Authors: Nova Ren Suma
Tags: #Juvenile Fiction, #Social Issues, #Runaways, #Horror & Ghost Stories, #Visionary & Metaphysical
lights of the ambulance dancing over me,
easing out all the bad red, and I heard
her talking to the EMTs. She’d say you
send that girl away.
You send her away.
AND THEN
—
49
—
IT
takes some time before I realize the
words they’re saying aloud are meant for
me.
“We’re going to take care of you here,
Laura, hon. Just rest.”
“I think her name is Lauren.”
“Sorry.
Lauren
. Your mom brought
you in to us. Do you remember? Do you
remember what happened? What you
did?”
“Have you ever tried to hurt yourself
before, Lauren? Lauren?”
“All right then, I see you want to
sleep. Just sit up and swallow this.”
“She won’t sit up.”
“Just help her. There. Let her lean on
your arm. There, Lauren. Here you go.
This will make you comfortable. Good.
Swallow.”
“Who was that you were talking to
just now, Lauren?”
“Did she say something? I didn’t
hear.”
“She’s talking to those girls again . . .
What girls, Lauren? I don’t see any
girls.”
“Let’s leave her be. Don’t encourage
her. Let’s just let her sleep.”
The two nurses shuffle out the door.
They leave it open—it’s a door that
doesn’t seem to ever be able to close—
and they wander back, every so often,
checking on me as I pretend to sleep.
Soon the pill they had me swallow
makes it impossible to keep pretending.
The pill makes the sleeping turn real.
My head thickens with the quiet. The
lost girls who’ve come out to visit with
me slip under the bed to hide. Or they’ve
gone somewhere else, behind the
curtains maybe, where the shadows
gather—all I know is I can’t see or hear
them anymore.
The next time my eyes close, I can’t
get the lids to lift open.
This is the psych ward of the hospital
and I don’t know how many days I’ve
been inside.
—
50
—
I
don’t dream. I don’t wake up coughing,
and I can’t smell smoke.
I’ve been across the river, in the
hospital’s adolescent psychiatric ward,
for what feels like a week’s worth of
nights, though it could be fewer and it
could be more, I’m not sure. The sun
streaming through the window feels like
afternoon sun long left over from
morning, or the dreary start to a new
day. I’m in a long, narrow room, in a
long, narrow bed against a wall. The
bed on the opposite wall is empty. So is
my head.
There isn’t a voice rattling around in
my mind that doesn’t belong to me—
which, after all that’s happened, is a
foreign and noticeable thing. Whatever
they give me here at night knocks me out
and steals the dreams away, also the
voices. I’m wiped clean and returned to
who I was before I ever spied Abby
Sinclair on the side of the road.
Except for the bandage wrapped
around my left arm.
I don’t want to unpeel the bandage to
see what I did. I lie still on the bed and
wait. My limbs are heavy, and I can’t
seem to do much else. Surely, if I wait
long enough, one of the girls will visit
me.
Someone has to.
But no lost girl enters the room, and
no lost girl finds her way through the
quiet caverns of my head to lift her lips
to my ear.
I need to get out of bed and go out
there, see if someone can get my mom on
the phone. She’ll believe me if I could
only get a chance to talk to her. She’ll
come right away and she’ll take me
home.
On the ride back, we’ll laugh over
this. We’ll be sure I’m far more careful
in the future with mirrors and fingernail
clippers. If I missed too much school,
she’ll cover for me as she has before.
Maybe we’ll say I came down with the
flu.
No one will ever have to know this
even happened.
—
51
—
MY
mom seems afraid to look at me
and yet all she can do is look at me, so
there’s the constant swish-swishing of
her head as it turns toward me, then
away, toward me, away. Not to mention
her hands, which keep smoothing the
hair from my face, or grabbing my
fingers and squeezing, or rubbing circles
upon circles on my back between my
shoulder blades even though I’d rather
she didn’t keep touching me right now.
She clears her throat. “They’re going
to keep you here through the weekend,
Lauren,” she says. “Then we’ll . . . we’ll
decide more on Monday.”
When I speak it’s my voice that comes
out, but it’s slower than normal, which
makes me think my ears have gone bad.
The meds they keep giving me whisper
through my system the way the voices
used to, but in dumb, dull sounds I can’t
translate. “Monday?” I say. “I think I
have a big exam on Monday. I can’t stay
through Monday.”
“I’ll bring your schoolbooks and
whatever you need from home, if that’s
really what you want. But are you sure? I
don’t want you worrying about school
after, after . . .”
She can’t say it.
“I didn’t try to kill myself, Mom. It
was an accident. I told you.”
“Do you remember what you said?”
she asks tentatively. “About Fiona
Burke?”
I sharpen. “No. What did I say about
Fiona?”
“You were . . . It sounded to me like
you thought you were talking to Fiona.”
I shake my head. “I don’t remember
that at all.”
She changes the subject. “How do you
feel?”
“Fuzzy.”
“Does it . . .” She points at the arm.
“Hurt?” I finish for her.
She nods.
“Not really. It’s barely even a scratch.
Can’t I go home with you? I have shifts
at work all this week.”
“No, you don’t. I called in for you
already. And it wasn’t a scratch,
Lauren.”
Now she’s not meeting my eyes at all.
She looks like she’s about to burst into
tears. She turns from me in the chair to
survey the common room we’re sitting
in, this sad space meant for sad people.
Blinds block out as much sunlight as
possible,
and
puke-and-blood-proof
couches and chairs covered in scratches
aim away from one another, making it
possible for a dozen people to sit in this
room at once and not have to talk to one
other person, which is a miracle in
furniture arrangement. A large woman
guards the common area from inside an
adjoining office. The window between
her desk and the rest of the room has a
shutter over it that can be closed, so if
the place falls to chaos, she can abandon
ship and blockade herself in.
A boy shuffles past the common room
just in time for my mom to see him—
how both of his arms are covered in the
kind of bandages that cover just my left
forearm—and how slowly his legs
move, barely lifting off the floor as he
inches down the tiled corridor. He
walks like he’s been filled with cement.
Maybe that’s what’s in the pills they
make us swallow here. Carefully I lift
my arm to see how heavy it is, and then
with a
thunk
I watch it drop back down
onto my lap, the way a sack of cement
might drop.
When my mom turns back in my
direction, a perfectly positioned beam of
sunlight from between the blinds catches
her in the face. It lights her up as if
someone in the clouds has aimed a
spotlight down to reveal something of
significance to me.
Pay attention,
it says.
My mom’s beauty mark again. Just
like the other night, it’s on the wrong
side of her face and I’m left wondering.
Am I looking at her in a mirror? Has my
memory gotten dislodged and confused?
Or is this woman—this beautiful woman
with the mark on the wrong cheek, the
one who keeps nervously touching me,
the one who locked me away supposedly
for my own good—is this woman even
my mother?
I want her to speak. I need to hear her
voice. Then I’ll know.
She sighs. She says, “I’m so sorry I
made you feel like you couldn’t come to
me, Lauren.”
For a second I think she called me
Laura, like I swore I heard the nurse call
me the other night. But no. No, she
knows my name, and she’d never make
such a simple mistake as that. It won’t be
so easy.
I’m second-guessing myself again. I’m
not sure who she is now: the one I know
and have always known, or someone
pretending to be that person, trying to
trick me. I decide to take careful stock of
her tattoos, but she’s wearing a sweater,
and the sweater strategically covers
them up with overlong sleeves and a
bulky turtleneck that doesn’t allow even
a peek of vine to be seen. Of the birds on
her neck, only two can be made out, the
last two closest to her ear.
Should I ask her to take off her
sweater? To undress and prove herself
to me?
Then I remember how I tore off her
shirt in the bathroom the other night and
how frightened she seemed of me after,
like I’d attacked her with claws out and
teeth bared, ready to rip into her skin. I
remember the sight of her chest. Her
breasts. Her ribs. Her stomach. And I
hang my head, ashamed.
“What?” she says. “Tell me what
you’re thinking, honey.”
“You should probably go,” I say. “I’m
having weird thoughts right now.”
“Like what weird thoughts?”
“I shouldn’t tell you.”
“Are they telling you what to think?”
She’s leaned forward and whispered
this, like someone might overhear. “Did
they tell you not to tell me?”
I think at first by “they” she means the
doctors, but then I get it. She’s
regurgitating rote from those case studies
in her books again. She used to make me
read them aloud to her so she could
guess the right answer and prep for her
exams. Because that’s the kind of
question you’d ask a patient you’re
trying to categorize, ticking off all her
symptoms until the winning diagnosis
dings and lights up the game board. If I
tell her that the alien-vampires who’ve
come down from the galactic heavens
are telling me what to think and what to
do and what to say, she’ll win the prize
refrigerator.
I give a tiny shake of my head. That’s
the only answer I can offer right now.
“Oh, Lauren,” she says, a hint of pity
in her voice. Her mouth crumples,
showing me how defeated this makes her
feel. She asks if I need anything from
home and I describe what she can bring
me: my textbook, for the test Monday;
some books to read, anything really; my
gray notebook with the doodles on the
front and I think I left it on my desk; my
eyeliner and the rest of my makeup; more
socks.
Then I make myself ask, “Did they
call you yet? The police? About Abby?”
What I know from my last night at
home—and my last visit to the house
before Trina left me her knife—is that
Abby
might
still
be
out
there
somewhere. It’s possible. I can’t give up
hope on that.
She’s hesitating, so I really do begin
to think it’s about to happen, the truth,
the end of the story, the end. And will I
be allowed to be sad about my friend
while in here, will they let me have that
emotion? Will they even let me call her
my friend?
But my mom shakes her head. “No
news,” is all she says.
“Do you want to call them and ask,
maybe? For me?”
I think she might agree to it. Then she
veers around and completely changes the
subject. “So I called Jamie. I thought he
should know.”
“About Abby?” I ask, confused.
“About you,” she says. “I called and