Soulprint

I’m not sure if I’m supposed to respond to that, but she doesn’t give me the chance anyway.

“But I’m not sure. And that uncertainty, I can’t deal with it right now. You understand? I can’t stay up worrying about whether you’re playing him for something.”

“I’m not,” I cut in.

“I hope you’re not, I really do. So if you mean that, stop playing.”

I’m not sure what part of this she thinks is me playing anything. It didn’t feel like playing at all. It felt like something bigger than the moment we were in. Bigger than the situation. Bigger than the goal. Something that had both nothing and everything to do with it. “But I’m not playing.”

She turns the water off and extends her hand through the curtain, and I place the uniform in her open palm. “This. Just stop this. Please,” she says. When she’s dressed, she pulls the curtain open, wringing out the ends of her hair. “His last girlfriend—Ella? It’s the whole reason he was locked up. She got him into the mess, and then she flipped on him to save her own ass. So please. You held a piece of glass to my throat. We risked our lives for you. The only thing I’m asking is for you to keep your distance. No distractions. This isn’t the time. You can see that, I’m sure. This isn’t the time.”

I nod. It’s all I can manage.

“Now let’s see the damage,” she says, like everything’s normal again.

I pull off my shirt. She leans closer. “He did a really good job,” she whispers. “No signs of infection, either.” Then she checks out my side. “Still sting?” she asks.

“Not too much,” I say.

She smiles. “I do like you, Alina. But we’re so entirely screwed right now. The only way to make it out of this is to get into that database and hope like hell there’s something we can use.”

I hate the idea that I must be like June, using what we might find for selfish reasons. I hate it, and yet I don’t have any better ideas.

Like the terrifying ocean. The only way past it is through it.

Dinner turns out to be cereal and soda with a side of chocolate bars.

And distance turns out to be the length of one blue gym mat, separated by one watchful sister.

Even in the dark, I see her staring at me. “See?” she says, “I already can’t sleep. This is ridiculous.”

Cameron, on the other side, is already breathing slowly and steadily, apparently unworried and unaffected by the whole situation.

“Don’t worry, Casey,” I say.

And then I spend the night trying not to think of him. Instead, I see the starred numbers on the printouts, boxes and boxes of paper in the hideaway. I try to focus, but instead my mind keeps replaying Cameron’s face the second before he kissed me. And then the kiss. And I can’t unfocus from it. I have decided it’s really unfair. I should get to decide what my mind thinks about, and not the other way around …

I bolt upright, my head swimming with Cameron and numbers and stars and data. I grab June’s notebook, flipping through the pages in the dark. Not that it would suddenly make sense to me now, even if I could see it. I need to see what’s on the hard drives again. I need to see the starred data and the data in the articles.

“Casey,” I say, shaking her shoulder.

“What?” she asks.

“I need to see the data again.”

“I’m actually sleeping here. In the morning, Alina.”

But I can’t sleep again. I can’t stop thinking of June, of what she must’ve felt. Because I realize, this path we’re on, I’m no longer following clues left behind for me. It’s me stepping in June’s footprints. It’s me reliving her life. It’s me seeing things exactly as she saw them. She hasn’t left me anything more. Now I’m discovering, just as she did. And so this feeling—this feeling that there’s something in that data—I know it’s not just my feeling. It’s June’s.

And the answer, I know, even though it pains me to think it—the answer is inside the database.

Cameron wakes before Casey. He sees me sitting in a ball on the mat, and he pushes himself to standing. He grins and disappears into the boys’ locker room for less than five minutes and comes out looking completely put together. He has on the uniform again, and for a moment I can picture him like this, walking out of the high school locker room, onto the court to play a game. I see him smile at some girl, like he’s doing to me, an acknowledgment of some secret they share. I see that he has had a life, and he won’t have it again. And maybe it’s not the same—from hiding to free, from free to hiding—but that difference, the distance from what we were to what we are, is the same. And if we really are so similar—people, I mean—then I think I understand him. I think he understands me, even.

“Off to get a car,” he says, jogging toward the office with the open window. I remember how he said that freeing me might turn out to be the one good thing he does with his life. How much we all need this. How much we all need each other.

I want to tell him to be careful, but I decide that makes me seem needy or nervous or both. He’s halfway toward the office, but I whisper it anyway.

Casey wakes almost as soon as he leaves. “Where’s Cameron?”

“Committing auto theft,” I say. “Ready?” I grab June’s notebook and hope I can make sense of it—if I can at least figure out what she was looking for.

“Ready for what?” she asks.

“The data. I need to see it again. You said in the morning. And it’s morning.”

“Right,” she says. She gropes around for the bag with the hard drives and stands up. “You’re a little intense in the morning, you know that?”

I think I’m probably a little intense all of the time. I’m realizing I don’t even care to hide it.

Casey walks with me down to the computer lab and sets up the cables, loading the files for me. As I sit down, she groans. “Give me five minutes. I would kill for some caffeine right now.”

She leaves me in the room, her footsteps quickly disappearing as I pull up the files of starred numbers. I do a search for the data, for the amount of asterisks. And I do a search for the total number of lines in the spreadsheet. I write down the answers, and I’m reading through the science article again when I hear the footsteps returning. They pause in front of the open door. “This has to mean something,” I say. “They don’t match up.”

And when the footsteps don’t continue, don’t respond, I look up, and I freeze.

There’s a boy in the doorway. Or a man. That in-between, indeterminate period. Probably my age. “Oh,” I say. “Hi.” I wish I had the ball cap on, so I could hide behind the brim. But at least I’m wearing the uniform.

He’s holding a mop and has a ring of keys attached to a belt loop. “Do you work here?” I ask. Trying to make it seem like I belong here, too. Smile, I remind myself.

“Yeah,” he says slowly. “In the summer.”

I lean back in my seat and pretend to refocus on the screen. “I’ll see you around, then,” I say, trying to convince him that I belong here, that I am meant to be here in this room, that he’s mistaken if he thinks otherwise. I am good at pretending. I am good at hiding the truth.

He takes a step back, then says, “You play for our team?”

“Uh-huh,” I say, because what else can I say when I’m wearing the school uniform and I’m in the school computer lab and he knows my face from somewhere. This school is probably small. He probably goes here. I’m probably screwed.

“Hey, Melissa!” I hear Casey yell from down the hall.

“In here,” I call back. Thank God, I think. Casey is better at people. She’ll know what to do. She already does.

“I was looking for you.” She skids to a stop in front of the room, pushing past the guy without making eye contact, like he’s in our way and his presence is inconsequential. “You done yet? We need to get back to the gym.”