Authors: Nova Ren Suma
Tags: #Juvenile Fiction, #Social Issues, #Runaways, #Horror & Ghost Stories, #Visionary & Metaphysical
together forever.
It’s Abby Sinclair’s wallet, and I
know this before it comes open because
of what her former camp counselor told
me about the things she took with her the
night she went to meet Luke. And I know
simply because I
know
, in my gut. As if
she reached out from the ether and told
me so herself. I knew it as soon as I had
the thing in my hands.
It’s over soon after I find it.
The fires lured them all here, and with
them comes all the noise.
The shouting. A dog barking. Sirens.
The door being kicked all the way open.
The men bursting in. Hands up. Knees in
snow. The fire truck, the firemen. Lights.
Confusion. The wallet being taken from
me. A girl’s name on my lips. Police on
the way, and then here. My mom. The
feel of my mom’s intact and pounding
heart through her coat. Lights. A blanket
wrapped around me. The tight ties
around my wrists. Questions. Losing
sight of Jamie. The backseat of a police
car. Lights. The sound of fires being put
out. The darkness as the lights go down.
The remembered feel of that wallet, that
old chewed piece of gum. The smell of
kerosene on my clothes, in my hair. The
taste of it on my tongue.
Out the window: the calm, blue sign
that
says LADY-OF-THE-PINES SUMMER
CAMP FOR GIRLS fading away and the
quiet oasis of my mind that shrinks off
with it.
Then pine trees. The pine trees of
Dorsett Road as I’m carried away. The
same stretch of pine trees Abby must
have seen the last night she was here.
—
63
—
THERE
are things I don’t understand,
things I was a part of without even
knowing I was taking part. I guess I was
one girl trying to make sense of them.
And trying to fight them, in a way that
made sense only to me.
“How did you know to go looking in
that shed?”
I’m asked this again and again, the
night of the fires and in the days after. By
firemen. By police. By my doctor, once I
was returned to the hospital. By my own
mom. Never by Jamie, though. He
doesn’t ask me how I knew to stay and
search in there—I guess because he saw
the force that propelled me that night,
couldn’t help but see the living fire of it
in my eyes.
Because that’s the thing: I thought it
was over. I thought finding something
that belonged to her (and the glittery
purple plastic wallet with her school ID
inside did belong to her; police verified
that) meant the worst I could imagine,
and I did imagine. I thought it was too
late. I thought she was dead. I held
something of hers in my hands and then I
held only my hands in my hands, when
they took the wallet for evidence, my
arms wound around my back and zip-
tied there as I waited inside the squad
car to be taken to the station and charged
with arson. I told myself awful things.
Convinced myself she was gone. My
voices told me, or some voiceless part
of me told me, or the synapses in my
head broke open and trotted out a song-
and-dance made up of kicking legs and
flapping lies to tell me. It doesn’t matter
how I thought I knew.
I was wrong.
Turns out Abby Sinclair was still
alive.
Officer Heaney was no police officer
—he’s a man who worked maintaining
the campgrounds, who visited often
during the off-season, who lived nearby.
He’s a man who was working at Lady-
of-the-Pines the summer Abby Sinclair
disappeared. What was found in that
maintenance shed, what I handed over to
police, with my descriptions and
Jamie’s of the man we saw, led to
uncover who he was, and where he
lived, and what—
who
—he’d stolen.
I was told she knew him. All the
Lady-of-the-Pines girls did. So when she
was walking back on foot after
overhearing Luke on the phone with
another girl, after stumbling off her bike
and leaving it behind at Luke’s and
rushing off into the dark to get away
from him, she ran into this man on the
road. I don’t know where on the road; no
one told me so specifically. But I can
imagine it.
Like Isabeth, she got in the car. Even
though, like Shyann, she wanted to run
off and hide forever in the trees, because
her heart was broken. Like Jannah, she
went off with someone she thought she
could trust. And like Hailey, she was
assumed to have run away . . . even
though all this time she was really
missing.
The car pulled over, and the man
leaned out an arm. “Hey, hey, Abby—
Your name’s Abby, right? What are you
doing out there? You okay?”
And she was nervous at first—anyone
hearing a car stop short on a lone road at
night would be—and, besides, she didn’t
want him to turn her in to the counselors.
She’d get kicked out. But his face was
friendly enough, and she’d talked to him
before, that one time the sink got clogged
full of hair and he came to Cabin 3 to fix
it. Not to mention, she’d skinned her
knee when she fell off the bicycle in
Luke’s driveway, before she left the bike
there and took off on foot, and she still
had another mile to walk back to camp
with her knee bleeding.
He said he wouldn’t tell on her. He
said he’d help her sneak back in.
I wish Abby didn’t believe him and
accept the ride that night, but she did.
She did.
Parts of this I tell myself, and parts of
this are unalterably true—news articles
and police officers have told me.
I don’t know what happened to her all
the months she was kept by him, and I
can’t make myself ask. The horror of it
gouges me open.
How easy it was for the man to get
away with taking her and keeping her—
because everyone so quickly believed
she ran away. It was never questioned,
not by anyone who knew her, not by
friends or family, not by the girls she
spent her summer with, not by the boy
she kissed under the stars.
It was questioned by no one—until
me.
At some point, and I don’t know if it’s
the night of, or a different day, someone
approaches to tell me something
important. One police officer remembers
me from when I visited the station asking
about Abby Sinclair and her bike. He
comes over when they’re processing me
for setting the fires, and he takes one of
my hands, even though it’s got ink from
the fingerprinting on it, and he tells me
some things.
Thanks
to
me
convincing
her
grandparents, Abby’s file was reopened.
He says that my visit to New Jersey, not
to mention the letter I sent Abby’s
grandparents—creepy
as
it
was,
upsetting them as much as it did—did
have them looking into it, but it was my
finding the wallet that broke open the
case. My poking around, my insisting no
one give up looking, that’s what did this,
he says. He was telling me I helped save
a missing girl.
I don’t see her myself, but I think of
her. I am always thinking of her.
She’s Abby Sinclair, 17, of Orange
Terrace, New Jersey. Abby with the
cubic zirconia in her nose. Abby who’s
afraid of clowns. Abby who can’t
whistle. Abby who chews her nails, just
the ones on her thumbs. Abby who can
tap-dance. Abby who doesn’t mind when
it rains. Or maybe she does mind. Maybe
she isn’t like any of those things, since I
made that all up.
But she is Abby Sinclair, for sure. She
was reported missing September 2 and
her case was officially closed on
January 29.
She’s 17 still, and she’s alive.
So how did I know? The truth is that I
only hoped. That’s what I did. There
was no disembodied voice whispering
the truth of what happened to Abby
Sinclair into my waiting and willing ear.
And if there had been, if ghosts walked
and communicated with me, if lost girls
really did reach out to me across the
smoky abyss—I wonder, wouldn’t I
have known the truth so much faster? I
could have saved her two months ago.
I could have helped end this before
the fires even got set.
Which is what I keep going back to:
the fires. It’s all I dream of now, since
the house is gone. This time it’s not
wishful and imaginary, it’s a memory of
something I did with my own two hands.
Besides, I know it now for what it
was: a girl’s attempt to call for help. A
need to be listened to. To be
heard
.
I know what she was saying—what I
was saying, even if I had trouble
articulating it in words then:
Don’t give up.
Don’t give up on her, or any of them.
Keep looking.
Always
keep looking.
No girl—no missing girl, no runaway
—deserves to be given up on, just like I
wouldn’t want anyone to give up on me.
The blaze was red and ferocious in
the snowed-out night. Before the fire
truck came to douse it and darken it, it
was brilliant, it was blinding. It was
unforgettable. No one could ignore it. I
bet it woke people in their beds at night,
so they stood at their windows
wondering. I bet people could see that
fire from miles and miles away.
THREE MONTHS LATER
IT’S
my first week back home. The
insurance company decided my stay at
the hospital was over, even if the
doctors hadn’t, and I was signed out and
left in my mom’s care as of Monday.
There are things outside our small house
that look different now, and I’m
spending my time noticing. There are
colors that are brighter, and patches of
sky that seem lower, and there’s a tree
on the lawn that I don’t remember seeing
here before.
Since I’ve been gone, spring has come
to Pinecliff, and our cat, Billie, has lost
some weight and is shedding tufts that
drift through the rooms. In the quiet, it
seems as if the house has been capsized
and I’ve woken underwater, seaweed
and minnows slowly circling me. I know
it’s only Billie shedding, but I let my
imagination idle as I watch a bit of hair
float by. There are other things I notice:
how my bedroom looks smaller than I
remembered, the bed taller. Things like
that. But I’ll get used to them.
Another one of my letters got turned in
to police, the postmark tracked down
and pointed to me, which is how my
mom discovered I’d written to more than
Abby’s grandparents. I’d been writing
other girls’ families, too, when I could
find them, telling them what their
missing daughters and sisters and nieces
would have wanted them to know. The
things the girls told me in my dreams,
when they let me coast through their
memories, a visiting observer who never
tampered with their lives but who paid
attention, who remembered. I’d write to
a girl’s mom, saying she meant to visit
her in prison, even one time. I’d write to
a girl’s boyfriend, saying she still loved
him and she didn’t ditch him at the gas
station and she did want to go to Mexico
with him, if only she could. My mom
wanted to know how many of these
letters I’d sent, whose mailing addresses
I’d found and what stories I told them,
even if I had the addresses and the
names wrong, even if my letters never
reached who I intended.
When I confessed, I could see from
her face how serious she thought this
was.
“These are real girls,” she told me
carefully. “Those girls you found online,
they
are
real. With real lives. And real
people at home wondering what