“Hannah,” he said gently.
She whirled around and jabbed her finger in his chest. “You! How could you do this to me? You said we were friends! You said we came first—that we were friends first!” She cried unabashedly.
“We are,” he replied.
“Then decide,” Hannah said. “Right here. Right now. Me or them.”
“Hannah, please don’t do this,” Jeremy replied.
“Fucking decide, Jer! Me or them?”
“Hannah, what’s the problem?” Mr. Armstrong said.
The same concern over Regan’s months-old breakdown was written all over his face. Not another one. God, please not another one.
“ME OR THEM?” she screamed at the top of her lungs.
Mr. Armstrong knew not to touch her. That was just a lawsuit waiting to happen. He summoned a female teacher to do what he could not, and they needed to move fast. Ms. Griffin tentatively touched Hannah’s shoulder.
“Honey, it’s okay,” she said soothingly.
“ME OR THEM?” Hannah screamed again. She pounded the lunch table with angry fists.
“Hannah, come on,” Ms. Griffin said, trying to steer her toward the cafeteria door.
“You’re a traitor, Jeremy!” Hannah cried, her words calling out his betrayal.
He grimaced, hanging his head in shame. He wouldn’t answer her, and by default, made the unspoken decision.
“People make mistakes . . .” Hannah heard Regan say as she turned her back on them.
The words fueled a vicious anger. She broke free from Ms. Griffin’s grasp and charged the table.
“FUCKING BITCH!” she bellowed, flipping Regan’s lunch tray. Food flew everywhere. She turned to Jeremy. “FUCKING ASSHOLE!” And she overturned his lunch tray, too, spilling milk and soggy pasta all over Jeremy’s shirt. “AND YOU!” She glared at Casey, then climbed the table toward her adversary. “I’LL KILL YOU!”
“Hannah! My God!” Ms. Griffin cried, grabbing the girl’s arms and pulling her down.
They struggled for a moment—Hannah desperate to get to Casey—before Mr. Armstrong intervened. It took both teachers to drag her out of the cafeteria, her obscenities echoing down the hallway and leaking through the crack in the lunchroom doors long after she was safely gone.
Silence.
And then a single clap. And another. And another until the cafeteria exploded with laughter, cheering, whooping, and banging. The lunch staff demanded order, but there was no taming the emotional riot. No taming the pounding fists and hysterical screeches. No taming the unreasonable reactions from unreasonable kids. The only three people to remain silent were the victims of Hannah’s rage—the people who understood her pain.
“What do we do?” Regan asked Jeremy.
He shook his head.
“Will she be all right?”
He paused, then shook his head.
“It’s all my fault,” Casey said. “I shouldn’t have sat here.”
Regan grew annoyed. “Just stop it already. You’ve apologized enough. At some point you’ve gotta stop with the self-loathing.”
“Regan, I destroyed her life!” Casey cried.
“You don’t have that much power over people,” Regan said.
Casey fell silent.
“God, I liked it better when you were a mean bitch,” Regan muttered.
“What?”
“Not mean mean to people. Just sort of self-absorbed. I don’t fucking know,” Regan huffed, and looked at her boyfriend imploringly. “What are we gonna do, Jer?”
“How should I know?” he snapped. “Why are you looking to me for answers?”
“She’s your good friend!”
“She’s not my good friend. I don’t even know where she lives!”
Regan growled.
“Should I send her flowers?” Casey offered.
Jeremy and Regan whipped their heads in her direction.
“Are you fucking kidding me?” Jeremy asked.
Regan chimed in. “Here’s the message in the card: Dear Hannah, Sorry you couldn’t kill me at lunch the other day. I hope you feel better soon! XOXO, Casey.”
“Fuck the both of you,” Casey spat.
“No, fuck them,” Regan said, pointing to the students who were still celebrating Hannah’s meltdown.
“And you dated them,” Jeremy said resentfully.
The girls turned to face him once more. Hostile silence wafted among them.
“We did,” Casey said finally. “And that’s our sin.”
He said nothing.
“And you brought it up to be hurtful—to cause us shame,” Casey went on. “That’s your sin.”
They stared at each other. And then Jeremy nodded. Casey nodded back. Truce over. Feeble friendship born.
***
Hannah never returned to school. Gossip offered a multitude of scenarios—each one “the truth.” She had a nervous breakdown and was committed to Clairemont, Mountainview’s famous psych ward. She moved with her family out of state. She killed herself by slicing open her arms. No, she killed herself by hanging. No wait. She killed her family and then killed herself in a house fire.
“I hate everybody,” Regan muttered to herself, catching the tail end of a conversation between two students walking by. They were discussing Hannah.
She found herself quite alone at the end of the school day. Jeremy was home sick. Casey had to leave directly after school for work. Regan had a little bit of time before she needed to report to work. Today, she was decorating a child’s birthday cake. She breathed deeply and tried to turn around her pissy attitude. She didn’t want bad vibes seeping into the icing.
“I know I’m not supposed to talk to you,” came a male voice from behind her.
She whirled around. “Touch me and I’ll kill you.” The words tumbled out with zero restraint.
“I’m not gonna touch you,” Brandon said.
Regan clutched her bag close to her chest. “What do you want?”
“I just wanted to know how you are,” Brandon said.
Regan burst out laughing. “Seriously?”
He said nothing.
“You destroy all my friendships, and you have the nerve to ask me how I am? No, wait. You spread rumors about how bad I am sexually, and you have the nerve to ask me how I am?”