Authors: M. Beth Bloom
Tags: #Juvenile Fiction, #Paranormal, #Love & Romance, #Social Issues, #Adolescence
FOR D.B.
1.
Sheets
2.
Ice Cube
3.
Headdress
4.
Sleepover
5.
Sunday
6.
Stuff
7.
Invitation
8.
Reveal
9.
Games
10.
History
11.
Living
12.
Burr
13.
Confetti
14.
Quake
15.
Aftershock
16.
Success
17.
Kitten
18.
Gang
19.
Burn
The canyons were
hot at night, even with the desert winds whipping through the hills. Everything was dry. Branches were matchsticks waiting to be lit; the leaves just brushfires that hadn’t happened yet. I wished the rocks were ice cubes in a glass. Everything looked thirsty.
Through the main store window I watched a man slink sheepishly out of his car toward our video slot to return his probably overdue rental.
Sitting on the countertop with my legs dangling, I peered down into the drawer where the drop box emptied. Soft-core.
Sigh.
I had zero work to do, but I wasn’t going to file it. I’d leave it there in the box to grow legs and walk itself back to the rack.
Out on the floor a woman my mother’s age was staring
at the Action shelf, puzzled. She’d been in here at least an hour, maybe more. Morgan sat next to me, silently reading the
Weekly
. The overhead TV was playing a bad eighties movie with James Spader that I didn’t remember picking, though I knew tonight was Wednesday, lady’s choice. I looked from Spader to Morgan to our only customer to my hands. My pinkie was getting its last coat.
“Your fingernails look pretty…stupid,” Morgan said suddenly, without moving his eyes from the paper.
I held out a hand and stared at it, tilting my head. I’d painted each nail a different color—Electric Blue, Flamingo, Vixen, Shamrock—and was seeing them now as I’d never meant them to be: sort of raver-ish. I rested them on my dirty Doc Martens to dry, noticing then that my laces were all wrong, a hole had been skipped, and the crossing pattern was a mess. I looked down at my ripped tights and baggy work shirt with the crooked Video Journeys stencil, and straightened my dad’s suit vest, covered in the daily flair of band buttons and rhinestone pins. I wasn’t wearing any pants, or shorts, or a skirt, just a shirt long enough to keep me decent. Underwear as outerwear, whatever. My hair was in knots, and I fingered the few strands I’d braided a week ago and considered the insult. It was accurate but hardly biting.
“Stupid,” I said, my eyes flashing across my rainbow
fingernails again, “compared to what?”
It was the first week of summer vacation, and I felt compelled to be a cool slob. It was effortless, really.
“Good point,” Morgan said without looking up.
The chemical stench of a counter full of Wet N Wild nail polish was starting to get to me. The heat plus the fumes plus the drone of the TV were making me feel so dazed that waving my rainbow nails back and forth in front of my eyes left color trails. I took some deep breaths, then put my elbows on the counter, held my head in my hands, and waited for more nothing to happen. Morgan started reading me a review of some new Drew Barrymore thing while I played with the nail polish bottles, stacking them, rolling them, switching their tops. When Morgan finished the review, I thought he’d turn the page and read something else, but he just closed the
Weekly
and zoned out. I peeked through my bangs to watch him watching the Spader movie. I tried to gauge his mood.
Then I said, “Hey, go help that lady. She’s been here for-ev-er.” I dragged the word across its three full, excruciating syllables. “I think she’s lost. Or something.”
He looked away from the screen but not at the paper and not at her and not at me. No one else was in the store.
“My nails are wet,” I said. I blew on my fingertips and could see the paint was already smudged on every nail
but the thumbs. I touched the thumbs and smudged them too, then started to seriously pick at them, chipping the polish, screwing everything up.
“Morgan,” I said.
Then the action woman sighed and left without renting anything. We were alone again.
It was ten to eleven, almost closing time, and we’d rented maybe fifteen movies all night. I got up and walked aimlessly around the store, reading cop movie taglines, idly dusting shelves, rifling through the customer suggestion box.
Yr imployees are way rude
, read one. I read it out loud for Morgan. He let out a small, amused sound, but it wasn’t a laugh. We didn’t share jokes as much these days. I hated when he acted moody, but I still couldn’t give Morgan everything he wanted, because there was just no way.
I used the pencil dangling from a string above the box to cross out and retouch a few letters.
Yr imployees are way rad.
Total improvement.
I glanced over at the counter where Morgan was still staring up into the TV screen with a tired but frustrated look in his eyes. I knew that look better than I wanted to—and I knew better to ignore it. Which was no biggie at school. There we were friends. Not
friends
-friends, not study buddies or lunch dates, just generic friends. But at work he was my
only
friend, and that disparity was
what led us into so many poorly written romantic sitcom subplots.
In the past year this shared boredom and solitude and isolation had sometimes prompted me to hang on Morgan even though I had no real reason to; in most ways he barely stood out to me. I realized it was almost strange how common and unspecific I found him: blond, semi-handsome, typically Californian. It was easy to imagine Morgan on the beach, but he wasn’t a beachy guy. He was serious, took himself seriously, and had once projected that onto me, unsuccessfully. So now he mainly treated me like some cute, messy pet who drank too much soda too late at night, forgot to brush her hair in the shower, and lost her keys in the laundry. When she did laundry.
Closing time was always the worst, when we’d start to shut the store down and turn off all the lights. Morgan would stand close and watch me count the money, his eyes fixed on my lips as they mouthed the amounts. But nothing ever happened, and so things were fine, better than fine even, and that was it. People talked about us like we were a secret couple, trysting around the video store after hours, and Morgan never denied the rumors, so I pretended to ignore them. I guess it made me seem unavailable, which I liked, or cool and experienced, which would help later when I was interested in
seeming available again. I was at various times in our non-courtship flattered, worried, irritated, bored.
And right now I was bored. I waved my hand in front of his eyes to break his stare. “James Spader is a total jerk.”
“Quinlan”—and it
was
kind of sexy when he called me by my full name—“do you need some attention?”
“No.” I put my hands on my hips. I rolled my eyes. “Maybe.”
Morgan huffed a short exhale through his nostrils.
“Who’s cooler, Drew or me?” It was shameless and random, but I couldn’t help it. We were alone, and the humpday hump was starting to feel like a mountain. I reconsidered; maybe he was
my
pet.
I tried to take it back and started to say, “Drew’s a babe,” but then instead, “Who cares?”
But this time he looked at me—not out into the store—and got a little too sincere. “You’re, like, the coolest. You know that.”
Damn. I sucked. The summer stretched out ahead of me, long and winding, and I already barely had enough deflective responses for Morgan to carry me until September. Then I’d have none left for senior year.
“Spader’s the coolest, man,” I said, trying to be normal. I picked up the remote and clicked off the movie. We stared at the blank screen, waiting for eleven to come and rescue us from each other.
Twenty minutes later the register was securely in the safe, the outer gates were locked, and Morgan was helping me into my holey flannel.
“Kurt’s dead, dude. Surrender the fantasy,” he said.
“Never fade away. Never fade away…” I reeled back and fell to the carpet, pretending to be badly wounded. I faked my own death, Morgan laughed.
But as I laughed with him, his expression changed. He grabbed me by the shoulder, lifted me up. “Oh my God, you gotta see this,” he said, spinning me around to look out the big front window.
Naomi Sheets was crying, hysterical, out in the darkness by the side of the road.
“What is she doing?”
I squinted my eyes to see. I had no idea.
“What a freak,” he said.
It wasn’t the word I’d have chosen, but it wasn’t far off. She looked crazy.
Naomi Sheets had never been my friend. I would almost say she’d never been anyone’s friend, but that seemed too dismissive and cruel. She was rich, blandly rich, in a way that kept her safely distant and constantly busy. Naomi took horseback-riding lessons, ballet, acting classes, yoga. She crocheted, spoke three languages, played the drums, and enjoyed all her successes alone. I’d
known her since our freshman year, when she transferred in from some posh Valley private school, where she was no doubt admired for her impressively golden all-over tan and eclectic skill set. That’s how I thought of her and how I treated her, too: with a strange mix of reverence and confusion. Naomi was special, clearly, but she wasn’t interested in being accessible. I wondered occasionally if she had hip college friends somewhere who laughed with her at the dull, forgettable high schoolers she wasted her days around.
But I knew she didn’t. Naomi Sheets didn’t have anyone; it was plain on her face. At school, strolling mutely through the hallways by herself, she acted like a damaged foreign exchange student, permanently lost. Some kids called her Cotton Sheets, but the nickname never fit. She was pretty and wore baby-doll dresses, Mary Jane shoes, and barrettes in her hair in a not-unstylish way. And she had these cool crooked teeth—some pointed almost like fangs and some so small they didn’t touch the others—kind of like Patricia Arquette in that one movie. I imagined in an alternate universe Cotton Sheets could’ve been the most popular girl in school: rich, talented, skinny. But in this universe she was just a weirdo with too many teeth, too much money, too many hobbies, and too few friends. I almost liked her but hardly had a motive to. And watching her now, crying
bizarrely in the shadows, I felt myself wishing we’d been friends all along.
Morgan looked at me. “What should we do?”
Suddenly it annoyed me that Naomi couldn’t just pretend to hold it together so we didn’t have any extra reason to gossip about her. Being a loner was one thing, but pulling a total schizo, talking-to-yourself meltdown in public was another.
“I don’t know,” I said. “But I’m going to go deal with it.”
“Quinn, she’s like possessed.”
“Whatever,” I said. “I’m going.”
“She might get spooky on you,” he said, jabbing my sides and making ghost sounds in my ear. I didn’t want to laugh but did anyway, because the jabs were tickling me. Then I grabbed his wrists to stop him, and he stared into my eyes, moved one hand down to my chest, and buttoned the second button on my flannel.
“Will you let me drive you home tonight?”
“Morgan,” I said, and didn’t sigh.
“What?”
“Nothing.” I removed his hand, unbuttoned the button, and walked toward the door.
“Fine,” he said, following me.
We locked the gates, and Morgan got in his Dodge Shadow and pulled out of the Video Journeys parking lot
without saying good-bye. I looked across the road and Naomi was still there, sitting on a rock, motionless.
I approached her cautiously, wondering what to say and coming up with nothing. She was facing away from the store, one hand over her face and the other by her side, balled into a fist.
“Hey, Naomi,” I said, and it came out like I wanted it to—as casual as possible. “Are you, like, having a thing?”
She acted startled but stayed still. She didn’t say anything for a full minute, just sat there, while I just stood there and waited for an answer. When Naomi finally said, “It’s you,” she didn’t sound angry. “What are you doing here?”
“I work here.”
“Did you see anything?”
“I saw you crying.”
I don’t know why, but I reached out and touched the tips of her hair. Then, I don’t know why, she stood and turned and threw herself on me. But we weren’t hugging, I was holding her up. If she was relieved, if she’d softened, I couldn’t tell. So I just kept saying, “Hey, hey,” quietly and quieter.
After a minute Naomi stepped back, and what I noticed first was that in the darkness her face didn’t look sun-kissed at all, but intensely bleach-white, stern and
striking, like a girl in a period piece. What I noticed second was the blood on her hands.
But there was also an eyelash on her cheek, so I focused on that instead.
“I’m okay,” Naomi said.
“I know,” I said back. “You’ve got an eyelash on your cheek.”
“Where? Where?” she said frantically, and started wiping at her face.
I said, “You’re supposed to make a wish, dude,” but before I could finish she’d brushed the lash off and left a smear of blood beneath her right eye.
“Did I get it?”
“Yeah, but now you’ve got a little…,” I said, gesturing under my own eye.
“What?”
“Blood. I think.”
Her face froze, went blank. “You better go.”
“Did you fall or something?”
“I said get out of here,” she said coldly. And then, emptier, “Stay away from me.”
It was obvious now: Naomi Sheets didn’t want friends. She didn’t have any and she didn’t want to make any.
I stepped back, freaked, regretting everything. I said, “Okay, it’s cool, I’m leaving,” realizing I should’ve left her
alone in the first place. By now I would’ve been uncomfortably trapped in Morgan’s passenger seat, his hand on the headrest, sneaking his fingers into my hair. Definitely preferable to this weirdness.
But Naomi was already losing it, scanning the darkness, panicked. Then she yelled out, beyond me, “Are you still here, James? Are you watching this?”
I wanted to beat it, badly, but couldn’t help myself. “Who’s James?”
Naomi nodded her head to indicate someone behind me. “My brother.”
“I didn’t know you had a brother,” I said, turning around. And there he was, across the street, leaning against the wall of the video store. I thought about raising a hand to wave but didn’t.
“Clean yourself up,” he said to Naomi, more forcefully than I was expecting. He stepped away from the wall and took a few steps toward us, stopping in the middle of the street. Then he tilted his head in my direction, and even though it was just his profile, backlit and in shadow, I could tell he was staring at me, like we knew each other. I didn’t recognize him. But I wanted to.