Authors: Nova Ren Suma
Tags: #Juvenile Fiction, #Social Issues, #Runaways, #Horror & Ghost Stories, #Visionary & Metaphysical
from the counselor’s shed; it was an
empty road, one on which no cars
passed; it was a slick, sweet-smelling
summer’s night.
That was it, that was the last of her.
She lingered on it, and so did I, holding
the memory between us like something
sweet slowly licked off a shared spoon.
I watched the reflective light mounted
on the back of the bicycle catch and
glow and grow small as she traveled
into the dark distance. Watched her
pedal, quick at first, then slowing to
coast down the hill. Watched as she
lifted both arms from the handlebars for
a heartbeat of a second, then put them
back down and held on. I watched her
go.
Then I lost sight of her. The bike
dipped under, but the image of the road
stayed still. I was leaning forward,
trying to see farther, when the mirror
went dark and I realized someone was
pounding on the window of my van.
My neck turned until I was face-to-
face with the intruder.
It was Mr. Floris, ninth- and tenth-
grade biology teacher by trade and
prison guard in his dark dreams and
deepest fantasies. Everyone knew Mr.
Floris loved trolling the school grounds
during his free periods, itching to hand
out detentions. And even though it was
no surprise to find him in the parking lot
seeking to foil late sleepers and
slackers, it was still a shock to be
caught. I’d forgotten where I was.
He rapped his knuckles on the glass,
then lowered the red scarf that he’d
wound around his face to keep out the
cold. When his mouth was free, I saw
the chapped lips beneath his mustache
shape out the words:
You. Roll down
this window this instant, young lady.
There was only a single layer of
window glass between us, but I couldn’t
hear him. I heard nothing but the distant
whirring of two bicycle wheels. Then he
pounded again, and I heard that and
flinched and was rolling down the
window and saying, “Sorry, Mr. Floris.
I didn’t see you there.”
At the same time I was taking another
glance in the rearview mirror, needing to
know—was she still in the van with me?
Was she huddled behind my seat, in the
dark cavern in back? But something was
blocking my view: the reflection of the
pale girl in the mirror who must have
been rubbing at her eyes again, a bad
habit. She had smoke-gray tracks of
mascara streaking down her cheeks as if
she’d been holed up in the van crying.
She wasn’t. I hadn’t cried in years.
On top of my head was the puffy wool
hat my friend Deena Douglas stole from
the mall and didn’t like on herself and so
gave to me. The hat was pulled low over
my eyebrows, hiding my ears and hiding
the view of the backseat where Abby
still could be.
“Miss Woodman,” Mr. Floris said,
“you do realize it’s third period and you
should be in class? Get out of this van
and come with me or I’ll have to write
you up.”
I’d never been written up before. This
was before I started skipping all that
school, before the “marks” on my
“permanent record” that I’d “regret” for
the “rest of my life.” This was before I
shattered into the particles and pieces
I’m in now.
Even so, I didn’t get out of the van.
“But . . .” I said, pausing there,
waiting.
Because didn’t he see?
I was expecting him to notice her
behind me. He was close enough to my
window that he must have been able to
see the bench seat and who was in it.
There . . . the apparition of a girl hiding
behind her hair, wasn’t she there with
her grimy face and her scratched-up
knees?
I could still smell her. I could sense
her breathing, too, her mouth sharing air
with my mouth even though logically I
knew it wasn’t possible.
But Mr. Floris’s eyes landed on
something else: The lighter in my
dashboard had thrust itself out with a
hard
pop
.
“That’s it, Lauren, get out. Now. I’m
writing you up.”
He didn’t see—he was blind to it. To
her. Soon enough he was opening the
door for me and waving me out onto the
icy pavement. I glanced directly at her
only once, when I was reaching down to
rescue her flyer from the floor.
Her long hair was tangled with
leaves, I noticed then, stuck through with
loose green leaves and pine needles and
matted with twigs and sap. One bruised
knee was bleeding, and the trail of blood
had wound down her leg to between her
toes. She was wearing one flip-flop. The
other had been lost somewhere I
couldn’t imagine.
I knew she fell off the bicycle; I could
see it happening, a loose rock under her
tire catching her off-balance in the dark
depths of the night. But did she get up
again, or did something stop her? What
and who did she meet at the bottom of
that hill?
She didn’t say. I wouldn’t have
expected her to tell me in front of him,
anyway.
I stepped out of the van, closed and
locked the door, and followed Mr.
Floris to the front office, where I was
about to be awarded a block of after-
school detention. But I did look back. I
kept looking back. Nothing would keep
me from looking for her now.
— — —
That was the first time I was visited by
Abby, who met her fate outside the
Lady-of-the-Pines Summer Camp for
Girls. Now, there are so many more
things I know about her.
She’s Abigail Sinclair of Orange
Terrace, New Jersey. Yes, there’s that.
But she’s really only Abigail to her
grandparents and her homeroom teacher.
To everyone else, she’s Abby.
Abby with the smallest speck of a stud
in her nose, so it looks like a sparkling
star has been plucked from the sky and
hung low beside her face, a star that
follows her wherever she goes, night or
day. Abby who chews her nails, just the
ones on her thumbs. Abby who never
wears skirts. Abby who’s afraid of
clowns and isn’t kidding when she says
so. Abby who doesn’t mind when it
rains. Abby who played flute, for three
months, then quit. Abby, solid C student.
Abby, still a virgin, on a technicality,
which
does
count. Abby who can tap-
dance. Abby who can’t whistle, no
matter how hard she tries. Abby who
likes, maybe even could have loved,
Luke.
Abby with brown hair, brown eyes,
120 pounds, 5'7", small scar on her right
knee from tripping over the back step
when she was five.
Abby: age 17, reported missing
September 2, but gone before that, gone
in summer and no one went looking.
Gone.
—
3
—
I
don’t know how I made it through the
day I first found Abby.
My memory holds on only to vague
pieces, because other, sharper things
have since come to take their place. I
remember the detention slip for cutting
class and smoking in the parking lot, torn
ragged on one side so it looked like
someone had taken a bite out of my
sentence, but I don’t remember the
detention itself. I don’t remember what
happened in my classes or what I
learned, if anything. I don’t remember
lunch period with Deena, and what
particular kind of slop-on-a-tray I
carried to our table and then put in my
mouth. Or what plans she made for her
eighteenth birthday party, which was all
she could talk about even though it was
weeks and weeks away. Or anything else
she said.
At one point there was my boyfriend,
Jamie Rossi, at my locker, asking what
happened and why I was late, and I
remember this because it was the first
time I had ever kept something from him.
“Just engine trouble,” I heard myself
telling him, “that’s all.” I didn’t say
anything about a girl taped to a telephone
pole, a girl hidden in the back of my van.
It was still possible I’d imagined it.
Imagined her.
I have this freeze-frame of Jamie in
my memory, this picture. In it, the hood
of his sweatshirt is popped up over his
head, and the dark curls over his
forehead are spilling out because he
needed a haircut again like he seemed to
practically every other week. He’s
leaning in, eyes closed so I see how long
his lashes are. And there are his lips out
to meet mine. His stubble showing, but
only on his chin, because he couldn’t
grow a full beard, not if he tried. I can’t
tell what he’s thinking—if he believes
me—because his eyes are closed. Not
that I could ever guess, with Jamie. He’s
a guy, so he’s used to keeping things
close.
Then the picture of Jamie’s face falls
away, and I must have kissed him back,
or a teacher came by and stopped us, but
I don’t remember that part.
I was outside myself, as if I were
standing at the dip in the highway that
led to Pinecliff Central High School, the
last place you could turn before heading
to school, all while some shadow-me
was inside the building going to my
classes, kissing my boyfriend, answering
to my name when it was called.
I couldn’t get Abby out of my mind.
During my free period, I did a search
online, on one of the library computers,
and found a listing in the missing
persons database for an Abigail Sinclair
from New Jersey. That flyer on the
telephone pole may have been a few
months old, but she was still out there
somewhere. She was still 17 years old.
Still missing.
There was also a public page online
that her family or friends must have
made for her—a memorial of sorts
where anyone could post a message:
ABBY!
IF
YOU
ARE
READING THIS! Come home!
We miss you.
----------------------------------------
--------------
Abigail, it’s your cousin Trinity.
You have Grandma and Grandpa
so worried you have no idea.
Where are you????? Call me if
you’re reading this. We just want
to know you’re ok!
----------------------------------------
--------------
Dear Abby, I have never met u
but I am praying for u every night
----------------------------------------
--------------
Abbz U R missed @ school <3
----------------------------------------
--------------
luv you girl come home!!!!
It was when I was scrolling through
this page of notes left for Abby, notes I
felt sure she’d never seen, from some
people she didn’t even know, that I
realized a person was standing behind
me, waiting for the right moment to
speak.
When I turned in my chair, I watched
this girl’s gaze peel away from my
computer screen and go to me. I didn’t
recognize her at first, and then her face
took on shape and I realized she was a
freshman, a girl I’d seen around school. I
was more aware of the fact that she was
breathing, undeniably alive, than of
anything else. This girl wasn’t missing;
she was right here. And all I wanted was
for her to go away.
“Hey, Lauren,” she said, “we saw you
this morning. Are you, um . . . okay?”
“You saw me? Where?” The thought
of being watched while I was in the van
alarmed me.
“Before school? You were in the
middle of the road? The bus almost hit
you? We all saw you and we called out
the window to you.” She waited. “Didn’t
you hear us?”
I shook my head. A feeling of cold
came over me as she brought me back to
that moment—so immediate I could have
been out on the windy highway beneath