I thought of you the other day. Well, spoke of you. I guess the lies should stop now that I’m coming to terms with things. Now that you’ve unfurled from the attic of my psyche, damp and unwelcome. It’s not that I don’t want you. No. It simply hurts too much to be with you. That’s what Luz Emilia told me. She’s my landlady, the person who convinced me you were worth talking about. She didn’t pry or insist, it just came out of me. Some people possess that ability: seamless extraction of emotions doubts and insecurities.
What began as a conversation about travels education and life goals quickly became an abridged autobiography. We talked about Ma and Papi and how she was there and how he wasn’t. About Ma’s fists and how they greeted you more than her lips did, kissing your cheeks and forehead and arms and stomach with tremendous passion. How Papi Bucky and Dave embraced her in the same way, how it must’ve been love. How you used to hide in corners and press your ears to the wall, listening for anything, a single exhale of Ma’s frail breath to assure you of her survival. How you never talked and only listened because words meant pain and you weren’t sure you could withstand more. How, at 13, I snuck a knife into the bathroom and nearly slit our throat before Apple knocked on the door. How I didn’t die that day. How you did.

Luz brought you back to life in a way. She told me that she imagines me being someone important, someone special one day but not before I tend to you. You, the boy who wasn’t allowed to be. You, the boy I wanted to be but couldn’t. You, the boy I was forced to deny in exchange for survival. You, the boy who dreamt of Mars and Paris and dinners with beautiful women and a million dollars so that you Nico Apple Malik and Ma could live in one home and never have to move again. You, who wished for the ability to fly, to escape to any part of this world or another without ever having to return.
I’ve since escaped the hood, the abuse, Chicago, the United States. But I can’t escape you. I’m not sure I want to. For so long, all I wanted was to breathe, to believe myself worthy of love and affection and care and happiness. But we couldn’t be happy together. The world was against us from the start. That’s undeniable. You were too quiet, too shy, too anxious, too skinny, too ugly, too weak. At least that’s what they told me.
They wanted me to despise you. And I did. Sometimes I still do. I’m embarrassed to showcase you to the world, in fear that they might see the scars I’ve left behind. That they might learn of the punches I sent your way whenever something seemed to go vaguely wrong. Of the conversations we had in front of mirrors, pretending to have a friend or lover that cared. About the cross-dressing–attempts at discovering beauty–sneaking Ma’s clothes into the bathroom for our personal enlightenment. We didn’t know what we were, but we knew we had each other. At least, I knew I had you.

I ain’t gonna waste time calling myself unworthy, because we both know it’s true. I don’t deserve you. I thought running from our past, your past, would save me. Grant me life anew. Even if that meant losing all I knew to be true. One doesn’t have to consider the impact of pain once they’ve convinced themselves of its irrelevance. Once they believe it doesn’t exist, or ceases to exist, the pain disappears, evaporates like aged tears. Right? If that’s true, why can’t I get rid of you? Why couldn’t I?
I promise this ain’t intentional. I want you near but what am I to do when society’s in my ear, perpetuating every fear that brought us here? What am I to do with the ten years lost since I abandoned you? What am I do with the memories nightmares smiles frowns laughs cries hellos and goodbyes? I don’t wanna say goodbye no more. Would you accept hello? Would you listen to me like you did before? Would you believe me if I said I loved you? Would you believe me if I said I still do? Would you hug me if I reached out? Would you wipe away the tears resuscitated by the shame I feel for neglecting you? Would you? Can you? Please? Randy? Can you?
Please.








