Authors: Tess Sharpe
today,” she says.
“Hmm?” I fl oat next to her, letting the water support my body.
“Amber said she saw Cody buying condoms at the drug store last
week.”
I reach above my head, pulling my arms through the water full
circle, propelling myself away from her.
I’m not fast enough. She jerks forward, off her back, water splash-
ing everywhere as she treads water, facing me. “You didn’t!” When I
don’t say anything or look at her, she says, “Oh my God, you
did
.”
“So what if I did?” I ask, and it comes out way more defensive than
I intend. Cody and I had been dating for months; it had seemed like
the thing to do. I just didn’t want to tell anyone aft erward.
She should know how good I am at pretending. It’s all we do. It’s
144
F A R F R O M Y O U
all I do. I pretend that I don’t hurt, that I want Cody, that I don’t want
her, that I’m not taking too many pills, that my virginity had been
important.
It hadn’t been. It only means something when it’s with the right
person. And I couldn’t have her.
“I can’t b-believe . . .” Mina stutters. “Oh my God.”
“It’s not a big deal,” I mumble.
“Yes it
is
!” She says it so quickly, and I can hear the catch in her
voice.
Like she’s about to cry.
“Mina.” I start to swim over to her, but she turns from me, dives
deep. She glides under the water, and when she surfaces I can’t tell if
it’s tears or lake water dripping down her face.
We never talk about it again.
A week later, Mina and I are at a party at Amber’s when Amber way-
lays me, walking across the crowded deck with a self-satisfi ed smile
on her face.
“Why didn’t you tell me?” Amber demands, twirling her sun-
streaked hair around her fi nger. We’re outside. Amber’s house is next
to the river, and I’ve been zoning out, staring at the ducks riding the
current downstream.
“What?”
“You mean Mina didn’t tell
you
?” Amber’s eyes widen. “Maybe I
shouldn’t say anything. . . .”
“Amber, out with it,” I snap. I can be a bitch when I need to be.
And no matter how much Amber would like it to be her,
I’m
Mina’s
best friend.
“Mina’s totally sleeping with Jason Kemp.”
T E S S S H A R P E
145
“What?” I can feel blood drain from my face. I have to tighten my
hold on my cup so I don’t drop it.
I look for Mina immediately, instinctively. When our eyes meet
across the deck, I understand: she planned it, she wanted it this way,
she’d just been waiting for me to fi nd out—and I hate her for it.
It’s the most vicious thing she’s ever done to me, but really, how
can I blame her?
Two weeks aft er that, two weeks of her hanging off Jason’s neck, of
them making out
everywhere
, of that gleam in her eye, the way she’s
pushing at me, punishing me, I fi nally can’t handle it anymore. I’m
sobbing as I crush the pills.
I’ve been on the edge of this for months, gulping down too many,
numbing myself to the pain. Numbing myself to her. This is the inevi-
table next step down, the evolution of my fall.
It’s like a roller coaster, the dip and slide searing through me,
going straight to my head. The buzz—fl eeting, but oh so good—fl oods
me, and I’m reaching for more before it vanishes completely. Anything
to erase her from me.
But some marks, they don’t fade. No matter what.
31
NOW (JUNE)
When I get home, I stare at the evidence board on my mat-
tress because I can’t think about anything else. I take Kyle’s
picture down, rip it in half, and toss it on the fl oor, barely
resisting the urge to stomp on it a few times.
“Sophie?” My mom knocks on my door. “Your dad said
your knee was hurting. I came home to check on you.”
“Just a second.” I scramble to push my mattress down.
My sheets are in a tangle on the fl oor, and I don’t have the
time to do anything but pile them on the bed, shoving
Kyle’s torn picture under my pillow and throwing myself
on top of the mess. “Come in.”
She frowns when she sees me, fl ushed and guilty- looking.
Knowing Mom, she probably has a numbered list of things
to watch out for when it comes to her junkie daughter.
“What are you hiding?” she asks.
“Nothing,” I say.
“Sophie.”
I sigh, reach next to my bed, and grab the shoebox
stashed underneath my nightstand. I fl ip it open, spill the
contents onto the bed. Photos spread everywhere. “I was
looking at pictures.”
T E S S S H A R P E
147
My mom’s face softens, and she picks up a photo, one of
me and Mina, our arms wrapped around each other, neon-
green swim caps clashing horribly with our pink tie-dyed
racing suits. “This was before your growth spurt,” she says.
I take the photo from her, trying to remember when it
was taken; some sunny day during swim practice. Mina’s
missing her front tooth, which means we must’ve been
about ten. She’d pitched headfi rst off her bike that summer,
racing me. Trev had run all the way home with her in his
arms, and later I found him checking her bike to make sure
it was safe.
“That was before a lot of things,” I say. I put the photo
back into the box, grabbing up others, shoving them out of
sight.
“I want to talk to you.” Mom sits down on the edge of
my bed, and I keep on putting the photos away to give
myself something to do. I pause at the photo of Trev and
me, standing on the deck of his boat, sticking our tongues
out. There’s a pink blur on the side of the photo: the edge of
Mina’s fi nger, obscuring the lens.
“I shouldn’t have said what I did about your college
essay,” Mom continues. “I’m sorry. You should be able to
write about anything you’d like.”
“It’s okay,” I say. “I’m sorry I yelled at you.”
She takes another photo, this one of me, fat and happy
in the lap of Aunt Macy. “You know,” she says quietly, “my
mother died of an overdose.”
I look up, and I’m so surprised she’s brought it up that
I drop the stack of photos. “I know,” I say, bending over
148
F A R F R O M Y O U
quickly to pick them up, grateful I won’t have to look at her
right away.
Mom rarely talks about my grandmother. My grandpa
lives on fi fty acres of wilderness, in a house he built with
his own hands. After the crash, he’d clapped his hand (a
little too hard) on my shoulder and said, “You’ll get through
this.”
It’d been almost an order, but I’d felt comforted by it, like
it was a promise at the same time.
“I was the one who found her,” Mom says. “I was fi f-
teen. It was one of the worst moments of my life. When
your father searched your room . . . when I realized that
you could’ve followed her down that path . . . when I real-
ized that someday I might walk into your room and you
wouldn’t be breathing . . . I knew I’d failed you.”
It’s unimaginable, the words coming out of her mouth.
She
had
failed me, but only after I’d recovered. She’d refused
to see the changes in me, the things I’d overcome and
accepted about myself—the ones she never could. She’d
stood there, stone-faced to my begging and tears, my heart
still a fresh wound pouring out grief and shock, and she’d
seen it all as guilt and lies.
I hate it, but there’s a part of me, the sliver that’s not
consumed by Mina, that can understand why she and Dad
didn’t believe me. Why they shoved me into rehab and
practically threw away the key. They wanted any way to
keep me safe.
I understand.
I just can’t forgive them for it yet.
32
ONE YEAR AGO (SIXTEEN YEARS OLD)
Adam’s back fi eld is crowded with people. School’s fi nally done and
his mom is out of town, leaving him and his brother to throw a party
that everyone from two counties seems to have shown up for.
Aft er waiting forever for the bathroom and a much-needed pill
break, I head outside to fi nd Mina and Amber. I stumble down the
desk steps, and I tell myself it’s because of my leg.
It’s not.
“Hey, Sophie, careful.” Adam hurries over from the cluster of kegs
and coolers at the end of the deck, grabbing my arm. He leads me over
to the picnic table, where Amber is sitting next to a tray of Jell-O shots.
“Having fun?” she asks me as Adam slips his arm around her
waist.
“Yeah,” I lie. It’s sweltering, and I’d rather be home than out here,
getting drunk and bitten by mosquitoes. I’ve already had a few drinks,
but I take the little plastic cup Amber hands me, and we tap them
together before popping them back. Fake cherry and vodka slide
across my tongue, and I swallow hard.
“Where’s Mina?” Amber asks.
“Not sure,” I say.
“I saw her in the house earlier with Jason,” Adam says. He squeezes
Amber’s waist, pulling her closer as music suddenly booms through
150
F A R F R O M Y O U
the yard. “Oh, you gotta dance with me, babe.” And Amber grins at
me as I wave them off .
I abandon the Jell-O shots and walk back in the house, weaving
my way around the crowd of older people, Adam’s brother holding
court among them. They were defi nitely Matt’s friends, if the smell of
pot coming off them is any indication.
I’m walking through the kitchen and into the living room when I
hear it.
“Screw you, Jason!”
I walk in on the tail end of the confrontation. Mina’s smack-dab in
a crowd of people, swaying on heels planted in the brown plush carpet.
She’s right up in her boyfriend’s face, and Jason clutches his red plastic
cup, looking miserable. People are staring, and I catch Kyle’s eye from
across the room. I mouth “How long?”
He shrugs and raises his eyebrows like,
Need some help?
I shake my head. They’ve been fi ghting on and off for a week now,
so I’m used to it. I walk over and grab her arm. She’s shaking, wobbly
in a too-many-Jell-O-shots way, and she stumbles against me in her
heels.
“You’re such a jerk!” She lunges at him, and I grab her by the waist,
struggling to stay balanced and restrain her at the same time. It’s kind
of hard considering I’m bordering on drunk and just snorted two lines
in the bathroom.
“I’m done, I’m done!” Mina says. It’s more for my benefi t, so I don’t
end up falling, because I will if she keeps this up. She rolls her eyes
when she realizes the room’s gone silent, everyone staring at her. “Let’s
go,” she huff s, and she stalks out of there, with me following, as usual.
“Um, Jason drove your car,” I say as I try to catch up with her. She’s
already halfway across Adam’s yard, heading toward the winding dirt
road that leads to the highway.
T E S S S H A R P E
151
“I took care of it,” she says. She stops, turns, and waits for me.
When I reach her, she loops her arm in mine.
Out here, away from lights and cloud cover, the stars shine amaz-
ingly bright, and Mina tilts her head up to look at them, a smile on
her face.
“I am
so
breaking up with him,” she announces. “And I don’t want
to talk about it anymore.”