Authors: Debra Chapoton
Jessica
Wednesday morning
I count the kids that slow to look at my pathetic tomb on their way to school. Even in the dark morning I can see their faces. Michael drives by, but doesn’t even glance over.
My shivering has stopped. Crisis averted I guess. I check my gown for blood. It’s fine.
I might as well walk to the hospital. My school is on the way; maybe I’ll drop in. A beat up Chevy pulls over and the driver, Amy Harper, throws a baseball sized pumpkin into the mix of flowers and junk. It rolls to my feet. Really? A pumpkin? This awful roadside accident site is slowly morphing into a Halloween scene.
I look at the car again and see Amy’s other self seated next to her. Without a thought I mesh through the door into the back seat and ride to school with her.
Amy’s grungy style looks less severe. The masking makeup that hides her cuteness isn’t quite so thick. The spirit side of her holds more interest for me though.
That
Amy seems even more forlorn. The pretty girl I’d talked to before, so despondent then, seems even more wretched now. And thinner. Not thinner like skinny—thinner like transparent.
Her spirit self looks back at me once then ignores my questions. She either refuses to hear me, or is too weak to answer. So I stop with the questions and all the way to school I pour out a hundred things, conclusions I had come to during my lonely night. Encouragements, cheer, optimism. If Rashanda were here she would say I was in good spirits and then we would both laugh at the pun.
Amy parks and drags her spirit self behind her into the school. I wonder if I should follow and help her through her day. Strange that I have all this compassion for someone I hardly know. Maybe I’m not such a bad person.
I follow her through the double doors and stop cold when I see Hannah at Michael’s locker. She has her arms draped around his neck and they’re whispering to each other. I forget about Amy and walk closer to them. I glare at Michael. After my night of deep contemplation I see him more clearly than ever. I do not like who I see. I could have stood between them and been right there for the kiss she planted on him, but no—yuck. It surprises me that I do not want to have anything to do with either of them.
They mangle themselves together closer. Disgusting. I turn and spy my best friend coming in with Tyler.
Tyler. Wow, I see him more clearly, too.
There’s an aura around him. Kind of shaped like him, too, but not separate or as vivid as Amy’s spirit self.
Tyler nudges Rashanda and stares at Michael and Hannah. Tyler’s aura darkens, tightens somehow, and I tremble as they pass.
* * *
The library appears deserted but from my nebulous vantage point I find three people. I choose to follow Amy again. Something about her draws me despite my curiosity about Rashanda and Tyler’s huddled conversation. I have all the time in the world. Now that I’m free of Hannah I can mind-meld with Rashanda later. In fact, she might be glad for my company in first hour. If I can’t physically sit next to her, at least I can sit with her ‘in spirit’.
Amy pulls a thick book from the stack and thumbs to the index. She runs her fingers down the page and stops on
depression
. I wonder why she doesn’t simply do a search on a computer. A prickle of fear stabs me in the heart. I know why. Amy is using the slow and archaic method of research so as not to leave a trace of her actions. She turns several more pages and lands in the S’s: suicide.
“Amy! Amy!” Her spirit self ignores me and naturally the real Amy can’t hear me either. “What are you planning? Is this for a paper or something? You’re not really that depressed, are you?” I guess my encouragement in the car had fallen on deaf ears. I swat at her vapory image. I figure I have two or three options.
I can do nothing.
Or I can try to alert my friends.
Or I can press my forehead to hers. The possibility of being trapped inside a suicidal teenager is no more frightening than my present condition. I’m going to die anyway.
No. I clap my hands to my head. No, again. Clinging to life, no matter how tenuous the thread, is preferable to giving up.
My best option is to get Rashanda and Tyler to help her.
I’m at their study carrel in an instant and catch the tail end of an odd conversation.
Tyler speaks with intensity, “. . . if we can get Hannah to let go of her it’ll be easier for her to return to her body.”
“He thinks Hannah is holding her? I don’t believe it. Jessica wants to stay. If anything, she’s the one who won’t let go.”
Who
thought Hannah was holding me? Were they talking about Michael?
“Here I am, guys.” I jump up and down in front of them, wave my arms, do a little barefoot dance. Tyler gets real quiet and Rashanda looks around the library. “Look. Right here. Here I am.”
But they ignore me.
Rashanda looks at Tyler again and says, “So, about Michael’s car. Do you want me to tell Jessica to ask him for the keys?”
He shakes his head. “I saw the keys on his locker shelf. It’d be better if she just took them.” Rashanda doesn’t say anything for a moment and then Tyler continues, “It shouldn’t be a big deal for her. I’ve seen her drive her boyfriend’s car before. Like to away games. Do you think we can convince one of them to do it?”
Convince one of us to do what? I want to scream. I press my head up to Rashanda’s nose; a strand of hair tickles us both. She brushes it and me away. I try Tyler then. His aura is looser and I wave my hand through the colors before bumping my forehead on his.
But I can’t force myself in. Not with my mother’s voice in my ear. And then my father’s. They both plead with me to wake up.
No, not yet.
But I wiggle my thumb.
Tyler
Wednesday morning
Every hair on my neck stood up. I looked back at Rashanda. She was tapping her eraser on the corner of her worksheet. This was the third time today that I sensed Jessica was near, first at Michael’s locker, then in the library, and now in first hour. I thought that maybe Hannah was passing by our classroom.
English class was only interesting because of the student teacher’s enthusiasm, but she’d only taught for half the period. The worksheet she passed out was review work and I had been as bored as Rashanda until I had that odd perception of Jessica. I scanned the room, closed my eyes, and waited.
Come on, Jessica.
If she popped into my head I could run all the way to the hospital with her. I put my head down on my forearm and hoped Ms. Gardner wouldn’t look up from the papers she was checking.
I let my mind wander and tried not to concentrate on the specific things that entered my thoughts. Fragments of conversations ambushed my mind.
Dr. Winston: “I felt her in the room when she had the splenectomy.”
Hannah: “Do you like my dress, Tyler?”
Rashanda: “They’re kidnapping her.”
Michael: “What are you looking at, quitter?”
My own voice: “So you must have some bits of Michael in your head.”
Then images formed. I saw the accident site with the flowers strewn around. Hannah’s family room with all the clutter. The hospital waiting room with the line of chairs against the wall. Jessica’s breathing machine with all the tubes and wires. The cute nurse. Mr. and Mrs. Mitchell hiding their concern as they spoke in whispers. Keith’s mom and her pastor walking away from Keith’s hospital room. Michael’s angry face as I left Hannah’s lunch table.
I got the prickly hair feeling again.
Come on, Jessica. Be in my dreams.
A wave of smells rushed my senses all at once. Disinfectant and flowers and blood and perfume.
The bell rang and I jerked awake. Nothing. No Jessica. The room was emptying out. I folded the worksheet and stuck it in my pocket. Ms. Gardner stared at me with her brow puckered. Oh, great. She caught me sleeping. I let the kids behind me jostle their way past my desk before I rose. Rashanda was a row over and walking slowly up the aisle.
“See ya, Tyler,” she said. I nodded and headed for Ms. Gardner.
“I’m really sorry about that,” I told Ms. Gardner. “I’m not one of those losers who sleep in class all the time. It’s just that, um—”
“It’s all right, Tyler.” She stood up and pointed at the edge of the worksheet that was sticking out of my pocket. She forced a laugh then frowned and said, “I know your family is going through a rough patch. You’re probably not getting enough rest. I’ve heard of sleepwalking, but that was the first time I ever witnessed sleep writing. I’m curious . . . can I see your paper?” She held her hand out.
I might have finished three quarters of the answers before I put my head down. I had no idea what she was talking about. I sure wasn’t sleepwalking around the classroom. I knew my skin was coloring as I pulled the paper out and handed it over. Ms. Gardner unfolded it. I glanced toward the door as the last two kids left snickering at me. I was even more embarrassed.
“Okay,” she said. “Good job. I guess I was wrong. Oh, and I’d change your answer to number twenty four. Think about it, Tyler.”
I took the paper back totally uncertain about what my mistake had been. I scrutinized my answers as I walked out into the hallway.
Number 24: In The Scarlet Letter the experience of Hester and Dimmesdale recalls the story of Adam and Eve because, in both cases, sin results in ___________ and ____________.
Instead of writing
expulsion
and
suffering
in the blanks, which I knew were the answers she wanted, I’d written in small hard letters
depression
and
suicide.
Holy crap! I moved like lightning to the stairs and called after Rashanda, but with the crowds of kids filling the stairwell she’d have to be super human to switch directions, let alone hear me. My second hour class was on this floor so I decided not to try to follow her. We were going to meet up before third hour at her locker anyway. She swore that Jessica would be there
if
she was in control.
Depression and suicide. What in the world was Jessica thinking?
Michael
Wednesday morning
Tuxedoes were not cheap. I called that Emma chick after I dropped Hannah off. Thought that maybe we could hook up for Homecoming. No dice. She had a date already. I’ll bet that dude will be one lucky sucker after the dance. So, since I couldn’t get my money back on the tickets or tux I didn’t have a problem with giving in to Hannah’s worshipful adoration as soon as we saw each other at school this morning.
Hannah was stranger than a cat. Hormones, I guess. She had her eye on that Homecoming queen crown and who was I to leave her dateless? Being king would be next to impossible though. Something had to give. I didn’t know how I’d play in the game, direct the band, ride in the float . . . I needed to split into two or three people.
Woke up today without a headache. Paid attention in first hour. Walked Hannah to second hour. Flirted with a blonde from drama class between third and fourth—Kayla something. Headed for the lunch line and looked over to our table. No Hannah.
Then I saw her talking to that a-hole, Tyler. What the—? And Rashanda was standing there, too. Hannah wouldn’t be trying to get their votes because they were only juniors.
All I could think as I walked across the cafeteria was
what is Hannah planning now?
It was weird enough when the four of us were in that hospital room. Theatrical. Bizarre. Uncomfortable.
“Hey,” I said. I startled all of them.
Hannah grabbed my arm. “Be cool,” she said. She put more pressure into her grip. “Listen. You have to drive us to the hospital. Please.” She looked frightened and agitated beyond her normal high maintenance self. “It’s important. Life or death important.”
Right. I started shaking my head, searching her eyes for some clue. Was this another prank? An on-the-fly thrill plan? I looked back at our table to see our friends taking their seats, totally unaware of this new development. Or, maybe it was an effort to gain the sympathy vote.
“Whose life, whose death?” I asked, feeling her grip loosen.
“It’s kind of hard to explain,” Hannah said.
“Jessica’s.” Tyler clipped his answer. I mimicked how he clenched his jaw. It hurt my teeth. “And this could affect Hannah, too, maybe permanently.”
Rashanda seemed to puff herself up and said, “It’s a really long story, and you’re probably not going to believe us, but your girlfriend has been, uh, responsible for Jessica’s condition. And we need her to go to the hospital to help Jessica wake up from the coma and not be a vegetable.”
I looked at each of them, trying to read their body language.
Tyler looked like he was going to start a fight with me. “Look, we need to hurry. Are you going to help or not? We need your car.”
“The keys are in my locker,” I said. I still hadn’t decided if I was going to skip out with them.
“No, they’re not.” Hannah jangled my set of keys at me. I could not figure out what the deal was. It looked like she was planning on leaving with these two regardless. Now I was angry and significantly curious.
I grabbed the keys and said, “Okay, then. Let’s go. But you’re explaining everything on the way.”
* * *
It was a wonder that I could keep the car on the road. They took turns blurting out impossible statements about the ghost of Jessica inhabiting each of us at different times. The story was completely convoluted and ridiculous, but each of them added some things that were too precise to disregard. I couldn’t ignore certain facts. Like Tyler knew things about me that I’d never told anyone. Like Rashanda could describe that time she was a victim . . . but from my point of view. Not possible.
Hannah insisted that she’d turned into Jessica when we walked out of the hospital. I remembered how weird she had acted then. But . . . not feasible. Out of the question that Jessica’s spirit was floating around invading people’s consciousness. And yet . . . I remembered thinking how flashes of scenes from Jessica’s life were stuck in my head like memories.
Then Tyler recited some stuff a doctor had told him. Some doctor we were going to meet at noon. I kept checking the rear view mirror to see the expressions on his face. I wondered if he could change colors on purpose. I drove slower than usual just to watch his anxiety rise.
“Can you step on it, Michael?” Hannah’s impatience was obvious. “She might still be inside me. Tyler says he can sense her when he’s around me. I thought she left when we pulled out of Stony last night.”
“But maybe not.” Rashanda was breathless. “Maybe she got weaker. Anyway, she was strong enough this morning to make you come to my locker between classes.”
“I told you, that was my idea. I felt I should tell you that she was gone. I almost called you last night to tell you that.”
“But you didn’t. She’s still in you. We could always throw you in the pool to find out for sure.” Rashanda had been leaning forward, out of my view, and finished her threat by sitting back hard. I wondered how much time Hannah and Rashanda had spent together the last few days. The pool thing was news to me. Hannah would only go in the lake up to her waist last summer.
“There’s something else,” Tyler said. Hannah looked back at him, but I couldn’t. I had to watch for traffic to make a left onto the boulevard. “Something more recent. Crap. I don’t know how to explain it, but Jessica made me write some words this morning. Depression. And suicide.”
“You didn’t tell me that.” Rashanda sounded angry. It clashed with the flowery scent she gave off.
I made the turn. We were only a block from the hospital.
“I didn’t get the chance. Hannah came up to your locker at the same time and, you know, we started in on her about stealing the keys.”
“Wait a minute,” Hannah said. “So is she inside me or floating around the school? And whose suicide? Do you mean that Jessica might try to kill herself if she’s in me? She’d kill
me
?”
“Never,” Rashanda’s voice hit two high notes. “She would
never
do that.”
Maybe she would. I remembered that stupid drama class scene from last week. Jessica was pretty convincing about stabbing Kayla in the heart. And Kayla looked a lot like Hannah, come to think of it. I made the turn into the parking lot and thought about how little I cared about what might happen to Hannah or Jessica. I was purely interested in watching everyone else’s responses. There was a feast of emotions here and I could learn a lot. I laughed to myself as I remembered one more thing—the balloons on the floor comment that Hannah had made at her locker Monday morning. Funny how such a little thing could convince you of such a big thing.