The rumors spread like an ever-evolving virus through the student body. Sam basically ignores me for two days, and Micah doesnât resurface at school.
In the lobby, the word wall is still growing, people adding their words, their stories every day. But in the 100-acre-wood, silence.
I reread our last message thread. I donât type anything new. The last thing he wants is to hear from me.
I fall asleep each night (thank you, magical little blue sleeping pills) replaying the way Micah looked at me in the closet, trying to understand me. But he canât.
donât even understand me.
And each morning, I wake to Alice going nonstop between her YouTube and redecoration projects. I mentally add up all the money sheâs spending.
âGood morning, sleepyhead!â Alice says one day, crouched by the baseboards of our room, armed with a spray bottle of disinfectant and a roll of paper towels.
âWhatâs with the cleaning blitz?â I ask as she attacks a baseboard with a towel.
âI was going to start painting, or at least do the primer, but then I saw how nasty these baseboards were. Like, so gross. And I canât redecorate until this place is clean, like really, really clean.â
âWhat time did you go to bed last night?â I ask.
She pauses, like sheâs doing a quadratic equation in her head. âI think I lay down for a little bit. But I honestly donât know if I ever actually slept.â
She launches into a description of her latest video for her YouTube channelâinterviews and retrospectives and maybe even a tour of Fairview.
âIf theyâll let me. I bet theyâll let me. Donât you think?â Her words spill out so fast and furious that I canât keep up. Partly because sheâs jumping from idea to idea, but partly because my own brain is elsewhere.
âHave you heard from Micah lately?â I ask, changing the subject and trying to sound like I didnât stay up half the night imagining worst-case scenarios involving cliffs.
that you.
Alice shakes her head. âNo, why?â
âHe hasnât been at school.â
âI wouldnât worry too much. He does this sometimes.â
âDoes what?â
âDisappears. At Fairview, we called it his depression cave. Just give him time.â She looks at me like sheâs waiting for something else. âSo what do you think?â
âAboutâ¦â
âAre you even listening? My video ideas!â She points to a series of Post-it notes on the wall. âI had to start writing them down just to keep track.â
The bright pink of the Post-it notes, lined on the wall like they used to be before the Night of the Bathroom Floor, makes all my other thoughts stop cold.
this âAre you feeling okay?â I ask, eyeing her cautiously.
âNever better.â
âOh! That reminds me!â She jumps up to get something from her desk. âI found this under your bed.â
She carries a box over to me and flips open the lid, revealing all the razors and pencil sharpeners and various donât-let-Alice-hurt-herself paraphernalia I hid away. She stares at me, waiting for an explanation.
âIâI wasââ
She hands me the box as I stammer for words. âKeep âem if it makes you feel better. But I mean it, Lil, you donât have to worry about me anymore.â
She scuttles out of the room, leaving a whirlwind of energy and disinfectant in her wake. I want to believe her. Sheâs better. Iâm better. Weâre better. Right?
Still, the symptoms of bipolar mania tick through my head.
She darts back into the room and grabs the blue painterâs tape from the pile, jumps onto her desk, and yanks out a long strip where the ceiling meets the wall. Seeing her up there, her eyes wild with ideas, her words coming in a long, rambling string, makes my stomach tighten.
My fingers start picking at a scab on my stomach.
No!
Iâm not doing that anymore.
Normally Iâd write something, but my brain canât focus on anything but the buzz of energy vibrating from Aliceâs direction. Or Iâd message Micah, tell him how Alice is acting.
I need something to stop my mind and fingers from turning on me.
âCan I help?â I ask.
She chucks a roll of tape at me and I tape around a light socket, but it ends up wonky. So I rip it off and start again.
And again.
And again.
âDoesnât have to be exact, you know.â Alice laughs. Itâs too high, too shrill.
I tell myself sheâs fine. She to be. I just got her back. I canât lose her to the pills again.
I ignore the uneasy feeling in my gut, rip the tape off, and try it again.
Once, twice, six times.
Until itâs perfect.