‘You were saying?’
‘Right, the second thing . . . I’m afraid of saying the wrong thing.’
She starts chuckling. Not quite the reaction I was hoping for. ‘Hey. Why are you laughing?’ I give her a slight nudge with my shoulder. ‘This is serious.’
‘Ahh, baby,’ she says, running her palm down my cheek and giving it a slight pinch. ‘You realize what this is?’
‘Horrible?’
‘Perfectly normal,’ she says, wrapping normal in air quotes. That’s a thing we do a lot around here. Both her and Dr Reeves are forever exercising their fingers to defuse the definition. ‘There’s not a person in the world at your age who doesn’t worry about this stuff. Bad news? There is no one answer. You just have to be yourself and do what you think is best.’ She kisses my forehead and stands to leave.
‘That’s it?’ Normally her advice is more helpful, more . . . more.
‘That’s it.’ She shrugs, and her palms slap down against her thighs. ‘You’ll figure it out. Have fun. Be yourself. That’s all you need.’ Her tone is teasing. I’m surprised she doesn’t slip in a wink before she disappears down the hall.
‘Ugh!’ I exclaim, feigning an aneurysm and falling back on my bed.
Why do people keep telling me to be myself? Honestly. It’s like they’ve never even met me.
Hi :)
That’s it. After a millennium, an ice age, a fricking era of dissecting dialogue, that’s the grand conversation starter I settle on. I hit send and a fizzing current zips through my veins, making my body buzz. Excitement is electric. It reminds me of this one Halloween night, for ever ago, when me and a couple of kids from school dared one another to knock on the door of the abandoned house beside Bennick Marsh. Legend had it a witch lived there.
My phone bleeps to tell me the message has been sent, and without thinking, I throw my cell to the end of the bed. I don’t know, maybe my subconscious was going for out of sight, out of mind. It doesn’t matter; I retrieve it a half second later because it feels like a galaxy too far away.
My heart is in my throat, my intestines all tangled up. I’m not sure any more if it’s nerves or excitement. Maybe a bit of both. I place my phone on my pillow, flip over on to my stomach, and lean up on my elbows. With hawk eyes I watch my screen fade to black, then start willing it to light up with a text.
It doesn’t.
The second hand on my clock goes round and round and round, sending my head into a spin. Reluctantly, I stop scrutinizing the dial and collapse into the crook of my arm. I don’t have the latest cell, one of those that tell you when a text has been read. I’m completely in the dark. An agoraphobic obsessive-compulsive’s most favourite place to be.
I’m listing forms of torture that would be infinitely more merciful than waiting for a boy to text back when, at last, my cell bleeps.
My fingers are slicker than oil as I unlock my phone and punch buttons to find the message: Amy?
Ouch. At least the message I sent him was better than that. A picture of a monkey scratching its butt would have been better; almost anything else would have been better.
One Thanksgiving my mom bought a deep-fat fryer. On Sunday mornings, she likes to load it with everything she can find in the fridge, and the smell of greasy food floods the air. It lingers for hours, clings to your skin, your hair, and the fabric of your clothes. It’s sticky and gross and the only way to get rid of it is a scalding-hot shower and plenty of soap. I feel like that right now.
Deep breaths.
My brain starts pitching ideas: don’t freak out. He couldn’t have known it was me texting. I didn’t sign my name and he doesn’t have my number. So how could he have known? But then, he was obviously expecting a message from Amy. Amy, the girl whose name keeps cropping up. Why doesn’t he already have her number? Should I be texting a boy who wants to talk to Amy? Should I be texting a boy that Amy wants to talk to? Am I going to become one of those girl-friends? You know, a girl that is his friend and nothing more? And if I am going to become that, will I have to hear stories about him and Amy?
I chew on my nails, pick up my phone, heart thumping fast, and hammer on the buttons that spell out my name. This time it takes me less than a minute to write my message.
It’s Norah.
My thumb dances around the send button until I utilize a burst of courage and punch it. It’s gone. MESSAGE SENT flashes up on the screen. I hope to God I’m not texting someone else’s boyfriend. I’ve seen love-triangle fights go down on my Hub feed. It never ends well.
I wait for Luke’s reply. I wait. And I wait. And I wait some more.
He doesn’t text back.