Two months after the Night of the Bathroom Floor, it comes to my attention that Iâm losing my shit at an alarming rate.
I use the term metaphorically, of course, because Iâve decided going insane is a process, and not a singular event, despite our eloquent idioms.
But there is no lightning bolt of insanity. Itâs more like a drizzling leak you donât even notice until youâre gasping for air, suddenly and irrevocably aware that youâve drowned in your own thoughts.
I wonder sometimes if thatâs how it felt for Alice. I havenât had the chance to ask since Dad drove her away in the middle of the night and shipped her off to Fairview Treatment Center. Sure, I could send one of the ten billion emails Iâve started and deleted, or I could go with Dad and my little sister, Margot, to the weekly family visitation days, but thatâs a big fat no.
Itâs not like I donât to see her, but I definitely donât want to see her like with all the other âtroubled teensâ at a place, according to the website, that promises to fix my big sister with horseback riding and trust exercises on the main lawn.
So until next month when Alice comes home from psych-ward sleepaway camp, I wonât know if weâre on the same slow train to locoville. All I know is that I, Lily Larkin, at the ripe old age of sixteen, am losing my freaking mind.
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âJust relax.â Sam slings her violin case onto the desk next to mine, doling out the same advice sheâs given me since we were freshmen. âThat little vein on your forehead is getting angry.â
âRelaxation will help me ace this,â I reply without looking up from my notecards, where Iâve written each line of my poem for todayâs presentation.
Sam plucks the cards from my hand. âAs your best friend, it is my sworn duty to save you from yourself.â
I swipe at them, but she karate chops my arm and sticks the cards into the back pocket of her jeans.
âItâs just one grade. So chill, Lil.â
âItâs never just grade,â I say, rubbing my temple to momentarily release the tension wrapping my head. Note to self: I have to get more sleep. âNot all of us can have your raw musical talent.â
Samâs mouth falls open as she holds up her fingers, three of them wrapped in Band-Aids.
âHello? First-chair bragging rights come with a price, too, you know.â
âSo donât tell me itâs just one grade or one solo or one anything.
Itâs a never-ending domino effect to success, and if one piece is off, only the slightest bit not perfect, the whole thing goes to hell.â
Sam frowns. âDepressing.â
âBut true.â
It doesnât help that weâre in the honors track, which means our dominos have to fall at a much faster rate. No breaks. No breathers. Just piece after piece, falling perfectly into place. Oh, and if you donât âspecializeâ in something like violin or swim team by the end of elementary school, what are you even doing with your life?
âSo maybe just take it down from hyperdrive,â Sam says. âDo you see anyone else freaking out?â
On cue, Kali plops down next to me, buried in her own notecards. Once upon a childhood, Kali was my go-to bestie, until it became clear in middle school that we were much better suited as frenemies. Weâre both word nerds and weâre always pitted against each other in writing contests and class rankings, so now weâre still friends but more the keep-your-competition-close variety.
âYou ready?â Kali asks without looking up.
As if I didnât stay up until two a.m. writing these poemsâand rewriting them. Every time I thought I was done, there was a smudge or weird spacing or a million other reasons to start again, over and over, until they were perfect.
âOh, sheâs ready,â Sam says. âShe brings her A-game.â
Sam gives my arm a squeeze as a group of students and a bearded teacher I donât recognize file in, taking seats in the back row. The teacher waves them forward until they all move, groaning, to the front.
While Sam scrutinizes the intruders, I pull my cards out of her pocket. She throws her hands up in the air and gives me her most disappointed look while I scan one last time through the words Iâm going to have to say in a few minutes in front of everyone. My stomachâs already tight at the thought. Although, if Iâm being honest, my gut is always semi-clenched.
Mrs. Gifford claps to get our attention, her eyes and her frizzy red hair even more wild than usual. She introduces the new kids as the art class, and the bearded man as Mr. Friedman, the art teacher. No wonder I didnât recognize him. Iâve never actually been the art room because (1) I have approximately zero artistic ability, and (2)Â my honors classes and the track team keep my schedule packed, leaving no room for artsy extracurriculars.
Gifford tells us the art kids are here âfor something very excitingâ and gives us time to practice our poems, although I strongly suspect itâs because sheâs still nursing her daily Diet Coke. She doesnât even notice when Damon, late as always, slides into a seat behind me.
âDid you see him?â he says, leaning forward like we were midconversation.
âWho?â Kali asks, a singsongy lilt in her voice because who sheâs been in love with since fifth grade. Sheâs never forgiven me for the regrettable month freshman year when I dated him, mostly because I believed that beneath his assholery, there was a boy worth liking. Spoiler: I was wrong.
Underneath, heâs still a colossal tool.
âThe psycho,â he says in a creepy, horror-movie kind of way. He takes a long sip of an energy drink (the official last-period pick-me-up of the junior class) and nods to a boy who came in with the art kids, wearing neon yellow sunglasses to hold back a shock of black hair that sways with the rhythm of his hand moving rapidly on a pad of paper.
âIâm surprised they even let him in,â Kali says.
âLet in?â I ask.
âMicah Mendez. Got expelled from his old school. I heard someone found him perched on Deadmanâs Cliff, trying to, you knowâ¦â Damon makes a throat-slitting motion with his thumb.
Kali leans forward, whispering. âI read on the Underground,â she says, referring to the tell-all cesspool of an online gossip page where people post the Ridgeline High rumor du jour, âthat he had a full-on meltdown at his last school. Like, a calling-the-cops freak-out.â
âI heard,â Damon says, shout-whispering just loud enough that Iâm sure the kid with the sunglasses hears, âheâs certifiable. Been locked up in a nuthouse for the last year.â
My stomach clamps so tightly, I almost lurch out of my chair.
âTheyâre called treatment centers, you douche,â Sam says. She shoots me a knowing look, but I quickly glance away, afraid Damon will intercept our stealth communication. Sam is the only one who knows about Alice, and thatâs how it has to stay. I donât need my familyâs dirty laundry coursing through the Ridgeline Underground rumor mill.
For all anyone knows, my big sister is still off at college, living in her dorm, staying out too late on weekends. I never mention that she came home a few weeks into freshman year, got into bed, and never got up again. That is, until the Night of the Bathroom Floor.
Iâve repeated the lie so much that sometimes I almost forget itâs not the truth.
Almost.
Damon scoots his chair so close to me, I can feel his breath.
âWhatever. Bottom line, kidâs a psycho. You should put in your Word of the Day, Lil,â he says, referring to my social media handle, LogoLily, where I geek out by making up new words. â
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âI know how to spell, thank you very much.â I take another look at the boy in the corner.
His hand stops moving and he looks up. I snap my own eyes away.
âAnd he doesnât appear particularly psychotic.â Iâm not exactly sure what a true psycho would, in fact, look like. But I do not think this kid is it.
Damon laughs. âThatâs the thing. You never know whatâs going on in someoneâs head.â He points to each of us. âAny one of us could be a secret psycho.â
His finger lands on me.
âYeah, right,â Kali says. âLilyâs perfect.â
Damon leans toward her, whispering dramatically, âExactly. Itâs the perfect ones you have to be careful about. So tightly wound. All the pent-up crazy just builds and builds untilââ He slams his palm on his desk. âSNAP!â
He leans back, laughing when I jump, my nerves congregated in my gut, twisting together into a bigger-than-usual knot.
âYou are a dumbass,â I say, acting like I donât care about Damonâs teasing or that this kid in the corner may know my familyâs secret. Except now heâs staring at me. Like at me. I meet the new kidâs eyes, and he smiles He half waves with a small piece of black charcoal chalk between his fingers. I turn away abruptly, forcing my eyes to focus on my poems.
âUh-oh.â Damonâs eyes flash back and forth between me and the new kid like he smells fresh meat. âThe psychoâs digging our Lily.â
âIâm not Lily.â
Even though we broke up ago, Damonâs never fully gotten the memo that Iâm not his to torment. The knot in my stomach expands, undulating out in all directions. When I look again, the boy with the sunglasses is still laser-beam focused on me.
âOh, this is too perfect,â Damon continues. âYou know what they say about freaks of a feather flocking toââ
âSeriously, Damon,â Sam interrupts. âMust you incessantly compensate for your micro-penis by being the biggest dick on the planet?â
Damon leers at her. âYeah, I bet youâd like to see what Iâm working with.â
âKeep it in your pants, Damon,â I say, trying my level best to act like Iâm not bothered by the boy in the corner. But the knot has completely taken over my abdomen now and is radiating waves of panic toward my chest. Even if it was the same center, he wouldnât say anything.
âDo you him?â Sam whispers to me.
I shake my head.
âAre you sure?â Sam straightens up, talking to me out of the corner of her mouth now. âBecause heâs coming over here. Right. Now.â