toââ
Elleâs mother cleared her throat and sat up straighter in her chair. âElle will be going back to school in a few weeks. Isnât that good news?â Her voice was high pitched and a little shaky.
âYeah. Iâm flat-out giddy,â Elle said under her breath.
âTessa, I was thinking it might be nice if you could drive Elle to school.â Elleâs mother looked at me, her chest puffed out from holding her breath.
âIâm not going to school with her,â Elle said. âIâll ride the bus.â
I heard Coop snicker, part of a joke that none of us knew.
âYou,â Elleâs mother said, her voice taking on the authoritative tone from years ago when sheâd caught Noelle and me watching an R-rated movie, âwill not be riding the bus.â
âDidnât you know?â Coop turned a bitter smile toward Elle. âPendeltons donât ride the bus. Itâs not safe.â
âGive me a break, Mom.â Elle flung her fork onto her plate, and it clattered noisily. âItâs not like Iâm going to be kidnapped again. Jesus.â
âYou, young lady, will not speak like that in my house.â Mr. Pendeltonâs deep voice boomed from his mouth. âYou should thank God for bringing you home safely.â
âIs that what you think?â Elle stared at her father, her eyebrows pulled tightly together. âThat God brought me back? God had nothing to do with it, Dad. And sometimesââElle stood from the table and threw her napkin on top of her manicottiââI wish I hadnât had anything to do with it, either.â She turned and ran from the room.
We all listened in silence as her feet rumbled up the steps. I watched the bright tomato sauce soak into the cloth napkin and hoped it wouldnât stain and be a permanent reminder of this disastrous meal.
âAnother peaceful dinner at the Pendelton household.â Coop looked at me. âArenât you glad you came?â He raised his eyebrows and sighed.
âI think Iâll go up,â I said softly. âIf thatâs okay.â
âIâm guessing it canât make matters worse.â Elleâs father took a sip of his wine and placed his glass on the table. The thick red liquid swirled around the inside of the wineglass until it lost momentum.
I didnât knock. I just walked in. She didnât hear me at first, and I stared at her for a minute or two. She was on her bed, propped against a pile of pillows that was stacked against her headboard. The white eyelet canopy that her parents had given her for her tenth birthday was still suspended above her bed, making her seem innocent and untouched. With one hand, she was writing furiously in a spiral notebook that she balanced on her lap. With the other, she wiped tears from her cheeks.
It shouldnât have surprised me to see her crying, but it did. Sheâd seemed so hardened that Iâd thought the only emotion flowing through her was hostility. I felt a little sick as I realized that she might be struggling with feeling anything real again after shutting down for the last two years.
She looked up. Her face was red and splotchy, her eyes slightly swollen.
âYou okay?â I asked.
âDo I look okay?â
I started to turn away and then forced myself to keep facing her. This is Noelle, I reminded myself. The girl who has been your best friend since before you knew what it meant to have a best friend.
âNo. You donât.â
âWell, Iâm not.â
I looked away, finding the cold stare of her eyes too oppressive. The room seemed to be floating in the past. Except for the clothes piled on the plush carpet, which were larger and more grown-up, it hadnât changed one bit since the last time Iâd been here. The butterfly border still fluttered around the top of the walls, the lavender paint still made me feel as if I were
C C Phoenixx
Rhys Hughes
Julie Ortolon
Susan Cory
Elley Arden
Jason the Horse
Guy Adams
Peter Glassman
Roxie Noir, Amelie Hunt
Joan Wolf