What You Left Behind - Jessica Verdi Page 0,22

in your room.”

“Yes.”

“And you had never seen it before?”

“Nope. Or at least not long enough to distinguish it from any of the other books Meg was always writing in.”

“So Meg must have put it there. She wanted you to find it,” I murmur, almost to myself.

“I guess so, yeah.” There’s a short pause and then Mabel says, “But why?”

“I have no idea.” But my mind is revolving with possibilities.

What if this checklist, this journal, means something? What if she left one for each of us, and there are two other journals out there, for me and Alan?

What if there’s something Meg wanted us to know?

Chapter 7

In the morning, I’m actually feeling all right—which is crazy, considering how dead tired I am.

I spent a long time last night searching for a journal with a Ryden in the back. It was a fail, obviously. If Meg had left another journal here, I would have noticed it before now. Then I left Alan a voice mail asking if he’s found any journals at his place and fell asleep reading more of Meg’s red journal, the Mabel one, looking for a clue.

I was woken up by Hope an hour or two later. Same old story. But then something sort of miraculous happened. She was crying and crying, her sore little gums bared, two small white teeth only just starting to fight their way to the surface, her hands pulled into fists, making way more noise than a thing the size of a shoe box should be able to, and somehow I knew it was hunger crying, not teething crying, even though she had eaten right before I put her down. I knew it. So I made her some formula, pulled her into my lap, and she latched onto the bottle right away, her sobs subsiding almost instantaneously. It was like when my mom feeds her. Easy. Peaceful. Kind of awesome.

She went right back to sleep when her bottle was finished. It was the first time I’ve ever gotten her to do that on my own.

Since I was all amped up after that, I used the time to continue the Michael search.

Michael Taylor Boston 1998 Ryden Brooks: 160,000 results and clear from the first page that they were all scraps of completely unrelated nothingness. Sometimes the Internet can be ostentatiously useless.

So I switched missions and Googled UCLA day care. Way more productive. Turns out they have a campus day care that gives highly discounted rates to children of UCLA students if they meet the financial aid requirements. And hello, I’m poor as fuck.

It’s all going to work out. Today is the day that my life finally starts to get back on track.

I meet Mom in the kitchen. She looks up from her coffee and her book in surprise. (Mom reads a lot of paranormal trilogies. You’d think she was one of the girls at my school or something.) Then she takes in my practice gear and Hope all ready to go in her car seat, and her eyes narrow. “What are you doing?”

“Going to soccer practice.”

She blinks a few times, slowly, and then says, “You’re bringing the baby?”

“No. Alan’s gonna watch her.”

“You paying him?”

“No.”

“Ryden.”

“Mom.”

She sighs and puts down her coffee. “We need to talk, bud.” She pulls out the chair next to her.

I glance at the clock. “I can’t right now. I have to be at practice in an hour, and I still have to show Alan how to heat up bottles and shit.”

“I really don’t care. Sit down.”

I don’t have time for this. But I sit, because I know that tone of voice, and I know she’s not going to let me go until I listen to what she has to say. “Fine. Let’s get this over with.”

“Enough with the attitude, okay?” she says. “I’m on your side.”

“I know,” I mumble.

“Good. Now, explain this whole soccer thing to me. How on earth is that going to work?”

“The same way it always does.”

Mom gives me a look. “What did I say about the attitude?”

“I’m not trying to give you an attitude. I’m serious—soccer works the way it always does. I go to practice; I go to games; I come home. What’s to understand?”

“What’s to understand is that you have a daughter now, and a job. And school. We talked about this. You have obligations, Ryden. Important ones. Soccer’s going to have to go.”

I shake my head. “Soccer’s important. I can’t play in college if I don’t play this season.”

Mom stares at me, her eyes bugging

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