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Authors: Megan Miranda

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BOOK: Hysteria
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And now Reid was offering to lie for me. “Promise you won’t.”

“I almost did,” he said. “I almost came to see you.” He was looking past me, like
he was imagining it in his head. Like he was trying to make it real.

Mom’s voice traveled down the strip. “Mallory?”

“Right here,” I called back. “Promise, Reid.”

“Promise,” he said. I couldn’t tell if he really meant it, but I wanted to trust him.
I was choosing to believe him.

“How was your walk?” Mom asked, extra emphasis on the
k.
Translation: I know you were making out with that boy, and that’s all he’s interested
in, by the way. Also, you should know better.

“You could’ve been nice.”

“Oh, I’m sorry. Is that why I’m here? In New Hampshire? To be nice to the boys my
daughter


“Your daughter what?”

She threw her hands up in the air and waved them around. “This stuff,” she said, like
there was chaos everywhere, “that you are so fit to ignore, is important. A boy
died
, Mallory. A boy is dead.
Dead
. It’s serious stuff. Do you get that?”

I stared at her and she stared back and I waited and she waited and finally I said,
“Yes, Mother, I get that. I get that, and I’ll never not get that.” Then I took shallow,
short breaths so I would not cry in front of her. Not now.

“I need to call Colleen,” I said. And when Mom cocked her head to the side, I added,
“She’ll be worried. I was supposed to call.”

“You can’t. You can’t call anyone. They could be recording our conversations.”

“I have nothing to hide. And besides, this isn’t one of your shows.”

“Yes, Mallory, I get that. I don’t think I’ll ever not get that.”

She couldn’t look at me. But that’s okay

I couldn’t look at her either. And while we were busy not looking at each other, she
unplugged the phone and brought it to her room.

I went to my room and turned on my cell. And even though there was no service, I sent
Colleen a message. It would go through whenever we drove through a place with signal.
If I was ever allowed out of here again.

I typed:
Something
happened.
Something
bad.
Will
call
when
I
 
can.

And then I watched as the phone searched for signal, and searched some more, willing
something to happen. But nothing did.

The rain started after dinner. The sky turned dark too early, and we watched old episodes
of shows we’d seen five years ago. But neither of us laughed or smiled at the right
spots, so I’m pretty sure she wasn’t watching, just like me. She was keeping an eye
on me.

We stayed up late enough that sleep should’ve come fast, but the rain wouldn’t stop.
And it wasn’t soothing, not for me. It reminded me of that night, when I ran, with
blood on my knuckles, under my nails, on my arms. My chest. Everywhere. When I hid
under the boardwalk pier and the rain fell through the cracks but didn’t do anything
to wash off the blood.

There was too much blood.

The rain didn’t stop that night, and it didn’t stop this night either. Not until morning.
The sky was still dark. Dark and heavy, the humidity filling up the living room. Pushing
us tighter and tighter until Mom broke first and said, “Let’s get some lunch.”

We drove to the diner that Reid had taken me to, just a mile down the road. It was
packed. Cars were lined up in rows on the grass, and some were just parked on the
side of the road, half on the pavement, half in the weeds. But they all had that red
parking permit in the back window, for Monroe.

I didn’t get out of the car. Mom seemed to sense something was a little off

or a lot off

and that maybe this wasn’t the right time for us to descend upon the diner on wheels.
But she also didn’t turn around. She just sat, engine idling, chewing the inside of
her mouth.

Finally she said, “Stay here. I’ll go in.” She left without asking for my order.

The inside was packed, but the outside was busy too. People holding candles, even
though it wasn’t dark, or night. The candles were totally unnecessary. And this wasn’t
where he had died either. I was guessing half the people here didn’t even like him.
Maybe even more than half. It was more like everyone was just looking for something
to do.

My phone made a tiny chime from my bag, a notice that my text had been sent to Colleen.
I wanted to grab my phone and write more, but I couldn’t take my eyes off the crowd.
I searched for Reid, wondering if he was here. Mourning, maybe, or maybe just participating.
Being part of something. Like this was an event to attend off campus. Something to
do.

Not the place for me to show up.

I scanned the crowd, but didn’t see him. But I did see a finger pointing in my direction.

I gripped the handle, thinking I should get out. Confront them. Defend myself. Say
I didn’t do it. But the girl, I think her name was April, her teeth were clenched.
And the boy holding her was staring as well. Same look. And then someone else looked.
So I released my grip on the handle and stared out the front window. Very, very slowly,
I moved my hand to the automatic buttons and pressed the Lock button.

The noise seemed to echo.

My heart sped up. I thought about mobs. This could so easily be a mob. One person
yelling. One person telling others what to do. One idea, floating through the crowd.
One call to action

something they’re looking for. They were looking for an outlet for their grief, or
their fear maybe, and the candles didn’t seem like they were really cutting it.

April and that boy moved closer. The third one did too. Somebody said something, loudly,
something like
there
or maybe
her.

I closed my eyes and counted to one hundred, and I felt the air growing muggy, like
it had the night with Brian, like the sky was about to break open.

Which it did.

Some people scattered

into cars, into the building

and the flames from the candles turned to tiny wisps of smoke. But some people stayed
put, watching me through the rain. And then Mom was yanking at the handle repeatedly,
trying to get inside.

I unlocked the door and she slid into her seat. She passed me the bag of take-out
food and pressed the lock on the door again. She acted calm, easing the car out of
the spot, but I could see her knuckles were white on the steering wheel. She turned
right, heading back toward our hotel, and something hit the back of the trunk with
a thud. She jumped and pressed down on the gas, and the tires squealed under the pressure,
under the rain.

We ate in silence on the couch across from the dark television. She’d gotten me a
grilled cheese, which actually wasn’t a bad call, except Reid had warned me the only
thing worth getting was a hamburger. No cheese. I took a bite, and the cheese was
thick, not gooey thick, fake thick. And anyway, I wasn’t really hungry.

Mom picked at her sandwich, but I wasn’t sure if it was because of the taste or a
lack of appetite. Eventually, she wrapped her food up and put it back in the white
bag, then rolled it all up into a ball. She stood and walked to the window. “We need
to talk to the administration at Monroe.”

So she had sensed it too. The way the atmosphere had felt so charged, the air crackling
with potential.

“And say what?”

“I’m not sure,” she said. “They’re not helping,” she said, staring out the closed
blinds. Staring out the crack between them, into the rain. “And they need to help.”
I wondered who was in charge, whether the fact that Jason’s dad was part of the administration
had something to do with their lack of help. And maybe Mom knew it, too, which is
why she picked up her purse. “But lock the door behind me.”

I opened my mouth to argue, but nothing came out. It was like something had clasped
me around the middle so I couldn’t take a breath. I put my hands on top of my head,
like I did when I was out of breath, only I tried to do it casually, so she wouldn’t
be able to tell. I turned around and sucked in a deep breath. I only said one syllable,
so she wouldn’t hear my voice waver. “Mom.”

She gripped her purse with both hands and closed her eyes for a moment. “I’ll take
care of this,” she said.

Then she walked toward me, fumbled around in her bag, and pulled out a small container
of pepper spray, just like Colleen used to carry around. Her hands were shaking as
she pressed it into mine. She squeezed her hands over mine, and I could feel them
shaking still. “Take it,” she said.

When she pulled her hands back, mine were shaking too, and this time I couldn’t keep
the waver out of my voice when I said, “Mom.”

“You will be fine,” she said. “I know you will.” And then she was gone.

And like she asked, I turned the lock behind her.

Then I perched on the edge of the sofa and stared at the dark television screen, trying
to steady my breath again. I heard her car come to life and fade into the distance.
I turned the pepper spray over and over in my palm, wondering what Mom meant when
she said she knew I’d be fine.

And then I heard another car door. A gentle click, under the sound of the steady falling
rain.

I glanced toward the crack in the curtains, wondering if it was Reid coming to see
me. I jumped up and faced the door, but then I heard the steps on the sidewalk. Familiar
somehow. Not Reid.

No, they were the footsteps following me home the night of the party. The way the
heel dragged along the ground a second before the step.
Scuff, step. Scuff, step.
I took a step backward, but the footsteps got closer. I wanted to run to the door
to check the lock, but I didn’t want to get any closer. And besides, would a lock
stop something that wasn’t real?

I saw a flash through the gap in the curtains. Blond hair. Lanky build. And the hairs
on my arms each stood on end. And then I felt the buzzing in the room, like I used
to feel in the kitchen at home.

Not real
, I thought.
He’s not real
.

Except I held the pepper spray forward and flipped the red switch to the unlocked
position. I pointed it at the door. The canister was shaking.

Then the door handle moved gently side to side, like someone was testing the lock.
I closed my eyes and thought
not real
again. But I could still hear the jiggling of the handle.

And then I heard something more. Metal inside the handle, scraping along the inside,
searching for something. Someone picking the lock.

Then the door swung open. Water splattered onto the carpet, falling from the sky,
dripping from his hair.

The realest thing in the world.

Dylan took a step inside.

 

 

Chapter 18

I
backed up, moving deeper into the living room until my back was pressed against the
bathroom door. It was so thin, I didn’t think it would support my weight. Dylan stared
at me, water dripping all around him, and I shook my head. Just shook it, and shook
it again. The room was buzzing with that other thing that wasn’t real. Like the whole
room was about to pop.

BOOK: Hysteria
4.11Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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