a-w-e-s-o-m-e
My elementary school was never able to afford
multiple sets of pulled, shimmering pom-poms,
so we made do with our fists and our voices and our hips.
Our school colors were green, purple, and gold,
and we’d scream chants and move until our voices were raw
and our little muscles were sore with lactic bubbles.
Mrs. A-manda;
her hair was bright red and so I imagined her car was red too.
Not like blood—never like blood—but bright brassy reddish maroon
that shone in the Florida heat and diverted your eyes on the turnpike.
She’d tell me to fix my spaghetti arms and correct my out-of-place hips,
to tighten my back and remember the steps.
I’m too afraid to google his name,
or what he could look like,
but I imagine he dribbled and passed until his voice was raw
and his muscles were sore and screaming.
Maybe he was captain, body moving in tandem with his teammates;
all that matters, really,
is that he still struggled
over algebra homework
and asked for twenties from his parents.
Still picked out his outfits the night before
and preferred pencil over pen.
Too much untouched future to be left,
corpse caressed in streetlight,
by a speeding and shaking reddish maroon.
Too young for her to pretend to turn back,
to fake innocence,
to act like she didn’t crush his chest
under ugly red wheels.
Cheerleading club was disbanded.