Isis fingers the Scrabble tiles. Her nails are bitten down even farther than mine. Her tongue works at the corner of her mouth.
âAlmost ready, Chuck.â She yanks a tile from the board. âAlmost.â
I fiddle with my tie-dyed T-shirt and flowery hippie skirt. Mikeyâs mom did come by with a box of Tanyaâs old clothes, left over from her Deadhead phase: tie-dyed shirts and flimsy, whispery skirts, hemp sandals and grandma shawls. There were some old sweaters, though, too, and Iâm wearing the best one: blue argyle cardigan with silver buttons in the shape of acorns. I didnât get to talk to Mikeyâs mom. If you arenât on a visitor list, you canât get in, and I donât have a visitor list, since I broke the rules. I donât know who would come, anyway, except for Mikey, but thatâs weeks away. Casper promised sheâd put him on my list. Otherwise I know thereâs just one name on it: my mother. But I donât expect her to come, and Casper doesnât mention it.
When the phone in Rec rings, everyone looks around for Barbero. The phone only rings up here after a caller has been approved downstairs against a master list. Callers have to be checked against a list approved by your doctor, and only at the doctorâs discretion.
Still, we arenât supposed to answer the phone by ourselves. âHe must have gone to the shitter,â Blue says, shrugging.
The phone keeps ringing. Francie nudges Sasha. âGet it.â
âYou get it.â Sasha resumes Connect 4. No one likes to play with her; she cheats.
Blue heaves herself up from the couch. âWimpy Bloody Cupcakes,â she says to us. Thatâs what she calls us, every once in a while: Bloody Cupcakes. We could all be so cute, donât you think, she said one day in Group. If we didnât look like fucking zombies! She raised her arms. Her scars made her look like a rag doll horribly resewn.
âCrazy Hut. Who is calling, please?â She twists the phone cord in her fingers.
She drops the phone so that it hits the wall, ka-thunk, and dangles, helpless, on its white cord. âItâs your mother, Silent Sue.â She returns to her paperback, wedging herself into the stiff green couch.
I stop breathing. Isis is pushing tiles and muttering under her breath. Francie is busy watching a movie.
My mother. Why would she call? She hasnât even come to see me.
Slowly, I walk to the phone. I press the receiver to my ear and turn away from the girls, to the wall, my heart beating like fucking crazy in my chest. âMom?â I whisper, hopeful.
The breathing is thick, raspy. âNoooo, Charlie. Guess!â The voice threads through my body.
Evan.
âI pretended to be your mom! Her name was in some stuff in your backpack.â He pauses, giggling, and suddenly switches to a honeyed, high-pitched voice. âHello, I need to speak with my daughter, please, Miss Charlotte Davis.â
I donât say anything. I donât know if Iâm relieved or disappointed.
âWe had to take your money, Charlie.â He coughs, a splatter of mucus. âYou know how it is.â
The empty film canisters in my backpack, the one he and Dump dropped off. The canisters I kept what little money I could scrounge in.
Evan is asthmatic and the drugs and the street do nothing for him. Iâve watched him curl up into a ball, wheezing until his face is purple, pissing his pants from the effort to not pass out. The free clinic only gives inhalers with medical exams and they wonât look at you if youâre high and Evanâs life is about being high. Heâs from Atlanta. I donât know how he got all the way up here.
I keep close to the wall so the girls canât hear me. Hearing Evanâs voice is taking me back to a dark place. I try to breathe evenly to keep in the moment, like Casper says.
Carefully, I say, âI know.â
I say, âItâs okay.â
I say, âThanks for bringing my backpack.â
He coughs again. âYou were pretty messed up in the attic, you know? I thought me and Dump was gonna shit our pants. All that, like, blood.â
I say, âYeah.â
Heâs so quiet that I almost donât hear him. âWas it Fucking Frank? Did heâ¦did he finally come after you? Is that why you did it?â
I scrape the wall with what little nails I have left. Fucking Frank and his black eyes and those rings. Seed House and the red door where girls disappeared. He had boxes of sugary cereal on the shelves, and beer and soda in the fridge, and drugs in special locked boxes. He had filthy skin but teeth that gleamed like pearls.
The men who came to Seed House for the room with the red door, they had hungry eyes, eyes with teeth that moved over you, testing, tasting. Thatâs why I hid in the attic for so long. Like a mouse, trying not to breathe so no one would notice me.
I say, âNo. No, he didnât get me.â
Evan sighs, relieved. âYeah, okay, thatâs good, yeah.â
âEvan,â I say.
âYeah?â
âBut heâs part of why I did it. You know? Like, the straw and the camel. Everything. Do you understand?â
Evan is quiet. Then he says, âYeah.â
I wonder where heâs calling fromâskinny Evan with his bad lungs and ripped pants, the funny houndstooth sport coat.
I ask him how he found me.
He tells me this is the place they send all the nutty girls. He tells me, âDump and me found a ride to Portland.â
The night they saved me in the underpass, Dump broke a bottle over the manâs head. It happened lightning quick. I saw a boyâs terrified eyes appear over the manâs shoulder and then the bottle in the air, gleaming against the yellowy lights. I picked slivers of glass out of my hair for days afterward.
Dump was mesmerized by the glass that glittered in the palms of his hands. He looked at me and his smile was a deep, curling cut. Bloody splinters of glass sparkled on the tips of his black boots.
The man who messed with me was at the bottom of the underpass, a lump of motionless, dark clothing. Evan wrapped me in his coat.
Evan tells me, âI just wanted to make sure you were okay and shit, you know?â
They said, Holy fucking shit. They said, Weâve got to get the fuck out of here. They said, You crazy fucking bitch, you canât be out here by yourself.
âYou were cool and all, for a wacko.â Laughter and coughing.
They walk-dragged me to a van and hauled me into the back. The seats had been taken out; the flooring was damp and there were patches of dirty carpet thrown over rust holes. Evan and Dump were keyed up, eyes popping, hands shaking. Did we fucking kill that dude?
I stayed with them for seven months.
Evan will die on the street, somewhere, someday. I have seen what he will do for a high. I have seen the sadness on his face when he thinks no one is looking.
âSo, yeah, also, I wanted to tell you, and, like, Iâm sorry and all, but I took your drawings.â Evan clears his throat. âYou know, that comic book you made. I donât know, I just like it. Itâs cool, you know, like, seeing me in there. Like Iâm famous or something. I read a little every day.â
My sketchbook, he has my sketchbook. Dump would say, Make sure you give me a cool superpower, like X-ray vision or something, okay? I wanna see through chicksâ clothes.
My heartbeat picks up. âEvan, I need that back. Evan, please?â
He coughs and gets quiet. âIâll try, you know, see if we can get over there, but I donât know, weâre leaving kinda soon. Itâs like, I just really like that book. I donât know. Makes me feel like I exist, seeing me in there.â
Evan, I say, but only in my head.
âYou get out, you come up to Portland, okay? Like, head to the waterfront and ask around for me. We do good together.â
I say, âSure thing, Evan.â
âLater, gator.â The phone goes dead.
Isis is nibbling at a new tile. I fold my hands in my lap. These are my hands. They have taken food from Dumpsters. They have fought over sleeping spaces and dirty blankets. They have had a whole other life than this one here, playing games in a warm room, as the night keeps moving far from me, outside the window.
Isis says, âHowâs your ma? That musta been weird, huh?â
She has spelled ball. It took her ten minutes to spell ball.
I tuck my hands under my thighs and bear down on them. The pressure against my bones feels good. He has my book, but I have food, and a bed.
âSheâs excellent.â My voice is mild and uncomplicated. âGoing on vacation. To Portland.â