Authors: Nova Ren Suma
Tags: #Juvenile Fiction, #Social Issues, #Runaways, #Horror & Ghost Stories, #Visionary & Metaphysical
the door when I put the bicycle in and
I’d left it open too long when I was
checking my phone and reading Jamie’s
text messages (six since that morning).
I’d let them in. They knew I was looking
for Abby—they’d heard everything I’d
said.
This chain restaurant, this parking lot,
was the nearest turnoff I’d seen. I’d
barreled through the lot and I’d come to
a stop and I’d opened the driver’s side
door and I’d leaped out, and it took
much deep breathing and many minutes
before I could open the two back doors
at the tail end of the van. When I did I
could hardly look, but I had to look,
because I had to know—
All I’d found was Abby’s borrowed
bicycle inside.
I’d gotten myself all worked up over
nothing.
Now I was sitting on the sidewalk, out
under the cold, winter-white sky. I
couldn’t get back in the van just yet.
I was looking down at my knees,
caked with ice and snow and with the
salt kernels thrown out in winter so
people wouldn’t slip and fall in the ice
and snow, and that was how I realized I
must have fallen. I lifted my hands and
saw that my palms, too, were caked with
the mixture, pockmarked and dented
from impact, discolored, almost grayed.
“Hey, you,” I heard.
This voice was coming from behind
me, to my left. I ignored it, of course,
like I’d been ignoring Fiona Burke since
we’d left the police station.
“Hey.” The voice again. This was a
girl’s voice, I realized, the voice of a
very young girl. “Hey. I’m talking to
you.” A clean, white toe nudged the
scuffed steel toe of my combat boot.
“Are you sick? Do you need me to get
my mom?”
From the size of her tiny feet in those
puffy white boots I knew she was far too
young to even be a part of this. When I
craned my neck to look up into her face,
I saw I was right: This girl was nine or
ten maybe, eleven at most. She was dry
and clean and safe. She had years to go.
Years and years.
The girl had many barrettes all over
her head and just looking at them made
my own head feel heavy. The weight of
all those barrettes, if they were plated in
steel like the kicking toes of my boots,
that’s what knowing all the things I knew
felt like.
“I’m fine,” I managed to answer her,
finally.
“You threw up all over the sidewalk,”
the girl said, holding her nose.
I looked behind me, to my right. “Oh. I
guess I did.”
“Do you have germs?” she said. She
took a step back. She moved comically
slow in a white snowsuit decorated with
little coiled demons awash in fire that I
realized, upon blinking, were only
goldfish.
Orange
goldfish
were
decorating her snowsuit, not demons.
“Do you?” she said again. “Have
germs?”
“I might,” I admitted.
“Gross,” the girl said, wrinkling her
nose. But she didn’t move. She didn’t
seem to care if she caught my sickness.
I noticed that my van beside the curb
was still idling; I’d left the engine on.
The back doors were also open,
showing the dark cavern inside. It
seemed much larger than it should be,
like a tunnel that didn’t want you to see
its end.
“Could you do me a favor?” I asked
the girl. “Could you look inside there?”
“What?”
“My van. Could you look inside the
van and tell me what you see?”
She started shrinking away from me.
She must have had that special assembly
in school about bad strangers wanting to
snatch kids in their dirty, scary vans.
I had the terrifying feeling then that
she’d be smart to play it safe and run,
but she only hopped over to the van and
peeked into the back. “Cool! A bike,”
she said.
“Anything else? Nothing else in there
besides the bike?”
“No,” she said. She looked back at me
like I was a wacko. Still, she didn’t run.
I began to worry for her. Where were
her parents?
If she stayed with me for much longer,
she really would catch it. She’d catch it
off me and carry it around with her
through elementary school and middle
school and into high school. She’d carry
it down the field during soccer matches,
up to the top of the Empire State
Building when she visited on a class
trip, down hallways and in the pockets
of her tightest jeans, and then her
birthday would come, and she’d
celebrate with friends, they’d have a
party, and she’d fling herself around the
room dancing, not having any idea of
what’s to come. She’d be 17, and by
then she wouldn’t remember any of this.
She won’t know what meeting me will
have done to her.
I stood up all of a sudden and grabbed
the handles of the back doors, closing up
the van. “Go back inside,” I told the girl.
Didn’t she hear me?
“Go,” I snapped, louder this time.
“Get away from me. I mean it. Get out of
here. Now.
Go
.”
She leaped back as if I’d smacked
her. Her face twisted like she was about
to cry, but before she let me see, she
whipped around and started running.
She was racing away, away from the
gray, salted sidewalk, and away from
me, into the warm and cheerful interior
of the local Friendly’s. Her mom was
probably in there, her dad and siblings,
too, and maybe a trademark Happy
Ending Sundae would help her forget
about this, and me.
I watched to be sure. When she was
safely inside, I realized it was snowing.
Snow falling on the roof of my van and
on the pavement and in my hair and on
my eyelashes and on my outstretched
limbs. Fluffy white flakes of snow
covering me just like they’d cover a
dead body.
—
18
—
FIONA
Bur ke
did
run away—there
was never any question.
After she’d finished packing and
making up her face, her bags strewn
around the foyer and her lashes
protruding from her eyelids in gnarled
spikes, Fiona Burke made a phone call.
Her voice softened as she spoke, turning
simpler, slower, like she’d regressed to
my age, or was mocking me by
pretending so.
She kept assuring the man on the
phone that everything was cool. She said
yes
a lot, like she wanted to agree with
every single thing he said. She got very
silent at one point and it sounded like the
person on the other end was yelling at
her. She stuttered, and said she was
sorry, and after a while the yelling
stopped and they were just talking and
making plans for the night.
I felt her looking at me, where I was
in the dining room in my My Little Pony
pajamas, and then I heard her speak
about me for the first time.
“The thing is,” she told the man, “it’s
like . . . someone’s gonna be here when
you get to the house. Like, I’m not
alone.”
I held my tongue. While she talked,
for a reason I didn’t understand, she was
making me stand in the corner, face
mashed into the crook of the wall. If I
opened my eyes from this position, all I
could make out was her mother’s dining-
room wallpaper: a pattern of yellow
blooms marching north in one mindless,
orderly flock. They blurred to butter
close-up. I couldn’t see her as she
spoke, but I could hear everything she
said.
“No! Not my parents. I told you my
dad’s navy buddy had a fucking heart
attack and they’re in Baltimore for the
fucking funeral. It’s not them. It’s . . . the
kid who lives next door. I’m sort of
watching her since her mom sort of had
no one else to ask. But I’ll just leave her
here. I’m still going with you.”
There was some arguing then. About
me. About what I’d see and who I’d tell.
But then Fiona Burke hung up the
phone and held still. Something in her
face told me she didn’t want to go where
she promised she’d go. That man had
been yelling at her, and she wanted to
stay right here.
I thought she was about to say she’d
changed her mind. Maybe she’d pull me
out of the corner and she’d grab my hand
and say we had to get out of the house
before he got here—whoever he was—
and I’d take her to hide in my bedroom
next door. This was back when my mom
let me have the pup tent in my room, set
up at all times for carpet-camping, and
Fiona Burke and I would crawl in there
and close the flap and I’d show her
where I hid the leftover Halloween
candy.
Maybe Fiona Burke spent a second
thinking something like that, too. About
running away from running away. But it
was too late to change her mind. She’d
set too much of it in motion.
Soon she was prancing over to me in
the corner of the dining room, crouching
so her wet-glossed lips had my ear.
“What am I going to do with you?”
she said, singsong. “He didn’t like it that
you were here, Lauren. He didn’t like it
at all.”
“Who’s he?”
She ignored that. “And really, you’re
not supposed to be here. My stupid
parents said yes to your stupid mom
without asking me first, and I couldn’t
get out of it. This wasn’t the plan.”
I told her that I was sorry, deeply, as
if I’d betrayed her.
Her hand whipped out and she shoved
something hard and cold to the back of
my neck, moving it up until it was
wedged against the base of my skull.
“Do you think I’d hurt you?” she said in
a strange, helium voice. Her breathing
quickened, and mine rushed to catch up.
I didn’t answer, so she gave more
pressure to the back of my neck,
wedging in harder. I imagined the muzzle
of a gun; I’d seen one in person at a
friend’s house once, and so that’s what I
pictured. His dad kept it in a box on a
high shelf in the bedroom, and my friend
had found a way to reach it by balancing
on the dresser. But we hadn’t taken it out
of the box to see if it was loaded, and
we hadn’t played at killing each other,
going
blam, blam!
with the steel against
each other’s temples and the writhing on
the floor until we got tired and decided
to be dead. I’d only touched it, with one
finger, once, and all I remembered was
that it had been this hard, and this cold.
Thinking of this, I may have begged
her, please, not to, begged her, please,
leave me alive, and she may have lost
her bravado and cracked up laughing.
She lowered her hand and all that was in
it was a small Bic lighter.
She flicked it and brought up a tiny
flame that matched the dyed sections of
her
hair.
The
color
was
indistinguishable up close, so for a
moment it seemed her whole head had
caught fire.
“God! What do you think I am, a
monster?” she asked.
I shook my head as far as it would
shake with me standing in the crook of
the wall.
“Maybe I am,” she said. “Maybe I
should burn this whole house to the
ground so that’s what they’d find when
they get home from the funeral. A pile of
stinking ashes and their daughter gone.”
She crooked her head at me, and she
blinked, and I truly didn’t know what she
was capable of doing. Then she blinked
again, and the flames shrunk away from
her face, and I saw how scared she was.
Petrified. She slipped the lighter into her
jeans pocket that already contained the
pendant, and she patted it, making sure it
was there. Then she looked out the
window at the driveway.
“When he gets here, you’re not going
to say a thing to him, are you?” she