Thinking Straight (13 page)

Read Thinking Straight Online

Authors: Robin Reardon

BOOK: Thinking Straight
11.97Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

I shrugged. Then I grabbed a pad and pen and wrote, “I'm putting it in my MI today, anyway.”

Sean read this and nodded. “Okay, that's good. But they may make you apologize to the group anyway, on Thursday, or they may extend your SafeZone another day.”

“What?” It was out before I could stop it.

Sean's head snapped up and he glared at me. I grabbed the pad again and wrote, “No!” But then I scratched it out. I mean, if they put another day on, it was that much more time before I'd have to pretend, before I'd have to respond to people who said inane, insipid, dishonest things to me. I threw the pad onto the desk, flipped the pen onto it, and shrugged again. “So fucking what?” is what I wanted Sean to hear.

“You need to stay in here until someone comes to get you. I'm sorry, Taylor.”

I picked up the pad again and scrawled, “What's with Nate? Who is that guy?”

Sean read it quickly and his hand snapped over the page, tore it off, and then crumpled it. For a minute I thought he might be about to eat it. But he opened it out again and folded it until it was small and flat enough to fit into his front pants pocket, which is where he put it.

“Look, if you're so hot on writing, then take this time and get started on your MI. I'm going out onto the floor.” And he left.

What's eating him? I thought. Why is he angry with me? And what did this have to do with Shorty?

There was something really creepy going on in this place, I decided. I felt like I'd landed in the middle of this horror flick, maybe one where some of the people were real people and some were aliens, or had been real people but had been taken over by some supernatural force. It was almost like I could go up to some of them and rip their face off and there'd be this hideous creature underneath.

And the worst part was that I wasn't sure whose faces were real. I couldn't tell which ones had hideous creatures inside them. I wasn't even sure what planet I was on anymore.

Okay, I decided, this was hell. I'd found my way into a little corner of hell. So, who were the devils, and who were just sinners who'd ended up here like me? That was the torture. I might never know.

A sudden bang startled me before I realized it was me. My hand hurt where I'd brought a fist down onto the desk. Quickly I looked out onto the floor to see if anyone had noticed. No one had turned toward the office, so I guessed I was okay.

But—holy shit! This was totally weird.

I stared out at all those kids, desperate for some sign about how to tell the real ones from the fakes. Knowing some of them were devils inside, I looked for red. Anything red. Red…red…red…Jesus Fucking Christ, nothing out there was red! It had been forbidden; it must have. Otherwise
some
body would have had
some
thing red on! But not even a hair scrunchie on one of the girls was red. Not one blouse, not one belt, nothing. Which meant that by its very absence it was present. It was pervasive.

I stood up, breathing hard, hanging on to the edge of the desk to keep from shouting, “Is nobody out there human?”

Down, Taylor. Down, boy. Down. Sit down.

I sat.

Now, calm. Deep breaths. Close your eyes.

But I couldn't close my eyes. I felt like I had to know if one of them got too close. If one of them did something really freaky out there, I had to know. What I would have done is anybody's guess, but I had to know.

Get a hold of yourself! Chill! Knock it off!

I managed to close my eyes, just for a few seconds. But I couldn't bring myself to turn my back to all of them out there.

I was still standing there when some kid I'd never seen before showed up. He looked for Sean, waved at him, and came into the office.

“You Taylor Adams? Nod or shake.”

Nod.

“I'm Jeffrey. I'm to bring you to Mrs. Harnett.” He turned to leave but waited at the door for me to go out first. I looked down toward Sean, who had suddenly stopped being a potential devil and had started to look like a lifeboat. I shot a pleading look at him: did I have to go? He just looked at me sadly and turned away.

Mrs. Harnett wanted to see me. It had to be about my speaking. And Sean had said he'd had to report me. All I could do was stand firm and brazen it out. I was ready to run, though.

She didn't give me that warm smile this time. “Shut the door please, Taylor.”

Jesus, save me. If she kills my body, protect my soul.

She didn't invite me to sit, so I stood.

“I understand you violated SafeZone this afternoon. Do you understand how significant a transgression that was?”

Did I? Not yet, maybe; that would depend on what happened as a result. But I nodded.

“Sean tells me you plan to write about it in your MI for today. Is that correct?”

Nod.

“When I read your MI, which I'll do later tonight, I'll determine what the consequences will be. I'll let you know tomorrow morning. Come to my office after breakfast. For now, you should assume this will mean full punishment, which would mean an extra day of SafeZone. This is to help with your resolution, Taylor. To help you feel the effects as deeply as possible in order to bring about a truer repentance. Do you know what repentance is, Taylor?”

Shrug. I was feeling a little less panicky, and I was getting irritated. What had I done that was so terrible?

She answered for me. “It means to change your path. It means you will not repeat the transgression you are repenting.”

Okay, this was getting to me. It wasn't like I'd committed some heinous sin. I hadn't even sworn, for God's sake. If anyone was at fault, it was Nate for tempting me. I lunged toward her desk to grab a pad of paper. Her hand shot out and held it down.

“Taylor, I'm afraid that you've been abusing the rule about writing during SafeZone. It's intended to be done only in emergencies, and I understand you've been doing a lot of it even though you've had no emergencies. Now I'm going to ask Jeffrey to walk you back to your room, where you will begin your Contemplation time early. By all means, write; but write your confessions, your repentance. Write to God and convince him you understand what he wants from you.”

Repent what? I wanted to ask. What did I do wrong?

So I sat at my desk to write my second MI, furious, resentful, wanting to hit something. It was a little after two o'clock and I was stuck in here until six. On the one hand, I wanted to get this thing over with, write the fucking MI, and seal it in its tidy little envelope. On the other hand, if I wrote anything right now, it would just get me into more trouble than I was already in. So I hit something.

I went over to my bed and picked up my pillow. I grasped it with one hand and hit it with the other. Over and over again. I wanted to shout. Hell, I needed to scream! So the pillow changed from a punching bag to a muffling device, and I screamed into it. I screamed until I was hoarse.

I can't say it helped, but at least it tired me out. I fell onto the bed, curled into a ball, hugged the pillow tight, and willed myself not to start blubbering. And then I heard myself say, “Jesus, help me.”

 

“Taylor!”

Someone was calling my name. Where are they? Who is it?

“Taylor, wake up. You're supposed to be contemplating, not sleeping.”

It was Jeffrey. I looked at my watch: nearly four o'clock. At least sleep had gotten me through a couple of hours. I nodded to Jeffrey and got off the bed, running a hand through my hair. He gave me a look like he had his doubts, but he left.

Was I calmer now? Was I still going to see devils everywhere? Did I hate Nate or Mrs. Harnett more?

But hate wasn't something I wanted. Hate just ends up turning back onto you, hurting you. Maybe even hurting your soul. So I dragged myself over to my desk and sat with a pen in my hand, staring at the paper that would become my second MI.

How had she known? How had she known that I was writing things? Are other people, people like Charles and Sean, under some kind of orders to save the papers and give them to Mrs. Harnett? Is that why Sean had kept my question about Nate? But he'd torn it off and crumpled it. Was he trying to help me by hiding it?

Okay, now I was starting to feel weird again. I walked around the room, searching corners for hidden cameras. Under the desk? On the back of the bureau? I looked all over. They'd have to have been those little Minicams or I'd have found them. But then, a camera would have caught Sean putting that paper into his pocket. No cameras, then. So, how? It must be that Charles had been turning over the papers. And Sean, too, except maybe for the one he'd crumpled.

I sat there tapping the pen on the pad, trying to think whether I'd ever seen any pages I'd written on after I'd written on them. I looked in my desk drawers. Then I checked Charles's. I looked under mattresses and in wastebaskets—which was futile, since they got magically emptied every day. Must be the job of some lucky resident to do that. So—was that how they got turned in? Someone went through the trash?

Note to self: see if you can volunteer for trash duty once you're out of SafeZone.

If I ever get out of SafeZone.

But I had to know whether Charles had done that to me. It would be just like him to think it was for my own good. But had he done it deliberately, or had he thrown the papers into the trash? And had he ever done trash duty? If so, he'd have known what would happen to them.

Wait! He'd found my wet tissues yesterday. Did that mean he really was going through my trash? And what had he done with them? Had he turned those in, too? Was he, after all, not the honorable man of the proverbs, as he'd led me to believe at Prayer Meeting last night? Or had he flushed them down the toilet to keep anyone from knowing because he'd felt guilty interrupting my Contemplation? Maybe someday I'd be able to ask him; until then, I wasn't going to figure this one out on my own unless Harnett confronted me with it.

I was beginning to feel decidedly penned-in. And it wasn't like I hadn't been feeling that way already; it was just getting worse. A lot worse.

Okay, so writing was no guarantee of privacy. At least I knew that much. But my thoughts, as far as I could tell, were still my own.

Will. I thought about Will. I sat in my chair and leaned back, eyes closed, and thought about Will. You know how a lot of people ask, What would Jesus do? Well, here's what I asked: What would Will do? What would Will say?

What would Will say about what had happened today? I pictured his face, his lopsided grin, the twinkle in his eyes as he raised one teasing eyebrow and dropped it a few times. And I heard him laugh. He opened that sweet mouth wide, and he laughed, and I heard it. All through the room.

I knew what he was laughing at. It was all these people taking themselves so fucking seriously, thinking they had some corner on Soul, on Good, on God. I smiled.

And then I felt his arms resting on my shoulders and his forehead leaning against mine. And here's what Will had to say: “Ty, my boy, here's what you tell them. Say it quietly, and sincerely, and like it's the most important thing anyone ever uttered. Tell them, ‘Jesus loves you. But I'm his favorite.'”

And he was gone. But behind my closed eyelids, his grin hung, like the Cheshire cat's. It disappeared slowly, and as it did, the layers of what he'd just said started to peel back, revealing the nasty things underneath.

“Jesus loves you.” Okay, that's obvious. We hear it all the time. And when you hear it, it sets you up, gets you into that holy mood, that soulful head. Yes, Jesus loves me, you think when you hear it. Jesus loves me.

Then you hear, “But I'm his favorite.”

Wham! It slams you right back down to earth. It's like, “Daddy loves me best!” coming from the mouth of the younger brother who makes your life miserable, who's always getting you into trouble and lying because he can get away with it, because Mom and Dad will believe him and not you.

It's like, “Can Jesus
have
favorites?”

But most of all, it's like, “But I thought
I
was his favorite!”

I heard the sound of my own laughter before I knew I was laughing. It was different from when I laughed with Sheldon in the laundry room. That had been silly, a kind of release, slapstick. This was real. It put this whole fucking place in its place, you know? Everything. And I laughed. I saw Mrs. Harnett's stern face alternating with her fake smile; I saw Sean panicking and scrabbling at things he didn't want to deal with, afraid for his life. I saw Shorty standing there trying to make me feel like I'd done something wrong when I hadn't, just so he could be seen as doing something that was supposed to be righteous. They were all so pathetic!

There was a knock at the open door. It was Jeffrey. He looked scared and determined at the same time.

“Um, you're making noise.”

At first I was going to pick up the pad and write this: “But I wasn't speaking, even though you must have been spying.” And then I realized that would be taking this thing too seriously. So I just smiled at him. It was a beatific smile, not a so-what smile. It had all the fake love in it that I could muster.

Other books

Alector's Choice by L. E. Modesitt
Kokopu Dreams by Baker, Chris
The Dislocated Man, Part One by Larry Donnell, Tim Greaton
Winds of Fury by Mercedes Lackey
40 - Night of the Living Dummy III by R.L. Stine - (ebook by Undead)
Promise Me Anthology by Tara Fox Hall