Authors: Nova Ren Suma
Tags: #Juvenile Fiction, #Social Issues, #Runaways, #Horror & Ghost Stories, #Visionary & Metaphysical
maybe I was. It was just that there were
so many, and my head had been crowded
up with them, like a smoky, dim room at
this party, except my head was filled
with girls. And also with myself—
because I was a girl, too. I was 17 and
maybe in danger, just like they were.
A flicker of shadowy movement
caused me to look toward the woods.
And there she was, the dark shape of her
at least, shaking her head no.
“No?” I said aloud.
Luke said something I didn’t catch,
and a voice in my head said,
It wasn’t
him.
“Are you sure?” I asked to the trees.
Yes,
she answered sadly.
Not him.
Not him.
She meant he hadn’t hurt her, not that I
ever really thought he did—besides how
she’d gotten her heart broken. Hearing
her made me know they were outside
with me now. All of them.
I could see a girl. Then two more
girls. Then another. Another. Girls I
recognized, and some girls I didn’t.
There were so many girls I had yet to
meet.
The lost girls’ eyes glowed, fire-lit,
from the sweep of pine trees nearby.
How far were we from where Abby
went missing? It was close, I realized.
So close.
If Luke could see them there, he’d be
scared the way I should have been
scared. I squinted and tried to picture the
girls as he would: the one girl with the
glittering shards of broken windshield
encrusted into her cheeks; the girl with
the frost-blue lips; the girl soaked
through her clothes, dripping from an
absent rain. Then the two girls melded
together as if their bodies met in the
most intimate tissue- and sinew-filled
spaces that Siamese twins share,
shoulder muscle growing into lungs and
liver, their sides fused hip to hip.
These two girls were motioning to get
my attention, waving at me to stop,
waving at me to get away from him, to
get in my van and get away. I should
have listened, but what struck me was
how it looked like they had three hands.
Two individual hands of their own, and
the third hand, the one they shared, far
larger than the other two.
“What are you looking at? What’s
over there?” Luke asked.
“Nobody,” I said.
“Aren’t you happy to see me? You
sure seemed to be two minutes ago.”
“Yeah, right.” But I didn’t bother
arguing. I heard what the girls were
trying to tell me, and I was feeling
around in my pockets. The pockets of my
cargo pants—there were many—and my
coat pockets, too, inside and outside,
every last one. Then I was down on my
knees, there at Luke’s feet, searching the
snow to see if I’d dropped them when I
passed out. I was drunk, probably, and I
was seeing ghosts, definitely, and now to
top it all off I’d lost my van keys.
With my movement, the motion sensor
made the back porch light flick on. It
spotlit us, beaming down on the crown
of my head.
Luke laughed again, and I realized
how this looked to him, where I had
myself positioned on the ground, with
such easy access to his zipper. “You’re
something else, aren’t you?” he said. I
had absolutely no idea what Abby saw
—sees, even still—in the guy, why she
got so intoxicated by him and took off in
the middle of the night on her bike to see
him and let him stomp on her heart.
But then I wasn’t looking up at him
anymore. The side door of the house had
come open, and the person standing there
let go of the door and let it swing closed.
When it slammed, Luke turned toward
it, too.
“Hey, man,” Luke said, all nonchalant,
when he saw it was Jamie. “What’s up?”
This was what the two girls had been
trying to warn me about. Now I knew.
Nobody wanted Jamie to get the wrong
idea.
“I was looking for you,” Jamie said—
to me, not to Luke. His voice was flat; I
couldn’t decipher any emotion from it.
His hair had fallen over his eyes like it
always did.
“Oh, I’ve got her,” Luke said, a game
in his voice and a hard hand on my arm,
pulling me up to my feet so he could jerk
me closer.
I pushed him away and disentangled
myself, fumbling on clumsy legs but at
least standing on my own without his
help. “He doesn’t,” I told Jamie. “This
wasn’t . . . It’s not, it’s not anything.
What?” I turned fast, in the other
direction. One of the girls was talking to
me, trying to tell me what to say to fix
this, but I couldn’t make out the words
because there was this panic in my chest
and it was cold and there was all the
wind.
“That’s not what she said before,”
Luke said.
I turned around to see Jamie backing
up, away from us. That was it. He was
going to believe that liar over me,
thinking I’d gotten together with this
sleaze so soon after our breakup. He
was watching me with a strained,
strange look on his face. But he didn’t
leave.
Luke cracked up laughing. “I’m
kidding, man. Dude, just kidding. She’s
all yours. I’m going inside for a beer.”
Jamie stepped away from the door
and let him through. But he didn’t join
me in the pool of light, where I was still
standing.
“I . . . that wasn’t what it looked like,”
I told him.
He didn’t say anything.
“I’m only talking to him because she
wants me to.”
“She, who?”
“She . . . oh.” I stopped. I had to quit
saying things out loud. I couldn’t talk
anymore about her or about the others.
Not then, not to him. “Never mind. I’m
not supposed to say.”
He shifted a little, a flinch almost.
Like I’d said something that scared him.
I found myself longing for it. I longed
for the motion sensor to come on in
another part of the yard and show him.
There’d be Abby, moving fast across the
snow with one flip-flop and one bare
foot, but not fast enough. Natalie’s long
hair would hide her face, but a shimmer
of glass would shine through. Shyann
would be concealing herself in the
branches, well-practiced from her days
of living off nature in the vacant lots of
her city. Madison would speak first
before anyone, saying could we hurry it
up already since she had somewhere to
be, and Isabeth would have the most
concern in her eyes, thinking of how it
feels to lose the people you love, so
she’d tell Madison to be quiet. Eden
wouldn’t care about any of this. She’d
just want me to find my keys so we
could go home. Kendra would want to
leap out and go,
Boo!
And Yoon-mi and
Maura would be shaking their heads
because they tried to warn me; they tried
to wave me away.
And the others? It was unbearable to
think of how many girls the dark expanse
of woods could contain.
Then there’d be Fiona Burke herself.
She wasn’t really one of them, but she
was more like them than she was like
me. She was missing, and I was still
here. She was a ghost, and I was alive
for however much longer I was allowed
to be. She’d try to talk me out of him.
We
don’t need him,
she might say.
Walk
away, Lauren. Walk away.
But none of the girls came out, and no
one spoke up from the vacant darkness.
And so Jamie kept on disbelieving me.
So I tried to correct it. “I lost my keys.
It’s just that I lost my keys.” I started
looking again but came up with nothing.
“Fuck it,” Jamie said—to the sky, or
to someone, something I couldn’t see. He
said it while looking upward, as far
away from me as he could. His body
went rigid and I thought he was going to
kick something. Then he let out a long
breath and said, “It’s too cold out for
this shit. C’mon, I’ll take you home.
You’re too drunk to drive yourself
anyway.”
He took my arm. It was the first time
he’d touched me in days and days.
—
43
—
WE
were silent on the drive home. I
was cursing myself for losing my keys,
and Jamie was next to me probably
cursing himself for caving and being
nice to me.
When we got to my place, Jamie
turned to me in my driveway and said,
“You’re freaking me out a little, Lauren.
It’s like you’re this whole other person
all of a sudden. Or else you’re just
trashed. Is that it? Is it that you’re just
really drunk?”
If only that’s all it was. If only I could
sober up and take an aspirin to erase this
tomorrow.
I leaned forward, and this wasn’t
Abby’s memory or any of the other girls’
memories cascading over me—it wasn’t
their wants but mine. I wanted to feel my
lips against his neck, or his neck against
my lips. I wanted to remember for one
small second what there was before the
shadows blotted it all out. I wanted to
know if his mouth still tasted like
cinnamon.
But he pushed me away. “We broke
up,” he said. “Remember?”
For an increment of time in the
darkness of his car, I didn’t. But it
passed and then I did.
“I have to ask you something,” he
said. “It’s about this.”
From his pocket the folded Missing
flyer emerged, and he didn’t have to
open it all the way for me to know
Abby’s face would be on it.
“You left it,” he said. “In my hoodie.”
I nodded. It was still in his hand, and I
absolutely needed to take it back.
“What’s up with this girl Abigail? For
real. Is that why you were with Luke
Castro?”
“Abby,” I corrected him. “But I
wasn’t
with
him. I told you, I dropped
my keys.”
“You don’t really know that girl . . .
Do you?”
I took the folded flyer from his hands
and protected it in mine. “Jamie . . .
what if I told you something and I
couldn’t explain it and you couldn’t ask
me why or how I know or anything?
What if I told you that Abby is here in
the car with us, right now? What if I
could see her sitting in the seat behind
you and she’s waving at me to stop
talking now, but I’m not going to, I’m
going to tell you. What if, Jamie? What if
I told you all that?”
He shut his eyes and held them closed.
At his back, in the seat directly behind
his, Abby Sinclair glared at me. I could
see the dirty reflection of her face in the
rearview mirror even if I didn’t turn
around to be sure.
Finally Jamie spoke. “I’d say you
were really trashed and you should go in
and have a glass of water and go to
bed.”
“Okay,” I said. “I’m glad I didn’t tell
you then.”
There was a stunned look on his face
when I slammed the car door and headed
up the walk to go inside.
—
44
—
MY
mom knew I’d been drinking
before I’d even taken off my coat. She
wasn’t going to punish me over it, but
she did remark on it, and she did ask
how I got home and how I was going to
get a spare key for my van if I couldn’t
find the one I lost, and she did comment
that I deserved a hangover if I got one.
She said that last thing with a vindictive
little sparkle in her eye.
It was when she was asking me about
the party, when she was saying
something that required an answer from
my mouth, that the room cracked open
and the voices came out. They weren’t
slivers of whispers like usual. They
didn’t take turns, and they didn’t play
nice. I couldn’t see them, but I could
hear them, closing in on all sides, voices
gone raspy and hoarse from breathing
fire and hoarser still from all the