Pack the lunches.
My mind ticks through my to-do list as I spread mayo on bread for tomorrowâs lunches for Dad, Margot, and me.
Staci (yes, thatâs right, with an and only an ; donât get me started) loiters around the kitchen nervously while I work.
âI can help, you know,â she says.
If I didnât have a down-to-the-second system already in place, Iâd probably let her pitch in. Alice and I had a fine-tuned method for running this place before Staci and Dad got married last year, and Iâm still doing just fine as a one-man band. Nothing screws up the rhythm more than someone else getting in on the act, especially Dadâs brand-spanking-new wife.
âThanks. I got it.â
âIâm just standing here.â
She reaches out to put the apple slices into the baggies. I slide them over to me.
âSeriously, Staci, I donât need help.â I slap the top of each sandwich into place. Weâve managed just fine without a mom for ten years, and weâre not in the market for a replacement. She leans against the countertop with a heavy sigh.
âEveryone needs help sometimes, Lily.â
She watches me put apples and lemon juice into baggies. The tense silence makes my heart speed up, which is the thing I need after my epic freak-out today. Fortunately, Dad strides into the room, armed with an over-the-top smile and Scrabble.
âHashtag family game night?â
He jiggles the box, sending the tiles clinking against each other.
âDo we need to have the hashtag talk again?â I say.
âWhat?â He holds up his hands innocently. âI used that right.â
âIf youâre older than fifty, you did use it right.â
He chuckles and slings his arm around my shoulder, pulling me tight against him. Even though Iâm gaining on his six-foot height, my head still fits perfectly in the space between his chest and shoulder. Always has. When I was little, pretending to be asleep so heâd carry me to bed, I believed this pocket of space was mineâa little piece of Dad carved out just for me.
âWell, hashtag my bad,â he says.
Groan. âDad. Seriously. It physically pains me.â
His chest shakes as he laughs. âAll right, all right, I get it. Your old man is not cool. But I might just be smart enough to kick your butt.â He shakes the box again, trying to ply me with my favorite game. Dadâs a self-proclaimed logophile (aka âlover of wordsâ) just like me. âHow about it?â
On the floor, my backpack bulges at the zipper. My stomach squeezesâitâs gonna be another late night. Geometry chapter test, Spanish oral on camping trips (because learning how to say in español is going to come in handy one day), and now this poetry project with a partner who doesnât give one flip. After todayâs episode, all I want to do is sleep, but if Iâm going to outrun whatever is wrong with my brain, I canât stop.
I keep my freak-out and the list in the back of my planner to myself. Dad has enough to worry about.
âCâmon. Thirty minutes? We got pizzaaaaa.â He draws out the word like heâs a used-car salesman selling me a lemon, which is actually the perfect metaphor for Larkin family time lately.
Maybe itâs because this family feels hauntingly incomplete without Alice. Or maybe itâs because Dad and I have spent most of our âtogether timeâ these last two months desperately tiptoeing around The Things We Donât Say. We talk about school. About the weather. About oddly specific German words. But never about the night she left. Our family is already stretched thin at the edges, trying to pretend everythingâs okay. If we pick at that particular thread, we might unravel.
Sometimes I think the silence is the only thing holding this family together.
But Dadâs shaking the Scrabble box so eagerly, I canât let him down. I look at my backpack again, mentally cramming thirty minutes into tonightâs homework schedule.
âCarbs wordplay? How could I say no?â I say, zipping up the lunch bags and ignoring the knot in my stomach.
âPizzaâs here!â Staci shouts up the stairs to Margot.
Iâm more than a little shocked that sheâs letting us eat what she calls âgluten-stuffed cholesterol pies.â Ever since the Night of the Bathroom Floor, Staci-with-only-an-
and Dad have been on an all-natural kick. Something about chemicals and well-being and how All I know is, our pantry went from Lucky Charms to various iterations of granola mixed with hemp hearts and flaxseed.
Staci carries in the pizza and starts dishing it up on the island for me. âPepperoni or Hawaiian?â
âHawaiian.â
Dad groans from the pantry. Heâs a staunch supporter of the Coalition Against Fruit on Pizza.
âI really do have a lot of homework,â I reply.
âNo, no, by all means,â he says. âHave your fruit in marinara sauce. Who am I to stand in the way of bad taste?â
Staci slides a triangular piece of paper-thin dark brown crust and a drizzle of what maybe, sorta resembles cheese onto my plate.
âWhat is ?â I say.
âPizza.â
âI respectfully disagree.â
She holds up the label from the box. âItâs all-natural! Non-GMO, gluten free, dairy freeââ
âJoy free.â
Dad laughs, but puts his arm around Staciâs shoulders, tugging her head against himâinto my spot.
I look away, trying to ignore the ache in my chest. Itâs not the usual palpitation-induced tightening, more like a dull ache right behind my ribs. An ephemeral thud of sadness.
Margot trounces down the stairs in a full-on, honest-to-goodness black robe, complete with a maroon-and-gold emblem on the chest, the latest in her Harry Potter obsession. She found Momâs old books in the basement after Alice left for Fairview, and almost immediately began sorting everyone into their Hogwarts house against their will.
âAny letters from Hogwarts today?â I say. I know I shouldnât tease her, but come onâsheâs a ten-year-old WEARING A CAPE.
She sticks her tongue out at me. âFor the one-hundredth time, I do not think I am an wizard.â
âYour attire begs to differ.â I take a bite of undigestible pizza. âJust saying youâre blurring the lines between reality and fantasy here.â
Dad bops Margot on the head with the Scrabble box. âEnough Potterverse. Letâs play.â
Staci arranges Dadâs tiles on the coffee table. (Theyâre always on the same team.) Margot and I share Dadâs über-competitive DNA, so after a few rounds, Iâm lost in the game and in my family, and todayâs drama fades away. My stomach feels almost normal as I sit here, focusing on seven little tiles as if theyâre the most pressing thing in my life. Like Alice is actually just off at college, and I didnât have an epic bathroom meltdown today, and that Micah kid didnât almost out my secrets, earning me a tell-all post on the Underground with the other hot gossip.
I even silence my phone when the alarm for my thirty minutes of free time goes off.
Iâm ahead by ten points, waiting on Dad to play the winner-take-all word I know heâs building, when he clears his throat and inches forward on his couch cushion so that his knees touch the Scrabble board perched on the coffee table.
âGirls. I want to talk to you about something.â His voice is serious. Very un-Dad-like. My stomach instantly retightens. âAlice is coming home.â
I pause with my newly picked tile in midair. âWhat? Like, here?â
âWell, this is her home,â he says calmly, like his words donât explode around me, sucking the oxygen from the room.
âWhen?â
âTomorrow.â
âI thought she had more time,â I say. The grip on my stomach has already started its march north toward my throat. She left in January. Itâs only March. âWasnât it supposed to be three months?â
âWell,â Dad breathes out slowly. âThe counselors think sheâs ready.â
Did anyone bother to ask if ready?
Dad continues. âAnd she seemed really good on our last visit, didnât she, Margs?â
Margot nods.
Staci pipes up, her face beaming with an overzealous smile. âWhat wonderful news. This place hasnât been the same without her.â
âIs she going back to school?â I ask.
âNot yet.â Dad flips a tile between his thumb and pointer finger. âSheâll stay here for a while.â
Well, that pokes a ginormous hole in our Alice-is-away-at-college ruse. And how can we talk about it when sheâs right here?
âSo, what do we tell people?â I ask. I think of how Damon talked about Micah today. If people know about Fairview, Alice wonât be able to just waltz back into her old life.
Dad studies the Scrabble board like the answer is hiding in the triple-word score.
He sighs. âLetâs just tell people that sheâs taking some time off for a work-study project. Thatâs something college kids do, right?â
âSo we should lie about it?â Margot asks.
âItâs not a lie, honey. Itâs more likeââ
âAn omission,â I offer.
Dad nods. He tousles Margotâs crimped hair.
âExactly,â he says. âWe do that sometimes to protect the people we love. But trust me, this is going to be a good thing, girls. Alice will be home, and things can go back to normal.â
Ah, the lies that bind.
Margot smiles. Dadâs words donât explode for her. She wasnât there when I found Alice. Crumpled on the bathroom floor. She didnât see Dad lift her or hear the tightness in his voice when he called 911. Sheâs too young and too lost in her fantasy world to see whatâs happening here.
Our big sister left because something was wrong with her.
Something Dad couldnât fix.
And now sheâs coming home.
Dad lays out a word that immediately bumps him ahead of me on the scorecard, but Iâm not really here anymore. Iâm watching family time from outside my body. Through the glass, I see them, laughing and placing tiles. I see me, playing my part, smiling when Iâm supposed to smile.
But inside my head, the worries have slithered in, uninvited.
This is how it always starts.
With a thought.
A whispered what-if.
everythingâs As my mind spins, my heart races. Iâm suddenly hyperaware of the air moving in and out of my lungs.
Dread branches out through my body. My right hand starts to tingle. I shake it out, but the pins and needles wonât go. Margot shoves me with her elbow.
âEarth to Lily,â she says. âYour turn.â
I blink back to life. The glass shatters. Dad is staring at me, and so is Staci. Well, sheâs staring at my left hand, which is scratching off the scab on my neck.
âActually, IâI really do have a ton to do tonight.â I empty my tiles back into the box lid.
Dad studies me now, his face still serious.
âYou okay, kiddo?â
I hoist my heavy backpack up, the weight of it almost crushing me, and I slap on my everythingâs-just-great face. The last thing this family needs is one more member losing their grip on reality.
âIâm fine.â
Not a lie.
Exactly.
Just an omission.
Because thatâs what you do for the people you love.
â
Alone on my bed, I try to calm my body.
Breathe in.
Breathe out.
Just breathe.
I do need a doubleheader meltdown today.
Across the room, Aliceâs empty bed stares back at me. On the night she left, I meticulously tucked in the corners of her navy-blue comforter. Sixteen times.
I thought, Aliceâs desk is just how she left it, thoughâa mess of papers and projects. Crochet needles from when she made what turned out to be a hideously deformed scarf. Recipes from her phase. Hot-pink Post-it notes, where Alice would scribble her ideas. She was always trying something new, always living life 110 percent.
Pictures on her desk show off Aliceâs big smile (best in the senior class) and even bigger hair. Sheâs standing between Margot and me at her high school graduation, her cap barely holding down her long, brown, curly hair that always occupied as much space in any room as she didâbig and boisterous and everywhere.
Everything from her hair to her smile to the bright red shoes below her grad gown screams Alice, at least the Alice I knew before she left for college. When she showed up on the front porch a few weeks into the semester, stripped of her Alice-ness, Staci gave her pills from the organic health-food store, insisting that her iron and BÂ vitamins were low. Dad said she was going through a phase. That she needed rest.
I saw the thin cuts on her arms that she tried to hide, but I kept it to myself. Figured it was another one of Aliceâs fleeting ideas, like when she went Goth for a month. I expected it to pass.
I didnât expect the Night of the Bathroom Floor.
Or the word Dad uses in hushed tones on the phone with the Fairview counselors:
I try to put Alice and her expedited homecoming out of my head while I bust through my homework in a few hours. (Thank you, energy drink nightcap.) The black, chalky fingerprint in the corner of my planner, courtesy of my new problematic project partner, keeps pulling my attention. Will everyone treat Alice like they do Micahârumors and swirling?
Before I turn out the light, I stand up and walk the distance between Aliceâs bed and mine, one foot carefully placed in front of the other.
Seven steps.
When I was little, after Mom died, that was all it took. Seven steps and one flying leap, and I was safe, tucked in next to Aliceâs side, where the monsters under the bed couldnât get me.
sheâd say, And somehow they stopped being scary. Alice was like that. Brave and smart, with all the answers.
I run my fingertips across her perfectly made bed and wonder which version will be coming home tomorrow: the girl who tackled life head-on, or the broken girl from the bathroom floor.
Back in my own bed, sleep flits just out of my grasp like always. Memoriesâfreeze-framed momentsâfill my head, circling like snakes, biding their time, lunging every so often to take a nip: Me, frozen, staring at the blood. Dad carrying her down the stairs. Me, running from the classroom today. Sitting on the bathroom floor with my list. Micah ignoring the calls.
I cover my head with my blanket.
But my brain doesnât listen.
Never does.
Across the room, a beam of moonlight illuminates Aliceâs perfectly made bed through the dark.
Seven steps.
But where do you go if your sister is gone? And the monsters have moved from under the bed to inside your head?
1:27 a.m.
1:40 a.m.
2:00 a.m.
2:03 a.m.
2:15 a.m.
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3:00 a.m.