A Goldfish’s Name
My goldfish’s name is Lenoxx.
Really, I’m surprised he’s still alive. It’s been about three years since I’ve had him and he’s doing well. I’ve heard horror stories about how people overfeed their fish and they’ve died simply because of that.
That’s the person’s fault.
I intend to not kill him. When Lenoxx does die, which he will (unless he’s somehow obtained immortality), I really hope it’s not because of me.
My crush’s name is Paris. Like the place. I think he’s cute but when it comes to looks I’m really not too sure - for all I know, he’s incredibly ugly in the eyes of someone else. But anyway, he sits next to me in math class and teases me sometimes so I think he could like me but I’m not sure. He’s funny and shares his answers to his math homework with me if I didn’t get to complete it.
He is also in social studies with me but his mates are in that class so I hardly have a chance to say a word to him.
Maths is after lunch and since my best and only friend Tab is out sick, I’m the first to the maths classroom. People come in and then Paris does. One other person sits at our table. Her name is Darla, but she’s sick nearly every day so most of the time it’s just Paris and me.
We talk about chocolate and he thinks it’s better with orange whilst I favour it with raspberry; in the end, we agree chocolate is just pretty good.
“Do you have any pets?” He says and the tardy bell rings just as one last kid slips in the classroom. I pull out all my math work.
“Yep,” I say. “I’ve got a goldfish and his name is Lenoxx. What about you?”
The teacher puts the correct homework under the camera that displays the work on the wall and we begin correcting our work. I see all stars on his and mine’s mostly red scribbles. “Lady and Princess. Two cats.”
I don’t care much for cats, but I pretend I do because Paris looks happy so I say it’s super cool and then he smiles and does a cute side sweep of his blond thin hair. He has super blond hair; so blond I’ve heard people call him Malfoy before, but he’s not Malfoy - he’s Paris.
Paris gives me a look and he smiles. I about to blurt out if he would like to come over and see Lenoxx, but then I realize how very weird that sounds. I hide my face into my arms and bite the inside of my cheek, not believing I even thought such a ridiculous idea.
“Are you going to the holiday dance?” Paris asks, and it takes me a second to realize he’s whispering to me.
I lift my head out of my arms. “Uh?”
“The dance. In a month. The holiday dance. The eighth-grade dance,” Paris says, his words tumbling out of his mouth now.
I raise an eyebrow. I’m pretty good at it now. I can only do my right but I’m working on my left. “I don’t know. Why?”
Paris looks down at his homework. I see one cross in it but otherwise, there are just red stars everywhere. He’s pretty good at math. Social studies, too. I’m more into art and music. I’m pretty good at English too.
“Well, if you are, would you like to go with me?”
Instead of saying, “Of course” or even “I’ll think about it” or something, I say, “People are bringing dates?”
I’m dead. Dead as Lenoxx will be one day, dead as Paris will be and fish that over-ate and all the people who take up Earth’s space, lying in a graveyard. Deaddeaddead. Because who in the world would say such an awful thing after he handed me an opportunity on a silver platter?
Before he even responds, I wave my hands in the air. “Forget I said that. Sorry. I’m sorry. I really, really did not mean to say that.”
Paris’s eyebrows are knit together. “Well, yes or no?”
“Yes?” I say, but mostly a question because I’m nervous as to how he’s going to react. My insides are fluttering and my intestines feel all twisted up. My lips feel numb and I think they are because I was biting them too much.
Paris seems shocked. “Wait, really?”
“Yeah.”
His light eyebrows raise. They’re wispy and you can hardly see them at all - almost like he’s got none at all. But he looks cool like that. It makes him look unique. He still looks shocked and I’m afraid I perhaps broke him.
“Paris?”
“Yeah?”
I press my lips together in a tight line, not sure if I should ask the question or not. My filter slips and the words come flying out of my mouth anyway. “Do you like me?”
Paris’s super pale cheeks grow fast into a flaming red fire engine red and I have to suppress a smile because he looks so flustered.
“Do you like me?” He counters back.
I stare at him.
He stares back at me, the features of his face quirking about. I think he’s nervous but I’m not too sure.
“I like you,” I admit, and just the reaction Paris gives tells me for sure he likes me too.
///
“God, you look amazing.” My best friend’s name is Tabitha Williams but I call her Tab for short. She’s got fluffy brown hair and matching doe eyes - enormous and beautiful. Her skin colour is right in between light and dark. I think she’s absolutely beautiful.
“Thanks,” I say, but I’m not convinced. I’m wearing a light purple dress to the “semi-formal” holiday dance. I have no idea what semi-formal implies, and when I asked Tab, she had no idea either.
“Just go with a dress,” she had said, so that’s what I’m wearing.
“I can’t believe you’re going with Paris,” Tab squeals, and then she pulls off her shirt and pants and pulls on a pair of spandex over her underwear to wear under her dress. She got a much more holiday-y one - silver with white diagonal stripes on it.
I smile and glance in the mirror. A dimple pops up in my left cheek. I don’t have one in my right, though, which makes everything seem much less symmetrical. Mum says it adds character. Right.
I take one look at myself in the mirror and then turn around. Lenoxx needs his food. I’ll usually give it to him after I eat dinner but I’ll be at the dance, and I’m afraid I’m going to forget to feed him after. I don’t want him to starve, either.
Shaking a few flakes into his tank, I turn back to Tab. She’s now in her dress and is squinting at herself in my full-length mirror. She pulls her gaze away and looks at me.
“You’re so pretty,” she says with a frown. “Also, you have the nicest boobs. Literally, look,” Tabitha says, gesturing at her flat chest. The thing is, I’d rather have her chest than mine.
I shrug. “It’s okay. Just wait. And, you look pretty too. Stop hating yourself so much.”
Tab doesn’t say anything except frowns once more. She gestures her head in the direction of the door. “C’mon. We’ve got a dance to go to.”
The dance is located in the gym. It is decorated with Christmas streamers - red, white, and green. Even though I’m sure there are many people here who do not celebrate Christmas, and I think the colors are exclusive of religions but I just put it to the back of my head. Long tables are folded out at the edges of the gym with snacks and punch. I don’t really know what it means to go to the dance with someone, but I had assumed I am gonna dance with Paris.
Dancing isn’t my forte.
I see Paris. He looks nice and is wearing a suit with a shirt underneath it and long pants. Exactly what I would have thought of as semi-formal. He sees me and Tab and comes over to us.
“Hi,” he breathes out.
“Hey,” I say, tempted to chew on my nail but I don’t.
The music is boring and pop-y, so we just hang around. I’d rather not clump up with everyone else and jump up and down with my fist in the air so I nibble on some food. Tab and Paris do the same.
Finally, a slow song comes on and I feel the nerves kicking in and I can see, out of the corner of my eye, Tab watching as Paris asks me to dance and I say sure.
I wipe my clammy hands on my dress one last time before I put my hands on his shoulders.
The song seems to last forever and I enjoy it but also don’t.
When I get home, I really want to go to bed. So I stumble up the stairs, tired, and shimmy out of my dress. I pull on a t-shirt and a pair of pajama pants and fall into my bed. I fall asleep instantly to the sound of the tick-tick of the clock and my timed breathing.
I wake up and my first thought is dang it, it’s Friday. And my second thought is no, it’s Saturday! I sit up in my bed and rub the sleep out of my eyes. I smell pancakes and bacon cooking, so I get up out of bed. I grab Lenoxx’s food and am about to shake it once into his tank when I freeze.
Lenoxx is in my tank. But he’s not moving. He’s lying upside down, right at the top of the water.
It’s stupid, really. How attached I got to the goldfish. I crumple to the floor and sit there, hugging my knees to my chest. I can’t think about anything except Lenoxx and convince myself I did nothing wrong. I hope I did nothing wrong. I couldn’t bear to hurt an innocent animal. He had to go.
I knew he had to go.
I make my way downstairs. Pancakes and bacon and eggs are already on a plate steaming, waiting for me.
I bury Lenoxx later that day. In our backyard. And I grab a nice stone and write RIP on it in a thick Sharpie, sticking it right where I buried him. I hope he’s comfy.
My goldfish’s name is Lenoxx, but now he’s gone.
Inevitable
We’re among the stars, Auxiliary and I.
She’s jumping from star to star and I’m stuck on the moon.
Being with her will bring nothing but impending doom. We’re in love with each other anyway.
Auxiliary has skin that matches midnight and dresses that sing a song of loveliness. She dances in the stars and her hair tangles in the glowing dips on them.
The stars know us. They know us. They know we’re in love. And they’d do anything to keep the two of us apart, which is why we’ll surely be blasted apart one day, through the galaxy, away from each other, away and away and away.
Auxiliary lights up the stars with her energy every night. And after all that’s done she twirls to the moon, to me, and we stare at the lighted up stars that really do hate us.
Doom for us is inevitable, and there’s no doubting that. Auxiliary knows that and I know that and doom is floating around us. It’s an aura, the doom is. An aura of doom.
Auxiliary jumps from star to star, lighting them up one by one. I’m watching her. She has so much energy. I have none.
She lights up the last one, and then flies through the darkness, her whole body glowing and humming with energy that sounds like a million songs. She twirls down to the moon like she does every night and she lets out a breathless, “Hello, Euphonious!” She does a full turn and her white dress twirls as she does so.
She always calls me by that name. She loves her long words. I prefer E. Auxiliary likes the complicated things.
We sit down together on the moon, like usual.
“Our doom is inexorable,” Auxiliary states. Her black hair is everywhere, pooling on the moon like spilled ink on parchment.
I squint my eyes as they catch on an especially bright star (Auxiliary named that one Sempiternal. She says once we’re blasted across the galaxy, we’ll still see that one star. It’ll be sempiternal. So that’s its name.) and then I turn my head to her. “I prefer inevitable.”
“Ineluctable.”
“Inevitable,” I argue back, because it’s what we always do.
“This is why we’re doomed lovers, Euphonious,” she says, because it’s what she always says.
“Call me E.”
“Never,” Auxiliary says, laying back on the rough surface of the moon. She’s looking up at the sky and her lips start moving; naming the stars.
I lay back too. We stare up at the darkness, only illuminated by the stars, our breaths light and sweet.
“We’re not meant to be together,” I say, my voice barely a whisper. Auxiliary’s tracing the patterns of the stars with her finger, one eye closed tight.
“We’ll be blasted through the galaxy,” Auxiliary says, in her normal voice. It never seems to waver. Always happy, always cheerful. “The stars will be frustrated with us.”
I say what I usually do, “Star crossed lovers.”
And she turns her head to me, beaming brighter than Sempiternal or any stars, and says what she usually does, “What a beautiful phrase.”
She gets up, her movements slow. She needs to get back to work; lighting up the sky. I stand up too, to watch her go.
“Goodbye, Euphonious,” she says, giving me a hug. She breaks apart from me first, looks straight into my eyes, and gives me a smile I know all too well: it means I love you and I’m sorry and ineluctable at the same time. I give her my smile back: I love you and I’m sorry and inevitable. “Call me E,” I whisper, and then she turns around, to run off again.
“Doomed, the two of us!” She calls, and she jumps into the darkness. “Inexorable. Ineluctable. Inescapable. Ineludible.” She says it like she always does. Auxiliary has a way with words. She’s something and more.
“Inevitable,” I add, and she smiles and runs off to the stars.