“Are we gonna dress up for tonight?” Bessie suddenly asked me, breaking me out of my daydream.
“Do you want to dress up?” I asked.
“I just bet Madison and Timothy are gonna be dressed up. I don’t want them to look better than us,” she replied.
“Can I wear a tie?” Roland asked.
“I guess,” I said, and he cheered and ran off, his only wish granted.
“Can you fix our hair?” Bessie asked. “Make it like Madison’s?”
“I can’t do that,” I admitted. I had to be at least somewhat honest with her. “Madison is lucky,” I told her. “She’s just made that way.”
“Can you make our hair look normal?” she asked.
“It’s in a bad place,” I said, and she nodded, like she knew. “There’s not much you can do but let it grow out and then get it into the right shape.”
“Could you cut it shorter?” she asked.
“I could,” I guessed. I had learned how to cut one of my mother’s boyfriends’ hair. He’d get drunk and then try to talk me through the steps to make it neat. He knew what he liked, and I could eventually get it there. He let me shave him, too, which was terrifying, how badly I wanted to cut him, even though he was one of the nicer ones.
“I hate him,” she said, meaning her father. “But I want him to think we’re good.”
“You are good,” I said. “Your father knows that.”
“No, he doesn’t,” Bessie said.
“He does, Bessie,” I said.
She wouldn’t say anything, and I just watched her grinding her teeth.
“What would you do to him?” I asked.
“What do you mean?” she replied, her eyebrow cocked.
“If he were here right now, what would you do?” I asked her, curious.
“I’d bite him,” she said.
“Like you bit me?” I asked, laughing.
“No. I didn’t know who you were then,” she said. “I’m sorry about that. Him, I would really bite him. I’d bite his nose.”
“You have really sharp teeth,” I said. “That would definitely hurt him.”
“I’d bite him so hard that he’d cry, and he’d beg me to stop,” she said. I could see her body warming up, turning patchy. I didn’t care. We were outside. We had infinite clothes. We were practicing.
“And what would you do if he begged you to stop?”
“I’d stop,” she said, as if it surprised her. Her whole body temperature changed, like the sun had gone down without warning.
“That sounds okay to me,” I told her. “That’s fine.”
“Do you hate your dad?” she suddenly asked, like she didn’t want to think about her own dad anymore.
“I don’t have a dad,” I replied, and she accepted this without question.
“Do you hate your mom?” she asked.
“Yeah,” I said.
“Would you bite her?” she asked.
“It wouldn’t hurt her,” I said.
“Was she bad to you?”
“Yeah, she was. Not horrible. She just, like, didn’t care about me. She didn’t like to think about me. It made her upset to know I was there.”
“Our mom,” Bessie said, “she gets upset if she isn’t thinking about us. All she does is think about us. And if for even a second she thinks that we’re not thinking about her, she gets so sad.”
“I think maybe parents can be pretty bad at this stuff,” I told her.
“Do you want to be a parent?” she asked.
“No,” I said. “Not really.”
“Why not?”
“Because I wouldn’t be good at it, either. I’d be so bad at it.”
“I don’t think so,” she told me.
And I could feel it washing over me, wanting to take these kids. I’m not joking when I say that I never liked people, because people scared me. Because anytime I said what was inside me, they had no idea what I was talking about. They made me want to smash a window just to have a reason to walk away from them. Because I kept fucking up, because it seemed so hard not to fuck up, I lived a life where I had less than what I desired. So instead of wanting more, sometimes I just made myself want even less. Sometimes I made myself believe that I wanted nothing, not even food or air. And if I wanted nothing, I’d just turn into a ghost. And that would be the end of it.
And there were these two kids, and they burst into flames. And I had known them for less than a week; I didn’t know them at all. And I wanted to burst into flames, too. I thought, How wonderful would it be to have everyone stand at a respectful distance? The kids were making me feel things, and they were complicated, because these kids were complicated, were so damaged. And I wanted to take them. But I knew that I wouldn’t. And I knew that I couldn’t give them the hope that I would.