Authors: Tess Sharpe
ing a pose for too long. The words are written in pencil, which is
weird, because she’s stockpiled purple pens for as long as I can
remember.
Sophie—
I know you’re still mad. I’m not sure you’ll even read this. But if
you do . . .
Please get better. If you can’t do it for yourself, do it for me.
Mina
I press my fi ngers under the smudge the word
me
is written over,
trying to make out the word she’d erased. I trace two letters, the
shadowy, barely there curls of a
U
and an
S
she didn’t quite erase:
do
it for us
.
When Aunt Macy gets home, peeking into my room without
knocking, I’m still sitting there with the letter in my lap.
“Sophie?”
When I don’t answer, she walks in and sits next to me. I keep my
eyes on the letter. I’m not strong enough to look at her.
“You’re right. I’m a drug addict. I have a problem.”
Macy lets out a long breath, an almost soundless exhalation of
relief. “Okay,” she says. “Now look me in the eye and say it.”
When I don’t, she reaches over and grabs my hand, squeezing
hard. “You’ll get there.”
I believed her. I put in the work. I followed the rules from then on,
talking to the therapist, starting up my mental calendar, making days
turn into weeks and then months. I struggled and fought and won.
T E S S S H A R P E
77
I wanted to make myself better. For Mina. For me. For what I
thought might be waiting when I got home.
But this is the thing about struggling out of that hole you’ve put
yourself in: the higher you climb, the farther you have to fall.
17
NOW (JUNE)
I call Trev three times over the next week, but he won’t
answer. After the third unanswered calls, I switch gears
and go by the
Harper Beacon
offi ce, only to be told that Tom
Wells, the head of the internship program, is out of town.
With my parents still watching me so closely, I spend
most of my days in my garden, among the redwood beds
Trev built for me.
After the crash, Mina had insisted I needed a hobby and
presented me with a preapproved list. I’d chosen gardening
to get her off my back, but then, as usual, she’d taken it to
extremes. She’d shown up the next day, Trev in tow with
lumber, hammer and nails, bags of soil, a box of seedlings,
and foam knee pads so I wouldn’t hurt myself.
I like the feel of dirt between my fi ngers, nursing deli-
cate plants into strength and bloom. I like watching things
fl ourish, like the swath of colors I can grow, bright and
alive. It hurts to get up and down, but the pain’s worth the
effort. At least I have something pretty to show for it.
After a full day of weeding, removing rocks and clay
soil from the neglected beds, I spend another fi lling them
with fresh, rich compost. Midweek, I’ve got the fi rst two
beds in good enough shape to think about planting. I run
T E S S S H A R P E
79
my fi ngers compulsively over the worn wood, making lists
in my head of fl owers that’ll thrive this late.
Mina had painted hearts and infi nity symbols on the
outsides of the beds, adding to them when she’d sit out here
with me: her favorite quotes surrounded by stars, a pair of
crooked stick-fi gure girls holding hands and faded red bal-
loons. I brush my dirty fi ngers over the wood to touch what
she’d touched.
“Sophie.”
I look up from my spot on the ground. Dad’s on the
porch, dressed in his regular blue button up and tie. His
tie is crooked, and I want to reach out and fi x it, but I can’t.
“You have your fi rst therapy appointment with Dr.
Hughes in an hour,” he says. “I moved some appointments
so I can drive you. You should clean up.”
I let go of the wood and follow him into the house.
Dr. Hughes’s practice is in one of the older neighborhoods,
on a block where most of the houses have been turned into
offi ces. Dad parks the car in front of the blue and white sign
with Dr. Hughes name on it. The little one story craftsman
is painted the same color as the sign, cheerful against the
lighter blue sky.
I’m surprised when my dad gets out of the car after me.
“You’re coming in?”
“I’ll sit in the waiting room.”
“I’m not going to ditch therapy.”
His mouth tightens, his hand drops from the car door.
“I’ll pick you up in an hour, then.”
I’m almost at the door when he stops me in my tracks.
80
F A R F R O M Y O U
“We just want you to be better. That’s why we sent you
away. You know that, don’t you?”
I don’t look at him. I can’t give him the confi rmation he
wants. Not without lying.
I was already better.
The offi ce is full of comfortable-looking furniture and
Norman Rockwell prints on the walls. A receptionist
looks up with a smile from the papers she’s fi ling. “Good
morning.”
“Hi. I’m Sophie Winters. I have twelve-thirty
appointment.”
“Come with me, please.”
She brings me to a large room with a desk, an over-
stuffed couch, and a few leather chairs. I take a seat on the
couch as she closes the door behind her. My shoulders sink
into the cushions, half of my body lost in brown suede.
Dr. Hughes comes in without knocking. He’s an older
man, with dark skin, a neat silver goatee, and square black
glasses. He’s short, I’d be taller than him if I was stand-
ing up, and his sweater vest is stretched snugly over his
round stomach. “Hi, Sophie.” He sits down at his desk and
spins in his chair to face me with a smile. His eyes are kind
underneath his glasses. He radiates thoughtfulness. Just as
a good therapist should.
It makes me want to run.
“Hi.” I burrow deeper into the couch, wishing it’d just
swallow me up.
“I’m Dr. Hughes, but feel free to call me David. How are
you feeling today?”
T E S S S H A R P E
81
“Fine.”
“I’ve talked to Dr. Charles on the phone about you, and I
have her notes and your medical history. I’ve also had sev-
eral sessions with your parents.”
“Okay.”
“How are you adjusting?”
“It’s fi ne. I’m fi ne. Everything thing is—it’s all fi ne.”
He taps his pen against his notebook, watching me. “Dr.
Charles said you’d be a hard nut to crack.”
I sit up straighter, on guard. “I don’t mean to be.”
David leans back in his chair, his eyes crinkling as his
lips twitch. “I think you do,” he says. “I think that you’re
an intelligent young woman who is very good at keeping
secrets.”
“Got that from a few notes and, what, an hour-long talk
with Dr. Charles?”
He grins. “Now that’s more like it. Dr. Charles is excel-
lent at what she does. But as soon as you stopped resisting
therapy at Seaside, all you did was tell her exactly what she
wanted to hear—what she expected to hear from an addict
on the verge of relapse.”
“I am an addict.”
“It’s good that you acknowledge that,” David says.
“That’s important. But at the moment, I’m more concerned
with the trauma you suffered. What jumped out at me,
from Dr. Charles’s notes, is how you sidestep the subject of
Mina every time she’s brought up.”
“No, I don’t.”
“You didn’t break a coffee table when Dr. Charles asked
you about the night Mina was killed?”
82
F A R F R O M Y O U
“My leg makes me clumsy; it was an accident.”
David raises an eyebrow. I’ve done something that’s
made him take notice, and I’m not sure what it is. It makes
heat prickle down my back. I’m not going to be able to play
him like Dr. Charles.
“Why don’t you tell me about Mina?” he asks.
“What do you want to know?”
“How did you two meet?”
“Mina moved here after her dad died. The teacher sat us
next to each other in second grade.”
“Did you spend a lot of time together?”
I don’t answer immediately.
“Sophie?” he prompts gently.
“We were always together,” I say. I can’t keep it out of
my voice. That choked-up emotion bleeds through, makes
it waver. I look away from him, my nails digging into my
jeans. “I don’t want to talk about Mina.”
“We’re going to have to talk about Mina,” David says
quietly. “Sophie, you were put into an environment designed
to get you clean right after you experienced a major trauma
and loss,. While I understand what motivated your parents
to do that, it might not have been the best thing for you in
terms of processing your grief.
“Most of your therapy at Seaside was focused on your
problems with addiction. I don’t think you’ve been given
the space or the tools you need to deal with what happened
to you and Mina the night she was killed. But I can help
you with that, if you let me.”
Anger surges inside me, stampedes through my veins at
T E S S S H A R P E
83
his words. I want to hit him. To throw the stupid tasseled
pillows on the couch at him.
“You think I haven’t
dealt with it
?” I ask. My voice is hor-
ribly low. I’m about to cry. It builds in the back of my eyes,
threatening to break through. “She died scared and in pain,
and I felt it—when she went, when she left, I
felt
it. Don’t
you dare tell me I haven’t dealt with that. Every day, I deal
with it.”
“Okay,” David says. “Tell me how you do that.”
“I just do,” I say. I’m still breathing hard, but I will myself
not to cry in front of him. “I have to.”
“Why do you have to? What’s keeping you motivated?”
“I have to stay clean,” I say.
The answer would’ve worked with Dr. Charles, but not
with this guy. My quick search before Dad had driven me
over had pulled up four articles Dr. Hughes coauthored
about PTSD and its effects on teenagers. Mom and Dad
have done their homework. With my addiction tackled,
now they’re setting out to fi x me completely. A New and
Improved Sophie. Whole and mended, with no jagged
edges or sharp points. Someone who doesn’t look like she
knows how death feels.
“I don’t think you’re telling me the whole truth,” David
says.
“You a human lie detector?”
“Sophie, you can trust me.” David leans forward intently.
“Anything you say here, any secrets you choose to share,
nobody else will know, and there’ll be no judgment from
me. I am here for you. To help you.”
84
F A R F R O M Y O U
I glare at him. “You already got me to talk about it when
I didn’t want to,” I say. “That doesn’t really breed trust.”
“Getting you to open up isn’t tricking you. It’s about
your having a safe outlet to talk. You have to share with
someone or you’ll burst.”
“Is that in your professional medical opinion?”
He smiles, dispassionate, with no edge to it, no pity, no
judgment. It’s a nice change from everyone else. “Abso-
lutely,” he says wryly. He pushes the box of tissues across
the coffee table at me. I take a few, but instead of patting my
eyes, or blowing my nose, I twist them in my hands.
“This won’t happen again,” I tell him. “Don’t start
expecting it.”
“Whatever you say.” He nods and smiles. I look away.