Authors: Nova Ren Suma
Tags: #Juvenile Fiction, #Social Issues, #Runaways, #Horror & Ghost Stories, #Visionary & Metaphysical
to say the words out loud, but something
from the fall down the hill made her
tongue loosen. Because there it was
now, a creature hovering over them in
the night, and she couldn’t unsay it.
I didn’t hear what he said back, and at
first I assumed that my hearing was
going in and out of this memory, but it
wasn’t that I was losing sound and
connection. It was that he didn’t say
anything. She’d told him she loved him
and he didn’t bother to respond. He
silenced her with his mouth instead.
The last time I was kissed, it was
Jamie, who tasted like cinnamon, which
was the way I was used to a boy tasting.
But being kissed by Luke wasn’t what
I was used to. He didn’t use his tongue at
first, and that made Abby want him to.
He teased with his lips, pressing his
mouth to her neck. One side of her neck,
below her ear, then the other. Then down
her neck, down and down to her
collarbone, and lower, to between her
breasts, which is when I realized her
shirt was wide open. Then he brought
his lips up again, climbing, climbing,
and his tongue entered her mouth, finally,
and she tasted him, I tasted him, and he
tasted us. It was sweet, a faint and
faraway sweetness, and it was much
wetter than I expected, so much so, I had
to wipe my mouth off after. So did she.
He wanted more than the kiss, but the
night wasn’t over yet. Up above, at the
top of the hill, was Abby’s borrowed
bicycle. I know this like I knew the grass
was tickling the backs of her thighs
because she had on shorts, but it was too
dark to see if they were the red ones
with the white racing stripes or another
pair of shorts. If this was
the
night or
another night.
And then his mouth left hers and she
had a moment to catch her breath. She
pulled back, dropping her weight to the
soft ground, the grass wet with dew from
the night, and gazed up to the darkened
sky over her head. All those stars: the
very same ones I was seeing almost five
months later.
This was what Abby remembered.
She liked returning to it to keep herself
from thinking of what came after.
—
8
—
JAMIE
was shaking me. He had me
by the shoulders and was calling my
name, his voice cracking, like this had
been going on for a long time. He’d
taken my coat—which had somehow
detached itself from my body—and was
holding it over me, like a blanket. My
skin was slick with chilled sweat
underneath the wool coat, my chest
sticky with it, and my buttons were all
undone, my shirt flapping open. I put the
buttons back together as quickly as I
could and wrangled myself out from
under Jamie’s grip, so I could stand up
by myself.
I was at the bottom of a hill that was
covered in snow. There was no bicycle
at the top, and no Luke Castro.
“Did we just—” I said, motioning at
my mouth, then his mouth. My lips felt
swollen from kissing, wet.
“What? No!” Jamie said, standing up
beside me and trying to help me get my
two arms into my coat. “You were
freaking out. You ran. You started
stripping in the snow, then you fell down
the hill. Don’t you remember?”
I didn’t know what would be
worse . . . if I told him I did, or if I told
him I didn’t.
I was saved by a harsh light in my
face. Not Abby’s memory of a blazing
summer’s day come to distract me, but
an actual light, vivid and aimed straight.
A police officer was waving a
flashlight at Jamie and me. “Those your
two vehicles out by the front gate?” his
voice shot out.
Jamie hesitated. Then he said, “Yeah.
The car’s mine. The van’s hers.”
My hands were cold; that’s what I
was thinking. And my ears. So cold. I
must have lost my hat when rolling down
the hill, and my scarf somewhere, too.
My legs were soaked and streaked in ice
and snow. I had ice in my hair; I had ice
up my nose.
“This is private property,” the officer
said, averting his eyes while I adjusted
my coat and cleaned myself up. “There
are signs up all over the fence.”
Now that he was closer, his light
bright enough to illuminate the whole
area, I tried to make out the name on his
uniform, but I couldn’t. He was a dark
blur, the brim of his hat keeping his eyes
in shadow.
“We were just going,” Jamie said,
taking me by the elbow.
But I was realizing something: the
opportunity here before me. Abby
wouldn’t want me to pass it up. I found
my voice. “Officer . . .” I waited for him
to give his name.
“Heaney,” he said, after a long
moment.
“Officer Heaney, we’re actually here
for a reason”—I felt Jamie tense up
beside me, alert and on guard—“we, I
mean,
I
just wanted to see what was out
here. Since the summer.”
“Uh-huh,” the officer said, putting out
a hand. “ID.”
He made us open our wallets and
show our driver’s licenses. Jamie wore
a deathly stare in his photo, like he’d
been planning to set a pipe bomb in the
DMV. I looked inexplicably sad in mine,
which was strange, as I remember being
pretty happy that day, the day I got my
driver’s license.
Seeing our IDs—that we were both
17, and both local—the officer seemed
satisfied enough, though he still wanted
us off the property. He said he’d
remember us. He’d remember and arrest
us for trespassing next time.
He motioned for us to start walking,
ushering us toward the gated entrance,
where we’d parked.
I found myself lagging so I could keep
pace with the officer, leaving Jamie
alone up ahead, the officer’s flashlight a
white-hot force against his narrow back.
“Officer Heaney,” I said, “were you
around here over the summer? When the
girl went missing?”
With the light on Jamie and not on me,
I could see more of the officer’s face
now, making him less of a uniform and
more of a person. Only, Officer Heaney
was nondescript in the way middle-aged
men often are, with their bloated,
stubbled faces and their shedding heads.
I wouldn’t recognize him out of uniform.
He could be anyone.
I noticed Jamie slow down a little
ahead of us, listening. But I had to ask,
even if Jamie heard me.
“Which girl?” the officer said in a
low voice.
He said it like there could be a great
many girls, a whole jumble of thin,
coltish legs and heads of long, blown-
out hair, and I could select the one I most
wanted from a model casting. He was
only testing me. He knew which girl.
“The girl who stayed here over the
summer,” I said, and then let the name
stumble off my lips for the first time.
“Abby
Sinclair.
Abigail
Sinclair, I
mean. The girl who disappeared.”
The officer was moving us quickly off
the property. As we passed the naked
flagpole, its rope hanging slack and then
flowing upward with the wind, I caught
Jamie glancing back at me. His face had
gone bone-white in the beam of the
flashlight, a piece of understanding
settling there. He now knew why I’d
stopped the van, that I’d planned this and
kept it from him.
The officer had stopped mid-step, as
if trying to decide what he could say, but
when he spoke, it was with recognition
and with authority, like I didn’t have a
legal right to ask for her by name. “Yes,”
he said. “Abigail Sinclair. Why are you
asking about her?”
I didn’t like the way he said her name.
“She’s an”—I was avoiding Jamie’s
gaze—“old friend of mine. I heard she
was up here this summer, and then I
heard what happened, and I thought I’d
come here and look around . . .”
The officer nudged me to walk faster.
We’d passed the compost now and were
coming up close to the front gate. “From
what I understand,” he said, “you’re
looking in the wrong place.”
I shivered from the slap of a cold
breeze. My feet had gone numb, and I
was almost surprised to look down and
see I did still have my boots on, and not
Abby’s flip-flops, because I could have
sworn my bare toes were buried in
snow.
“What do you mean, the wrong
place?”
“The girl ran off. Her family knows
that. Everyone knows that.”
“You’re wrong. She didn’t run away.”
“You sure about that?”
I was, all at once.
We’d reached the chain-link fence out
front. He held it open with an arm out
level with my chest, and there seemed to
be a fraction of a second when he was
keeping me from stepping through the
broken gate.
“ I
know
her,” I said lamely. “I know
she wouldn’t.”
Jamie spoke up, surprising me.
“Didn’t anyone see anything? Where she
went? Who with? Anything?” He gave
me a sidelong glance, assuring me we’d
talk about this later, but for now he’d go
along with it.
“And did you ever search the area?” I
added. “The woods? Did you look for
her bicycle, did you—”
“If you’re only curious and that’s all
this is, I’ll tell you,” the officer said,
looking only at Jamie’s face, I noted, not
mine. He revealed a couple details I
didn’t remember from the Missing
poster, and I drank them in, holding them
close for later.
It was Abby’s grandparents, her legal
guardians, who said she ran away—
that’s what they told camp officials and
the police—and that’s why there was no
urgency to propel anyone to keep
searching.
The
officer
pointed
off
the
campground toward the old highway,
now called Dorsett Road. A witness—
he didn’t share who—had seen Abby
take a right on her bicycle down this
road, and that was the last anyone saw of
her. He shook his head like there was
nothing that could be done. She’d done it
to herself.
Besides, I could sense him thinking,
what was she? She was only a 17-year-
old girl. And 17-year-old girls vanish
all the time.
Soon after this the officer closed the
gate, made sure we got in our separate
vehicles, and then took off. He drove an
unmarked car without any lights on top,
and I wondered if he’d been off-duty
when he noticed our cars parked here.
But as soon as his taillights were
swallowed by the night, Jamie got out of
his car and strode over to my van.
“
What
was that?” he said, taking a
seat on the passenger side. My engine
was idling to get the heat running, and he
cupped his hands to the vent.
And here was another opportunity for
me to tell him. Here—in the quiet night,
minutes after I wore Abby’s body, or she
wore mine, when the two of us together
rolled in a bed of pine needles, in the
arms of the boy she said she loved. Now
that Jamie knew she existed, I could
have told him how connected I felt to
her, this stranger who wasn’t a stranger
to me.
I could have. But all I said was, “I
saw her Missing poster. I looked up this
place. I was . . . curious.”
(I did
not
tell him I had the Missing
poster, folded as many times as a piece
of paper could be folded, in my
backpack, near his feet. I felt Abby in the
trees, and I felt Abby in the air. I felt the
exhale of her breath through the heating
vents, and I felt the inhale in my head.
She didn’t want me to show Jamie, and
what she wanted felt far more important
than what I wanted.)
“So you don’t know her,” Jamie said.