The Secret to Lying (28 page)

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Authors: Todd Mitchell

BOOK: The Secret to Lying
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“Sure.” I stared at the yellow curtain surrounding Ellie’s bed. It made me think of the pod in the center of the core where I’d left the Thief, surrounded by Nomanchulators. My stomach knotted.

Chuck squeezed my shoulder and headed off. I listened to his footsteps recede.

“Can I come in?” I asked, breaking the silence.

“If you want to,” Ellie replied. Covers rustled as she moved about.

I parted the curtain and stepped through.

Ellie sat among several pillows with her legs crooked beneath a blanket. She had a hair band in her mouth and she struggled to put her straight blond hair back in a ponytail, only it was too short so it kept slipping free. She gave up finally, leaving half her hair pulled back while the other half brushed her cheek. “I’ve got bed-head,” she muttered.

“You look great,” I said, my voice wavering. Shadows underlined her eyes and her skin was sallow.

Ellie scoffed.

“You do,” I added, trying to cover up my shock at how different she seemed. “It’s good to see you.”

“Please. I can tell when you’re lying.”

I took a step back and considered leaving. Obviously, she didn’t want me there, but if I left now, I might hurt her feelings again. I didn’t want her to know how much it bothered me to see her like this.

“So, how’s it going?” I asked, attempting to play it cool.

Ellie didn’t respond.

I searched the room for something else to talk about. An IV hung next to her bed, but there were no beeping machines or ventilators. There were no flowers or balloons, either. I wondered if she’d had any visitors. Chuck probably thought I’d cheer her up. I should have told him that Ellie hated me.

“You want to hear something funny?” I asked.

Her eyes flicked over me but she still didn’t talk.

“In the emergency waiting room, we passed this guy with a two-by-four nailed to his foot.” I held up my hands to show how long the board was. “No kidding. He shot a nail straight through his foot, boot and all, and into a block of wood.”

“That’s not funny.”

“Guess you had to see it. He seemed pretty embar-rassed.”

Ellie fidgeted with the blanket, smoothing out the wrinkles over her legs. I stuck my hands in my pockets, hoping she’d say something to end the awkwardness, but she didn’t.

“Why are you here?” I finally asked.

“Isn’t it obvious?”

I looked at her sunken cheeks and thin arms. It
was
obvious, but that didn’t explain why. I shook my head.

“What are people saying about me at school?”

“Nothing,” I said, leaving off the fact that almost no one talked to me anymore.

“Oh.” She stared at the blanket. “Well, I passed out.”

“Why?”

“Low blood sugar, I suppose. The doctor said my electrolytes were so out of balance that I could have gone into cardiac arrest. That’s why they kept me this time.”

“You have heart problems?”

“Not exactly.” Her hands kept fidgeting with the blanket, twisting a loose thread around her finger. “It’s what happens when you only eat toast and lettuce for long enough. Your body starts to feed off itself. First the fat, then your muscles and joints. Then your brain can’t regulate things. Bones deteriorate. . . . Pretty, huh?”

I glanced around the room, unable to meet her gaze. An orange cafeteria tray sat on a rolling cart near the side of her bed. It had one of those metal covers on it — the sort butlers used in cartoons to keep food warm. The smell made me hungry. “At least the food here’s probably better than ASMA’s,” I joked.

“Of course,” Ellie said. “Everyone thinks it’s so simple. All I have to do is eat a cinnamon roll or a hot dog and I’ll be better, right?”

My face flushed. “It’s not like you need to diet.”

“Right. Because this is all about looking cute in a hospital gown.”

“So why do you starve yourself?”

“Why do you cut yourself?” she countered.

I hesitated, stung by her question. “Okay,” I admitted. “Maybe it’s not so simple.”

Ellie scooted over and moved her book —
The Bell Jar
by Sylvia Plath. “Here,” she said. “You can sit.”

I hoisted myself onto the bed, crossing my legs.

“Chuck says it’s about control,” she explained. “I can’t control my life, so I try to control myself by not eating. And the worse I feel, the more I have to starve myself to be good. Or pure. Or worthy.”

“Is that what you think?”

“Sometimes.” She twisted the loose hospital band on her arm. “The explanations don’t really matter, though. They don’t change anything. I’m still stuck in this cycle, wanting to be thin.”

“But you are thin.”

“I’m never thin enough,” she said. “That’s the problem.”

I thought of all the things she’d written to me — about how she was consumed by image, and how she wanted to be a zero, as if disappearing was the only way to be perfect. She’d kept telling me that she could never be herself in person, but I was too blinded by what I wanted her to be to see what she was talking about. Only now, when I looked at her intense eyes and slender neck, and how lost her tiny arms seemed in the wide sleeves of her hospital gown, it was like some spell had finally broken. Her image dissolved, and I saw her true self — the ghost that was fading away.

“I’m sorry,” I said.

“For what?”

“Sorry I said you were dead inside. I didn’t mean it.”

“Then why’d you say it?”

“Because I was afraid you’d see the truth about me.”

Ellie studied me.

There was no point lying anymore — I’d already lost everything. “I’m not who people think I am,” I said.

“Who is?”

“This is different. I lied to everyone about my past. The things I’ve done . . . Who I am . . . Everything about me is fake.”

She grew silent, lost in thought for a moment. Then she nudged my leg. “Thank you.”

“For being a massive jerk?”

“For being honest.”

“But I’m not honest. That’s what I’m telling you —I can’t be honest. I don’t even know what’s real anymore.” I picked at the hospital blanket, pulling off a fluff ball. “These last few weeks, I’ve been trying to act normal and fit in, only I can’t do it right. Everyone takes it for granted that they’re real, but I have to try to be real. And if you try to be real, what are you?”

“I know what you mean.”

“You do?”

“I’m like that all the time,” she said. “I’m constantly obsessing over how I should talk, or act, or eat — calculating the exact number of calories I need to cut to become this idea of who I’m supposed to be. I do it so often, I don’t think there’s anything real left underneath.” She shrugged. “There’s just this empty shell, pretending to be human.”

“That’s not true.” I wished she could see herself the way I saw her — not some cold, distant model, but the girl who’d IM’d me and kept me from being alone. “You are the most sincere, passionate, real person I’ve ever met.”

“I don’t think that person exists anymore.”

“She does,” I said. “I’m talking to her.”

Ellie grew silent, staring at her hands. I blew on the blanket fluff I’d pulled off and the tiny ball swirled into the air, landing in her lap. She picked it up and smiled shyly, as if I’d given her something precious and she feared she might lose it.


Smilet,

I said.

“Huh?”

“That’s my favorite word. Not
ucalegon. Smilet.
It means half smile, only it’s not really a word. I think Shakespeare made it up.”

“I like it. It should be a word.”

“As in,” I added, “‘You have the prettiest smilet in the world.’”

“Or, ‘Wipe that smilet off your face!’”

She said it in such a mean voice that we both cracked up.

We talked for a little while after that about school, and our parents, and our hometowns, but we didn’t have much time left before Chuck came to take me back.

Instead of saying good-bye, I pointed to a crease in the blanket between us.

“That’s the gap,” I said. Then I held out my hand and reached across.

Ellie reached back, wrapping her slender fingers around mine. “So are you disappointed that I’m not the perfect girl you thought I was?”

“No. I like you much better now — bed-head and all.”

“You, too,” she replied. “It’s good to finally meet you, James.”

IT WASN’T ANYTHING LIKE
normal sleep. I felt the familiar change happening, my mind descending into forbidden corridors. Again and again I went to sleep, diving deeper into darkness until I landed in the core. The mucky ground gripped my ankles, pulling at me with its promise of oblivion.

“You didn’t need to come back here,” Nick said. He leaned against the stone wall of the cavern, cradling a jar full of hundreds of glowing sparks. “There are no more demons. You’ve won.”

I glanced around the cave. All the smaller jars were gone, leaving the wet stone walls drenched in shadow. In the center of the cavern stood the pod where my other self slept, like a great black heart surrounded by sticky cords. I certainly wouldn’t miss this place. Still, something about what Nick had said didn’t make sense. The last time I’d been here, things had gone horribly wrong. How could I have won?

“I don’t get it,” I said.

Nick held out the jar and shook it. The sparks swirled around, tinking against the glass. “The Thief.” He grinned, flashing his perfect teeth. “She thought she had you, didn’t she? But you weren’t fooled. You tricked her.”

I thought of how the Thief had sacrificed herself to save me. “I didn’t mean to.”

“Sure you didn’t,” Nick replied. “I knew, first time I saw you, you’d be the one to catch her. She was the last demon.”

I rubbed my forehead. My face was covered, same as usual, with a scarf to hide my identity. From whom, I didn’t know. The core appeared empty except for Nick and the jar cradled in his gloved hands.

“Where is she?” I asked.

“With the rest of them.” Nick flicked the jar. Sparks scattered, hitting the glass and sliding into a glowing pile at the bottom. “This is it — all your problems.”

I stepped closer to get a better look.

“The Thief was the one who kept letting the other demons out,” he said. “She was the reason some of them came back. It never would have ended as long as she was free.”

I nodded, recalling how she’d busied herself stealing jars when we were here before. At least that part of Nick’s story fit.

“Can I see that?” I asked, reaching for the jar.

“Careful with it. They’re angry buggers.”

I cupped the jar and stared at the sparks. A few fluttered like lightning bugs, but most lay still at the bottom, their yellow glow growing dull. “She’s in here?”

Nick nodded. “She won’t be causing you any more trouble.”

“Now what?” I asked, giving the jar a shake. Some sparks brightened momentarily.

“Now it’s over. You’ve become what you wanted to be, and you don’t have to worry about this mess anymore.” Nick nodded to the jar. “It’s all under control.”

“Control,” I repeated. The word tasted metallic. This was what I’d fought for. It felt so quiet. So dead.

I let the jar fall from my hands.

For one hushed moment it turned in the air in perfect silence. Then it exploded against the stone floor. Sparks swirled around me, expanding, filling the cavern with their angry buzzing. Several whirled off, landing at the base of the stone walls where they glowed like embers. Others shot past Nick and disappeared into the darkness.

“You shouldn’t have done that,” Nick said.

I watched the sparks. They pulsed and grew, becoming more solid, taking on hideous, familiar forms.

Nick backed away. “Better run.”

Instinctively, I started for the elevator, then I saw the Thief crumpled near the base of the pod where my other self slept. I hurried to her side and tried to help her stand, but she was too weak.

Several demons around us had nearly re-formed. They stretched their limbs and licked their wounds, glaring at me as they regained strength.

“Leave,” the Thief said.

I shook my head. “I’m not not running away anymore.”

Demons hissed and growled as I stood. I drew my sword, but there were too many to fight. For the first time, I thought of surrender. It had never seemed like a choice before. Until now.

My hands shook as I laid my sword on the ground and turned my back on the demons. Stepping toward the pod, I reached to touch the sleeper within. Deep in that shadowy heart, I could barely make out his eyes moving beneath closed lids.

Several demons charged — flashes of movement at the edge of my vision. They slammed into me and pinned me against the pod wall. I opened my mouth to scream but couldn’t draw breath. Claws tore at my gut and teeth pierced my neck. Then a searing pain scorched through me and all thought blazed out to an ashy darkness.

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