Authors: Tess Sharpe
41
NOW (JUNE)
Trev is quiet, leaning against the front door for an endless
stretch of time.
There is nothing either of us can say.
There is nothing left to say.
There is just the truth, fi nally out in the open. I can see
the weight of it settling on him, dragging him down. I hate
that I’ve done this, hurt him this much, but at the same
time, an undercurrent of relief pulls at me.
He’s all I’ve got left—my best friend by default. The quiet,
steady presence in my life that’s been there for so long, I’d
be lost without him. I’ve taken advantage of that steadiness
so many times, and I hate that I can’t stop now.
He comes alive suddenly, like he’d been frozen by the
truth I’ve thrown at him. He straightens against the door
and starts talking fast, a staccato burst of sound from a
grim mouth: “If it was never about drugs, I have to tell my
mom. The police—”
“No, absolutely not.”
“But if you think you have a lead—”
“I have
nothing
,” I say. “I have Mina’s notes on an almost
three-year-old cold case. I don’t have any evidence that
T E S S S H A R P E
193
proves she was being threatened. I can’t go to Detective
James and be, like, ‘Hey, here’s a break in the investigation
you think I’m hindering.’”
“But if Kyle explains that he lied, they’ll have to believe
you.”
“No, they won’t. There were drugs at the scene. My
fi nger prints were on the bottle. As far as Detective James
is concerned, I’m a liar who’s still covering for her dealer.
Some notes that Mina wrote about Jackie’s case aren’t going
to change that. But fi guring out who was sending Mina
threatening notes
will
. Whoever got rid of Jackie killed
Mina—and I’m going to fi nd him.”
“Are you crazy?” Trev asks. “Mina died because she
got too close to fi guring it out. And now, what, you want
to launch an investigation? Do you have a death wish or
something?”
I step even further away him, a fl inch I can’t control.
He’s too wrapped up to notice the hurt I’m throwing off. Or
maybe this is what I’ve pushed him to, this kind of heart
twisting that once was Mina’s specialty.
“I’m doing this for Mina. Do you really think Jackie’s
still alive, after three years? That bastard in the mask killed
her. And then he killed Mina because she was too close to
fi nding him out. He has to pay.”
“Yes, he does. But that’s what the police are for. You’re
gonna get hurt if you keep this up,” Trev grits out.
I take a deep breath. “I’m not Mina. I’m not going to
keep secrets. I’ve got Kyle and my friend Rachel helping
out. But to get the police to listen to me, I need proof Mina
194
F A R F R O M Y O U
was looking into Jackie’s disappearance, that she was being
threatened because of it. You and Kyle didn’t fi nd the killer’s
warning notes, did you?”
Trev shook his head.
“So I have to put together a list of people who knew
Mina was investigating Jackie and then narrow it down to
the likely suspects.”
Trev runs his hands through his hair. “This is insane.”
“What else am I supposed to do? I can’t sit around and
hope that the cops will fi gure it out. I understand that
you’re trying to move on or whatever, but I can’t do that.
Not yet.”
It’s exactly the wrong thing to say to him—I know it
before the words are out of my mouth. His gray eyes widen,
and his cheeks fl ush beneath his tan.
“Move on?” He spits out the words like they’re poison.
“She was my baby sister. I practically raised her after Dad
died. I was supposed to be there when she got what she
wanted out of life. She was supposed to be the aunt to my
kids, and I should’ve been an uncle to hers. I wasn’t sup-
posed to lose her. I would’ve done
anything
for her.”
“Then help me!” I snap at him. “Stop yelling at me and
help
me already. I’m doing this with or without you, but I’d
rather do it with you. You understood her.”
“I guess I didn’t understand her at all,” Trev says, and
it hits me all over again that Trev didn’t just lose Mina. He
lost me, too—this shining, bright idea of a me that never
was.
I want to touch him, to comfort him somehow, but I
T E S S S H A R P E
195
know better. I settle for going toward him a few steps, close
enough to touch.
“You understood her,” I say. “As much as anyone could,
you did. She loved you, Trev. So much.”
Trev had been Mina’s favorite person. Her second con-
fessor, after me. I think, if I hadn’t been at the center of this,
she would’ve told him the truth about herself.
Maybe he would have made it easier. If she could have
basked in his acceptance, it might have given her enough
strength to break free.
I don’t know. I can’t ever know. Thinking about is maso-
chistic, like the hours I spent in rehab, spinning a perfect
version of our lives, where she tells everyone and it doesn’t
matter, a future fi lled with prom dresses and slow dances
and promises that never get broken.
When he looks at me, I feel exposed. For the fi rst time
since I’ve come downstairs, I’m acutely aware of how little
I have on. How bright the hall lights are, and how my scars
shine white and pink.
There’s a clicking sound, and Trev steps forward, away
from the front door just as my dad opens it.
There’s a long, uncomfortable moment when Dad’s eyes
fl ick over my face, tear-stained and too red, to settle on
Trev, looking just as bad.
“Trev,” Dad says, and it’s like he’s seven feet tall instead
of fi ve foot eight.
“Mr. Winters,” Trev says.
I shift from foot to foot, clenching my fi sts at my sides to
keep from scrubbing at my face.
196
F A R F R O M Y O U
“Sophie, is there a problem here?” Dad asks, still not tak-
ing his eyes off Trev.
“No,” I say. “Trev was just leaving.”
“I think that’s for the best,” Dad says.
Trev nods. “I’ll just—Well, good-bye, Sophie. Bye, sir.”
The door’s barely shut behind him before Dad is turning
to me, opening his mouth. “Just a second,” I tell him, and
I slip out the front door after Trev before Dad can stop me.
He’s already walking down the path.
“Trev!” I call.
He turns.
From where I stand at the bottom of the porch steps,
it’s like an ocean between us, this new knowledge that
stretches us so far from each other.
“The interviews,” I say, lowering my voice. “The ones
that Mina did about Jackie. They’re recorded.”
His eyes widen, and he takes a step toward me almost
automatically.
“I can’t listen to them alone,” I confess.
Trev nods. “Tonight?” he asks.
Relief, sweet and simple, rushes through me.
He’s always giving me what I can’t ask for.
“Tonight,” I say.
42
THREE AND A HALF YEARS AGO (FOURTEEN YEARS OLD)
“I can do it myself,” I say, clutching the bottle of vitamin E oil.
“No off ense, but your hand still looks like raw hamburger.”
Mina is not patient or soft . She grabs the bottle, ignoring my pro-
tests. It’s normal, her being bossy and my falling into line, so I shrug
my robe off one shoulder as she settles behind me on my bed.
I bite my lip, looking down at the carpet. I can feel her eyes on my
shoulder where metal dug into the skin, mangling it. Her fi ngers don’t
linger as she gently smooths the oil over my scars with determined
effi
ciency. “This stuff smells like my grandma.” She gets up and moves
to my front.
“Lavender,” I explain. “Mom got it at that natural health food store
in Chico. Here, let me.” I try to grab the bottle away from her, but she
dangles it out of my reach. “Nice,” I say. “Way to taunt the gimp.”
“I dare you to call yourself that in front of your mom. She’ll fl ip.”
Mina smiles wickedly at me.
“She’d probably just send me to the shrink for another six months.”
“She means well. That whole week you were in coma-land, she was
freaking out. Soap-opera style. It was intense.” Her fi ngers trace over
the top of my shoulder, the new rough landscape that my body has
become.
“She keeps acting like things are going to go back to normal.”
198
F A R F R O M Y O U
“Well, that’s stupid,” Mina says. “Things are diff erent. But it
doesn’t mean they have to be awful.”
“I feel awful, sometimes,” I whisper. “I mean, look at me.” I hold
my arms out, my robe slips all the way off my shoulders, and the scar
on my chest, a raw split of skin, is even uglier in the light. “I’m gross.
And it’s not like things are going to change. She needs to realize that.”
“Oh, Soph.” Mina practically defl ates. She sits down on the bed
next to me. “What happened to you was horrible,” she says. “Beyond
horrible. And it isn’t fair or right that Trev and I came out of it fi ne and
you . . .” She trails off . “But
gross
?” She presses her hand against my
heart. Her thumb brushes up against the edge of the scar on my chest.
“This isn’t gross. You know what I think when I see this?”
I shake my head.
Her voice drops. She’s whispering, a secret for just the two of us: “I
think about how strong you are. You didn’t stop fi ghting, even when
your heart stopped. You came back.”
The unspoken “to me” hangs between us. We both hear it, but
neither of us is brave enough to say it.
“You don’t . . . you don’t ever wish they hadn’t saved you, right?”
Mina asks. She’s staring hard at her hand, like she can’t bear to be
looking in my eyes if I give the wrong answer.
I can’t tell her the truth. She’d be almost as scared of it as I am.
“Of course not,” I say.
The truth?
I don’t know.
Maybe.
Sometimes.
Yes
43
NOW (JUNE)
When I get back into the house, Dad is waiting in the
hallway.
“What was that about?” he asks.
“Nothing,” I say.
“Sophie, you’ve been crying.” He reaches out, and I
move away when his hand makes contact with my cheek.
“Did Trev say something—”
“We were talking about Mina,” I interrupt. “I got sad.
Trev wasn’t—I was just sad.” I rub at my arms, stepping
farther away from him. “What are you doing home? Did
you forget something?”
“Your shots are today,” Dad says. “Didn’t your mother
tell you?”
“Oh. She did. I forgot.”
“I thought I’d take you.”
I can’t stop the hesitation that passes over me, and I can
tell he’s hurt by it. It’s the barest fl ash in his lined face, but
it’s there.
I remember, suddenly, all those days he took off work so
he could drive me back and forth to physical therapy. How
he’d sat in the lobby doing paperwork while I bullied my
200
F A R F R O M Y O U
body into working better. How he’d always wrapped his
arms around me afterward.
“Sure,” I say. “I’d like that.”
On the drive to the doctor’s offi ce, we talk about ordi-
nary things. About the soccer team that Dad’s dental offi ce
sponsors, how he’s thinking about retiring from assistant