Authors: Nova Ren Suma
Tags: #Juvenile Fiction, #Social Issues, #Runaways, #Horror & Ghost Stories, #Visionary & Metaphysical
FIONA’S
here with me now. She
pretend-shoots the doctor dead and then
she’s motioning for the window, like I
should make a leap for it, or push the
doctor through the glass to see if her
enormous earrings will break her fall.
I’m not sure what Fiona’s getting at, but
I’m not about to do anything stupid, and I
need to keep all reactions off my face so
the doctor doesn’t know.
With Fiona’s arrival, the doctor’s
office has darkened at the edges,
bleeding shadows in the corners and on
the ceiling tiles. I see our time is running
out. Not just on this session. On the girls.
Then I catch what Fiona wanted to
show me: She’s not motioning at the
window; she’s motioning at the desk
beside the window. The pendant is on
the doctor’s desk. It’s been here this
whole time.
I point to it. “That’s mine. Can I have
that back?”
The doctor gazes over at her desktop,
but she doesn’t move closer.
“I’m glad you brought that up,” she
says. “What is this little collection?”
I don’t understand what she means by
“collection.” There’s one thing: the
necklace. There’s the necklace I wore
around my neck, and that’s all.
I can see it there, out of reach but in
the same room with me now. Close
enough that I could stand up, and take a
few steps, and have it in my hands. I
study it as if for the first time: The stone
is gray but not completely gray; really, it
doesn’t look like a stone at all but a
breath of smoke that’s been caught inside
a bubble of glass. I think of breaking it
open, to see if that’s what’s in there.
Because it can’t be. Because it’s heavy,
heavier than something made of smoke
should be, and when you hold it in your
fist it grows hot, or your fist does, and if
I had it now I’d practically be burning.
“It’s just a necklace,” I tell her.
“Is it?” she says oddly.
I watch as she raises herself from her
plush chair and moves for the desk,
gathering up some papers in her arms
and my pendant on top. She walks it all
over to me and places the pile neatly on
the small table before the chair where
she has me sitting. I’m about to grab for
the necklace first, but she blocks my
hand.
“Is that what you meant? This
‘necklace’?” She points, and again I
notice how she’s careful not to touch it.
Her tone is confusing me. Also
confusing is when she asks me to
describe it for her, as if she can’t see it
on the table before us, right here. I tell
her about the smoky gray stone, which
gleams in the light and swirls with
movement, coming alive at the sound of
my voice. It’s like a mood ring, the kind
they sell at gas-station registers for five
bucks. But it never changes color, and
you wear it around your neck instead of
on your finger.
“Where did you get it?” she asks.
“Did someone give it to you?”
I avoid her eyes. “Not exactly.”
I’m worried she’ll make me tell the
whole story before I’m allowed to have
it back. And if I told, I’m not sure I’d get
to keep it.
“I . . . found it,” I say weakly. What I
should
say is that it belongs to a missing
girl. I should be confessing that it might
be a clue, and should be turned over to
police, if my wearing it against my skin
all these weeks hasn’t contaminated it.
But if I could only get it back, I’d have
my link to her again. To Abby. Because
she hasn’t finished telling me her story.
None of the girls have.
“Lauren,” the doctor says, waiting
until I meet her eyes. “What I see there
isn’t a necklace like you’re describing.
What I see there is a rock.”
A rock?
“A rock,” she repeats. “A rock from
the ground, which looks to be tied with a
string.”
I lower my eyes to the pendant, and
there’s the swirl and the gleam and the
shimmer, and then a flatness and a
stillness that wasn’t there before, and a
darkening that wasn’t there before, and a
rock. There’s a rock. The pendant has
turned into a rock.
I flash back to the side of Dorsett
Road, the gully filled with snow where I
found the pendant that night. I see my
hand reaching out to pluck it from the
ground and I see my fingers wrapping
around a dirty rock from the side of the
road and lifting this putrid thing into the
palm of my hand like it’s something
beautiful. I see it clear, and my throat
chokes up, and my eyes burn, and I’m not
so sure anymore about anything.
“What did you do?” I shriek.
I have it now, in my hand, and it’s still
a rock. No matter how many times I turn
it over, rubbing it in my fingers, it
doesn’t change back. It’s as gone as the
girls are, as gone as I should be soon, if
the shadows gathering by my feet under
the table are any indication. Gone, and
this dirty, lumpy rock is all that’s left.
“I didn’t do anything to it,” she says in
a quiet voice. “You know that.”
I put my head down, which is why I
don’t see the next thing she’s trying to
show me. There’s the sound of shuffling
papers and some movement on the table
before me, and then she says, as if this is
a portfolio showing at the end of art
class and she wants to know my artistic
influences regarding my still life of
grapes: “Now tell me about these,
Lauren.”
I won’t look.
“Your mother found them in your
room, in your dresser, she told me, and
under your bed. Your mother said there
were a lot more than what we have here,
but she brought in a few to show me.
Can you tell me about these posters,
Lauren? These ‘Missing’ notices? It
looks like you’ve printed yourself up
quite a collection.”
On the top is Shyann Johnston, gone
missing from Newark, New Jersey, at
age 17. Beside her is Yoon-mi Hyun,
gone
missing
from
Milford,
Pennsylvania, at age 17, but I don’t see
Maura Morris’s flyer, which bothers me,
because I always like to keep them
together. And then poking out from
beneath Shyann is a girl I haven’t found
in the dream yet, and edging out from
beneath Yoon-mi is a girl I looked for
and didn’t ever see and there are so
many, all age 17, and these aren’t even
all of them.
I wonder what Fiona will have to say
about this—or, more, what she’ll tell me
to say in my own defense. She stands far
across the room, beside the potted plant
the doctor accused her of being, and the
look on her face is something terrible.
I’ve seen that look only once before,
years ago, when she wanted to get me
away from that little man and did the
only thing she could think when his back
was turned, which was hide me, fast. In
the moment before she shoved me in the
coat closet, I remember how she looked
this sickened, this afraid.
I turn back to the doctor. Fiona has
given me no words, so I have nothing to
say.
It doesn’t matter. The doctor has
glanced at the clock. She gathers my
girls off the table and holds them in her
arms. This is enough, she says, for today.
We’ll talk some more next time. We’ll
have time to go through all of this—
we’ll have lots and lots of time to talk in
the coming weeks.
“Weeks?”
I say. “I thought I was
getting out on Monday.”
She won’t confirm if I am or not, only
that we’ll talk more soon. Then she tells
me I can go now. I can go out with the
others and line up now, because it’s time
for lunch.
—
56
—
THE
girl who I witnessed yodeling
when she first arrived has the other bed
in my room now, but she sleeps with her
face to the wall, so all I have is a view
of the back of her head and the lump of
her body. She sleeps day and night, night
and day, and there’s nothing that can
wake her, not even when I bolt upright in
the dark, shaken to consciousness by a
bad feeling I can’t name.
This isn’t a dream—those have been
taken from me. This is something else. I
let my eyes adjust in the darkness and
stare directly overhead, at the ceiling
speckled with midnight static. It takes
some moments before I start to be able
to decipher them. The shadows.
The ceiling and walls are clean and
unmarked where my roommate is
sleeping—no shadows there. That’s
because they’ve all gathered on my side
of the room, staining the wall beside my
bed and clawing upward to bloom in the
darkest spot directly over my pillow,
where my head is now resting.
“You have to get out of here,” a voice
says.
It wasn’t one of the girls’ voices
sidling through the slurred spaces of my
mind. It wasn’t Fiona’s voice, her body
appearing suddenly beside me in the
bed, her mouth tilted to face my ear. It
wasn’t even my neighbor, spouting out a
random lucid sentence in her sleep. It
was my own voice. I’d spoken those
words aloud. To myself.
—
57
—
JAMIE
has come to visit, and he’s
driven my van. He tells me he’ll go drop
it off at my house after. A friend will
come pick him up, and he’ll leave the
keys for me in my room.
I don’t know why he’s come all the
way over here to tell me about his
transportation arrangements, or why it’s
so important to him that I know he got
my van off Karl’s back lawn. He goes to
the window of the common room to
point out the van in the parking lot, and
there it is, at the curb beside a low-
hanging tree, black and menacing and
mine, and if only I could be in it now,
going anywhere, just driving.
Jamie’s back is to me, and I can study
the set of his shoulders under that old
peacoat he’s still got on. His thin legs in
those big black boots. The curls of his
hair sticking out under that knit cap. If
this were the last time I ever got to see
him, I’d be okay with it. This memory of
him here at the window would be a
decent one to hold on to.
Then he turns, and the memory I’m
making of him shifts. The pain in his
eyes is more emotion than I’ve felt
myself in days. It’s like they carved all
feeling out of me and handed the gore
over to him, as my guest, to carry
through the halls on my behalf until his
visiting time is up and the dinner hour
begins and they make him leave empty-
handed.
He takes a seat in a vinyl chair beside
me and turns it so we face each other.
“I’ve been thinking about what you
said,” he starts. “That night. When I
drove you home.”
It’s kind of him, only I can’t remember
exactly what I said that night. Bits and
pieces like that have been smudged
away.
“So that really was what you were
seeing?” he goes on. “That girl?” And
that’s how I remember I told him about
Abby Sinclair.
I have the very strong feeling that he
shouldn’t say her name here, so I put my
hand on his arm to stop him, the first
touch we’ve had between us since he
arrived. Unfortunately I’ve used my left
arm, and some of the bandage peeks out
from the edge of my sleeve. He sees it
and freezes. I pull my arm away and put
it back where it was.
Jamie and I aren’t together anymore,
and I’m not sure if we’re friends, but
we’re something. He wouldn’t be here if
we were nothing. He starts talking about
some random thing and while talking he
fidgets—I think the other patients in the
common
room
are
making
him