Read Broken Hearts, Fences and Other Things to Mend Online
Authors: Katie Finn
Tags: #Juvenile Fiction, #Social Issues, #Friendship, #Emotions & Feelings, #Family, #Marriage & Divorce
opened my eyes and pushed myself up to a sitting position, I
could see that it was almost totally dark outside. The ocean was
rough and choppy, and the trees were swaying in the wind. The
second thing I heard was my phone, which was ringing away on
the bedside table.
I reached for it, then stopped when I saw Hallie’s name— and
the picture of her I’d taken as she posed next to the fake
phonebooth— lighting up the screen. I wasn’t sure I was awake
enough to handle Hallie and keep my cover stories straight. The
phone stopped ringing and I sat back against the pillows, re-
lieved. I would call her later that afternoon, when I’d had some
coffee and could think about what I was going to say to her, how
I would explain the sudden appearance of my friend Gemma
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Tucker.
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I had just had this comforting thought when the phone
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started ringing again. It was Hallie again, and I knew she would
think something was off if I kept ignoring her calls. My heart
thumping, I answered the phone.
“Hi, Hallie,” I said, clearing my throat after hearing how
scratchy my voice sounded.
“Sophie, hi,” Hallie said. “I hope I didn’t wake you up.”
“No, it’s fi ne,” I said, pulling the phone away from my ear and
squinting at the time. It was almost eleven in the morning, so it
wasn’t like Hallie was calling at the crack of dawn or anything.
“What’s up?”
Hallie sighed, and said, “I just wanted to . . . apologize about
last night. I’m sorry the party kind of fell apart at the end.”
“No, it’s fi ne,” I said quickly, closing my eyes for a second.
Hallie’s voice sounded tired and thick, like she’d been crying, and
most likely because of me. Again.
“I know this is a little bit of a strange situation,” she said. “I
don’t know how much . . . what exactly Gemma has told you.”
I paused before replying. The way Hallie had pronounced my
name was awful. She’d practically spat it out. “We, um,” I said,
not really sure how much to admit I knew, “went into things a
little bit last night.”
“Well, I’m just so sorry to put you in the middle of all this,”
Hallie said, sounding sadder than ever. I was about to tell her
that
I
was the sorry one, but before I could, Hallie took a breath,
sounding like she was psyching herself up for something. “But
that’s not exactly why I called. Is Gemma there? Do you think I
could speak with her?”
—-1
“Oh,” I said, my mind racing. “You know, I don’t think that
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would be such a good idea. She’s still sleeping. In fact,” I said,
getting a sudden inspiration, “I think she’s actually heading
back to Connecticut, like, this afternoon, so—”
“Hey!” There was a pounding on my door and I jumped. It
swung open, and Sophie, her hair up in a face- washing topknot
that also somehow managed to look chic, stuck her head in my
room. “Are we going to get breakfast? I’m starving.”
I was giving her all the
stop talking for god’s sake now
ges-
tures that I knew, but Sophie obviously didn’t have her contacts
in yet, as she just squinted at me. I knew I probably just looked
like a gesticulating blob. “What?” she asked loudly, and I in-
wardly groaned.
“Was that her?” Hallie asked, her voice quiet, and I knew I
couldn’t really tell her that I’d had another friend magically show
up on my doorstep in the last twelve hours.
“Yeah,” I said. “Um . . . hold on a second.” I pressed the mute
button and scrambled out of bed. “It’s Hallie,” I whispered to So-
phie, even though I knew Hallie couldn’t hear me, and that I
could just talk at a normal volume. “She wants to talk to you.”
“Me?” Sophie asked, looking panicked.
“Well, she wants to talk to
me
.” I mouthed this last word, as if
Hallie would be able to hear it. “But she thinks you’re me. So . . .”
Sophie backed out of my room and down the hall, and I fol-
lowed. “What am I supposed to say?” she asked. “What does she
even want?”
“I don’t know,” I said. “But I think the longer we keep her on
-1—
hold, the more she’s going to think something strange is going
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on.”
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Sophie looked down at my phone for a long moment, then
took a breath and nodded. “Okay,” she said, gesturing for me to
give her the phone. “Is she going to yell at me?” she asked.
“I don’t think so,” I said, with much more confi dence than I
felt. “It didn’t sound like it.”
Sophie nodded and unmuted the phone and I leaned against
the wall, realizing that we’d stopped to have this conversation
right in front of the framed
Nightmare of the Zombguana
poster.
I turned away slightly from it, as the bright colors and tepid praise
from bought- off critics— not to mention the zombie- iguanas—
were really not helping at the moment.
“Hello?” Sophie asked, her eyes on me. “This is . . . Gemma.” I
tried not to wince when she said my name. It was, I knew, how
I must have sounded when I called myself Sophie the fi rst few
times— completely unnatural. Sophie listened for a moment, then
shook her head. “No, I’m not leaving,” she said, shooting a ques-
tioning look at me a moment too late, and I realized Hallie must
have asked her about what I’d said “Gemma” was planning to do—
head back to Connecticut today. She listened for a long moment
while I bit my fi ngernails, straining to hear and wishing I’d told
Sophie to put the phone on speaker. “Okay,” Sophie said. There
was another long pause, and she nodded. “Sounds good. See you
then.” She ended the call and gave the phone back to me.
“That’s it?” I asked, shocked that the conversation had been
so brief, not to mention so free of yelling.
“Yeah,” Sophie said, sounding a little shocked herself. “She
wants to meet for coffee at noon. So we can talk things out. It
—-1
didn’t really sound like she was that mad, Gem.”
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“So you’re having coffee with her in . . .” I checked my phone.
“An hour.” I was starting to get a fi erce headache, and felt that
the sooner I got caffeine, the better for all involved. “And you’re
going to go there pretending to be me.”
“Should I not have said yes?” she asked, biting her lip. “I
mean, I thought it would be weird to say no. I was worried that it
might make things even worse.”
I nodded; I couldn’t argue with that. “Okay,” I said. “Well . . .
maybe this will be fi ne. We can see what she thinks about me,
right?”
“Right,” Sophie said. I could hear my best friend using the
same voice I currently was— a cheerful tone on top of growing
panic.
“It’ll be fi ne,” I said.
“Right! Fine!” Sophie echoed, even though it was clear nei-
ther one of us believed this.
Just then, there was a huge crash of thunder from outside
that rattled the panes of the windows— which
really
didn’t seem
like a good sign.
“Come on,” I said, giving up on all attempts at forced opti-
mism. “We should get ready.”
O O O
“Okay,” I said as I turned the car into a spot across the street
from Quonset Coffee and cut the engine. The wipers stopped
-1—
and the windshield was instantly engulfed in rain. The weather
0—
had not improved, and in fact had gotten worse as the morning
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had gone on. I had found a giant golf umbrella in the garage,
which we had needed just to cross the driveway to the car— and
even then, we got drenched. “So . . . are you feeling okay?”
“Yeah,” Sophie said, fl ipping down the visor mirror and fl uff-
ing up her hair. “I just want to get it over with.”
“I hear that,” I said. I was hoping that this would be fi ne, that
I wasn’t sending my best friend into the lion’s jaws.
But I just wasn’t sure what Hallie wanted out of this. Her re-
quest for a meeting with her former adversary was the last thing
I expected. I couldn’t make any sense of it, and it was with an
increasing sense of alarm that I was sending Sophie in my place.
I was also wishing that Ford hadn’t made me watch the God-
father movies with him quite so many times.
Sophie fl ipped the mirror back up. “Is she really going to
think I’m you?” she asked. “I mean, what if I’m in there and she
starts talking about how she knows I’m an imposter? And then
she throws her coffee at me or something?”
“She won’t,” I said, trying to sound as sure of this as possible,
despite the fact I’d been worried about something very similar
on the drive over. “And of course she’s not going to say you’re an
imposter. She believes I’m you, so why wouldn’t she believe you’re
me?”
Sophie bit her lip and nodded. “Okay,” she said. She pulled out
her phone. “Sure you want to do this?”
I nodded and took out my own. On the drive, we’d devised a
plan so that I could listen in to the conversation. I would call her
and she would just leave the connection open, with her phone in
—-1
her purse, which would be as close to the table as possible. This
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way, if things got tricky— if Hallie asked Sophie about something
that I would have known— I could text her the answer.
“Here we go,” I said. I called her, and Sophie answered, then
stuck the phone in her purse. “It’ll be fi ne,” I said, trying to sound
much more sure of this than I felt.
“
Mercedem non sine periculo,
” she said. “It’s the Clarence Hall
motto,” she explained. “I picked it up when I was dating Justin.”
“And Jason,” I reminded her.
Sophie waved this away. “Anyway, it means ‘no reward with-
out risk.’ Appropriate, right?”
I nodded and forced myself to smile. “Thank you for doing
this,” I said. Sophie gave me a smile back, but I knew her well
enough to see that she was really ner vous.
“Here I go,” she said, squaring her shoulders. Then she looked
out at the rain and sighed. “Ugh.”
“Take the umbrella!” I said, starting to reach into the back-
seat. “It’s pouring.”
“No,” Sophie said, “I’m just going to run for it.” She took a
deep breath, then got out of the car and darted across the street.
I had just lifted the phone to my ear when the passenger door
opened and Sophie was back in the car again, half- drenched and
dripping.
“You want the umbrella after all,” I said knowingly. Sophie
just shook her head, and I felt my heart leap. “She wasn’t there?”
I asked hopefully. “We got stood up?”
“I haven’t gone in yet,” Sophie said, talking fast and brushing
-1—
droplets of water from her face. “It just hit me. Clarence Hall!
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That’s where I know that Reid guy from. He was Justin’s room-
mate.” She frowned. “Or Jason’s. I can’t remember. But I
knew
I
knew him from somewhere!” she said triumphantly.
“But . . .” I said, now worrying about more than this coffee
date. “If you remember him, that means he might remember
you, right?”
“Oh,” Sophie said, her face falling. “Right.”
“And he’d remember you as Sophie Curtis. Not as Gemma
Tucker.” I let out a breath as the ramifi cations of this became clear.
Reid was staying with Hallie and Josh, and at any moment he
might remember how he knew Sophie, including her name—
which would make everything I’d built this summer come crash-
ing down around me.
“So . . . what now?” Sophie asked. “Do I still have to get coffee
with her?”
“I think so,” I said. “And I’ll . . . come up with something in
the meantime.”
“Okay,” Sophie said, though she sounded very unconvinced.
She looked outside, shuddered, then headed into the deluge once
more. When I saw she’d made it across the street and gone inside
Quonset Coffee, I lifted the phone to my ear.
“Hello,” I heard Sophie saying. Even though her voice was
muffl ed though the bag, I could tell that she was ner vous. “It’s
me, Gemma. I mean, hi.”
Hallie said something in response, and I pressed the phone to