Daisyâs wrong though. The school doesnât forget. Although the taunts slow a bit, for the next few months, the life I already thought was hell, is even worse. Notes are slipped into my locker calling me an âincest whoreâ. One day, I came to find that someone had plastered pictures in the hallway of me getting out of the pool that night, and you can see almost every inch of my body through my waterlogged clothes. Guys and girls cough âslutâ as I walk by, and Iâm sure that Iâve never been so humiliated in my life.
Soon, the taunts get so bad that I canât take it anymore. I leave school in the middle of the day and take a cab to the ferry. I get on, no one questioning why a high schooler isnât in class, and I take it all the way across the bay.
When I get there, it only makes me feel worse. Because unlike Daisy, who would have a million people to call when she visited home, I have no one. Just a few acquaintances that certainly wouldnât leave school to come get me. I take another cab to the mall and walk aimlessly around the stores, remembering the day I bought my homecoming dress. More despair floods my veins, because I canât even call my dad. Heâs disappeared again, on some trip, somewhere. No surprise there. Heâs never been around when I needed him. Except for my sister, no one ever is.
Iâve never felt so alone.
I decide to catch a movie even as my phone rings with a call from Daisy.
I donât pick up.
I buy a ticket to whatever movie is next, and then a large popcorn, and then I sit in the theater for the next hour and a half, staring blankly at the screen as tears stream down my face. Thereâs only a couple of other people there, some alone, some with one other person. Thereâs a woman in her fifties a few rows down from me. Sheâs calmly drinking her soda as she watches the show. Sheâs drab, dressed in a pair of oversized gray sweats, her mousy chestnut hair in a ponytail. Like me, sheâs also alone but she looks like sheâs okay with that. Content even.
Is that my future, I wonder. Am I going to find myself alone? Always going to the movies alone, going out to eat alone, sitting at home with my cat alone.
It all feelsâ¦hopeless.
Someoneâs head explodes on the screen, and I think, for the first time, that maybeâ¦the world would be better off without me.
My mind starts to spiral. I start to think about how I could do it. I could slip away like this, take some prescription drugs and then let myself sink into the water. Just drift away like I feel Iâm drifting through life.
But then Daisyâs face fills my head, and I see her standing at my grave side, tears streaming down her face, her spirit broken. I see my mother sobbing into Curtâs chest. A snarky voice inside tells me âtheyâll recover, maybe theyâd be even better off without my baggageâ, but I try to push the thought away.
By the end of the movie, Iâm disgusted with myselfâ¦and Iâve realizedâ¦I might need some help.
Itâs midnight by the time I get home. Iâve walked all the way from the ferry stop in the rain, and Iâm completely soaked. Thereâs a police car in the front of my house, and I brace for whatâs to come. All the lights in the house are on.
Taking a deep breath, I walk up to the front door and knock, because I left my keys in my backpack at school. The door flies open and thereâs my mother, looking at least ten years older than she had this morning.
âSkylar! Oh my God!â she cries as she flings herself towards me, throwing her arms around me.
I can see inside the house. Thereâs a policeman standing there next to Curt, both of them staring at me with frowns on their faces. Noah is also hovering in the back of the room, his lips pursed and his arms crossed in front of him.
Daisy comes flying down the hallway, practically pushing my mom to the ground in her hurry to get to me.
âWhere the fuck have you been?â she growls, squeezing me so tightly, Iâm finding it hard to breathe.
I realize Iâm shaking then, and the tears that have been on and off all day are streaming down my face. Again.
Iâm dragged inside, everyone staring at me incredulously when I tell them I had gone to the mainland all afternoon and that I just lost track of time.
My mom and Curt apologize to the police officer and thank him for coming, and he gives me some sort of lecture about never doing this again before he disappears into the night.
Iâm still feeling numb though, still trying to fight off the blanket of melancholy draped across my shoulders since that moment in the theater when I first started thinking about ending my misery.
âWhat were you thinking?â my mother shrieks as soon as the doorâs closed. âYou realize how worried weâve all been? I wouldâve never expected this type of behavior from you.â Sheâs ranting and raving, her face turning red as she gestures, and I just sit there, like a lump on a log.
Finally, my mother realizes that her screaming isnât getting through to me. She murmurs something to Curt and he leaves the room, snapping at Noah to follow him. Noah reluctantly follows him, and I feel the loss of his gaze the second heâs gone.
Daisy refuses to leave though. Sheâs standing there with her arms crossed, her hair uncharacteristically unkempt like sheâs been running her hands through it all evening.
My mother sits down on the couch next to me and takes one of my hands in hers. âSkylar, help me to understand.â
âSheâs being bullied,â Daisy blurts out, finally shocking me out of the fog that Iâve been wrapped in.
My motherâs mouth drops. âBullied?â She stares at me, concerned. âWhy havenât you said anything?â
Again, Daisy inserts herself before I can say anything, not that I have anything to say.
âWould you even have cared if she did?â Daisy spits sarcastically. âWhen was the last time that you even spent some quality time with us and asked what was going on in our lives? Sorry to burst your bubble, Mom, but since we move here youâve been so far up Curtâs ass youâve forgotten about us completely. Youâve been acting like Grant and that shit is saying something.â
Shock and guilt is written all over my motherâs face as she stares incredulously at the both of us. She opens her mouth, to defend herself Iâm sure, but Daisy waves her away, not wanting to hear it.
âSky, you shouldâve said something to me. You scared me. Not knowing where you were all day, scared me. If all you wanted was a break, I couldâve gone with you to Falmouth.â
That does get my mom speaking again, because she starts lecturing us both on the fact that we are, under no circumstances, allowed to play hooky from school, and how this whole instance has damaged her trust in me.
She seems to skip right over what Daisyâs told her, or the accusation that Daisyâs levied about just how interested in her daughtersâ lives sheâs been over the last year.
After another thirty minutes of lecturing, Iâm sent to my room, grounded for the foreseeable future. Daisy tries to follow me inside, but I tell her I just need some space, and reluctantly she gives it to me.
Iâm lying listlessly on my bed, staring up at the ceiling when the door opens, and I donât have to look over to see who it is this time.
Noah walks inside and closes the door behind him, clicking the lock. He stands there by the door, so long that I have no choice but to glance over at him. The look on his face is inscrutable. Heâs just staring at meâ¦almost blankly.
Finally, he walks over to the bed and sits at the foot, reminding me of that moment we shared. It almost feels like another lifetime at this point.
âWhere did you go?â he finally asks.
I donât bother answering him.
I donât owe him anything.
In this moment, it feels like heâs won, like all the fightâs been wiped out of me. Who was I to think that I had enough in me to go up against someone like him?
I was a fool, thatâs what I was.
âSkylar!â he snaps, frustration thick in his voice.
I stare at him.
He looksâ¦wrecked. There are dark circles under his eyes and his hair is all over the place.
âI hate you,â I whisper to him, and he leans back, his face stunned.
âWhat?ââ
âI hate you.â
He shakes himself out of his momentary stupor and leans forward.
âIs that what youâve been doing? Going out to God knows where and blaming me for all of your problems?â he taunts.
I jerk up, adrenaline spiking through my veins for the first time in maybeâ¦weeks.
âExcuse meâ¦are you actually asking that? You are the cause of all my problems!â
âIâm not the cause of any of your problems. Iâm just the one that points out youâre too scared to do anything about them!â
âYou told the entire school that I kissed you,â I hiss, my heartbeat so rapid it feels like it could explode out of my chest and fly away any moment now. âEveryone thinks that Iâm some kind of sick freak now. I hear about it all day, every day. My life is ruined until I get out of this place. Youâve made my lifeâ¦unbearable.â
The word âunbearableâ slips out, more honesty than I ever would have wanted to give him.
âThis is on you,â he mumbles under his breath.
âOn me? Really? All this is on me?!â I question in outrage.
âIsnât it?â he counters looking me dead in the eye. âYouâre wasting time blaming me when you should be asking yourself one very important question.â
âAnd whatâs that?â I seethe.
âWhy you never told anyone that I. Kissed. You. Back!â he spits.
Now itâs my turn to rear back, like Iâve been physically hit. I stare at him incredulously.
âYou think anyone would have believed me? Those idiots worship the ground you walk on. You could tell them to get on the floor and lick it, and they would do it without a second thought,â I explain frantically.
âSo what? You could have still told the truth.â
âLike they would ever believe me over you.â I scoff.
He gets up from the bed and shakes his head before tossing one last remark over his shoulder.
âWhat makes you think I would have denied it?â
When he starts walking out of the room without saying another word, my apathetic heart begins to faintly beat in my chest, needing this exchange to remind itself that it still has life in it. So much life in it.
âIs that your way of telling me that the truth is my friend?â I ask before he has a chance to leave.
âProbably the only one you have,â he quips, his back still towards me.
âThat was my first kiss. My very first kiss. And you ruined it. Howâs that for some truth?â
With my heartbeat drumming a mile a minute, I watch as Noahâs back stiffens, his hand white knuckling the knob of my door. I wait with bated breath for him to turn around. For him to confront me. To call me a liar. To say something.
But he doesnât. Instead he just leaves.
Heâs said enough for one night.
We both have.