going down, but we canât stop yet. Iâm beginning to hate being in a rental car with Mom. Weâve been crammed into the same room now for weeks. Thereâs nowhere to go to get away from her.
Your parents made you sick
, says the voice in my head, and I flash to the memory of me crying and begging not to go back to school.
You think she loves you? What loving mother ships her youngest child off to boarding school?
I push away the thought and flip open my journal again. Itâs traveled the whole way with me, but Iâve hardly written a thing. Just one line about Drew Center:
The whole ward here has more locks than a federal prison.
What else is there to say?
I want to write something cheerful and touristy about the Ripleyâs Believe It or Not museum. When I get home, Iâll paste my ticket to the page, and maybe a photograph or two. Mom and me posing in front of the worldâs largest tire. Dad sitting in the big chair.
But right now, I find myself reading a page from last November. A page I wrote about Ramona, my roommate in boarding school.
Girl, if you were standing in front of me and were hearing this, I would say: You were always the one to do the crazy stuff first. Letâs do this, letâs do that.
Come on, Lani, donât be so boring. And now, looking at everything, see how we both turned out?
You, overeatingâme, not eating.
You, too quick to loveâme, too scared to love.
You, blaming others too muchâme, blaming myself too much.
You, not caring about schoolâme, overcaring about it.
You, moving on.
Me, staying behind.
And Iâm sorry, Iâm sorry, Iâm sorry, Iâm sorry.
Got to go exercise away this God-awful me.
Maybe Iâll forget the God-awful you.
Miss you, Mona.
Iâll love you forever.
The tears on my cheeks surprise me. I close the journal and think about Ramona. Whatâs she doing now? Has her life turned out any better than mine?
Mom starts up again. She just wonât let it go. âEvery meal, you struggle,â she says. âYou canât finish anything.â
âWeâre eating fast food,â I say. âItâs awful.â
Saturated fat
, says the voice in my head.
Food additives. Dyes. Flavor enhancers. You ate chicken nuggets this morning, forty-eight calories per nugget. Thatâs not going to get you ready for school.
âWe eat anywhere you want to eat,â Mom says. âWe eat anything you say youâll eat.â
Chicken nuggets
, continues the voice in my head.
Three grams of fat apiece! You can see the fat ooze out of them. Itâs disgusting!
âI donât think you can deal with this problem by yourself,â Mom says. âI think theyâre right. You do need help.â
She thinks youâre a failure
, says the voice in my head.
Your own mother looks at you and sees a failure. This summer has made you lose your edge. You donât look like a girl with a great future anymore.
âI canât believe you think Iâm a failure!â I say. âI make top grades, but you think Iâm losing my edge. You criticize me all the time!â
âI donât mean youâre a failure,â Mom says. âYou do a great job in school. But you pick at your food. This is too hard for you to handle.â
She shipped you off and made you sick
, says the voice in my head.
She kicked you out of the house. You do everything right and one little thing wrong, and the one thing wrong is all she sees.
âDad! Mom thinks I canât do anything right. She thinks Iâm screwing everything up. You believe in me, donât you, Dad?â
âOf course I believe in you, honey.â
âThatâs NOT what Iâm saying!â shouts Mom. Which means, of course, that sheâs lost the argument.
But the fight gets worse from there. Pretty soon all three of us are shouting. Finally, Dad zooms down an exit lane, turns into an empty
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