I wake to Aliceâs phone in my face.
âSay âGood morning,â Lily!â
âToo early,â I say, rolling over and covering my face with the comforter.
I donât know how Alice is this bright-eyed at seven a.m. after last night, talking about a new idea that is apparently going to âchange everything.â
âItâs because of Lil!â
I force my body out of bed and head to the bathroom. Alice follows me, still talking while I brush my teeth.
âI just keep thinking about the guerilla poetry. How you put it all out there. And how thatâs so brave, and I have all these thoughts and feelings that I never share, and like, how sad is that? And so I was thinking about your poems and whatâs going on in your brain, and how I never talk about what happened to me, and the point isââ She takes a big breath. âI donât want to hide anymore.â
I spit into the sink.
âAnd the videoing comes in where?â
âIâm starting a YouTube channel! Gonna talk about Fairview. About being bipolar. All of it.â
âYou know people watch YouTube, right? Like, real, live people.â
âYeah. That part is slightly, all-consumingly terrifying, but like Micah says, itâs not brave if youâre not scared.â
I point to the paint samples scattered across her desk. âMaybe you should finish the redecorating before your YouTube career?â
Alice laughs like Iâm hilarious. âI can do both! Iâm an excellent multitasker.â Sheâs gone back into the room now, and I can hear her plucking posters and décor from the walls. âMaybe the redecoration will be my first video! I mean, home decor isnât really about mental health, but people always love a good before-and-after montage, right?â
Alice pops her head into the bathroom, scaring the snot out of me.
âOh!â she half shouts. âAnd text me. I want to know how everyone responds to the guerrilla takeover! Man! What a rush. Are we going again tonight? I can bring my video camera!â
âNo cameras,â I say. âAnonymous, remember?â
âRight. Right. Youâre the boss. But I want in!â
Sheâs off again, humming from the bedroom as she continues prepping the walls for the seafoam green. In the medicine cabinet, her nearly full bottle of pills stares back at me. Maybe sheâs right: sheâs better off without them.
And Iâm better, too.
My skin is starting to heal, and Iâm not up Googling all night, and I havenât even posted on my Word of the Day in forever because Iâm writing poetry instead.
At night, when the thoughts are circling, I pull out my pen.
I get the words out.
And the monsters get a little quieter.
And the random acts of poetry are a hit, which means Iâm that much closer to UC Berkeley and the win my family needs. And Alice is becoming more Alice every day. Weâre almost normal again.
Things are definitely getting better.
â
Ridgeline High is awash in words. Ours, plus more, so many more. The white paper in the lobby slowly fills throughout the day:
Gifford is beside herself.
âItâs wonderful,â she says, and I swear she gets a little misty-eyed. âTo be surrounded by words. Just wonderful! But, guerrilla poets, whoever you are, one word of warning. Principal Porter is concerned that these random acts of poetry are bordering close to vandalism. I pointed out that no actual school property was harmed besides a poster, and Iâve offered to buy a new one. Push the boundaries, my dear poets, but donât overstep.â
She looks in my direction so briefly that Iâm sure no one else catches it, but I do.
I wonder if Principal Porter personally reviewed the security footage tape with her. Did she convince him to look the other way in the name of art? I make sure to give her an extra-big smile on my way out of class.
âJust wonderful,â she whispers so that only I can hear.
Even Sam is caught up in it.
âLetâs go add something,â she says, pulling me by my sleeve toward the lobby before track practice. She plucks two pens from her backpack and hands me one, then starts writing in an open space under Micahâs SAY SOMETHING.
âSuch a cool idea,â she says as she draws a small violin. Next to it, she writes:
âYou do â I say, not sure if I should laugh or take her to the counselorâs office. Sam has played violin since we were in elementary school. I canât even picture her without her black case in tow.
She shrugs. âItâs a love-hate relationship. I love playing it, or at least I used to, but I hate that itâs taken over my life. Between practicing for my solo and track and homework, I have zero social life. Not like youâre ever free lately anyway.â She nods toward her violin case. âBut yeah, sometimes I fantasize about just going all rock star and smashing this puppy into a million little pieces. Except my parents would just buy me a new one and ground me for life, so itâs not a totally solid plan.â
She nods to the blank space in front of me. âYou didnât write anything.â
âOh, Iââ
She lifts up my hand with the pen and laughs. âYou can do it, Anxiety Girl. Itâs not graffiti. You wonât get in trouble.â
Micah walks past just then, giving me his signature grin, and I guess now we do. I know some of his. He knows some of mine. And we share the guerrilla poets.
Sam elbows me, bringing me back to the crowded hallway.
âPeople are talking about you two, you know.â
âAbout who two?â
âYou and Micah.â She click-clicks her pen and sticks it behind her ear. âI told people thereâs nothing going on, because if there were, Iâd definitely know about it.â
âWho are these ?â Probably Damon. Probably started spreading rumors the second he saw me jump away from Micah in the hallway weeks ago.
âJust people. Dumb gossip.â She picks up her violin case, and we walk to practice. âYou know, if there were something between you two, you could tell me, right? Iâm Sam, best friend extraordinaire, remember? I donât care what people say about him, only what say about him, but if you have some secret love affair and donât let me live vicariously by sharing every juicy detail, then I be pissed. âCause if my parents have their way, the only relationship Iâll ever have is with Tchaikovsky.â
âI hear those Russians can be wild in bed,â I say, because Iâm nothing if not a master of deflection, and what Iâd really love right now is to take all the attention off me, especially when Iâm standing in a hallway surrounded by my words while simultaneously being totally unable to tell my best friend that theyâre mine, or even something as simple as how I feel about Micah, how I feel when Iâm with him.
When I look back, Micahâs standing with his art posse across the lobby, writing on the paper like he wasnât the one who hung it there. Itâs better this way. Him in his world. Me in mine. And us? Weâre in a good place. Weâre over the awkwardness of the hallway jump-away. Weâre killing this project. Why mess with it?
â
Micah and I add more words and art all week.
We do it in broad daylight this time, leaving small random acts of poetry throughout the school when no oneâs looking. Post-it notes with small sketches surreptitiously stuck around the school. Index cards with poems slipped into locker slats. I even pen a short and admittedly terrible haiku in Spanish and tack it to the noticios bulletin board.
Micah brings more magnetic poetry and slaps it onto the lockers casually as he walks down the hall. We do it quietly, slowly, so no one knows itâs us, but over one week, weâve scattered random acts of art and poetry through the school.
And weâre not the only ones. People write words and poetry on the windows. Leave small sketches on the whiteboards. In the halls, rhyming couplets and long strands of magnetic poetry materialize, along with the occasional imbecility, the letters constantly rearranging into something new.
In the girlsâ bathroom, someone has written messages on the mirrors:
During one of our last in-class artist-poet collaborations, the other partnerships are buzzing with rumors of the identity of the guerrilla poets. Micah and I are sitting on the floor of the art room because Friedman has decided we all need to give his junk-to-masterpiece theory a whirl.
âJust thrown out. Can you believe it?â Friedman says after showing us a Frankenstein-level atrocity heâs made out of a broken guitar and a busted lamp.
Iâm creating some sort of microwave-utensil mash-up, while Micahâs scrolling something on his phone. He turns his screen so I can see: in little digital squares, pictures of all the poetry people are making or finding. Snippets of random acts written under a desk. Sidewalk chalk drawings. A row of books in the library, their spines lined up to create a short and sweet poem:
THE HATE U GIVE EVERY LAST WORD IâLL GIVE YOU THE SUN ALL THE BRIGHT PLACES EVERYTHING, EVERYTHING Each picture is tagged with #mywords #mystory.
âYouâre a hit,â Micah whispers.
â
a hit,â I correct him. âAnd weâre hardly viral.â
âMaybe not, but look at these comments.â
He holds up the latest Ridgeline Underground, where someone has posted a picture of my blackout poem in the lobby.
âAre those all from secret accounts you have or something?â IÂ ask.
âNope. These are bona fide people, reading words.â He puts down his phone and picks up a couple of cheap forks from the pile of junk. âSo. Would you say the method was a success?â
âDefinitely. Iâll be posting my Yelp review tonight.â
âExcellent. So then this is the part where I get to say I told you so, right?â
âOnly if youâre sure you want to play the jackass card this early.â
Micah taps a fork to his chin. âNah. Iâll save it.â
âFor what?â
âFor when we win.â
I say. âI thought you werenât making too many plans for the future.â
âAnd that is still my official party line,â he says. âBut I may or may not have looked into some art programs.â
âAnd what, may I ask, caused this change of heart?â
He leans in close, pretending to reach for something in the junk pile, his breath tickling my skin just like it did in the motion-sensor room at the art exhibit. And just like then, all my own plans become a blur because all I can see are his lips.
âWord on the street is that Lily Larkin, perfect student extraordinaire, broke into the school, plastered her deepest fears on the walls. I canât just let her be the only brave one, now, can I?â
âNo, you definitely cannot.â
The same electric energy pulses between us as on the beach, drawing in chalk at night, standing on the cliff.
âAm I interrupting something?â Kaliâs voice drives us apart.
âJust some project planning,â Micah says, bending one of his forks against the edge of a desk.
Kali looks from him to me and back again, trying to figure us out. Sheâs probably heard the same rumors Sam has.
âWell, weâre all just going for second place at this point anyway, right? Like anyone could beat these freaking guerrilla poets. âOoh, look at me, I wrote on the walls.â Itâs all so juvenile, and honestly, Iâll tell them right to their faces when they turn in their project.â
Micah scoffs. âIâm sure your disapproval will break their hearts.â
Kali huffs as she walks away, and Micah chuckles again to himself, but stops midlaugh when he sees my face. âWhoa. Whatâs up? You look like youâre about to have one of those panic attacks you donât have.â
âI guessâI guess I just never really thought about what happens when we have to turn the project in.â I lean in close to Micah to whisper. âEveryone will know itâs us. Theyâll know the poetry is mine. Theyâll â
âAnd this is just occurring to you now?â
In the back of my head, I knew there was a deadline, a moment when all this anonymity would end, but I was so eager to get my muse back, to win, that I didnât think it through.
âMaybe Gifford will let us turn it in but not share it. We could convince her the anonymity is part of the whole idea?â
Micah raises his hand, and I tug at his sleeve, whispering for him to âStop. Never mind. Itâs a bad idea.â But Friedman nods at him, and Micah asksâ
if anonymous submissions are allowed.
Friedman and Gifford exchange a glance across the classroom, and then shake their heads.
âAs Matisse says, âCreativity takes courage,âââ Friedman says. âSo Iâm afraid not, Mr. Mendez. Once created, art belongs to no oneâand everyone.â
Micah shrugs at me. âWell, there you go.â
âWhat the hell was that?â I whisper to him, scanning the room to see if anyone is looking. âAre you to out us?â
Before Micah can answer, Damon walks behind him, discreetly dropping a putty knife from the supply closet into Micahâs lap. As he walks back to his seat, Damon makes wrist-slashing motions to Micah. I fight the urge to huck my microwave at Damonâs head.
âWhen did he start pulling this crap again?â I ask.
âNever stopped.â Micah tosses the putty knife into the junk pile. âIn fact, thereâs been an uptick in his efforts ever since he saw you and me in the hall that day.â
âMicah, I had noââ
âItâs fine,â he says, waving off my concern.
âItâs not Micah. You need to tell someone.â
He ignores me, focusing extra hard on whatever heâs doing with the tines of his bent forks. âTrust me. Better to lay low.â He holds up his creation, the forks wrapped around each other, tines overlapped so that they look like two hands clasped together, the handles curving into a heart above them.
âHow do you do that?â I ask.
âWhat?â
â
things like that.â
He shrugs. âI donât know. I just see what something could be instead of what itâs been.â He puts his pointer fingers to his temples and closes his eyes. âLike right now, Iâm seeing you and me, standing in front of everyone, telling them we are the guerrilla poets. They applaud. They carry you on their shoulders! They worship you as the poet queen!â
âMicah!â I almost yell. âYou seriously want me to spew my most personal secrets to strangers, and you wonât even tell anyone that Damon is straight-up harassing you?â
âTouché.â He hands me the fork heart. âBut whereâs all your bravery from the night we broke in?â
I toss the microwave back into the pile of junk. I canât see the potential in used-up appliances like Micah can. Across the room, Damonâs banging together two pieces of junk from the pile, looking particularly apelike. Part of me wants to strangle him for tormenting Micah. The other part wants to make sure he never knows that the girl with the monsters in her head. The thought of everyone knowing makes me want to rip into the still-healing scabs on my stomach.
âBut that was at night, with no one around. Iâm a different Lily there. IâmâIâm guerrilla poet Lilyâand in the daytime, in front of everyone, I lose her.â
Micah grabs my phone from next to me, flips open the calendar, and taps a few times. He turns the screen to me. POETRY PROJECT DUE is in big, bold letters.
âWell, then, according to the almighty planner here, youâve got about two and a half weeks left to find her.â
These random acts of poetry are amazing! Itâs about time we had some positive messages in this school and on this hell site.
I wrote, like, four magnet poems today!
Seriously. So awesome.
Yeah, but also kind of sad that everyone has all these secrets!
Right? Someone wrote in the lobby that they have an eating disorder no one knows about.
So sad ð I wish people felt safe sharing that kind of stuff.
I know! And also, has anyone thought about how whoever is writing the poems is kind of messed up?
That shit is dark I just want to hug them! When they turn in their project, I will!
Hug them? I want to get them some help.
Definitely mental.
And you wonder why no one shares, assholes.
LogoLily:Â Have you seen the Underground?
100-acre-wood:Â Imbeciles.
LogoLily:
is why no one can know.
100-acre-wood:Â As someone who is no stranger to the public lashings on the Underground, I assure you, itâs not so bad.
LogoLily:Â Theyâll crucify me.
100-acre-wood:Â Lily. Those words are yours. Be proud of them. Be proud of what weâve done.
LogoLily:Â I am.
100-acre-wood:Â Then stop hiding.