After school on Monday, the art room is hopping. And loud.
Way too many decibels for my pounding head. Alice snuck out around two a.m., meaning I was up on Alice-watch until she crept back in at five this morning. And while I waited, I picked my stomach raw.
The hallwayâs more or less empty, but I worry Damon will walk by any second armed with more psycho jokes, or that Sam will see me and offer more stress-busting sex tips. Just standing here, watching from the door, I have to shove my hands into the pockets of my jeans so my fingers donât scrape at the scabs on my waist. Little imperfections screaming to be picked.
A speaker on a bar stool fills the room with a heavy bass beat. Using his paintbrush like a slingshot, Mr. Friedman flicks hot-pink paint onto a massive canvas hanging from the ceiling. In the back corner, Micah sits on a long, black-topped table, laughing with a group of fellow artists.
Iâm sure everyone else is thinking the same thing about me. A girl wearing cutoff shorts over ripped tights whispers something to the guy with the dreadlocks next to her. The girl is pretty, like model pretty. Micah probably likes her. Which is fine, because who cares who Micah is into? Not me, thatâs who.
Friedman spots me standing awkwardly by the door.
âCome in, come in! All artists welcome.â He waves me in. When I say, âOh, no, Iâm just watching,â he practically pushes me into the room. âYou donât art,â he says. âYou art. Now come. Do.â
Micah nods at me and hops off the table, sticking a paintbrush behind his ear. He plunks a roll of tape and scissors down in front of me, along with a huge stack of magazines.
âSo I was thinking about that blackout poem, and I thought you could find more words in these.â He pats the stack.
Around us, other students are deep in their work, painting, drawing, sculpting a butt out of clay with a putty knife. This place is weird.
âI donât think arts and crafts is the answer here,â I say, my skin itching. âItâs been two weeks, and my muse is nowhere to be found. What exactly are we doing? Whatâs the plan?â
âYou know my philosophy on plans.â
âI mean it, Micah. We should have thought of a project by now. I donât think this whole muse thing is working.â
knew He shakes his paintbrush at me. âNo quitting until itâs done, remember?â
Friedman flips off the music. A few students moan in protest.
âSorry, ladies and gentleartists. You donât have to go home, but you canât stay here. Let the muse rest.â
Micah and I walk into the hall, and he hands me the magazine stack.
âGive it a little more time,â he says, and our fingers touch again like they did in his kitchen, and I leave them longer than I should because Micahâs giving me that smile of which Iâm becoming problematically fond, the one that makes me forget my best-laid plans. And as hard as Iâm telling my skin not to buzz where he touches me, I canât stop it. And maybe I donât want to.
But just as Iâm thinking that, Damon turns the corner, and he stops, a sinister smile on his face. I jump away from Micah, pulling my hand from his like heâs a leper.
âTold you. Freaks flock together,â Damon says. He leans in closer as he passes me. âDonât worry, Lil. I wonât tell.â
âNothing to tell,â I spit back, looking at the ground instead of Micah.
When Damonâs gone and I finally look up, Micah says nothing, just stares at me, his face soured. He starts to say something, but then just shakes his head, shoves the stack of magazines at me, and walks back into the art room, leaving me in the hallway, wishing the floor would swallow me whole.
â
Sam is already stretching on the track by the time I get there. When I start lunging next to her, she turns and offers me her hand.
âOh, hello,â she says. âHave we met?â
After the awkward moment with Micah just now, Iâm not in the mood for whatever this is, but I take her hand and play along.
âYes. My name is Lily. You may know me from such roles as your best friend.â
She shakes her head. âNo, that canât be right. From what I understand, best friends spend time together. Or at least return each otherâs texts.â
I give her shoulder a shove.
âYou know Iâve been busy.â
She plucks my phone from my track bag and turns it toward me, showing a series of texts from her over the last few days. Nothing monumental, mostly just checking in, lamenting about this project, memes making fun of Coach Johnsonâs red face. I didnât realize I hadnât replied to any of them.
âFor real, Lil, whatâs going on?â
âItâs just, this poetry contest has me running in circles,â I say.
Kali chimes in from where sheâs stretching and not-so-covertly eavesdropping on the grass with the tennis team.
âTell me about it. And much is riding on it.â She stands up and pulls her leg behind her in a quad stretch. âLucky for me, my partner is basically a genius. Speaking of partners, howâs it going with handful, Lil?â
A lump lodges in my throat when I think about the way I just jumped away from Micah in the hall. Luckily, Sam responds for me.
âKali, you have as much chance of beating Lily as you do of removing that pole up your ass without surgical intervention.â
I can tell by the fire in Samâs voice that weâre going to be okay, even if I have been a craptacular best friend lately.
Kali scoffs and sprints off, purposefully swinging her ponytail extra hard in our direction. Sam links her arm through mine.
âI just miss you, thatâs all.â
âI know. As soon as I figure out this project, Iâm all yours. Burgers and shakes on me and weâll catch up.â
âHow dare you ply me with strawberry shakes! My one weakness!â Sam shakes her first toward the sky. âAnd youâre still coming to my concert, right?â
Sam takes my phone again and creates a new event in my calendar in about three weeks:
âNow you have no excuse, even if you too busy to reply to me.â
âI wouldnât miss it for the world,â I say, and the guilt eases slightly in my chest.
âNow, since the she-witch brought it up, how your mysterious partner?â Sam says, her usual mischievous smile resurfacing. âAny news on the brooding-artist front?â
I roll my eyes. âDid you not just hear Kali? Sheâs basically waiting for me to fail. And between this poetry thing and the state finals and Alice walking around our house like a disgruntled zombie, I have absolutely zero space in my life for anything else.â Tears fill my eyes, and I donât even really know why, except all I can see is Micahâs face in the hallway when I yanked my hand away, terrified someone might know that the Boy on the Verge is more than just my partner. Heâs someone I can talk to, someone who gets itâgets me. âAnd the worst part is, sheâs totally right. Micah and I donât have that even resembles a project yet, which means no summer program, which means maybe no Berkeley ever, andââ
âWhoa, whoa, whoa. Calm down.â Sam holds my shoulders. âYouâre really spiraling, huh?â
I nod.
âFirst of all, Kali is like the most basic bee-yatch at this school. And second, youâre going to win. Itâs what you do. Itâs who you are.â
Sam hugs me before joining her relay team, and I jump up and down on the rubbery track, swinging my arms across my chest. I try to shake Micah and the summer program and Alice out of my head. Coach says races come down to focus.
But while I wait for my heat, my fingers find a small, fresh scab on my stomach. Itâs a tiny one, but right now itâs canât-think-about-anything-else huge.
And just like that, Iâm gone. Trapped behind the glass, watching me dig into my skin.
I dig, and dig.
Until I pick off the bump.
All the way to the root.
And I can breathe again.
âLily!â Coach yells. âCare to join us?â
I slam back into my body in time to hear Coach ask me where my headâs at today, and I tell him itâs here, and Iâm ready.
I take my spot on the starting blocks, head down, butt up, feet pushing back. The track, warmed by the spring sun, radiates heat up at me. I close my eyes and picture myself kicking off, rounding each turn, sprinting across the finish line. When the buzzer sounds, I rocket forward, muscles flexing, eyes ahead, body moving down the track.
Coach clicks his stopwatch and tells me Iâve added .3 seconds to my time.
âDo you want state or not?â
âIâm having an off day.â
But he doesnât want to hear that.
So I tell him Iâll fix it.
Iâll be better.
Iâll win.
Because if I donâtâwho am I?
â
My brain and heart are still sprinting even though my race is done.
The familiar tingling starts down my arms. If only I were alone, I could pick more of the scabs on my stomach. I could stop the tsunami rolling through me.
Itâs happening again.
I canât breathe.
I grab my bags and sprint off the track, into the school, where I end up on the floor of a bathroom stall. Again.
Is this my life now? A revolving panic attack carousel? My fingers have crept under my shirt, searching for skin.
âNo!â I yell, pushing my hand away.
I need a distraction.
Something, anything.
I read the words on the stall walls. Permanent-marker declarations that apparently Mr. Bronson has done unspeakable things to Señora Garcia. And Tom Day loves Sharon Goodman. FOREVER. And this gem:
But there are also smaller ones, written in pencil, so faint that I have to lean in close to read them.
And in thin, almost imperceptible strokes in the grout above the trash can:
I picture the people who wrote these confessions. Were they like me? Alone? Panicking? Etching out their truth anonymously on a bathroom stall.
Hidden people.
Hidden words.
The thought burns a sadness inside me, just behind my rib cage, where I keep all the words I donât say, either.
. Thatâs what Micah says.
And before I even know what Iâm looking for, Iâm pulling out his magazines from my backpack and flipping through them, frantically. Anything to keep my mind, my fingers, off my skin. I cut out headlines and sentences and words from articles telling me how to look great in skinny jeans and climax your way to better skin!
I cut and cut and cut and then lay out all the words in rows on the tiled floor.
One by one, I tape them onto the back of the stall door.
I stand back and read the words.
Not mine.
Not exactly.
But theyâre a start.