One of a Kind

Jazmine Figueroa

It wasn’t like I didn’t have friends, because that wasn’t the problem; I had a ton of friends but Kim was different. She wasn’t too smart, too sassy, or too neat -- all the things people had always hated about me. Kim was the most generous person I had ever met. The difference between the people I called my friends and Kim was that she understood me in ways no one else was able to. I was loud, energetic, but also shy and self-conscious. Sitting or walking anywhere alone was almost always impossible for me, and she never judged me. Our discussion based classes didn’t always work for me because I didn’t want my classmates to think I was dumb. No one really understood any of those things, they just thought I had “issues.” She understood it all.

When she left for the weekend, I was never the same. I spent most of my time in my dorm room. It never occurred to me why I locked myself away, I just always did. She’d only be gone for two days, but in my mind years passed before she’d come back. I’d leave my room, walk to her door and turn the knob only to find that it was locked because she had left for the weekend. It wasn’t until she returned and I was no longer locked away that I would realize how much I had missed her in that short period of time. I would walk to her door and turn the knob to once again find an unlocked door. Her room was messy, and mine was always clean; I wish I understood why I liked hers more.

We became so close that knocking simply lost all its meaning. I walk into the room where clothing consumes her tiled floor. I am taken aback by the smell of the week-old Chef Boyardee spaghetti and meatballs that were sitting in a bowl on her desk. Piles of papers and books casually float around her desk, making it almost impossible to see. Her wall is jam-packed with the same pictures I see every morning. Some pictures are ripped at the edges; faces of friends who aren’t important anymore have been replaced by the off-white paint that occupied the other 75% of her walls. The room is semi-dark, but the sun is slowly creeping through the same burgundy curtains she’s had since sophomore year. I walk toward them to open them and light up the whole room, but in the process crash into a side table I had forgotten existed. When I finally make it to the window and open the curtain, the sun consumes the room. I sit on her bed and take in the sight in front of me. I try to remember this moment, the sheets, the curtains, her Justin Bieber blanket, and the smell of old pasta because I understand one day it’ll all be gone. My eyes begin to water, and my heart begins to pound faster as I let my emotions get the best of me. It used to feel like we had so much time together, at times it felt like too much time, but now time has passed quicker than I thought it would. I realize her graduation is fifty days away and I become aware of the reason I love this room so much. I look at Justin Bieber to see him staring back at me, and I remember the first day she brought the blanket to the dorms. Back then I thought she was crazy; now I wish I had one of my own. I turn and see a picture of us from our first heads dinner together three years ago. I still remember how stressed out she was because it was her first big dinner with the head of school and she wanted to make a lasting impression and it’s then that I realize how much things have changed, how much we’ve changed.

****

This is it. This is what every screaming girl in this arena has been waiting for: Usher’s appearance on that big blue stage 300 seats in front of us. All the lights are turned off except for one bright yellow light that’s hitting the stage. The arena suddenly becomes silent as teenagers hold their breath, waiting for the big moment. They all raise their hands in unison to their mouths to scream as the music begins to play. I can’t hear my own thoughts, all I can hear are the constant screams of “I love you Usher!” coming from the mouth of every person here tonight. I begin to stand up, trying to be a typical teenage fan swooning over Usher’s amazing dance moves and flawless charisma, when I feel my phone vibrate from the outside of the brown purse I’m carrying. I take it out to see three missed calls and two text messages. As I unlock my phone, I chuckle at the idea of being so important someone felt the need to call me three times until I open my messages to see what’s waiting inside.

“JAZMINE WHERE ARE YOU?! MOOSE. ANDRE. EXPELLED. CALL ME ASAP!!”

I stare at the brightly lit phone screen in front of me, unable to process the letters that are forming the words that are forming the sentences I was taught to read in the second grade. I reach behind me to find my seat to keep from losing my balance. I look up at Kim and she’s screaming her lungs out. Her hands are cupped around her mouth in a circular formation as if her screams are going to get heard over the thousands of screaming fans around us. Her cheeks are flushed, and there are three small droplets of sweat on her forehead. She notices me staring at her and turns towards me to say something witty, but stops when she realizes my hands are shaking. She takes the phone out of my hand and reads the same message I just finished reading. She looks down at me, then down at the phone and then back at me. I open my mouth to try and say something, but before I can speak she’s running down the steps into the crowd below us. I chase after her, getting some death stares in the process until she reaches her destination: the bathroom. It doesn’t take me long to realize she’s gone there to cry. I run inside and find her on the floor, her face covered by her hands, her knees pulled up to her chest. She removes her hands when she hears the door slam. Her cheeks are bright red and covered with black mascara. Her eyes are red and filled with tears. I make my way towards her and all I can do is hug her. She hugs me back as a single tear streams down my face. I want to be strong for her and for me, but I don’t feel as strong as I thought I was.

****

It’s June 7th 2013, and I’m sitting on my bed with no sheets staring at the black and white polka dot dress hanging in front of me. Once I put this dress on, it all becomes real. Kim is really graduating, and I really won’t see her every morning. I decide not to put the dress on and instead walk into Kim’s room and see that she’s already put her dress on. She’s dressed in all white, her long blond hair curled up into a ponytail. She smiles at me, so I smile back trying to hide the pain in my eyes.

“How do I look?” she asks. “Perfect,” is the only word I’m able to blurt out before I break down into tears.

“I should get going, but in just a few hours I’ll be a high school graduate, crazy right?”

“So crazy,” I say. I walk back into my room and stare at the black and white polka dot dress for a little bit longer. Finally I take a deep breath, grab it off the hanger and slip it on. As I stare at myself in the mirror, I take another deep breath and tell myself that everything is going to be okay, but I know it’s not true.

****

I walk through the door, turn to my left and peek into a room I once called my own, a room once filled to capacity with pictures and posters and unnecessary cheesy dorm decorations, but now it’s just empty. I walk inside towards the closet to find the One Tree Hill quote I had written on the inside of it: “To be nobody but yourself in a world which is doing its best, day and night, to make you everybody else means to fight the hardest battle, which any human being can fight and never stop fighting.” I go over the writing with my fingers, and it takes me back to the night I chose to write it. I never really knew why I picked that specific quote -- it always just seemed to speak to me. I look around at the bland walls and try to imagine what it looked like just a couple months before, but I can’t. It all just seems like a distant memory now. I walk outside into the hallway and see that Kim’s door is open. I begin to smile at the excitement of being able to see her until I notice the neon green sign on her door which reads “Welcome back Pixel!” It isn’t until then that I realize she won’t be moving back into that room today, or any other day. I find the courage deep down inside of me to walk into her room, because I know it’s the last time it’ll ever look this clean, this...boring. I walk inside and sit on her bed as I’ve always done in the past, except this time there is no Justin Bieber blanket on the edge of the bed, the window isn’t consumed by the same burgundy curtains she’d had since sophomore year. Her floor is empty, missing the huge piles of clothing I’m used to seeing. But her walls are what startle me the most. They are completely empty, not even a single piece of tape to show that they were once filled with irreplaceable memories. I place my head against the wall to see if our darkest secrets and regrets are still safe, only to come up empty. I close my eyes as I turn and face the wall to try and remember what it looked like when she lived in it. When I open them, the wall is once again filled with pictures. I look around the room to see it exactly how I remembered it: messy. I close my eyes and open them once more to find an empty room. I walk to the door, take one last look at a room I once loved more than my own, turn off the light and close her door for the very last time.