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Authors: Miriam Gershow

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BOOK: The Local News
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“Okay, thanks.” I lifted my mug in a salute. “Thanks for this. We have to get back to work.”

“Sure, sure, sure,” Mom said. She kissed Oliver on his dog lips. David Nelson and I exchanged disgusted glances.

After she left, David brought his mug to the bed and sat Indian-
style where Oliver had just been. I curled my legs under my butt, making myself smaller. I had the feeling of a cactus or a porcupine.

“Your poor mom,” he said.

“You sound like Min Mathers,” I said.

“I’m just saying …” He paused, as if he were trying to figure out what he was saying. “It’s got to be tough.”

“Duh.” I leafed through
Richard III.
Queen Elizabeth’s noblemen were begging for their lives; Richard, about to kill them anyway, didn’t give a crap.

“Do you think about it a lot?” he said.

“What do you think?”

“I don’t know. You act like you don’t, but how could you not?”

My float sat untouched on my nightstand, the ice cream melting into the pop.
Today shalt thou behold a subject die for truth, for duty, and for loyalty,
one of the noblemen told Richard.

David scooted himself closer to me. A thin mustache of ice cream shadowed his upper lip. “It’s okay to be sad,” he said, sounding like he’d been practicing the line for a while.

I started laughing, which I felt almost bad about when I saw his mouth pucker in surprise. But this type of heartfelt earnestness, especially from David Nelson, had a tendency to make me itchy and restless, as if the last flimsy barricade protecting my life from a completely maudlin wasteland were giving way.

“I’m trying to read,” I said.

“You’re so tough.” I couldn’t tell if he meant it as an insult or a compliment. He sat funny, balanced strangely on his knees, hunching forward, his mug in one hand, the other grasping my comforter. He looked right at me. “Can you imagine how some other girls would be handling this? I mean, remember Gina LeShawn?”

Gina LeShawn had been a passenger in a drunk-driving
accident our freshman year. The driver, a junior from another school, wrapped the car around a tree and ended up with a broken collarbone and a jail sentence. Gina broke her ankle and ended up a local celebrity, regularly gathering swarms of people around her in the hallways to retell the story of the accident and the emergency room and, months later, the sentencing hearing for the driver. For a good portion of the year she could be found sobbing in the cafeteria, as girls in ponytails and polo shirts squeezed her shoulders in concern.

“Well, I’m not Gina LeShawn,” I said.

“And thank god for that.” He looked at me like Chuck looked at me, straight on and steady. His zit was huge.

“Come on,” I said.

“Come on, what?”

“Go away. Go back to your chair.”

He didn’t go back to his chair. He kept staring, as if I had something on my face. “What?” I said to him. “What?” And then he sprang forward, far more agile and quick than I knew David Nelson to be, crushing my book, spilling some of his float into my lap, jamming his mouth to mine. His lips were sticky and sweet, his teeth clicking loudly against mine.

There was one long, slow moment (really, it must have been just a nanosecond) during which I felt nothing at all, a weightless, limbless remove. And then, in a dizzying rush, I was back—in my room, in my bed, with the full weight of David Nelson upon me, a weight far more substantial than I would have guessed. He had me pinned, his nose buried in my cheek, a knee digging painfully into my thigh, an elbow poking my hip.

He was a jack-in-the-box newly sprung, breathing hard, trying to shove his tongue in my mouth. His breath was sugary but sour.
“Cut it out,” I managed to say, but he kept at it, lapping me with his tongue, one hand pawing at my hair, but hard, so it was more like hitting me in the head. For a few more seconds I just sat there and took it, stunned, a bug speared to the corkboard, wings splayed. The faces of all the boys I’d ever thought of kissing—Barry from World History Club, whose hair was the almost outlandish gold of fairytale princes’; bookish Mr. Jarris, who sometimes subbed for Hollingham and nervously twiddled his hands in his pockets as he talked of the Byzantine Empire; Joey Jeremiah, from that silly high school show that used to run on PBS—flashed through my head. David Nelson’s ceramic mug pressed coldly against my rib cage, giving me a feeling like I might cry.

Finally I dislodged my arms from the tangle of him and shoved my palms against his chest. He bounced backward on the mattress almost comically, losing hold of his float entirely, the mug bouncing on the bed, pop spilling darkly along my comforter. He lay sprawled at the foot of the bed, panting, staring at me wide-eyed, like a cornered animal.

“What. The. Hell?” I said, and his cheeks turned a bright, car-toonish red.

“I’m sorry,” David said in the voice of a little girl. He wiped me off his lips with the back of his hand. “I’m really sorry.”

“You should be,” I said, and I could feel my eyes stinging stupidly. I watched his chest as it flittered like a jackrabbit’s, his terribly cut, uneven bangs, his eyes that bulged from his skinny face. “What the hell?” I repeated, louder now.

“Shhh!” he told me, as if it were his parents downstairs. He pumped his hands toward the ground, like he was tamping a fire. “Calm down,” he said.

My blood coursed hotly through me, behind my cheeks, down
my neck, through my cramped-up legs, as if it had turned to lava. “You calm the fuck down,” I said, “you rapist.” Some dark, crushed, nameless thing was propelling the words.

He was so red and flustered-looking, it seemed like he was the one who was going to cry. I’d never talked like that to anyone, certainly not David Nelson, and I felt a quick pang of regret. I had to clench my teeth not to suddenly scream, my jaw trembling with the effort. Chuck would say later that it was because what David had done was assault. That I was a sexual assault victim reacting with perfectly normal and understandable shock. I believed Chuck for a while, relieved to have so easy an answer (and wasn’t that what therapy was for—providing self-satisfying and palatable answers to inexplicable questions?). But it wasn’t that. All David Nelson had done was kiss me. He hadn’t even tried to grab my boobs.

It was that he’d crossed a line, a line which I knew—instantaneously—we couldn’t just cross back from with the hopes that everything would revert to its rightful place. He’d changed things, created a moment after which nothing would be the same. I already had one of those, recently acquired. One was too much. I couldn’t have another. Not now. Not from David Nelson.

I started shaking.

“I didn’t mean it,” he said in a low voice. Then, more shrilly, “I don’t mean I didn’t mean it. I meant it. I didn’t mean it like that.” And finally, terribly, “I’ve been waiting so long.”

I felt my chest sinking into itself like he was sucking the air right out of me.
Dupe,
I thought, suddenly and quickly.
Dupedupe-dupedupedupe.
He stared at me as if he expected something. I could not imagine what. David Nelson was my only friend.

“Shut. Up,” I said, but what I wanted to say was,
You’re making it worse.

“I should go,” he said, scrambling quickly off the bed, grabbing
his books from the desk, his coat and backpack from the floor. He was a blur of motion, nodding fast, picking up his mug, rubbing his hand uselessly over the pop and ice cream that had already seeped through my comforter and sheets, already spread into a brownish stain in my mattress, one that would never wash fully clean, a blob I would spy for years whenever I changed the sheets, the sight of it reminding me of the scooped-out feeling of that night. The meaning would slowly fade, though, and I would eventually come to eye it dispassionately as I snapped clean linens between two fists and spread new sheets over the mattress. From one angle it looked a bit like the storm system on a weather map, from another a mangled butterfly.

“I can clean this up,” David said, crackly-voiced.

I jammed my palms against my eyes. “Just go,” I said. My chest filled back up with air, too fast now, my heart thumping like it could burst. I listened to him stumbling to get his shoes on. To him saying my name. To unintelligible mumbling, a swallowed sentence about
didn’t want to
and
never mind.
To the wriggling of my doorknob. To quick footsteps down the stairs. To my mom saying something and David Nelson saying something back. To the front door opening and closing. To the sound of this house without him—the low buzz of a television barely on, the creak of a couch spring, the hum of a cavernous fridge—noisy with quiet, teeming with it, like a breath held too long, painfully paused and waiting.

He didn’t show up at the Saturday search. I knew he wouldn’t. We’d quickly and instinctively winnowed separate channels for ourselves through the school hallways. There was only one run-in, on Wednesday, between fifth and sixth periods, near the chem labs, corrected by Thursday. I chose the longer route to Ms. Villara’s Spanish class via the second-floor history and psych rooms. In Bar-dazian’s English class and Fontana’s trig we perfected the art of staring intently and unwaveringly past each other. He commented incessantly about Queen Margaret during the
Richard III
discussion, and I felt hotly satisfied when Mrs. Bardazian did her usual “Why don’t we give a chance to some of our quieter classmates?” as David raised his hand for the millionth time.

I spent three days of lunches in the cafeteria, hounded by Lola Pepper and girls who ended every sentence with a question mark
(“This tuna loaf is like a brick?” “We’re hanging out at Devon’s after school?”) and modified every verb with
so
(“I so failed that history quiz,” “I so wouldn’t wear those pants with those saddlebags”). They had predictable questions about Danny
—What was he like at home? What did he have in his room? Do you have any idea where he is?
Sometimes I pretended I didn’t hear. Sometimes I gave them a word or two, like “Just normal” or “Stuff” or “No.” Lola had a habit of looking at me a lot while the other girls talked among themselves, as if she were trying to gauge my response to their conversation about a CD from a band I’d never heard or how one of them could get Lyle Walker to notice her in world civ class. I didn’t really know what to do with myself as Lola stared. Pretend I didn’t see her? Act like I was absorbed in the conversation? Smiling seemed the most effective—a closed-mouth, noncommittal smile—placating her enough to turn her attention, at least for a little while, back to the rest of the table.

By Saturday morning I was tired, more tired than usual. It was a lite version of those first days after Danny was gone, when it seemed like there was so much effort to every step, every word, every eye blink, not because of grief so much as disorientation. The reference points had gone awry: cop cars parked regularly in our driveway, strangers brought casseroles, our name was flashed over and over again on the local news as if a recent hurricane or tornado had been named for us. I found myself doing things like opening the medicine cabinet and, upon seeing the Listerine bottle, thinking,
Lister-ine? What is Listerine?
even though that same green bottle, or one just like it, had been sitting in that same spot for years. Everything was suddenly being relearned—Did I have a brother? Did I not have a brother?—causing my brain to stutter and buckle.

This time it wasn’t so bad, not nearly as dramatic; now I just longed for sleep more than usual. I was gritty-eyed and exhausted
by the time we got to the field where this week’s search would begin. People milled about, standing in weeds and grass still wet from the rain that had just fallen and was sure to return soon. They all had their hands pocketed in raincoats, heads tucked under hoods. A few grown-ups held bullhorns at their sides. Several ladies in bright plastic ponchos passed out the orange safety vests and whistle necklaces. People always brought their dogs; today, a German shepherd pulled at its leash and a pit bull barked at a patchy mutt. Some off-duty cops spoke into walkie-talkies. The on-duty cops had been pulled the week before, after we’d passed the two-month mark. “Can’t justify the overtime anymore,” a lieutenant with a walrus mustache had told my dad. “We still have to entertain the very real possibility of a runaway.” The vein in my dad’s temple pulsed so quickly and so visibly I thought he would pass out or punch the guy instead of just walking away like he did. No other idea was as quick to incite rage in my dad or hysteria in my mom as the runaway one. Whenever police or even Howard the PI mentioned it, my parents heard an accusation, one meant to squarely shift responsibility
—This is
your
problem, not
ours.

Lacking a ransom note or direct witness of abduction, my parents had spent the first weeks after the disappearance yelping to anyone who would listen,
Starting defensive ends
does not
run away. Popular kids about to begin their senior year
do not
run away. Someone just finishing a neighborhood basketball game with friends
does not
suddenly run away.
If the runaway idea should have held some comfort in its relative quaintness or normalcy, this seemed lost on my parents. They loved Danny slavishly; he loved them back, if not quite slavishly, then with his own brand of brutish devotion. So there was never any doubt for them that he’d been gotten. And the idea of
gotten
mobilized people. It evoked panic, contagion, a need to march through wet, marshy fields or across vast cement lots for the wildcard
possibility of finding who had done this getting, or where, or why, or how. And my parents needed this. They needed everyone to step up and help, to be squawky and persistent and hysterical on our behalf.

BOOK: The Local News
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