Read The Girl I Used to Be Online
Authors: April Henry
If I stay here and wait for someone to find me, will it be too late?
When I first walked under the trees, the shade was not that much cooler than it had been in the open. But I'm starting to shiver. It must be shock. I didn't even put a sweater in my backpack. It was ninety-seven degrees when I left, hot enough that I couldn't even imagine a world in which I might want a sweater. Medford is always hotter than Portland.
Hotter during the day, but colder at night. The temperature tonight will probably be in the forties. Since I'm higher up, maybe even colder. And I'm wearing only a T-shirt and cutoff jeans. A hot drop falls on my thigh, and I realize I'm crying. Which is stupid, because I need the liquid.
But this is ridiculous. I can't be that farâno more than a mile, and I suspect much lessâfrom where I parked my car. I didn't see any other cars on the access road, but people must drive down it. Even if they don't, it's only two miles from the main road.
Surely I can crawl back to my car. Or at least to an open spot in the trees, where I might be able to make that flicker in my cell phone turn into a single bar.
I carefully lift my foot and, biting my lip, put on my sock and then my shoe, leaving it unlaced. My ankle is definitely swelling. I flip over and, with my bad foot raised, crawl forward in the direction I came from. It's hard going. A twig gouges my palm. A rock scrapes my knee. I'm trying to maneuver on four unpadded, unprotected surfaces. Maybe I can find a fallen branch sturdy enough to use as a cane.
As I scan the ground, I spot something right in front of me. And it's not a branch. It's small and weathered gray. The color of a stone.
But it's not a stone.
Everything goes still. I don't want to pick it up, but I do.
It's not very heavy. It's not a twig.
I think it's a bone.
I remember a book I read about people hunting dinosaur fossils in Montana. The problem is that old bones really do look just like rocks. The book said the way to tell them apart is by licking. If it sticks to your tongue, then it's a bone, because bones are porous.
I wipe my find on my shirt, wipe it and wipe it until it's as clean as it's going to get. Then I stick out my tongue and touch just the tip to the surface.
And it sticks.
I yank it away, my stomach rising. I spit and keep spittingânever mind needing to conserve body water.
It could be an animal bone. It must be. I cradle it in my palm. It's smaller at the top, flares out at the bottom. Both ends are squared off. I hold it next to my fingers.
I think it's a finger bone.
From the same hand that once held mine, that lifted me high in the air, that surely brushed the hair back from my forehead? Is that what I hold loose in my hand? Is that what I pressed against my mouth?
No. Other animals must have bones like this. I run through the possibilities. Deer have hooves. Skunks are too small. Raccoons' hands wouldn't be this big.
Maybe a bear?
And just as I think
bear
, the birds stop singing.
Something is coming. Crashing through the underbrush.
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My heart pounds in my ears. Something big is out here in the woods with me. It's coming closer. And I'm hurt and can't run away. Ignoring the pain, I press myself to the ground, still as a rabbit.
But wouldn't a bear or any other animal be less, I don't know, less noisy? One with nature? I realize I'm being ridiculous. Whatever is moving through the woods must be a person.
“Help!” I shout. “Can someone help me?” My voice is weak. I feel stupid, like a little kid playing a prank.
“Hello?” a man shouts back, surprise coloring his voice.
“Can you help me? I'm hurt!”
A few seconds later, Stephen Spaulding walks into view. The chief of police who was trying to get everyone to calm down yesterday so they wouldn't form a lynch mob and go after Benjy.
“Hello! It's Olivia, isn't it? What's wrong?” He's scanning me from head to toe, and then his gaze sharpens as he sees my unlaced shoe. “Your ankle?”
“I was hiking. I might have broken it.”
He comes closer and drops to his knees. “Okay if I touch it?”
“Yeah.”
As he gently pulls off my shoe and sock, my shoulders relax. Even though his cool fingers leave hot pain trailing behind as he pokes and twists, it's nothing compared with the fear that was devouring me.
“I was worried you were a bear,” I say. Part of it comes out as a squeak as he moves my foot.
He laughs. “A bear! Bears are usually more scared of you than you are of them.” He starts putting my sock and shoe back on, and even though he's careful, I suck in my breath. “I'm pretty sure your ankle's sprained, not broken. Of course, you'll need to get an X-ray.” He returns his gaze to my face. “Was that your car I saw when I drove in here?”
I nod.
He tilts his head. “Kind of a weird spot to pick to go hiking. There are no marked trails around here, so it's not easy going.”
“Yeah. I learned that the hard way.”
He's still looking at me, waiting for an explanation. I have to give him a little more. Better to stick close to the truth.
“After hearing everyone talk about what happened to that Naomi and Terry, I decided to come out here and check it out.”
He frowns. “Don't you think that's kind of morbid?” There's a burst of chatter from a microphone clipped to his shoulder. His eyes never leave my face as he reaches up and turns down the sound.
What can I say? “I don't know.”
“You should realize after what happened yesterday that it's not a game to her friends and family.” He shakes his head. “It's not a human-interest story to them. Two people died in these woods.”
“I've just been thinking about them a lot, sir. I wasn't being disrespectful.” My voice breaks a little.
His face softens, almost imperceptibly. “Okay. And call me Stephen.”
“Are you here because of the case?”
He nods. “We're going to be conducting a new search because of the jawbone that was recovered in this area. If we find more bones, we might be able to figure out exactly how Terry Weeks was killed. After all these years, though, we'll be lucky to find any. Animals like to chew on them. They get splintered and pockmarked and scattered.”
I push away the mental images. “I've got one for you. I think.”
“Got one what?”
“A bone.”
He jerks his head back. “Are you serious?”
For an answer, I hold it out, pinched between finger and thumb.
His eyes widen in amazement. Then he pulls a pair of latex gloves from his back pocket and puts them on. He holds out his palm, and I let go. I let go of my father's hand, or at least what I believe is part of it.
He catches his breath as he regards it. “Where did you find that?”
When I point, I find myself noticing my own finger, thinking about the bones beneath my flesh.
He squints, then looks back down at his palm. “It does look like a human knucklebone. Although you would be surprised how much animal bones can resemble human bones.” With his free hand, he carefully takes the glove off by turning it inside out, leaving the bone trapped within. He knots the glove and then slips the makeshift holder into the front pocket of his uniform. Then he gets to his feet and walks to where I was pointing. “Is this the spot?”
“I think so.”
He crouches and inspects the ground, pushing aside ferns, but finally stands up. “At least now I know where to center the search.” He pulls what looks like a roll of orange tape from his pocket. But when he tears off a strip and ties it to a branch, it doesn't stick to anything, just flutters in the light breeze. He turns back. “Okay, now we need to get you to a hospital. Put your backpack on your lap. I'm going to carry you.”
My face gets hot. “Maybe I could just put my arm around your shoulders and hop.”
“That would take too long, and you'd probably just hurt your other ankle in the process.” He's already squatting, lifting my arm and putting it around his neck, threading his own arm under my bent legs. When he stands up, I hear him trying not to grunt. I'm guessing I weigh more than he thought, but he'll never admit it.
“I swear I'm a pretty good hopper.” I'm babbling, trying to ignore the fact that I am now clasped to this cop's chest. “And this time I would pay attention to where I'm going.” His face seems to be getting red. “Are you sure this is okay?”
“I used to hunt around here when I was growing up. Back then I could field-dress a deer and carry it out myself on my back. Pretty sure you weigh less than a deer.”
The last time I was carried through the woods, it was probably a lot easier. I would have weighed about a fifth of what I do now.
And it's now that I have a flash of memory. Of the last time I was carried through these same woods.
Only it's not my dad who's carrying me. It's not my mom.
It's someone who is holding me tight and muttering under their breath. Pressing the back of my head with the flat of a hand. My face so tight against their shoulder that I can barely breathe.
All I can see is a pair of dark boots hurrying through the snow.
Snow churned pink, freckled with red.
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I freak out. Thrashing, kicking, arching my back, grunting the word
no
âdoing all the things I was too afraid to do fourteen years ago. But I feel as if I'm three years old again.
Stephen sets me down in a hurry. I'm flat on my back on the ground, a rock digging painfully into my spine. But underneath me there's dirt, not snow.
“Olivia? Are you all right? Can you hear me?”
He kneels over me, running his fingertips over my scalp, his fingers snagging in my hair. He looks scared.
I roll onto my side and throw up. In my mind, I again see the scarlet blood spotting the snow, feel the rough fabric of a coat scraping my cheek, hear the voice muttering above me. My stomach convulses again, but all that comes out is strings of bitter yellow bile.
“What just happened?” I say, more to myself than to him.
“I think you just had a grand mal seizure. All of a sudden you went stiff, and then your arms and legs started jerking. I'm just lucky I was able to set you down before I dropped you.”
I push myself up to my elbows and then sit up.
He presses his lips together. “Your eyes were moving, but they were unfocused. Have you ever had a seizure before?”
I'm not going to tell him it wasn't that. It wasn't that at all. “No, sirâI mean, Stephen.”
His mouth twists as he regards me. “I can't feel any injuries to your skull, but you must have hit your head when you fell. We need to get you to the hospital ASAP.” He pronounces it ay-sap, and he's already gathering me back up, getting to his feet with a grunt. He starts walking much faster than he did before, fast enough that I'm bouncing against his torso.
“I'm already feeling better,” I tell him, pushing back my memories. “I don't think anything's really wrong. It was probably just, like, shock. From finding that bone.”
“Right now I don't think it's up to you or me to decide what's wrong with you,” he says as we move into the open. “I'll feel a lot better after you've had an MRI or a CT scan or something.”
Past his shoulder I see my car, with his cop car parked right behind. “I'm pretty sure I can drive.” The Mazda is the most valuable thing I own. I don't want to leave it here to be stolen or vandalized.
“No way.” Stephen half rests me on the hood of his car while he digs for his keys.
“It's not like my ankle's broken. It's just I can't put my full weight on my foot, that's all. My car's an automatic, so I don't even need my left foot. And I promise”âmentally, I cross my fingersâ“that I'll drive straight to the hospital.” I'm pretty sure it's a $250 copay for an emergency-room visit. Probably a bunch more if it involves a CT scan or an MRI.
“And I would be liable if you ended up plowing through a light because your foot decided not to cooperate or you had another seizure. I can see the headlines now. âPolice chief abandons injured girl in woods.'” He opens the door to the back of the police car and plops me down on the hard seat. I hiss a little as my ankle brushes against him. “See if you can put your leg up and still get a seat belt on.”
I turn sideways. The seats are formed with weird dips that I realize are shaped like the prisoners who must normally ride back here. There are indentations for their butts and shoulders and heads. But I manage to stretch out my leg and still buckle up as Stephen watches, shaking out his arms and massaging his biceps. He no longer seems like the rigid cop who would never color outside the lines. His fear for me has softened him, made him more a person than a cop.
Maybe there's a way I can use that. “So what do you think really happened with Naomi and her boyfriend?” I ask after he gets in the car and pulls out onto the road. The police radio has been turned down, but little voices drift back to me. “Do you think it was Benjy?”
“We'll interview him, sure, but in my opinion, that guy's just mentally ill. He's not a killer. You have to feel sorry for him. He was going places, but then something that wasn't his fault sent him off the rails. Yesterday, everyone was so busy pointing fingers, but there's a strong possibility it was actually a serial killer.” We're already on the main road.
“A serial killer?”
“About a year after your parents died, a girl in Grants Pass was murdered. Stabbed to death. She had long dark hair, just like Naomi's. Sometimes the first crime in a series is worked as a single case and then closed, and no one realizes it's related until years later.”