The Death of a Rabbit
M.K. French
“I
need some paper.” I half-whispered. I plopped my book down on the lab table that
I shared with the same person I shared everything else with. As I was twenty minutes late, carrying out
the duties of my illustrious post as sophomore class secretary counting money in the
safe, the rest of the class had already begun working on the assignment for
which I had missed the instruction. I
handed my written excuse to Mr. Sherwood, our twenty-something teacher who I
was sure was in love with me, which was fantastic, since I was in love with him
too. I made sure to give him my most
flirtatious, but seemingly innocent smile as I put the note on his desk, a
little extra wiggle in my 16-year-old saunter and headed back to take my usual
place next to Leah. I hopped onto a tall
stool; her small form was nearly underneath the table, as she was seated on a
short one. This exaggerated our
difference in stature and demeanor—me huge and extroverted, her petite and
demure. Despite our physiological
differences, we were Siamese—attached at the hip and everyone knew it.
“Whose
turn is it to ask questions today?” I
whispered, as I started rummaging through her bag for a pencil. She took no notice—this was a usual
routine. I don’t think I ever brought
any of my own school supplies during my entire high school career.
“Mine,”
she whispered back. “But I’m already almost done—you haven’t even started.”
“Girls—on
task please,” Mr. S’s chocolate pudding
voice oozed out from the front of the room where he was writing equations for
the next class.
No
way—your turn I scribbled on the
front of her notebook.
It
won’t make sense if I ask. She
scrawled underneath what I had just written.
Fine, you crack! I wrote, adding a smiley with its tongue
hanging out to smooth over the abrasive term of endearment. I was inwardly disappointed at Leah’s
reluctance to play our daily game, where we would interchangeably fake (or in
my case, not fake) our utter bewilderment about the assignment in order to get
Mr. Sherwood’s divine butt bent over our table. The lucky one would get their
fill of gawking while the other played dumb for as long as possible. On rare auspicious occasions, one of the
know-it-alls at the front of the room, Chris or Brandon, would ask a question.
Though it didn’t take long for the boys to catch on to and be annoyed by our
perverted exploitation of the young instructor. They had the audacity to start
going up to his desk to ask their real questions, necessitating our fake ones.
I
expected her to giggle and write something equally or more crude back, but she
didn’t. She had her small brunette head
bent over her work, trying earnestly to finish despite my shenanigans. I made better grades somehow, but she was the
better student.
I went back into
her bag for gum, rooting around for at least another minute, unsuccessful.
Gum? I scribbled
Out she curtly jotted.
“Gawd—you’re
no help today.” I teasingly whispered,
garnering a disapproving look from Mr. Sherwood, now seated behind his
desk. I smiled and got busy looking
busy. I looked over the enigmatic
problems and immediately became frustrated with the alien shapes and postulates
laid out before me. I had no idea that a bigger problem was looming.
Determined
instead to do something I was usually successful at—making Leah laugh—I turned
again and wrote Why do we have to
prove this crap? I’ll take their word
for it! I thought for sure that
this would be effective in distracting her so we could socialize more as the
minutes of class dwindled. She said
nothing but worked on. I looked again to
my blank sheet of paper, wrote my name, Geometry 10, and the date on the
top. I put an Arabic 1 next to the red
vertical line, circled it, made a few graphite flourishes, and turned back to
our social graffiti.
What
crawled up YOUR butt and died? I scrawled. She lifted her
head and flashed me a teary look through her unruly brown curls that was a mixture
of irritation and misery.
“Sorr--REE,”
I whispered, finally interrupting my own cheerful self-absorption to attend to
my friend, who was visibly upset. “What’s wrong?” She looked over warily at Mr. Sherwood, and
then underneath my query about what had found its way up her posterior and
died, she quickly wrote The rabbit.
She just as hastily scribbled it out.
“I
didn’t know you guys had a rabbit?” I
searched my confused brain through memories of my almost daily visits to her
house for an unobserved rabbit hutch. I wasn’t all that surprised that I had
missed it in her little sister Clare’s constantly changing menagerie of
animals.
She
let out a faint chuckle. That’s more like it, I thought. She then
fashioned her face into a tilted, impatient gaze that said, “No, you dumb shit,”
and now only mouthed the words: “I’m pregnant.” The shapes and letters on my page became bleary
as the bell intruded upon our newly-defined moment.
*****
A
few weeks passed. This was more than a crisis for the daughter of a
foot-washing deacon. This was certain
death. It came down on us like the coal
that killed the children of Aberfan, black and smothering. Despite much intense deliberation, we were
still found ourselves gasping and grasping—but no answers were made to us. None of the so-called “options” seemed that
at all. I didn’t bother to offer
anything closely resembling telling her parents—as I knew this was not
one. In absence of a solution we did
nothing but wait—for an uncertain outcome. We went to class, to volleyball
practice—we tried to talk as if this “thing”—in our minds not even another
being yet but just—a thing, wasn’t there threatening to destroy all the plans
we had made.
Finally,
the time arrived when no conscious choice had to be made. Leah had inexplicably
failed to board the bus for an away game one Saturday morning. I played a shitty game and couldn’t get to her
house fast enough after a day of worry. My anxiety was exacerbated by a
dreadful secret about a dead rabbit that she refused to share with anyone else,
even with the stupid boy with whom I was very angry for putting her in this
condition, though I knew that Leah was just as much to blame.
But I was
honor-bound. I kept my word. As an adult I will never cease to question and
criticize the wisdom of my choice. As a teenager I loved my friend too fiercely
to betray her confidence in me.
I don’t remember
what the weather was like the day of that game against Noxon. I don’t remember if we won or lost it. I don’t remember what hour the next morning I
was finally able to take my hand from her forehead and sleep. I don’t remember
how long it took me to clean the bathroom.
I don’t remember what excuse we invented for the missing linens—the ones
I took home with me and threw away.
But I do remember
finding her, arms folded against her small tummy, among piles of saturated red
towels and chunks of vomit on the floor in the bathroom. I remember the fear and self-hatred surging
inside me as I stayed there, holding her—skin searing my hands, on the stained
linoleum fighting every urge that I had to run and get her mother as she begged
me not to tell. I remember how liver-like
clots broke up and pinkened the water as I bathed her. I remember putting her
to bed in an improvised diaper. I remember feeling certain she would bleed to
death. I remember waking up with her
still alive and thanking God. I remember
later realizing that what she, what we—had lost was not just a thing, but a
soul. I remember feeling guilty that I
was glad it was over. I remember us afterwards, trying to carry on with our
adolescent lives as if we were still adolescents.