Alice claps excitedly as we climb the metal ladder on the side of the school. Sheâs standing on the edge of the flat roof, holding open a huge service hatch.
âAnd you knew about this how?â I say as we scale down the rabbit hole on an even tinier ladder.
âItâs how all the seniors get in for their pranks,â Alice says. âThe janitor leaves it unlocked for his secret smoke breaks.â
We come out in the boiler room. The massive equipment heaves and belches and hisses.
âThe underbelly of Ridgeline High,â Micah says like weâre on a horror show. âWhat torrid tales this room could tell. Naughty children being tortured. Librarians making out with janitors. Terrified freshmen hiding from wedgies.â
Alice laughs. The sound of it calms me. Stops me from turning around. From slipping out of my body.
We exit into a dark and deserted senior hallway. Our footsteps echo against the walls.
âCreepy,â I whisper.
âIt doesnât even feel like the same place,â Micah says.
Without all the people, it seems less, somehow. Less daunting, less chaotic, less final without the teachers and the tests and the shoulds and should-bes taking up all the oxygen. Aliceâs fingers beat out a dum-dum-dum rhythm as she drags them against the lockers, rattling the locks.
âEverything seems so small,â she says.
âYouâve only been gone a year,â I say. âItâs a little soon for a nostalgic montage of your youth.â
âA year and a lifetime,â she says. âAnd itâs definitely not nostalgia. I hated this place.â
âI think youâre supposed to hate high school. Itâs like a rule,â Micah chimes in. âThe only ones who like it are the kids who are peaking at seventeen, and thatâs just interminably sad.â
âBesides,â I add, turning to Alice, âin case you forgot, everybody you in high school. Girls, guysâespecially the guys, as I recall. Trust me, I know. I was the little sister to wild, popular, funny Alice Larkin with the best smile in the senior class. Sheâs a hard act to follow.â
She stops for a second, looking back at the empty hallway. âSmiles can hide a lot.â
Micah finds a switch, and light floods the hallways, filling all the dark spaces. My stomach tightens when I notice the security camera in the corner.
Micah follows my eyes. âYou want to turn back?â
I shake my head. âWeâre already in. Might as well do what we came to do.â
âWho you tonight?â Micah asks.
I shrug, trying not to smile.
We get to work covering the school with words. On each classroom window, I write a poem in dry-erase marker. Alice writes prompts on bathroom mirrors:
Micah draws sketches on whiteboards.
We make our way around the building, leaving a stream of words and art in our wake. When we get to the main lobby, I pause, the muse whispering in my ear. Every student passes through this lobby at least once a day. Walks past the enormous eagle-mascot painting on the wall and the oversized poster spelling out the school rules with a cheesy acronym: SOARâSafety, Optimism, Accountability, Respect.
âMicah,â I say. âYou donât happen to have access to some black paint, do you?â
He looks at the poster, and without a word, he takes off down the hall toward the art room. He comes back with brushes, jars of paint, and a huge roll of paper and tape.
âAlice, help me.â I toss her a paintbrush and show her which words on the poster I want to keep. Then we black out everything else. Micah tapes up the paper next to us on the wall and gets to work on his own idea, which turns out to be two massive eagle wings rising out to the left and right, with just enough space between them for a person.
When Iâm done blacking out words, Micah reads whatâs left.
Micah adds one more touch to his painting, writing, between the wings and below them.
âWhat?â he says with a Valley girl accent and a flip of his hair. âYou to have a tagline. Everyone whoâs anyone on the interwebz has one.â
âBut we are not the interwebz,â I remind him.
âNot yet.â
He tapes more paper all around the lobby, plenty of space for everyone in the school to When he goes to return the supplies, Alice flips through my notebook.
âYou really wrote these?â
âYep.â
âI had no idea.â
âYeah, well, thatâs kind of the Larkin family way.â
âWell, theyâreâ¦â She pauses.
âBrave.â
I exhale.
âDonât get me wrong,â she says. âTheyâre also super dark and twisty, but I wish I could put myself out there like that.â
The far-off hallway light haloes her hair, which has grown out a little since she first came home. Itâs not traditional-Alice wild yet, but itâs getting there.
âHello? Youâve always been the brave one.â
She scoffs. âRight. What is it Iâm supposedly doing right now? A work-study project? Iâm hiding in my own life.â
She shakes her head like sheâs shaking off the thought, and holds up my notebook. âSo, these monsters?â She points to the poem I wrote about the voices in my head. âDid they get worse afterâIÂ mean, when youââshe pauses, swallowing hardââfound me that night?â
âYes.â My voice is small, the images leaping to my mind, fresh and raw. Aliceâs blood.
I donât know how.
She starts to say something, but stops, tugging the sleeves of her shirt down farther over her wrists. She picks up a pen and writes on the paper next to the eagle.
Then she whispers, âI wasnât trying to kill myself, you know.â
Her voice falters a little, but then her words come out in a rush, like theyâve broken a barrier. âI just wanted to feel something. Something real. I saw the razor and I was so numb, and when I cut into myself, it feltâbetter.â
She laughs, but it sounds forcedâfakeâas it echoes in the empty hall.
âThat probably sounds crazy, huh?â
I touch my scarred stomach. All the times Iâve dug into my body, made myself bleed. For what? A distraction? A release? A momentary fix. Something, anything, to quiet the voices in my head.
âNot crazy at all.â
She sighs heavily. âItâs just, sometimes I feel so big. Like my body canât contain me. Other times, so small I could disappear. Too big, too small, and sometimes, too nothing at all. Itâs exhausting, you know, never fitting in your own skin.â
She groans. âThere I go again, making it all about me. What Iâd really love is to not have it be about me for one freaking second. And I know I havenât been much of a big sister lately, but Iâm feeling more like my own self every day.â
âJust like that?â I ask.
âNot exactly.â We start walking down the dark hallway to meet Micah. âCan you keep a secret?â
I nod.
âI stopped taking my medicine.â
I pause midstep. âAliceââ
âDonât do that. Donât do the voice.â
âWhat voice?â
âThe Alice-youâre-being-an-idiot voice.â She turns to me, her eyes boring into mine. âThe meds were killing me, Lily. Maybe not all at once, but pill by pill, I was disappearing.â
âWhat do your doctors say?â
âThose doctors donât know what I need.
know what I need. I know my own body, and it wasnât working.â
âI have to admit, you do seem more you lately.â
âI am. I really am. Iâm getting better.â
âWell, that makes two of us,â I say, and it sounds exactly like the truth. No recent panic attacks. I havenât woken up with blood on my fingers since our first night of guerrilla poetry.
âPromise me you wonât tell Dad about the meds?â
âAlice, Iââ
âPromise me,â she says sternly. âHe just wants me to be better, and this better for me. I it is. So promise me.â
She looks at me like she did when we were young, swapping secrets beneath the covers.
âFine,â I say, even though in my gut I know Iâm being stupid. âBut same with my poems.â
Alice crosses her heart, buttons up her lips, and kisses her fingers like when we were little. She loops her arm through mine and we walk down the dark hallway together. For an instant, weâre two fearless explorers again making our way in the world with nothing but each other. And even though that world may be crumbling around us, for a moment, we are not bloodstained floors and scars peppering my stomach. We are matching Hello Kitty lunch boxes and snuggles before bed and frolicking in frothy waves. We are limitless possibilities and invisible worlds unfolding before us.
We are whole.
When weâve sufficiently guerrilla-poetried the crap out of Ridgeline High, we head back to the boiler room. We crawl up the small ladder, and barely make it out onto the roof before a loud, male voice barks at us from the sidewalk below.
âHey! You! You canât be up there.â
Micah mutters obscenities as he ushers us to the ladder on the side of the building. We fly down, stepping on each otherâs fingers as we go, and hit the ground as the security guard turns the corner of the building. We barely make it to Micahâs bike, with the guard yelling at us to stop, but Micah hops on and Alice sits on the handlebars while I run alongside, and we zoom out of the parking lot, leaving the poor guy doubled over in the dark.
Alice laughs, and Iâm laughing, too, and Micah is whooping into the night.
And my brain is firing a million little zaps through my body.
Micah winks at me as I run, and even though my heart is in my throat and my lungs are gasping for air, Iâm here and Alice is here and our laughter fills the dark spaces.