Dear Ana: Chapter 9
Dear Ana: A Novel
âMovie?â
âEagle Eye.â
âNever heard of it.â
âThatâs concerning.â
Noah chuckled. âIâll add it to my list. Season?â
âWinter.â
âWinter?â he repeated in disgust.
âYes. I love the cold. I hate the sun. I love when it gets dark early. I wish daylight savings was never-ending.â
âWell,â he said doubtfully. âI guess that explains why youâre always wearing gloves.â
I looked away and took a sip of my coffee instead of responding to his not-so-subtle way of trying to get me to uncover something about myself. It was Friday night and we were at Espresso & Chill after hours. I wasnât scheduled at Tysons and usually I would pick up a shift, but once we started talking the time flew by and it was too late. Noah and I had come up with a system over the last few months. I clearly laid out all the topics of conversation forbidden from being discussed, and after that, everything was . . . easy. I hadnât had easy in a long time.
Noah had no issues filling my silence with his life. His story was heartbreaking and inspiring, with a happily ever after to tie it all together. The plot to a touching movie, or a sentimental memoir. He talked about his café. He talked about his loving brothers. He talked about the close relationship he had with his parents.
He talked about Ana.
I thought Iâd felt the worst of it. That never-ending, all- consuming, always there guilt. But listening to him speak so highly of her . . . it hurt. God, it fucking hurt. Ana was everything I wasnât and everything I would never be. If only her best qualities had gotten donated as well. I still couldnât bring myself to stop asking, though, to stop torturing myself because somewhere, deep down in the corrupted barrel I called a soul, I knew I deserved it. The questions kept steamrolling through, questions I didnât even know I had until suddenly this boy who had access to all the answers fell right into my lap.
I hesitated before bringing her up, certain he would hear the irrational eagerness behind my innocent curiosity, but he didnât seem to notice. It was obvious he was holding back when he spoke of her, but I didnât mind. I took the crumbs he fed me fervently. Desperately. A mouse trapped in a home with a vegan family but eating the dairy-free cheese anyway just to survive.
So while Noah gave me depth, I gave him minor and nonessential facts about myself. I was sure he would get sick of my answers, but every night ended the same way.
âWill I see you tomorrow?â
And I would nod.
âPinky promise.â
âWhat about baked goods? You only ever get a coffee when youâre here,â he said suspiciously.
âIâm more savory than sweet and I put hot sauce on everything, but if I was in the mood for it, I would choose anything with chocolate. I hate cheese, except on a well-done pizza or in a double-toasted bagel. I hate nuts and anything peanut butter flavored, but I do love pb&j sandwiches, and my favorite chocolate bar is definitely Reese. I know that sounds contradictingâââ
âEverything you said sounds contradictingâââ
âBut the fuzzy math makes sense in my head. I prefer processed snacks over real food. I love candy. Hate rabbit food. Fruit-based pastries are a no, except for bananaââoh!â I clapped my hands together loudly. âOkay, I have my answer. I would never eat a banana, like, by itselfââthatâs gross. But my mom makes this chocolate chip banana bread that is to die for.â
âChocolate chip banana bread?â he repeated, shaking his head. âDid you have to choose the one thing thatâs not on my menu?â
âIâm just trying to improve your business.â
âI appreciate the input. Chocolate chip banana bread has also been added to my list.â
âGood.â
âGood.â
I was leaning casually on the table with my chin in my right hand and my left hand resting beside me. He was sitting back against his chair, arms crossed, eyes never leaving mine, giving me that look Iâd become so accustomed to. It was focused and fascinated, one green orb, one blue orb, and suddenly I was flying in the sky and laying in the grass at the same time.
Thump, thumpââ
âWhat? Is the interrogation over? Did I finally bore you?â
âNot even close,â he assured me. âIâm giving you an opportunity to offer something up voluntarily.â
âI just gave you an entire speech about what I like to eat.â
âAnd it was truly invigorating.â
I grinned and pointed to the white drape covering the right side of the café. âAre you still renovating?â
He ignored my question. âWhatâs your favourite color?â
âGreen. Does someone else own that part of the building?â
He huffed playfully. âIâm the sole owner of the building, but I still have no idea what to do with the rest of it. I think I might just expand the shop once it starts to get more foot traffic.â
âThis place is packed every day,â I reminded him. âIâm starting to suspect that youâre shoving some innocent person out of this chair seconds before I walk in because itâs conveniently always empty.â
He looked down, his cheeks tinted pink. âItâs the least I could do, seeing as my café is always packed because of the continuous anonymous glowing Yelp reviews.â
âOh, those arenât me. I mean, your café is nice and all, but I definitely wouldnât rate it five stars.â
âSure itâs not, hotcoffeeh8ter101.â
âItâs not,â I insisted, biting back a smile. âBut I would love to meet them.â
âIâll set you guys up,â he promised jokingly.
I kept looking at the tarp and an idea occurred to me suddenly. âYou should turn it into a bookstore.â
âA bookstore?â
âYeah, reading is super in right now.â
âI didnât realize you kept up with the trends.â
âI donât,â I agreed. âIâm part of the generation of readers that spent lunch in the library because I had no friends.â
âWow . . . no wonder youâre sad.â
âThose are happy memories, Noah. Reading is much more fun than socializing.â
âOkay, reading has also been added to my list,â he said. âSo, what are we talkingââAustin? Dickinson? Atwood?â
I stared at him blankly. âNone of the above.â
âOh. I assumed youâd be into classic literature or intellectually stimulating novels.â
âIntellectually stimulating?â I repeated with a chuckle. âMy favorite book series is Twilight. Which was very stimulating, just not intellectually.â
âOh God,â he groaned. âYou were one of those girls?â
âNo,â I replied. âI still am one of those girls. Present tense, Noah.â
âIâm sorry, I just canât picture you fangirling like the girls did at my school.â
I laughed at that. âItâs not cool to be a hater. Besides, I was more of a silent-obsessed fan. I didnât express it in fits of squeals and giggles, but I was exactly like them. And yes, Edward Cullen was and will forever be my one true love,â I told him with conviction.
âReally? A sparkly fictional character is my competition?â he teased.
Thump, thumpââ
âFictional men are definitely the standard, but it was the unconditional and irrevocable love concept that gripped my attention.â
He contemplated my words for a moment. âHave you ever been in love? With a real person?â
I coughed as the coffee went down the wrong pipe.
âAre you joking?â
âNo, Iâm seriously asking.â
âUm, well, in order to fall in love, you would have to get to know someone. Date someone. Talk to someone. None of which I have ever done. Youâre actually the first guy Iâve ever been . . . friends with.â
When did the word âfriendsâ become such an ugly word?
I glanced at him when he didnât respond, and Noah was smiling brightly.
âWhat?â I demanded.
âYou called me your friend.â
I rolled my eyes. âDonât let it get to your head.â
âToo late.â He winked. âYouâve really never been in a relationship before?â
âAre you surprised?â I looked at him skeptically. âItâs so obvious how awkward I am. Thatâs not exactly a turn-on for people.â
âThatâs not how I see you. I mean, youâre certainly difficult at times. Most times.â
My lips twitched. âI have no idea what youâre talking about.â
âMhm,â he agreed sarcastically. âYouâre also a little mean.â
âOnly a little?â I scoffed.
âExtremely pessimistic.â
âOkay, Iâll give you that.â
âYouâre so . . . secretive. But somehow youâre also remarkably blunt at the same time.â He shook his head. âYouâre an enigma, Maya.â
âSee?â I said, laughing. âGetting to know me is too much work.â
âBut,â he continued. âYouâre also funny. Smart. You listen in a way that I know youâre listening, even though I canât physically see the action. When I talk to you . . . I donât feel like my words are just bouncing off. You absorb everything I say,â he said softly. âI like the way you think. You never respond or react to stuff like I expect you to. It keeps things interesting.â
âYouâre making me sound like a science experiment.â
âYouâre pretty,â he pressed on. âEffortlessly, painlessly, fluently pretty.â
Thump, thumpââ
âIf only thatâs what men want.â
âWhat do you mean?â
I rolled my eyes. âDonât play dumb, Noah. I may have been single for a lifetime, but Iâm not naïve. Men donât care if a woman is smartââactually, most would prefer the opposite. You know, to protect their fragile ego. And, I donât have proof, but Iâm almost positive the first rule in the male pledge of allegiance is that a female canât be funny. Literally and figuratively.â
He raised his eyebrows in shock. âYouâve read it?â
I ignored his mockery and kept going. âListening, Noah? If I let a single brain cell comprehend what was coming out of a manâs mouth, it would only take half a second to hear something sexist, misogynistic, or just plain cruel.â I shook my head in distaste. âMen donât want unpredictable. They want easily controlled, and someone willing to accept the bare minimum.â
He regarded me skeptically. âFor someone who isnât a fan of real men, your words carry the fumes of a scorched past relationship.â His eyes lit up suddenly, and he gave me a suggestive look. âGirls?â
I sighed longingly. âYeah, I wish.â
He paused, thinking. âYour dad?â
âWeâre not close, but he still fulfilled all the fatherly requirements.â
âA male stranger on the street? A creepy professor?â He was grasping at strings. âIâve got nothing.â
Of course he didnât. Those were always the immediate assumptionsââboyfriend, father, or a fucking stranger. Those were the only possible ways a man could ever hurt a woman. There were no other scenarios. Everything else didnât count. My story didnât count.
It wasnât Noahâs fault for thinking that way. We lived in a world that chose to only recognize the right kind of abuse, and that chose to only believe the right kind of victim. If it wasnât previously psychoanalyzed in a published document, or artistically displayed in the media by an Oscar-winning celebrity then it wasnât real. If you didnât relentlessly perform your victimhood with calculated tears and a striking, unmistakable image of frailty during all hours of the day then it must not be true. It was deemed unacceptable and therefore couldnât be heard. And if your story couldnât be heard, then it also couldnât be helped. And as the days went on . . . as the minutes of being ignored and invisible continued to tick loudly in a never-ending cycle of despair you inevitably started to believe it too.
But so be it. You got blamed when you fought back. You got blamed when you didnât speak up sooner. You got blamed for being too sensitive. Too dramatic. Too emotional. You got blamed when the situation you described wasnât common or ideal. You got blamed when you didnât have proof because obviously, the first thing I felt like doing after getting beaten and strangled was to take a fucking selfie. I refused to humiliate myself any further. I refused to fold myself into societyâs version of the perfect damsel in distress, and if that meant my story would remain unspoken until it died with me then so fucking be it.
âThe silent monologue raging on in your head looks good,â Noah said when I continued to reel quietly. âIf only I could hear it too.â
âItâs extremely rusty,â I assured him, forcing my unyielding anger back into its forbidden box. âYouâre not missing out.â
âWell, on behalf of my very fucked up species, I apologize.â
I gave him a small smile. âYouâre not all bad.â
âA select few arenât,â he agreed reluctantly. âYouâll find your match, Maya. Any guy would be lucky to date you.â
Thump, thumpââ
âWho said I was looking?â
âYou just told me that you only read about cheesy romance and everything love.â
âI do.â
He gave me a look. âSo you enjoy reading about it, but you donât want to experience it?â
âNot necessarily.â I hesitated. âI guess I just donât believe in it.â
âThereâs nothing to believe in. Love isnât a theory or a hypothesisââit exists.â
âI believe in love as an emotion,â I clarified. âI believe that love can be strong. I believe that love can be beautiful. But I also believe that love is conditional and subject to change. It can happen in a split second, or after a prolonged sequence of time . . . but it always happens. Real and unconditional love is as make belief as vampires, and werewolfâs and any other mystical creature or fairytale ever written on paper.â
âDo you really believe that?â he asked doubtfully.
âThereâs always something, Noah. Thereâs always going to be something that you canât forgive, or look past.â I swallowed noisily, all remnants of humor gone. âSometimes you donât even know what it is that made them change their mindââthat made them decide to hate youââbut it always happens.â
He was quiet for a second, before suddenly leaning into the table, his chair squeaking against the tile. âTheyâre wrong.â
âWhoâs they?â
âThey,â he repeated firmly. âThem, he, she, it. The person who told you that you couldnât be loved without restrictions or limitations. Theyâre wrong.â
His face was so close to mine, I could count every eyelash, and freckle, and smile line, and hair follicle beginning to sprout over his lip.
Thump, thumpââ
I leaned back in my chair, pushing it away from the table.
He would never forgive this.
âMaya?â
âSorry,â I replied, standing. âI have to go . . . my momâs going to be wondering where I am.â
He nodded. âDrive safe.â
I walked to the door but stopped with my hand on the knob.
âThank you,â I said, looking back at him.
âFor what?â
âCalling me pretty.â
He grinned. âNo need to thank me for being honest.â
âOkay, settle down.â I rolled my eyes. âBye, dude.â
âSee ya, chick.â
I pulled onto my street with a smile on my face, just like Iâd been doing every day since December. Somewhere within the hours of laughter and shared words, I always found myself forgetting . . .
. . . but then that same smile disappeared as soon as I saw my brotherâs car in the driveway, just like it did every day since December.
I walked to the front door slowly, counting each stride. After three tries it finally took exactly 52 steps. I knew 52 steps. 52 steps was real. 52 steps confirmed I wasnât imagining. I could hear them all talking in the living room, and they sounded so . . . normal. But everything would change as soon as I stepped through the door. My presence would shatter the illusion theyâd created for themselvesââa tornado ripping through on a cloudless day. Or maybe it wasnât an illusion. Maybe they werenât pretending. Maybe they genuinely felt like an ordinary, loving family and it was me who made it feel incredibly dishonest and illegal.
âSalam Mama, Baba,â I greeted, tilting my head in their direction but keeping my gaze on the floor. I could feel Mikhailâs eyes burning a hole through my skin like bleach.
âMaya, honey, weâve been waiting for you. We wanted to have dinner all together tonight. Like a family.â
âI already ate,â I lied quickly, my stomach growling in response. âIâm really tired, I just want toâââ
âMaya,â she interrupted. âPlease.â
I shifted my stare to her pleading eyes. I spent my whole life pretending, couldnât I do it for one more night? For her?
âOkay,â I agreed. âIâm just going to change.â
After getting dressed in some sweats, I went to the bathroom and leaned against the door, staring at my hand. I swapped out my leather gloves for my cut-off cotton pair today. They were meant to be used for arthritis or carpal tunnel, which was what my mom thought I had because thatâs what I told her. Not because I had anything to hide or because I was doing anything wrong, I just didnât know how to explain whatever this was. I liked to think of it as grooming. It was equivalent to shaving your legs or popping a pimple. I was only cleansing my body of its noticeable flaws.
I carefully slipped them off and examined the skin on the dorsal side of my right handââfor some reason, my deranged hyper fixation excluded my left hand, but wearing one glove was more conspicuous than wearing two. It wasnât as bad as I thought. Most of the scabs had healed into a faded pink spot, but there were a few that were still bumpy and protruding from my skin, which meant the glove remained necessary. All I had to do was leave them alone for a few more weeks and they would disappear completely, freeing me from this disgusting bad habit. As long as I couldnât see or feel them, I wouldnât have the compulsive urge to pick.
There was one though, near the bottom, that hadnât healed quite as nicely as the others. The corner was black, which I assumed was dried blood I hadnât wiped away from the last time I was picking at it. I was positive the black and crusted part would be pink underneath, it just had to be removed so it could heal smoothly. So it could heal perfectly. I gently rubbed the scab, careful not to go too fast. Speed usually resulted in accidentally pricking my skin too hard and causing it to bleed.
âMaya, come down!â
I ignored her and slipped my nail underneath the scab slowly. I washed my hands, satisfied with the result, until I noticed the stream running red in the sink.
It was bleeding. I must have nicked my skin without noticing.
I ran my hand under the water to stop the flow, ignoring the tender sensationââ
âMaya!â
I turned the water off and put my gloves back on, letting out a shaky breath. It was gross and weird, and after every picking session, or episode, or whatever the fuck, I would tell myself that it was the last time. But then after a few minutes, or days, orââif I was luckyââweeks, my brain would go into overdrive and my fingers would absently go searching and prodding for a fresh scab or bump or scratch on my skin to pick, pick, pick.
âSorry, Mama. I was in the bathroom,â I told her, taking my usual seat at the table. They had already started eating which meant our family dinner would end quicker. I still hadnât set my eyes on Mikhail or acknowledged his presence in any way, but I knew he was sitting across from me because I could feel his gaze. They followed my hands as I reached for my spoon, and kept watching as I scooped up some rice and brought it to my mouth. I swallowed forcefullyââmy hunger had vanished and was replaced with nausea.
âHow was work today?â Mama asked.
âGood,â I responded, my voice monotone. He was still trying to get me to look at him. He wanted me to address his existence. He wanted to see the fear embedded in my eyes and confirm that I was still scared of him. That the panic he instilled in me all those years ago had never left. That, even though heâd been gone for almost five years, I was still haunted by the mere mention of his name. He could stare all he wanted. I was never going to give his sick and twisted mind the satisfaction it craved.
âDid you call the university yet to make sure your enrollment deferral is still active?â Baba asked.
Did he mean fake enrollment?
âYeah, they said itâs fine. I have two years, Baba,â I replied, pushing food around my plate to make it look like Iâd eaten more than one bite.
âI donât know why you differed anyway,â he said disapprovingly. âYouâre just going to be behind. Everyone has got it figured out except for you.â
My resolve slipped for a moment and I scraped my spoon harshly against my plate. My father was a prideful man, but this? Letting his wounded dignity speak to me like I was burdening him with my existence. Like I wasnât reminded every day that I was behind in life.
âHoney, you know sheâs helping us out,â Mama told him quietly, but he kept eating without giving her a response.
I bit my tongue and swallowed the burning sensation starting to grow deep in my chest at his unjust disappointment. I put my whole life on hold for them. I sacrificed my happiness and well-being for them. I would have left ages ago. I would have run away from this nightmare they called a family but I didnât. I stayed. I stayed and they still werenât satisfied. Nothing I ever did was good enough.
My mom stood up an eternity later and gathered my dad and Mikhailâs plates. I got up quickly and took my plate to the kitchen as well.
âIâll do them, Mama, go sit down,â I insisted, taking the plates from her. I covered the sponge with soap and started scrubbing the dishes clean. I was almost done rinsing when I felt him walk up behind me and my movements instantly halted. He reached over to grab a glass from the drying rack, his arm brushing my shoulder gently and I jumped back, dropping the plate. It hit the ground between us and shattered loudly, glass flying everywhereââ
The vase shattered against the wall less than a millimeter away from my head. Shards of glass sliced through my cheek.
âWhy are you running away, huh?â Mikhail goadedââ
âAre you okay?â he asked, grabbing my arm.
He grabbed my arm tightly and shoved me into the wallââ
âLet go of me,â I demanded, yanking my arm out of his grasp.
âMaya, I justâââ
âGet away from me!â I was screaming now, backing into the counter, but he was blocking my only exit so I couldnât escape. I slowly slid down the cabinets and onto the floor.
âPlease, leave me alone,â I pleaded, covering my ears so I couldnât hear his yelling. âLeave me alone, leave me alone, leave me alone . . .â
I put my head down on my knees, praying for it to be quick. After several minutes I shifted my hands away from my ears, checking to see if he was done yelling but there was only silence.
Was he gone? Did he change his mind? Did I black out again and not notice him leaving? I lifted my head slightly and opened my eyes.
My mom, dad, and Mikhail were all standing in the kitchen, staring at me with shocked expressions. My mom had tears in her eyes, and my dad held her hand, regarding me apprehensively. Why were they just standing there? Didnât they see what he did to me just now? Werenât they going toââ?
And then it dawned on me.
My memories had mixed in with reality.
Nothing was real.
I stood up quickly, and everyone took a step back like . . . they were afraid of me.
âIâm fine,â I told them. âI just thought . . .â
Thought what? That Mikhail was attacking you?
âMaya, whatâs going on with you?â Mama whispered with the same frightened look on her face.
âNothing, Iâm fine. I just got startledâââ
âStartled?â Baba repeated. âYou had a psychotic breakdown!â
A psychotic breakdown? A laugh slipped through my lips before I could stop myself. There was no way they were being serious.
âMaya, if you need . . . help again, thatâs okay. Thereâs no shame in struggling . . . mentally. Let us get you some help, honey.â
My humor quickly disappeared as I realized they were serious. So it was normal when he did it, but as soon as I took a step out of line I needed psychiatric help? Again?
âYes, Maya,â Mikhail said suddenly. âPlease, let us help you.â
All my efforts to avoid looking at him flew out the window, and my eyes flickered to his at the sound of his voice. My mom said heâd changed, but he still looked exactly like I remembered. Even his smug look was the same.
Disgust pooled in my mouth. I was going to be sick.
I ran out of the kitchen and up to my room, slamming the door behind me. I could still see their expressions judging me through the closed door, Mikhailâs standing out over the rest, and before I could stop myself my fist rose and struck the door once, twice, a third time. Each bang harder than the next as I desperately tried to break the images out of my mind. I pulled my arm back to swing again, when I caught a glimpse of myself in my full-length mirror and paused.
Wild, knotted hair. Tear-stained cheeks. Lips pulled back into an animalistic sneer as I destroyed my door. Spots of blood leaking through the glove covering my right hand. Blood from my own neurotic doing.
I dropped my fist to my side. They were right to look at me that way. They were right to be terrified by my presence. Everyone should be terrified of me. I was terrified of me. Who was I? When had I become this person? I didnât slam doors and get consumed with so much fury I could only see red. That was Mikhailâs role in this family . . . wasnât it?
Iâd been constantly aware of my genetics for my entire life. I took numerous biology and psychology courses because I needed to know and understand what made up our brains and our minds, and how they both connected to make up who we were as individuals. Did we have a say in how we turned out as humans or did our genes and brain chemicals call all the shots? How much of who we were and what we were capable of was predetermined? Inescapable? Unpreventable? I didnât need to know because I was interested in the subject. I needed to know if there was even the slightest possibility I could end up just as fucked up as Mikhail.
I tried so hard not to be like him. I tried so hard to smother every ounce of anger that ever raged through me. I told myself over and over again that my brain was different. That I was different. But trying to fight science was useless. Trying to fight my genetics was useless. We were both created and marinated within the same womb, so it was highly likely the mutation that dominated his mind would dominate mine as well, no matter how hard I tried to deny it.
As I continued to stare at myself, I suddenly couldnât tell if it was me or Mikhail standing there, and pure revulsion filled my core up to the brim. I was slowly turning into everything I hated about him. Whoever said the apple didnât fall far from the lunatic tree was right . . . I was truly my brotherâs sister.
Quicker than seemingly possible, I grabbed my bottle of cleanser from the shelf behind me and hurled it at my mirror. I watched, satisfied, as it hit my reflectionâs face perfectly and shattered my image into a pile of glass on the carpet. The only thing facing me now was a half-empty wooden frame with sharp fragments clinging on for life. Even without the mirror, it was still accurately mirroring the person standing in front of it.
I flicked my light switch off without bothering to clean up the mess and curled into a ball of misery under my covers. I held my phone in my hand, the need to let everything out before I rotted from the inside out was strong, but who could I talk to? Who would understand?
And then almost like it was planned, almost like he sensed it, Noah texted me.
My lips twisted into a watery smile at his name lighting up my phone. Poor boy. He thought he knew me. He thought he had me all figured out, but he was wrong. He only saw what he wanted to see. I couldnât even bring myself to be upset about it because who would want to know the real me? I brought destruction with me everywhere I went.
It was supposed to be easy, Noah and I, thatâs why I kept seeing him. But after one simple interaction Mikhail reminded me why I couldnât have easy. After one simple interaction, Mikhail torpedoed the charade I had managed to uphold since December. The play Iâd been putting on where I starred as a girl who had coffee dates with a boy, and Noah fell for it because Noah was a believer and I was a liar. He didnât deserve this. No one did. Which was why I had to do the right thing and . . . let him go.
I could physically feel her heart and my mind cracking at the thought. Two parts of two different people writhing in synchronized pain. This was it. This was my life. There was no one I could text about my day. No one to see after work. Nothing in the next week, or the next month, or the next year to look forward to. I was entirely alone. But not the kind of alone people loved to romanticize. No, there was nothing poetic about this. I was living inside a body that was forcing me to survive when my soul didnât want to, and I didnât even have it in me to do anything about it. I couldnât live and I couldnât die. I couldnât fight and I couldnât give up. I was just stuck here, sinking in the quicksand, standing still and patient and silent so it didnât suck me under because that was how you survived the deathly quicksand, but it was still pulling me under anyway and I was starting to suspect there was no bottom.
I was starting to suspect this was forever.
My phone beeped again and I reluctantly opened his message.
You sidetracked me with your anti-men/anti-love speech, and I forgot to askâ¦will I see you tomorrow? -Noah I swiped left and deleted our chat.
âNo,â I said. âYouâll never see me again. Pinky promiseâ
I chuckled. Promises . . . they were like threads. One hard yank from both directions and it would break in half. In this case, I was holding both ends.