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Authors: Carolyn Mackler

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BOOK: Infinite in Between
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PROLOGUE

IN THE BEGINNING
the five of them made a promise. It was the day before the first day of high school. They wrote those letters to their future selves, hid them in a secret place, and vowed to unearth them at graduation.

From the noisy, crowded gym at freshman orientation (day 1) to the noisy, crowded gym at graduation (day 1,387), four years of high school seemed infinite.

On that first day they had no clue that one of them would experience the worst of losses (day 691) and another would watch her family break apart (day 38) and another would fall deeply and dangerously in love without buckling up for the ride (day 1,045). There would be a fatal car accident (day 123), a supreme betrayal (day 489), a kiss with the most unlikely person at a waterfall in the woods (day 943), and a walk along the Seine in Paris (day 352), where a long-held secret is definitely not discussed.

And then there would be that night (day 1,386) when it all unraveled.

But back to day one. The beginning.

GREGOR

“DO YOU REALIZE
this is going to be life-changing?” Dinky asked Gregor.

Gregor opened his eyes wide like
shut up
, but Dinky didn't seem to notice. Sometimes his friend missed social cues. Or maybe he just didn't care.

They were in the backseat, speeding toward the high school. The air smelled like fruity skin cream, and on the floor at Gregor's feet, there was a pair of turquoise sneakers and a pink sports bra. Gregor tried not to look at the bra, but his eyes kept wandering back to it.

“By life-changing,” Dinky said, “I mean, this year is going to
change our lives
.”

Gregor's sister, Erica, groaned from the front.

That was exactly what Gregor didn't want, to give his sister any ammunition. She was only a year older, but she acted like she was twenty.

“Seriously,” Erica said as she smeared moisturizer onto her calves. She smirked at her friend Callie, who was driving. Erica didn't have her license yet. She didn't even turn sixteen until next
June. “It's your
freshman year
of high school, guys. It's not like you're going to law school.”

“Newbies,” Callie murmured, flicking on her blinker and turning into the nearly empty parking lot.

“Exactly,” Erica said. “Newbies.”

Gregor stared out the window, his cheeks burning as hot as his bright red hair. It was bad enough that his dad had insisted Erica take him along when she and Callie went to cross-country practice. He thought it would be good for Gregor to see the high school before anyone was there, to find his locker and homeroom and the orchestra room. Gregor was relieved when Dinky agreed to join, but now he wasn't so sure that was a good idea.

As they got out of the car, Erica said to Callie, “Russell might be picking me up after cross-country. If he does, can you take my brother and his friend home?”

“Sure.” Callie stretched her arm into the back and grabbed the turquoise sneakers but not the pink sports bra. “I guess that's fine.”

“If you talk to Mom or Dad, don't tell them I went with Russell,” Erica said to Gregor as she shut her door. “Get out at Dinky's house and walk from there. Tell them I went for a run.”

Without even saying good-bye, the girls jogged toward the track, leaving Gregor and Dinky alone in the parking lot, staring at the massive brick building that was going to be their school in,
oh man
, three days.

“Your sister is hot,” Dinky said, grinning. They started toward the side door. It was propped open with a brick. “Forget that Russell dude.”

Gregor punched Dinky's arm. Dinky and his sister? No way.

“That's what high school will be like,” Dinky said, popping his shoulders as he walked. This was Dinky's version of a strut. “Cute girls. Big dudes with facial hair. You have to think about being cool. I want to be drum major, maybe even next year. You should go out for band with me. Do drums too.”

“I've got cello,” Gregor said. He'd been playing since he was five. That was who he was, what he did.

“You're a prodigy on cello. We all know that. But you can play drums, too. Girls like drummers.”

Dinky pulled the side door open, and they peered down the long corridor. It was quiet and dark in there, and the floors were so shiny, they seemed wet. Gregor had been to Hankinson High School before, for Erica's holiday concert and a few school plays, but now it felt huge and intimidating. He unwrapped a piece of gum for himself and handed another one to Dinky.

“Should we go in?” he asked.

“I guess,” Dinky said quietly.

Neither of them moved. Gregor squished the gum between his molars. With his braces he wasn't supposed to chew gum, but he could do it as long as he was careful.

Just then they heard the tinny jingle of “Pop! Goes the Weasel.” It was getting closer and closer. The ice cream man.

“Do you have any money?” Dinky asked.

Gregor reached into his pocket. “Yeah . . . some.”

“Should we?”

“Sure. We can look around the school at orientation instead.”

They sprinted across the closely cropped emerald lawn and
waved down the ice cream man. Dinky ordered a Chipwich. Gregor got a Creamsicle.

“Awesome,” Dinky said, spitting his gum into the napkin. “Thanks.”

The ice cream truck blared its music and steered up the hill toward the football stadium.

“Anytime,” Gregor said as they sat on the curb.

Gregor licked his Creamsicle, sucking the sweet flavor out of his braces. The cheerleaders were shrieking in the stadium, and the runners were doing stretches over at the track. The whole thing made his stomach flip like crazy.

“High school is big, you know,” Dinky said, gnawing at his frozen cookie. “You start out one person and finish as someone completely different.”

Gregor wiped his chin with a napkin. He wasn't sure how he felt about that. So far in his life, nothing major had happened. It was mostly cello, school, video games, his family, his friends. He'd made out with a girl from orchestra last year. It was awkward, about as sexy as kissing a Pez dispenser. Maybe his life was a little boring, but he wasn't so sure he wanted it to be changed.

ZOE

THE DRIVER STEPPED
out of the black SUV and nodded at Zoe. “Are these your bags?”

“Yeah,” she said quietly. Her hair was pulled into a messy ponytail, and she was hot even though it was only sixty. Zoe glanced down. She was wearing ripped jeans and a yellow tank top. Her mom, who was Sierra Laybourne, always said yellow wasn't her color. There were toothpaste droppings on Zoe's left boob that looked like bird poop. She hoped no one would recognize her in the airport and take a picture. If they did, she'd smile and act like everything was fantastic. That's what she'd been doing her entire life.

The driver slammed the back shut and walked around to open her door. His square jaw was frozen into a frown. He reminded Zoe of her mom's bodyguard from last spring.

Behind the driver, their house loomed majestic with massive stone columns. She and her mom had been in Coldwater Canyon for a year, and this place was huge even by LA standards. It freaked Zoe out—all the long hallways and empty rooms. It didn't help that kids back in eighth grade told her that a producer drowned in their
pool twenty years ago. That was a creepy image whenever Zoe went swimming.

Zoe buckled her seat belt. It hadn't started out as a terrible day. Just this morning she and Sierra had gotten pedicures by the pool. Her mom let her pick the color for both of them, and she'd gone with purple. It had seemed like a typical day, a flurry of texts for her mom, a rug being delivered, a cook who specialized in raw foods. The one strange thing was that her mom's manager, Max, had locked himself in the office, hissing into his phone.

But then, an hour ago, their housekeeper had walked into Zoe's room. “I'm so sorry to be the one telling you this,” Rosa said, “but you need to pack.”

“For what?” Zoe asked. She'd been texting with a few girls, planning what to wear for the first day of ninth grade. “Are my mom and I going somewhere?”

Rosa pinched the bridge of her nose. They no longer had a nanny on weekends, so the housekeeper was Zoe's main point of contact.

“No, it's you,” Rosa said, her eyes crinkling sympathetically. “I'm sorry, Zoe. Max just told me too. Your mom's already left for Arizona. She's going to be getting help again. Longer this time.”

Back when Zoe was in seventh grade, her mom had gone to rehab to “rest and focus on her goals,” as she'd described. It was only for two weeks, so Zoe had stayed in LA with her nanny.

“So where am I going?” Zoe asked after a second.

“Max said you're flying to Hankinson this afternoon,” Rosa told her. “He set it all up.”

Zoe bit at her thumbnail. She knew things were getting worse with her mom, but it wasn't like anyone was talking about it. It
wasn't like anyone ever talked about
anything
.

“What?”
she asked, her voice rising.

Rosa touched her arm. Their housekeeper was on the older side and had a granddaughter around Zoe's age who she sometimes brought over.

“I know it's not fair,” Rosa said, “but you can try to make the best of it.”

“Where
is
Hankinson, anyway?”

“It's in New York State. Your aunt lives there. That's nice, right? You're going to stay with her for a while.”

Her
aunt
? She'd never even
met
her mom's sister. The only evidence she existed were pictures of her in old albums, and the fact that she always sent birthday presents for Zoe—a sweater or a necklace. She signed the cards
Aunt Jane
. That was more than what Zoe knew about her father, which was nothing. No evidence at all. She'd asked about him, but her mom had always said it wasn't important.

Rosa disappeared into the hallway. She came back a few minutes later wheeling two pink suitcases.

“The car will be here in an hour,” she said. “I'll go get your ski coat, and then I can help you pack.”

“But it's September,” Zoe said. “Why do I need my ski coat?”

Rosa wiped at her eyes like she was tearing up. “It gets cold in New York.”

As the SUV meandered down the long driveway and waited for the gate to open, Zoe realized that packing her ski coat meant that Rosa knew she'd be in Hankinson until winter. She cried the whole way to the airport while the driver adjusted the volume on the music.

Two days later Zoe was twenty-seven hundred miles across the country at her aunt's house in central New York State. Her feet were tangled in the sheets, her belly cramping like she was getting her period.

She clutched her phone, quiet in her hand. A zit was erupting on her chin. Great . . . her period, a zit, and a new school all in the same day.

“Zoe?” Jane shouted upstairs. “Ready for breakfast?”

Jane was her mom's older sister. She'd told Zoe to call her Aunt Jane, but that felt too weird. From what Zoe had pieced together, her mom and aunt had had a fight before Zoe was born and had barely talked since.

“Orientation starts in forty minutes,” Jane added.

Zoe pressed her face into the pillow. She
so
didn't want to go to freshman orientation at some school she'd never heard of until two days ago. She checked her phone. Still nothing.

“Zoe?” Jane was walking up the stairs. “Are you awake?”

“Yeah, I'm up,” Zoe said. She was wearing only underwear and a tank top that stretched tight over her stomach. She never let anyone see her this naked—not even her mom. That's what her mom's outburst in London had been about. Zoe wouldn't let her into the dressing room to see how flabby she looked in that stupid bikini. Her mom's body was so perfect, straw-thin thighs and her famous Pilates-flat stomach. How could Zoe have known that someone would record her mom screaming outside her dressing room door and that it would go viral? The thing was, her mom wasn't even a shouter. Usually, when she was mad, she'd go in her room and give Zoe the silent treatment. Zoe guessed that the meltdown meant her
mom was drinking again, which she hadn't done since she went to rehab two years ago.

“I'm just checking that you didn't fall back asleep,” Jane said through the closed door. “The waffles are almost ready. Do you want yogurt, too?”

So far Jane seemed nice enough, though Zoe was less than thrilled that she was forcing her to go to orientation today and to start at the local high school tomorrow.

“I don't get why I have to go,” Zoe had told her over dinner the night before. It was make-your-own tacos, something she'd never done before. Just like she'd never had ice cream at a roadside stand or done her own laundry or been inside a Walmart. “As soon as Sierra gets home, I'll be going back to
my
school.” Zoe went to a private school in Santa Monica called Topanga Day. She'd gone there since fourth grade.

Jane had shaken her head. “You're here, so you'll go to school. It's what your mom would want.”

How could Jane even
know
what her mom would want? They hadn't talked in fifteen years.

That was last night. Now Zoe sat up in bed and touched her volcanic zit. She'd give it a good squeeze later, after orientation. Jane sneezed. She was right outside the door.

“Just waffles, please,” Zoe said. She slid her phone into the small orange bag that her mom bought her in London before everything had fallen apart.

“See you downstairs,” Jane said. “I don't want to harass you, but we need to leave in twenty minutes.”

As Zoe wriggled on a bra under her tank top, she paused to
examine her toenails. On the airplane ride east, she'd decided to leave her purple polish on until she saw her mom again. She texted her mom to tell her that, but Max had written back instead.
Sierra doesn't have her phone with her in Arizona.
That was all he said.

BOOK: Infinite in Between
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ads

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