Authors: Nova Ren Suma
Tags: #Juvenile Fiction, #Social Issues, #Runaways, #Horror & Ghost Stories, #Visionary & Metaphysical
murdered her.”
“Wait, what do you mean? Did you
see anyone in the woods?”
“No. Of course not. I’m just
assuming.”
It wasn’t something I was going to
assume. Some of the girls I’d seen lately
in the house had met terrible fates before
they walked up to the front door—it
could be told through their eyes and in
the way, sometimes, parts of their bodies
would go all pins and needles like they
hadn’t gotten used to having legs again.
Or the way the smoke would flow
through their guts like a magic trick, a
sad one, without scarves.
It was all in the patches of the stories
we skipped over, the unspoken ends.
Isabeth. Eden. Shyann, even, maybe. I
ached for them.
But wouldn’t I have known if
something like that had happened to
Abby, out of all the girls?
“What was that movie where they put
the girl’s head in a box?” Cass was
saying now. “You know what I’m talking
about, right? That movie? There was this
box, and they look in it and there’s her
head?”
I didn’t know the movie and hoped I
never would. I left Cass quicker than I
meant to, especially after driving all the
way there.
Talking to Abby’s camp counselor
had given me nothing. Worse than
nothing: She’d drawn a detailed enough
image that felt more real than the real
thing. I didn’t want to think anymore
about what she’d said, didn’t want to
picture it.
This visit to the coffee shop was what
propelled me down to New Jersey, but
there was another place I could try in
another part of the state. I had the
address. I still had questions. And
though I didn’t know how to make sense
of it, I couldn’t let myself believe she
was dead.
—
37
—
“SHE
ran off,” Abby’s grandmother
said when I asked her. “That’s it. That’s
the story. You drove yourself all the way
here to hear that.”
Her expression didn’t become pained
as she said these words, though I
expected it would. I found myself
watching her upper lip, the darker hints
of hair growing in there, the way the
hairs moved like little antennae as she
spoke. She was the woman who raised
Abby, her legal guardian. Within
minutes, I could already tell she wasn’t
the kind of grandmother who’d open her
arms to you, who’d remove the cigarette
from her mouth to say sweet things and
offer you a cookie. She’d let me inside
the house, though. At least she’d let me
in.
“And you went to that camp
together?” her grandmother asked for the
third time.
“Yes,” I said. “I was there. She never
said a thing about running away. I know
she had her wallet with her, and her
purse I think, too, but she left all the rest
of her stuff there, you know.”
“We know,” she said. “They shipped
it back to us. Of course we know.”
Her grandmother’s lips drew in on the
butt of her cigarette, ballooning up her
old lungs with the last of the smoke. She
was smoking indoors, windows closed,
slowly killing anyone who came near
her, and as she tapped the ash I could
see the similarity between this plastic-
entombed room and the rooms in the
house where my dream kept taking me. It
was the air. The haze of it. A feathery,
caustic mist of lavender-blue.
“This is a girl who ran away before,”
her grandmother said. “This is a girl
who stole money from her own
poppop’s wallet when he was taking his
afternoon nap in that very chair.” She
was pointing at the sunken armchair I
was sitting in. I imagined it would be
soft to the touch, but I couldn’t tell,
because it was encased in a skintight
layer of clear plastic.
“No,” I said. That didn’t sound like
the Abby I knew.
“Dear,” she said, “the girl you met at
that summer camp wasn’t the same girl
she was at home, with us, you can be
sure.”
I was sensing there were things Abby
hadn’t told me. A grave, troublesome
part of her story she’d completely left
out. When had she run away before?
Why hadn’t she mentioned this? What
more didn’t I know?
Abby’s grandmother’s eyes flicked to
the side table beside the couch, and mine
followed. There was a frame standing
upright, a two-in-one. The frame met in
the center, drawing the two sides
together
and
connecting
them
symbolically.
Almost as if her gaze had given me
permission, I found my hands reaching
for the picture frame. I picked it up.
On the left side of the frame was
Abby; I recognized her immediately. It
was the school portrait, the same one
used for her Missing flyer, but this was
the first time I was seeing it in color.
Her skin had a pink glow she didn’t have
anymore,
and
her
teeth
were
extraordinarily white. Someone must
have said, “Cheese!” to her before
snapping that photo, someone must have
forced her to have a smile that showed
teeth, because as I held the picture close
I could see how wide her lips were
opened, how prominent her teeth were
made to be, like an unseen hand was
holding a hard, cold object to the back of
her neck and telling her to grin or that
would be the end of her.
On the right side of the frame was a
woman with a pigtailed little girl in her
arms. Abby’s mother and young Abby.
Abby hadn’t told me what happened
to her mother, and now I wondered.
Because she wasn’t in this house, was
she? She wasn’t in Abby’s life. She
wasn’t here.
Her grandmother sensed the question.
“I’m sure Abigail told you about
Colleen.”
“A little,” I said.
“Abigail is exactly like her, I should
have guessed. Colleen ran off and
Abigail gets it in her head to do the
same.”
“How old was she, Colleen, her mom,
when she . . . ran off?”
“Old enough to know better. Twenty-
three.”
So she wasn’t one of them, then.
“That’s awful. I mean it must have been,
for Abby.”
“Drugs,” she said, and snipped it
closed. “Miss Woodman. Lauren, may I
call you Lauren? Do you have a
mother?”
It took me a moment to nod. Of course
I had a mother.
“And your mother, she’s still with
you?”
I nodded again.
I expected her to say,
Good for you.
So I could then say, if I dared, how it
didn’t matter: Having a mother couldn’t
stop it, and not having a mother wouldn’t
make a girl go. Having brown hair
wouldn’t make it happen; having black
hair or yellow hair or green-dyed hair or
a shaved head wouldn’t keep a girl here,
in this world, if she was destined to go.
Staying home every day or going out
every night. Taking drugs or not taking
them. Wearing that or wearing this.
Talking to strangers or talking to
nobody. Hooking up with boys or
hooking up with other girls or saving
herself for “the one.” There was no way
to know. If a girl was meant to go, she
just did. I believed that.
Abby’s grandmother stubbed out her
cigarette. “Abby always did want to be
like Colleen. Let’s hope she has fun.”
She breathed out, and the last of her
smoke made its way toward my face. I
coughed. I could see she’d decided what
had happened to Abby a long time ago,
and that was why she wasn’t even
reported missing for more than a month.
But I was there. I was there for a
reason, and maybe it was only to say
this:
“Mrs. Sinclair,” I said, “I have to tell
you. She didn’t run away. Abby. I know
her mother did, but she didn’t.
Something happened to her. She went
missing. You have to keep looking.
Please believe me. Please.”
My face was on fire from letting those
words out, my breath gone heavy and
hard to catch, but all she did was shake
her head. Then she had her hands out for
something, and it took me some moments
to realize she wanted the picture frame I
was holding.
“Give it here,” she said.
Before I did, I looked one last time,
not at young Abby and her lost mother
but at recent Abby. Abby at sixteen,
maybe, in this photo, maybe even just
turned 17. Abby forcing a smile that
showed all her teeth. She was wearing
something around her neck in the photo,
but I got only a glimpse of it showing
through the open collar of her shirt,
before her grandmother was on her feet
and rescuing it from my grasp, then
snapping it closed.
I wasn’t sure, because I had only a
moment to see it, but I thought the
pendant she had on was a swirl of smoke
inside a stone. Round and gray.
“If she sent you here to get any of her
things, let’s stop this right now,” her
grandmother said. “I’m not letting you up
there, in her room.”
“She . . .” I started, beginning to deny
it. But I did want to go up there; I did
want to see her room.
“No,”
her
grandmother
said.
“Absolutely not. I knew you were after
those earrings. She thinks she can send
you here to get them and sell them? No.
Lauren, it’s time for you to go.”
Abby’s grandmother led me to the
door, and only after I stepped through it
did she say to me, “When you see her,
tell her we assume she’s not coming
back. Tell her we won’t wait all those
years like we did for her mother.”
“How long did you wait for her
mother? Did she ever come back?”
“Oh, she came back. She came back in
a box.”
—
38
—
OUT
in the driveway, Abby’s
grandfather was shoveling snow. He had
his back to me, his shoulders hunched
into the work, so I wasn’t sure if he saw
me coming, if he’d overheard our
conversation and the decisive click of
the door closed in my face.
Even so, I was aware of him plunging
his shovel closer and closer to where I
was walking. He was moving down the
imaginary line he’d drawn in the white
powder, straight for me. If he kept it up,
we would soon cross paths.
When we did, the shovel paused in the
ground at my feet and I heard him speak.
“How’s she doing?” he asked, just loud
enough for me to make out, and just quiet
enough so his wife wouldn’t hear.
He kept his back to the house and his
head down, but though he leaned toward
the snow at his feet, his eyes weren’t on
the ground. They were lifted up, to my
face.
“You’ve seen her,” he said—not a
question. “She all right? Doing okay?”
There was no true way to answer this.
She was intact, with both her arms and
legs, and with hair on her head and no
wounds gaping open, none I could see.
But
how
was she doing beyond that?
Whenever I saw her, the expression
on her face was a different one
altogether from the school photo in her
grandmother’s
frame,
the
face
photocopied on the flyer. Not smiling.
Not even pretending to. No hint of teeth.
Instead she wore a faint question mark of
an expression, one waiting to be filled in
by the numbers with paint.
I could sense only echoes from her.
The echo of sadness. The echo of
longing to go home. The echo of craving
a peanut butter sandwich.
Sometimes she showed herself to me,
so why wouldn’t she do the same now,
here, for her grandfather who surely
loved her, and had certainly known her
longer? She could set a whisper sailing
on the wind. She could simply wave
from the window of the van if she were