Authors: Nova Ren Suma
Tags: #Juvenile Fiction, #Social Issues, #Runaways, #Horror & Ghost Stories, #Visionary & Metaphysical
when the girls’ room door banged open,
slamming against the wall, and a group
of three freshmen clattered in, crowding
me.
At the same time, the door, third from
the right, slowly swung itself open,
creaking as it went, revealing an empty
stall. No soot-covered snow boots. No
girl.
The freshmen tittered a little, bowing
their heads and not making eye contact—
as freshmen do around upperclassmen
and I don’t even know why—and then
one of them got brave and spoke up. She
was the smallest of the three, brown
glowing skin and shiny dark hair held
tight against her head with two yellow
clips, and she said, “You cut off all your
hair.” She flushed when I turned and
looked at her, but still stared at my head.
“Rain!” one of her friends said,
admonishing her.
“I like it,” Rain said, ignoring her two
friends but talking so fast it could barely
be made out. “I mean it brings out your
eyes or, I don’t know, something.”
“Thanks,” I said. This was the same
girl who’d bothered me in the library,
but now I had my eyes on the stall. I had
my heart lodged in my throat and a
whisper of a voice in my ear. The voice
wasn’t Fiona Burke’s; it didn’t snap at
me, it wasn’t cruel. And it wasn’t Abby
—she was staying quiet, giving this new
girl a turn to speak. It was Natalie
Montesano, whose face had lodged itself
over mine just that morning. I was
hearing voices, seeing phantom feet. I
didn’t care what some freshman thought
of my haircut.
“I’m Rain,” she said patiently. “We
used to be on the same bus? You look
—”
“You should go,” I said. I almost
growled it, and I don’t know why it
came out that way, like I was one of
those bullies who’d demand lunch
money or an iPhone and humiliate
someone simply because she was
younger than me. I fit the part, maybe
today, with my asymmetrical haircut that
toughened up the angles of my face and
my red eyes from the thrashing I’d done
in my sleep and the insistence, the deep
need
, to be alone again because
someone was trying to tell me something
important.
“Oh, okay,” Rain said, lowering her
head.
“The sink’s broken in the art room, so
we just needed to fill this up,” another
freshman said, and I noticed now that
she was carrying a bucket. “Ms. Raicht
said we could. She told us to come in
here. She said . . .”
“Just do it,” I said, like I ruled the
girls’ room and commanded the sinks,
“and hurry up.”
They filled the bucket quickly and
were heading out the door when Rain
turned back and held it open, pausing to
say this to me: “Are you feeling okay?
You look like you’ve seen a ghost or
something.”
I looked her in the eyes for the first
time and wondered if she might be able
to see the girl in the stall, too. If I
pointed her out.
Then she said, “I had the flu over
break and I was so dizzy and I puked and
everything. Do you need me to take you
to the nurse?”
I was about to tell her I was fine and
she should leave me alone when a
person shoved past her into the bathroom
and said, “Someone said you were up
here. Nice haircut.”
Jamie walked in and leaned up against
the far sink.
“You’re not allowed in here,” Rain
said to him. “You’ll get in trouble.”
Jamie glanced at her, then said to me:
“Who is this girl?”
“Nobody.” It was true. She wasn’t
even close to sixteen yet, let alone 17, so
I didn’t have to bother about worrying
over her. I was staring right at her and
blanking on her name.
It took her a few moments to sense
that she should leave. The door slammed
closed, and Jamie stepped closer, as if
we were alone, but we weren’t. It was
impossible now to be alone with me
because I was always being followed.
He stepped close to me, and then I
stepped away, and I think that’s when it
began to dawn on him.
“Didn’t you see me downstairs?” he
asked.
“Yeah,” I admitted, not able to keep it
up anymore, not now that the visions
were multiplying, now that there were
three girls.
“So you’re avoiding me?”
I shrugged. I felt my shoulders make
the motion, and I didn’t do a thing to stop
them.
“What’s gotten into you?” he said, just
coming out with it. “Are you into
someone else? Is that it? Who is it?”
“It’s no one. It’s not that.”
“So what is it then?” I now realized
we were having “the talk,” and that I
wasn’t going to get away with avoiding
it today.
He’d retreated back to lean against the
sinks. His arms were crossed over his
narrow chest and his thick, dark hair
was curling down over one of his eyes.
He didn’t reach up to move it away.
I didn’t want to let myself keep
looking at him—like I’d given up that
right—so I dropped my gaze and thought
and thought of what to say. There was a
drain in the middle of the tiled floor that
I hadn’t noticed before and my eyes
caught on it. Was that how Natalie had
entered the room? And was that the exit
she’d taken to leave? Could the girls
travel through the pipes of the school?
Were they anywhere, and everywhere,
able to find me wherever I went, no
matter if I wanted them to or not?
“Lauren,” Jamie said. “You owe me
this. You know you do. Just say it. I can
take it.”
He was right: I did owe him an
explanation. It was more than just that
we’d gotten physical together and that
made all of this so much more serious.
And with seriousness comes the
lowering of the walls, and with the
lowering of the walls comes the
nakedness, and with the nakedness
comes the connection and the fear. Both
of us had done things we’d never done
with anyone else before—at least that’s
what
he
said; I know I was telling the
truth—not to mention the talking and all
the secrets spilled after, like when we’d
lie in bed together, under the covers, at
his house or my house, when no one else
was home.
He told me how his dad used to hit
him until one day, when he was thirteen,
he hit him back and got lucky with his
aim and bloodied his lip. I told him how
my dad disappeared when I was three
and a few years ago we thought he was
in a homeless shelter down in Texas, but
when we called to talk to him he
wouldn’t come to the phone. Jamie told
me how he used to think of suicide
sometimes, when he was reading a lot of
Camus. I told him how I never once
thought of suicide, but I knew my mom
had, before I was born, and knowing I
was the one keeping her alive and happy
made me more afraid to die than
anything ever could. Jamie and I simply
told each other a lot of things. And I
guess that once you’ve gone that far with
someone, once you’ve let him in, in all
the ways a person can be let in, you
should say why you don’t want to see
him anymore. You should
know
why,
yourself.
I didn’t, but I tried to explain.
“It’s me. It’s me and it’s not me.
There’s more of me than you know.
There’s more, and I can’t tell you, I can’t
say. There are things . . . There are
people.” I got the distinct feeling I was
saying too much. It’s true that Jamie
knew a lot about me, but he didn’t know
everything. I’d never told him about
Fiona Burke running away all those
years ago. And, right then, I was
relieved I hadn’t. She wouldn’t want him
to know.
“Wait, so you’re saying I don’t know
you? Are you
serious
?” He’d heard only
part of what I’d said.
“You used to. You don’t anymore.”
“You’re not making sense.”
I agreed. It felt like we were having
two separate conversations, that he was
hearing things my mouth wasn’t saying,
and I was saying things his ears couldn’t
hear.
Then I remembered the phone call
he’d taken when we were at the Lady-of-
the-Pines Summer Camp that night. He
was acting like all of this was my fault,
but was it? Who was the guilty one here?
“Maybe I should ask
you
if there’s
someone else?” I said. “If there was,
would you tell me?”
“No,” he said, and hearing that
answer felt like a slap. Then he
clarified. “There’s no one else.” He
added this last bit without looking at me:
“But it sounds like you want me to get
with someone else.”
I couldn’t blame him if he did. I
wasn’t fit for consumption. I was
defective. I was about to melt down that
drain and share the pipes with the only
people who understood me. The girls.
I don’t know what I wanted him to do:
pull me into his arms, maybe, and say it
didn’t matter. Sense there was someone
in the stall and not be scared away by it.
He did none of those things. You see,
Jamie Rossi was great. He was kind. He
was really, really into me, or at least he
used to be. But he was also a pretty
typical 17-year-old boy, and you can’t
expect so much from them.
“Whatever you want,” he said, his
eyes hardening. “I guess we’re broken
up then.” He turned for the door, and I
thought he was about to leave; then he
turned back.
“That’s mine. That hoodie you’re
wearing. Take it off.”
“You’re kidding.”
He waited, and the expression on his
face said it all. It was more a lack of
expression, an iron door behind which
he’d packed all his emotions; I’d never
get close to them again since I wasn’t
strong enough to lift that door. He
absolutely was not kidding.
“C’mon,” he said. “You made me late
to class already. Just give it so I can go.”
I unzipped the red hoodie, then pulled
it off, arm by arm. Underneath I wore
only a T-shirt of the thinnest cotton, and
it was January, and my nipples turned to
pebbles and the gooseflesh on my arms
popped up, and surely he’d see this and
let me hang on to the hoodie for the rest
of the day.
Nope.
I held it out to him, dangling it in the
open space between us. He closed the
gap, tore it out of my hand, and left.
Natalie, upon hearing the door slam,
dropped her feet down off the toilet and
came out of the stall. She made me
cough, and she made my eyes tear up,
and I couldn’t look at her, not even in the
mirror, and there was a lump in my
throat so I couldn’t speak.
She didn’t touch me, because I don’t
think a ghost can touch a person. But she
stood very, very close to me so her
whisper teased at the lobe of my ear:
You don’t need him,
she said, and I
knew just what she’d say next.
You have
us.
—
24
—
NATALIE
wondered what else
she’d inherited from her mother, beyond
the physical characteristics most kids
inherit through the curse of DNA: eye
color, hair texture, bumps on the nose,
extra weight around the hips. Did she
carry something else of her mom’s, that
raging flare buried and faintly glowing
somewhere in her, the one that made her
mother sneak the blade from the kitchen
and plunge it, without warning, into the
snoring chest of that man in her bed?
Maybe this kind of calculated rage
was genetic. It could be that Natalie had
this trait just as she had anything else.
You have your mother’s eyes.
You have your mother’s skill with a
carving knife.
Natalie feared it could snap on at any