Authors: Nova Ren Suma
Tags: #Juvenile Fiction, #Social Issues, #Runaways, #Horror & Ghost Stories, #Visionary & Metaphysical
twigs, scraped raw in places, as heavy
as a sack of bricks.
“I tried,” I said.
She kept staring.
I sat on the end of my bed and
watched her in the vanity mirror. It was
easier than looking directly at her.
Talking to her reflection came easier,
too.
“I told them,” I said. “I told them you
didn’t run away. That’s what you wanted
me to say, right? But, Abby, I don’t
know if they believed me. And that
Cassidy girl from the summer? Don’t
even ask me what she said. I went down
there and I told them . . . I don’t know
what else to do.”
I tried to keep my voice down, so my
mom wouldn’t hear, but why wouldn’t
Abby say something? Anything? Why
wouldn’t she blink or nod or give me a
sign?
If she told me what to do next—where
to go, what to look for—all of this could
be over by morning. Any one of the girls
could give me a little push like that if
she wanted. I mean, if that’s why they
contacted me, why wouldn’t they do the
simplest, quickest thing? It made me
question them, and myself, and all of
this. It made me wonder about the
dreams and the house that contained
them. Either I was meant to stay outside
and help, or I was meant to join them
inside and never get out. This dark
thread of tightrope between the two
options couldn’t keep me upright for
long.
Abby, though. Abby was different.
She would be the one to give me her
secret and let me unravel the answers.
Why else stare at me like that?
I took in all her details in the mirror:
the mud spatter and the pieces of road
and nature melded to her skin. The
center hole in her throat had a faint
glow, like she’d taken my pendant and
swallowed it. Her lips were a thin, grim
line, closed to air and words.
“It would help if you told me,” I said.
“What happened when you were walking
back from Luke’s house?”
I watched as she turned slowly, in
small, jerky increments, until the back of
her body was what faced the mirror and
the front of her faced away from me.
I hadn’t done what she wanted. I’d
visited her grandparents—I’d done that
—but maybe I should have said more.
Maybe I’d been a coward. Maybe I
knew how her grandmother would have
responded
if
I’d
told
her
the
disconnected
spirit
of
her
lost
granddaughter
was
communicating
through me, a complete stranger, from
some open gateway between this world
and the next. And that I didn’t know what
this meant about where she was now,
and I didn’t know what that meant for
where she could be found in the future. I
barely knew how to explain it myself.
Really, that would have gone over
well.
I was going to say this when Abby
suggested writing the letter. She’d turned
her body deliberately, and I saw what
she was facing now: the open notebook
on my desk, the pen pointed to the page.
When I sat down at the desk, she came
closer, and when I picked up the pen she
was at my elbow, smoke-gray breath
singeing my skin.
I couldn’t mimic her handwriting, and
this wasn’t a session of automatic
writing in which I sealed my eyes,
cleared my mind, and let the barest touch
of her ghostly hand guide my own. I
simply wrote down what she wanted to
say for her, because she couldn’t hold
the pen and write it herself.
For the return address, I used the one
on Dorsett Road. I borrowed an
envelope and a stamp from my mom’s
desk in the kitchen downstairs, and then I
carried the letter up to my room to mail
from a public post office box in the
morning.
But as I was pulling the covers to my
chin and curling up to go to sleep, I felt
her still there in the room, as if I could
do more even than that, as if I should be
trolling the back roads in my van, calling
out her name, pasting her poster on every
telephone pole, visiting the police
station every day until they reclassified
her case as possible foul play. I thought
of Fiona Burke, who I felt sure was
observing from a perch somewhere in
the shadows, and I thought of how I’d
never wondered what happened to her,
before this winter, and how I should
have. How heartless it was for a girl to
be forgotten and buried before there was
even anything of her to put in the ground.
I wouldn’t let that happen now, again.
Not to Abby Sinclair.
—
41
—
FRIDAY
was Deena’s eighteenth
birthday party at her boyfriend’s house.
It was also the night I lost any control I
had over this. If I’d ever been in control.
First the noise. Not all in my head this
time—also in the room around me. It
was a raucous party as Deena had been
hoping. All the activity didn’t drown out
the insistent whispering in my head but
drew it out, made it frantic. So much
seemed to be happening, and there I was
in the midst of it, sitting on a sagging
plaid couch with a spiked jug of
cranberry juice. I was a part of things in
the way any piece of furniture would be.
I’d forgotten anyone could see me and
flinched when two girls from school
came up asking if I was still into Jamie.
“Wait, is Jamie here?” I said. “Have
you seen him?”
They said he was around somewhere,
or I thought that’s what they said, but
before I could ask why, they’d moved
away and somehow taken my jug, the
one between my knees that I’d been
lifting up, again and again, to my mouth.
It was here that the party turned from
me. I became completely detached from
it as if a scissor had poked through the
page and removed me from the scene.
I realized two things: One, that
cranberry juice Deena left me with sure
had a lot of vodka mixed up in it. And
two, none of these people would notice
if I went missing.
Flash, I’m gone, and they’d keep
partying.
It could happen to me here, at this
party, at right that very moment: There’d
be a girl in my spot on the couch and
then no girl taking up space on the plaid
cushion. The seat would stay open for a
minute or two before someone snagged
it. And that would be the last of me.
I checked to see what clothes would
be listed on my Missing poster: black
boots; black cargo pants; ugly flannel
shirt I forgot I even had on; under that, a
V-neck gray shirt with a rip in the
shoulder; black tank top underneath it
all. Would anyone remember any of
those details when asked?
That was when I noticed it, the
pendant, how it wasn’t tucked under all
the layers of my clothes the way I liked
it to be. It had been pulled out, and I
hadn’t noticed. It was hanging down
over my chest. Glowing a milky, fizzy
white.
I stood up. I grabbed my coat. Of
course no one stopped me. I took a step
toward the door, and everything went on
just as it was.
It was when I was pushing through the
crowd to get to that door and to the front
porch and then past the porch to where I
parked my van outside. It was right then.
The shadows. I noticed them at the edges
of the room, down by the floor, near the
heating vents, and up by the ceiling,
where the stucco met the plain white
walls.
These
shadows
formed
themselves into thin tendrils, like
fingers. And the fingers grew, coiling
into long, snakelike arms. Reaching. I
knew if I got close, they could grab me.
Maybe this was what each of the girls
saw before her time came. One of the
shadows was directly over my head
now. It could let go at any moment. It
could drop and take me down with it.
No one else could see them. Everyone
from the party was oblivious: Chugging
cups from the keg. Smoking up in the
corner. Dancing to bad music on the
worn rug. Making out against the wall.
Picking a fight near the windows.
Ordinary things on an ordinary night—
and Happy Birthday, Deena, you made it
—all while something terrible was
coming for me, about to swallow me and
make me gone.
It couldn’t be my time yet. Could it? I
had people to help, girls to unearth and
keep track of, girls who needed me out
here, alive. Didn’t I? I had to leave this
house. I knew how hot the shadowy
hands would be, from the fire, how their
grip would singe through my flannel shirt
and my cotton shirt beneath it and even
the shirt beneath that, to what’s left,
which was my skin.
Once they touch your skin, you’re
theirs.
—
42
—
I
was facedown in the snow, and there
was a boot planted before my eyes.
Something damp was in my mouth, but it
wasn’t a tongue. It was the sopping-wet
finger of my own glove. I think I
might’ve been sucking on it.
I pulled out the finger, spit out some
lint, and looked up. The sole of the boot
had a red stripe, and ice and snow were
crusted into the laces. There was another
boot exactly like it beside the first, and
far up above both the boots was a set of
shoulders and, above that, a head. The
head was shaking with laughter.
Then he reached out a hand, stretching
out his arm so it was close enough to be
grabbed by mine. “C’mon, let me help
you up.”
This wasn’t Jamie, but it was a guy I
knew. Really, it was a guy I’d talked to
only recently, a guy I wouldn’t have
known if not for knowing the girls.
“You’re plastered,” Luke Castro said
—Abby Sinclair’s Luke. He grinned
when he said it, and I couldn’t see his
face to tell if this was all a joke to him
or if he really cared.
“No,” I mumbled, “it’s not that.”
Because it wasn’t. It wasn’t the spiked
cranberry juice that made me run out of
Karl’s house—or if it was that, it was
only partly that. I remembered the
shadows, targeting me and descending
fast.
“Sure,” he said sarcastically. “You’re
perfectly sober. Sure.”
“I’m fine,” I said, and I shook off his
hand and stood up on my own. I
wobbled and tried to hide it. “Are you a
friend of Karl’s or something?”
“You asked me that already,” he said.
Wait. I did?
“Tell me again,” I said. “Tell me
again you didn’t do anything to her.” I
was back in our first conversation,
asking after Abby Sinclair, and it took
him a few moments to get there himself,
even though I was the one who’d so
obviously been drinking.
“I didn’t.
Do
anything. To her,” he
said.
We were off to the side of the house,
away from the windows, like we meant
to sneak over here for a reason. Did I?
Did I find Luke at some point and lead
him out here? Did I do anything
embarrassing? Did I say something
stupid? Did he hurt Abby and all along I
didn’t know it? Did anyone see us go out
here? How many of those things did I
say out loud?
There was a motion sensor and not a
regular light, which I didn’t realize until
it flicked off and dropped us into
darkness. I couldn’t see the puff of
breath trailing from his mouth, though I
could feel it, since his face was so close
to mine. He smelled the way I remember
Abby remembering he smelled—or else
it was the way he’d smelled when I
made that visit to his house weeks
before. Her memories were cutting into
mine, lifting up out of nowhere and
confusing me.
She thought I’d been ignoring her. And