Authors: Nova Ren Suma
Tags: #Juvenile Fiction, #Social Issues, #Runaways, #Horror & Ghost Stories, #Visionary & Metaphysical
have been startled enough to bolt up and
say, “Yes, ma’am?”
Her
second
night
away,
she
abandoned the shed. It was too close,
and now that she’d stayed out a whole
night, she was getting anxious about the
consequences of coming back. Part of
her did want to go home, but when she
stepped nearer to the trash cans, she
heard voices she recognized, from those
kids who lived on her block. She
imagined what they’d throw at her, like
the bottle that one time. Like trash in the
street. Like brightly colored pellets of
candy,
small
and
rock-hard
as
hailstones. When held in hot, grimy fists
they sweated off some of their coating,
so you could see the impact of them on
her clothes as if she’d been out playing
paintball. Orange, brown, blue, green,
red; the darkest spots where she was
hardest hit.
She was about to come out, but she
heard those voices. And she knew that if
she left her hiding place, if she went
home and returned to school, she’d get
worse things thrown at her. Far worse.
And then she’d topple. They could dump
all they wanted on her, the contents of
whole trash cans even, and she’d just lie
there, and let herself be buried, and that
would be the end of Shyann.
That was why she couldn’t ever go
back.
After the first night in the shed, she
spent one night in an old warehouse, and
the night after that in a condemned house
where the padlocks had been ripped
from the doorjamb so anyone or anything
could get in. Her fantasy of spending her
last months before she turned eighteen in
the wilds of a vacant lot, sleeping nights
high up in a thick oak tree where nothing
could bother her—that fantasy fell to
pieces once she’d experienced the cold.
She was constantly shivering, in dark
places where the electric and heat didn’t
work because the city had shut it off. She
tried to keep warm, but the winter nights
were long, longer than she’d expected.
She didn’t know how many nights she’d
be able to last.
The last thing she remembered was
something of a dream. Her eyes were
closing, and the cold had gone deep into
her bones, and she felt like she could
hear the whole city talking about her. But
they weren’t taunting—this time they
were saying nice things. The mayor
would lock them up if they didn’t.
All the girls at school, on camera,
they were going: “Shyann, please come
home, we’re so sorry. We’re saving you
a seat at lunch.” And the guys on her
block, they were going: “We only said
you’re ugly ’cause we want to get with
you, Shyann. Didn’t you know? We
thought you knew.”
Teachers were praising her, coming
up to the microphone one by one. Mr.
Wallace said how wrong he was for
blaming her for the candy dropped under
her desk and giving her detention for
eating in class. Ms. Taylor, who led the
grueling warm-ups in gym, swore on the
spot that Shyann would never have to do
extra sit-ups for being slow with the laps
again. And Ms. Atkins, the nasty English
teacher, publicly announced that she was
taking back all the Fs and awarding
Shyann an A.
Stuff like that. Stuff like her parents
saying all this was too little, too late,
and they’d homeschool her to graduate.
And they’d buy her a car. And she’d find
it when she came home—all shiny and
blue, wrapped in a bow like on
commercials.
She was too cold to move. Too cold
to get up and see if this had all come
true, but she could picture herself doing
it. She could see herself slipping into
that sparkling blue thing—hers, all hers
—and driving far, far away.
—
31
—
I
looked it up to be sure. They still
hadn’t found Shyann’s body—at least,
there was no funeral announcement, no
search party scouring the vacant lots of
the city, paying careful attention to
private hideaways and the climbing
branches of tall trees. They hadn’t found
her, just like with Natalie on that
mountain road two states away. And
with Fiona, down whatever road she
took, wherever she landed aside from
back here with me. None of the girls I
saw in the house had been found.
There were more stories still to be
told. More girls, their voices rising,
their
Missing
flyers
entering
my
collection. My memory expanding now
to hold all of their names.
—
32
—
ISABETH
Isabeth got in the car. Didn’t she know a
girl alone should never get in the strange
car when it pulls up alongside her, when
the man calls out asking if she needs a
ride, when even after she says no, he
keeps tailing her, keeps asking?
She knew.
On any other day, she wouldn’t have
accepted the ride. But what she wanted
her family and friends to know, what she
hoped they’d only understand, had they
been there, was how the rainstorm had
caught her unaware when she was
walking home from school. How the
burst of showers came from out of
nowhere and how, within seconds, she
was soaked. And that’s when the car
pulled up behind her.
At first she ignored him. Then he
pulled the car closer, and she happened
to take a peek and realized—a glimmer
of relief—that it was only someone she
knew. Well, sort of. The man’s face was
familiar; he was from around the
neighborhood. He knew her dad, or was
it her brothers? He worked in a store in
town, or was he a member of her
church? Either way, she’d seen him
before, somewhere.
“Need a ride?” this man, technically
not a stranger, called.
She hesitated.
“Come on, get in out of the rain,” he
said.
Isabeth nodded, and within moments
she was depositing her schoolbooks in
the backseat. She was climbing into the
front seat. She was closing the car door.
Only then did she waver. She hadn’t
done the wrong thing, had she? Did she
really know this man? Should she ask his
name to be sure? Would that be rude?
That would be.
So
rude. She didn’t want
to be rude. That’s what she was thinking
moments before she realized the door
had been locked automatically.
Isabeth had done everything she was
told to do for the past 17 years: She had
studied. She had washed the dishes. She
had kept her legs closed. She had stayed
off the Internet past ten o’clock. She had
joined her family for church every
Sunday. She had eaten her vegetables.
She had, once or twice, helped an old
lady cross a street. She had never once
rolled up the waistband of her school-
uniform skirt to show more leg.
She’d done so many things right, and
one thing wrong. She shouldn’t have
gotten in that car.
Isabeth Valdes: Gone 2010 from
Binghamton, New York. Age 17.
— — —
MADISON
Madison was going to be a model. She’d
been told she should model all her life,
like randomly when she was out
shopping for a cute new outfit at the mall
or sucking on the straw of her iced,
sugar-free, skim-milk chai latte at the
coffee place or just minding her own
business walking down the street. She
figured it was only a matter of time
before someone plucked her from the
great big nothing that was her life and
plastered her face on a billboard and
made her into Something. She figured
heading to New York would only bring
her into Somethingness that much faster.
She met the photographer online, or
talked to him anyway. He said he’d do
her portfolio for free, and he had the
lights set up in his apartment and
everything.
So Madison spent the entire six-hour
ride practicing her posing face in the bus
window. She had an expression she was
trying to perfect, half serious, half sweet,
lips pursed, eyebrows lifted, chin held
high. She knew the photographer would
love her for it.
Madison Waller: Gone 2013 from
Keene, New Hampshire. Age 17.
— — —
EDEN
Eden simply wanted a taco. She was the
one who saw the roadside stand at the
edge of nowhere and begged her friends
to stop. She was the one who raced out
of the car before anyone else did. The
light was falling, and picnic tables were
empty, and all she knew was that the
roadside stand said TACOS and she
needed one, right now. The rickety shack
was covered in hand-painted signs like
that. One said STRAWBERRIES and another
s a i d BLUEBERRIES. And the biggest of
them all said JEWELRY / PIE / WOVEN RUGS
/ CIGARS. Though the place was ready to
close up shop, Eden talked them into
serving her and her friends some tacos
slathered in cheese and sour cream and
pico de gallo and heaps of guac. But by
the time she and her friends were
finished eating, the place was closed and
dark and there was nowhere to use the
bathroom before they got back on the
road, so Eden had to make use of the
weeds.
The last thing Eden’s friends heard
her say before she trampled off into the
darkness beyond the picnic tables was,
“Back in a sec! Gotta pee.”
Eden DeMarco: Gone 2011 from
Fairborn, Ohio. Age 17.
— — —
YOON-MI AND MAURA
Yoon-mi said she knew the minute she
walked into the gymnasium for early
pep-squad practice. She knew as she
stretched and as, across the gym, the last
phys ed class of the day counted off into
teams. She knew as the class spread out
to start dodgeball, getting ever closer to
where they were practicing. And she
knew as she stood up to learn the new
cheer. She knew when she felt the smack
of impact as the ball hit her square in the
face. She knew as she fell backward,
and she knew as she lay there, staring up
at the ridiculously tall ceiling, where
caught in the rafters was a lone silver
balloon from the formal the month
before. She’d gone to that dance with a
boy, even though she secretly liked girls.
What she knew is that something
significant would happen today.
The feeling took shape and grew eyes
and a mouth and a face, turning into this
girl, this fellow junior named Maura.
“I’m so freaking sorry!” Maura was
going. “I didn’t mean to get you in the
face!”
And
there
were
more
people
surrounding them—the gym teacher, the
other juniors in last-period gym, and the
girls on the pep squad, a crowd of heads
and hands—but Yoon-mi focused in on
one of them.
Maura Morris, who’d moved here
from Canada last year.
Her future girlfriend who’d just
clocked her in the face during dodgeball.
Maura, on the other hand, didn’t know
a thing when she walked into PE that
day. Not even when she smacked the
beautiful pep-squad girl in the face with
a speeding dodgeball. Yoon-mi Hyun,
the girl to whom she gave two black
eyes—little did Maura know that, within
a week, she’d become her first
girlfriend.
The mystery wasn’t how they fell in
love—that was quick; that was easy—it
was what happened once they went
public. Their families’ reactions. The
kids at school. When Maura suggested
they could run off together and start a
new life up in Canada, she’d only said it
offhand. A little wishful thinking, a silly
dream. She didn’t expect Yoon-mi to
show up at her house with her bags that
very night and say, “Let’s go.”