Chapter no 2

The Way I Used to Be

ITโ€™S TOTALLY SILENT INย the house after breakfast. Caelin left with Kevin to go play basketball with some of their old teammates from high school. Dad needed some kind of special wrench from the hardware store to install the new showerhead he got Mom for Christmas. And Mom was in her room, busy addressing New Yearโ€™s cards.

I sit in the living room, staring out the window.

A row of multicolored Christmas lights lining the garage flicker spastically in the gray morning light. The clouds pile one on top of the other endlessly, the sky closing in on us. Next door, a mostly deflated giant Santa rocks back and forth in the center of our neighborsโ€™ white lawn with a slow, sick, zombielike shuffle. It feels like that scene inย The Wizard of Ozย when everything changes from black and white to color. Except itโ€™s more like the other way around. Like I always thought things were in color, but they were really black and white. I can see that now.

โ€œYou feeling all right, Edy?โ€ Mom suddenly appears in the room carrying a stack of envelopes in her hands.

I shrug in response, but I donโ€™t think she even notices.

I watch a car roll through the stop sign at the corner, the driver barely glancing up to see if anyoneโ€™s there. I think about how they say when most people get into car accidents, itโ€™s less than one mile from their home. Maybe thatโ€™s because everythingโ€™s so familiar, you stop paying attention. You donโ€™t notice the one thing thatโ€™s different or wrong or off or dangerous. And I think about how maybe thatโ€™s what just happened to me.

โ€œYou know what I think?โ€ she asks in that tone sheโ€™s been using on me ever since Caelin left for school over the summer. โ€œI think youโ€™re mad at your brother because he hasnโ€™t spent enough time with you while heโ€™s been home.โ€ She doesnโ€™t wait for me to tell her sheโ€™s wrong before she keeps talking. To tell her that itโ€™s really her whoโ€™s mad that he hasnโ€™t been home enough. โ€œI know you want it to be just the two of you. Like it used to be. But heโ€™s getting olderโ€”youโ€™re both getting olderโ€”heโ€™s in college now, Edy.โ€

โ€œI know thatโ€”โ€ I start to say, but she interrupts.

โ€œItโ€™s okay that he wants to see his friends while heโ€™s home, you know.โ€

The truth is, none of us knows how to act around one another without Caelin here. Itโ€™s like weโ€™ve become strangers all of a sudden. Caelin was the glue. He gave us purposeโ€”a reason, a way to be together. Because what are we supposed to do with each other if weโ€™re not cheering him on at his basketball games anymore? What are our kitchen table conversations supposed to sound like without him regaling us with his daily activities? Iโ€™m certainly no substitute; everyone knows that. What the hell do I have going on that could ever compare to the nonstop larger-than-life excitement that is Caelin McCrorey? At first I thought we were adjusting. But this is just how we are. Dadโ€™s lost without another guy around. Mom doesnโ€™t know what to do with herself without Caelin taking up all her time and attention. And me, I just need my best friend back. Itโ€™s simple, yet so complicated.

โ€œIt wouldnโ€™t hurt you to branch out a bit either,โ€ she continues, shuffling the stack of envelopes in her hands. โ€œMake a couple of new friends. Itโ€™s officially the new year.โ€ She smiles. I donโ€™t. โ€œEdy, you know I think Maraโ€™s greatโ€”sheโ€™s been a great friend to youโ€”but a person is allowed more than one friend in life is all Iโ€™m saying.โ€

I stand and walk past her into the kitchen. I pour myself a glass of water, just so I have something, anything, to focus on other than my mom, the pointlessness of this conversation, and the endless train wreck of thoughts crashing through my mind.

She stands next to me at the kitchen counter. I can feel her staring at the side of my face. It makes me want to crawl out of my skin. She reaches out to tuck my bangs behind my ear, like she always does. But I back away. Not on purpose. Or maybe it is. Iโ€™m not sure. I know Iโ€™ve hurt her feelings. I open my mouth to tell her Iโ€™m sorry, but what comes out instead is: โ€œItโ€™s too hot here. Iโ€™m going outside.โ€

โ€œOh-kay,โ€ she says slowly, confused.

My feet quickly move away from her. I grab my coat off the hook near the back door, slide my boots on, and walk out to the backyard. I brush the snow off one of the wooden swing-set seats. I feel the bruises on my body swell against the cold wood and metal chains. I just want to sit still for a second, breathe, and try to figure out how things could have ever gotten to this point. Figure out what Iโ€™m supposed to do now.

I close my eyes tight, weave my fingers togetherโ€”and though I know I donโ€™t do it nearly as much as I probably shouldโ€”I pray, pray harder than Iโ€™ve ever prayed in my life. To somehow undo this. To just wake up, and have it be this morning again, except this time nothing would have happened last night.

I remember sitting down at the table with him. We played Monopoly. It was nothing, though. Nothing seemed wrong. He was actually being nice to me. Acting likeย .ย .ย . he liked me. Acting like I was more than just Caelinโ€™s little sister. Like I was a real person. A girl, not just a kid. I went to bed happy. I went to bed thinking of him. But the next thing I remember is waking up to him climbing on top of me, putting his hand over my mouth, whisperingย shutupshutupshutup.ย And everything happening so fast. If it could all be a dream, just a dream that I could wake up from, then I would still be safe in my bed. That would make so much more sense. And nothing will be wrong. Nothing will be different. Iโ€™ll just be in my bed and nothing bad will ever have to happen there.

โ€œWake up,โ€ I think I whisper out loud. God, just wake up. Wake up, Edy!

โ€œEden!โ€ a voice calls.

My eyes snap open. My heart sinks into the pit of my stomach as I look around. Because Iโ€™m not in my bed. Iโ€™m in the backyard sitting on the swing, my bare fingers numb, curled tightly around the metal chains.

โ€œWhat are you doing, splitting atoms over there?โ€ my brother shouts from the back door. โ€œIโ€™ve been standing here calling your name a hundred times.โ€

He walks toward me, his steps are wide and swift and sure, the fresh snow crushing easily under his feet. I sit up straighter, put my hands in my lap, and try not to give away anything that would let him know how wrong my body feels to me right now.

โ€œSo, Edy,โ€ Caelin begins, sitting down on the swing next to mine. โ€œI hear youโ€™re mad at me.โ€

I try to smile, try to do my best impression of myself. โ€œLet me guess who told you that.โ€

โ€œShe said itโ€™s because Iโ€™m not spending enough time with you?โ€ His half grin tells me he half believes her.

โ€œNo, thatโ€™s not it.โ€

โ€œOkay, well, youโ€™re acting way weird.โ€ He elbows me in the arm and adds with a smile, โ€œEven for you.โ€

Maybe this is my chance. Would Kevin really kill me if I toldโ€”could he really kill me? He could. He made sure I knew he could if he wanted to. But heโ€™s not here right now. Caelin is here. To protect me, to be on my side.

โ€œCaelin, please donโ€™t leave tomorrow,โ€ I blurt out, feeling a sudden urgency take hold of me. โ€œDonโ€™t go back to school. Just donโ€™t leave me, okay? Please,โ€ I beg him, tears almost ready to spill over.

โ€œWhat?โ€ he asks, almost a laugh in his voice. โ€œWhere is this coming from? I have to go back, Edyโ€”I donโ€™t have a choice. You know that.โ€

โ€œYes, you do, you have a choice. You could go to school hereโ€”you had that scholarship to go here, remember?โ€

โ€œBut I didnโ€™t take it.โ€ He pauses, looking at me, uncertain. โ€œLook, I donโ€™t know what you want me to say here. Are you serious?โ€

โ€œI just donโ€™t want you to go.โ€

โ€œAll right, just for fun letโ€™s say I stay. Okay? But think about it, what am I supposed to do about school? Iโ€™m right in the middle of the year. All my stuff is there. My girlfriend is there. My life is there now, Edy. I canโ€™t just drop everything and move back home so we can hang out, or whatever.โ€

โ€œThatโ€™s not what I mean. Donโ€™t talk to me like Iโ€™m a kid,โ€ I tell him quietly.

โ€œHate to break it to you, but you are a kid, Edy.โ€ He smiles, clapping my shoulder. โ€œBesides, whatโ€™s Kevin supposed to do? Weโ€™re roommates. We share a car. We share billsโ€”everything. Weโ€™re kind of depending on each other right now, Edy. Grown-up stuff. You know?โ€

โ€œI depend on you tooโ€”I need you.โ€

โ€œSince when?โ€ he says with a laugh.

โ€œItโ€™s not funny. Youโ€™reย myย brother, not Kevinโ€™s,โ€ I almost shout, my voice trembling.

โ€œAll right, all right.โ€ He rolls his eyes. โ€œApparently you gave up having a sense of humor for your New Yearโ€™s resolution,โ€ he says, standing up like the conversation is over just because heโ€™s said what he wanted to say. โ€œCome on, letโ€™s go inside.โ€ He holds out his hand to me. I feel my feet plant themselves firmly in the snow. My legs begin to follow him instinctually, as they always have. My hand rises toward his. But then just as my fingers are about to touch his palm, something snaps inside of me. Physically snaps. If my body were a machine, itโ€™s like the gears inside of me just grind to a halt, my muscles short-circuit and forbid my body to move.

โ€œNo.โ€ I say firmly, my voice someone elseโ€™s.

He just stands there looking down at me. Confused because Iโ€™ve never said no to him before in my entire life. He shifts from one foot to the other and turns his head ever so slightly, like a dog. He exhales a puff of air through his smiling lips and opens his mouth. But I canโ€™t let him say whatever smart-ass remark his mind is churning out.

โ€œYou donโ€™t get it!โ€ I would have yelled the words if my teeth werenโ€™t clenched.

โ€œGet what?โ€ he asks, his voice an octave too high, looking around us like thereโ€™s someone else here whoโ€™s supposed to be filling him in.

โ€œYouโ€™re my brother.โ€ I feel the words collapsing in my throat like an avalanche. โ€œNot Kevinโ€™s!โ€

โ€œWhatโ€™s your problem? I know that!โ€

I stand up, canโ€™t let him try to get away before he knows the truth. Before I tell him what happened. โ€œIf you know that, then why is he always here? Why do you keep bringing him with you? He has his own family!โ€ My voice falters, and I canโ€™t stop the tears from falling.

โ€œYouโ€™ve never had a problem with him being around before. In fact, itโ€™s almost like the opposite.โ€ The sentence hangs in the air like an echo. I look up at him. Even blurry through my tears I can tell heโ€™s mad.

โ€œWhat do you meanโ€โ€”I shudderโ€”โ€œthe opposite?โ€

โ€œI mean, maybe itโ€™s time to drop the whole little schoolgirl-crush thing. It was cute for a while, Edyโ€”funny, evenโ€”but itโ€™s played itself out, donโ€™t you think? Itโ€™s obviously making you, I donโ€™t know, mean, or something. Youโ€™re not acting like yourself.โ€ And then he adds, more to himself, โ€œYou know, I guess I shouldโ€™ve seen this coming. Itโ€™s so funny because me and Kevin were just talking about this.โ€

โ€œWhat?โ€ I breathe, barely able to give the word any volume. I canโ€™t believe it. I cannot believe heโ€™s really done it. Heโ€™s managed to turn my brotherโ€”my true best friend, my allyโ€”against me.

โ€œForget it,โ€ he snaps, throwing his hands up as he walks away from me. And I can only watch him get smaller, watch him fade from color to black and white, like everything else. I stand there for a while, trying to figure out how to follow, how to moveโ€”how to exist in a world where Caelin is no longer on my side.


That night I close my bedroom door gently. I turn the lock ninety degrees to the right and pull on the knob as hard as I can, just to make sure. Then I turn around and look at my bed, the sheets and comforter clean and perfectly made up. I donโ€™t know how I can possibly go even one more minute without telling someone what happened. I take my phone out of my pocket and start to call Mara. But I stop.

I turn on the ceiling light and my desk lamp, and then pull out my sleeping bag from the top shelf of my closet. I roll it out onto the floor, and try to think of anything but the reason why I cannot bring myself to sleep in my bed. I lie down, half falling, half collapsing, onto my bedroom floor. I pull my pillow over my head and I cry so hard I donโ€™t know how Iโ€™ll ever stop. I cry for what feels like days. I cry until there are no more tears, like I have used them all up, like maybe I have broken my damn tear ducts. Then I just make the sounds: the gasping and sniffling. I feel like I might just fall asleep and not wake upโ€”in fact, I almost hope I do.

You'll Also Like