Mirage

Maybe I’m a mirror for my own fears.

My breath catches. Maybe the doctor was right. Maybe there are things about myself I don’t want to see.

“Change scares people too,” he says. “You seeming so different scares the stones out of them. But I believe in your fire. It’s still in there, just not raging right now, and that’s okay. Gives people a chance to catch their breath.”

“Beautiful, the way you see me. The way you talk.” He’s like Gran that way.

Impossibly, Dom’s smile grows even wider. “It’s like you don’t know me at all. Ah,” he says, dropping my hand and pulling something from his pocket. “Which reminds me. I was going to wait until later, but now seems like the right time. Close your eyes and open your hand.”

I grin and shut my eyes with my palm upturned, waiting. Whatever he places there is light: a little more weight than the warm air swirling around us. “Okay,” he whispers.

There’s an intricately folded origami tiger standing in the palm of my hand.

“I’m holding a tiger,” I say.

“I used to say that about you.”

“I know. I’m sorry.”

“Nah. Don’t be. I’m glad we’re talking again, like we used to.”

I turn the tiger over in my hand. He worked so hard on it, even painted it with minuscule strokes of color for the stripes and face.

“It’s got a message for you,” he says with a sly grin, but places his finger over my lips when I begin to ask what. “You’ll discover the message when you’re ready. Keep it somewhere safe. Now let’s go back to the hangar.”

He doesn’t grab my hand or put his arm around me, which I’m grateful for. I’m happy to have had the quiet moment talking with him. He didn’t make me feel bad for being different. Acceptance is a lovely thing when you know you don’t belong.

I’m surprised to see the hangar doors closed when we approach. It’s too early in the day to close. There were too many people around earlier to turn them away. This can’t be good for business. Dom takes one side of the sliding metal door and heaves it open.

A single reckless white balloon escapes through the crack of the door and out into the daylight, floating up into the sky. Free.

I squint and watch it bob and soar on the currents until it becomes one with the sky, disappearing from view.

“Surprise!”

Music kicks in, people are blowing on kazoos, and the hangar is filled with balloons and streamers and people with happy faces. I look to Dom. “Happy birthday!” they all yell.

“It’s . . . it’s your birthday?”

With a perplexed tilt of his head he replies, “It’s your birthday.”

I don’t know what to say. My parents walk toward me with satisfied grins that they pulled off the surprise.

“You didn’t remember your own birthday?” my mom says with a hearty hug and a laugh that doesn’t cover the consternation in her eyes. Her brows cinch. “That’s something coming from the girl who surprised us last year by throwing her own surprise party.”

My grandmother is perched in a lawn chair in the middle of the hangar, smoking a Swisher Sweet cigar. My mom lied about her being home alone. Fatigue draws at the wrinkled skin around Gran’s mouth, but she’s smiling and nodding her head to the music. Apparently, her not feeling well was all a ruse.

Avery leans against the wall under the flags in the back of the hangar. Her eyes find Dom before they turn to me, and then she smiles big and waves. I frown, not trusting a smile that looks like an afterthought.

Numerous skydiving friends and friends from school approach to wish me happy birthday. Too many faces and names compete for space. Too many jumbled memories. My eyes scan the room for a familiar comfort to anchor me. Joe’s absence is a hole in my chest.

I have random conversations with friends who feel like strangers. Some have red cups of I?don’t?even?know?what sloshing around inside. Word has obviously gotten around about my incident with the LSD, because people safely stick to benign topics like their jobs, what they’ve been doing over summer vacation, and how bad they don’t want school to start again. Their mouths are moving and smiling, but their eyes are asking if I’m okay.

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