She’s there between them, a phantom that is not named or talked about, but around and through, their words tearing holes in what’s left of her, a brutality of neglect. I see her in the sidelong glances from Isaac in the halls, hear her in the loud curses tossed by the people who would’ve been her friends, feel her in the lingering soreness between my thighs. I even taste her in the food that didn’t decorate the wall behind my head in the dining room, mashed potatoes not thrown in a fit that never happened.
I chew slowly, as if being hyperaware of my actions will lead me to some form of control over hers. My food is ground to a pulp, saliva running down my throat before I catch Mom looking at me over the rim of her glass, water paused at a perpetual angle. We stare at each other for a moment, Dad’s steak knife grating against his plate while the glass magnifies her lips, drawing out the cracks that years ago she would have balmed away before dinner.
“Mom?”
“Sasha?”
We talk at the same time, a small question in the upended lilt of our voices. We don’t speak the next part, Are you all right? Because it seems that she knows I’m not, perhaps has known for a while. And maybe I knew she wasn’t either.
“Help me with these?” She nods toward the plates, and I follow her to the kitchen with mine in hand, trying not to stare at the mess of bone and gristle that remains. The door swings shut behind us, and Mom leans against the counter, dishes forgotten in the sink.
“What’s going on with you lately?”
I scrape what’s left of my dinner into the garbage disposal, listen to the grind of flesh and bone being pulped and forgotten.
“What do you mean?”
I ask not in denial but out of true wonder. How do I seem to them, this new daughter erupting forth from the existing one?
“You’ve been . . . different.”
She is careful with me, hesitant. I think of the wall behind my dinner seat, a life’s worth of arguments accumulating in a point of impact that is boring down into plaster. How many times have I stormed away, leaving behind a mother who wonders . . . what if the other one had lived?
I think there’d probably be a hole in the wall, that’s what.
But Mom doesn’t know that. She probably pictures someone like Lilly in my place, a nice girl with my face who is malleable, picking up suggested hobbies that we can practice together, long ponytails overlapping each other’s shoulders as we sit side by side knitting, scrapbooking, journaling.
“I’m fine, really,” I say, any thought of coming clean chased away by the image of this kinder, nicer child that she never would have had.
“That’s my point,” Mom says. “When I said you’ve been different, it’s not a bad thing.”
“Then what is it?” I realize my shoulders are tense, pulled back straight and tight as if I were at attention on the field, waiting for the whistle to release me.
“I think you might be happy.”
I’ve barely talked to anyone in the past few days. Heath’s texts line my phone like bubble wrap that I’ve got to dig past to find anything else. They sit, unanswered. Brooke has never required anything other than an audience, and to watch while I pick splinters from my gums. Lilly is the one who notices my silence. I see her mentally cataloging it, along with every time Isaac and I make eye contact, which always sets ablaze a stolen memory of flesh on flesh, the ground against my bare shoulder blades.
My sister isn’t talking to me either. In the week since my bloody sheets I’ve checked my phone more than usual, sliding past accumulated texts from Heath to see if any from Isaac have come in, but none have. I feign indifference, casually tossing my phone onto my bed as if there were someone watching me, that they might know how little I care. But when I went to finish the abandoned Faulkner paper, my fingers typed something else, a note for my twin, letting her know the consequences of her actions.
Hope you’re happy. He’s not talking to us and my sheets are stained. There’s a word for boys like him, and that’s trouble. You want to live, I know, but at what expense to me?
The paper flowed more easily after that, the words that had been blocking my brain now set aside in a document I refuse to save or name, only minimizing it as I wait for an answer. But there was no response from her that night, or any thereafter. Even the red C+ on my paper, written hesitantly as if the teacher couldn’t quite believe it herself, doesn’t penetrate my thoughts. It takes Brooke’s voice, every word punctuated with a staccato, to do that.
“Shit a brick, Stone,” she says, pulling the paper off my desk before I can hide it in my backpack. “Did you have an aneurysm or something?”
“No, but my parents will,” I whisper. “Could you not—”
“Not what?” Lilly asks, leaning forward in her seat to rest her chin on Brooke’s shoulder. “Oh my God . . .” She fades out, her hand covering her mouth when she sees my grade.
I swipe it out of Brooke’s hands and crumple it, my face matching the bleeding red of the pen. “It’s nothing. Forget it.”
“Sasha,” Lilly says, eyebrows drawn together like an art project titled Concern. “If you need to talk, or something.”
“Seriously,” Brooke adds. “I mean, you’re like the Hester Prynne of the group, so you can’t tell us there’s nothing going on.”
“Yeah,” Lilly agrees automatically. “Wait, what? Hester who?”
“Cute,” I say to Brooke. “Shame you don’t apply your cleverness elsewhere.”
“Yeah, that one was pretty good, I gotta say,” Brooke goes on. “See,” she explains to Lilly, “Sasha’s like the chick from Hawthorne—only letter you’re ever going to see on her stuff is a big red A.”
“Ooooohhh,” Lilly says, but I’m not sure she actually read The Scarlet Letter, so even the explanation of the joke is probably lost on her.
Brooke’s mouth is suddenly a thin line, cheeks puffed as she tries to suppress whatever drop of comic genius is currently brewing. It’s a Friday, the last few minutes of class dwindling to nothing while everyone huddles in groups.
“Just say it before you stroke out,” I tell her.
“Err . . .” She glances around and has the dignity to lower her voice. “I was gonna say that you always got As . . . until you started getting some D.”
Brooke regrets it the second she sees that it’s true. I can tell when our eyes meet that whatever semblance of honesty exists in me flashed for a moment, and she caught it. Lilly only gapes, mouth open in what has become her signature expression.
“Sorry,” Brooke says quickly. “I didn’t mean . . . it was just too funny to not say it.”
“Yep. Pretty goddamn funny.”
I hear Lilly’s gasp before the door slams shut behind me, my shoes smearing the tears that fall so that anyone who sees could follow them like bread crumbs, a trail of confusion that leads to the bathroom, where I curl protectively in a stall, waiting for the day to be over.
“Sasha?”
It’s the last voice I expect to hear bouncing around the girls’ bathroom, echoing with a vibration much lower than what these walls are used to.
“Heath?”
I’m so surprised I lower myself to speaking to him, even pushing open the stall door. We’re alone, the long mirrors on the far walls reflecting back an endless line of Sashas and Heaths, none of them knowing what to say. We look at each other for a second, him breaking away first to inspect the tampon dispenser like it might have a suggestion.