Read Kiss of Broken Glass Online
Authors: Madeleine Kuderick
Tags: #Juvenile Fiction, #Social Issues, #Self-Mutilation, #Emotions & Feelings, #Friendship
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All three of them.
After that, I’ll ride my bike to Rennie’s
and we’ll raid her mother’s bathroom,
paint our nails Lincoln Park after Dark,
and drink Monster until we get a caffeine buzz.
I want to tell the Pomeranian
that’s what I’m really thinking
just to see the look on her face.
But Donya warned me,
it isn’t worth it.
So I give her one of those
fake, elastic smiles
and deliver my best lines of BS.
“I’m here because I made an impulsive mistake.
But I’m feeling much better now.
And it will never happen again.”
Then I do a little curtsy-bob with my head
and the Pomeranian bubbles in her stupid
Scantron sheet and trots away.
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“Not bad,” she says. “Might even get you out.
Unless . . .”
“Unless what?” I ask.
Donya snaps her gum
and loops the pink strand
around her finger slow as taffy.
“Unless you got good insurance,” she says.
“Then you’re screwed.”
I follow Donya down the hall.
“What’d’ya mean I’m screwed?”
“Cha-ching,” she sings.
I stare at her, my face blank,
like she just spoke Egyptian.
“Oh, come on, Kenna,” she says.
“Don’t you get it?
If you got good insurance,
they’re gonna milk it.
Take their time with you.
Find your inner child
and all that crap.
But with no insurance—
Voila!
You’re miraculously cured.
Sometimes the same day.”
I don’t want to believe her.
But Donya knows this place like the inside of her pocket.
And if Donya says I’m screwed, then I probably am.
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At my school,
nobody
narcs on cutters.
Not the goody-two-shoes
who pretend they don’t notice
and turn their heads the other way.
Not the stoners who can barely
raise their eyelids.
Not the jocks who are too busy
growing tumors on their arms.
Not even the jerks who call us
emo’s
and
attention whores
,
under their breath.
Nobody.
So that makes Tara the first
narc in history to go running off
to “get help” just because
someone needs a Band-Aid.
Only that’s not why she did it.
Tara did it because she’s a freaking
competitive cutter who can’t stand it
if anyone has better scars than her,
and she got it into her head that
people were paying more attention
to me than to her.
That’s crap, of course.
But that didn’t stop her.
And now that I’m gone,
she’ll
own
fourth period lunch,
with her duct tape bandages
and her six-inch slits,
and she’ll be a freaking rock star
just like she wants.
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Does she think that Tara’s
a two-faced greedy bitch
for ratting me out?
Or that I’m a dumbass
for getting caught?
It’s a very tricky relationship.
The three of us.
I remember how one time
my math teacher spent the whole
period talking about triangles.
How they’re the strongest shape,
and that’s why they’re used for building
bridges and trusses because they won’t
geometrically distort, or some crap like that.
But as usual, school has nothing to do
with real life because if you ask me
triangles are the weakest shape of all,
ready to blow apart at any minute,
especially when the three corners are
Rennie,
Tara,
and me.
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He’d be a circle.
Pure.
Honest.
Perfect.
You can trust a circle.
It doesn’t have any crooked angles
hiding secrets in the corners.
It’s the same with Sean.
Sure. He can be annoying
when he blurts things out
like little brothers do,
but at least he says
what he means.
He’s not a liar.
Or a fake.
I bet you could search
a thousand classrooms,
and cafeterias, and gymnasiums,
and never find that kind of honesty
anywhere else. Believe me. I’ve tried.
I think Sean may be
the last circle on earth.
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It’s bad enough we have to spill our guts
at 8 a.m. when any normal teenager
would still be hibernating.
But apparently one gut spill per day
is not enough for Attaboys.
So when the afternoon rolls around,
they herd us back into the therapy
room for another session.
The only good thing is that Jag’s
sitting six inches away from me
in his Screaming Zombies T-shirt
and I can smell the faint woodiness
of skateboard on his skin.
Jag reaches his arms back to stretch,
and it’s like every muscle in his body
is in perfect, rippled balance,
and I can just imagine
how good he looks on his long board,
pivoting his Levi’s hips,
flexing his marble six-pack,
surfing the smooth cement
with his arms long and low
like fighter-plane wings.
He catches me staring at him
and smiles with that half-broken grin
until I feel so sweet and tickly inside it’s
like I’m swirling in a cotton candy machine.
Too bad Roger has to ruin it.
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Roger drums his pen on the whiteboard
like he wants to knock some sense into us.
He says we should talk about having goals,
because that’s what all adults think we need.
Goals and college plans and career objectives.
But what do they know?
I mean, who says their world is
right
?
What if our real purpose on earth is
something as simple as
Have fun.
Feel good.
Be free.
If it is, then 99.9% of all adults
are failing miserably on this earth,
and when they die they’ll probably
be reincarnated as boring worker ants
because that’s about all they’re good for.
I almost feel sorry for Roger.
Not because he’s going
to be an ant in the next life,
but because he really believes
the crap he’s writing on the board.
TOP THREE REASONS FOR HAVING GOALS:
* Goals keep you focused
* Goals give you purpose
* Achieving Goals is something to celebrate
He says it’s best to write your goals on paper
and he hands us a yellow sheet and a felt-tip pen.
I know I should play along and scribble something like:
* Quit cutting
* Get straight As
* Join a club
But that would be too easy.
And then someone might expect me to do it.
Besides, who can think about goals
sitting six inches away from Jag’s lips?
Those soft pink pillow puffs,
dreamy as clouds and totally kissable.
So that’s the first goal I write,
in microscopic letters:
Lock lips with Jag Mancuzzi,
Then I notice Skylar
looking even thinner
after three peas for lunch
and I scribble down another goal:
Buy Skylar a jumbo burger.
Finally Donya catches my eye,
pretending to walk with a cane,
like that’s how old I’ll be
when I get out of Attaboys.
So I smooth out my paper
and write my last one:
Blow this place!
And Roger is right.
It
does
feel good to have goals.
Right up until the time
he comes around and collects them.
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I wonder how long you can sit
in a folding chair before your spine
actually fuses to the metal.
Or how many Nemos
you can count on the wall
before you want to bang
your head against it.
As much as I hate the idiotic
group sessions, the time in
between is even worse.
It’s a million shades of boring.
The only entertainment besides
zoning out to Judge Judy reruns
or watching Bullhorn pluck her lip hairs,
is when we get a new arrival,
like the little head case
who rolls in right after group.
He’s about the same age
as my brother Sean.
Eight. Maybe Nine.
Supposedly, he jabbed
his teacher with a pencil.
But looking at him now,
crumpled in a ball on the floor,
he doesn’t seem dangerous to me.
It’s makes me wonder,
isn’t there something else
for an eight-year-old?
Like a ten-minute time-out,
or no recess,
or “Sorry, kid,
you lose your lollipop.”
Do they really have to Baker Act him?
Seriously?
And when he opens his mouth I realize
he doesn’t even speak English
because he’s all like
“lo siento, lo siento, lo siento”
but nobody’s listening
to the little stabber
no matter how many times
he says he’s sorry.
They try to lift him to his feet
and he goes sort of wild,
kicking and spinning,
knocking Ding Dong’s
sucker jar off the counter.
The orderlies swoop in
and loop this long white jacket
around him until he looks
like a caterpillar in a cocoon.
When they cart him off,
the only thing I can see
are his tiny inchworm eyes
crying out for help.
And it makes me think:
I don’t know why you
stabbed your teacher, kid.
But I sure hope you got her good.
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I’m staring out the window.
Tapping on the glass.
Trying to remember the last time
I actually wanted to see my mother.
Tap.
Tap.
Tap.
Nope.
Nada.
Nothing’s coming.
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Okay.
Maybe I shouldn’t have rolled my eyes
at the very first question Mom asked.
But—”how’s the food?”
Like I’m at summer camp?
Please!
And now Mom’s going through that whole
breathe-deep-and-count-to-ten crap
like it says to do in the tough-love book
she always forgets in the bathroom.
Before long, she starts quoting chapter three:
“Blahblahblahblahblahblahblah . . .”
And then there it is:
Bad choices.
I knew she would say it.
That’s the book’s favorite phrase.
She grits it between her teeth
like a fat wad of bubble gum
so the other words won’t slip out.
The ones she really wants to say.
Like how I’m such a huge disappointment
and why can’t I be more like my sister?
I want to tell her,
Hey Mom, I’ve got news for you:
A hard-boiled egg instead of chocolate cake?
(That’s a bad choice.)
Vampire Diaries
instead of
Supernatural
?
(Bad choice.)
Plastic instead of paper?
(Bad choice.)
But shredding your arm with a razor blade
and getting Baker Acted like a psycho?
That’s not a
bad choice
, Mom.
That’s a freaking disaster!
But just when I’m about
to go off on her, I start to feel it.
The way my cuts tighten up
like Grandma’s arthritic fingers
right before a storm.
I guess I should’ve mentioned
how my scars can tell the weather.
Only not hurricanes or tornadoes.
More like the emotional weather.
Like when Mom’s waterworks
are about to spill.
So even before it happens,
I know her lips are gonna quiver
and the creases on her forehead