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Authors: Travis Thrasher

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BOOK: Solitary: A Novel
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She already knows.

"I'd be careful," Jocelyn says, as if reading my mind.

"Why's that?"

"There are some really scary people around here. Not just the guys. Some of the girls-" She fakes a grimace.

Rachel laughs. "Give me a break."

"She's being honest," Poe says. "Everybody here is just a little different."

"Good to know I'm hanging out with the right people."

Poe's ghostly white face looks serious, almost startled. "Oh, we're so not the right people, Chris. If you're looking for those, you're definitely sitting in the wrong place."

"I like where I'm sitting."

Jocelyn takes a grape and starts chewing on it as if to mask the smile on her lips.

When I get home I find Mom passed out on an old fold-up lawn chair on the deck. It's a bit jolting because of where's she sitting.

Since our driveway juts up at a forty-five-degree angle toward the cabin on the side of the hill, our deck overlooks the sloping mountainside. It's not just a story off the ground. It's more like four stories. A fall would be deadly.

Someone consuming a bottle or two of wine might find a fall particularly easy.

I breathe in and call out for her to wake up, but it's not happening.

I scoop her limp body up like a corpse and carry her inside. As I put her down on the couch I make sure her head is propped up on one of the arm cushions. Blonde hair that used to be cut every few weeks looks uneven and faded. Strands glide over her nose and mouth, and I brush them back, the way she used to brush my hair off my face when I was little.

I lock the door, worried she might suddenly wake up and shriek and tumble over the deck.

A window is open, letting the afternoon light creep in.

I hear birds and the rustle of gentle wind and even the faint sound of the creek.

It should be peaceful.

Another sound yanks me out of my melancholy mood and calls me back out on the deck.

Far below, down through the trees, I can make out the gravel road below us.

I see a car coming, the first I've seen since we've been here.

It's not exactly a car. It's one of those massive SUVs that are used in the military. It's not even the smaller suburban version, but a black, shiny, hulking Humvee.

It rumbles past, leaving a cloud of dust.

I half expect a squadron of other vehicles to follow.

I wait and watch and listen, but nothing comes.

Where was that thing headed?

I want to take my bike out and see where this road leads.

Glancing back inside, I decide that I might take a bike trip a little later.

Mom won't care.

She probably won't even know.

I don't know if there's really any spaghetti in SpaghettiOs. I wonder if the 0 comes from the feeling you get an hour or two after eating them. Those tiny little chunks of hot dog surely can't be anything that was once living and breathing, right? Regardless, I can't help but love this wonderful and easy little dinner. Since Mom isn't cooking, it's my choice for dining.

It's already 6:30 in the evening and the sun is slipping away. Halloween is this coming Sunday, with the school dance the night before. As I pedal down the road through the shadows of trees, I wonder what it would be like to go to the dance.

It's not really the dance I'm wondering about. It's what it would be like to go with her.

You have to stop this.

Perhaps I should stop the dreaming, but I can still think about Jocelyn. I can still suppose.

just because she's being friendly doesn't mean she's interested in you.

I know this. I've never been one of those guys who thinks that just because a girl talks to him or smiles at him or is nice to him means anything more.

Maybe it's because I'm new and I'm needing someoneanyone-to lean on.

Sounds corny, but I could use a little help.

I know that running into Jocelyn last weekend was complete luck. That's all.

She came to talk to me because of her step-uncle.

That's it.

I ride for ten minutes thinking things through until I reach the barrier.

I stop my bike.

With the hill sloping upward to my left and then heading on down to my right, I stand in the middle of the mostly dirt road facing a large gate. There are two stone blocks on each side, with a black wrought-iron gate between. On top of it are spikes. The gate opens at the middle.

There's a sign to one side: NO TRESPASSING.

And in smaller type underneath: Private Property. Violators Will Be Prosecuted.

Even though the barrier makes it impossible for a car to pass, I know I can slip right around it and keep pedaling.

The road continues on until it curves around the trees and disappears.

Now I'm really curious.

This is where that big, honking Humvee went.

I walk up to one of the stone blocks and peer around.

Something catches my attention, something that doesn't look like it belongs in the Carolina woods.

It's a black, square device that's planted in the ground.

It's about two feet tall.

A camera.

If someone is watching it, they can see my face peering down at it.

They can probably see the hairs in my nose, too.

I pick up my bike and decide to come back at another time.

I have plenty of time to check out what's farther down the road.

Next time I'll do it with the cover of night.

I'm propped up on my bed doing a bad job on my homework when I hear the stairs creak.

"I didn't hear you come home today."

Maybe because you were floating in a sea ofMerlot, Mom.

I just nod and stare up at her.

She comes in and sits at the desk that's too tiny for a sixth grader and looks around at the narrow sliver of a room.

"I'm sorry," she says.

I'm not in the mood for a heavy conversation and nod again, accepting her apology for being dead drunk when her son came home from school. But she continues.

"I wasn't expecting this."

"Expecting what?"

Mom sighs. "I thought Robert was still around. I didn't really believe he was gone. I guess I was being naive and thoughtless."

"It's fine."

"You could have stayed in Illinois, Chris."

"I wasn't staying with that guy."

"He's your father."

"Technically."

"I still love him," she says.

"Good for you. I don't."

"Don't say that."

"He's not here to hear it. He never was around anyway."

"You don't understand."

"What don't I understand? Tell me."

"Don't get that tone. I'm just saying ... I feel bad for dragging you down here."

"It's done."

She tries to ask about school and teachers and anything else, but my short, curt answers drive home the point.

"Do you need anything?"

I think for a minute.

Yeah, Ind like you to be happier.

"No," I finally say.

"Okay. Come on downstairs when you're done with your homework."

I hear the steps fade away and the television turn on.

For some time I fight staying up here and brooding and being angry.

Then I head downstairs.

I know I'm not the only person in this cabin who feels lonely.

These are the things I miss.

I miss Brady swinging by my house and picking me up in the BMW convertible his parents gave him on his sixteenth birthday. Brady's a year older than me but acts four years younger. He was always playing a new batch of songs he'd downloaded the night before, blasting them through outrageous speakers. He never understood the "album" concept and most of the time didn't even remember the band's name. Music in Brady's car sounded the way it should: loud, fast, riotous.

I miss the Tremont brothers, Lenny and Luke. Fraternal twins and stand-up comics who would inevitably make me laugh within five seconds of seeing them. We'd hang out before class and during lunch.

I miss dear, sweet Mrs. Williams: always encouraging me with my writing and my reading even though I gave a good C-minus effort in her class. She was like the grandmother I never had. (Though I doubt she'd appreciate that, since she's not that old.) I miss her smile and her gentle prodding. Even when I knew I should have done more, she was gentle, and she was so utterly consistent.

I even miss Trish. I miss the idea of what we had, though I still don't know exactly what that was, if there really was a we. I think of her tears when I told her I was leaving. I think of how I laughed and asked her why she was crying, since she had broken up with me a couple of months earlier.

"I never thought we wouldn't get back together, Chris. This is what couples do. They break up and then get back together. They don't move out of state and leave the other forever."

I miss my high school and the normalcy of everything. How I knew where kids stood and who they were. I miss the trends I knew and the path I was heading down.

Walking into Harrington County High, I realize I don't have a clue. The kids passing me might be poor as mud or wealthier than Brady's family. They might be kind or snotty or dorky or silly. They might be ten thousand things, but the fact is that every moment I walk by them, I don't know. I don't know anything. Sixteen years wiped away.

The slate is clean.

Sometimes that can be a good thing, but in my case it just feels like a headache.

I'm heading to my first class when I see a familiar face.

It's not the one I'm looking for, but I'll take it.

"You're here early," Rachel says.

"I'm taking the bus now. Last week my mom drove me."

"What? You don't drive?"

"We left Illinois before I could get my license."

"Ouch. That sucks."

"You're telling me."

"I'd pick you up, but you're the complete opposite way that I take."

"That's okay," I say. "Thanks."

"You should get Joss to pick you up."

"Maybe."

"I can ask her for you."

"No, that's fine." I glance around to see if Jocelyn is anywhere near.

"Hey-one thing Joss was asking about, but she's far too proper to come right out and ask you. Well proper isn't the word. But I don't want to say prideful, because she's not, even if most of the school thinks she's stuck up. They think Poe is too. Just because they don't talk to everybody, you know?"

"What was she asking about?" I ask, lost in Rachel's stream of consciousness.

"What's your email address?"

I chuckle. "Don't have one. We don't have Internet."

"Seriously?"

"Yeah. Still trying to get used to it. Mom says we'll get it eventually."

"So like-there's no way to email you? How about your phone?"

"I left it in Illinois."

"Really?"

"Well ... long story. I had a cell and busted it and my mom's making a point by not getting me another. What do you need my email for?"

"Oh, I don't. It's just-well, look, I'll let her tell you.,,

"Jocelyn?"

"Yeah." Rachel scans the crowded hallway. "Let me go find her. She usually gets here late. Hey-see you at lunch?"

"Sure."

I wish I had stayed home.

I don't talk with Jocelyn before or after either of our classes. Both times she slips in and out like a ghost. At lunch she's quiet and distant. Rachel dominates the conversation as usual, and Poe seems irritable. As usual. I try some small talk, try to make some kind of connection, but it doesn't happen.

Gym is the last class I have, and it's spent playing tag football with a group of guys who act like they're auditioning for the NFL. Back home I played soccer and ran track. This school doesn't even have a soccer team. Football is the big deal here.

At the end of class, with the bell signaling the end of another wonderful school day, I choose to put my jeans and shirt back on since I didn't get all sweaty. The locker room smells dank and old; the lighting is ancient, like it belongs in old army barracks. Just as I'm getting my duffel bag zipped up, I hear footsteps behind me.

There he is: Gus, with three of his henchmen, standing between me and the door.

He's smiling.

Aw, man. Not now. Not today.

BOOK: Solitary: A Novel
13.89Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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