Authors: Nova Ren Suma
Tags: #Juvenile Fiction, #Social Issues, #Runaways, #Horror & Ghost Stories, #Visionary & Metaphysical
marking each metal-framed bed, which
were arranged in two long rows against
the walls.
I had a feeling I’d find her,
somewhere, and then I did. Abby hadn’t
just carved her name into the wooden
wall behind the bed she slept in. She
didn’t bother to note the year she spent
here the way the other girls had. What
she’d carved was a clue:
abby sinclair
luke castro
forever
Jamie said it before I did. “Weird.
Remember that Luke Castro kid from
school? What a douche.”
I knew who he meant—some guy
who’d graduated a year or two ago. He
played on some sports team, or hung
around with the guys who did. I didn’t
really remember.
“Maybe it’s the same Luke Castro,” I
said, and even as the words came out of
my mouth I knew it had to be the same
Luke—this carving of his name together
forever with Abby’s told me so.
I don’t think Jamie noticed how I
lingered at this particular bed over all
the others, how my finger reached out to
trace the shape of the lopsided heart
Abby had carved into the soft, splintery
wood near where she rested her head
each night. He had no idea I was trying
to picture how she’d carved it, and with
what. I was looking back into memories
I didn’t own, wanting in.
I heard him down at the other end of
the cabin, talking to himself—or, no,
someone must have called his cell,
because he was talking to someone on
the phone. His back was to me and his
voice was low, like he didn’t want me to
know who it was.
It was then, with no one looking, that
it began.
I stood up. I walked on legs that didn’t
feel like mine toward the back of the
cabin, where there was a line of empty
cubbies and a dark bathroom. I kept
going, toward the bathroom. I couldn’t
hear Jamie on the phone anymore. My
ears picked up on something else: a
rhythmi c
slap-slap-slap
coming from
floor level. Startled, I stopped. The
slapping sound stopped. I started
walking again, and the sound picked up
as before.
It was coming from my own feet, the
noise of my own footsteps traveling the
floor into the tiled room that held the
showers. I could almost imagine that I
didn’t have on my combat boots and was
wearing summer flip-flops instead. Flip-
flops like the one Abby had on in my
van.
As I stood in the shower room I
realized I wasn’t cold anymore. It was
so far from cold, it was stifling, and I
needed to undo the buttons on my wool
coat to let my neck breathe. I opened my
coat all the way. I shrugged off my thick
scarf and let it drop.
There was a single window in the
shower room, so small only an arm
could fit through, but I went to it and
shoved it open for some air. It revealed
a view of the woods behind the cabin,
but not the snow-covered tree branches I
expected, not the heavy-loaded pines
and the blanket of white gleaming in the
winter darkness. What I saw was green.
The impossible green of summer.
I turned away fast and slid down the
tiled wall—warm with humidity against
my back—until I was sitting on the
shower floor, beside the drain.
“I’m in here,” I said aloud, letting the
words echo and find their way to
whoever was also there, listening.
I became aware of her breathing, as if
she’d sidled up the tiled wall beside me,
her bare, bug-bitten shoulder millimeters
from mine.
Her story rose up in me, fully formed
and practically kicking.
The summer she stayed here, Abby
did sleep in that bed in Cabin 3, where
I’d found her name and Luke’s name.
She did have the bunk pushed closest to
the farthest wall and below the last of
the windows. She slept curled into a
ball. The pillow in the plastic pouch still
on the bed was the pillow she’d hug
between her knees.
I would soon know more and more.
Like how when Abby left camp late that
July, no new girl came to claim her bed.
Though Cabin 3 was minus one
counselor-in-training with Abby gone,
they had to make do; it was too late to
fill her spot. The girls at camp were
simply told she’d quit. The counselor in
charge of Cabin 3 removed Abby’s
clothes in their neatly rolled stacks from
her cubby and packed them into the
paisley suitcase stowed under her bed to
return to her family, who didn’t seem
surprised she’d run away. None of the
counselors wanted to tell the kids that
she’d run off into the night with only the
clothes from Color War on her back.
That she’d left no note to say why. No
explanation.
Even so, the girls in Cabin 3
suspected more. They avoided uttering
her name and stayed away from the
things she’d touched. No one took
advantage of the extra cubby or used the
tropical shampoo she’d left behind in the
communal bathroom. Abby’s bed was in
a prime location, more private than the
beds in the middle, yet no one wanted to
sleep there after she had, as if it had
been cursed.
The only way I knew I’d gotten up and
started walking was the
slap-slap-slap
that followed me as I went.
The bed was just as I’d left it, but on
the mildewed pillow trapped inside the
plastic case was something I hadn’t
noticed before. My hand reached out and
unzipped the pouch. My fingers plucked
it from the stained surface of the pillow
and drew it out. It dangled before me.
A single strand of hair.
From Abby’s head.
I knew this fact like I knew all the
other things I knew. Besides, the piece
of hair couldn’t be mine—due to its light
brown color and the spring to its
spiraling curl. My own hair was dyed
black and coarsely straight.
Something made me sniff it, some
disgusting level of curiosity. I knew
what it would smell like even before I
lifted it to my nose, the faint but acrid
hint of smoke as if this piece of hair had
been held over a lighter and set ablaze.
Everything connected to Abby seemed to
smell like that.
I left Cabin 3, and with the
slap-slap-
slap
of the flip-flops on my bare feet I
wandered out again to the campground,
feeling the hot summer sun on my
shoulders. I lifted my hair and tied it in a
knot. The sky was bright blue and dotted
with fluffy, drifting clouds. The sounds
of girls shrieking, splashing carried over
from the lake in the near distance.
There were traces of her everywhere.
Abby peed in these woods. She trampled
these flowers. Here she scratched at a
mosquito bite. Here she scratched at the
same mosquito bite until she bled.
The spot on the campground where
she first saw him was hidden from view
by pine trees, but I found it from the way
the branches grew sparser there and how
the ground gave way, as if I’d seen it in
pictures. Or, more, as if she were
handing over this memory so it didn’t
have to be hers any longer. So now it
could be mine.
He was on his motorbike, which you
could hear way out in the trees, a sawing
sound that made it seem like the whole
forest was under siege. None of the girls
in Abby’s group out picking wildflowers
knew what the noise was, or where it
was coming from, until there he
appeared atop that speeding, screaming
machine. He sailed over a hump of tree
roots and skidded to a solid stop in the
clearing, front tire braking inches from a
girl’s toes.
“This is private property,” one girl
said. “You’re not supposed to be here.”
“I live here,” Luke Castro said. As he
said it, I remembered. Luke Castro from
school
did
live somewhere around here
—I was pretty sure.
The glare from the sun, or from her
memory, made it so I had a hard time
looking directly at his face, but it was
him, the same guy from school.
He was checking out Abby in her
camp-issue tank top. Out of all the girls
there, he eyed her and only her—
because she was older than the others,
because she’d gathered up the most
flowers, or simply because she had on
the tightest shirt.
“I live down the hill, that way,” he
said.
He gestured out into the trees, though
none of the girls knew where that could
be, or what direction. Was it toward
Pinecliff or away from Pinecliff? Near
the train tracks or far from them? The
counselors hadn’t taught the girls how to
judge direction by the sun or to use a
compass yet, and Abby should have
figured out how to make this a teaching
moment. But she couldn’t care less.
Abby had come here to train to be a
camp counselor. On her application,
she’d written that she loved kids. She
didn’t actually love kids; she’d wanted
an excuse to get away from Jersey for
the summer. She had no idea how much
she’d
hate
kids after just the first week,
after all the yelling through megaphones;
eating slop, or trying to; burning through
her arm muscles rowing those canoes.
Right then she wished the girls would
just wander off into the woods and
entertain themselves with twigs and
pinecones or something so she could
have a moment alone with this stranger
here.
But the girls were telling Luke to get
off camp property, and he did, with one
last glance at Abby.
These girls couldn’t know what was
communicated in that glance and in
Abby’s. The
Hey
, the
Hey yourself
. The
What’s up with all the weeds?
The
Oh
my God, don’t even ask
. The
What’re
you doing with these losers anyway?
T h e
No freaking clue, I’m sooooo
bored
. The
Yeah?
, the
Yeah
. The
Then
maybe you should come out later and
hang with me
.
Luke Castro rode off, his motor
buzzing in the trees all around them like
he could come crashing back and run
them over at any moment, crushing toes
this time, leaving carnage. But he didn’t
come back, not that day.
All Abby remembers is how she said,
under her breath, “Who was
that
?” And
how she had no idea she’d find out soon
enough. She’d find out.
—
7
—
SHE
wanted to show me another
memory of hers before I left the
campground that night, something more
about Luke.
That was Abby’s giggle scattering in
the air like pine needles. We were
rolling. It was too dark to see, and I’d
lost track of my flashlight, but I could
feel the warm grass through my shirt, the
mud and leaves leaking through my
clothes. The ground had given way to
some kind of hill, and the decline went
on until it stopped at a soft bottom,
where another body dropped next to us,
as if this other person had gone rolling
down the hill, too. Even though I felt
connected to her—she and I, me and
Abby—I was also aware that there were
just two bodies at the bottom of that hill:
the boy, who was Luke, and the girl,
who was Abby. I was only watching.
She took his hand then—it felt like I,
too, took his hand—and she held it tight.
She spit out pine needles and smoothed
the leaves from her hair, even though it
was too dark for him to see her hair, and
she said—she said it and my mouth
echoed the shape of it: “Oh my God, I
totally love you, Luke.”
It had just come out. She didn’t mean