The next morning, Riley doesnât say anything about meeting me and Mikey in the alley. He must have been so messed up, or gotten so messed up, that he doesnât remember. Or he doesnât care. Itâs hard to tell with him. Heâs super talkative with Linus and the waitstaff, but not me, though he does slip me half of a grilled cheese sandwich at lunchtime.
After I get off work, I head to the library. All the computers are taken, so I camp out upstairs, in the art section. Ellis used to think it was weird, that I liked to look at old art and stuff, like Rubens and all his pillowy women with soft hair and flushed cheeks. I like Frida Kahlo, too, she seems so pissed off, and her colors are all angry. There are like a million stories inside her paintings. Even though Evan said my comics made him feel great, and famous, they seem dumb to me, just stupid stuff about loser kids on the streets, high as kites, dancing around in dark capes and pretending theyâre superheroes.
This art seems important. Itâs in books. It lasts. I have to teach myself, I want to teach myself, how to make something great. I want my drawings to be great.
Before I go, Iâm able to slip onto one of the computers. Thereâs an email from Casper.
Iâm just starting to reply when the timer goes off. I promise myself Iâll come back tomorrow after work and write her an email. I should probably write Blue, too. I know how lonely it can get at Creeley. I feel bad that I didnât reply to her email the last time I was at the library.
When I get home, thereâs a note from Mikey shoved under my door. Meet me at Magpies at 9. I got suckered into a double shift today. Iâll take you to a party after, okay? See you.
I fold the note tenderly, my heart thrumming at the thought of seeing Mikey again. A party. Like a date? Something? Iâm not sure. I use a lot of soap in the bathtub, pick a clean shirt. I slip into the bathroom down the hall, wincing at the smell of piss in the toilet and the overflowing wastebasket. I inspect my face in the dirty, cracked mirror.
âExcellent-looking underneath all that dirt and shit,â Evan had said at the parade.
I donât have any dirt and shit on my face now. Itâs pink from the sun and clean, with a wave of freckles across my nose. Itâs still a shock seeing my real hair after years of dye. Who is this person? Whatâs she becoming?
I blink at myself. I could be a girl, a real girl. I could be a possibility, with Mikey.
Couldnât I?