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Authors: Zhang,Amy

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BOOK: Falling into Place
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It is then, when she releases her need to understand, that everything falls into place.

Things just aren't that simple.

And suddenly it's very clear to her that every action is an interaction, and everything she has ever done has led to something else, and to another something else, and all of that is ending here, at the bottom of the hill by Highway 34, and she is dying.

In that moment, everything
clicks
.

And Liz Emerson closes her eyes.

 

 

SNAPSHOT: SKY

We lie on the red-checkered blanket with weeds and flowers all around us, caught in the fleece. Our breaths carry our dandelion wishes higher, higher, until they become the clouds we watch. Sometimes we looked for animals or ice-cream cones or angels, but today we only lie there with our palms together and our fingers tangled, and we dream. We wonder what lies beyond
.

One day, she will grow up and imagine death as an angel that will lend her wings, so she can find out
.

Death, unfortunately, is not in the business of lending wings
.

UNCORRECTED E-PROOF—NOT FOR SALE

HarperCollins Publishers

..................................................................

CHAPTER TWO
How to Save a Corpse

I
watch the spinning lights close in, wrapping the scene in long lines of ambulances and yellow tape. Sirens wail and paramedics spill out, running and slipping down the great hill in their haste. They surround the Mercedes, crouch beside her, the glass crunching beneath their feet.

“No gag reflex. Get the tube ready, I need RSI intubation—”

“Can you start a line from there? Jaws of life . . . get the fire department!”

“—no, forget that, break the windshield—”

So they do. They remove the glass and carry her up the hill, and no one notices the boy standing near the mangled bits of her car, watching.

Her name is on his lips.

Then he is pushed back by a policeman, forced back to the crowd of people who have gotten out of their cars to catch a glimpse of the scene, the blood, the body. I look past the circle and see the traffic rapidly piling up in every direction, and right then, it's very easy to imagine Liz somewhere in the long line of cars, sitting inside an intact Mercedes, her hand pressed to the horn, her swearing drowned out by the pounding bass of the radio.

It's impossible. It's impossible to imagine her as anything but alive.

The fact, however, is that the word
alive
no longer accurately describes Liz Emerson. She is being pushed into the back of an ambulance, and for her, the doors are closing.

“She's tachycardic—and hypotensive, can you—”

“I need a splint, she's got a complex fracture in the superior femur—”

“No, just
get the blood stopped
! She's going into shock!”

As everyone moves and rushes around her, a musical of beeping machines and panic, I just watch her, her hands, her face. Her hair falling out of the hasty braid. The foundation across her cheeks, too thin to cover the graying skin.

When I look around, I can see her heart beating on three different monitors. I can see the steam her breath makes on the mask. But Liz Emerson is not
alive
.

So I lean forward. I place my lips beside her ear and whisper for her to
stay, stay alive
, over and over again. I whisper it as though she'll hear me, like she used to. As though she'll listen.

Stay alive.

UNCORRECTED E-PROOF—NOT FOR SALE

HarperCollins Publishers

..................................................................

CHAPTER THREE
The News

M
onica Emerson is on a plane when the hospital calls. Her phone is turned off, and the call goes straight to voicemail.

An hour later, she turns on her phone and listens to her voicemails as she makes her way to baggage claim. The first is from the marketing division of her company—something about her next trip to Bangkok. The second is from the dry cleaners. The third has no message.

The fourth begins just as she spots her suitcase on the carousel, so the words “Your daughter was in a car accident” don't register right away.

She makes herself listen to the entire thing one more time, breathe, and when it ends and the nightmare doesn't, she turns and runs.

The suitcase takes another turn on the carousel.

Julia is almost halfway through her calculus homework when the phone in the hall rings.

It makes her jump, because no one ever calls her house. She has a cell and her father has three, and Julia has never understood why they needed a landline too.

Regardless, she goes into the hall to answer, because conic parametric equations are giving her a headache.

“Hello?”

“Is this George De—”

“No,” she says. “This is Julia. His daughter?”

“Well, this is the emergency contact number we have for Elizabeth Emerson. Is it correct?”

“Liz?” She twirls the phone cord around her fingers and wishes, suddenly, that she had never let Liz put her dad down as an emergency contact. It wasn't like he was ever around for emergencies.
Stupid
, she thought. “Yes, this is the right number. Is Liz—what's going on?”

There's a pause. “Is your father home?”

Julia pushes down her annoyance, chokes it, cinches the phone line tighter around her fingers and watches them turn purple. “No,” she says. “Is something wrong? Is Liz okay?”

“I'm not authorized to release the information to anyone except Mr. George Dev—”

“Did something happen to Liz?”

Another hesitation, and then a sigh. “Elizabeth was admitted to St. Bartholomew's Memorial Hospital a little while ago. She was in a car accident—”

Julia drops the phone, grabs her car keys, and Googles directions to the hospital on the way to her car.

Kennie is on a bus with the rest of Meridian High's dance team. At the moment the Mercedes flips over, she is leaning over the back of her seat, trying to grab Jenny Vickham's bag of sour gummies while the bus driver yells at her to sit down. She is happy, because soon she'll dance beneath spotlights as the only junior in the front row. Soon they'll win the competition and come back laughing. Soon she'll spin and leap and forget about the baby and the abortion and Kyle and Liz.

I'm happy
, she tells herself.
Be happy
.

Both Monica Emerson and Julia are too busy unraveling to remember Kennie. They couldn't have called anyway—Kennie has no phone service on the bus, and her phone is about to die. As Monica and Julia rush for the hospital, Kennie is traveling in the opposite direction, blissfully ignorant of the fact that her best friend is dying.

She probably won't know for a while. No, she'll come home after winning the competition, cheeks sore from smiling so much, stomach cramped from laughing the whole ride back. She will take a shower and exchange her sparkles and spandex for a worn pair of pajamas. She will sit in the darkness of her room, her wet hair piled atop her head, and scroll through her Facebook feed. She will find it clogged with a story told through statuses, and it will take her breath away.

UNCORRECTED E-PROOF—NOT FOR SALE

HarperCollins Publishers

..................................................................

CHAPTER FOUR
Stay Alive

L
iz had planned the crash with an uncharacteristic attention to detail, but not once did St. Bartholomew's Memorial Hospital make an appearance in her plans, because she was supposed to die on impact.

She had been excessively careful in choosing the location, however. The highway, the hill, the icy turn, all nearly an hour from her house. She had even driven along the route once, swerved a little, chipped the paint on the Mercedes, for practice. But because she had chosen to crash her car so far away, no one is there to meet her when the ambulance pulls into St. Bartholomew's. No one is there to hold her hand as the doctors wheel her to surgery.

There's only me.

I can only watch.

Stay alive.

I watch the doctors arrive. I watch the flashing scalpels, the eyebrows that curve downward. I watch the hands, the white latex splashed with red.

I watch, and I remember the time Liz fractured her shin in kindergarten playing soccer, already too in love with the sport and already too vain for shin guards, and how we went to Children's Hospital instead of this one. That surgery room had a border of giraffes jumping rope, and Liz had held my hand until the anesthesia pulled her away.

But there are no giraffes jumping rope here, and Liz's hand is broken. This isn't like that surgery, or any of the other ones—the one at St. Nicks' when Liz tore her ACL during a powder puff game, or the one at the dentist's when she'd had her wisdom teeth removed. During those, the doctors had been relaxed. There had been iPod docks in the corners, playing Beethoven or U2 or Maroon 5, and the doctors had seemed . . . well, human.

These surgeons are all hands and knives, cutting and peeling Liz apart, sewing and sewing her back together as though they can trap her soul and lock it away under her skin. I wonder how much of her will be left when they finish.

Stay alive
.

But she doesn't want to. She doesn't want to.

I try to remember the last time she was happy, her last good day, and it takes so long to sort through the other memories, the unhappy ones and the empty ones and the shattered ones, that it's easy to understand why she closed her eyes and jerked her wheel to the side.

Because Liz Emerson held so much darkness within her that closing her eyes didn't make much of a difference at all.

UNCORRECTED E-PROOF—NOT FOR SALE

HarperCollins Publishers

..................................................................

CHAPTER FIVE
Five Months Before Liz Emerson Crashed Her Car

O
n the first Friday after the start of Liz's junior year, only three topics were discussed at lunch: Ms. Harrison's plus-size miniskirt and fishnet stockings, the sheer number of freshman skanks, and the enormous beach party Tyler Rainier was going to throw that night. Over her tray of healthy (by government standards) and inedible (by everyone else's standards) lunch, Liz declared her intentions to go. Which meant, of course, that everyone else was going to go.

Everyone
were the others sitting at the three tables reserved for Meridian High School's elite: the petty, the vain, the jocks, the idiots, the beautiful, the rich, the accepted and admired sluts. In particular, her statement was directed at Kennie, who would immediately text Julia—who, due to a scheduling conflict resulting from an overload of AP classes, had a different lunch hour—with the plans.

Liz, Julia, Kennie. That was the way things were, and no one questioned it anymore.

After school, Liz drove home with the radio blasting. She was more lenient on the gas pedal than usual, because she knew she would return to an empty house. Her mom was either in Ohio or Bulgaria that weekend—she couldn't remember. It didn't matter. There was always a business trip, and always another one.

Once upon a time, Liz had loved that her mother traveled. It was like magic, like a fairy tale, to have a mother who crossed oceans and knew the sky. Besides, when her mom wasn't home, her dad let her eat on the couch, and he never nagged when we wanted to jump on the bed or skip brushing our teeth or play on the roof.

But then her dad died and she grew up and her mother still went on her trips, and Liz had learned to be lonely.

It wasn't thе aloneness that Liz minded. It was the silеnce. It echoеd. It bounced off the walls of the Emerson's ovеrsized house. It fillеd thе corners and the closеts and thе shadows. In reality, Liz's mom wasn't gone as oftеn as it seеmеd to Liz, but thе silеnce magnifiеd еvеrything.

It was her oldest fеar, that silence. Shе had always hatеd when thеrе was nothing to say, hatеd the minutеs of darknеss at slеepovers as everyone driftеd but didn't quite slеep, hated study hall, hated pauses in phone calls. Othеr little girls fеared the dark, and they grew up and lеft their fears bеhind. Liz was afraid of silence, and she kept hеr fears clenchеd so tightly in hеr fists that they grew and grеw and swallowеd her whole.

For a whilе, she sat in thе garagе with thе Mеrcedеs still purring bеnеath her, the radio blasting linе after line of rap shе could barеly understand. Shе wishеd that shе'd asked Julia or Kеnniе to comе over after school so she could put off the silencе for a little longеr. But she hadn't, and she told herself that regrеt was stupid and she pullеd her keys from the ignition. The silеnce hit her physically, surroundеd her as she unlocked the back door, swallowеd her as she wеnt insidе, strangled her as shе slid out of hеr shoes and microwaved somеthing called a Pizzarito (“a mеlting pot of flavor!”). Briеfly, shе thought about going for a run—opеn gym for soccer would start soon, and shе was out of shapе—but though thе air was crisp and part of her wanted that еscape through movemеnt, a grеater part was unwilling to go upstairs for hеr running shoеs, comе all the way back down, lacе thеm up, dig hеr keys back out of her purse, lock the door. . . .

The microwavе beеped, and Liz fetched the Pizzarito and flipped through channеls until the borеdom became intolerable.

Thеn, with the silencе still pounding inside and outside of her, Liz went to thе bathroom, slid her fingers down hеr throat, and carеfully transferred thе mеlting pot of flavor from her stomach to the toilеt.

In her lifе, Liz had flirtеd with a numbеr of dangеrous things—drugs, bulimia, the pеrvеrt stonеr who worked at RadioShack. Bulimia was the only onе that stuck. She had broken thе habit for a whilе—she'd startеd puking blood for a bit, which frightеnеd her, bеcausе shе hadn't wanted to die. Not then. But she was going to be grinding in a swimsuit tonight, and shе wanted to bе happy. She wanted to be bright and laughing and thin.

BOOK: Falling into Place
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