My Life After Now - By Jessica Verdi Page 0,33
in my palms.
So this was what it looked like: my new blood. The thing that was keeping me alive and killing me at the same time. It looked normal enough. Red. Plasmic. Wet.
The gashes were deep, on all five of my right hand’s fingers. The blood dripped onto the wooden body of my guitar. I didn’t wipe it off. Instead, I started playing again. I didn’t care that I was making the open wounds even worse, and I didn’t care that blood was getting all over the strings.
I played and sang and wrote till I passed out, and woke up the next morning still fully dressed, hugging my bloody guitar, scabs forming on my fingers.
It was November 17th. My golden birthday. I was seventeen years old today.
It was a Saturday, so luckily I didn’t have to go to school and suffer through all the smiling faces wishing me a happy birthday. Today was the first of my limited reserve of birthdays left, and there was nothing “happy” about it.
I shuffled downstairs and found that my dads had woken up early to make me my traditional birthday breakfast. A giant stack of alternating pancakes and homemade waffles, covered in whipped cream, chocolate syrup, and chocolate sprinkles, with a big fat birthday candle stuck in the top. I’d assumed this year we’d be forgoing the annual calorie-fest in light of my recent withdrawal from life, but I guess it was going to take a lot more than a severe case of depression to make my dads cancel their only daughter’s birthday festivities.
“Happy birthday, Lucy!” they cheered as I entered the kitchen. They were wearing party hats and blowing into noise-makers.
I sank into a chair. “Coffee?” I said, cradling my head in my hands.
“Coming right up! Anything for the birthday girl!” Papa said.
“Where’s Lisa?” I mumbled.
“Still sleeping. The pregnancy’s really making her exhausted these days,” Dad said. “Should we wake her up? This is your first birthday with all of us under the same roof, you know.”
“And only seventeen years too late,” I muttered under my breath.
“What’s that, honey?”
“Nothing. No, don’t wake her.”
Papa placed my birthday feast along with my Rent mug filled with black coffee in front of me.
And then they sang. “Happy birthday to you, happy birthday to you…”
They waited for me to blow out the candle. “Make a wish, Lu!” they urged.
Suddenly, everything came to a grinding halt. Make a wish. As if it were that easy. As if I hadn’t been ceaselessly wishing since that day at the clinic. As if something as innocent as a childish birthday wish would right all my wrongs. As if the one thing I wanted wasn’t impossible.
Out of nowhere, I began to cry, the tears running down my cheeks at the exact same speed as the wax that was dripping down the still-lit candle.
Caught off guard, my dads immediately rushed to my side and put their arms around me.
“Lucy? What is it?” Dad asked anxiously.
It was everything. Becoming another year older, my brittle, scabbed fingers, the Rent mug, my dads’ smiling faces…it was all too much.
And then the physics of it all became suddenly clear: the only way to keep from sinking was to unburden myself of the weight.
“I have to tell you something,” I blurted out before I even knew what I was doing.
They pulled back and looked at each other. Dad sat on my left, Papa on my right, and they waited. I could only imagine what was going through their heads right now, but I knew that they weren’t expecting what I was about to say.
I finally knew what to wish for: Please don’t hate me, please don’t hate me, please don’t hate me, I thought.
And then I said it. “I have HIV.” It’s amazing how much weight three small words, five tiny syllables, can hold.
The only sound in the whole house was the crackling of the candle. I blew it out.
18
You’ll Never Walk Alone
There was no going back now.
I held my breath.
My fathers’ faces were so blank, so perplexed, that at first I thought they hadn’t heard me. And I truly didn’t know if I could say it a second time. But they just didn’t know what to do with what I’d just said.
After a while, the blankness melted away and was replaced by disbelief. Papa even let out a miniscule chuckle, as if he thought I was kidding. The first real sign of actual comprehension was the twitching of Dad’s fingers, and then the eventual reaching out and