Authors: Nova Ren Suma
Tags: #Juvenile Fiction, #Social Issues, #Runaways, #Horror & Ghost Stories, #Visionary & Metaphysical
Yoon-mi Hyun and Maura Morris:
Gone 2007 from Milford, Pennsylvania.
Both age 17.
— — —
KENDRA
Kendra ran to the edge of the cliff and
waved to all her friends. “Guys, guys!”
she called. “I’m gonna do it. Watch!”
Kendra had seen the guys jump the
cliffs before—one of the guys would
take a running leap to clear the
outcropping of rocks and cannonball into
the bright blue basin of water below.
The splash would be terrific. Then
there’d be those heart-pounding moments
after the jumper went in, when he was so
deep no trace of him could be made out,
and then, just when some coward was
thinking of dialing 911, the surface of the
lake would shatter.
The jumper would surface, whooping
and yelling, and the next guy would get
in line to see if he could make a bigger
splash.
None of Kendra’s friends had ever
jumped off this particular cliff—the
highest point above the lake—and she
knew they were too chickenshit to try.
She’d be legend.
She powered through the run, took the
leap, and her body set sail. Gravity took
hold and air rushed around her as she
started to fall. It sang her name.
When she hit water, she didn’t expect
it to sting so much. She’d fallen
sideways, and the impact was a surprise,
and the cool temperature of the water
was also a surprise, and she was sinking
fast, going deeper than she knew the lake
could go. Traces of foam surrounded
her, forming a tunnel that seemed to bury
her in the wet and sopping center of the
Earth.
She looked up and up, and up and up
some more. That pinpoint of golden light
at the highest height of the blue above
her was the sun, she knew, casting down
over the water. All she had to do was
swim up to reach it.
How far could it be?
Kendra Howard: Gone 2012, from
Greenwich, Connecticut. Age 17.
—
33
—
EVERY
night it seemed I was out on
the cracked sidewalk again, feeling that
distinctive pinch of smoke in my throat
as I approached the front gate. I was
climbing the stairs and ignoring the bell
—because there’s no need to ring a
doorbell in a place that’s like home—
and going in. I always went in.
The house was brighter, the flames
having caught the drapes and only
beginning to dance in delight across the
vaulted ceilings.
I didn’t know if this was a new fire,
set from a flick of Fiona Burke’s lighter,
or if time had woven in on itself and the
remnants of fire I saw on nights before
this were meant to become this one, this
fire that still had a chance to build and
rage.
Still, the flames didn’t hurt us. We
lived with them like we would the
quirks of any ordinary house, the way my
mom and I constantly catch our socks
and pant hems on the loose nail in the
floorboard in the upstairs hallway, but
we’ve never bothered getting it fixed.
The house was getting crowded now
as each new girl arrived. Voices coasted
down corridors and stairways, echoing
so it sounded like they were repeating
ever after the same things.
Two of the newest girls were moving
in. They wanted to share a room, since
they came here together, and they didn’t
want to spend a night apart.
I met them on the stairs outside and
noticed they were holding hands.
What is this place?
Yoon-mi asked
me as she eyed the door. Yoon-mi wore
a hat that hid her long hair, so she
seemed made of only two bright brown
eyes.
Beside her, Maura wore her own hair
tightly tied back, pulling sharply at the
skin of her scalp. Only when they were
alone did she take down her hair. She
whispered something and then Yoon-mi
asked that question also, for the both of
them.
Why are we here?
“It’s where you live now,” my dream-
self told them, holding open the door so
they could join the others. Once they
made it through, I pushed the door
closed. And I wondered: They wouldn’t
get out, would they? Now that they were
here, they were as good as stuck and I
couldn’t do a thing to stop it.
They must have read the curse of this
place from off my face. Maybe they
thought
I
was
the
one
who’d
manufactured
their
doom,
who
commanded this house and kept them
bound here. I expected them to fight me,
claw at my arms and try to push open the
door to get out onto the ashy street, but
they didn’t seem too upset so long as it
was both of them on the same side of that
door.
There was one girl, though, who
couldn’t accept it—the curse of what
being in this house meant for her fate.
For her plans.
Whenever I saw Madison, she was
trying to find a way out. The house had
many windows, some with no glass left
in the frames so it should be easy to
jump through and hit the sidewalk
running, but none of the girls could leave
through the windows or even the front
door. If they could make it to the rooftop,
if the crumbling stairs didn’t cave in on
the way up, they still couldn’t take a
flying leap to reach the bottom.
Something always stopped them.
Still, Madison had tried every one of
the exits. She’s got someone to meet,
she’d
go
around
saying.
That
photographer. It was really all she talked
about—how she had to leave and get
back to his place, how they never did get
around to finishing the pictures for her
portfolio.
Madison hated that I could simply
come and go and she couldn’t, so she
tried to block the door to keep me with
her. It was only fair, she told me. It’s not
like anyone would want to take
my
picture, with my choppy haircut and my
ugly boy boots and my face, which was
okay, she conceded, but nothing special.
She held her leg across, her back
wedged against the frame. She was tall,
and her legs were quite long. Her top leg
was propped up just high enough that I
couldn’t hop over. Her bottom leg was
propped lower, so I couldn’t crawl
under. She wouldn’t budge.
Why do you think you keep coming
back here, Lauren?
she asked me. She
spoke as if she were only curious, but I
could see on her face it wasn’t that.
She wanted me to stay this night and
the next. She wanted me here all nights,
and it wasn’t because she liked my
company. It was only that if she had to
be here, she wanted me to have to stay,
too.
One night you’ll come back and you
won’t be able to get out again,
she said.
There was a threat in her words,
something unspoken. All the girls had
that unsaid question in their eyes when
they looked at me. I was in danger, too,
wasn’t I? Because why else did I know
about this place, and them—why else
was I here like they were?
Madison was very blond in the dream,
even more so than in the pictures posted
all over her online profiles. It was like a
fire was still burning somewhere, or
flashbulbs were dancing in her hair.
One night you won’t be able to get
out,
she said again. Then she adjusted
her leg, lowering it a smidge, and in that
quick moment, I leaped over her shin
and darted out the door. She
called after
me as I made it down the front stairs and
into the street,
I’m the one he wants to
take pictures of. Not you.
I always did make it out, every time.
And though the voices stayed with me,
snippets of the things they said (
You
should’ve seen me jump, man,
Kendra
was going,
you should’ve seen me.
Or
Isabeth, more quietly,
I should have
walked. It was only rain. I should have
just walked home.)
cascaded through my
head like little lullabies sometimes,
other times like cymbals crashing.
These girls were here inside the house
and they couldn’t get out—and maybe,
no matter how much it pained me, this
meant they were dead.
But there was one girl who hadn’t set
foot in the house yet. I’d looked, and I
still couldn’t see her. She’d reached out
to me, and it wasn’t to keep ahold of her
story, to record it when no one else was
listening, to hear her confessions, her
regrets. To know her like no one else on
the outside could. There had to be
another reason.
She was different, wasn’t she? She
was the one I could keep from ending up
here. Maybe even save.
—
34
—
On Thu, Jan 17, 2013, at 10:03
AM,
Cassidy
Delrio
wrote:
Lauren,
Sorry it took me a little while to
write you back. Yeah, if you’re
around campus and you want to get
coffee or whatever just let me
know. I get out of econ at 2:40, then
I have anthro at 4:10, so if you
could meet me at like 3? Sorry
about your friend. She was sweet. I
really don’t know why she ran
away, none of us counselors did.
Sucks you haven’t heard from her,
for real. But if that’s not a bummer
and you still want to come by and
talk about it, that’s cool. I have an
hour to kill.
Cass
—
35
—
I
was in math class when the message
from Abby’s camp counselor came
through on my phone. Which meant I had
to leave. Right then. I couldn’t think
about sines or cosines or try and fail to
find the hypotenuse on the triangle when
I knew I could meet her today, if only I
could leave school and drive down
there.
I raised my hand, and Ms. Torres said
couldn’t I wait until the bell rings? I
assured her I’d be quick even though I
wouldn’t be, because it won’t matter,
will it? Trigonometry, after you’re gone.
Jamie was sitting a few rows behind
me in class, and his eyes followed me to
the door. When I closed it and gave one
last backward glance through the
window slit, he was still staring.
Glaring actually. He knew I wasn’t
planning on coming back—but he wasn’t
trying to stop me from leaving.
I grabbed my coat from my locker and
then headed for the main hallway, the
closest way out. The lockers in this
hallway were red, and the floors were
checkered in black-and-white, making
the exit bob and swim out there in the far
distance. I could see down the long
corridor into the sunlight beyond: the
south parking lot, unguarded, the
gleaming windshield of my van. There
was more I needed to find out about
Abby, and I felt drawn to talk to this
Cassidy girl, to someone who’d been
there with her that summer. There was
more, and I could learn what it was . . .
If I could just get myself out of this
building.
“The bathrooms are that way,” a
voice said. “I mean, if you’re using that
hall pass for what I think you’re using it
for.”
I paused in the empty hallway and
looked back. Around the corner, braced
by a wall of teal-painted lockers, stood
a tall girl. A real one.
I blanked on her name for a moment,
like I barely even knew her, and then it
came to me: Deena Douglas. Deena of
the fake eyelashes and the smoky voice,
of the boyfriend who was six years older
and the habit of sucking her thumb when
she slept and then denying it when she
woke, even when it was sticky with