Alice isnât any more Alice when I come into our room after packing tomorrowâs lunches. At dinner, she said about two words, despite Dadâs best efforts to get her laughing and Margotâs litany of questions about Fairview. Luckily, Staci and Dad filled the silence with chitchat while we chomped on some tofu concoction, trying too hard to pretend tonight was just like any other night.
âSorry I left such a mess,â she says, standing in the middle of the room, looking at the piles of half-finished projects.
âItâs fine.â I scoot back on my bed to lean against the wall, pulling out my planner. She picks up the graduation picture of her and her best smile, shakes her head, and puts it in a drawer.
âDid you make my bed?â
âI wanted to help.â
She nods, studying the room like itâs been a lifetime instead of two months. âWhatâs with Margotâs cape?â
âSheâs been reading Momâs books. Sheâs waaaay into it.â
Alice pulls pajamas from her drawer. âHarmless cosplay, or full-on psychosis?â
âUnclear.â
âWhat about Dad? He looks old. Well, older.â
âHeâsââ
ââfine. Weâre all fine.â I add this last part even though she didnât actually ask about me.
She nods and heads to the bathroom, but stops at the threshold, staring at the tile floor.
âYou okay?â I ask.
She looks at me like sheâs surfacing from an alternate dimension, and I want to tell her she can share her monsters with me, and Iâll tell her about mine and how Iâm scared, every single second, that sheâs going to hurt herself again. How I might shatter if she does.
âFine,â she says before stepping in and closing the door. The shower beats out a steady rhythm, and I double-check to make sure the box of blades is still under my bed.
Iâm busting through tonightâs Spanish review when Dad appears in my doorway, his reading glasses perched on the tip of his nose, his eyes tired.
âYou still up, Lily pad?â
âYep.â
He sits on the bed next to me and hands me half a chocolate chip cookie.
âLifeâs too short for tofu,â he says, smiling. âBesides, you only YOLO once.â
I take the cookie even though Iâm not hungry.
âDad, seriously. The slang is not your friend.â
He laughs lightly and looks toward the bathroom, where the showerâs still going.
âHow long has she been in there?â he asks, checking his watch.
âNot too long.â I almost tell him about the box of razors under my bed, anything to make him look less worried about what Alice could be doing behind closed doors.
His eyes rove over her side of the room, where her blue duffel bag sits on the floor, still packed, like itâs standing at the ready.
âHow does she seem to you?â he asks.
âDifferent.â
He nods, his eyes never leaving Aliceâs bag.
âDad.â I clear my throat. âWith bipolar disorder, is it, like, treated? Like itâs gone? Or, I mean, what ifâcould sheââ
He pats me on the thigh as I stumble over the memory of the Night of the Bathroom Floor.
âAll that matters is sheâs going to be better now.â He holds my hand, squeezing it three times, his unspoken signal for âYou leave the worrying to me, all right? Thatâs job, and I take it very seriously.â
Just above his temple, a patch of white hair matches the shoots of gray in his beard. His brow is furrowed, forming a strong crease right in the middle of his eyebrows. Alice is right, he looks older. For all his dad jokes, all his unrelenting efforts to make everything okay, heâs worried.
âIâm in the running for a poetry contest,â I blurt out. Dad looks up and smiles, momentarily erasing the crease in his forehead.
âOh yeah?â
âYeah. Winner gets a scholarship to a Berkeley summer program, and Gifford says Iâd basically be guaranteed a spot freshman year.â
Okay, so I embellish a little, but itâs worth it because Dad fist-pumps into the air, his wrinkles morphing from worry to smile lines, and I breathe a little easier.
âA Golden Bear just like your old man!â
Before I can stop him, he breaks out into a rousing, but whispered, rendition of the schoolâs fight song, and even though I donât need all this fanfare, Iâm glad Iâve made him happyâfor a moment. And I know, more than ever, that a win is exactly what this family needs.
When heâs finished his ode to his alma mater, he pats me on the back.
âThatâs amazing, honey. Really. Just amazing. Berkeley on the horizon, and youâre still gunning for the state finals, right?â
Itâs the first time heâs asked about my running since Alice left. Before, he always wanted to hear about my times and would put all my meets on his calendar. He still tries to get there when he can, but I guess heâs got bigger things on his mind now than me running in circles.
I nod. âGot a real chance this year.â
He scans my bed, all my textbooks and notebooks and flash cards, like heâs seeing themâand meâfor the first time in ages. âYouâre not pushing yourself too hard, though, are you?â
I shake my head, but for an instant, I wish I were young again, that heâd tuck me into the spot just below his shoulder, next to his heart. And heâd tell me itâs okay, and Iâd believe him because heâs my dad and dads donât lie.
Maybe I tell him. About the bad thoughts and the panic that keeps surging through me and how Iâm sitting at the top of a roller coaster, waiting for this massive drop that never comes. How Iâm 99 percent sure Iâm as messed up as Alice.
Yes, Iâm going to tell him. Even though his eyes are tired and one more disappointment could kill him, or at least maim him. But weâre all the walking dead around here anyway. Whatâs one more flesh wound?
I breathe deeply. The words form on the tip of my tongue.
But he doesnât ask. Instead, he says heâs proud of me and stands up, eyes lingering on the bathroom door for a second as the water turns off.
He kisses the top of my head. âWhat did I ever do to deserve such a perfect daughter?â
My chest deflates. I swallow my words.
I hide them deep behind my ribs, tucked neatly by my heart, with all the other words I keep.
â
Alice returns, hair still damp, and gets into bed without a word.
I disappear, too, into the pages of my notebook, still trying to think of a poem because even though Micah says heâll help me, I have serious doubts about this whole muse-discovery plan. On my hand, the Winnie-the-Pooh sketch he put there stares at me, and I canât help wondering about Manic Micah. How many of the Underground rumors are true? And why did he offer to help me?
And what, exactly, was I thinking? That a boy with monkeys on his socks and a super-sketchy past can help me with this poem?
Help me write something good enough to save this family?
Gifford said.
is a stranger with short hair and scars on her arms sleeping across the room from me. Real is me sitting on the bathroom floor, staring down a list of crazy.
Reality is too real.
My brain canât focus with the lump formerly known as Alice across the room. Sheâs perfectly quiet, but I know sheâs there. Seven quick steps, one flying leap, and an eternity away.
In the dark, the monsters come calling.
The shoulds pile up like so many cars on the highway that screech and skid into each other, unable to stop. With Alice across the room, sucking up all the oxygen, theyâre louder than ever. I end up in the bathroom, staring at a row of medicines in the cabinet with long names and harsh consonants. Each one is labeled with Aliceâs name. Each one shouts its orders:Â take exactly as directed. take with food. take twice a day.
eat me!
drink me!
trust me!
I donât know what Iâm looking for exactly. Maybe a clue? Some crystal ball.
But seeing her medicines makes my skin too tight. Makes my breath catch in my lungs.
I slam the cabinet shut. My face looks like Dadâs in the mirror. Same wide jaw and green eyes. Same purply circles under them. My long brown hair is straighter than Aliceâs, but still has a hint of Momâs frizz.
I stare until my face goes fuzzy. Like when you say a word too many times. My face loses its definition.
Loses its meaning.
My eyes focus on a few stray eyebrow hairs. My hand fumbles in the drawer for my tweezers.
The hairs pinch as they leave my skin.
One. Two. Three. One more.
The hair breaks, leaving a small stub. I dig the tweezers in until blood beads on my skin. But I keep going.
It stings.
But I control the hurt.
Andâ¦got it.
In the mirror, my cheeks are flushed.
I wipe the pinpoints of blood from my eyelids.
Not a single hair running wild.
locuration (n) The process of slowly losing your mind, like a frog in a boiling pot of water who doesnât notice the heat until itâs too late, so youâre left watching yourself boil because it all happens so slowly, so imperceptibly little by little, unwanted thought by unwanted thought, until BAM!
Youâre cooked.
From Spanish (crazy)