Authors: Nova Ren Suma
Tags: #Juvenile Fiction, #Social Issues, #Runaways, #Horror & Ghost Stories, #Visionary & Metaphysical
in there again. Yet she did neither of
those things. She wouldn’t set foot near
this house at all.
Her grandfather had asked how she
was doing, if she was okay. I didn’t
want to say something cruel, but a big
and blazing part of me did want to alarm
him. Her grandmother hadn’t listened;
maybe he would. I locked my eyes on
his, and I put as much weight into the
words as I had in me, and I said, “No. I
don’t think she is.”
I expected him to ask more of me, but
he didn’t. The shovel went down and he
moved along the line with it, putting
distance between us. I had the sudden
vision of jumping into a snowbank like
this one as a little kid. How it felt to
throw armfuls of bright white powder up
into the air and let it sprinkle down all
over, to lie flat as it buried me, and then
to stand up and shake it off and set
myself free. Whose memory was that,
mine or Abby’s? It could have belonged
to either of us.
I sensed his wife at the window,
watching, but still I called to him, “Are
you the one who put the flyers up on the
telephone poles?”
“Up north,” he said. “A whole lot of
’em.”
“I saw one,” I said. “Up in Pinecliff.”
He nodded. “Nobody was doing a
thing. I talked my wife into putting in the
report, but the police say they don’t have
time to chase after every runaway,
so . . .”
I had to do it again, even though I
failed the first time. Now I was the one
who stepped closer to him, walking into
the pathway he was making in the snow.
“She didn’t run away like you think she
did.”
He eyed me, his pupils held low
under a surface of shining water. “She
tell you that?” he said.
“Not exactly,” I admitted. “But you
should call the police. Please. Call the
police. Ask them to keep looking. Find
out what happened to her.”
He stopped for a moment and then
said one last thing. I wasn’t sure if it
meant he heard me or he hadn’t. He said,
“You have to let them know you miss
them. That’s why I did the flyers. Even if
they don’t ever think about coming back.
You gotta make sure they know they
can.”
—
39
—
MY
mom was waiting in the garage
when I came home from New Jersey that
night. I hit the garage-door opener to see
that she’d found what I’d hidden behind
the lawn mower. I’d gotten the tire
patched at the bike shop in town and
she’d wheeled it out and was playing
with the bell on the handlebars. When I
pulled in and cut the engine, the first
thing I heard was its tinny little
ding
.
“There you are,” my mom said lightly,
though behind those three light words
were more words, heavier words. She
was going to confront me about not
telling her where I was all evening, and I
was going to have to come up with an
excuse that didn’t involve a drive out of
state to ask after a so-called runaway I’d
never met, not in real life.
But all my mom said was, “I feel like
I never see you anymore.”
Get used to it.
I heard that. That was my head
thinking it, or it was a familiar voice
warring to be the loudest thing in my
head. Fiona Burke had also heard my
van pull up, so she’d come out to talk to
me. She wanted my mom to leave the
garage, but she wouldn’t.
Maybe we should give my mom a
warning on what to expect, now that I
was 17 like the others. A little head start
to begin planning out the design of my
Missing posters. Hopefully she’d do
something eye-catching, a Missing
poster to frame and be proud of, to
admire long after I was gone.
That was what Fiona Burke wanted
me to say to my own mother.
“Where’d you get this old thing?” my
mom said, nudging Abby’s borrowed
bicycle. “So retro. It’s darling.” She was
straddling the Schwinn now and testing
out its wheels.
“You shouldn’t touch it. I’m holding
on to it, for a friend.”
She let go and climbed off, and I
caught hold of it before it propelled
itself into the wall.
“What friend? Deena?”
I shook my head.
“What’s going on, Lauren? What was
so much more important than being in
school?” Seeing the surprise on my face,
she raised an eyebrow. “Your school
called. I told them you had a dentist
appointment.”
“Thanks for covering for me.”
“Sure thing. Now you tell me where
you were.”
“New Jersey,” I said, before I, or
anyone else, could stop me.
“Excuse me?”
“I drove down to New Jersey, and
then I drove back up.”
“New Jersey?”
she said, more to
herself than to me. “Who do we know in
New Jersey?”
I could have said no one, or I could
have said someone, but my mouth didn’t
want to keep opening, and my body
wanted to move instead. Before I knew
it, I was grasping the bike’s handlebars
and wheeling it out to the center of the
garage.
“You just got home, where’re you
going?”
She didn’t say I couldn’t go. She’s
never told me I couldn’t do something.
She didn’t ground me or give me
curfews. She covered for me when the
school called and said I’d cut class. She
trusted me—or she wanted me to think
she did.
If there was any mother in existence
who I should be able to let in and know
all, it would be this woman. This
woman, here.
“I want to try the bike,” I said. “I’ll
just ride it along the train tracks to the
bridge, then I’ll turn back.”
“It’s too cold.”
I shrugged and pulled down on my
wool hat so my ears were covered.
“Besides, when’s the last time you
rode a bike? You were maybe ten and
you skidded off the embankment outside
and skinned both knees.”
“I guess you never forget how to ride.
That’s what I heard.”
“They say that.” She was floundering
here. She didn’t know how to discipline
me because she never had to before.
I straddled the bike and tried out the
brakes, testing the bounce of the tire. It
seemed as good as new. The snow had
been cleared off the road and I could
coast down it without sliding on ice. Not
two miles away, down the hill, the train
tracks ran north and south, following the
river. I could follow those tracks for
days. The line headed straight up to
Montreal.
What could my mom do if I told her
the truth? Tie me by the wrists to my
bedposts each night, lock me in our
basement and lower food through the
vents so I didn’t starve? Could she save
me and could she save Abby? Could she
save Fiona Burke years after the fact?
Once you were tagged to disappear
and join the others, I don’t think you
could be saved at all.
My mom said my name, softly. She
reached out, as if to touch my hair, and
when I flinched, she lowered her arm.
“We’re going to talk when you get
back,” she said, as if prophesizing our
future. “You’re going to tell me what’s
been going on and why you went down
to New Jersey.”
Very quietly, maybe to keep Fiona
Burke from hearing, I said,
“Okay.”
“I just want you to know you can talk
to me if you want to talk to me,” she
said, keeping it going and coming close
to ruining it. “I’m always here, if you
want to talk. I can see there’s something,
Lauren. I just don’t know what it is yet.”
For a moment I wondered if mothers
can
see. Maybe once you’ve made a
person, you can see through the skin you
shaped to what’s in there hurting without
anyone having to tell you,
Look here.
I stood up straight with the bike in my
hands. I stood in my mom’s direct line of
sight. There I was: Girl, 17. Girl, hair
not so long anymore, but long legs, my
mom’s same long nose. Girl wearing
black boots and black jeans. Wearing the
pendant I found on the side of the road, a
pendant like the one I thought I saw on
Abby in that photograph, like the one
Fiona Burke had on the night she ran
away. I actually never took it off.
Wearing also a flashing sign that said
I was in trouble. Wearing it on high for
heavy traffic so it could be seen far out
in the lanes in the distance. Letting it
blink and beep. Letting it shout out what
I wanted it to say because maybe
someone would know how to make it
stop.
Girl, not yet missing.
Easy target of a girl, standing out in
the open right here.
But all my mom said was, “When you
get back? We’ll talk.” All those psych
classes weren’t teaching her when to
keep pushing and when to let go. She’d
come so close, and too fast she’d let go.
“Don’t you have homework?” I said.
“We can talk tomorrow—it’s not
urgent.”
Liar
, said Fiona Burke.
My mom looked relieved. “I do have
a paper to write, but Lauren? We’ll talk
tomorrow about all of this.”
I got the bicycle gliding and hopped
on. It balanced perfectly and didn’t
topple over. I hadn’t forgotten anything
I’d seen so far. Not even how to ride a
bike.
I pumped the pedals until I was out of
sight of my house and the Burkes’ house
and could let go and have the spinning
tires do it all without me having a say. I
thought of Abby on this bicycle, on the
way to meet Luke. Then there was Abby
leaving Luke’s house on foot in the
warm summer’s night, there was the
road, there were the pine trees, and
beyond that I guess there was something
I wouldn’t get to know. There was a
dark night sky starred with questions,
and she was one of them. I kept thinking
if I looked hard enough maybe I’d be
able to pick out her point in the
constellation.
Or more likely I’d keep getting it all
mixed up, like how I could never seem
to find the Big Dipper, even when it was
right there, screaming out its existence in
the sky right over my head.
Then I changed the story. I imagined
Abby on the way to meet Luke, but never
stopping, never bothering going to his
house and instead riding a wide circle
and making it back safe to the grounds of
the summer camp that night.
I imagined her still alive.
I kept pedaling and soared around
each coming turn. I sped past mailboxes.
I flew over humps in the road. I
somehow managed to avoid slicks of
ice. I pedaled so fast, I didn’t know how
I’d ever get the bike to stop.
When I reached the railroad tracks, I
saw the light in the distance and heard
the rumble: a train was coming. It sped
closer, rattling the air, a freight train that
didn’t look to be stopping at the
commuter Amtrak stop at Pinecliff. I
pumped the pedals and steered the bike
down the narrow road that ran alongside
the tracks. I was ahead of the train, but I
felt it gaining on me, a hulking monster I
was too small and insignificant to think
of ever beating.
The train was just behind me and then
it was beside me, and for a single,
perfect moment the freight train and I
were matched, its nose even with the
bike’s front tire.
Then, fast, it overtook me and
thundered past me and I was left behind.
—
40
—
SHE
was waiting for me in my
bedroom, watching in silence as I shook
out my legs, my muscles burning after
riding her bike so hard and for so long.
Her eyes held on me, and the weight
of that gaze felt like she was pressing
her entire body down on top of me,
caked in mud and littered with burrs and