Makes you fat, she says.
April Turnado is not fat. Far from it. Her too-skinny face had given me a glance as they swept past, her eyes big and round. Felicity was in the passenger seat, her head swiveling to follow me, her mouth moving as she told her mom something. I could see words coming out, her lipstick outlining her bright teeth, but couldn’t hear them. I guess I didn’t need to. I know what she said. Keep going.
Three years ago, I was dry and warm and safe, dialing the police when I woke up to an empty house. Felicity woke up wet and cold and confused, lying on a riverbank. Now Felicity is the one who is dry and warm and safe and I’m the one soaking wet, wondering what the hell just happened.
What did happen, Felicity?
Exactly what the hell happened?
Chapter 33
Felicity
Seventh Grade
We’re driving home from Dr. Gabriella’s, the rain a white sheet outside the windshield.
“So . . .” Mom turns on the defrost, hoping I’ll fill in before she has to ask.
I don’t.
“How did it go?”
“Fine,” I say. This is my go-to answer. School is fine. My friends are fine. My therapist appointment was fine.
“Honey, if you don’t think Dr. Gabriella is helping you—”
“She is,” I say quickly, realizing my misstep. “I . . . she is.”
Mom’s eyebrows draw together, but she doesn’t push me further. I know I need to go on, share more about what happens during my sessions, but the truth is I talk a hell of a lot more about my mom than I do Tress Montor.
“I . . . Gretchen’s dog has an infected toe pad,” I say. Because it’s something I heard about all day. Big news. World-ending stuff.
“Oh,” Mom says. “That’s too bad.” But she’s not really listening. She’s squinting at something in the distance, a shape on the side of the road. “Is that someone walking?”
We get closer, the wipers clearing the windshield for a single moment when Tress looks up and makes eye contact with me.
“Holy shit!” I say, and Mom gasps.
“Felicity Turnado! Language!”
“That was Tress, Mom! We’ve got to turn around and pick her up, give her a ride.”
Mom doesn’t stop. She doesn’t even slow down.
“Mom?”
She glances over at me, her mouth a thin line. “You say Dr. Gabriella is helping you; I believe it. And I’m not undoing any of that by picking up Tress Montor.”
“But . . .” I spin in my seat, watching Tress disappear into the storm. “It’s raining.”
“Yes,” Mom says, speeding the wipers up a notch. “It is.”
Chapter 34
Tress
Seventh Grade
It’s Lenore Usher who finally picks me up.
“Tress?” My aunt calls, rolling down the passenger-side window.
I climb in, dripping all over. “Sorry,” I say, pulling my wet clothes away from my skin.
“Sorry,” I say again when I notice a huge clod of mud I dragged into the car. Lenore has that effect on people; you just start apologizing to her, even if you don’t know what you did wrong. Because she makes you feel like you definitely did something.
I glance at her, but she’s not looking at me, or the mess I’m making in her car. She’s focused on the road, staring over the wheel as we climb into the hills.
“I missed the bus,” I say, even though she didn’t ask.
“Cecil didn’t notice?”
I shake my head. She doesn’t call him Dad or your grandpa. He’s just Cecil. Feels about right. “No, ma’am, Cecil didn’t notice.”
I don’t call anybody ma’am. Not Mrs. Anho, not my science teacher, not Cindy the pity librarian. But it pops out around Lenore Usher, probably because that’s what Ribbit calls her. Not Mom. Which, if I really think about it, kind of makes sense. He’s been following her around since he could walk, going to council meetings and committee gatherings, where everybody else made damn sure to call her ma’am.
It was probably Ribbit’s first word.
Mine was mama. I know that. It’s written in my baby book, the one I hide under my mattress because I don’t want Cecil to know that I kept it. He calls sentimental things senti-shit-all.
We drive past the Usher house, looming out of the storm, a fresh wound in the side where a rock fell away. Lenore pulls into our driveway, some gravel spinning out from under her tires. She puts the car in park, lets the engine idle. Zee brays his welcome, his upper half sticking out from his barn door. Goldie-Dog runs up to the car, despite the rain, jumping onto the passenger side