Authors: Neal Shusterman
It wasn’t just Nikki’s compact mirror that broke that day. A barrier inside of me had broken as well—and Gerardo deciding to keep that little piece of glass made it even worse. I was feeling an emotion I had never allowed myself to feel for anyone. It was dangerous. The thing is, Gerardo acted
real
with me. He would act one way with his friends, another way with Nikki. But he didn’t need to put up a front with me, because I was nothing to him. I guess, strangely, being nothing made me all the more important—and although he began as nothing to me, too—just another short-time occupant of the mercy seat—that was changing. Sure, he only sat with me once or twice a week, but on those days that he didn’t, I began to feel a longing that would follow me through the rest of the day. All these years I’d kept my feelings for others covered as completely as the mirror in my room, but now that was changing.
Part of me knew those feelings would eventually choke me. But when something takes root, you can’t stop its growth. It wasn’t any old thing that was growing, either. My feelings for Gerardo were just like Miss Leticia’s corpse flower: all ripe and ready to blossom into something that Gerardo would surely find repulsive.
T
he letter was just about burning a hole in my pocket. I could feel it there every minute of every day. Sometimes I could swear it was moving, rubbing itself against my leg to remind me it was there. Whenever Marisol walked by, giving me a sneer, instead of sneering back, I just reached into my pocket and brushed my fingertips across the smooth, soft paper.
You have a destiny,
that paper said.
Marisol can torture you all she wants, however she wants. No amount of roadkill will ever take that away.
I stopped by the library after school one day, to do some investigating. I got on the Internet and searched for a town called De León. I found six of them, but all in different states, none in ours. So then I opened up the atlas—you know the one—it’s so big that the library’s got to have its own special stand for it. I searched every inch of our state on the map. No De León.
It had been two weeks since I got the letter, and I was still no closer to figuring out who had sent it or why.
I tried not to think too much about it, but the questions in my head just kept coming. How could somebody in some far-off place know what I needed to find? Have they been watching me? Should I be frightened? And what if, after all my searching, this
was just another one of Marisol’s stupid tricks, designed just to drive me crazy?
I pulled out the note and looked at it again. No. Marisol did not have a sweeping handwriting like this. Her letters were all happy and round. She dotted her
i’
s with hearts. And the paper—this wasn’t the kind of paper you found in any stationery store. There was true magic in this note—I knew it in my heart, even if I didn’t have any evidence. Yet.
“Can I help you?” the librarian asked.
“Huh?”
“You seem a bit confused; I was wondering if I could help you.”
I looked around and found that I was standing in the quiet reading room, facing a blank wall. I hadn’t even remembered walking there. I must have been wandering while looking at the note. It was just like the way I would wake up and find myself standing in the corner of my room. I had gotten used to that particular weirdness, but this was the first time I ever remembered wake-walking. I felt strangely unsettled and couldn’t look that librarian in the eye.
“I’m fine,” I told her.
She left, not all that sure that I was.
I’m so stupid—it’s just three words,
I told myself. Why should three words have such control over me? It was like some sort of magic spell.
Then I got to thinking about what Miss Leticia had said about words, letters having a magic to them when they were in the right order. Spells and spelling are one in the same. Spelling. Letters. The idea struck me at dinner one night so suddenly, I
dropped my spoon right into my soup, and it splashed across the table, right into Vance’s eye.
“Hey!”
“Excuse me.” I got up, dinner suddenly forgotten, and went to my room, locking my door. My parents didn’t question it, since I did it so often. Maybe they were glad to have me gone from the table. It was breakfast that Mom was determined to make a family meal. By the time dinner rolled around, she was too tired to care.
The second my door was locked, I went to my desk, pulled the note out of my pocket, and set it on my desk. Then I took out a piece of paper, my brush and ink. I let the tip of the brush soak in the silky blackness, then I closed my eyes, trying to feel a connection to the words. From my mind to my hand, to my fingers, to the tip of the brush. Then I opened my eyes and wrote in smooth simple strokes:
FIND THE ANSWERS
Even before I took the next step, I could sense I was onto something. It wasn’t just the words, it was the letters. The letters and the spaces between. It was the spelling. It was the
spell.
I took the letters and began writing them down in different combinations.
FIND THE ANSWERS
DITHERS IN WRENF
STAINED WN FRESH
TRAIN WEDNES SHF
RAINS WHEN FEETS
THERE WINS FANDS
WHERE FINS STAND
That gave me a moment’s pause. “Where Fins Stand.” It didn’t make any sense, yet somehow it sounded familiar. I searched my mind for the meaning, but I couldn’t grab anything from those words. Still, there was some connection.
FIND THE ANSWERS…WHERE FINS STAND…
I shook my head to shake the thought loose and kept on playing with the letters, but no other combinations stood out in my mind. Eventually, I had to face the fact that I was on a wild-goose chase. As sure as I was that there was something hidden in those letters, logic told me to forget it. I closed the ink and crumpled the paper.
As for what happened next, well, I should have been smart enough to see it coming—or at least to step out of the way before I was hit. But I was so obsessed with figuring out the note, I never saw all the forces around me coming together. It wasn’t so much a conspiracy of things as it was separate events weaving themselves together into a net that snared me sure as an animal trap.
The next day was a bad one. For one, all that time I’d been spending obsessing over the note kept me from studying, so I failed a math test. Then at lunch Gerardo spent the whole time talking about Nikki, and how good things were between the two of
them. Well, they say bad news comes in threes—and when I got home on that day, I found my dad sitting on the sofa, across from none other than bad news number three: Marshall Astor, Marisol’s boyfriend and accomplice in crime. My heart took a long, slow fall into my gut.
“What’s he doing here?”
“Cara, honey,” Dad said, standing up, “that’s no way to talk to a guest.”
“That’s no guest, that’s vermin. I’ll get the rat poison.”
Dad laughed nervously. “She’s got a biting sense of humor, doesn’t she? You two talk. I got some, um, business I have to take care of.” Dad was out of that house at light speed.
I looked around, hoping Momma and Vance were there. Anything to keep me from being alone with Marshall, but they were nowhere to be found.
“So what do you want?” I asked. His foot was no longer bandaged, though he did still walk with a little bit of a limp. “If you want me to testify against Leticia Radcliffe, forget it.”
“What? Oh. No, I never told nobody about that.” I saw his toes wiggle in the tip of his shoes. He grimaced, and that just made me smile. I didn’t usually enjoy other people’s pain, but for Marshall Astor, I’d make an exception.
“Ruined your football season, I’ll bet.”
He shrugged. “I couldn’t play anyway. I was already on academic probation.”
I crossed my arms, making it clear I was done with the small talk. “So what do you want?”
“There’s no point in beating around the bush,” he said. “I’ll just say it straight out. I’m asking you to the homecoming dance.”
It caught me so off guard I just laughed out loud.
“I’m not making a joke,” he said. “I’m serious.”
“You think I’m gonna fall for that? What are you gonna do, wait till I get all dressed up and pour a bucket of blood on me? Sorry, I saw that movie.”
“Nah, that’s gross,” he said. “I wouldn’t do that.”
“Oh, but it’s not too gross to fill someone’s room with roadkill?”
“I had nothing to do with that!” he said. Then he hesitated. “Well, okay, I did help Marisol scoop up the roadkill, but I didn’t know what she was going to use it for.”
I just looked at him in disbelief.
“I didn’t!” he said. “I thought she had got it into her head that they needed a decent burial, or something. I didn’t know she was gonna do what she did! I didn’t find out until after.”
I wasn’t sure who was more of a fool—him for saying something like that, or me for actually believing him.
“So you’re telling me Marisol has nothing to do with you asking me to the dance?”
“No,” he said, “it’s not Marisol’s idea at all. In fact, she’s pretty mad about it.”
“Is that so?” Anything that made Marisol mad was fine by me—but I wasn’t foolish enough to think Marshall was doing this out of the kindness of his microscopic heart.
“If it’s not a Marisol scheme, then you must be doing it on a dare.”
He shook his head. “You’re so sure you’re completely undatable—well, maybe you’re not. Maybe there are some decent things about the way you look.”
“Name one.”
He panicked for a moment, looking me up and down, trying to find something. Finally, he said, “You…uh…you’ve got nice hands.”
Hah! Even if it were true, it wouldn’t have made me believe his intentions. “I see right through you!” I told him. “You’ve got some secret reason for wanting to take me, and I want to know what it is!”
Suddenly he got all mad. He picked up a pillow and he threw it down hard. “Why do you gotta ask? Can’t you just accept the invitation and leave it at that?”
Then I thought of Gerardo. I never even went so far as to imagine him inviting me to the dance, because I knew he was going with Nikki Smith. I tried to imagine myself with Marshall Astor, and I simply couldn’t. “Who says I even want to go with you?”
He laughed—as if any girl in the world would be a fool to turn down an invitation from him. “You know what they say, Cara. Don’t look a gift horse in the mouth.” I thought he might make some crack about me looking like the gift horse, but he didn’t.
“I only promise you two things,” Marshall said. “One: This is not a trick. No one’s gonna do anything bad to you, or they will answer to me. And two: You will have a good time.”
“And how can you be so sure of that?”
Marshall smiled his winning smile. “Because if there’s one thing I know, it’s how to show a girl a good time.”
And then he strutted out like so much peacock.
After he left, I stormed into my room, slamming the door, even though no one was there to hear it. I just liked the sound of
hearing it slam.
Nice hands,
he had said. That was the best thing he could say about me, and even that was a lie. I was a nail-biter. More than that, I bit the skin around my nails, so both my hands always looked like a war zone.
But then I looked at my hands, and I realized that maybe Marshall was a bit more observant than me…because my fingertips weren’t gnawed on at all. My nails were smooth, my cuticles were smooth. It looked as if I had just had a hundred-dollar manicure. It was impossible, because I’d been biting my nails more than ever. And yet they were perfect.
Like magic.
I gasped, and reached into my pocket, pulling out the shimmering note. I had been running my fingertips over its soft texture day after day, and my fingers had been healed. Repaired. Beautified. It was definitely a hint of something magical and mystical, but how far it went—how
deep
it went, was still a mystery.
“I’m not going.”
“What do you mean you’re not going?”
My momma was practically on her hands and knees, begging. “He is the handsomest boy in your grade, and if he’s taken a liking to you—”
“He hasn’t taken a liking to me,” I told her. “Face it; there’s something else going on here.”
She put her hands on her hips. “Well, how do you know he isn’t into ugly girls?”
The very concept completely derailed my train of thought.
“In this world,” my momma said, “there is a man for every woman. You go to the mall, you look at people. Half the time
they look so mismatched you wonder what’s going on. But to them, they fit perfectly.”
Vance sat in the recliner just enjoying the whole thing. Dad was in the kitchen, pretending not to listen, but I know he was.
“What are you gonna do for the rest of your life, Cara?” Momma asked. “You gonna lock yourself in your room? You gonna climb out that window and go walk around the cemetery your whole life?”
I snapped my eyes to her.
“You think I don’t know you do that? I know every time you climb out that window, but I never say anything because I figure you’ve got a right to do the things you do.”