The rumors roll on. The Ridgeline Underground is full of speculation about the true identity of the guerrilla poets, and itâs not pretty. Someone posts a list of the top five students most likely to commit suicide. Micah makes the cut. Someone else makes a mock GoFundMe to collect donations for therapy for the poets once theyâre revealed. Itâs a mental-health witch hunt.
On my bed, I scroll through all the accusations while Margot recites multiplication facts from the math flash cards sheâs spread on the floor, and Alice plays YouTube videos as research for her new channel. Iâm glad sheâs returning to the land of the living and all, but with her videos and shuffling the furniture around for her redecoration extravaganza, sheâs been nonstop since she joined us as an honorary guerrilla poet.
I end up on the UC Berkeley summer English program site. Maybe I donât even need this sponsorship. I could just not turn anything in, and no one would know Iâm one half of the infamous guerrilla poets. Iâd apply on my own, and Iâm sure Dad would pay for it if it means I could be a Golden Bear. And Iâd still make the connections, get that leg up on admission.
I slam my computer shut. Between the noise of Alice and the noise in my head, I need to get out.
I need to run. But thatâs a big, fat noâIâm trying to my body, not induce a panic attack. I turn to the almighty Google yet again, hoping to find something that can actually stop the chaos in my brain. What I find isâdrumroll, pleaseâyoga.
So, instead of running, I find myself standing outside Staciâs bedroom door in hot pursuit of peace. When I walk in, sheâs lunging in a particularly commanding position, one hand pointing toward the back wall, the other pointing at me, her eyes focusing down the length of her arm.
âWarrior pose,â she answers without me asking. âThe ancient warrior Virabhadra stood like this as he drew his sword to cut off his enemyâs head.â
âI thought yoga was about inner peace,â I say, inching into the room. I havenât spent much time in here since Dad and Staci became newlyweds last year. Which means sex. And lots of it. So Iâve avoided the place where all the magic happens because, well, eww.
Bachelor Dadâs only décor was books, dog-eared and coffee-ring-stained. Now thereâs fresh flowers in a tall vase on the nightstand. The room smells like orange blossoms, and the bed is not only made but has six bedazzled throw pillows on it.
Staci has turned the corner of the room into her own mini yoga studio, with an essential oil diffuser on the dresser and a mat in front of a mirror. She shifts her arms, stretching them toward the ceiling.
âSometimes,â she says between long, loud breaths, âyou have to fight for peace.â
Her steady in-and-out breathing fills the room as she stands up straight, brings her hands together in front of her chest like sheâs praying, and does a small bow to the mirror, before turning to me.
âWhatâs up?â
âOh. Well. Iââ I stumble over my words because Iâve never actually asked Staci for anything before, a fact Iâve prided myself on since she moved in and took over the nightstand and the pantry and Dad. âCould you maybe, uhâ¦teach me?â
âWhat? Yoga?â She does a double take.
âYeah.â
She wastes no time getting me onto the mat, showing me how to dip my head down and butt up in something called a Downward Dog, while plinky-plunky rain sounds play on her phone.
âNow, breathe in through your nose, pulling the air deep into your lungs,â she says. My chest cracks open when the air fills it. âLet go of all the bad; inhale only good. Clear your mind. Focus on your breath. Your body. Listen to what the silence is telling you.â
But the silence only leaves gaps for my brain to go wild (like full-on parents-out-of-town kegger). It replays all the Underground rumors about the guerrilla poets.
Thankfully, my hands are holding me up, so I canât claw at my side, even though all I want to do is rip into myself. Quiet the monsters by picking myself clean.
After a thirty-minute session where I fall over at least five times, we namaste and bow, and she crouches down to roll up her mat.
âYou okay? Youâve seemed a little, I donât know, in your head lately.â
âGot a lot going on at school.â
âIâm here, you know.â She turns off the diffuser and the rain sounds. âIf you ever need to talk. Whatever youâre going through, you donât have to go through it alone.â
Then she hugs me, which is kind of gross because sheâs in a tank top and sweaty, but I let her and I nod like I understand, but hereâs the thing: I alone. Iâm the only one who can hear the monsters, feel the panic. Iâm the only one who can feel the urge to pick at myself drumming through me like an unstoppable rhythm. When the problemâs in your head, no one can carry it but you.
â
Around midnight, Dad notices me pacing around the house.
âWhatâs up, Lily pad?â he says from his office.
âCanât sleep.â
âMust be something in the water. I canât seem to turn off the old noggin, either.â He opens his drawer and holds up a small white medicine bottle. âDonât know how Iâd function without these babies.â
He pours a blue pill into his hand, pops it in his mouth, and chases it with water.
âNow, this Berkeley summer program? Did you say it was paid for?â
âYeah. Why?â
He thumps his pen on the lip of his desk, looking at his computer screen.
âJust doing some budgeting.â He says this with a smile, the kind meant for my benefit, but Dadâs not that good an actor. His pen taps the desk and his leg vibrates the floorâwhap-whap-whap. Dad pinches the top of his nose, right between his eyes. Itâs a gesture heâs done a thousand timesâwhen heâs grading a particularly terrible paper or worrying about Alice.
âIs something wrong?â
âNothing your old man canât handle.â He plops a stack of papers into his top drawer, closes it, and then adds, smiling, âBut I wouldnât say no to a scholarship.â
He turns off the computer, stretches out his arms wide with a yawn, tilting back in his office chair. âAnd luckily, I happen to be the proud dad of the most talented kid at that school.â His voice is back to its normal, steady assurance as he stands up and puts his arm across my shoulders, pulling me into my spot. He flicks off the office light as we walk out. âAlice seems better, doesnât she?â
âMuch.â
âAnd you?â
âGood as ever.â
As we leave the office, he squeezes my handâonce, twice, three times.
âDonât know what Iâd do without you, kiddo.â
â
Once Iâm sure Dadâs in his bed, I tiptoe back downstairs into his office and open his drawer. I flip through the papers, which are mostly printouts of online pages with titles like and Underneath, I find bills from Fairview with enormous dollar figures on the total due now line at the bottom.
No wonder Dad asked about scholarship money. Is this why Staciâs working at the yoga studio again? Why Dadâs teaching extra classes?
I donât know how heâs affording it, but I do know this: my apply-to-Berkeley-on-my-own plan is out. I canât ask Dad to shell out more money right now, mostly because I know heâd find a way. Take on more classes. Work himself sick. Add more bills to his already overfilled drawer of worry.
I stuff everything back into the desk and creep upstairs. Alice is struggling to move her dresser out from the wall.
âOh good,â she says. âHelp me?â
I step over the cans of seafoam green paint stacked in the middle of the room and pick up a corner of the dresser.
âYour multitasking is going to kill me,â I say.
She just laughs, inching the dresser to where she wants it. âYouâll thank me when our room is featured on HGTV.â
Her plans for the room spill out. New shelving and two-tone paint and something called shiplap that apparently is all the rage. Suddenly Iâm having flashbacks to all the other times sheâs redecorated our room. Spoiler: it never ends well. Two years ago, we had a half mural of a tree on our ceiling that she abandoned after a few weeks. Then there was the time she plastered the wall with inspirational quotes from magazines. They fell off one by one when she moved on to her next big idea.
âHow are you paying for all this?â I ask, mentally tabulating all the improvements she has planned.
âDad. He said as long as itâs making me happy and keeping me busy, open tab.â She holds up a thin, silver MacBook. âEven bought me supplies for the YouTube channel.â
She lowers the computer, and I feel the anger rising, just like it did when she stayed out past curfew. She says she doesnât want everything to be about her, but it is. It is. This whole last year. And now sheâs spending Dadâs money like itâs going out of style, totally clueless that her Fairview visit (which didnât seem to do by the way) has already drained us dry.
âOh, unclench, Lil. I swear you and Dad are going to get your faces stuck like that one day.â
âStuck like what?â
âYou know, your worry face.â She tightens up her jaw and purses her lips in a ridiculously overdramatized way, and then busts out laughing.
âI do do that.â I relax my face muscles, which I didnât realized were tensed so tight.
âSeriously, though, you okay?â she asks.
âFine.â
But Iâm not. Nothingâs fine. Dad me to win this summer scholarship to make up for what Alice has cost us. But winning will cost something, too. Everyone will know, once and for all, the Lily Iâve worked so hard to hide.
1:30 a.m.
2:00 a.m.
2:20 a.m.
I donât message him back.
Instead, I lie in the dark, trying to figure out a way to keep my secrets while also winning this contest. After an hour of trying not to tear into my own skin while also ignoring the sound of Aliceâs YouTube research, I sneak back downstairs, take a blue pill from Dadâs drawer, and swallow it.
Somethingâanythingâto turn off the noise.