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Chapter no 1

Every Last Word

Iย shouldnโ€™t be reading the notes.

Hailey trims a rose and passes it to me. As I attach the note to the stem

with sparkly pink ribbon, I read it. I canโ€™t help it. This oneโ€™s a little over- the-top, but itโ€™s still sweet. I give it to Olivia and she drops it in the classroom-specific bucket.

โ€œNo way! You guysโ€ฆโ€ Olivia snorts, laughing hard as she turns the card over in her hand. I guess sheโ€™s reading them, too. โ€œI canโ€™t tell who wrote this butโ€ฆpoor boy. This is so cheesy.โ€

Someoneโ€™s attempt at heartfelt poetry makes its way around the circle.

Alexis falls back against my bed in hysterics. Kaitlyn and Hailey double over on my rug. Eventually, I join in.

โ€œThis is mean. Letโ€™s not read them,โ€ I say, hiding the rose in the middle of the bucket, wanting to protect this anonymous guy who put his heart on the line for some girl in his calculus class named Jessica.

Olivia grabs the stack of cards in front of me and starts thumbing through them. โ€œGod, who are these people and how do we not know any of them?โ€

โ€œWeโ€™re not losers?โ€ Alexis offers. โ€œItโ€™s a big school,โ€ Hailey counters.

โ€œOkay, back to work. The flowers are wilting.โ€ Kaitlynโ€™s still laughing as she snaps back to her role as the leader of our Valentineโ€™s Day fundraiser. โ€œOlivia, since you like the notes so much, switch places with Samantha.โ€

Olivia shakes her head, and her ponytail goes flying. โ€œNo way. I like my job.โ€

โ€œIโ€™ll switch. My handโ€™s getting tired anyway,โ€ Hailey says, and the two of us trade spots.

I grab a rose out of the bucket and pick the scissors up off the floor. The instant I slide my fingers through the handles, this thought hits me out of nowhere, and before I have time to react I feel my brain sink its teeth in and latch on tight, already preparing to fight me for it. My hand starts trembling and my mouth goes dry.

Itโ€™s just a thought.

I let the scissors fall to the floor and I shake out my hands a few times, looking around the circle to be sure no oneโ€™s watching me.

Iโ€™m in control.

I try again. Rose in one hand, scissors in the other, I squeeze my fingers together, but my palms feel clammy and my fingers are tingling and I canโ€™t get a solid grip. I look up at Kaitlyn, sitting directly across from me, watching her face twist and blur as a wave of nausea passes over me.

Breathe. Find a new thought.

If I cut it once, Iโ€™ll keep going. I know I will. Iโ€™ll move on to the next rose, and the next one, and Iโ€™ll keep cutting until thereโ€™s nothing left but a huge pile of stems, leaves, and petals.

After that, Iโ€™ll massacre those syrupy sweet, carefully written notes.

Every single one of them.

God, thatโ€™s so twisted.

Then Iโ€™ll take the scissors to Oliviaโ€™s ponytail and cut right through that hair tie.

Shit. New thought. New thought.

โ€œI need a glass of water,โ€ I say, standing and hoping none of them notice the sweat beading up on my forehead.

โ€œNow?โ€ Kaitlyn asks. โ€œCome on, Samantha, youโ€™ll hold everything up.โ€

My legs are wobbly and Iโ€™m not sure I can trust them to get me downstairs, but somehow the scissors are gone and the banister is in my hand instead. I head straight into the kitchen and run my hands under the water.

The water is cold. Listen to the water.

โ€œAre you okay?โ€ Paigeโ€™s voice breaks through the chatter in my head. I hadnโ€™t even seen my little sister sitting at the counter, doing her homework. Thatโ€™s when I spot the knife block, full of knives. And a pair of scissors.

I could slice right through her hair.

I take big steps backward until I slam into the refrigerator. My knees give out and I slide down to the floor, gripping the sides of my head,

burying my face in my hands to make it dark, repeating the mantras. โ€œSam. Open your eyes.โ€ Momโ€™s voice sounds far away, but I obey her

words, and when I do, the two of us are nose to nose. โ€œTalk to me. Now.โ€ I look over at the staircase, wide-eyed.

โ€œDonโ€™t worry,โ€ she says. โ€œThey wonโ€™t find out. Theyโ€™re upstairs.โ€

I hear Mom whispering to Paige, telling her to take a bag of chips up to my room and keep my friends distracted.

Then she grabs both of my hands so hard, her wedding ring digs into one of my knuckles. โ€œTheyโ€™re just thoughts,โ€ she says calmly. โ€œSay it, please.โ€

โ€œTheyโ€™re just thoughts.โ€ I can echo her words but not the steadiness in her voice.

โ€œGood. Youโ€™re in control.โ€ When I look away from her she grips my arms harder.

โ€œIโ€™m in control.โ€

Sheโ€™s wrong. Iโ€™m not.

โ€œHow many thoughts does the brain automatically deliver in a single day?โ€ Mom moves on to facts to help me center myself.

โ€œSeventy thousand,โ€ I whisper as tears splash onto my jeans. โ€œThatโ€™s right. Do youย actย on seventy thousand thoughts a day?โ€ I shake my head.

โ€œOf course you donโ€™t. This thought was one in seventy thousand. Itโ€™s not special.โ€

โ€œItโ€™s not special.โ€

โ€œGood.โ€ Mom pinches my chin and lifts my head, forcing me to look at her again. โ€œI love you, Sam.โ€ She smells like her favorite lavender-scented lotion, and I inhale it, feeling a host of newer, prettier thoughts overpowering the darker, scarier ones. โ€œWhatever youโ€™re thinking, itโ€™s okay. It doesnโ€™t meanย anythingย about you. Got it? Now tell me.โ€

The two of us have been here before. It hasnโ€™t happened in a long time, not like this, but Mom slips right into her assigned role as if itโ€™s second nature. Sheโ€™s well trained.

โ€œScissors,โ€ I whisper, dropping my head to my chest, feeling dirty and sick and humiliated. I hate telling her these awful thoughts, but I hate the thought spiral even more, and this is my ticket out. Iโ€™m well trained, too.

โ€œThe roses. Oliviaโ€™s hair andโ€ฆPaigeโ€ฆโ€ Mom doesnโ€™t make me finish. She wraps her arms around me and I grab ahold of her T-shirt, sobbing into

her shoulder, telling her Iโ€™m sorry.

โ€œYou have nothing to be sorry for.โ€ She pulls away and kisses my forehead. โ€œNow stay here. Iโ€™ll be right back.โ€

โ€œPlease donโ€™t,โ€ I beg, but I know she wonโ€™t listen. Sheโ€™s doing what she has to do. I dig my fingernails into the back of my neck three times, over and over again until she returns. When I look up, sheโ€™s crouched down in front of me again, holding the scissors flat in her hand.

โ€œTake them, please.โ€

I donโ€™t want to touch them, but I donโ€™t have a choice. My fingertip connects with the cold metal and I let it slide over the blade, lightly, slowly, just tickling the surface. When I feel the handle, I curl my fingers through the holes. Momโ€™s hair is dangling in my face.

I could cut it. But I would never do that.

โ€œGood. Itโ€™s just a pair of scissors. They triggered a few scary thoughts, but you wonโ€™t act on them becauseย you, Samantha McAllister, are a good person.โ€ Her voice sounds closer now.

I drop the scissors on the floor and give them a hard push to get them as far away from me as possible. I throw my arms around Momโ€™s shoulders, hugging her hard, hoping this is the last time we go through this but knowing it isnโ€™t. The anxiety attacks are like earthquakes. Iโ€™m always relieved when the ground stops shaking, but I know there will be another one eventually, and again, Iโ€™ll never see it coming.

โ€œWhat am I going to tell them?โ€

My friends canโ€™t know about my OCD or the debilitating, uncontrollable thoughts, because my friends are normal. And perfect. They pride themselves on normalcy and perfection, and they canโ€™tย everย find out how far I am from those two things.

โ€œPaige is sitting in for you on rose duty. The girls think youโ€™re helping me with something in the kitchen.โ€ Mom hands me a dish towel so I can clean myself up. โ€œGo back upstairs whenever youโ€™re ready.โ€

I sit alone for a long time, taking deep breaths. I still canโ€™t look at the scissors on the far end of the kitchen floor, and Iโ€™m pretty sure Mom will hide all the sharp objects for the next few days, but Iโ€™m okay now.

Still, I can hear this one thought hiding in the dark corners of my mind.

It doesnโ€™t attack like the others, but itโ€™s frightening in a totally different way. Because itโ€™s the one that never leaves. And itโ€™s the one that scares me most.

What if Iโ€™m crazy?

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