greasy napkins—and scraping it all into the garbage. All along, I kept thinking,
I
will never do this again, I will never be here again, this will never be my locker
again, Radar and I will never write notes in calculus again, I will never see
Margo across the hall again. This was the first time in my life that so many
things would never happen again.
And finally it was too much. I could not talk myself down from the feeling,
and the feeling became unbearable. I reached in deep to the recesses of my
locker. I pushed everything—photographs and notes and books—into the trash
can. I left the locker open and walked away. As I walked past the band room, I
could hear through the walls the muffled sounds of “Pomp and Circumstance.” I
kept walking. It was hot outside, but not as hot as usual. It was bearable.
There
are sidewalks most of the way home, I thought. So I kept walking.
And as paralyzing and upsetting as all the never agains were,
the final
leaving felt perfect. Pure. The most distilled possible form of liberation.
Everything that mattered except one lousy picture was in the trash, but it felt so
great. I started jogging, wanting to put even more distance between myself and
school.
It is so hard to leave—until you leave. And then it is the easiest goddamned
thing in the world.
As I ran, I felt myself for the first time becoming Margo. I knew:
she is not in
Orlando. She is not in Florida. Leaving feels too good, once you leave. If I’d
been
in a car, and not on foot, I might have kept going, too. She was gone and
not coming back for graduation or anything else. I felt sure of that now.
I leave, and the leaving is so exhilarating I know I can never go back. But
then what? Do I just keep leaving places, and leaving them, and leaving them,
tramping a perpetual journey?
Ben and Radar drove past me a quarter mile from Jefferson Park,
and Ben
brought RHAPAW to a screeching halt right on Lakemont in spite of traffic
everywhere, and I ran up to the car and got in. They wanted to play Resurrection
at my house, but I had to tell them no, because I was closer than I’d ever been
before.