I sneak out to meet Micah again a few nights later, armed with poster boards, tape, markers, and an idea. He follows me to the track, where I lay the boards on the ground and start writing my latest poem, a line on each poster.
Micah watches for a minute and then gets to work on his own poster board. He draws a man, a smoky whisper of a being, all black strokes and billowy form being stripped away into nothing. Then we set up the hurdles on the track, evenly spaced all the way around, and on each one we hang a poster board.
Micah reads the last line of my poem out loud, âSomeone who isnât all wrong.â
âIt occurs to meââhe pauses while ripping a piece of tape with his teeth to stick the poster on the hurdleââthat there are two Lilys. The Lily who writes these poems, and the one you want people to see.â
Frankly, I judge him for not saying it earlier. Itâs been a week since he saw my bathroom-stall poem, and he hasnât run away screaming or done any of the things Iâd expect someone to do after getting a glimpse into the chaos of my mind.
âThis from the king of enigmatic double lives,â I say, deflecting about as hard as I can. Micah looks at me through the dark, opening his arms wide.
âIâm an open book. All you have to do is ask.â
âOkay,â I say, thinking about the rumors on the Underground about his expulsion from his past school. âWhere did you get your scar?â
âPlaying catch with my dad as a kid. Baseball broke the skin, and it kept busting open so many times, my eyebrow never quite grew back.â He walks toward me in the dark. âBut thatâs not really what you want to know, is it?
âYou want to know if the rumors are true. If Iâm the guy they say I am. The kind of guy who could hurt someone.â Heâs within a foot of me now. âWhat do think?â
I remember how he looked when Damon soaked his sketch pad. The darkness in Micahâs eyes. Damon definitely deserved to get hit, but Micah stopped.
âHonestly?â I say. âJuryâs still out.â
âWell, I eagerly await the verdict.â Micah smiles. âAnd the answer to the question you didnât actually ask is yes, I am that kind of guy. Or at least I used to be. For a long time, maybe even since my dad died, my depression didnât exactly look like depression. It looked a lot like me being pissed off at the world. And this kid at my old school said something about my dad, and I justâlost it.â
Through the dark, I can see the outline of him, the bright socks and T-shirt with a big yellow smiley face on it. This is not a boy with anger issues.
âSo when did you go from guy to the one who subscribes to the dorky-sock-of-the-month club and idolizes a make-love-not-war icon like Bob Ross?â
âI told you, when you get to the point where dying seems like the answer, you have two choices: change or fade away. I chose to change.â He looks down at his legs, at the zebras on the bright green fabric. âAnd the socks? I guess they help me remember Iâm still here. Living out loud. Still screaming into the void.â Micah holds up his poster board, eyeing the smoke man fading into nothing. âSometimes, though, the void still wins.
âPlus,â he continues, âliving out loud has the extra awesome benefit of pissing off people like Damon. People donât like unpredictable. They want to put you in a box. Iâm the depressed kid. Youâre the A-plus student. It makes people nervous when youâre not what youâre supposed to be.â
I read my words that loop around the track. The loop Iâve run a million times. Always pushing to be the best. Because thatâs what Iâm supposed to be. Thatâs box.
âSo is that the point of the Hundred Acre Wood? Bears and pigs and tigers who donât fit into boxes. A bunch of weirdos against the world?â
Micah shakes his head and laughs. âKeep guessing.â
He tapes his drawing to the final hurdle and then lies down in the grass next to the track, his hands behind his head as he stares up at the night sky. I lie next to him, inhaling the sweet scent of the April orange blossoms. Without the sun, the night air has a nip, and when I shiver, Micah scoots closer.
âDonât get any ideas,â he says. âJust donât want my partner freezing to death before our projectâs done. Now your turn. Why the two Lilys?â
I donât know if itâs the obscurity of the night or the track where Iâve spent so much time chasing a better timeâa better meâbut I donât stop the words.
âBecause Iâm afraid,â I start. âOf losing control. Of becomingââ
âLike Alice?â
I nod, ashamed.
âThere are worse people to become,â he says.
I pick at a blade of grass on the field.
âI justâI just donât need people knowing about the monsters in my head.â
He leans up on one elbow, giving me the same look as on the cliff, the one that makes it hard to remember that I have no time for boys.
He taps my leg with his foot. âI know, and Iâm kind of okay with you.â
âYeah, but youâre different.â
His smile pierces through the dark as it spreads across his face.
âOh my gosh. Stop throwing yourself at me,â he says. âWhat part of partners do you not understand?â
I kick him lightly in the shin, and Micah laughs, a rich, genuine sound that fills the empty track. We pick up our supplies and leave the field, walking over our sidewalk chalk art. My words and his monsters are smudged and fading. He pulls his bike upright and nods toward the handlebars. I hop on, and he starts toward my house.
âI go to this therapy group a couple times a month,â he says while we ride. âJust some Fairview friends and indigestible refreshments, but you could come. If you want.â
âYou think I need therapy?â
âI think needs therapy.â
I turn my head to look at him in the dark. âBecause Iâm a head case.â
âNo, I justââ
âYouâre just ruining guerrilla poetry with this therapy talk, is what youâre doing.â The last thing I need right now is therapy. Someone with a degree on the wall diagnoses you, and suddenly thatâs all you are anymore. One more box, one more label. âI am not about to lie on some overpaid therapistâs couch while looking at inkblots that totally are all penises, but you canât say theyâre penises or youâll be diagnosed as a grade-A sicko who wants to murder puppies or whatever.â
âWow. So thatâs a no to therapy. But you talk to someone. What about Alice?â
âTold youânot gonna happen,â I say.
she said.
âStill shutting you out?â
Weâre almost to my house, and Micah pulls over to let me off.
âAnd sneaking out at night. Ignoring me. So can you please just drop this?â
âYes.â
âThank yââ
âIn exchange,â he continues, âfor an evening of your time.â
I cross my arms, trying to figure him out.
âDo you ask your project partners out on dates?â
âIâm officially horrified that you think Iâm capable of something so conventional.â He starts pedaling away into the night but yells back at me. âTomorrow. Pick you up at seven!â
The guerrilla poet strikes again! The track this time. Anyone know who it is??
No idea. But I love it!
Wish Iâd thought of it The drawing kind of looks like something I saw on that Micah kidâs page Ummmâ¦his partner is Lily Larkin LOL never mind. Sheâs about as deep as a kiddie pool. Maybe one of his friends does the poems.
That guy has friends?