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Authors: Jenn Bennett

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Still.

All Dr. Cold-as-Ice Sheridan said was that my portfolio showed “remarkable talent,” and after questioning why I wanted to be a medical illustrator, she just went on to explain that
the university was one of the top medical schools in the country and had (standards and practices) or (board members’ expectations) or (insurance regulations) to uphold. And that their actual
students came first. She promised to consider my request and run it by her colleagues and students. She said she’d have an answer in a week or two.

In a week or two, the summer would be half over and I’d barely have time enough to come up with something else for the student art contest. But what could I do, argue with someone who was
doing me a favor? She gave me her business card, so at least I had her email address. I wasted no time writing her the cheesiest, most polite thank-you email in the history of sucking up.

After that, I’m ashamed to say that I spent my entire night checking my artist profile on
Body-O-Rama
, hoping that Jack had gone straight to his computer and searched me out.
Granted, my profile pic was an inked self-portrait with half of my face drawn as exposed musculature. But only twenty artists were featured on the site. How difficult was I to recognize? Then
again, Jack really didn’t know anything about me. Maybe he’d mistaken me for the much cooler girl who painted brightly colored Day of the Dead sugar skulls. In a panic, I read through
all the comments on everyone’s recent posts, just in case.

Nothing.

And nothing the next day. And the next. But it was the day after
that
when his lack of response was more disappointing than it might’ve been if it was just another Saturday.
Because it wasn’t: It was my eighteenth birthday.

And yet, no Jack. Had he given up? I’d even made it easier on him by posting about my birthday plans the day before. It practically screamed,
Look! Here I am!
It was just weird
that he was begging me for my name and supposedly waiting for hours to see me, and then boom, nothing.

Was he just busy? Or maybe there was a reason I didn’t want to face: that he’d seen my art and decided I was too morbid. It certainly wouldn’t be the first time, and even if we
were
both artists, maybe Cadaver Girl and Vegetarian Graffiti Boy were oil and water. I guess I needed to stop pining away for something I didn’t even really know if I wanted.

I mean, hello! I was eighteen, baby. I could finally . . . vote and buy all those cartons of cigarettes I’d been pining for. Yippee.

So Mom spent her only weekend day off from the hospital schlepping Heath and me around the city for Beatrix-approved birthday activities. We waited in early-morning fog for forty-five minutes to
have milk shakes for breakfast at St. Francis Diner (my favorite) before nerding out at Green Apple Books (where Heath ponied up for a 1960s coffee table book about medical oddities that he’d
had on hold for me). We finally ended up at the Legion of Honor, which, in San Francisco, is an art museum—not a brotherhood of knights, or whatever it is in France.

I know a museum may not be everyone’s idea of Super Birthday Funtimes, but I really wanted to see this exhibition called
Flesh and Bone
, and it featured one piece in particular
that had me salivating: a Max Brödel diagram of a heart. I’d posted a link to it on the
Body-O-Rama
site when I’d blogged about my birthday plans, and, holy smokes, seeing
it in person didn’t disappoint. Brödel is pretty much the godfather of modern medical illustration. He was a German who immigrated here to draw diagrams for Johns Hopkins School of
Medicine in the early 1900s. His illustrations were beautifully detailed and had this weird, surreal quality.

I’d studied his stuff in books and had even copied a few for practice. But seeing the actual carbon-dust-on-stipple-board drawing was breathtaking.

In fact, even after I’d looked at everything else, I went back to that heart diagram for one last look, admiring every detail, including the tiny handwritten labels:
AORTA, LEFT VENTRICLE, TRACHEA
. It was so completely perfect. And I couldn’t help but think he’d drawn it from a dissected heart. If Dr. Sheridan would just let me spend
some time in the anatomy lab, I might be the next Max Brödel. I mean, anything’s possible, right?

But even though I was currently in muscle-and-sinew heaven, it didn’t mean that my family was. Mom kept trying to steer me into one of the permanent collections to see Rembrandt and
Rubens: “They’re famous, Bex. And so beautiful.” Eventually Heath griped and groaned and yawned us into the museum’s overpriced cafe for lunch. It was pretty much the same
kind of food we had in the deli at Alto Market, so none of it was all that appealing to me. But we ordered, then snagged seats on the patio outside. And because I was a total loser, I checked
Body-O-Rama
’s comments one more time, only to be disappointed anew.

My mom was checking her phone, too. I
so
wanted to ask her about that weird late-night phone call she’d gotten the other day, but I was worried I’d end up incriminating
myself. I’m a terrible liar.

“You’re eating that, Bex,” she said, nudging my shoe beneath the table as she futzed with the fanning dark hair around her temples. She had a pixie cut, which was pretty much
just a shorter version of Heath’s haircut—only where his was all blown up, hers was blown down. She was tiny, like me, and the elfish thing looked good on her. But as long as I lived
with the two of them, I could never cut my hair short, or we’d all look like some freaky family gang, ready to lure strangers into our house with Kool-Aid. Hence the braids.

I made a face at Mom. “The bread’s stale.”

“It was twenty dollars. It can’t be stale.”

Heath slung his arm over the back of my chair. “Sure it can. Noah says half the starred restaurants in town recycle bread from other tables.”

“Saint Noah is never wrong,” I pointed out. Noah was my brother’s latest boyfriend, a twenty-five-year-old engineer who had a million-dollar condo in the Castro. He’s
stable and smart, and even though Heath had yet to bring him home and introduce us, we’d heard so much about him that we were kind of in love with him, too—especially my mom. I think
she was hoping he’d be a positive influence on my not-so-stable brother, who had already burned through two community colleges, dropping out once due to boredom and a second time after he got
busted at an inopportune moment with an English professor twice his age.

“By the way,” Mom said, rearranging her knife on her plate, “you never told me when Noah would be free to come over for family dinner.”

“I forgot to ask, sorry. He’s been working, and . . .”

And
Heath had been sneaking out to drink and see metal shows every other night. I didn’t say this—sibling loyalty is a two-way street—but my mom has some weird sixth
sense about these sorts of things, which is probably why I have no confidence when it comes to lying to her. Nurse Katherine the Great always knows.

She shot him a dark look across the table. “I swear, Heath, if you screw this up with Noah—”

“I’m not going to screw it up.”

“Again,” I amended under my breath.

“We were on a break,” Heath said.

“Because you were fooling around with that cook.”

“Chef,” he corrected. “And he was fooling around with
me
. I didn’t start it.”

“Tell me again, why is Noah with you?”

“Because I’m overflowing with personality and I ooze charm.”

I snorted. “You’re overflowing and oozing something, all right.”

“Please, God,” Mom pretend-prayed to the sky. “All I ask is that you swap these children for kittens, and I’ll never sin again.”

Heath made prayer hands and closed his eyes. “Dear Prince of Darkness, please make sure the kittens piss all over her bed so she’ll regret it and beg for us to come back.”

I elbowed him in the ribs until he laughed, and then I asked Mom for money. “I’m going back inside for ten-dollar strawberry shortcake,” I explained as I accepted her debit
card. “You two keep steering us toward the apocalypse while I’m gone.”

They continued to joke and laugh as I strolled around tables and a hundred pecking birds, who must’ve thought this place was some kind of avian Shangri-La, what with all the fancy crumbs
being tossed their way by museum patrons. I couldn’t blame them. It was really pretty out here, especially beyond the patio; afternoon sun cleared out the fog over the Golden Gate
Bridge’s famous orangey-vermillion arches stretching across the blue bay. For once, it actually seemed like summer. Though I did feel a little sorry for the tourists who were prancing around
in shorts. Come nightfall, they’d be regretting they didn’t book their trip in September or October, when it was sunnier.

As I opened the cafe door, a riot of sound drew my attention toward the museum hallway. People were jumping up from their seats, craning their necks to see something. I sidled past one of the
museum volunteers and wove between patrons crowding the exit of the
Flesh and Bone
exhibit.

A couple of guards cleared a space around a spotlighted area in the middle of the room. That’s when I saw it, scrawled in slanting metallic gold on the gray exhibit wall beneath Max
Brödel’s heart diagram:

C E L E B R A T E

Was this, could this . . . ? Who the hell else would it be?

Jack.

Jack-Jack-Jack! His name bounced around my hollow head like a rubber ball inside an empty gym. Celebrate. This was no coincidence. He went to the
Body-O-Rama
website. He saw my post
about birthday plans—the one in which I’d posted
a photo of the Brödel.
Humiliation and excitement raced through me in dizzy spirals.

Oh, my ever-loving God . . .

He did this for me.

Important-looking people rushed in with a security guard. Museum administration. One of them was a distinguished older woman in a dress suit, who clamped a hand over her mouth when she saw the
graffiti.

Someone was excitedly talking to a couple next to me. “Dressed in black,” he was saying. “I didn’t get a look at his face, but I thought it was weird he was wearing dark
glasses. He had a paint pen or something tucked into his sleeve, and he just strolled up to the wall and started writing, like it was nothing.”

The couple gasped and shook their heads.

“Did they catch him?” I asked, butting into their conversation.

“I don’t think so,” the man told me excitedly. “It all happened so fast. I ran through that doorway to flag down a guard for maybe ten seconds, maybe. He was already gone
when I got back.”

Holy crap. This was shocking. And stupid. And crazy. Someone else nearby said the police were on their way. My hands shook as I fumbled inside my pocket for my phone. No way in hell was I
getting closer, so I zoomed in as best I could and snapped a photo.

Oh, Jack . . . what have you done?

6

IT TOOK US FOREVER TO GET OUT OF LINCOLN PARK
because of all the hubbub and traffic. Meanwhile, I was cooped up in the backseat of the paddy wagon,
dying to talk about it. But I couldn’t—not in front of Mom, who’d already joked that the “coincidence” of the graffiti was bizarre (if not cooler than the birthday
sombrero I’d get in a restaurant).

As soon as I could get Heath alone, I was telling him everything. My brother may be a lousy role model, but he’s an excellent listener and advice-giver. He’d give me some
perspective.

If I didn’t die first.

We made a couple more stops before we headed home, but I spent the rest of the afternoon on my phone, refreshing
Body-O-Rama
every minute and checking my email and feeds (still
nothing). Now that I knew he’d actually been on the site, it was driving me batty that he hadn’t contacted me personally. I did my best to consider everything rationally. I mean, he
hadn’t actually defaced any artwork. If he had? Watch out, buddy. Never mind the world of hurt he’d be in with the law—I would personally hunt him down and strangle him if
he’d screwed with the Max Brödel heart.

But he hadn’t. All he’d defaced was a temporary wall—one the museum probably painted over for every installation.

And yet he’d had the balls to walk into a museum in broad daylight and vandalize it. Talk about a jailable offense. Cop cars had descended on Lincoln Park like they were answering a bomb
report. Granted, I knew a lot of kids who did crazy things. My own brother had probably broken a million minor laws before he graduated. Unlike me, he knew perfectly well how to be bad, and he was
damn good at it. But smoking weed and using fake IDs paled in comparison to citywide infamy.

And then there was the much more personal part of this: the Me factor. What did it mean? Yes, it was my birthday, so clearly it was a nod to that. But for the love of Pete, just send me a
Have a Terrific Day!
message online. No need to bring a felony charge into the mix. Was Jack a secret adrenaline junkie? I could already hear Mom labeling him a troublemaker.

Despite all that, it was—in a way—incredibly romantic. Or maybe I was just romanticizing it. Maybe he pulled a dozen nutball stunts every day before breakfast.

“You okay back there?” Mom asked when we were nearly home, peering into the rearview to make eye contact.

“A little weirded out by everything, that’s all.” Which was true. “And hungry.” In the wake of what had happened, I’d forgotten all about getting my fancy
strawberry shortcake.

“I thought we’d pick up Mae Thai for your birthday dinner. How does that sound?”

I sighed with plea sure. “Heavenly.”

Mom’s eyes crinkled at the corners when she smiled at me in the mirror. I really hated lying to her, especially when she’d been so nice to me today. This whole situation with Jack
was exhausting. If this was what it was like to have a crush on a bad boy, I wasn’t sure if I could handle it. I mean, Howard Hooper—aka the only real boyfriend I’d ever
had—was kind of a jerk, but not in a tough-guy way. In the way that geeks sometimes are when they look down on everyone who doesn’t know the name of every Avenger or what 1337 meant
.

BOOK: Night Owls
11.37Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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