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Authors: Alexis Bass

Tags: #Juvenile Fiction, #Love & Romance, #Social Issues, #Dating & Sex, #Girls & Women

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BOOK: What's Broken Between Us
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UNCORRECTED E-PROOF—NOT FOR SALE

HarperCollins Publishers

..................................................................

CHAPTER
ONE

G
race Marlamount was the first one to die. I sort of wish I’d realized sooner, as early as when we all used to sit around in a circle at Stony Day Elementary, that we all had numbered days. Look to the left, look to the right, we’re all going to die. But someone has to do it first. So who’s it going to be?

And then maybe I would have paid more attention. Noticed more about the people I was spending so much time with, asked questions, been friendlier overall. Tried harder for a reputation outside of being Amanda, Jonathan Tart’s little sister. Sometimes I wish for that.

Sometimes I think,
What’s the use?

The entire student body of Garfield High is here in the
gymnasium, all 582 of us, sitting shoulder to shoulder as Principal Green introduces a group dressed in red T-shirts and acid-washed jeans, standing in tiers, the A Cappellas for Change. They open with a rousing rendition of “We Are the World.” There’s a slide show on display on the right wall, flashes of kids our age who have all been cut out of existence because someone drove them off the road or into a tree or a freeway median or a pole after downing too many glasses of liquid courage. Though the lights haven’t been dimmed, so we can hardly see the images.

The last few photos are of Grace; everyone cups their hands over their mouths in an echo of gasps. We all recognize her, even the freshmen and sophomores, who never went to school with her. This is the first real tragedy to strike our seemingly safe and boring, run-of-the-mill suburb since the early nineties—according to our parents. And thanks to my brother’s national television debut on
Lifeline
, and the flurry of articles that followed it, our sleepy town has turned into one of
those
suburban stories of
We Didn’t See This Coming
, and warnings of
This Can Happen Anywhere
.

“It’s so sad,” the girl in front of me says. She’s a freshman, I’m guessing, because of the way she’s declaring her grief, like she’s not familiar with the way sorrow can bury you alive. She glances back at me. Since I’ve already made eye contact with her, I give her a small smile.

It’s a practiced smile, as now all my smiles are, calculated and for other people’s benefit. They are reassuring.
It’s a shame,
my smiles say,
how the mighty have fallen
. They are sad, too, so people
will know that I’m in pain for them, for Grace—an overcompensation sometimes, to make up for Jonathan not being here to grieve and apologize himself. My entire appearance is deliberate now. I can’t look like I’ve just rolled out of bed and thrown my hair up. I wear mascara and lip gloss. Because when people look at me, they don’t excuse what they see. Not anymore. Being Jonathan Tart’s little sister used to give me a free pass for a lot of things—and ponytail hair is really the most trivial of them. Even the little things count now.

So I don’t get to be sad however I want. At school especially, I have to be in the kind of mourning that apologizes.

The moderators from a group called Chicago Cares come to the stage next: a woman with a stern voice and a man who looks like he’s about to cry. They spoke at an assembly last year, too.

“It’s, like, best to hire a driver, I get it,” someone jokes from behind me, and the result is a burst of hushed giggles.

“You lost one of your own in a drunk driving accident,” the woman on the stage starts.

It sounds so generalized and cheesy, especially the second time around, but again, I feel my throat tighten up, and I have to suck on my lower lip to keep it from trembling.

“Grace Marlamount was supposed to be a senior this year,” she continues. “She was supposed to be excited about the game on Friday, impatiently refreshing her email, waiting to hear back from colleges, thinking about what it was going to be like leaving home for the first time.”

There’s a long pause where everyone is actually quiet. I bow
my head. Tears are brimming around the edges of my eyes, but I hold in my desire to sob. Crying is taking it too far. It might look like I’m laying it on thick, swimming in self-pity. Or worse; people could think I’m crying for Jonathan.

The truth is, even though we were the same age, I didn’t really know Grace Marlamount that well when she died. Not the girl she’d become. Sutton Crane’s partner in crime. The one who whispered the joke that triggered the loudest laugh in the room. The one yelling for my brother at the bottom of the stairs on a Saturday night—
Jon!A!Than!
—and who held the answer to the inevitable question,
What’s going on this weekend?

She was always magnificent—I remember that much—even before Jonathan declared it official. It’s no surprise that she’s the star of the homecoming assembly even more than a year after her death.

“Grace had her whole life ahead of her,” the woman says, glancing back at the empty wall where the slide show had previously been playing. “And a single driver under the influence took it all away.”

I exhale and try to collect myself now that she’s brought up my brother.

The girls behind me whisper.
Grace was so nice
, they’re saying.

This would be the part of the assembly where I’d turn to my best friend, Dawn, and we’d exchange a knowing glance, because that’s exactly what Dawn and I used to say about her all the time, and though it sounds like a simple and small thing
to say—
Grace was so nice
—when you’re a pretty sophomore girl and your best friend is a senior, Sutton Crane, who’s known for her sharp tongue, her ability to fill out a dress, and her charismatic boyfriend, you can be anything you want. Not everyone would have chosen nice. But Dawn’s not here anymore; she’s in college across the country. Another downfall of having an upperclassman as a best friend. If Grace were alive, maybe she’d be feeling like this, too—left behind.

It’s ironic when you think about it, though I try not to, how the night of Jonathan and Sutton’s graduation, Grace thought she was the one losing her best friends.

“You can’t let this happen again,” the woman says, her forehead pinching as her voice rises. “You all can prevent this.”

The man takes over the mic with as much passion as his partner. “You all owe it to her. You have to promise. You have to be safer, smarter, more aware.”

His eyes meet mine, but I think it’s by mistake.

“You have to be the exact opposite of Jonathan Tart.” Someone behind me says this, their voice cruel and bitter. The comment gets a few snickers, and again, I know these must be from underclassmen who don’t remember the way Jonathan was worshipped. And that he was
so nice
, too.

It’s been sixteen months since Grace died. Five months since Jonathan’s
Lifeline
interview aired. Exactly three hundred and sixty-four days since Jonathan was locked up. And in twenty-four hours my brother will be getting out of jail. I don’t
think
the man at the podium will bring this up, but I look at him for clues
that he might decide the messy controversy about Jonathan’s short sentence will help honor Grace.

“That’s how you’ll pay your respects to Grace Marlamount,” he says. “By doing everything in your power to prevent this kind of reckless death in the future.”

When the man and woman start to clap, the A Cappellas for Change group starts to clap, and then Principal Green joins in, so the rest of do, too.

The starting string of the football team stands, preparing for the part of the assembly where all the fall sports teams are introduced. But everyone keeps applauding. I close my eyes and take a deep breath and just like that, I’ve pulled it together.

UNCORRECTED E-PROOF—NOT FOR SALE

HarperCollins Publishers

..................................................................

CHAPTER
TWO

M
y days are numbered at Garfield High, and this, more than anything else, comforts me. I’ve made it through September and most of October. There are only 144 days to go.

One hundred and forty-four days of school after Jonathan has been released and will be living at my parents’ house.

I plan to carry on how I always have since it happened, walking tall with my hair done and my clothes pressed, in adorable shoes that pinch. Smiling apologetically. Shaking my head whenever someone asks me about him, or the accident. That’s where Graham Sicily will come in, blocking unwanted conversation.

“Wasn’t it so emotional at the assembly this morning?”—Stacey Millbrant: fellow Stony Day Elementary survivor.

“Sometimes I think they need to show us photos of the car again; you know, something that will shock people more so they’ll never forget. Especially for the freshmen.”—Caleb Ruiz: self-proclaimed reformed pothead, who actually made T-shirts with
Don’t Let the Party End Early
ironed across the front.

“Yeah, wasn’t the car practically split in half? Did you see it, Amanda?”—Katie Easton: dance team captain; always wearing glitter.

Enter Graham Sicily. “Hey, you guys don’t know why Trevor broke up with Leticia, do you? Everyone heard them screaming in the stairwell.”

Graham is my boyfriend. It’s really generous of him. He’s getting the short end of the stick. He gets to date Jonathan Tart’s baby sister right when it’s no longer cool to be associated with Jonathan Tart. And I don’t have sex with him. I blame it on my virginity, and on his, and a lot of times on a nonexistent migraine. But Graham is someone trustworthy. You can rely on him to change your flat tire. You can believe him when he makes a promise. He’s good grades and good breeding and good fun. Graham Sicily is captain of the soccer team and student-council something—it always changes—and I’m fairly certain he’s dating me because he feels like he’s rescuing me, and he likes that feeling.

To be fair, most of the time he is rescuing me, warding off our shameless classmates who want to ask me about the details of the night Grace died, who are curious about how Jonathan’s holding up in prison and want to talk about the unfairness of
his sentence. Graham is there making excuses and ushering me away when I’m about to lose it, so no one ever has to see me fall apart and wonder if all my tears are for Jonathan.

“Try not to think about it,” Graham says to me by my locker, a mere five seconds after successfully bringing up tomorrow’s homecoming game to thwart another unpleasant conversation, this one comparing Jonathan to that kid who used affluenza to get off his murder charges—Graham’s sixth rescue of the day, complete with a bit of advice. This is his solution much of the time. He used to put his hands on my shoulders, look deep into my eyes, and tell me, “None of this is your fault.” Like he’s watched that scene from
Good Will Hunting
one too many times. But I never mind.

Since it’s Jonathan and his return on probation that’s got me upset, Graham’s new solution is to put it out of my thoughts. Don’t think of him, because he doesn’t deserve it.

“I’ll try,” I tell Graham, and he pulls me into a hug so huge and all-encompassing that I truly do feel safe in his arms, like I could dissolve here. I lean into him and pretend that I haven’t just lied.

All I can think about is how the material on his soccer jersey would be perfect for catching tears. Graham knows I’m a mess, but he only knows the shallowest layers of the debris.

The truth is ugly, so I keep it from Graham, from everyone. Except Dawn.

The truth is: I’m glad my brother is coming home tomorrow. I’m
grateful
Jonathan’s sentence was the minimum, one year
in prison with ten years of probation. I understand that this is lenient, unfair, and not at all fitting to the crime. But the sentence makes me
happy
. Relieved, too. And it’s not only because Jonathan has one of those faces that make people say,
He’s too pretty for jail.
Or because I don’t think he deserves to be there longer.

My brother was a shell of his former self after the accident. He didn’t come out of his room. He barely got out of bed. His breath always stank of whiskey. He didn’t speak.

So sometimes I can’t bring myself to care that our team of the-best-of-the-best lawyers took full advantage of Grace’s parents’ refusal to press charges against my brother, and milked the sign missing from the road and the haphazard weather conditions for all they were worth.

Jonathan killed one of his best friends. Nearly paralyzed his girlfriend. If that’s not a life sentence, I don’t know what is.

I miss being in my brother’s shadow. It was warm there. But if I’m really being honest, I’m afraid to see him.

I pull away from Graham and let him kiss me.

“What would I do without you?” I whisper. This compliment always brings out a candid, bashful smile in him, as though he can tell that I am actually being very genuine.

Graham gives my hand another squeeze before he leaves, walking in the opposite direction down the hall, and I make my way to my last class of the day, thanks to my open seventh period. It’s such a relief. I stare at the floor as I enter the room, when a thought shadows over me. Dark and weighty and paralyzing.
None of this really matters.
Not my secrets or the ways I try to apologize for Jonathan or even Jonathan getting out of jail tomorrow, because despite anything else that happens to me or Jonathan or the rest of us, Grace is still gone. So it’s all useless anyway.

I’m standing in the doorway of my sixth-period Consumer Economics classroom, with no memory of walking there. I let my eyes travel to the other side of the room, where Henry Crane is sitting. He looks nothing like his sister, Sutton, otherwise you might say Jonathan and I had similar taste. But Henry is tan where Sutton is pale. His hair is a filthy blond, while hers is close to platinum. Henry’s features are sharp; Sutton’s are full. With Jonathan and Sutton, it had been love at first sight. It took Henry and me years to grow on each other. And we never got around to finding out if it was
love
. Henry is the person I try the hardest not to notice. I always fail. This time, he’s actually looking back, staring at me like he can see the truth.

T
EXTS TO
D
AWN,
S
ENT
T
HURSDAY 1:45 P.M.

I told you how we never talked about it, it just worked itself out—Henry takes the left side and I take the right. I get the window side of the classroom, and he gets to be closer to the door. But today he sat in the middle, just a desk away. So that’s why I noticed he had a knee brace on, and then Bryan asked him if he’d be out this season and he said yes, for most of it, even though he was introduced with the rest of the soccer team at the
assembly today. Then Bryan asked him how things were—in the broad sense—and Henry said, smashing. And you know how whenever he plays on his accent he’s being sarcastic, but Bryan was like, okay, good to hear it, man. Because that was probably the first time Bryan and Henry had spoken all year, and then of course Bryan turned to look at me because here he was, in between Amanda Tart and Henry Crane, asking Henry if he was okay in the broader sense, which was basically the same as asking how he’s doing with the fact that my brother will be out of jail tomorrow, and all that.

And then Henry had Bryan pass me a note at the end of class, which made Bryan turn red and frowny. I might not open it, because is there anything he could say to me that I’d want to hear anyway?

Damn, I didn’t mean for this to be so long. Or to say “which” so many times. Which means you should call me the second you get out of Econ 101.

That’s right. I have your schedule memorized.

Which means I miss you like crazy.

BOOK: What's Broken Between Us
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