Authors: Nova Ren Suma
Tags: #Juvenile Fiction, #Social Issues, #Runaways, #Horror & Ghost Stories, #Visionary & Metaphysical
without realizing. Without seeing her
there.
She came visible seconds after my
engine gave out, as if a fog had been
lifted from off the steep slope of our
railroad
town
that
mid-December
morning.
Abby
Sinclair.
There
at
the
intersection. I’m not saying she was
there in the flesh with her thumb out and
her hair wild in the wind and her bare
knees purpled from cold—it didn’t start
out that way. The first time I saw Abby,
it was only a picture: the class
photograph reproduced on her Missing
poster.
When the light turned green and traffic
started moving, I wasn’t moving with it.
I was arrested by the flyer across the
road, that weathered, black-and-white
image of Abby, with the single bold
word
above
her
forehead
that
pronounced her MISSING.
I remember being dimly aware of the
cars behind my van honking and
swerving around me, some drivers
flipping me off as they blasted past. I
remember that I couldn’t move. The van,
because the engine wouldn’t start, and
my body, because my joints had locked.
The green light dangling overhead had
cycled through again to yellow—
blinking, blinking—then red. I knew this
only from the colors dancing on the
steering wheel, which I held in two
fisted hands, so my knuckles that had
been green, then yellow, were now red
again.
Ahead of me, where the old highway
halted in a fork, a stretch of pine trees
braced themselves against the biting
wind. The pines were weighted down by
weeks’ worth of snow, but they still
moved beneath it, unable to keep still.
The slope of ground between them and
the road was white and pristine, not a
footprint to mar it. Centered within all of
this was the telephone pole and, hung
there as if displayed on the bare walls of
a gallery, the missing girl’s face.
I left my van door swinging open,
keys in the ignition, backpack on the
front seat, and abandoned it to run across
the intersection toward the stretch of
pines. A pickup truck skidded; a horn
shrieked. A car almost met me with its
tires, but I moved out of the way before I
could feel the bumper’s touch. I was
vaguely aware of a big, yellow vehicle
stopping short behind me—the school
bus, the one I rode before I got my
license and saved up to buy the old van
—but by then I’d made it to the pole.
I trampled through the snow to get
close. The flyer was old, the date she
was last seen long passed. Her
photocopied picture had been duplicated
too many times for much detail to show
through the ink on ink, so with all those
layers smudging away her face, and with
the snow spatter and the fade, she could
have been anybody really, any girl.
By that I mean she could have been
someone who had nothing to do with me.
Someone I’d leave attached to the pole
on that cold day, someone I’d never
think of again in this lifetime.
But I knew she wasn’t just any girl. I
had a glimmering pull of recognition,
burning me through and through, so I
couldn’t even sense the cold. I’d never
felt anything like it before. All I knew is
I was meant to find her.
The flyer had only facts. She was 17
—like I was; I’d just turned 17 the week
before. She’d gone missing from some
summer camp I’d never heard of—
though it was around here, in the
Pinecliff area, near this place that
overlooked the frigid, gray Hudson
River from the steep hill on which our
town was built. The commuter train that
ran alongside the river stopped here
nearly every hour during the day, and
crept past at night. The summer camp
had to be close.
I tore the page from the pole, ripping
it loose from where it was stuck fast
with packing tape that had been wound
and wound around the pole to keep her
from falling face-first into the snow, or
from getting carried away on a gust of
exhaust and escaping into the traffic
leading to the New York State Thruway.
It was the clear tape covering the details
on the flyer that had kept it from
disintegrating for all these months. It
was also the tape, so much of it, that
made it almost impossible to tear her
free.
When I crossed the intersection again
—more horns honking—and reached my
van, I saw that some Good Samaritan (or
a creeper disguising himself as a Good
Samaritan) had stopped his own car on
the shoulder to offer help. There was
some tinkering with the engine, mention
of a possibly busted fan belt, and a
plume of gray smoke that spat itself into
the man’s face and then lifted up into the
bone-white air overhead, a blot of hate
on the sky that already threatened more
snow. There was a tow I couldn’t afford,
and an hour waiting on a greasy folding
chair in the back of the garage because it
was too cold to wait outside. It wasn’t
until they fixed my van and I was headed
in late to school that I had a moment
alone to take a closer look at the flyer.
I didn’t tell Jamie or Deena, or
anyone. There wasn’t anyone I wanted to
tell. This discovery was mine, and I
wanted to hold it close.
My heart had an irregular beat that I
can almost hear again now, like an extra
thump was thrown in to make me think
there were two hearts in the van,
thumping.
There were—but I wasn’t aware at
first. This was before I knew she
followed me.
—
2
—
I ’ D
parked in the senior parking lot
even though I wasn’t a senior, cut the
engine, and was sitting there holding it.
The flyer. The paper was the same
temperature as my fingers—cold—so I
couldn’t feel either.
I tried to flatten the paper against the
steering wheel, smoothing the tears and
wrinkles from her face as best I could to
study what they said about her.
“Endangered Runaway” they called
her. A sliver of fear entered me when I
saw they said she was in danger, but
now I know that everyone under eighteen
who goes missing is called endangered.
On Missing posters, if you’re not an
“Endangered
Runaway,”
you’re
“Endangered Missing,” but you’re
always in danger—it’s never a “She’s
Probably Doing Okay, But We Have to
Check Since It’s the Law” missing girl.
Besides, Abby
was
in danger. I felt it.
I pored over her flyer again, learning
her hometown, her hair color, her eye
color, her weight and height. I learned
that she was gone before she was
reported missing, and I didn’t understand
why. I learned of her pierced nose. I
didn’t learn about her habit of writing
the name of the boy she liked on the
inside of her elbow, then spitting on it
and rubbing at it till it was clean. That
information wasn’t on the flyer, and this
was before she told me.
I would have pocketed the piece of
paper and gone into the school building,
and maybe all of what happened next
would have been different, but that’s
when I saw the light.
My Dodge van had one of those
cigarette
lighters
built
into
the
dashboard, a knob beside the stereo that
you press in to heat. It glows orange, and
then when it’s ready to use, it pops back
out. I’d had the van a couple months, but
I’d never used the lighter.
Now the knob was pressed in. An orb
of fire-orange was blazing from the
dashboard as if someone had reached
out an arm to light a cigarette. A
phantom cigarette and a phantom arm,
because I was alone in the van. I was
alone.
I told myself I must’ve knocked the
lighter when I parked. Or the mechanic
who’d fixed the engine got it stuck. It’s
been lit up, I assured myself; it’s been on
the whole time.
I looked out at the quiet parking lot, a
white expanse beneath the rising ridge
above the school. Nothing stirred.
This was when something streaked
past outside: a fast-moving blur, as if
someone were sprinting the length of the
school property. Someone wearing red.
My temples hammered, and I screwed
my eyes shut. I lost my grip on the flyer
and felt it fall to the floor. There were
stars clouding my vision, stars that
became one star, until then,
there
: the
sparkling cubic zirconia in her left
nostril.
She was visible in the van’s rearview
mirror when I opened my eyes. Bright
and searing like a sunspot, until my eyes
adjusted, or her heat dimmed enough so I
could see her clearly.
She’d taken the middle bench seat, the
collapsible one I hadn’t bothered to
collapse all week, as if I’d known to
expect her company. This seat was just
behind mine, but I didn’t turn around. I
could say that I didn’t want to make any
sudden movements, that I was trying not
to scare her away, but truth is I couldn’t.
My body wouldn’t move for me at all.
Her reflection in the rearview showed
her face at eye level. Her shoulders
hunched. Her two bare knees folded to
her chin, purplish blooms of bruises on
her shins like she’d crawled across the
icy asphalt lot, slithering between
parked cars, to reach my black van.
This was Abigail Sinclair from the
Missing flyer. I could smell her, harsh
and hot like a tuft of hair burning.
She uncrossed her arms and lowered
her knees, and I noticed that her T-shirt
had the name of the summer camp and a
picture to go with it: a veiled lady lifted
up above a trio of pine trees, as if in the
midst of being taken herself. The shirt
was covered in grime and streaked with
mud,
so
the
words COUNSELOR-IN-
TRAINING could barely be made out
above her heart. Below the shirt, I saw
she had on a pair of shorts. Red ones,
with thin white racer stripes. She had
been on the home team in Color War that
day—I found that out later.
She was letting me see what she was
wearing on the night she disappeared,
but I knew, even then, that this wasn’t
about what a girl was wearing when she
found herself gone. Nothing she could
have worn on that night would have
made a difference. Not these shorts or
another pair that were longer or less red.
Not a bathing suit. Not a bear costume.
Not a short skirt. Not a burqa.
There was so much more to her story I
didn’t know.
“Abigail?” I said. It came out in a
whisper.
Without a word or warning, my vision
shifted. I was soon seeing through some
layers of smoke and coughed-up haze
into what she herself saw the night she
went missing. This seeing was more like
knowing. I didn’t have to question it—in
the way that I can be sure, without
needing to check first, that there are five
fingers on my hand.
What I came to know was this:
She didn’t like it when people called
her Abigail. So I wouldn’t, not anymore.
And she did ride away on that bike,
though it was green, not blue as had been
reported. What I saw of her—what she
willed me to see—was a moving image
spooling out in the frame of my rearview
mirror, a home movie projected in an
empty theater for me and only me.
There she was, riding a bright green
bicycle into a sea of darkness. That was
her, coasting on a gust of wind and
letting her long hair untangle and fly. It
was a rusty old bike, one she borrowed