The Google gods diagnose me with about a million disorders, and as much as I hate to admit it, there may be something to Micahâs panic-attack theory. My late-night internet deep dive tells me itâs like the survival mechanism we learned about in biology. Your body pumps blood and oxygen to your arms and legs, getting ready to either battle or run. Your pulse spikes. Your lungs inflate. Itâs simple science, fight or flight.
But what if thereâs nowhere to run?
And the only person to fight is yourself?
By school on Monday, I have exactly no muse and no ideas how to help Alice or myself.
I also have zero idea how to act around Micah. We havenât talked since the beach. If I could, Iâd Google Alas, no search engine in the world is equipped for my next-level neurosis.
And my brain is doing what it does bestâtaking something shiny and new and turning it ugly.
you It doesnât help that every time I look up, Sam shoots me suggestive eyebrow signals from across the room. So now Iâm sitting across from Micah during todayâs collaboration session, staring at my empty notebook, trying not to think about the way he looked at me as we watched our art slip away.
âEarth to Lily.â His voice brings me back to reality. âWhere are you today?â
âIâm here.â
âCouldâve fooled me.â Heâs tapping his pencil on his sketch pad. âYou freaked me out Saturday night. Alice made it home?â
âYeah. If, in fact, the girl they sent back from Fairview is Alice.â
âWhat does that mean?â
âIt meansâI donât know. It means sheâs not herself.â
âYeah, well, Fairviewâs supposed to change you,â he says. âChanged me.â
Of course. Micahâs been at Fairview. He probably knows all about getting back to normal after treatment. Probably knows more about bringing the Alice back than I could ever find online.
âSo,â I say, trying to act casual. âWere there a lot of people with bipolar disorder there?â
âSome.â
âAnd do they, like, treat it, or is it something that takes time?â
Heâs eyeing me suspiciously now. âIf you want to know about Alice, you should ask Alice.â
âYeah but, just, how long does the medicine take to work? And what about therapy? She doesnât want to go anymore.â
âOh! I know! Talk. To. Alice.â
âFine. Just tell me thisâwill the medicine fix her?â
Micah frowns. âFix her? Iâm sorry, has Alice broken?â
âYou know what I mean.â
âActually, I donât.â
Heâs waiting for an explanation with an expression on his face that says Iâm a total jerk. All my thoughts of beaches and boys and soul-searching looks scatter to the wind.
Kali flops down in a seat next to me, and for once Iâm grateful for her interruption.
âCan you believe about the summer scholarship?â she says.
âGifford told you?â
Kali smiles, but itâs not really a smile, more like a wolf baring her teeth. Very unsettling.
âWhat? You thought you were the only one in the running?â Before I can stop her, Kali reaches across me and grabs my notebook. âLetâs see what youâve got.â
She flips open the emptiness. Page after page of jack squat. Zilch. Nada. She turns from the nothingness of my notebook to the nothingness of me, and I want to crumble into dust.
âNo way,â she says, her smile becoming even more predatory. âDonât tell me straight-A Lily Larkin is having writerâs block?â
Damon has sauntered over now. My heartbeat picks up speed.
I look around for Gifford, but she and Friedman have left the room, so I try to recall the pages of suggestions from my late-night Google search on how to stop a panic attack in its tracks.
I inhale as deeply as I can, but my chest seems to be stuck, and Iâm scratching at a scab on my stomach even though I told myself I wasnât doing that anymore, but itâs not working, and just as I start slipping out of my body, Micah stands up, grabs the notebook, and tosses it back to me.
âLike sheâs going to let you see our idea. Youâd probably just steal it because, believe me, itâs A-mazing. Right, Lily?â
Micahâs staring at me, offering me an out.
âDefinitely.â I sit up straighter. âAmazing.â
Kali flashes her smile-not-smile again and flounces off, her ponytail whipping unnecessarily hard behind her. But Damon doesnât leave, just grabs Micahâs sketchbook from his desk.
âAs long as weâre sharing ideasââ
He covers his mouth in faux shock before turning the drawing toward his buddies. On the page, Micah has drawn a boy, his mouth wide, screaming. And inside that mouth, the same boy, screaming again. And so on and so on, screaming boy spiraling back into eternity.
âDude. Thatâs messed up,â Damon says. âThey teach you this at the loony bin?â
In one movement, Micahâs in Damonâs face, his hands balled into tight fists, his eyes full of darkness and rage, so different from the boy on the beach. Is this the Micah everyone whispers about, the one who got kicked out of his old school for fighting? And Damonâs telling him to âSettle down, man,â and Micahâs looking around, like heâs waking from a trance, seeing everyone staring at him, and just as quickly as it started, he sits back down, trains his eyes on his desk, opening and closing his fists slowly.
Damon holds the pad out to Micah, who doesnât even move one millimeter. Damon laughs and chucks the pad into the metal trash can by the door, but Micah just stares at his desk, eyes forward, jaw gritted tight as Damon pops open an energy drink near Micahâs ear.
âPaybackâs a bitch,â Damon says before dumping the liquid in after the sketch pad.
I wait for Micah to say something. To defend himself like he defended me a second ago. When itâs clear heâs not going to, I jump up and shove Damon out of the way.
âDo you have to be such a tool the time?â
He smirks and drains the rest of the drink into his mouth before chucking the empty can into the trash. I pull out the sketch pad and let it drip dry for a second before handing it to Micah. He wipes it with the sleeve of his hoodie, but the screaming boy is all but obliterated.
âWhy didnât you do anything?â I whisper once the onlookers have dispersed.
âNothing to do,â he says, ripping out the wet pages. âYou heard Principal Porter.
means âplay nice, keep my head down.â Damon would love nothing more than for me to go all Manic Micah and get kicked out of here. Prove the rumors right.â
He stops trying to salvage the drenched notepad and throws it back into the trash. He closes his eyes a moment, and when he opens them, the darkness is almost gone.
âSo,â he says. âAre all the guys at Ridgeline such Neanderthals, or was I just lucky enough to piss off the biggest douchebag in the place?â
âJust lucky, I guess.â
âAnd dated this king of the d-bags?â
âWho told you that?â
âI have my sources.â
I want to ask more about these dubious sources, since Iâve seen Micah talk to exactly no one since he got here, but Iâm hung up on the fact that he about my dating history. Heâs asked about me.
âFirst of all, that was freshman year, so it hardly even counts, and second of all, I have officially filed that under things I regret doing in high school.â My cheeks warm up when Micah raises his eyebrows. âI mean, I didnât him, do him. Iâve actually never doneââ
I take a deep breath. âWow, Iâm saying a lot of things here, and Iâm just going toââ I make a sound like Iâm rewinding the last few seconds. âAnd weâll just pretend like that never happened, yes?â
Micah shakes his head, grinning wide. âNo way. That may have been my favorite moment of our partnership so far. Flustered looks good on you, Lily.â
I look down at my desk, biting my lip as my cheeks burn once more, which is all sorts of stupid.
âWell.â I clear my throat. âIâd like to personally apologize on behalf of Damon and all the Ridgeline d-bags. And also, to say thank you. For saving my butt with Kali back there. I kind of froze.â
âYeah, I picked up on that.â
âBut sheâs right, you know. We still donât have anything solid.â
One quasi-transcendent day at the beach isnât going to beat Kali or help keep my family and future from falling apart.
âHey, we canât give up now. Not until round two of Discovering Your Muse with the Micah Method.â
âOh, itâs a method now?â
âThat sounds like questioning.â
âOh, wow, itâs a method now!â
âBetter. Friday after school? My house.â
âShall I bring my own rake?â
The bell rings and Micah gathers up his stuff, but before he goes, he gives me that Iâve-got-a-secret grin again with his eyebrow reaching upward. âOh, did I forget to tell you?
in charge this time.â
Whoa. Guys. Check out Manic Micahâs page @100-acre-wood. Some weird shit on there.
WTF Whatâs with the cartoons?
Go back to Fairview, freak.
LogoLily:Â You up?
100-acre-wood:Â Always.
LogoLily:Â What did you mean, in charge?
100-acre-wood:Â I mean itâs your turn to capture the muse. Show me what inspires you. Teach me something about poetry. Anything.
LogoLily:Â Micah. I canât even write a poem. How am I supposed to teach you?
100-acre-wood:Â I donât know. Think outside the lines.
LogoLily: ð
100-acre-wood:Â You did just use an emoji.
LogoLily:Â What? Itâs the language of our generation.
100-acre-wood:Â I refuse. Little cartoons to express emotion?
This from the boy with a profile pic of WINNIE-THE-POOH!
100-acre-wood:Â officially insulted emoji LogoLily:Â hold on LogoLily:Â looking for an anti-establishment-damn-the-man-burn-all-the-coloring-books emoji 100-acre-wood:Â weâre done here emoji 100-acre-wood:Â (but also, excited to be inspired emoji)