I knew what this meant. This meant we were going to have one of those “friend” conversations. She'd had them with other people, not just me, and she did it on this side of the desk. I'd figured that out from listening in on stuff that was pretty much none of my business, but what the hey, I was bored a lot when I'd stayed at Pax.
Hannah would lean forward in the chair and start with, “I'm your friend.” Then she'd tell you how you could fix your life in three easy steps.
I sat down, but on the edge of the seat because I wasn't going to be there very long.
“You haven't been around,” she said. “How are you?”
It must have been a really crazy day, because she didn't have any lip gloss on and there was a tiny bit of somethingâmaybe broccoliâstuck between her bottom front teeth. “I'm good,” I said.
“I was surprised to see you last night.”
I shrugged. Where did she expect to see me? Pushing a cart in the Superstore?
“I'm worried about you.”
“You don't need to worry. I'm okay.”
She leaned her elbows on her knees and laced her fingers together, kind of like she was going to pray for me. “C'mon, Maddie,” she said. “We're friends, aren't we?”
Not exactly “I'm your friend,” but close enough. I shoved my hands in the front pocket of my hoodie. “Not really,” I said.
For a second her mouth moved without any sound coming out. Then she said, “Why would you say that?”
“Because it's true.” I looked around her office. “Hannah, you were really nice to me when I was here, but that doesn't make us friends. You run Pax House, and I stayed here because I had nowhere else to go.”
Silence. I waited to see if Hannah would say something, because I'd already said what I had to say.
She exhaled softly. “I care about you, Maddie,” she said at last. “If you came back here, we could work things out, you could go to school, you could makeâ”
Work things out
meant go home to my mother and Evan. I'd told Hannah I couldn't do that, but she just didn't want to believe me.
“Stop!” I stood up, both hands in the air over my head. “I get that you think I should go home, go back to school. What you don't get is it's my choice and my life.”
“So you're going to live on the street forever?”
“No!”
“Then what are you going to do?” Her face was flushed.
How was I supposed to answer that? Tell her about Q's plan to win big at poker? This wasn't getting us anywhere. I knew getting mad just made things worse. When I dug in, so did Hannah, but she was the adult here. Wasn't she supposed to be reasonable? Wasn't she supposed to listen? “I have friends,” I said.
“Friends who are eating out of the garbage.”
“It's not garbage,” I snapped. “You don't know what you're talking about.”
She got up and stepped in front of me with her hands on her hips. “I know what happens to people out here, Maddie,” she said, her voice sharp with anger. “People start using, or they slide down into a bottle, and then they end up doing things they never would have done otherwise. I don't want to see that happen to you.”
“It's not going to happen to me.”
Hannah shook her head. “Everybody says that, Maddie. You think most of the people that come through here weren't like you once?”
“Stop doing this!” I shouted, holding up one hand. “Stop trying to scare me! And stop trying to make me into you!”
I ran out of the office, cut through the kitchen and pushed through the heavy metal door to the outside. I stood there breathing hard, rubbing the back of my head with one hand.
Jayson was watching me. “You okay?” he asked.
I nodded.
“Hannah's a good person,” he said.
Great, not him too. Why couldn't the do-gooders go work on someone else's life? I gave a halfhearted nod because I didn't want to get into it with Jayson.
“You doin' okay, Maddie?” he asked. “Really?” I could see concern in his chocolate-brown eyes. “You got somewhere to sleep that's safe?”
I gave him a small smile. “Yeah, I do. Honest.”
“Good.” He smiled back. Then he fished in his pocket and pulled out a folded sheet of paper. He held it out to me. “Do me a favor?” he said. “Keep an eye out for this kid. Runaway. Parents are going crazy.”
I unfolded the page to look at the picture. The blood drained from my face, and for a second the world swirled around me. My breath stuck in my chest.
It was Leo.
I would have given it away; Jayson would have known right away from the look on my face except that somehow, just at that exact second, some smart-ass guys came down the sidewalk talking loudly, pushing each other, showing off. He turned his attention to them, folding his arms and somehow looking even bigger than usual. By the time the guys had gone by and Jayson looked at me again, I'd remembered how to breathe.
I folded the paper into a small square and stuffed it in my back pocket. Then I looked at him with what I hoped was a normal expression on my face. “What did he run away from?” I asked.
Jayson shook his head. “Nothing, far as I know. Swear to God, the parents are frantic. How often does that happen around here?” He glanced up the street where the boys had gone back to shoving each other and talking trash.
“Nobody runs away without a reason,” I said.
“Doesn't mean it was a good reason.” He stretched one arm behind his head and then the other. “You didn't see these people. Mother looks like she's about to cry all the time. Father's going on about two hours of sleep. They're nice people, Maddie.”
I thought about Leo insisting he could never go home. I thought about the way he cringed whenever anyone other than Dylan got close to him. Nice people? I wasn't so sure.
“I gotta go,” I said to Jayson.
“Stay safe,” he said.
I nodded. “Yeah, you too.”
I could feel the folded piece of paper in my pocket. It seemed to get heavier with each step I took. When I got home, I stopped on the sidewalk and pulled it out. Leo looked serious in the picture, but it was him, with longer and what looked to be darker hair. His parents were offering a reward. A big one. That had to mean they cared about him, didn't it? Then I thought about Leo telling me he was bad. If they cared about him, if they loved him so much, why did he think that about himself?
I folded the paper as small as I could and put it back in my pocket. Then I went upstairs.
I didn't tell Q about Leo's family looking for him. I don't know why, I just didn't. But I kept the piece of paper. I told him about seeing Hannah when I'd been scavenging and how I'd gone to talk to her because I didn't want her asking around about me.
We'd never talked much about our lives before. Q knew I'd stayed at Pax House, and he knew I'd left home because of Evan. I knew even less about him, and it didn't matter anyway.
Getting through the day was a lot easier with Leo around. We needed more food, and I was always afraid Q was going to come home and say John Goddard thought we were using too much water, but having Leo just to help with Dylan was worth it.
And he was smart. He seemed to remember everything he read. We'd carry home stacks of books from the library and, more than once, I woke up in the middle of the night to find Leo, wrapped in a blanket, reading on the bathroom floor.
Sometimes he didn't want to sleep. He had nightmares a lot worse than Dylan's. He'd move in his sleep like he was running from something, and at the same time he'd try to curl into a tiny ball. He made sounds like an animal caught in a trapâpained moans that made the hair on the back of my neck stand up.
I'd crawl over and sit beside him in the dark until he jerked awake, wet with sweat. Then I'd hold his hand until he stopped shaking, and lots of times we'd fall asleep like that. I learned pretty fast not to try to put my arms around him or touch him before he was awake. That made him freak.
Like Q, Leo was watching all the time, but when we were all together and he was playing with Dylan, he almost seemed like a normal kid. Or at least as normal as our family was ever going to get.
“Leo should go to school,” I said to Q. We were sitting on the floor by the window. He was working with the cards and a different poker book. Dylan and Leo were building some kind of house for Fred.
“You know we can't do that,” Q said, setting down the hand of cards he'd just dealt himself. “Schools ask a lot of questions.”
“Couldn't weâ¦fake it?” I asked.
He didn't say a thing. He just looked at me like my brain had fallen out and rolled across the floor.
I slumped back against a box. “Okay, so we can't fake it,” I said. “There has to be a way. He's smart, Q.”
Q reached over and tucked a stray piece of hair behind my ear. “So are you. You teach him.”
I rolled my eyes. “Yeah, there's a good idea.”
“I'm serious,” he said. “People teach their own kids all the time. You can do it. Give me a list of what you need and I'll get it for you.”
“How exactly are you going to do that?” I asked.
“Goddard,” he said. “You really want to know any more than that?”
I pressed both hands to my face. “No,” I muttered through my fingers.
I made a list for Qânotebooks, pencils, a math textbook, a calculator, a math set, plus crayons and colored paper for Dylanâand a couple of days later, he came home with it all in a paper shopping bag. The next Saturday he got up early.
“I have to work today,” was all he said. He came back dirtier than I'd ever seen him. That was how it always was with Goddard. He always got the best of any deal.
Q played poker pretty much whenever he got the chance. As far as I could tell, he was winning more than he was losing, but I couldn't be sure. The bags of change seemed to come pretty regularlyâthirty dollars, sometimes forty. Mostly he played with the guys he worked with, but sometimes he went out for what he called higher-stakes games.
I always pretended to be asleep when he came in, but I could tell by the way he moved if it had been a good night or not. If it was, he was cocky, even as he was creeping around the room. If it wasn't, he kind of crawled in and rolled up in his blanket away from me.
He read the poker book over and over, dealing cards and mumbling to himself. “What are you doing?” I asked him one night while I sorted through our food stash trying to figure out what we were going to have for breakfast.
“I'm trying to learn how to figure the odds so I know when to bet,” he said.
“Don't you just bet when you have the best cards?” I asked as I shook a box of Oatios, trying to figure out how much was left inside.
He set the open book on the floor and stretched his legs out across the painted wood. “I wish it was that simple.” His hair was smushed flat on one side from where he'd been leaning his head on his hand as he read.
“I think I'd rather collect bottles,” I said. I stepped over him and scooped up Dylan. “Bath time,” I whispered against his neck, scrambling my fingers up the back of his head to make him laugh.
When I came out of the bathroom, Q was bent over the book again, cards spread out in front of him. He picked up his pencil and scribbled something on a piece of paper next to the cards on the floor. Leo had moved closer and was watching.
Q studied the paper and then looked at the cards again. He shook his head, set the pencil down and scratched his chin. “I'm missing something,” he said. “I wish I knew what the hell it is.”
Leo was looking at the paper, even though for him it was upside down. “Your outs are wrong,” he said softly, more like he was talking to himself.
Q looked surprised. “What do you mean, they're wrong?”
Leo pointed to the cards. “A flush is better than a straight, right?”
Q nodded. “A flush beats a straight, yeah.”
Leo pushed the piece of paper toward Q. “Your outs are wrong,” he said again.
“How do you figure that?” Q asked.
“Those two cards are yours?” Leo asked. There was an ace and a jack in front of Q.
“Yeah.”
“Those other three are theâ¦?”
“Flop,” Q said. He pushed the cards closer to Leo, a ten and a kingâboth heartsâand a five of spades.
Leo looked at Q. “So if the next card is a queen, you have a straight, and if it's an ace, you have two the same.”
Q tapped the deck with a finger. “Assuming no one is holding a queen, there are four to be had and three acesâsince I have one. Four and three make seven, so I have seven outs. Seven chances to make my hand and win.”
Leo shook his head. “No. Really all you have is five. If the queen or the ace is a heart, then there will be three hearts showing and there's a good chance someone else willâ”
“âbe able to make a flush, which would beat my straight,”
Q finished. He took a deep breath and blew it out. “How did you figure that out? I've been doing it wrong for weeks.”
Leo shrugged. “It's just math.”
Q picked up the poker book and started flipping through the pages. He stopped near the front and held out the book to Leo, pointing to the middle of the left-hand page. “Do you understand that?” he asked.
Leo leaned over and started reading. After a minute he looked up at Q. “It's pretty simple.”
Q turned to grin at me and then bent his head over the book with Leo. I could feel the energy coming off Q in waves, while in my stomach, something cold twisted itself into a knot.
The next night, Q started teaching Leo poker. Or maybe it was Leo teaching Q, I wasn't so sure. They were at it when I left with Lucy and were still spreading cards on the floor when I came back. At least Dylan was asleep, and judging by the mess in the bathroom, he'd had a bath.