Grade Nine
Flight
by Rebecca Rosenblum
Before Matt and Ebbe moved
into our house, at lunch hour I helped my friend Justin train racing
crickets, or else ate under the bleachers by myself. I watched sitcom
reruns after school and never went anywhere on weekends, and I certainly
couldn’t fly. A lot of the time I couldn’t even walk without
something going wrong, like a poster falling off the wall onto me or a
ring on my notebook getting caught on the button of my jeans. For
example, my fourth day of grade nine, some girl knocked against me on
the stairs, pretend-by-accident, which made me drop all my books and
they slid to the bottom and got stepped on, also pretend-by-accident.
Justin was the only one who didn’t care about that stuff, but I was
getting tired of talking about crickets.
On Saturday, I told my mom
I didn’t like high school much, but all she said was that most people
don’t. She was kind of distracted because my Uncle Evan and Aunt Danja
had just "suffered a financial reversal" and then also "a
marital breakdown." My mom was on the phone a lot around then.
Still, on the eleventh day of school, after someone stole my jeans from
the locker room so I had to walk home in my gym shorts, I was surprised
that my cousins Matt and Ebbe were in our front hallway. They had their
school uniforms on for some reason, Ebbe with ripped black tights under
her kilt and Matt with a grey wool toque over his long hair. My mom was
acting all thrilled and giving them popsicles and even my dad said,
"Welcome," before he went to out to the shed, so I guessed it
was a planned visit.
Finally my mom turned to
where I was standing in the doorway and said, "David, take your
cousins on upstairs and show Ebbe the pullout in your father’s study.
Matt can bunk with you. They’ll be staying with us for a while, isn’tthatwonderful?
And put some pants on."
Her face didn’t look all
that wonderful. I barely knew my cousins, them being older and cooler
than me, and Montreal being so far away from Stoney Creek, but I didn’t
really mind, either. I started walking upstairs. I didn’t hear any
footsteps behind me so I turned and then they were both right there. I
found out later that floating makes you feel safer, softer, when you’re
scared. Then, I just thought they were quiet.
"Well,
here," I said. Ebbe looked at my father’s study, the file folders
sticking out of drawers, the red Hide-a-bed with the foam poking out of
the arms. She tried to smile but it didn’t really work. Ebbe had dark
straight bangs, thick and flat like a chocolate bar across her forehead,
and a big shiny smiley mouth, but even she couldn’t smile at the torn
curtains with big blue anchors. "It seems nice," she said
quietly.
"It’s not
right," I told her, "making the girl take the Hide-a-bed, but
since there’s two boys and two bunks…"
"It seems nice,"
she said again, more firmly, and she smiled a bit better that time.
Me and Matt went down the
hall, with Matt dragging his backpack across the floor. I figured my Mom
would tell him soon enough not to do that, so I didn’t bother.
"You can choose what bunk," I told him.
"It’s your room.
Whatever one you don’t use." He shook his head and the ends of
his hair fluttered under the edge of his toque.
"I go back and forth.
It doesn’t matter. You’re the guest."
"Oh." Matt
squinted at the bed, and even though he was in grade twelve and smoked
and everything, he looked kind of interested. "Can I have the top
one?"
"Sure, no
problem." I flopped down on the bottom one, to show him it really
wasn’t a problem.
Matt floated up top
without the ladder. "Thanks, Davey. You know, it’s really nice of
you, letting us stay here."
I was sure he knew I didn’t
have any say in it, so I didn’t know why he would thank me. It took me
a minute to think of an answer. "It’ll be nice to have someone to
talk to."
"Yeah?" Matt
poked his head down to look at me, and his toque popped off and his hair
stood up on his upside down head. "Well, if there’s one thing
Ebbe and me can do, it’s talk."
*
Matt was in grade 12 and
Ebbe was in grade 11. Their first day of school, my twelfth, they wanted
to wear the uniforms from their old school, but I told them it might not
be a good idea. I was surprised they listened to me, but they both went
and put on jeans and t-shirts.
They were worried that
people wouldn’t like new kids in senior grades, that it was too late
to make any friends. Their first day, though, when I was waiting for the
bus after school with Justin, I saw Ebbe talking with Mitch Casper, who
was in lacrosse. And then the next day there was an assembly and Matt
sat in the back with all the other guys with toques, so I knew they’d
be fine. Way better off than me, actually, in just two days. Even though
Justin had just made a pretty good new racetrack in his yard.
On the night of my
thirteenth day of school, over chicken with pistachio nuts that no one
liked but Matt and Ebbe were too polite to leave (I wasn’t that
polite) Ebbe told me she and Matt had looked for me at lunch but I wasn’t
anywhere. "I have junior lunch, third period. You guys have senior
lunch, fourth period.
Ebbe gave me a big smile,
much better than the first day. "Oh, I have third spare, so I can
sit with you anyway. They won’t mind one senior student in the
cafeteria, will they?"
"Well, no, but…"
I wanted to tell her it was a bad idea for her to sit with a kid like
me, if she wanted to be cool and have guys from lacrosse talk to her,
but I was tired of eating under the bleachers when Justin was at band
practice. So I just smiled back.
*
Matt was right—I’d
never known anyone who talked as much as him and Ebbe. They’d look
like they were having a big serious conversation, but then Matt would
say, "C’mere, Davey," and it’d turn out they were just
talking about video games or what their friends at home were doing, or
how many characters there were on The Simpsons. One day we
counted their cousins and mine on the sides that weren’t related to
see who had more, and it turned out I did. Another day, Matt wanted to
know where you could get pot in Stoney Creek and I felt stupid for not
knowing, but then Matt and Ebbe got distracted making a list of every
place in Montreal they knew they could get it, and didn’t even care.
I hadn’t thought they’d
want to hang around with me, but it seemed like that was all they wanted
to do. That and wait for their parents to phone. They didn’t call that
much, but both Matt and Ebbe would go running every time the phone rang,
just in case. I was too scared to ask about the financial reversal or
the marital breakdown, but I’d heard my mom yelling about it to my dad
or on the phone a few times, and she always said things like, "No
assets but the furniture!" and "That fucker!" so I knew
it wasn’t very good.
But Matt and Ebbe wanted
to be around to hear about it. Mitch kept calling Ebbe on the phone, and
she’d talk to him at school, but they never went out anywhere. Matt
was in the theatre group, but he only went to the lunch hour rehearsals.
After school, Matt and Ebbe hung around our house, talking to each other
and me and waiting for their parents to call and that was pretty much
it. For me, it was great. They taught me three-handed euchre and
Balderdash and Matt taught me chess. They taught me a game that was all
talking, where you imagine with a person lying dead with no one else
around and you describe the scene and the other people ask questions
until they figure out why the person died. It was pretty gory sometimes
and my Mom told us not to play it at dinner. They both liked to shoot
hoops in the driveway and Ebbe practiced her rhythmic gymnastics in the
backyard until it got too cold. Her event was the ribbon, and that was
all really weird. Matt was always asking if anyone wanted to watch TV
with him, as if it were a game like Frisbee that wouldn’t work if you
were by yourself.
Matt and some of the
theatre guys had worked up a routine for the Christmas assembly. The
skit ended with him falling into the orchestra pit. At lunch the day of
the first rehearsal, I saw him and a bunch of other big twelve guys
march through the cafeteria carrying the crash mat, to put in the pit to
break his fall. He waved at Ebbe and me and disappeared into the hall.
That night on the bus, Ebbe asked him, "Why don’t you just float
down?"
"Insurance problems.
The school board wouldn’t like it." Matt shrugged. They both
looked at me and cracked up. I guess they thought I could do it, too.
They were always waiting
for their parents to call, but whenever they finally did, Matt and Ebbe
would be miserable afterwards until one of us thought of a good game to
play. Once I picked up the extension to call Justin and I accidentally
heard Uncle Evan yelling, "—I don’t even know where the
furniture is. She says she burnt it all, even the leather
recliner, but that’s fucking unlikely. And the house—" and then
I hung up, but afterwards I looked carefully at Matt and Ebbe when they
came downstairs, and they looked kind of spun. And later I noticed Matt
poking at my Dad’s chair, like maybe he was wondering if it would
burn. I wanted to tell him it was only vinyl, but I didn’t.
It stayed warm right into
November that year, so we could hang around outside a lot. Sometimes
Matt had to study and sometimes Ebbe did gymnastics but otherwise it was
the three of us, hanging out in the driveway of my house. Mitch came by
once or twice, but he never wanted to play games or really have much to
do with me and Matt, plus he couldn’t skate and didn’t want to
learn. Matt had a skateboard and he was always trying to teach me stuff,
but I’d just fall and fall. Ebbe could skate pretty well, too, but she
didn’t have her own board, so she and Matt would sit on the bumper of
my Dad’s car, watching and giving me pointers.
One day, after Mitch had
stormed off because Ebbe wouldn’t go walking in the ravine with him,
and after I had fallen off the board for the millionth time, Matt said,
"You know, Davey, if you feel yourself start to tip, you should try
to float up."
"Yeah, if you just
fly up a few inches you’ll save yourself some scrapes," Ebbe
said.
I could feel my face go
burning. "I can’t even climb a rope in gym class."
"No one can do
that." Matt laughed and flipped the board away from me, up into his
hands. "Fly proper. No holds, no hands."
I looked at the blacktop.
"I can’t fly."
Ebbe got up off the bumper
and put her face under mine so I had to look at her. "Sure you can.
I mean, maybe it’s just that you haven’t had any practice. You look
strong enough. You got the same genes we do, half of ’em,
anyway."
"Right, man."
Matt put the board down and straightened up. "You just, you know,
step up." He took a big step forward and stopped his foot way off
the ground. Then he stepped up with his other foot and put it higher, as
if he were going up a flight of stairs. He kept climbing until his feet
were as high as my eyebrows. He looked down at me and offered me a hand.
"C’mon up."
I shook my head. "I
can’t do that."
"You don’t have to
do it Matt’s way. There’s lots of ways." Ebbe did a little
twirl, like she did sometimes in her gymnastics routines, and she
swirled up beside her brother.
I shook my head. "I
can’t do that."
Matt looked serious, his
chin tipped down. "Maybe try jumping. Can you jump up to us?"
I rolled my eyes, no,
but they just kept looking at me all serious, so I did a little hop and
landed right back on the blacktop again.
"Nononono," Ebbe
said. "You jump up but you don’t go back down. You stop at the
top."
"Right. Try again.
You can do this, Dave-o. I know you can."
I jumped again, higher
that time, and Ebbe said, "Stop," just as I hit the ground.
She shook her head.
"No, sorry, that was me. My timing was off. One more time."
They were both swirling and tipping around me in the driveway. It was
very distracting.
I sighed. "One
more. Then Night Court is on." I jumped straight up with all
my might, my heels kicking my butt, and Ebbe shrieked, "Stop!"
and then I crashed down so hard my teeth slammed together.
Matt cocked his head to
one side. "Not bad. You’re getting it."
"Getting it! I’m
not getting anything but a headache, and Night Court…" I
looked down and saw my shadow on the blacktop, about an inch below my
feet. Then the phone rang inside and Matt and Ebbe bolted and I fell the
rest of the way.
*
After that, the project
was getting me to fly, way more than naming all fifty states, or finding
a kid to buy pot from who didn’t cut it with oregano, or writing
better lines for the skit with Matt falling into the orchestra pit. I
could never get the hang of the jumping thing, or Matt’s steps and
certainly not Ebbe’s twirl. We tried a running start all the way down
the driveway and I floated a little on the curb in front of my house,
but the cars kept distracting me and Matt was worried one would hit me.
Matt and Ebbe even said we could go away from the phone for a little
while, so we tried going to the park and jumping off the swings until
Ebbe fell on top of a kindergartener and we got in trouble.
One weekend my Mom decided
we didn’t do enough that was educational, so we went to Dundurn
Castle. It was a Saturday, and Uncle Evan and Aunt Danja didn’t
usually call on Saturdays, so Matt and Ebbe said they would go, even
though it didn’t sound like much fun to me.
It wasn’t fun. I had to
make a picture of a boat by poking holes in a piece metal with a nail
and Ebbe got sent down to the kitchen to bake bread. I don’t know
where Matt was during the metal art part, but when he got back he
smelled like smoke.
Finally we were done and
went outside to wait for my parents to pick us up. It was really windy
and the wind flipped Ebbe’s hair over her face like an inside-out
umbrella. Some little kids were running in the field beside the castle
with their unzipped coats over their heads like parachutes. We watched
them for a while and then Matt started unbuttoning his jean jacket and
Ebbe unzipped her bomber coat. They looked at me, so I undid my beige
windbreaker and said, "Ok, ok."
They started to run, arms
straight up overhead in their coats, Ebbe’s black tights kicking under
her kilt, Matt in his jeans and toque right behind her and me, tripping
only for a moment, then zooming. It was so warm for late November.
Little kids turned to see the big kids running too, and then Ebbe arched
like mermaid and went up towards the top of the tallest tree. Matt
floated below her, grabbing her ankle. She kicked at him, laughing, and
zipped away and all this time I was running running until suddenly it
was like reaching the top of a hill with my bike in the lowest gear and
then starting to roll down. My legs were whirling like I was still
running without the ground and I was so surprised to be zooming up that
I crashed into Matt’s legs.
He reached down, grabbed
me under the armpits and yanked me up to face him. I struggled to pull
my arms down, all tangled up in my coat, and lost my momentum. I felt
myself get heavy in his hands and I hated it. He was strong enough and
balanced easily on the air, but I hated the feeling of being lifted and
held. "All right, Dave-o?" He grinned at me, his face red
under his toque from the wind.
I shook my head, my whole
body. "I’ve got to get down. Let me down."
"You did it, Dave-o!
You see that? You flew right up here to the trees, on your own. It was
awesome."
Ebbe drifted nearer from
the birch tree. "…so great, David," she was saying.
"No, I hate being
lifted, I’m not doing it on my own now, put me down." I shook my
head and shook it and shook it. Finally Matt got the picture and started
to sink slow until my Keds rested on the ground again. All the
seven-year-olds applauded, but I was disgusted with myself. Off in the
distance I could see my mom and dad sitting in the front seat of the
Camry facing the castle, not even thinking to look out into the field. I
started walking towards them.
*
Right through the first
half of December, nobody said anything about where Matt and Ebbe would
spend the holidays. Finally, their Mom called, just before the big
pageant with Matt falling into the orchestra pit. After the show it
would be only another week until winter break. It was quiet all over the
house, except for Matt and Ebbe’s low voices on the two extensions
upstairs. Finally even that ended and I heard footsteps and then the
study door shut. I was doing my homework in the living room to give them
privacy, but also waiting for them to come watch a new tv show with me.
It was almost 8:30, though, and they still hadn’t opened the study
door, so I went up and knocked. "C’min," came Ebbe’s
voice, sounding like she was talking through water.
"Hey, you guys,"
I said as I opened the door. Then I didn’t know what to say.
Matt was sitting at my
father’s desk with his hands covering his face and his toque beside
him. Ebbe was sitting on the floor by the desk, her back pressed up
against the drawer handles. Her face was all red and puffy, and she was
crying and crying into her hair. What was worse was that even though
Matt smudged the inside of his wrist across his face a minute after I
came in, I could tell he was crying, too. I could just tell. Both of
them looked at me and they tried to smile and it was worse than the
first day when Ebbe saw the Hide-a-bed. Now the Hide-a-bed was covered
with Ebbe’s pretty orange bedspread and I knew they were staying with
us for the holidays. They looked so heavy and sad it was hard to imagine
them ever flying.
"Hey, you guys,"
I said. "There’s this new show on that’s based on Beetlejuice,
about this couple that dies in their house? And then they haunt the new
people that buy the house? And it’s funny, because they think it’s
still their house? You guys wanna watch?"
The phone rang, but for
once neither Matt nor Ebbe jumped for it. Finally, Ebbe said,
"OK," but there were still lots of tears at the back of her
voice. She came over and hugged me so hard my shoulder cracked, and I
could feel the buttons on her shirt digging into my chest. "I’ll
go turn it on. What channel?" she said.
"Six." It
seemed like there ought to be something else for me to say, but I didn’t
know what and then she went out and down the stairs.
Matt was still yanking his
hand back and forth over his eyes. Finally he looked at me and smiled
with the left half of his mouth. "Beetlejuice, eh? Winona
Ryder was spooky-hot in that one."
I felt bad, telling him,
"It’s not exactly like the movie. In the show, the one that can
see the ghosts, it’s the grandpa. But it still looks funny."
"David." Matt
shook his head and stood up. "David, David, David." He put his
hand on my shoulder and squeezed, and pulled me out the door.
As we walked downstairs,
my mom was yelling into the phone, "That fucker. Well, Danja, you’ll
just get another storage locker." The grandpa turned out to be
pretty funny, but there were no cute girls at all on the show.
*
In the middle of the night
that night, something poked me hard in the leg. I jumped upright real
fast, ready for an emergency, a fire alarm or something. But it was just
Ebbe’s Doc Martin kicking me through the blankets. She and Matt were
standing there beside the bed still in their jeans and t-shirts. I was
scared they were saying goodbye, running away back to Montreal and all
their friends, the good weed, their own parents and their own beds.
Well, not their beds, anymore, maybe. Still, I hoped like crazy they
were going to let me go with them.
"Where—where
are you guys going?"
"Nowhere. Well, not
far," Ebbe said, and laughed a little. "You’ve got to help
us."
Matt started opening my
dresser drawers and pulling out clothes. "We’re going up to the
roof. Ebbe’s got the best idea." The look on his face was so
excited, he didn’t look like would cry ever again. I put on my jeans,
and showed them how to get into the linen closet, up the ladder to the
attic, through the window and up the drainpipe to the roof.
Once we were standing by
the eavestrough, the only part of the roof that was flat enough to stand
on, I realized that the wind was finally winter wind, with tiny flecks
of snow in it, and that I should’ve worn more than just my pajama top.
But Matt and Ebbe didn’t complain, so I didn’t either.
All Matt said was,
"Ok, Ebbe, you tell it. Your idea."
"Oh, yeah, so
he’ll know who to sue if it doesn’t work." She turned to me and
put both hands on my shoulders. In the dark, I could barely see her
eyes, but I imagined they were still red around the edges. "So,
Davey, I was thinking what if you tried to fly from up here. That way
you’d have all that time in the air to get your bearings, that whole
long cushion of air to straighten out and stop. Then you can go at your
own pace from there, no pressure." She looked at me as carefully as
she could.
I couldn’t see Matt at
all, but I could hear him say, "What do you think? You’re not too
bad at it already, so I don’t think it’d be dangerous. But you don’t
have to try it if you don’t think it’s a good idea."
"No, absolutely
not." Ebbe whipped her ponytail back and forth. "Only if you
want to. We’re going to try it, anyway. Right, Matt?"
"Right." I saw
his tall form move over to the edge of the roof, saw his head swivel
towards me. "So just watch us try and then, if it looks ok, try,
ok?"
"Ok." I nodded
at him and he hopped off the roof and disappeared down to the tip of his
toque. After a second, his whole head bobbed back up over the lip of the
eavestrough.
Ebbe looked at him.
"Good?"
"Whoo-hoo.
Good."
She looked back at me and
stuck out her tongue, then flopped backwards and stopped parallel with
the eavestrough, lying on her back on nothing at all. She stared
straight up at the stars. "Oh, wow, wow, wow. This is the best idea
I ever had."
Matt laughed and leaned
back, too, kicking off the roof and spinning out over the lawn. I lost
sight of him but I could still hear him laughing on the wind. I wanted
to go out there. I walked over to the edge of the roof and looked at
Ebbe looking at the stars. She caught my eye and stopped smiling for an
instant, then looked back up at the black sky and the hydro wires and
the outlines of trees against the stars. "You know, Davey, you look
up, and the sky is still the sky, you know? Stoney Creek sky, Montreal
sky…."
"Hey guys, I bet if
we went up to the top of the tv aerial we could feel the satellite beams
coming in through our bodies!" Matt called.
Ebbe popped her head up a
little from where she was lying in the air. "Oh, man, that’d be
really cool. You wanna try that, David?"
From inside the house, the
phone started to ring, but nobody moved or said anything. Then I stepped
off the roof, and didn’t fall.
Rebecca Rosenblum is three-quarters of the way through her masters
degree in English and creative writing at the University of Toronto.
Her work has been seen in Exile Quarterly, and she has forthcoming
pieces in echolocation and The New Quarterly.
|