Excerpt
Eulogy
Its all I know how to do, all Ive ever done: read and think and write. I have to write to someone. That someone is you.
Ive known you since before we were born. Arent all true loves, the really great loves, destined? All we have to do is meet. When will I learn your name?
Go ahead, ask me a question. When was I first hurt? When did I first see you? When did the first miracle happen? When was my first kiss? When did I first write a eulogy?
Eulogy for a Young Boy
He thought. He wrote. He read. He ran and drank milk. A boy made of milk and concrete. He was cut in two. He bled. He died.
A stranger smart enough to steal a child and lock a door took the boys life. The man cut him in half, then chewed him up. Blood and rubble.
Even though the boy was dead, he dreamed up a girl with skin and hair of light, taking care of him, holding his hand. He dreamed the girl gave him a kiss, and he wondered if the kiss would send him back to the world. It didnt. It kept him under. He sleeps in the box with the girl made from light.
We have to forget him so we can take him with us.
Thats the eulogy exactly as it came out of me a little less than six months ago, the day I turned fourteen. I havent touched it. Ive read it a few dozen times, and I still cant be sure I understand it. But I can tell you this: I had died. I eulogized myself.
I remember the locked garage and screaming for it to be unlocked. I remember a square of brown sunlight on the floor of the garage and a window I couldnt reach. Why couldnt I figure how to reach the window? Why couldnt I stack crates and climb out? I couldve broken the glass and escaped. I dont know. I cant exactly tell you what happened in that garage, except I left it without the belt I had to hold up my pants, my zipper was broken, and I was bleeding. My right arm didnt look like mine.
I dont remember what happened, or how many times I ended up in that garage. It mightve been once or a thousand times, but I died, and this came so soon after my mother lost my father.
No, she didnt lose him, like he was a mitten or a penny dropped through a hole in her pocket. A car killed him in the street.