When I Ran Away Ilona Bannister (best free ebook reader .txt) š
- Author: Ilona Bannister
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Matty and Michelle go to my parents. They kneel at the feet of their kitchen chairs. Matty holds on to my dad and Michelle cries into my motherās lap while Ma strokes her hair in a way that she has never stroked mine. I take Michelleās phone and try again and again to get to her voicemail but thereās still no signal. Michelle said she got his message before the planes hit and the phones went dead so she knew he was there. I throw the phone on the coffee table, and we all stare at it, knowing heās in there, locked in this little plastic box, and that we canāt reach him.
āWhat did he say, Mish, tell me again what he said?ā my dad asks her, for the fourth, fifth, tenth time.
She croaks, her voice swollen with grief, āHe said, āMishy, this is gonna be good.ā He said the guy was nice and he couldnāt believe the view. And that he was gonna take me up there one day. To see the top of the world, he said,ā she repeats again for him. āāāTop of the fuckinā world,ā he said,ā and she sobs. And my dad cocks his head and listens like something in those words will give us a clue to where Frankie is really hiding.
But I just see Frankie slipping his phone into his pocket, turning around, putting out his hand for a strong, firm handshake with some other unnamed faceless man who is also about to die. I see him standing on top of the world minutes before I started running far below him, a few streets away.
Later I sit next to Ma. She holds the phone and I tell her he loves her because itās too soon for the past tense. I put a hand on Mattyās shoulder. His white T-shirt, the curve of the muscle under the cotton; I cry out, but it feels like the sound came from someone elseās body.
Time keeps moving without us. Everything happens at once. Nothing happens at all. Harry quietly hands each of us a mug without making eye contact, not wanting to intrude on our grief. He puts one in my hand. All I can do is smell the whiskey fumes. I canāt swallow. Itās too strange to be living. To be breathing, drinking, crying. Involuntary actions are now deliberate. Step One. Breathe in. Step Two. Breathe out. Step Three. Blink.
Harry refills drinks, gets tissues, but the sky is changing now, the day has passed in spite of us and he whispers to me, āGigi, this is time for your family now, I should go. Unless you need anything? Unless I can do anything else? Iāve written down the numbers for places you can call for help, they gave them on TV. They said itās quite difficult now, they donāt have much information.ā
āI, I, couldā¦ā But I canāt speak. I mean to say something but I donāt know what. He reaches out to touch me, pat my arm or hold my hand, but then he doesnāt. He nods at me, looks down, turns away. Harry says goodbye to my parents and Matty and Michelle, says the right things, I can see by the way they hug him, the way my dad says thank you, the way Ma nods her head, grabs his hand and squeezes it wordlessly.
He walks to the front door and I follow him. Outside, I stand on the landing and he stands a step below me. I look only at his face, trying not to see the City still smoking behind him. āIām sorry, Gigi. Iām so sorry.ā He means it. He doesnāt try to hug me. I would freeze and turn to a pile of dust if anyone touched me. Somehow he knows this.
As he walks down the steps in Frankieās old shirt, hands in his pockets, I stop him. Stand two steps above him. I use the edge of my T-shirt to clean the smudge of dust still on his forehead. āYou missedā¦ā I mean to say You missed a spot, but that would have been me before, trying to lighten the darkness. Our eyes lock instead. Then I watch him turn and walk away.
As Harry walks down the block, Sharon, Danielle, and Stacy, my oldest friends, run towards Maās house and brush past him as though he isnāt there. Danielleās crying, Stacyās trying not to, saying my name over and over, arms outstretched to me. Iām quickly enfolded in their perfume and big hair and love and sorrow on the steps of my childhood home. Matty must have let them know. They loved Frankie like their own little brother. They hug me and smooth my hair, hold me by the elbow, try to take my weight as their own, but Iām stiff, numb, and they donāt know that their embraces are like a steel brush on my skin. I watch Harry walk away as I say to the girls, āFrankieās gone,ā and this is only the first time of the hundreds of times that I will say the words. Heās gone.
The girls hold me, arms around my waist as we go up the steps to the front door. I stop before I open it. I donāt look back because I donāt have to. I know Harryās still there, watching me, sad for me. For all of us.
A couple days later when we finally get to the City to make the rounds of the hospitals, Manhattan is covered in flyers of the smiling dead. And by then weāll know itās thousands. For daysāweeks, monthsāafterwards, there will be calls to hospitals, hotlines, police. Weāll tell them Frankieās missing. And day after day he wonāt come home. He wonāt come through the door telling us a crazy story about how he escaped and almost didnāt make it. Because he didnāt.
But tonight, Ma will hide the phone from a drunk Michelle and keep it for herself, and sleep with it
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