No one notices the words.
Like a herd of cattle, they walk over them, stomping their way into school as Micah and I watch from my car. But then, finally, a girl stops, picks up a piece of chalk from the bucket, and crouches down.
âSheâs writing something!â I say, hitting Micah, whoâs half-asleep in the passenger seat. He probably got as much shut-eye as I did last night. It was almost dawn by the time I fell asleep after my confrontation with Alice, which means I slept through strength training this morning and my head is foggy. I chug an energy drink like my life depends on it.
âGo guerrilla poets of Ridgeline High,â Micah says with his eyes closed, weakly fist-pumping.
A few others have stopped now, looking at the ground.
âDo you think they like it? They probably hate it,â I say. âMaybe they donât hate it.â
Micah turns sideways in the seat and props his backpack like a pillow underneath his head.
âYouâre a roller coaster of emotions, Lily Larkin,â he says. âRemember, art is putting a piece of yourself out there and saying, âLook, world. Here I am. Like it or not.âââ
Still, knowing theyâre reading words makes my head a little woozy, my heart a little erratic, like Iâm standing on the cliff again. The warning bell forces us from the car, and we walk toward our artwork.
Micah groans, throwing up his hands. âOh, come on, seriously?â
Someone has sketched a crudely shaped, and egregiously enormous, penis next to our art. He rubs the addition with the side of his hand. âItâs official. We go to school with imbeciles.â
âWell, itâs a good thing we donât care what they think,â I say, smiling, although my mind is not really on the penis. Itâs on the new words, scrawled in chalk next to Micah has managed to eviscerate most of the phallic chalk, and he stands next to me, mouthing the words.
âWell,â He says, âitâs not exactly Shakespeare.â
âTrue.â But people read my words. They connected. I take a picture of the chalk art and all the new words. âBut itâs something.â
â
âIs it you?â
Samâs staring at me in the orchestra room where we meet up before track, her violin perched on her shoulder, her bow pointed accusingly at me.
âIs what me?â
âThe chalk poetry. Kali swears itâs not her. And she asked me if it was you, and not like I would tell Kali but you would tell right?â
Sheâs waiting for me to answer. Of course Iâd tell her. Under normal circumstances. This is Sam. Sam who knew about Alice and didnât tell. But these are not normal circumstances. And what I wrote in that poem is stuff Iâve told Samâor anyone else.
The what-ifs push her away from me.
âItâs not me,â I say.
âWell, Kali is capital-
pissed about it. And I guess part of me secretly hoped it you just to stick it to her.â Sam packs her violin into her case and flips the little silver locks into place.
âHowâs the solo coming?â I ask.
Sam groans and rolls her eyes. âTerrible. I canât get the timing right, and rumor has it, there may be some college scouts in the audience. My parents only mention it fifty-six times a day.â
âYouâre a shoo-in for first chair,â I say, linking my arm through hers as we head to track. âSeriously, Sam, thereâs no one better.â
âYou to say that. Itâs in the best-friend handbook,â she says, laughing, and my guilt for keeping secrets lifts slightly off my shoulders.
Coach puts it right back on.
âYou missed training this morning,â he says.
âI know. Iâm sorry. I hadââ
âI donât need excuses, Larkin. I need someone I can count on, and frankly, Iâm seeing a bigger commitment from some of the other runners.â He looks at me intensely, like heâs trying to show me how serious I should be taking this. And I am. Of course I am. Iâve been training to win state since freshman year. Iâm not about to lose it now. âIf Iâm going to put you in the qualifier, I need to be able to count on you.â
âYou â
He looks me dead in the eye. âWhatever else you have going on, stop thinking about it. Youâve got to give a hundred percent here, or I can find someone who will.â
After practice, I watch from my car as more people add words to the sidewalk in front of the school. So even though Coachâs warning makes it hard to breathe and makes my fingers want to reach for my skin, I reach for my notebook instead.