Authors: Juliana Stone
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J U L I A N A S T O N E
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Copyright © 2014 by Juliana Stone
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This book is for my daughter, Kristen. A young woman
with a mind of her own and a love of books that runs in the
family. I hope you never change.
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My gram told me once when I was eleven that I could do
anything. She’d been very matter of fact as she poured us each
an iced tea on a steamy afternoon.
It was the kind of afternoon when the air sizzled and stuck
to the insides of your clothes. The kind of afternoon that made
your skin clammy and your muscles lazy. I remember that the
birds were quiet but the locusts chimed like mini buzz saws.
Funny, the things that you remember, and the things that
you can’t forget no matter how hard you try.
On that particular afternoon, we’d sat on her front porch
in the rain, Gram’s hyacinths bent over from the weight of the
water, her two cats Mimi and Roger curled at our feet. I’m sure
I wore some trendy New York outfit that was totally inappro-
priate for Louisiana in August, and Gram Blackwell was dressed
in what she liked to call “genteel southern attire,” which basi-
cally meant cotton instead of linen or silk.
We settled back in our chairs and chatted about the soccer
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team. I told her how much I wanted to make first string, and she
told me that anything was possible as long as I applied myself.
Of course I believed her with all the enthusiasm an eleven-
year- old who has never been hurt or disappointed feels.
Why wouldn’t I? This was Gram, and she was never wrong.
I tried my hardest and made the team.
But that was before Malcolm. Before the awful year that
had just passed. That was before I learned that my charmed life
could bleed. That pain could become an everyday kind of thing,
and that the thought of happiness was just a word that didn’t
mean anything.
And now, at the ripe old age of sixteen and a half, I don’t
know what I believe in anymore, and I don’t know if I’ll ever
be fixed.
It’s not like I haven’t tried.
I went to private therapy. I went to group counseling. I read
the books that I was supposed to read, did the relaxation exer-
cises that I thought were stupid, and took the meds that they
gave me.
In fact, I loved how those little blue pills made me feel
nothing— which isn’t very different from the way I feel most
of the time— but medicated nothing is so much better than the
real, hard nothing I had been living with.
I suppose it’s why they weaned me off of them. Addict wasn’t
exactly a label my mom wanted to add to the impressive list of
everything else that was wrong with me.
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BOYS LIKE YOU
My point is…I did it all. I tried.
It’s just hard to succeed at something when you don’t really
care, and as much as I want to get better for my parents, I can’t
make
myself care. Not even for them. My therapist says I need to care for myself first.
And therein lies the problem. The catch- 22. I just don’t care
anymore. Not really.
Yet there are moments where, if I try real hard, I can close my
eyes and smell the rain. Not just any rain, mind you, but
that
rain. From that long ago afternoon.
Gram’s rain.
“Monroe, I’m heading to town in a few minutes. Do you
want to come along?”
I turned as Gram walked into the kitchen. It was nearly noon
and I had been sitting at the table for about an hour, trying to
decide if I was going to eat the bowl of pears she’d put out for
me earlier or if I was going to put them back in the fridge.
I liked pears. I liked them a lot. I just wasn’t all that hungry.
“Uh, I think I’ll stick around here, if that’s okay with you.”
Gram put her purse on the table, and I pretended not to
notice how her eyes lingered on my hair. I’d pulled it back in a
ponytail yesterday— or maybe it was the day before— because I
couldn’t be bothered with it and I’m pretty sure I hadn’t brushed it since.
She pointed to the bowl in front of me and raised her
eyebrows, waiting half a second before grabbing it and setting
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it on the counter. She pulled plastic wrap from the drawer and
covered the pears before putting them back in the fridge.
Gram turned and leaned against the counter, and for a
moment, we stared at each other in silence.
I’d arrived a week earlier and we hadn’t had a real chat yet—
the one that I sensed was coming— and my stomach churned at
the thought.
Gram’s long hair was swept up in a clip at the back of her
head, the silver strands glistening in the sunlight that poured
in from the window above the sink. She wore pink lipstick, a
casual cream skirt— cut to an inch above her knee— a moss-
green blouse, and low open- toe heels to finish off the outfit.
Pearls were in her ears, and the matching pendant lay at her
neck. A classy choice that was totally Gram.
She was beautiful.
My gram had turned sixty last year and still carried that
simple elegance that set her apart from a lot of women. She’d
been a real hottie in her day, and though my mother said I was
her spitting image, I didn’t see it. But then I suppose beauty is more about your state of mind, and since mine was all dark and
gloomy, that’s what I saw when I looked in the mirror.
“All right,” she said after a while and glanced at the clock
above the stove. “I have someone coming by the house anyway,
and I’ll need you to show him where the job is.”
Great. I thought of my bed and the nap I’d planned.
“Who is it?”
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I didn’t really care, but I could at least be polite and ask.
“I’ve engaged the services of a local contractor for some
repairs and maintenance around the plantation. Today the fence
around the family crypt and burial plot will be painted.”
Gram’s ancestors had lived in Louisiana for generations and
this place— Oak Run Plantation— had been in the family for
just as long. Years ago, Gram’s father had turned the family
home into a successful bed and breakfast/museum, which Gram
had inherited, because according to my father, Gram’s brother,
Uncle Jack, was a no- good drunk who couldn’t find his own
butt if he needed to.
My grandmother even stayed on after her husband died, but
instead of living in the big house, she moved into what used to be the carriage house. And that’s where I’ll be staying this summer.
Everyone— which would be my parents and my best friend
Kate— was hoping the hot Louisiana summer and laid- back
atmosphere would somehow fix me. They think that the city
and the memories are too much, and I don’t have the heart to tell that that the memories will never leave. That much I’ve learned.
So location doesn’t really matter, but I was glad to be away
from my mother and her large, expressive, puppy- dog eyes. She
looks at me a lot when she thinks I won’t notice, and every time
she does, I feel like the biggest failure on the planet.
I don’t know how to react to her anymore— do I pretend I’m
better to make her pain go away? Do I ignore her? Do I tell her
to get out of my face?
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And my father, God, he’s the total opposite. He acts as
if everything is normal. As if the last year and a half never
happened— as if each one of us is whole— and that makes me
angry. And kinda sad.
Gram grabbed her purse, bent low, and gave me a hug. “I
love you, Monroe.”
“I know,” I whispered.
She grabbed her keys and paused. “Barbecue sound good
for supper?”
I shrugged. “Sure.”
“All right then.” She moved toward the door but paused, her
hand on the ivory handle. “He’ll be here in an hour. Why don’t
you brush your hair?”
“Okay,” I answered, though I’m pretty sure we both knew it
wasn’t likely to happen.
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The crap thing about not being able to drive is that I do a lot
of waiting around for rides, and I hate waiting. Doing nothing
makes me crazy, and crazy Nathan isn’t exactly the kind of thing
I’m going for these days.
But mostly I hate waiting because it gives me too much
time to think about the reasons I’m waiting in the first place.
About how one stupid mistake changed everything. About how
I screwed up so badly that now, the summer before my senior
year— the one that I should have spent hanging with Rachel and
Trevor and the rest of the guys— is going to suck.
Though it won’t suck as much as Trevor’s.
I wiped sweat from my brow and scooped up my bag from
the porch. I hate waiting. I hate thinking.
In the fourth grade, Alex Kingsley tripped Trevor in the
hallway, just outside our classroom. We had been in line waiting
to head into the gymnasium, and Trevor tumbled into me.
Long story short, we both wiped out, and the entire row of girls
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laughed their butts off. So did Alex— until we cornered him in
the schoolyard at lunch.
Trevor and I taught the little turd exactly what happened
to dickheads. After that, Alex pretty much left everyone alone,