New Horizons (26 page)

Read New Horizons Online

Authors: Dan Carr

BOOK: New Horizons
3.91Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

She gave me a ‘B-’ in geography, and an ‘A’ in art. I was terrible at art and that was just funny that she did that. She must have done that to a lot of kids because she didn’t know what good art was supposed to look like. She was a geography teacher, for fuck sake.

Lisa Hatcher was at the back of the classroom, near most of her group in the corner. She was taking her stuff out of the baggie even though Mary had told us to leave it where it was. That was what being in a classroom environment was all about. There was always someone telling people to do something, and then there were people doing what they wanted, and it was just a cycle of that bullshit every single day.

Mary wrote the instructions on the blackboard. They were pretty basic, and not as difficult as you would think a dream catcher was to make. She even drew little circle diagrams so we would have something to follow in case we wanted to skip ahead of the directions. Because maybe some of us were good at making dream catchers.

“You can do whatever colour you like for your feathers and beads,” Sharon said. “They are all up on the desk here to pick from.”

One by one we went up and chose the colours we wanted. But instead of using the white twine we were provided with in our baggies, I saw that there was black twine in the bin.

“Can I take some of that instead of white?” I asked.

“Of course,” Mary said.

We traded twine, and I grabbed the beads and feathers that I wanted instead of the ones I was given. Each person got their turn, and then the class was quiet in concentration. Sharon and Mary went around and helped when it was needed, and offered advice to those who didn’t really want it. When Mary came around to me, she looked down and smiled.

“That looks lovely, Valerie.”

“Thank you.”

Everything about it was black. It had black thread in the middle and black cord around the hoop. And black feathers. My beads were a glossy black that reflected a slight purple. The beads that held the feathers were all black, except one, which was a deep red.

“That is a very dark dream catcher,” Sharon said.

“Yes, it is.”

Sharon went to the front of the class while we were finishing up our dream catchers. She began to explain what exactly a dream catcher was meant to do. The mechanics of it. The science behind thread catching your nightmares and trapping them in a web.

“There are many stories about how exactly a dream catcher works, but I like the one I was told when I was little girl. The dream catcher is meant to be hung near light, right over the bed where the dreamer is to lay. And at night, when you’re asleep, the good dreams know how to escape through the knots and cords of the dream catcher, and fall down the feathers to your sleeping self, and the bad dreams get lost and tangled in the web, where they can’t escape. By sunrise, the bad dreams are washed away, and the good dreams were free the entire time.”

I raised my hand.

“Yes Valerie.”

“I am not a huge sleeper. Now, will this help the good dreams get into my head if I’m not asleep.”

“I believe you have to be asleep to dream.”

Some people’s dream catchers were pretty bad. The ropes weren’t tight, and the feathers looked like they were going to fall off. I guess the residents had no interest in it. Murray didn’t have an interest in it. He kept looking over at me.

“Hey Murray?”

He sat up straighter in his seat.

“Quit looking at me. I’m trying to work on my dreams over here.”

He turned his head back to his dream catcher. It didn’t look to be going so well. His feathers were thin, some even falling out, and the web was loose. I doubt it would do a good job of catching any dreams.

“Now, since we are done, we are going to trade,” Mary said.

“Trade?” I loved my dream catcher. I didn’t want anyone else’s dream catcher catching my dreams. It wouldn’t do a good job.

“Logan.”

Logan looked up at Sharon.

“Trade with Valerie.”

“No.”

“Yes.”

“No. Hers is ugly.”

“No, hers is her own interpretation of a dream catcher.”

“Well, her interpretation is ugly.”

“Come on Logan, be a good sport. I made this for you.” I handed my interpretation of a dream catcher, as Sharon had called it, over to Logan.

Logan reluctantly took it. When she handed me hers, I realized why she didn’t want mine—my black, scary, nightmare one. Because Logan’s was all sorts of different things that didn’t go together. There were mixed up beads, with no pattern. There were feathers of different sizes and fluffiness all over the place, and her web was uneven, which made the hole off centre. It made sense that she didn’t want to give me her dream catcher. Because hers was strangely beautiful.

“Logan, you can take it back.”

“No, it’s fine.” She looked down at the black one, and flipped it over in her hands to see if both sides were just as plain and sad. “It’s…okay.”

I smiled because it was so sad. That I had a colourful, wildly constructed dream catcher. And she was stuck with mine. A black, dead looking thing.

At the end of class, we were instructed to go to the mess hall for lunch. I headed for the classroom door, but before I could get out, Murray grabbed me by the arm.

“Separate you two,” Mary said.

“Yeah, Murray, let’s separate.”

He dropped his hand from me.

I moved out the door. There was nothing he could say that would ever change my mind about him. He was nothing like I thought he was. He was all bad.

“Val, can I talk with you?” Murray followed close behind me. It felt like his feet were going to clip my heels and trip me.

I didn’t stop walking.

“Val.”

I turned around and stopped.

“What’s going on? Can’t we still be friends?” he asked.

“We are both residents in a program for troubled youth. Sure, let’s be friends. Because it’s really going to go somewhere in the real world.”

“What’s wrong with you?”

“What’s wrong with me? More like what’s wrong with you. You’re fucked up. You beat the shit out of a girl.”

“It wasn’t like that. I didn’t touch her.”

“Oh right, it was just the knife that did all the work.”

“I didn’t cut her.”

I laughed. “That is such a relief. Never mind then, you’re a saint.”

“It was self-defence.”

“You held a knife up to a girl’s throat. And not any random girl. She was your girlfriend. How is that self-defence?”

“She was crazy.”

“She was crazy, eh?” I shook my head. It was exhausting talking to people that wanted things really bad and didn’t see things how they actually were. “Why did you lie to me? Why didn’t you just tell me the truth? You don’t know me, and I don’t know you, and we will never know each other in any other way outside of this place. So why couldn’t you just be honest? It’s so dumb to lie about dumb things. Nobody cares. You shouldn’t either.”

“I didn’t lie about anything, and I wasn’t trying to keep it a secret. I just don’t want to talk about it. That can’t be too hard for you to understand, can it? I want to be good,” he said. His voice was shaky. “Just like you do, I’m sure.”

“It’s not hard, Murray. You make it seem like it’s hard. It’s pretty fucking easy to be good. You just have to choose so, and you do it.”

“Is that why you held a gun up to your head?” he asked. “Because you were being good?”

“Holy shit.”

I cringed when I heard the new voice behind me. All I hoped was that it wasn’t who I thought it was. But when I turned around, it was the last person I wanted knowing anything nuts about me.

Logan’s eyebrows were high on her head. Her mouth was open a crack. I could see her front teeth. Just the edges. It was enough to see that they were straighter than mine.

“What’s the difference between what I did to someone else and what you did to yourself?” Murray asked. “I don’t see a difference. If you try to hurt yourself, you might as well be hurting the people who care about you.”

“I just can’t trust you, Murray.” I hesitated for a second. “You’re bad.”

“You’re one to talk,” Logan said.

I looked over at her. Because she was probably right. What was the difference between Murray and I? What was the difference between holding up a knife to someone else, and holding up a gun to yourself? Both were very different, but both were wrong to try.

“What?” she said. “You know I’m right.”

“Mind your fucking business,” I said.

“Oh, just like you, right?” Logan asked.

Murray moved ahead of me. He left me with Logan. I didn’t know what was worse. They were both two different kinds of people that I couldn’t exist with.

“Go have lunch, ladies.” Mary pointed down the hall. “You’re late.”

Logan and I headed back to the dining area in the mess hall. While we walked, I placed my hands on random prints spread out across the walls. It was something to do to avoid a conversation with her. But that didn’t mean she didn’t stop talking.

“So you tried to kill yourself, eh?”

“I did not.”

“The facts suggest otherwise.”

There was barely any hallway left to walk toward. It was becoming an open space, with tables, and people. No corners to disappear in.

“Did you think a gun was your cell phone? Were you trying to make a call? I mean, what other reason do you need to hold a gun up to your head?”

There was no easy answer. Not that I was ever going to answer that. But I had thought about it quite a bit since the night I had done it. The gun was sitting in a drawer of a side table. A random handgun at a random party, ready for someone to mess with. And it was loaded because that was what I had imagined it to be when I lifted it up and held it to my temple. It might’ve been empty, but that didn’t matter. I pressed the tip against my skin, closed my eyes, and—-

There were shrieks.

I lifted the gun from my skin, and turned around. There were cops at the door, and one was looking right at me with the gun near my neck, still pointed toward me. He began to yell at me, and then people were yelling my name, telling me to drop the gun. So I did.

In that second, a thousand pound weight had been lifted off my shoulders. The music was still blaring through the house while the party was breaking up, and once the cops pushed me to the floor, a flood of relief washed over me—-

I had scared the shit out of myself.

It felt good to know that I was afraid to die, or that I wanted to live—it had been a while since I’d been reminded of that.

“I knew you were suicidal—the quiet ones always are.”

“I’m not suicidal. I promise.”

“Sure.”

“Why are you bothering me? Go bug Murray. Ask him why he held a knife up to his girlfriend’s throat. That should be more interesting than my story.”

“No, I know that story. It was self-defence.” She took a seat on her side of the table, next to Twin.

I sat down next to Brooke before rolling my eyes.

“Roll your eyes all you want, little girl. If you’re not going to listen to his side of the story, than you can’t make up your own.”

“You don’t know the real story.”

“And neither do you. Maybe he is crazy. I don’t know, but I don’t give a shit like you seem to.”

It was an annoying thing to hear. That Murray might still be innocent. That he might still be a good person even though he held up a knife to someone’s throat. Context seemed to matter. But it took energy to look into things. And it was easier to make things up.

“So what do you think?” Logan asked.

“I think this is all exhausting and I don’t really give a shit. It has nothing to do with me.”

“Then stay out of his business. Actually, maybe quit giving a shit entirely and then I might believe that when you say it.”

I decided right then to do just that. To stop thinking about anyone around me. Because it was too hard. It was difficult dealing with other people’s problems, getting involved, all the while having my own life lurking over me. If I wanted to ever be good, I had to worry about myself and not think about anyone else.

 

 

 

 

 

 

16:
THE TAKEN FIREFLY

 

After lunch we were given an hour of bunk time.
It was a windy day in New Horizons. The woods were throwing up all over our cabin and shaking us. It felt like the cabin was going to lift off its cement blocks and blow away. Kenzie screamed when a branch flew into the window and shook the glass.

“It’s scary out there,” Twin whispered. It was the middle of the day. Still light out. And she was still right.

I lied on my stomach and examined Logan’s dream catcher that was now mine. It hung over my head, in case I wanted to dream up anything later. Everyone was hanging theirs up too, going about their little routines in their bunks.

Brooke had a deck of cards. She was laying them out in front of her. I had no idea what game she was playing with herself and I was too scared to ask in case she asked me to join. Tracy had a book from the library bookcase. I heard her turning the pages below me, and I noticed earlier that it was a Judy Blume book.

Other books

The Last Girl by Riley Shasteen
The United States of Fear by Tom Engelhardt
Things I Did for Money by Meg Mundell
Joyous and Moonbeam by Richard Yaxley
On the Waterfront by Budd Schulberg
Don't Ever Get Old by Daniel Friedman
Prelude of Lies by Victoria Smith
Accidentally Wolf by Elle Boon
Serious Ink by Ranae Rose