did what any reasonable, disapproving parent would do and called the school, saying Charles was coming with a gun. The police ended up searching for him during the lockdown and didn’t let us leave the school until they found him. He was pulled over 20 minutes from the school, obviously with no guns.
Again, slightly traumatizing, but we were fine. Definitely a valid concern given the current state of the country. School shootings were honestly something I did think about when applying to colleges. Virginia Tech had been my number one for a while, so lucky me.
I felt safe coming to Tech, and I’m not even gonna lie, I felt safe because Tech had already had a shooting. It was unheard of two shootings taking place at the same place, let alone the same school. How could I be wrong? But I was so, so wrong because it did happen to me. I became another goddamn statistic at a school that was already a statistic. How lovely. And not just another random shooting because that’d be too easy. It happened to be after 1am on the 15 year anniversary of the first Virginia Tech shooting. So, April 16, 2022.
It was the end of sophomore year. My roommate, Teagan, and I were watching Phineas and Ferb in the living room. Specifically, the What a Croc! episode. Our other roommate, Lexi, was at her boyfriend's house staying the night. Their cat was at our house. He was sleeping in her bed while we were watching. I decided to go get him and bring him into the living room with us. I put him on the chair he liked and after a few minutes, he laid down and fell asleep. There was a party happening in the apartment two floors below us that had leaked out their back door, so there were tons of drunk kids outside our window. They were singing, screaming, and talking loudly. I went out on the balcony and looked down at what was happening for a few minutes. I actually had a gut feeling in that moment that there was gonna be a shooting. I’d had these gut feelings before, all about people (and a cat) dying, and those gut feelings ended up always being right. I brushed it off as anxious overthinking, but that was silly of me to do. But who would’ve expected the events that followed?
I went back inside and sat back down on the couch and ate some chips. There were screams below from the party that scared me for a second, but I just tried to focus on the show. George (the cat) quickly sat up, looked at the window, and then ran into Lexi’s room. I thought it was strange how fast he moved, but he was a weird cat, so I moved on. Then it started.
I heard a pop from below and immediately sat up. Then another pop, but this time we saw a flash of light through the balcony door. It sounded like a gun to me, but I didn’t wanna go there. I tried to assure myself that it was confetti or thunder or something, but it wasn’t a birthday party and there wasn’t a cloud in the sky.
“Is that….” Teagan started to say, then there was another pop, and more flashes of light. “Go,” I was sure. I knew it was gunshots. Teagan said something else, but I couldn’t even pay attention to her. At this point, I was rounding the corner toward the kitchen and she was still sitting.
“Get over here!” She got up and came over to me. We were next to the living room, but just behind a wall now.
“Are we sure—” Then it hit. A bullet literally hit our balcony door, instantly shattering it. It looked like a scene straight from an action movie. I hated action movies. “Bathroom, go!” I shouted, but we were already running. Slamming the door behind us, we heard another shot. And another. I yelled at her to call 911 (how kind of me) and I called Lexi.
“Hi, what’s going on?” She said groggily.
“The apartment just got shot up,” Then my voice broke as it hit me. This was actually happening right now. It didn’t feel real until I said it.
“What? Are you serious? What?” She immediately was crying. We talked for another moment, while Teagan was on the phone with 911. George. The fucking cat. I needed to get him. “George ran into your room before it started, I’m gonna go check on him.” Teagan grabbed my leg as I reached for the door.
“What are you doing?”
“Getting George.” Both she and Lexi began yelling at me to stop and wait it out, but I still opened the door. At this point, we hadn’t heard a single shot since the ones that went off right when we got in the bathroom, so I thought it was fine. My heart was racing as I snuck down the hallway, greeted by a glass covered living room. I crouched down a bit as I snuck through the maze of glass to get to Lexi’s room. There was glass everywhere in her room too. I was talking Lexi through my actions to alleviate her fears. I didn’t see George, so I dropped to the ground. I remember looking down at my knees for a second and just seeing the glass on the ground next to them. I dropped my phone and looked under, seeing a petrified George. He was nine months old.
“He’s okay! He’s alive, I don’t know if he got shot. I’m getting him.” The fact that I even had to say that there was the possibility that he got shot. I hated it. I was so fucking angry at everything.
I reached under and grabbed him, but he went further. I dropped down more, landing my knee right on a shard of glass, entirely ignoring the pain it caused. I fought him for a second since he was wiggling away, but I managed to grab him by the arm and scoop him up. I grabbed my phone and ran back to the bathroom, where I proceeded to check him for glass. Within a minute, from all the petting I was doing, he began to purr.
“You’re bleeding,” Teagan noted while I was too preoccupied with George to notice. I looked down and saw that blood had dripped halfway down my shin. It wasn’t a big cut, but the lack of attention let it get bad.
The next few minutes were a blur, but Dylan came. My brother, but also Lexi’s boyfriend, sprinted for his life to get there as soon as I told Lexi what was happening. He made sure we were okay, then ran out to talk to the police. Then Dylan’s roommates, Ben and Karan, came over, with Lexi. The 6 of us were standing by the living room and I couldn’t stop staring at the bullet hole in our balcony door, then across to where it landed in the wall. The casing was sticking out. I just kept looking. Balcony door, bullet casing in wall. Balcony door, bullet casing in wall. The whole time, more shards of glass were falling from the balcony door.
I did also instinctively grab the bullet casing out, forgetting that our apartment was now an active crime scene. This was met with Teagan yelling at me and calling me a fucking idiot. Definitely not my finest moment. I put it back in and we moved on.
“Do you need a hug?” It was Dylan. We’d never hugged. Our relationship was interesting after I’d came to the same college as him. It didn’t make us any closer really, like I’d had expected it to. But when he wrapped his arms around me and squeezed me, telling me it was okay, I knew I was safe because he was family. That was probably the safest I’d ever felt being hugged before.
We slept at Dylan’s apartment that night on an air mattress on his living room floor. Teagan magically fell asleep, but I didn’t sleep much that night. I couldn’t shake all of the thoughts and feelings. I was just another statistic now. Never in a million years did I think I’d become another statistic. How fucking idiodic was this?
The shattered balcony door was a haunting reminder when we went home the next day. It feels weird to say home because it didn’t feel like home after that night. A home is somewhere you’re supposed to feel safe and comfortable and it was anything but that. They didn’t even board up the balcony door until we’d already come home. I remember just standing in the living room, keeping my shoes on to avoid stepping on the glass that went everywhere. If you walked too hard or shut the door too hard, more glass would fall. But also, more glass would fall while you were doing nothing. After they boarded it up, there was a little gap on the side where you could see broken glass through it. Periodically, glass would build up there and we’d have to sweep it up. It was just another reminder of what had happened.
As a method of coping, we put wiggly worms in the bullet holes. They were just dumb, fuzzy worm-like creatures on strings with googly eyes. It was a silly little coping mechanism. Then when maintenance plastered over the bullet holes when nobody was home, they fucking took the worms with them. We were pissed.
As very mature individuals following a trauma, we drew a bunch of vulgar crap and curse words on the board over the balcony door. This was also a fuck you to maintenance, who said it was gonna take a month to replace the glass (and it did).
There was also a bullet that hit our AC and got lodged somewhere in it (you could even see the bullet hole from the exterior leading into the vent, and it’s still there today). So not only did we have trauma, but we had a broken AC for the rest of the time we lived there. And it was April, so it was hot. And then a wasp got in, so we lined the edges of the board with trash bags
because what the shit? We don’t need wasps and trauma.
The dean of students came the day after too, with the chief of police. He said some crap about how if we needed anything, to email him and he was “so sorry” for what happened. Teagan
ended up emailing him and he never answered. Then in response to an email Lexi sent to one of the resources offered, she was sent an email that started with “Hi Amanda!” Thanks Virginia Tech. Real nice.
I had to fill out some forms for therapy recently. It asked you to check off a list of boxes of traumatic events. One of the options was “School/Mass Shooting.” Not that my PTSD ever let me forget the thoughts, but I started thinking. We were in this weird category where we were victims of gun violence, but it wasn’t a school shooting. Sure, we were technically at school, but we weren’t. We were a mile off campus. So yeah, I became a statistic, but a confusing one. There’s a hell of a lot more statistics on school and mass shootings than just a plain old shooting caused by gang violence.
That’s what the police told us it was. Some kid at the party was in a gang and another gang came to kill him. I never heard what happened to him, but he was the only one shot. Which was pretty crazy, there were probably fifty or so people at that party. But just one person, three balcony doors, two bedroom windows, and exterior walls. Only one person was shot, but a lot of people were traumatized.
It’s hard to move on from that kind of tragedy. It’s been two years, so you’d think it’d be different, but it’s not. It’s really not. I still get triggered by loud noises and by parties. It took me a long time to feel comfortable at a party again. First party I went to post shooting, I left after twenty minutes. Fireworks are the worst too, and this country is fucking obsessed with them. Go freaking USA or whatever. Fuck that. I still hate them. I still get triggered by every single firework I hear to this day. I also used to love thunder. It used to comfort me. It took me nine months for it to stop triggering me. Occasionally I get triggered by it still, but thunder is
comforting again. The first time I sat through a thunderstorm and didn’t have to put earbuds in and mash a pillow over my ears felt like a trauma win. It felt like I was finally moving on. The truth is I haven’t been the same since the shooting. I haven’t enjoyed college since it happened. PTSD doesn’t go away. I think about the shooting a lot. I think about how scared I was. I think about how Teagan almost died. I think about how George almost died. Where the bullet landed in the wall after exiting the balcony door was just a foot over where Teagan had been standing. When she hesitated to go into the kitchen, she stood still. She was in line to get shot in the head had she stood there for thirty more seconds. And the bullet that went through Lexi’s window was two inches above the pillow. That’s where I took George off of when I made him come sit in the living room. He would’ve been shot. Lexi and Dylan originally were supposed to sleep at our house, so one of them would’ve been shot in the head. It really does take a near death experience to fuck you up for good. I still feel the constant fear and everything. It’s good, it’s so fucking fun. It’s weird meeting new people and making new friends and I’m just like “wow, they don’t know I almost died.” And then I tell them and they’re like “holy fuck, are you okay?” No. No I’m not. But I'm still trying to move on. You don’t just get over shit like that. Maybe one day, who knows.
Growing Up With a Low Rent Robin Williams
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Simon A. Smith is a Chicago teacher and writer. His stories have appeared in many journals and media outlets, including Hobart, Lit Magazine, Whiskey Island, Chicago Public Radio, and NewCity. He is the author of two novels, Son of Soothsayer and Wellton County Hunters. He lives in Rogers Park with his wife and son.
You never told anyone the whole story about your dad. You let most people think he was little more than a kooky horndog or dirty sailor. It was better for both of you. He got to see himself as the comedian he always wanted to be, and you got to pretend you weren’t dying inside every time he told another unsettling joke. That way, your friends felt it was harmless to laugh at all his unsavory antics. Like when you were at the pizza joint downtown, and your dad told your buddy that he’d like to hump the waitress. He laughed so hard that soda gushed from his nose.
Once, when your freshman crush came over to do English homework, she asked your dad if he could think of a single word that contained seven total syllables. The assignment was to write a haiku. You and your flame were at the kitchen table, sitting so close an envelope could have scarcely been slipped between your elbows, and your dad took that moment to come humming into the room, pull a beer out of the fridge, and announce, “I’ve got a compound word that might do the trick.”
“Oh, really?” she said. “Lay it on us.” She had this playful way with banter, half-biting and half-flirtatious, which drove you wild. It made things worse that your dad was a sucker for it too.
He gulped his beer. You watched him cycle through the word in his mind, counting and recounting the syllables on his fingers. When the calculations ended, he nodded and smiled. “You ready for this?” he asked.
“Hit us with it,” your crush said.
He lingered, drawing out the suspense, then let you have it. “Je-sus-mo-ther-fu-cking-christ,” he intoned.
Nobody moved at first. You closed your eyes because you couldn’t look at your dad, and you definitely couldn’t look at your crush, and because you still had that childish belief deep inside that if you couldn’t see anybody then nobody could see you either. And when you felt her arm slide from the table, you were not surprised that she was pulling away. You were not surprised that she’d decided to pack her things, leave your house, and never return. What you were shocked to discover, when you opened one eye, was that your crush had only removed her hand so that she could raise it and place it over her quivering mouth. You were shocked to find that she was now lost in convulsions, great gusts of laughter you worried might topple her from the chair.
Your dad shrugged and left you there, alone with your gasping dream girl, wishing she’d never asked him a question, yearning to rewind time and go to her house instead, or maybe be born to a different father who wasn’t some screwball prone to deranged outbursts.
After she calmed down, after she dried her tears, and took several deep breaths, she put her fingers on your bare wrist. Waves of nausea churned in your gut. “Man, your dad is something else,” she said. She looked you straight in the eyes and said, “I wish I had a dad like yours.”
**
He’d gotten out of jail only a few months earlier. His road in was paved with a different kind of indignity. For years he’d driven drunk, PBR wedged between his thighs, careening down backstreets with you riding shotgun, struggling to endure the cigarette hotbox that was his 1985 Datson. You were his little crony, his plus-one at all the dive bars, places where he gave you quarters to play shuffleboard, ordered you fried chicken, and let you drink Pepsi while he sat at the bar and told crass jokes about homosexuals and potheads. It wasn’t that he disapproved of the lifestyles, only that he considered laughter so much more important than dullness or decorum. On the way out, he’d ruffle your hair, ask you not to tell mom when you got home.
Mom already knew. You didn’t have to say a word. Between his slurs and stumbles, he was his own worst secret-keeper, a walking confession before he even hit the living room. The confrontation went the same every time. Mom fixed him with her infamous glare, the narrowed eyes and chiseled lips, and Dad responded with mock consternation.
“What?” he’d say, throwing up his arms. “What is it now?”
You’d go to your room and play video games or maybe go outside and shoot basketball with your next-door neighbor, Kevin. You’d try to take your mind off how lousy things were, how despite the mounting aggravation from his wife and law enforcement, your dad’s drinking was only getting worse. It was so bad that Officer Shifflet snatched his driver’s license, and when he didn’t quit, Shifflet added two years to the suspension and fined him 5,000 dollars. And because your mom knew that he was still picking you up from school and soccer practice, she took the type of action that only a desperate mom would. She called the cops herself and told your dad’s secrets.
On the day the police came to arrest your dad, you were the only one home. The bus had just dropped you off, and you were probably watching cartoons, doing what every thirteen-year-old did to unwind after school. But if you were a normal kid, you wouldn’t have a dad who came bursting through the door, shouting for you to flee the scene.
“Hey! It’s me. Get out. Go! They’ll be here soon!”
You leapt up from the sofa, zero-to-sixty in record time. “What? Dad! What’s going on?”
“The cops. They’re after me. I didn’t do anything, okay. I didn’t do anything!” he repeated.
That’s when you looked out the window and noticed your dad had parked his car in a very odd location. Instead of pulling it up to the garage like he usually did, he tried hiding it far back in a wooded area at the edge of your property. It wasn’t even really hidden, just… out of place. If he’d had the chance, you thought, he’d likely have covered it with leaves for heavier camouflage or something. The whole thing was so conspicuous, and you know that if you could see it, the cops would see it too. You wanted to help, but there was no time.
“Don’t tell them I’m here,” he said. “I’m not here, okay?” His voice was shrill and teetering on the edge of breakdown. He was on the verge of crying, and because you’d never heard him cry before, and because he was your father and protector, you started to cry also. “Don’t cry,” he told you, even though you were pretty sure he already was, and then he opened the door to the attic, slammed it shut, and dashed upstairs.
You stood there and tried not to weep. Tears rolled down your cheeks. Your knees wobbled, and your heart raced. The Captain Planet theme song played in the background. There was no way you could run.
Moments later, you watched a police car come rushing up your driveway. Two officers stepped out and made their way straight to your front door. You’d never seen either of them before, which was even scarier, because at least you knew Officer Shifflet, at least he’d been to some of your baseball games and was the husband of your gym teacher, Mrs. Shifflet. They knocked hard, and rang the doorbell, then knocked and rang again. It went on like this for a while, until you were unable to resist any longer, until you felt as though you might pass out or pee your pants if you had to hold them off for one more second. You wondered if they could arrest you too, so you opened the door. They came at you full throttle.
“Where’s your dad, son?” the man asked. There was one male and one female officer. “We saw his car already,” he said. “We need to come in and look around. Son? Son, you need to let us in, and do what we say. Do you understand what he’s done? Do you know what’s happening –”
The female cop intervened. She put her hand on the man’s chest and spoke over him. “Hey, buddy. Listen. It’s okay. We aren’t going to hurt you or your dad. Can you please let us in? Do you know where your dad is?”
You couldn’t speak, but you could move your head. You shook your head no, but you also let them in, so it was impossible to tell what your headshake actually meant. It didn’t matter because they were inside now. They were spreading out, calling your dad’s name. They had their hands on their holsters, but they were not raising their guns. The man located the door to the attic. He put his palm on the doorknob and turned to you. He addressed you and his partner in tandem.
“Is this a door that leads to a basement or attic?” he asked. “Am I going to find him in here?”
Because you were simultaneously covering for your dad and trying to avoid a horrendous disaster, and because you were more frightened than you’d ever been in your entire life, you shook your head and nodded at the same time. Because you loved your dad, and because you were also dying to make the nightmare end, you let them open the door and slowly walk up the stairs. You knew they’d found him when you heard your dad wail. You heard him make the most excruciating sound, like a dog that had been kicked hard in the ribs. It was the saddest noise you could ever imagine anyone making.
**
The strange thing was that you’d seen pictures and heard stories about your dad when he was growing up. One thing that was easy to tell was that he came from a very religious family. If the bible verse needlepoints in Grandma’s kitchen didn’t give it away, the Billy Graham radio program playing in Grandpa’s sitting-room would. Getting more information was hard, especially when you were younger. According to your Uncle Les, when he was in high school, your dad was shy and reserved, the type of kid who would go out of his way to avoid attention. If he was called on in class, he responded so quietly that the teacher had to yell at him to speak up. In his senior picture he looks handsome with his square jaw and razor-sharp crewcut. In his twenties, people told him he looked like Charlton Heston. If you’d only heard stories from your three uncles, you’d have an impossible time trying to piece things together. How did this God-fearing, clean-cut boy with movie star looks, turn into the loony father you knew?
For better or worse, you also had aunts, three ladies who were a lot more candid than the men. They were more willing to talk about the darker sides of their childhood, and the older you got, the more open they became about the sinister parts. Your aunt Susan in particular, a self-proclaimed “basket case” and the only sheep blacker than your dad, told you about your grandfather’s rabid temper. When your dad was about twelve or thirteen, Susan told you, Grandpa beat him so badly that he needed to be rushed to the hospital. Before that, she said, he would rough your dad up, come into his room at night in a psychotic rage and punch him and his brothers in the head for some reason that only made sense to his own schizophrenic mind, but there were times when he went way too far. Schizophrenia ran in your family, she said. She bet you didn’t know that, but it was true. The two of you sat there for a long time after, silently lamenting, and when you hugged afterward, things made a little more sense.
It made a little more sense now that your dad had turned to alcohol to medicate all the trauma he’d experienced as a child. You had a little more insight into how he became the man who got drunk every night after work, took steaming baths after dinner, and then wandered around your backyard in a bathrobe, muttering to himself as he scooped birdseed into the dozens of feeders he’d strung up all over your property. All the mortification you used to feel as you thought about the neighbors who might see him out there, babbling in his manic stupor, buck naked under the robe, it started to lose some of the anger that used to surround it and was replaced with a larger dose of sorrow.
**
When you were in Little League, your dad was still your hero. When you told him you wanted to be a catcher, he carved you a home plate to squat behind and a pitching mound for him to perch atop. He was a hell of a carpenter. Everyone said so. In fact, concocting baseball apparatus was about the lowest form of construction he did. He built your entire house with his bare hands, no matter how inebriated he was during the process. It was the same resolve he used during your pitching sessions as a boy. You practiced for hours on the weekends. Say what you will, but he made time. Every Saturday there he was, Winston pinched between his lips, whipping fastballs in the dirt or airmailing cutters over your head just to test your reflexes. He was almost as good of an athlete as he was a craftsman, snockered or not.
The following spring, despite your dad’s efforts, you weren’t the starting catcher. In your defense, your team was stacked. It seemed like every season your team, The Warriors, won the county championship. Half the players made the All-Star squad every year. That wasn’t the point, your dad said. He said that the point of playing Little League baseball was to have fun. The coaches took things way too seriously. He wasn’t wrong. The year before, Coach Hubbard slugged a fan on the opposing bleachers because his raucous whistling was annoying the crap out of him. Your dad said your coaches were a bunch of lame brains, and you couldn’t really argue. You went along with whatever he said, until the day you couldn’t anymore.
It was following the last regular game of the year. Everyone was circled up under the big oak tree beside the field, listening to Coach Hubbard prattle on about preparing for the playoffs. He started in on some of his favorite topics, “manning up,” “putting away your skirts,” and “pulling on your big boy pants.” It must have been ninety degrees, and everyone was sopping with sweat, especially the catcher, Andy, who was completely cooked, pink as a boiled ham and soaked to the bone.
Hubbard kept yapping, and then all of a sudden he trailed off. There were footsteps creeping up behind you. Coach stopped talking and everyone turned around. There was your dad in his corduroy pants, his button-down shirt, and leather sandals. Your dad was often overdressed for occasions but none more than this one. He was short and wiry, but on this day his shadow loomed over all of you like a behemoth twice his size.
“Hey, Coach,” Dad said.
“Hey there, Mr. Smith. What’s up?” Coach asked.
“Have you gotten to the part yet where you tell the kids that the most important thing about Little League baseball is having a good time?”
“That’s nice,” Coach chuckled. “Sure, I like that. But winning is even better. These boys are trying to bring home a trophy.”
Your dad laughed. He folded his arms over his chest and grinned. “I see. So, then you’ll finally be able to quit your day job and go on The Johnny Carson show with all your fame?”
“That’s funny,” Coach said. “I don’t need Johnny Carson to tell me I’m right about this.”
“They’re eleven years old, Hubbard,” Dad said.
“It’s never too young to build a winning mindset.” Hubbard took a step toward your dad, so that their pelvises were almost touching, but Hubbard’s head was a good five inches higher.
“You’re ridiculous,” Dad said. He considered stepping closer himself, giving him a little crotch bump, but thought better of it. “I guess you don’t get it.”
“Nice talking to you,” Coach scoffed.
Your dad turned to leave, but right as he did, he got in one last comment. “Well, fuck you very much,” he said, tipping an imaginary hat.
Hubbard returned to you and the rest of your team under the tree. He looked right at you and shook his head. “Jesus,” he sighed. “Well, like I was saying, it’s time to lock in, boys.” For the rest of the lecture, everyone stared at you instead of Coach. You looked at the ground. You picked blades of grass and tried not to scream.
Afterward, in the car, Dad asked you if everything was okay, even though he knew it wasn’t.
“Why do you have to do that? Why can’t you just leave things alone?”
“I’m a poker, I guess,” Dad said. “I like to poke big old dopey bears.”
“Nobody else does that. You’re the only one!” you said. You cranked the window down so hard you hurt your wrist.
“Robin Williams does shit like that all the time, and people eat it up.”
“Who is Robin Williams?” you asked.
“He’s a comedian. He’s hilarious.”
“You are definitely not Robin Williams,” you said.
You sat there for a while in the heat. You could tell he didn’t know what to do. “He should put you in,” he said. “You’re better than pig-faced Andy.”
You shrugged. He was hurt, and you felt bad, but neither one of you was good at saying what you were feeling, so he just started the car, and the two of you drove away in silence, trying not to think too hard about the damage you’d both caused.
**
While your dad was in jail, you did everything you could to keep his incarceration under wraps. When your buddy Nick asked why he wasn’t coming to any of the basketball games anymore, you told him that your dad was fishing in Raystown Lake, and a few weeks later when he asked again, you said he’d gone on a hunting trip with some friends. Your neighbors started getting curious. Kevin’s dad, Albert, came outside one day while you were mowing the lawn and asked where your dad had been all summer. You told him that he was working as a foreman on a new housing development up in Lackawanna. Albert looked at you like he knew you were lying, but he didn’t want to upset you. He nodded and patted you on the back.
“If you need any help around here, you let me know,” he said. “I’m just a house away.”
“Thanks, Al,” you said, “but he should be home soon.”
That night you told your mom what you’d been doing, weaving tales all over town. She was somber in her response but also resolute. She didn’t want to back down from the decisions she’d made.
“I’ve been telling people that he’s visiting a long-lost aunt in Millcreek,” she said.
The two of you sat there at the kitchen table for a little while, feeling sorry for yourselves and then suddenly it hit you how comical it all was, making up stories about all the ridiculous journeys your dad was supposed to have taken but had no knowledge of. You started laughing, and then your mom caught the bug too. You both laughed for a long time, until your eyes and noses started running, and you went through wads of Kleenex. Then you put on your dad’s oversized sandals, grabbed his bag of birdseed from the garage, and walked around filling all his goddamn bird feeders. Outside, the night was serene and starry. Dry grass crunched softly beneath your feet. The world was fresh and freeing at this hour, receptive to your every whim, and by the end of the task, you finally understood your dad’s attraction to these evening rounds.
**
During his final days, when your dad was sick and wasting away, you went to visit him at his small house in the mountains. He’d moved 2,000 miles west to escape all the people in his life who thought he was too delusional to deal with. In Grass Valley, there were no Coach Hubbards, or ex-wives, or even sons to tell him that he was off his rocker or causing too much pain. Maybe he thought that if he could outrun the lame brains he could outrun throat cancer, but it was no use. The most heartbreaking thing was that if he had managed to arrive in California five years earlier when he was still healthy enough to sit on a back porch, drink rum, smoke weed, and listen to classical music, he would have been in heaven. Grass Valley was the perfect place for your dad. Plenty of birds, solitary walks, and lots of artsy residents who looked upon his mental illness as more of a daffy eccentricity.
Instead, what you found was a frail man who could hardly breathe. A man who spent most of his days sky high on morphine. The whole time you were there he kept trying and failing to give you a tour of his house. He didn’t have the lung capacity, so most of what you did was help him back into bed and watch him drift in and out of sleep.
“I should probably get going,” you said.
“Huh?” he said, coming to, bolting upright. “No, no!” he said. “First,” he said, “you have to throw baseball with me. I promised myself we’d throw baseball one more time. I have my glove,” he said, and then he reached under the covers and pulled out a baseball glove that you hadn’t seen in twenty years. It was moldy around the hand opening and rotted at the tips. It looked like something a rottweiler had been using as a chew toy for decades. Inside the glove there was a baseball, and somewhere inside that baseball were all the memories of every time you’d ever played catch with your dad. It took all your might not to break down and start sobbing right then and there.
You watched him wiggle his bony fingers into the glove, watched his lids flutter and his arm twitch with every movement, and you knew that there was no possible way he’d be able to toss the ball more than six inches.
You put your hand on his shoulder and squeezed. “Dad,” you said, “it’s okay. We don’t have to do that. I appreciate it, but…”
“Oh, come on, fucker!” he shouted. He reared back with whatever strength he had left in his entire body and socked you on the arm as hard as he could. It hurt a lot, and you were glad it did. He wasn’t dead yet, and he needed to feel something real one last time. He started coughing, and his face turned red and swollen. He sighed and swayed back against his pillow.
“It’s okay,” you said again, and now you were really going to bawl. If you didn’t get out of there soon the floodgates would open, and you’d really be in trouble. “We don’t have to throw now because I remember,” you said. “I remember all the times we ever threw baseball, and… and, I will never forget.”
He was already half asleep again. His battery was drained. It had been a tough day. He let the glove fall from his hand and closed his eyes. “Alright,” he whispered, “okay then.”
And then you took the biggest, deepest breath you’d ever taken. You kissed him on the forehead and you left.
**
On the day your dad came home from jail, you could tell his first priority was getting things back to normal as fast as possible. He spent the morning organizing paperwork, and then preparing his coffeepot, lunchbox, and tool bag for work the next day. During the afternoon he sat at his workbench in the garage, listening to Tchaikovsky on his small radio and super-gluing knickknacks back together that had broken while he was gone. Before the sun went down, he got his wheelbarrow out, filled it with a shovel, a rake, a couple beers, and some Quikrete, and headed down to the bottom of your driveway. There had been some heavy rain the previous week, and the water had washed a bunch of stones out onto the street. You watched him wheel the things down from your bedroom window. You wanted to help him fix the driveway. You wanted to talk to him and just be near him, but you didn’t know what to say. You didn’t know how to be close to him and also get close to him, and the prospect of just standing next to him and sifting concrete in a bucket while no one said a word seemed gut-wrenching in so many different ways. But you decided to go help him anyway.
When you were about halfway down the driveway, you noticed that Kevin had gotten there first. You guessed he’d been outside already, maybe shooting basketball, and he had seen your dad working. Kevin, being who he was, a smalltown kid who had been raised to help an elder carrying shovels and rakes, jumped right in. You quickened your pace, and as you got closer you could hear their conversation.
“So, how was it then,” Kevin asked. “All your hunting and fishing trips?”
“What?” Your dad said. He set the bag of Quikrete down and looked up at him from where he kneeled. “What the hell are you talking about?”
You tried to move faster, but you knew it was too late. You couldn’t just shout something to drown out their conversation. What would you even say? How could you possibly explain what you’d done over the last six months? You couldn’t just holler, Wait, Dad! I’ve been telling absurd lies in a pathetic attempt to save your reputation and preserve my own pitiful existence! There was nothing to be done, so you just stayed where you were, paralyzed with humiliation.
“I thought you were off living it up with your boys. I wished you’d taken me and Simon with you,” Kevin said.
“Shit, I wasn’t on any trips with my boys,” your dad said. He laughed hard. Some of the chalky dust from the sack had gotten on his face and hair. “I was in jail!”
You and Kevin were both done for then. You, frozen in the driveway, Kevin paused in mid-thought, leaning on the shovel.
“What?” Kevin said, and he was sort of laughing too, but in a much more nervous way.
“I mean, it may have felt like vacation from time to time, to be honest. It wasn’t as bad as people say it is.” He stood and clapped the soot off his hands. He picked up his bottle of Pabst Blue Ribbon. He held it aloft like he wanted to toast Kevin, but Kevin didn’t have any beverages. “As I always say,” he said, smirking, “if it wasn’t for the grace of God, I’d be sipping a pina colada on the beaches of Jamaica right now.”
And just like that, he was back. The typical dad moves were still intact. Kevin reacted the way everybody did who didn’t understand the role your dad was playing, the charade that only he could envision in his tragic mind. He chuckled for a second, then stopped abruptly. He looked closer at your dad’s face to see if he was joking or not, but he couldn’t tell. Nobody ever could, and that was part of the reason he ended up so alone and ravaged in California, but it was far from the only reason. It was nobody else’s fault. You don’t know how many hours of your life you lost pleading with him to see a therapist, or join a group, but he never listened. Humor, alcohol, cigarettes, and marijuana were his self-proclaimed remedy. And for a long time, it made you so angry. It made you angry enough to almost hate him. In the end, for Christ’s sake, in the end, he did turn out like the real Robin Williams. Two tortured souls, performing away their buried suffering until they couldn’t conceal it any longer.
God damn it… And as much time as you’ve spent agonizing over how much you wish he had been different, how much you longed for him to be ordinary and sane like everyone else’s dads seemed to be, the only thing in the world you want to do now is return to the bottom of that driveway. You want to go back in time to that very moment. If only you could walk the rest of the way down that driveway and wrap your arms around his scrawny body, you would give him the biggest hug. You would never let go. No matter how much he cursed and cackled and said the weirdest shit anybody had ever heard… you would not let go.
Dating Advice from Emperor Hadrian
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Wendy was stricken with wanderlust early on when she climbed onto her roof just to watch the sunset over the mountains. She loves nothing more than climbing mountains (real and metaphorical) with her family. She has an MFA from Lesley University in Writing for Young People, and teaches English, Creative Writing, and Literature at Southeast Community College in Lincoln, Nebraska. Her essays appear in Segullah, Inscape, and Illuminations magazines. She also writes middle grade fiction, with the strong belief that kids deserve good books, and she deserves the steady dose of wondering and wandering inherent in a creative life.
My first real boyfriend wasn’t smart or funny. Instead, he was condescending, which is the insecure man’s substitute for wit. And I, smart and funny as I was, didn’t understand my role in this perpetual toxicity. I was inexperienced and quick to forgive as he regaled tragic childhood stories of loss and trauma.
I alone understood him.
Also, he had a motorcycle.
We dated for two years and finally, at age twenty-one, I found the courage to call it off. After our breakup, I spiraled into a months-long depression. My sadness spread like unblotted ink, staining and straining my school, my work, and my other healthy relationships. I couldn’t see a way out.
Three months later, my roommate handed me a flyer she’d found posted outside our university’s Art History department: Study Abroad in Syria.
“You need this,” she said.
I agreed that I should probably get off the couch, but going all the way to Syria seemed a little extreme.
“They’re sending students to rebuild museum displays and study Syrian mummification. You should apply.”
What better way to climb out of a depression than studying alternative ways of preserving the dead?
In February 2003, I applied.
The grant money was approved in early March. One week later, George Bush pronounced that Syria had Weapons of Mass Destruction up its proverbial sleeves. The university (and the government) wouldn’t allow the trip.
But since the grant money had already been allocated, two months later I found myself (and my first-ever passport stamps), in the basements of the British Museum in London, the National Museum of Scotland in Edinburgh, the Glyptotek in Copenhagen, and the Louvre in Paris.
The trip was undeniably incredible. With our travel group I feigned enthusiasm, but internally I felt hollow, still aching for my first lost love.
Between museum visits, my wiry-haired art history professor insisted that we drive from Edinburgh to London through the Lake District and experience what she called “John Constable Clouds,” as well as an afternoon at Hadrian’s wall.
Around 76 BC, Roman Emperor Hadrian’s empire spread across the Western hemisphere. He developed stable, defensible borders and focused on unifying his empire’s disparate people. Part of his strategy was to build a coast-to-coast wall marking the northern area of Brittania, and he did a pretty bang-up job, because two millennia later, it’s still there.
I walked alone over and around the ruins, staring out at the Constable clouds and the green patchwork landscape. Questions forced their way into my mind, as if the sheer beauty bombarding my eyes and the fresh air flooding my lungs forced open my brain’s floodgate. For the first time in a long time, I could think clearly.
Why would Hadrian build such an intense wall?
Why did my stupid heart still feel so broken?
Who was Hadrian trying to keep out?
Why was I holding so much in?
Why was I ruining this once-in-a-lifetime opportunity because I missed a boy who wasn’t even that funny?
The questions warred within my mind. Then, as if conjured by the promise of a vigorous battle, a figure appeared next to me, clad in Roman attire.
“Pretty nice, isn’t it?” Emperor Hadrian nodded toward the landscape. He was cocky, even for an Emperor. Especially one that only existed in my mind.
“I guess,” I sighed.
“You’re not impressed?” He puffed out his imaginary chest.
“Why did you build a wall that spans the entire country?” I asked. “Isn’t that a bit…excessive?” It felt like a fair question.
Hadrian stared out at the clouds as they flirted with the stone-pocked landscape. “I wanted to keep some things in, and other things out.”
He looked thoughtful now, less pompous, even introspective.
“What things? This wall is 73 miles long, eight feet wide, and more than twelve feet tall. Every third of a mile has a watch tower that housed thousands of soldiers. What could possibly be worth that much effort?”
Hadrian stared into the distance. “Is there too high a price to keep intact an empire?”
Oh dip.
I couldn’t argue with him. Not just because he wasn’t real, but because I couldn’t deny that he was right. He had something worth protecting, so he did everything he could to protect it. He built a wall across an entire freaking country.
I felt a shift within me, immediate, intense, and permanent. My mushy, tender heart transformed into something stronger. Into stone, into a wall, spanning across my entire being, to protect that which was most valuable.
Hadrian disappeared. I was alone again on his wall. I took a picture. Not of myself, but of the Constable clouds, and the grazing sheep, and the long, stone wall that withheld attacks from far worse foes than a mediocre ex-boyfriend. I needed to memorialize the moment that changed everything. The moment I knew that I was strong enough, good enough, smart enough, clever enough and ambitious enough to never again remain in a toxic relationship. I knew what that meant now, and that was okay, because it taught me how to construct effective defenses.
Not Hadrian’s wall; my wall.
Not built to keep out future love. Not built to keep in resentment or regret. Built to protect. Built to fortify. Built out of the stones of past experience, which paved a sturdy foundation. Built higher, wider, and longer, in continuum until I gained the vantage needed to recognize incoming danger, and the experience to appreciate the views.