Kiss of Broken Glass

Read Kiss of Broken Glass Online

Authors: Madeleine Kuderick

Tags: #Juvenile Fiction, #Social Issues, #Self-Mutilation, #Emotions & Feelings, #Friendship

BOOK: Kiss of Broken Glass
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Advance Reader’s e-proof

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This is an advance reader’s e-proof made from digital files of the uncorrected proofs. Readers are reminded that changes may be made prior to publication, including to the type, design, layout, or content, that are not reflected in this e-proof, and that this e-pub may not reflect the final edition. Any material to be quoted or excerpted in a review should be checked against the final published edition. Dates, prices, and manufacturing details are subject to change or cancellation without notice.

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CONTENTS

Cover

Disclaimer

Title

Dedication

Tuesday 3:22 p.m.

A Pruned-up Old Nurse Comes Over

And Here’s the Other Thing You Need to Know about the Baker Act

On My Way to the Ward

When the Door Opens

Then

But I Guess that Figures

Instead

Inside the Ward

The Whole Time I’m Getting Ready for Bed

I’m Having a Nightmare

Wednesday 8:00 a.m.

Have You Ever Tried to Quit?

A Girl Peeps Up from across the Room

Skylar Flits Out of Her Seat

I Get Thirty Minutes of Free Time

Day Nurse Flaps Her Big Bullhorn Lips

Room Check

Drawing for Distraction

I Decide to Draw Instead

My Favorite Place at School

If Only

Oh, and by the Way

One Phone Call a Day

Sometimes I Wish Dad Wasn’t So Clueless

Dad Used To Have A Little Superman In Him

That Was the Last Time

At Least Sean Still Has Dreams

Wednesday 11:30 a.m.

Wednesday After Lunch

Which One Did You Pick?

She Notices Me Staring

Rennie

Six Months Later

And Then

Afterward

I Guess That’s Why I Picked the Word

Wednesday 3:22 p.m.

Donya Catches Me in the Hallway

Speaking of Being Screwed

I Wonder What Rennie Thinks

If Sean Was a Shape

Wednesday 4 p.m.

Tap, Tap,
Tap . . .

Waiting and More Waiting

It’s Almost Time

Visiting Hour

Deep, Dark Secret

And That Makes It a Billion Times Worse

But at Least I’m Not an Idiot

By the Time My Mother Leaves

Skylar Notices Me

Skylar Shows Me Her Poem

Jag is Sitting on the Windowsill Nearby

Donya’s Staring at the Moon Too

Jag Hops off the Window Sill

Lights Out

My Dream on the Second Night

Dreams Are Just a Body’s Way of Sorting Things Out

Thursday 7:16 a.m.

Skylar’s Nervous Breakdown

There’s So Much Drama

Before Group Therapy

The Three C’s of Addiction

What I Find in Skylar’s Empty Room

The Rubber Room

I Need to Chill

My One Phone Call

Shower Escape

All I Want To Do

Ten Things Rennie Never Told Me

Bullhorn Brings a Tray to My Room

As If Things Weren’t Bad Enough

Some Friend I Am

I Hate It When People Say

Roger Must Have Some Kind of Radar

Things to Do Instead of Cutting

How Did You Do It?

Thing to Do #826

Ding Dong Tells Me—No Visitors Today

Small Talk

Skylar’s Being Transferred

Skylar’s Confession

There’s a Battle Going On inside My Head

Before Bed, I Make Two Lists

Five Facts that Prove I’m Not Addicted

Five Reasons That’s Total Bullshit

First Prayer in Forever

My Dream on the Third Night

I Wake Up

Friday 8 a.m.

Jag Says He Doesn’t Have Much Choice

It’s So Empty

One Hour Before

Five Minutes Before

The Family Meeting

It All Comes down to This

Friday 3:22 p.m.

Resources

Acknowledgements

About the Author

Author’s Notes

Copyright

About the Publisher

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DEDICATION

To everybody out there

                  
who is aching for the kiss

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Tuesday 3:22 p.m.

So here’s the thing about being Baker Acted.

You lose everything—

your belt,

your shoelaces,

the perfume bottles in your purse.

They take it all away in the emergency room

and make you sit in the aisle with a box of Kleenex

and a gown that doesn’t close in the back.

There’s nothing to do except watch the clock

on the wall and wonder how pissed your mom’s

gonna be when she gets there.

Tick.

           
Tick.

                       
Tick.

A cop guards you the whole time,

picks his teeth with a toothpick,

scratches his dandruff,

stares at you like a real creeper.

He talks about you too,

like you’re not even there.

To the nurses and orderlies.

“They caught her in the school bathroom,” he says,

“using a blade from her pencil sharpener.”

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A Pruned-up Old Nurse Comes Over

She looks at your wrists and ankles

and the places high on your hips

where it’s easy to hide the dark cut lines

even when you’re wearing short-shorts.

She’s holding a sheet of paper,

with an outline on it,

like a paper doll with no clothes.

She marks up the paper doll

with her fine-point Sharpie,

across the wrists,

through the ankles,

on each hip.

Slash.

           
Slash.

                       
Slash.

You watch that nurse,

and while you’re watching

you wish a thousand times

that you’d just waited till you got home

instead of doing it at school where that

Two-Face Tara caught you by the sink—

red drops running down the drain.

You think about the tap of Tara’s heels

as she ran to get Mr. Lane and the whoosh

of the bathroom door as he shoved it open wide,

and the look on faces peeking from the hallway—

smirking,

           mouthing,

                 
busted!

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And Here’s the Other Thing
You Need to Know about the Baker Act

Even if

the principal promises

you’ll be home before dinner—

Even if

the guidance counselor says

they’ll release you right after the ER—

Even if

your teary-eyed mother rushes in

and begs the doctor not to admit you—

“She’s only fifteen for heaven’s sake!”

It doesn’t matter.

You’re not going anywhere.

They’re gonna lock you up,

in a psych ward

for 72 hours.

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On My Way to the Ward

Creeper clamps his hand on my elbow,

and it feels rough and prickly as steel wool.

He swipes his badge through keyless locks

and steers me down a pale green hall

where everything smells like fake pine,

and the lights that flicker all look gray.

Then we stop.

It takes half a century for the elevator

doors to open and the whole time we’re

waiting I have to lean away so Creeper’s

disgusting chunks of dandruff don’t

flake off on me.

Inside the elevator it’s smaller than a

coffin and even though I’ve never been

claustrophobic before, this torpedo of

panic launches in my chest and I try to

yank my arm away and say,

Get your freaking hands off me!

But instead, this stupid sob spills out

and a tear rolls down my cheek,

and there’s nothing I can do but

stand there in that flimsy gown

with all my feelings hanging out.

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When the Door Opens

I see a sign overhead:

Adler Boyce Pediatric Stabilization Facility

Someone’s scribbled on the wall:

Attaboys Prehistoric Sycho Farm

Creeper pushes an intercom button.

“New patient,” he grunts. “Kenna Keagan.”

An old woman comes out,

white hair in a bun,

lips tight,

shoulders stiff.

She nods at Creeper

and signs for me on the dotted line

like I’m a package being delivered by UPS.

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Then

I step into the ward.

I thought it was gonna look like jail inside,

with steel bars and silver toilets.

But it doesn’t.

It’s all rainbows and angelfish instead,

painted on the turquoise walls,

glued to the ceiling,

just like kindergarten.

And right away I think,

it’s a good thing Avery can’t see me now.

This is just the kind of thing my older sister

likes to shove in my face to prove that she’s superior.

That—

and the way she looks like

a runway model even in sweatpants.

That—

and the fact she aces every test

with her freakazoid memory.

That—

and the promise that someday

she’ll score 2,400 on her SAT,

go to Harvard,

and win the Miss Universe Pageant,

while I stay home and scoop out

my basic B existence

like the plain vanilla,

no topping,

community-college material

that I am.

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But I Guess that Figures

Because Avery’s only my half sister.

Her dad was some kind of med-school prodigy

who graduated from Johns Hopkins

and probably would’ve discovered

the cure for cancer if he hadn’t died.

My dad’s just the backup dad.

The one Mom married afterward

so she wouldn’t lose the house on Long Boat Key.

He’s an accountant for PwC, which means

he makes good money doing boring stuff

and is hardly ever home.

But I remember this one time

when Dad’s client was in Chicago,

he brought me and my little brother, Sean, with him

to the top of the Sears Tower—103 floors up.

We climbed into this solid glass skybox

and Sean giggled and danced on the invisible floor.

“Look at me,” he shouted. “I’m walking on air!”

And for a minute, I felt like I was too.

We gazed out over the city

where the blue sky meets Lake Michigan

and the sun reflects between buildings

like a cat’s cradle of light.

Then my dad knelt down

and pointed toward Lakeshore Drive

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