not until the bell rings forty odd minutes later that she finally moves. We face each other as we gather our things. Our eyes meet. Hold. Her irises catch the sunlight streaming through the windows, a light brown—so similar to the maple I spend my days shredding. Her lips part and my gaze glues to the motion. I try again, this time extending a hand. “I’m Connor. It’s my first…” I trail off because she’s already making her way to the door.
I turn at the hand landing on my shoulder. Rhys is behind me, his gaze following mine. “She’s unavailable.”
With a shrug, I tell him, “I wasn’t interested.”
He shakes his head. “No. I don’t mean she’s unavailable because she’s seeing someone. I mean, she’s unavailable”—he taps at his temple—”because she’s checked out.”
“No longer part of this world,” Mitch adds, stepping up behind him. He rotates a finger around his ear—the universal sign for crazy—and whispers, “Certifiable.” He eyes me up and down, stopping at my worn-out sneakers. “Actually, you’d do just fine together. Ghetto with ghetto. A perfect match.”
I should punch him. Once for me. Then two more for the girl-with-no-name. Instead, I walk away, convince myself that people, in general, can be dicks, but people in high school? They fucking thrive on it.
Besides, I’m not here to make friends.
I’m here to make plays.
Chapter 4
Ava
Healthy Ways of Coping with PTSD and Anxiety.
I read the title of the pamphlet for the umpteenth time, shaking my head in disbelief. I’m not the one with PTSD, and maybe if the school psychologist had given me reading material about how to cope with people suffering from PTSD, I’d have a different reaction. I didn’t feel like I needed to see her, but Trevor had spoken to the principal about how to “make sure my final year runs as smoothly as possible” and this was one of the many, many things on the list. So, every Monday and Wednesday I had to sit in an uncomfortable chair for a half hour and spill my guts about everything that was going on, all the emotions I was experiencing, and what I was doing to cope with it all.
I had nothing to say regarding any of those things, so I spent the entirety of our appointment trying to convince Miss Turner—a woman not much older than myself—that I was fine. Perfect, even. That my home life did not affect my school life, my grades, my future.
Vincit qui se vincit: He conquers who conquers himself.
I am a conqueror.
I am.
I am.
I flick the ring around my thumb.
I am.
I am.
I wish it to be true because those are the last words my stepdad, William, said to me before he walked out the door. “You’re a conqueror, Ava. You got this.” I didn’t respond to him. I simply held the front door open and watched his truck pull out of the driveway and disappear down the road. I didn’t ask where he was going. I didn’t care. And I didn’t ask why he was leaving me, leaving us. I already knew. He didn’t love us, so he left. Love should make people stay. Love should make you want to keep the people who hold that love near.
Until one day when you open the bathroom door, and the scream that erupts from your throat forces you to understand. At that moment, I fell to my knees, soaking in crimson while clinging to hope—and I knew why William left. Because sometimes, love isn’t enough. And neither is a school motto that teaches you from the day you enroll to the day you graduate that you must conquer all. Always. And when the tears blur your vision and your hands shake uncontrollably, and your throat aches with the cries that have consumed you, and you pick up the phone and question who to call, who to save you… you fail.
You don’t dial 911 as you should.
Guilt seeps into my veins and through my airways, making breathing a task.
I flick the ring again.
I am not a conqueror.
I am a fucking failure.
I am.
I am.
At around five thirty a car door slams, and I pack up my homework scattered on the kitchen table and get started on dinner. Heavy footsteps enter the house, his head lowered, tools in one hand, work hat in the other. I watch from the kitchen doorway as he slumps down on the couch by the front door of our tiny two-bedroom house and starts unlacing his boots. Shoulders slouched, messy hair and