COLINâS BEEN IN THE INFIRMARY more times than he can count, but heâs rarely been the one sitting beside the bed while someone else babbles under the influence of painkillers.
âLike a demon. Or a ghoul. Or . . . something whose face melts,â Joe mumbles.
âEverythingâs okay now,â Colin reassures his godfather. Joe has been rambling about demons for almost an hour. âItâs the morphine.â
The door from the hallway opens and Maggie comes in, carrying fresh bandages and a glass of water. Sheâs barely in her thirties but has the wisdom of a much older woman. It shows in the deep set of her frown and the persistent worry lines on her forehead.
âHowâs he doing?â she asks Colin.
âStill going on about a face-melting demon, but he seems better.â
Maggie hums, lips tight, and pulls the sheet down to check Joeâs bandage. âWe should take this one to the hospital, to be sure.â
âIâm fine,â Joe growls, suddenly coherent. âWeâre not driving two hours for something you can do better here.â
âI can stitch you up, but this is deep. Youâll have a nasty scar.â
âIâm staying put. Donât have anyone to impress with my flawless skin.â
âChicks dig scars,â Colin says, and ducks when Maggie pretends to smack his arm.
Joe groans when Maggie peels away the blood-soaked bandage. Colin looks away, wincing. The cut is deep, but clean now, and Colin swears he saw a hint of bone. Maggie shoos him to the other side of the room while she stitches Joe up. His stomach turns at seeing Joe like this: obviously old, vulnerable.
âGet out of here, kid,â Maggie says, lifting her chin toward the door. âYouâre green.â
âIâve . . . never seen him like this.â
âMm-hmm. And how do you think he felt seeing you worse off more times than any of us can count?â
Colin knows sheâs right. He can remember being here or in the hospital after a nasty crash on his bike, with several broken ribs and a huge gash on his scalp. Heâd wondered at the time if he were going to die. It seemed so matter of fact to him: Either he would, or he wouldnât. It was simple. He never considered how they might feel to lose him.
âGo on. Get some sleep. I got this,â Maggie says.
Colin looks at the man on the bed. âYou good, Joe?â
Joe grunts as Maggie ties off a stitch. âIâll be back to work tomorrow,â he says.
The nurse laughs. âThe hell you will.â
Colin is startled awake when Jay returns to the dorm room. Dim light from the hall slips across the walls and is gone just as quickly.
âYouâd better be alone,â Colin says into his pillow. Itâs been a crazy day, and the last thing he wants to deal with tonight is one of Jayâs girlfriends sneaking into their room. If caught, all three of them would get demerits.
âIâm alone. Dude, Iâm so tired.â
Colin hears the rustle of fabric, Jay swearing as he trips, and the muffled clunk of keys and shoes hitting the rug. The mattress across the room creaks as he collapses on his bed. He moans something and rolls onto his stomach.
Jayâs breathing evens out, and Colin opens an eye, trying to see the clock next to the bed. Itâs four in the morning, somehow both too early and too late to easily guess where Jayâs been.
âWhere were you?â he asks. Jay doesnât answer and he asks again, louder, reaching with his good arm and throwing an empty water bottle toward Jayâs side of the room.
Jay startles, lifting his head slightly before dropping it down again. âIâm sleeping, man.â
âShelby?â Colin asks.
âNah, sheâs such a scene queen. Not to mention insane.â
Colin rolls his eyes and adds a snort so Jay hears his scorn even if he canât see it. All the girls Jay dates are insane.
âHowâs Joe?â
âHis legâs pretty cut up,â Colin says, scrubbing his face. âBut otherwise he seemed okay when I left.â
âHeâs, like, seven thousand years old,â Jay says. âAnd nothing keeps Joe down. Not even his whole fucking porch collapsing with him on it.â
âHeâs seventy-two,â Colin grumbles. âAnd heâs lucky. Half an inch to the left and he could have bled to death.â
Jay answers this with the appropriate weight of silence. Sometimes, when the planets align, even he realizes when a smart-ass comment is unnecessary.
âOh,â he says with more enthusiasm. âI saw your girl.â
âWhat?â
âLucy. I saw her on my way here. She was sitting in front of Ethan Hall. I asked her if she needed help, but she said no.â
âFirst of all, sheâs not my girlââ
Jay groans into his pillow.
âTrust me,â Colin counters, opening his eyes to stare at the ceiling, wide-awake now. Scattered above him are glow-in-the-dark stars and a model of the solar system. His dad made it for him before he died, and itâs followed Colin to every bedroom heâs ever had. He sighs, rubbing his hands over his face again and wondering who this strange girl is and why in the hell she was sitting outside alone at four in the morning. âShe told me to leave her alone.â
âChrist.â Jay groans. âItâs like you know nothing about women. They all say shit like that, Col. They have to. Itâs, like, hardwired into their brains or something. They say that stuff to feel less guilty about wanting us to jump their bones. I thought everybody knew that.â
âThatâs the kind of reasoning that will earn you a cell mate ironically named Tiny,â Colin says.
âIf Iâm wrong, then why did I get laid last night and you were here with a pile of laundry and your hand?â
âI think that has less to do with me and more to do with the poor choices being made by the female students at Saint Oâs.â
âAh, right,â Jay says thickly, already half asleep. He falls silent, and eventually his breaths even out. Inside, Colin is a tornado, unable to stop thinking about Lucy and why she might be sitting outside in the cold.
On that first day, she said she was here for him, and although he doesnât understand what that means . . . maybe part of him does. Clearly she looks different to Colin than she does to Jay, and itâs hard to pretend that doesnât mean something. In fact, heâs trying his best to ignore the caveman-asshole feeling he gets when he thinks that sheâs somehow his, but sheâs the one who put it out there, planting the idea like a tiny dark seed inside him.
And now he canât sleep. Great. Careful not to wake Jay, he grabs two hoodies and slips out of the room.
Lucy is exactly where Jay said she was, sitting on a bench in front of Ethan Hall with her back to Colin, facing the pond. In the low light, the water looks strangely inviting, smooth and dark and calm enough to make the moon and thousands of stars come see their reflections. Mist curls along the edges, like fingers luring its victims into the frigid blackness.
With a deep breath, he closes the distance between them.
âHey,â she says, without turning to see him.
âHey.â
Finally, she peeks at him out of the corner of her eye. âWhat are you doing up?â she asks. Her voice is always so raspy, like she doesnât use it much.
âCouldnât sleep. What about you?â As expected, she doesnât answer, so he places the sweatshirt on the bench next to her. âJay said he saw you out here. I thought you might be cold.â Sheâs still wearing the plain blue oxford, and no way is it warm enough.
âIs that why you came out here?â
âMaybe.â He rubs his hands together, blowing into them, and glances over at her.
âHow is Mr. Velasquez?â
Colin wants to burst out in song heâs so happy sheâs speaking to him. âHeâs going to be okay. By the time I left, he was back to his old self, insisting he could work from bed if Maggie would let him. Iâm pretty sure Dot will be in the infirmary forcing food on him every twenty minutes.â
Lucy stares at the pond for several beats, and Colin wonders if theyâve gone back to the silent game until she says, âDot is your boss, right? You seem close to her.â
âShe is my boss.â He smiles at her tentative efforts at making conversation. âBut sheâs always been kind of like a grandmother to me.â
âSo, your kind-of-grandmother runs the kitchen and the headmaster is your godfather?â
âGod-fahhthaahhh,â Colin says in his best Brando, but Lucy only gives him an indulgent tiny-dimpled smile. âMy parents died when I was little. They were teachers here and were close to Dot and Joe, who was a history teacher at the time. Dot hired me in the kitchen when I was fourteen, but sheâs been feeding me since I was five. I try and hang out with her as much as I canâlike help her out on baking nights and stuff.â
âIâm sorry your parents died.â
He nods once. His stomach tightens, and he hopes they can move on from this topic. He doesnât want to think about his motherâs spiral into psychosis, or the accident, or any of it. Almost everyone here knows the story, and heâs grateful he never really has to tell it.
âAnd youâve lived here since you were five?â
âWe moved from New Hampshire when my parents got jobs here. They died when I was six, and I lived with Joe until I moved to the dorms freshman year.â He bends so he can see her face more clearly. âWhat about you? Does your family live in town? I thought you were a commuter, but . . .â He trails off, and her silence rings back to him.
âColin . . . ,â she says finally.
Hearing her say his name does things to him. It gets him thinking of ways to make her say it again, and louder.
She looks up at him. âAbout what I said yesterday . . .â
âYou mean the part where you asked me to stay away and here I am, finding you in the middle of the night?â
âNo, not that.â She sighs, tilting her head up to stare at the sky. âIâm glad youâre here.â
Well, thatâs the complete opposite of what heâd expected. This girl is about as hard to read as a Cyrillic text. âOkay . . . ?â
The amount of attention sheâs giving the stars makes him wonder if sheâs trying to count them. Does she see something there that he canât?
âI shouldnât have said what I said yesterday. I want you around me. Itâs just that I donât think you should want to be around me.â She takes a deep breath, like sheâs readying herself for a hard admission. âAnd now I sound crazy.â
He laughs. She totally does. âA little.â
âBut I guess what Iâm going to say is kind of crazy.â
He stares at her, focusing on the way her teeth rake across her bottom lip. He already knows thereâs something different about her. And thereâs most definitely something strange about them. Itâs not until heâs here, in this moment, that he realizes how much heâs resisted thinking about how weird everything has been. After his motherâs breakdown and the resulting death of both of his parents, heâd learned how to guard his mind so carefully, never lingering too long on his morbid history orâeventuallyâanything even mildly worrisome. The idea that there might really be something strange about Saint Oâs always struck Colin as legend, a way to make new kids behave, to lure the thin stream of tourists to the town nearby in the summer. But thereâs something paradoxical about sitting with an odd stranger at night next to a foggy pond that makes you see things more clearly.
Even so, his body fights the clarity. Colin can feel his thoughts clouding, letting go, as if heâs supposed to not care how strange it seems. This time, he pushes back, listening instead to the rational side of his brain and sliding away from her the tiniest bit. Heâs always known Lucy wasnât a normal girl. Her hair is blond to him, not brown. She never seems cold; she never seems to eat. Sheâs so . . . different. And when her eyes meet his and they are a slow, grinding, anxious grayâfilled with metal and ice, worry and hope, and wholly unlike anything Colin has ever imagined beforeâhe wonders for a flash if Lucy is even real.