: Chapter 10
If You Could See the Sun
âYouâre stress pacing again,â Chanel observes from her dressing table.
Iâm not just stress pacingâIâm the textbook definition of anxiety right now. My heart is beating so hard I can feel it in my throat, and my mouth tastes like ash. Ever since I messaged Evie Wu on Beijing Ghost this morning, telling her Iâd be willing to help her cheat, my nervous system has been on the verge of breaking down. And I hate it, truly. I hate everything about this.
But I need to honor my choices.
âYou also look like youâre going to throw up,â Chanel adds helpfully.
âI wonât,â I tell her, just as my stomach lurches. I fight back the rising swell of nausea. âI meanâoh god, I hope not.â
âHey,â she says. She tears open a new face mask packet, dabbing the excess foam on the pale insides of her wrists. âNot to be super gross, but like, if you were to throw upâ¦do you think your vomit would be invisible as well? Because technically itâd be outside your body, but if it was also produced byââ
âChanel?â I interrupt.
âHmm?â
âPlease stop talking.â
She manages to stay quiet for a full minute, pressing the mask onto her skin, before she says, âWill you at least tell me what kind of task youâre doing today thatâs soââ
âNope,â I say, and she responds with an exaggerated pout. âAnd careful, your mask is going to wrinkle.â
She stops pouting at once, settling instead for a stiff poker face as she hurries to smooth out the edges of her mask again. If I wasnât trying so hard to keep my lunch down, I mightâve laughed.
âAnyway,â I say, completing another lap around our tiny dorm room. My feet refuse to stay still. âIâm not withholding information this time because I donât trust you. But the less people know, the less likely things will go horribly wrongâand the less liable youâll be.â
âBut Henry knows.â
I grimace. âYeah, well. Thatâs because I need him for something. Speaking of whichâ¦â I glance up at the clock, and my heart seizes. 5:50 p.m. Itâs time.
Oh my god. This is really happening.
When I speak again, my voice comes out as a squeak. âIâI should go find him now. Get this over with.â
I leave everything except my phone in the dorm and rush outside, barely catching Chanelâs quick âgood luck!â as the door swings shut behind me.
Henry and I agreed to meet by the main entrance of the humanities building at 6:00 p.m. At exactly 5:59 p.m., we both arrive at the same time, and I have to give it to himâHenry might be unbearably pretentious, but at least heâs punctual.
He also happens to look especially put together today; his dark blazer freshly ironed, his tie straight, not a single hair out of place. I almost laugh. He looks like heâs about to deliver a speech to the school, rather than help me pull off a crime.
âAlice,â he says when he sees me, ever so polite.
âHenry.â I return his greeting with a mock salute, mimicking his formal tone.
Faint irritation flits over his face. Good. If Henry is in the mood to bicker with me, then at least Iâll have something to keep me distracted from my nervesâ
âAre you nervous?â he asks.
Or not.
âWhy would you think Iâm nervous?â I snap, reaching over his shoulder to yank open the door.
âWell, you appear to be shaking.â
I follow his gaze, and hastily hide my trembling hands in my pockets, pushing past him into the building. âItâs cold,â I mutter.
âItâs twenty-two degrees right now.â
My jaw clenches. âWhat are you, the weatherman?â
âReally? The weatherman?â His voice is light, amused. âNot your best insult, Alice.â
I try to stab him to death with my eyes. Unfortunately, it doesnât work.
I keep walking.
The corridor is almost completely empty, as it should be. No student wants to stay behind after class, especially when our dorms are only a courtyard away, or when they can take a Didi to the Village or Solana. But for the teachers, itâs a different story. Most of them bike to school, and like to hang back in the classrooms until after dark, when the streets outside arenât as crowded and the probability of being run over by a car is significantly lower. Mr. Murphy is one of them.
Sure enough, the lights in the history classroom are still on. Through the small window in the door, I can make out his figure hunched over the teacherâs desk, stacks of papers laid out before him. It looks like heâll be busy marking them for a while.
Perfect.
Now I just need to turn invisible.
âSometime soon would be good,â Henry murmurs from close behind me, as if reading my mind.
I scowl but donât reply right away, gesturing for him to follow me into one of the narrow adjoining corridorsâfar enough so that Mr. Murphy canât hear us. The place smells like fresh printer ink and whiteboard markers. It smells like integrity, like academic success.
Another wave of nausea rolls over me.
âIâve already told you,â I say as I resume my pacing. âI canât control when exactly the invisible thing happens. It just does.â
Henry doesnât move, though his eyes follow me as I walk, back and forth, back and forth. Someone once told me my stress was contagious, that it spilled right out of me. But maybe Henry is immune to it, untouchable, like he is with most things.
âIn that case,â Henry says, âhow can you be certain itâll even happen tonight?â
âI mean, Iâm not.â I sigh. âBut itâs happened much more often in the evenings these past few weeks, and I can make aâ¦a reasonable prediction based on the existing patterns. Like menstrual cycles.â
For a brief moment, Henry looks stunned. âI beg your pardon?â
âMenstrual cycles,â I repeat, very clearly, glad to see him squirm for once. âYou know, like you can keep track of what time of the month it happens and know roughly when to expect it, but sometimes it still manages to catch you off guard. Itâs like that.â
âAh.â He nods, schooling his expression back into one of calm. âRight.â
And just like that, my momentary rush of satisfaction leaves, and the anxiety returns with double the intensity. I quicken my steps, wring my hands together. Itâs a wonder Henry isnât dizzy looking at me.
This is, without a doubt, the worst part of every mission: not the fear of getting caught, or even the guilt gnawing on my conscience, but the uncertainty. Never knowing when Iâll go invisible or when Iâll go back to normal.
Only a couple weeks ago, Iâd spent an entire day standing around the school hall, waiting for my powers to kick in so I could finish what shouldâve been a simple Beijing Ghost task. They never did. Henry had been surprisingly understanding about it, even though heâd chosen to wait with me too, but I can still taste the sharp, sour note of failure, still feel the heavy frustration of relying on something completely out of my control.
âJust relax,â Henry tells me, after Iâve paced the length of the corridor at least twenty times. If I were counting my steps, like Chanel does, Iâm sure Iâd have reached my daily goal by now. âEven if this task doesnât go as we initially planned⦠Whatâs the worst that could happen?â
I make a little noise of disbelief. âPlease, please tell me youâre joking.â
âI assure you Iâm quite serious.â
âOh my god,â I say. Shake my head. âThe worst thingâI mean, there are literally so many worst-case scenarios I donât even know where toââ
âLike what?â
âUm.â I pretend to think hard for an answer. âLike, getting expelled?â
âI highly doubt they would expel us. Weâre the best students they have,â Henry says. States it, just like that, as if itâs an indisputable fact.
My heart snags on the we, the casual compliment in those words, but I push on.
âNo? They could also involve the police, throw us into jailââ
âA few of my dadâs friends are lawyers,â he says breezily. âAmongst the best in the country. Even if the evidence was stacked up against us, weâd still win the case.â
I twist around so fast my shoes squeak against the polished floor. âSee, this is why I canât stand people like you,â I seethe, jabbing a finger in his direction. âYou think that just because youâre all smart and wealthy and attractive you can just do whatever the hell you wantââ
âWait.â Something shifts in the black depths of his eyes. âYou think Iâm attractive?â
âOh, come on, donât act like thatâs such a huge revelation,â I snap. âIâm pretty sure even the guys in our year level think so. I mean, really, when we had those diving lessons last year, everyone in the stands was straight-up gawking at you as if theyâd never seen a shirtless guy before, and later, when you did that photoshoot for the school magazine, and they made you wear that ridiculous suitâI couldnât evenâyou justâ¦â I trail off, suddenly all too aware of the heat in my cheeks, the anger curled in my chest that no longer feels like anger, but something else.
Something worse.
âJustâwhatever.â I clear my throat. âAnyway. What was I saying?â
Henry cocks his head to the side, a slow smile spreading across his lips. âYou were telling me how much you hate me.â
I bite my tongue, quickly avert my gaze. Try to will the strange feeling in my stomach away. Eventually, when I decide itâs safe to look at him again without my skin bursting into flames, he says, âDo you feel better now?â
âHuh?â
âYou tend to stop being so scared when youâre angry,â he explains.
Confusion bubbles inside me. âHowâhow do you know that?â
âI notice,â he says simply.
Another statement. Another phrase thrown into the air for me to decipher. But I canât wrap my head around it. What does he mean, he notices? And how could he be aware of something about me that I wasnât even aware of myself? It just doesnât make sense. It doesnât make sense, because no one noticesâ
A sudden chill snakes down my spine, crawls along my legs, my wrists. A thousand pinpricks of ice. I go cold all overâpainfully, unnaturally coldâand I understand what this means, at least.
It means itâs time to get to work.
âHenry! What are you still doing here?â
Mr. Murphy looks up from his desk as Henry and I walk in, his eyes sweeping right over me.
âI was hoping youâd still be in, Mr. Murphy,â Henry says with one of his rare, grossly persuasive smiles. Bright eyes. Shining teeth. Faint dimples in his cheeks. Even Iâm almost tempted to believe what comes out of his mouth next. âDo you have a few minutes to spare? I was hoping to look at some of the primary sources from the Opium Warsâyou know, since you said weâll be learning about that nextâbut the librarian wouldnât let me go near them without your approvalâ¦â
Itâs perfectâthe slight reluctance in his voice, like heâs afraid to inconvenience the teacher; the eagerness without appearing overeager; the sincerity in the way he holds Mr. Murphyâs gaze. And, of course, thereâs the one factor others wouldnât be able to replicate, no matter how great at lying they are: his reputation. Heâs King Henry, every teacherâs favorite student, the one who always talks to them about extra course material, advanced readings, debates new theories with them just for fun.
I never thought Iâd see the day where I was grateful for Henry being such a teacherâs pet, but here we are.
Mr. Murphy sets down the paper in his hands. His tone is friendly, slightly teasing, when he asks, âPrimary sources, hmm? And this couldnât wait until tomorrow?â
Henry ducks his head, making quite the convincing show of looking sheepish. âWell, I was reading about the First Opium War this afternoon and itâs all just so interestingâterrible, obviously, but interestingâand when I remembered the library had some of the original texts⦠I suppose I got carried away.â He shoots Mr. Murphy another smile, softer this time, embarrassed, and my heart does a weird little somersault in my chest. âSorry, youâre right. Itâs not that importantââ
âNo, no, I didnât mean that,â Mr. Murphy says quickly. He stands up, his chair rolling back a few feet and hitting the wall with a dull thud. âItâs great that youâre so passionate about your subjects, Henry. And Iâm more than happy to go with youâright now, in fact.â As he says this, he tucks his laptop under his arm, and makes a motion for Henry to lead the way.
But Henry hesitates, his eyes falling on the laptop. For the first time, I sense a fissure in his mask of calm. âYou donâtâyou donât have to bring that with you. Itâll be really quick.â
I swallow the lump of fear in my throat and step closer, studying Mr. Murphyâs reaction carefully, searching for any signs of suspicion, of confusion. But he just sighs and shakes his head.
âI know, but I think itâs for the best. Iâve heard a few funny reports latelyâ¦â
My stomach lurches.
âWhat reports?â Henry asks, tensing too.
âOh, well, nothing to be overly concerned about, Iâm sure,â Mr. Murphy says with a wave of his free hand. âJust stories of things disappearing here and there from lockers, phones and laptops being hacked. Stuff like that.â He nods toward the door. âYou good to go?â
Henry straightens, but not before his gaze darts in my general direction. âYes. Yes, of course.â He doesnât ask Mr. Murphy about his laptop again, or persuade him to leave it behind, and I donât blame him; if Mr. Murphyâs already on guard and vaguely aware of whatâs been going on, it wouldnât take much for him to suspect something was off.
But once Henry and Mr. Murphy have left the classroom, leaving me alone, invisible, the laptop I need gone, I canât help feeling absolutely idiotic. My heart sinks all the way down, my head pounding. What am I supposed to do now? Follow them to the library, try to steal Mr. Murphyâs laptop when heâs not looking? Try again another day? But even with Henryâs reputationâeven if Henry claimed to have found a never-before-seen primary source from the Daoguang Emperor himselfâI doubt the teacher would be so trusting if Henry were to come find him two nights in a row.
No, there has to be some other way. Maybe I can access Mr. Murphyâs laptop from his phone or my phone, or maybe he has a copy of the exams sent to his email, or maybeâ
Maybe he has a physical copy lying around somewhere.
Around here.
With a sudden, dizzying surge of hope, I remember the thick folder Mr. Murphy always carries with him, how he likes to print things out, says he finds it hard to read things on a screen.
I rush to his desk. Itâs a complete mess, highlighters and half-marked papers scattered everywhere, one last bite of jianbing going cold on a dirty plate. But right there, buried beneath it, is the see-through folder I last saw Mr. Murphy with.
Slowly, inch by inch, I pull the folder free as if itâs a Jenga block, careful not to move anything else on the teacherâs desk. The folderâs been crammed full with worksheets, copies of the syllabus, past test rubrics, excerpts from the textbook readingsâ¦
There doesnât seem to be any kind of organization system, not even a single colored tab. All I can do is flip page after page as the folder grows unbearably heavy in my clammy hands, my heart racing, terribly conscious of the ticking clock and how many minutes have passed since Mr. Murphy and Henry left.
My senses seem to have sharpened, too, like a rabbitâs when it fears itâs being hunted; every rustle of movement in the corridors outside startles me, every creak of the door or tap of the branches against the windows makes me freeze. I can smell the leftover food from the staffâs office upstairsâseafood, and something sourâand feel the sweat forming on my skin in cool, perfect beads.
And still I force myself to keep rifling through the giant folder, keep searching, scanning the blur of text for the words Year 12 Midterm or History Exam untilâ
Finally.
Finally. There it is.
Adrenaline floods my veins as I take out the exam and answer booklet with shaking fingers, holding them up under the fluorescent classroom lights. For a second Iâm so stunned by what Iâm about to do I almost drop them, but I steady myself. Grab my phone and snap a photo of the first page, then the second, the third.
Iâm close to finishing when I hear itâ
Voices.
ââ¦difficult to believe the emperor really was so ignorant. If you read between the lines of that letter, it seemed more like one last, desperate attempt to avoid trouble,â Henryâs saying, his slow footsteps falling behind Mr. Murphyâs quick, noisy ones. Heâs speaking louder than usualâno doubt to warn me theyâre about to come in.
No. Not yet.
Iâm on the very last page now, but my shadow keeps blocking the wordsâ
Then realization hits me like a boulder, almost knocking the breath out of me: my shadow. If I have a shadow, then I mustâve turned visible again, and if Iâm visible when Mr. Murphy walks in here⦠If Mr. Murphy sees meâ¦
Shit.
Panic invades every cell in my body. I twist the paper around in the light and snap a photo, then stuff it back into the folder and shove everything under the dirty plate again in one rapid, frenzied movement. I donât know if itâs in the exact same position as before, but thereâs no time to check.
The doorknob creaks. Turns.
Mr. Murphy opens the door just as I throw myself onto the ground, squeezing into the gap under his desk. The space is tiny; I have to tuck my knees under my chin like a fetus, wrap my arms tight around myself like a vise.
My heart is pounding so hard I think I might die.
âThanks again for everything, Mr. Murphy,â Henry says. He sounds less than ten feet away. âI know how busy you must beâ¦â
âYouâre too polite,â comes Mr. Murphyâs response from nearby. Heâs walking, drawing closer and closer, andâ
Oh god.
His worn, leather shoes suddenly appear in my line of vision, only a few inches from my leg.
I retract further, press up against the hard surface of the desk, fold into myself until I can barely breathe, but still heâs too close. He only needs to look down to know Iâm here. He only needs to listen carefully to hear my furious heartbeats, my uneven gasps for air.
Iâm trapped.
The thought sends a new jolt of hysteria through me. Iâm trapped and I canât see any way of getting out. Not undetected. Not without consequences. The inevitable begins to play in my mind like a horror film: Mr. Murphy accidentally dropping a pencil or paper and seeing me crouched here, hiding at his very feet; the shock flashing through his eyes, even more pronounced than when I broke down over my test in class, and the realization thatâll follow shortly afterward, that I must be here for a reason. Then heâll look at his desk, notice how the folder is maybe two inches to the right from where heâd left it, how the corner of the exam booklet is bent, and put two and two together, and thenâ
âIs there something else you need, Henry?â Mr. Murphy asks. He lowers himself into his seat, and I watch in silent horror as the chair rolls forwardâ¦
Thereâs no room for me to retreat. The front wheels ram into my right foot, crushing my toes. A white-hot bolt of pain shoots through me, and I have to bite down on my tongue to keep from crying out.
Please let this stop, I pray, not even sure who Iâm praying to. Please, please let him get an urgent call, or have to get up to use the bathroom, or let the fire alarm go off sometime soonâ¦
But neither the chair nor Mr. Murphy moves.
âWell, actuallyâ¦â Henryâs voice floats over from the other side of the room, and I can tell from the pause that heâs trying to stall. He must know Iâm still here. We talked about this before, albeit briefly; I would text him once I was safe outside, and if not, he would create a distraction to buy me time. I just hadnât counted on him to remember.
For a second, I allow myself to hope.
Then I hear his footsteps moving in the opposite direction, and my heart falls. Confusion clouds my mind. What the hell is heâ
A crash breaks through my thoughts: the unmistakable sound of flesh slamming into cement, like someoneâs body hitting the floor.
Then a gaspâ
âHenry? Henry!â
The chair rolls back and in a flash of brown, Mr. Murphyâs shoes disappear from view. I hear him run toward where Henry must have fallen and I donât think. I just move. Ignoring the pins and needles in my legs, I scramble out from under the desk, almost banging my head against the corner, and sprint for the back door.
In the dark of the corridor, I sink into the shadows, panting, catching snippets of Henryâs conversation with Mr. Murphy as I creep farther away from the classroom.
ââ¦havenât had much to eat. Donât worry, this has happened beforeâ¦â
ââ¦to the school nurse? They might still be inââ
âNo, no, that wonât be necessary. Really, itâs fine. I didnât mean to startle youâ¦â
The night air is cool when I step out. Sweet with the fragrance of begonias blooming in the school gardens. I close my eyes and inhale, hardly daring to believe what I just managed to get away with. What Henry just did. When he talked about creating a distraction, I never wouldâve imagined he meant fake fainting.
Itâs all so bizarre that a bubble of laughter bursts from my lips, and suddenly my whole body is shaking with hysteria, the much-needed release of tension. I donât know long I stand there, waiting, light-headed and almost giddy with relief, but soon I hear voices. Henry and Mr. Murphyâs. Some of their words are muffled by the front door, but I can make out Henryâs continued insistence:Â âIâm fine, Iâm fine. I can go see the nurse myself.â
Mr. Murphy must believe himâor maybe he simply knows better than to challenge Henryâs stubbornnessâbecause thereâs the squeak of shoes, of heavy footsteps moving away, while another set draws closer.
The door creaks open.
âWell, that was a thoroughly humiliating ordeal.â
I twist around.
Henry is standing behind me, his expression calm, hands in pockets, the collar of his shirt rumpled. A reddish-yellow bruise has started to bloom over the curve of his left cheekbone, a violation of his otherwise perfect skin.
Without thinking, I grab his face in one hand and tilt it up to the moonlight, inspecting the injury. It looks swollen. Painful.
âHoly crap, Henry,â I say, no longer laughing. âYou didnât have to go that farâI mean, Iâm grateful, obviouslyâso gratefulâbut⦠Does itâdoes it hurt?â
He doesnât answer me, but his eyes widen slightly. Flicker to the point of contact between us, where my hand is still cupping his cheek.
I let my hand drop and step back, mortified.
âUm, sorry. Really donât know why I just did thatâ¦â I shake my head, hard, as if I can somehow shake the awkward moment away too. What is wrong with me? âDo you need a bandage though? Or ice? Or one of those cloth things they tie aroundâ¦â I trail off when I see the corners of his lips twitch with ill-suppressed amusement. âIs this somehow funny to you? Because you couldâve been seriouslyââ
âI appreciate the concern,â he says. âBut Iâm honestly fine. I promise. Iâve done this before.â
I stare at him. âWhat? Why?â
He hesitates, and I can almost see the gears in his mind working, trying to decide how much information he can afford to disclose. Finally, he says, âIt was a long time agoâ¦when I was seven or eight. My father had signed me up for violin lessons and I really, really did not want to goâ¦â
It takes me a minute to understand what heâs saying, to grasp the sheer absurdity of it. This is truly the last thing Iâd expect from Henry Li. âWait. So youâd fake faint just to get out of violin lessons?â
âI only did it once.â He grimaces. âAll right, twice. But in my defense, it was very effective; the violin teacher was so concerned for my well-being she personally asked my father to keep me home.â
I choke out an incredulous laugh. âAnd you couldnât have justâI donât know, faked a cough or a cold like a normal kid?â
His expression doesnât change, but his eyes harden. âThat wouldnât have been enough. So long as I was physically conscious, my father wouldâve insisted that I continue with my studies, push through until I was perfect.â He turns his head away from me, the moonlight washing over his stiff profile, lining the slight furrow in his brows, and I realize, with an odd pang, that the conversation is over.
I also realize that for all the glamorous magazine profiles and interviews and SYS-related news Iâve devoured in my attempts to better understand my competition, I donât know Henry that well at all⦠Yet now, more than ever, I kind of wish I did.
A few beats of heavy silence pass. Then Henry asks, âDo you have everything you need?â His voice is formal again, perfectly professional. I hate it.
âOhâyeah.â I pat the front of my blazer, where my phone is. âI do.â
But as we make our way slowly back to the dorms, the exam answers saved and safe in my pocket, the promise of a sizeable payment awaiting me, I canât shake the feeling that Iâve left something invaluable behind.