After a million kisses and somehow not enough kissesânever enough kissesâwe force ourselves to stop and get out of the water. We pull on our clothes and he walks me to his house and presses his mouth to mine one more time. I drive home, the taste of the ocean and Micah on my lips.
The house is quiet when I creep through the front door and close it softly behind me. I almost make it past Dadâs office without detection.
âThat you, Lily pad?â
âWhatâs up, Dad?â
In his study, heâs sitting in his armchair, buried in a book. The rest of the house is dark, the dishwasher running softly like it does every night after Dad and Staci go up to bed.
âWere you waiting on me?â I ask.
âOf course. Canât sleep until all my girls are home, safe and sound.â
âSorry Iâm so late. I didnât meant to worry you.â
âThatâs the thing: I have to worry about you.â Dad stands up, stretches, and puts his arm around me. âLate-night study session?â
I nod.
âThose teachers really push you, donât they?â
âUnderstatement of the century.â
âNot that you ever had a problem pushing yourself just fine,â he says with a wink. âSpeaking of which, I havenât seen you running much. You still shooting for state?â
âYep.â
âThatâs my girl.â He piles a stack of papers with Fairviewâs letterhead into a drawer.
âDad?â I swallow hard. âI know about Aliceâs bills. And Iâm doing everything I can to win this scholarship for the summer program, butââ
Dad cuts me off, shaking his head.
âNow, letâs not talk about that,â he says. âLeave that to me. Thatâs what dads are for.â
On his desk, a picture of the four of us at the beach sits next to a stack of student exams. Itâs from the day when Alice got me to swim out past where the waves break, when I almost let the water take me. But this is earlier that morning, and Dad has Margot on his shoulders, while Alice and I dance in the in the in-between where the waves meet the sand.
âSeems like yesterday,â Dad says, changing the topic with a happy-sad look on his face. He picks up the picture and rubs the back of his neck. âI wasnât sure I could do it after your mom died.â
âDo what?â I ask.
âRaise you girls. All alone. No one really tells you how, you know?â
The quaver in his voice scares me. Heâs Dadâalways trying to make things better, trying to make me happy. Always there, period. I wrap my arms around him from behind.
âYouâre doing great, Dad,â I say. âAnd youâre not alone.â
â
The Post-it notes have taken over.
Dozens of them adorn Aliceâs side of the room. She looks up at me from where sheâs scribbling something on a new one, and then she slaps it onto the wall. Her eyes are bloodshot, and the room is a total mess.
âWhenâs the last time you slept?â I say, stepping over the plastic tarp and paint cans. Margot is zonked out, curled up in my comforter, tucked under her arm. I told her days ago that Iâd talk Dementors with her.
âNo time for sleep!â Alice says, and then she skips over to me and pulls on my wet hair. âBesides, Iâm the one who should be asking the questions, when my little sister comes in at midnight, fresh from what I can only assume is a skinny-dip?â
âHow did you know that?â
âIâm your big sister. I know all,â she says with a wink. âAnd also, youâre wearing his hoodie.â
I look down at the sweatshirt Micah wrapped around me tonight. âOh.â
She laughs, the high, uncontrolled pitch Iâve been trying so hard to ignore.
âDonât worry, your midnight rendezvous secrets are safe with me. So I guess this means you into him?â
I nod, the lingering feel of his lips, sending aftershocks rippling through me. âHe just sees the world in this beautiful way, and I want to be part of it.â
I sit on Aliceâs bed so I wonât wake Margot. Alice studies the sticky note in her hand. âYou know he has a pretty complicated history, right? It doesnât bother you?â
âIt did. But then I got to know him, and heâs like everyone says,â I say, sorting out my feelings for Micah as I shape them into words. âAnd itâs like his depression, his time at Fairview, itâs all part of who he is, and sometimes I think I could fall in love with who he is. And when you love someone, you love all the broken pieces, right? Or maybe when you love someone, those pieces donât seem so broken anymore. Theyâre just part of them.â
Alice is quiet, looking at the scars peeking out from her sleeves now. âYou really believe that?â
âYeah. I think I do.â
âSecrets!â she yells, snapping her fingers. âI could do a whole segment on the secrets we keep. How we try to protect people. How we protect ourselves.â
âAliceââ
âAnd why we say some things and not othersââ
âAlice!â
âWhat, what? Why are you yelling?â
âIâm trying to talk to you.â
She slaps the Post-it onto the wall and laughs. âSorry, but the ideas just keep coming, like, bam-bam-BAM! I canât write them down quick enough. Itâs like theyâre building up inside me, like this pressure, and theyâre gonna leak out my ears because theyâre coming so fast, and like, I have to reach in and pluck them out of this tornado before theyâre gone forever.â
I pat the bed next to me, trying to whisper so Margot stays asleep. âCome, sit.â
She obeys, but barely. Her butt is on my bed but her eyes dart around the room, her fingers flicking the pen back and forth.
âAlice. I donât think youâre fine.â
She rolls her eyes. âI told youââ
âNo, Alice, Iâm serious. Maybe you need to get back on your meds.â
All her energy turns angry in an instant, her bloodshot eyes turned on me.
âNo! Iâm not going back to that placeâwhere I feel nothing about anything. I want to everything. What I need is for everyone to stop trying to fix me.â She points to Margot. âDid you know she thinks something called a Patronus is going to help me? Told me I had to think of my happiest memory. Like she can wave a magic wand andâpoofâno more bipolar disorder.â
âIâm not trying to fix you, Alice. Iâm trying to help you.â
âFor the one millionth time, I donât need help.â
âIf the Hundred Acre Wood has taught me anything, itâs that needs help.â I choose my words carefully. âSo if you wonât take your medicineââ
âI wonât.â
âThen Micah said he has this group he goes to, from Fairview. What if you went to that? Just once, just to try it. Iâd even go with you.â
Alice groans and leans her head back. She puffs out her cheeks as she blows out all her air. âThis is important to you?â
âIt is.â
âFine. Iâll go.â She points a finger at me. âBut not because I need help. Maybe I could help Maybe I could show them my videos orââ She stands up, scribbling on another Post-it note. âOr maybe I could interview them. A whole segment on life after Fairview!â
She slaps the note onto the wall with the word in the center.
I change for bed but leave on Micahâs hoodie because it smells like him and the ocean and tonight. And even though the symptoms of mania are still bouncing in my head, I can finally breathe in this room.
Because sheâs gonna get help. Sheâll be okay.
We all will.