What I can’t find is how long you can make a Heart work once it is shot and can other body organs take over for it and can a hospital keep you alive without it and are you the same person without it and are you a person at all?
This is all I can find on that topic:
A gunshot wound to the Heart is almost always fatal.
CHAPTER 7
GROUPS
MRS. JOHNSON FINISHES EX-MRS. JOHNSON FINISHES EX - plaining our group project which can be about any animal we choose. She asks us to give her some choices and writes them on the board.
I choose the Heart.
Her marker squeaks to a halt on the whiteboard. I see, she says, turning slowly to Look At The Person. Of what animal?
I don’t care. As long as it’s human. I’m really good at drawing the human Heart now.
The class laughs.
She sighs. I want you to write about an animal. How about a panda?
I shake my head. Can’t she see I’m already drawing a Heart in my notebook?
Another animal?
I shake my head again.
Well. Think about it. Maybe you’ll come up with some animals that’ll interest you.
After she writes a bunch more animals on the board she says to break into groups. Everyone moves except me. Mrs. Johnson stands in front of my desk. Would you like help finding a group?
I have a group.
Who’s in your group?
Me.
Who else?
Nobody. I’m my own group.
Someone laughs.
I’d like you to be in a real group. How about joining Emma and Brianna?
No.
More kids laugh.
Mrs. Johnson narrows her eyes and mouth at them but turns back to me. Excuse me?
No Thank You. That’s another sticker for my YOUR MANNERS chart.
Everyone laughs now.
Mrs. Johnson takes a big breath and lets it out. I want you to be part of a group.
I stare at her hands.
Do you understand?
Yes. I understand what she wants but I also know what I want.
So will you come over and join them now?
She doesn’t understand. I shake my head. No.
Why not?
I sigh and try to explain it so she’ll Get It. I know that’s what you want but it’s not what I want.
Hi, says Mrs. Brook, you’re early.
I know. I told Mrs. Johnson that but she said it was time to see you NOW. She’s having trouble Getting It today.
Oh. Let’s Talk About It.
I explain about the group project.
Caitlin. When a teacher says she wants you to do something that means you should do it. It’s the same as saying you have to do it.
Well why didn’t she say that?
It’s a nice way of saying it.
No it’s not. It’s a confusing way of saying it. And she should say PLEASE if she’s trying to be nice.
Would that have helped? If she’d said please?
Maybe. Should I share that with her?
Why don’t you let me talk with her instead. And why don’t you want to do a group project with some of the girls?
I can do a better group project by my own self.
I’m sure you can do a wonderful project but there’s value in working with a group.
What’s the value?
Making friends.
I already have friends.
Tell me about your friends.
My Dictionary. TV. Computer.
Mrs. Brook shakes her head. I’m talking about people and learning how to get along with others.
I know how. I leave them alone.
Not that way.
But that’s what they always tell me—Leave me alone. Caitlin go away—so I’m listening. And I’m doing what they asked so I’m being nice.
Mrs. Brook’s head drops down and she squeezes her hands into fists. It can be difficult but I’m going to help you. She Looks At The Person. Let’s think about the children in your class.
I stare at the Facial Expressions Chart. I start stuffed-animaling it.
Are you thinking?
I already did.
Who did you think of ?
I’m thinking of people who smile a lot. That’s supposed to mean happy and nice and friendly. And which people have mad faces or cry a lot because that means they’re sad. Or mad. Or scared.
Or sometimes even happy and just feeling emotional, Mrs. Brook says.
See! That’s why emotions are evil and I hate them! Especially crying. I don’t Get It.
Laughing is easier to figure out, she says. It usually shows that you’re happy.
Not always. Sometimes it shows that you’re being mean.
That’s true—if someone is teasing or making fun of someone.
WHEN, I tell her, not if.
She sighs. I suppose it’s just as hard to figure out emotions from laughing too.
Now I’m thinking about Josh.
Mrs. Brook does her turtle head jerk. Oh? Do you . . . like him?
No.
Let’s try to pick someone you like and we’ll work on a friendship with that person. That’s the first thing to think about.
Oh. You didn’t say that.
Who do you like?
I don’t know.
Think hard.
Miss Harper.
Miss Harper?
Yes. She’s the princiPAL. Get It? She’s everyone’s pal.
Yes okay but I’m thinking of someone your age.
Who are you thinking of ?
No one in particular. I’d like you to think of someone.
I don’t like this game. I give up so why don’t you just tell me?
Well—how about Emma?
Emma?
Yes. She’s very outgoing.
I don’t like very outgoing. Or efFUSive. Or EXtroverted. Or greGARious. Or any of those words that mean their loudness fills up my ears and hurts and their face and waving arms invade my Personal Space and their constant talking sucks all the air out of the room until I think I’m going to choke.
It’s easier to talk with people who are outgoing. Just think about it.
This is what I’m thinking: Mrs. Brook does not Get It.
You’re a very special person Caitlin. I think you’ll be a wonderful friend.
Okay maybe she does Get It. I’m the one who doesn’t. She lets me look up friend in her Dictionary. It says: somebody emotionally close.
There’s that evil word again. Emotionally. That is not one of my strengths.
But you can develop that strength.
I look away and suck on my sleeve. I’m not ready to develop that strength just yet.
Mrs. Brook seems to Get It. She sighs and says she’ll talk with Mrs. Johnson and maybe this time I can be my own group because there’s a lot going on in my life right now but soon I’ll have to join the group.
I don’t like the word soon because you don’t know when it’s going to sneak up on you and turn into NOW. Or maybe it’ll be the kind of soon that never happens. Like when I asked Dad and Devon when the chest would be finished. They said soon.
CHAPTER 8
BAMBI
I’M DOING MY GROUP PROJECT on the Heart and how it works and how a gunshot wound to the Heart makes it stop working and what they do with the body when it’s dead which is cremate it. At least that’s what happened to Devon.
When I finish my last drawing I go to the sofa where Dad is sitting and show it to him. He reads it and his head droops almost to his knees. The bump on his throat goes in and out every time he swallows. He sniffs several times which means at least three times and actually he sniffs five times before I say, What’s wrong with it?
Nothing, he says. It’s—it’s very well done. I . . . need to go take a shower. You can pick out a video and watch it.
Yay! And I don’t even have all the stickers I need for a video! I run over to the shelf with the videos and s
top. Why are you taking a shower at night? You always take a shower in the morning.
He is already out of the living room. I’m a little sore . . . and I don’t hear what he says after that except he must be really sore because I hear him crying even before the shower turns on.
I don’t want to hear the crying so I focus on my favorite videos. I don’t like the ones the other girls at school like with loud music and girls who giggle and dance. I like cartoons. I pick up Cinderella but it’s kind of a stupid story. Not because she lost a shoe. I lose shoes all the time. But if you know where you lost your shoe why don’t you go back and get it? And if you don’t know Devon always says go back to the last place you remember having it and start looking there. Cinderella should go back to the dance. Snow White is okay because of the dwarves and Pocahontas is good because of the animals but Devon says the music is crying music and Dad is already crying so I don’t want that.
I pull out Bambi and look at it. Bambi reminds me how smart I am. Sometimes I’m smarter than Devon even though he is three years and one month and sixteen days older than me. Even when I was five years old and we watched Bambi. At the beginning the mother deer dies in the fire. You don’t see her die because it’s a cartoon but you see the flames and she never comes back so she is definitely dead. Devon kept saying, She can’t be dead! She can’t be dead, and I said, She’s DEAD Devon! He started crying and saying, She’s coming back! She has to come back, so I had to yell at him, SHE’S DEAD AND SHE’S NEVER COMING BACK, and Dad had to come and take Devon out of the room because like Dad said, You shouldn’t say things like that!
I don’t know why Devon couldn’t Get It that the mother was dead. Our mother died two years before we watched Bambi so he should’ve known that mothers die and that they don’t ever come back again no matter how much you cry or call for them.
I look over at Devon’s chest. The air from the heat pump is making the sheet lift up just a bit. Then it stops dead. I look back at the Bambi video and put it back on the shelf because it’s giving me a recess feeling in my stomach and I don’t know why.
CHAPTER 9
NO RUNNING. WALKING.
WHEN I GO TO MRS. BROOK TIME she says to go get my coat because we’re switching our schedule.
Today?
She nods. And for the rest of the year. She shuts her door and her shoes start squeaking across the floor toward the coat hooks outside my classroom.
Why? I don’t like switching things. It’s always recess first—yuck—then Mrs. Brook time. Her shoes keep squeaking down the hall so I have to walk-run to catch up with her because there’s No Running In The Halls. What’s the schedule going to be now?
We’re going to have our time together while we walk around the playground during your regular recess. Then you can stay outside and have recess with the kindergarten through second graders.
I Look At The Person. Two recesses? I don’t even like one recess.
But the little kids are very sweet and I’ll be with you for recess with the older kids because sometimes they can be . . . She presses her lips together. I think it’s a mad face. A little rough.
I think about Josh. And I wonder why a grown-up wants to go to recess at all. Okay. But don’t even try getting on the monkey bars. It’s too dangerous.
Mrs. Brook smiles. I promise you I’ll avoid the monkey bars.
I take my jacket from the hook and put it on as Mrs. Brook pushes the bar on the door to the playground and it clanks open. The brightness outside hurts my eyes and the wind makes them water and the screaming on the playground stabs my ears. I suck my sleeve and walk fast to try to get away from it even though it follows me everywhere.
Caitlin! What are you doing so far ahead of me?
I’m walking. And you’re slow.
Usually when two people go for a walk together, Mrs. Brook says, they actually walk together.
Oh, I say, and keep walking.
Caitlin! Walk back to me. Please.
So I walk backward to her and stop. Now what?
Let’s walk next to each other. That’s what going for a walk together means. She puts her right foot out first then her left.
I do the exact same thing.
You don’t need to stare at my feet, she says. And you don’t need to match my exact stride or use your left foot when I use mine.
Then how is that walking together? I ask.
We’re going to keep pace with each other because we’re talking to each other while we walk. Sometimes we’ll make eye contact too. That lets the other person know that we’re listening and interested.
What if we’re not interested?
She Looks At The Person and she opens her eyes wide and she speaks slowly. We’re going to act like we’re interested. Okay? We’ll use this time to observe people and maybe talk to them. We really need to work hard on making friends.
Why? I ask. Don’t you have any? Recess isn’t the best place to make friends.
I want to work on friendships for YOU. You’ll be going to the middle school soon and I want you to have some friends there.
Middle school is sixth grade, I remind her. That’s next year.
Actually you only have a few months left in elementary school. Sixth grade starts in August.
She’s right. Why does everyone say next year? It’s not next year. It’s this year. I suck on my sleeve some more even though I know Mrs. Brook doesn’t like me to.
There’ll be more group projects in middle school so you’ll have to learn to Deal With That. Having friends will help.
Can’t I Deal With It by being my own group?
Mrs. Brook shakes her head. This means no.
I keep sucking my sleeve.
Caitlin. Why don’t you try clasping your hands together or putting your hands in your pockets and squeezing them into fists or one of the other things we’ve talked about instead of sucking your sleeve?
I stop sucking my sleeve but I’ll go back to it later when she forgets because I’m persistent.
She nods at kids on the playground and tells me what they’re doing and how they’re feeling but I don’t know how she can tell. I don’t even know which kids she’s talking about. They all move around too fast. When she mentions the boy in the purple hooded sweatshirt I try to keep up with him and I wish I had a purple sweatshirt like that because purple is my favorite color and I think I might like a hood and it’s fun to watch the flying purple when he runs really fast.
Caitlin!
What?
You’re far ahead of me again. We’re supposed to be keeping pace with each other so we can talk.
Oh. I thought you were done talking.
Look in my eyes while we walk and talk. That will help you keep pace.
I keep switching my eyes away to give them a break but she keeps catching me.
Finally she says, There. That’s much better.
Except that my eyes hurt and my neck is stiff. How is that better?
When the bell rings Mrs. Brook tells me I have twenty minutes of recess with the little kids and then I have to go back to my classroom like they do. If you have any trouble go see one of the teachers.
Inside?
No. There are always at least three teachers on recess duty out here.
Really? I never see any teachers outside at big kid recess.
We always have several outside but they’re kept quite busy because there are a lot of kids on the playground at the same time.
I know. Too many. It’s way too loud.
CHAPTER 10
MICHAEL AND MANNERS
IT’S LOUD AT LITTLE KID RECESS too but I like these kids much better. They don’t hurt as much when they run into you. They’re my size or smaller. I look around and smile.
I see a little boy in a red baseball cap that reminds me of Devon’s red Potomac Nationals baseball cap. And I remember seeing that boy at the memorial service for Devon because I remember that cap. He was sitting hunched over on a pew just the way he’s sitting hu
nched over on a bench right now. I wonder why he’s sitting like that. There’s no teacher next to him so I don’t think he’s in trouble. He’s rubbing his eyes so he’s either sleepy or sad. I think those are the only two things it could be.
I walk closer to see if I can figure out which it is. He looks up when I’m near and I can see his reddish wet face.
Are you sad?
He nods.
Why?
He doesn’t say anything.
I look around for Josh but then remember that he’s not out at this recess. Is someone else being mean to you?
He shakes his head.
I put my hands in my pants pocket and rediscover my gummy worms. I pull one out and dangle it in front of him. Want this? Her name is Laurie.
He looks at it for a moment then takes it but doesn’t put it in his mouth.
It’s not a real worm, I tell him. It’s to eat.
He still doesn’t eat it and I’m about to ask him to give it back if he’s not going to eat it but then he says, Thank you. I don’t think I can take it back now.
He puts it in his mouth and part of it hangs out as he chews. Finally the worm disappears. I miss her, he says.
Laurie the worm?
He shakes his head. Mommy.
Oh.
He turns his head to look up at me and moves closer but doesn’t invade my Personal Space. I try to look in his eyes. When I do I’m surprised. They are like Bambi eyes. They’re simple. Like the eyes on the Facial Expressions Chart and they stay still so I can see what’s inside.
Don’t you miss your brother? he asks. The Bambi eyes do not even blink.
What do you mean?
He’s dead. Right?
How do you know?
Everyone says you’re the weirdo whose brother is dead. Oh. Sorry. I didn’t mean to say weirdo. That’s just what people say. Are you weird?