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Authors: Aaron Starmer

BOOK: Spontaneous
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how you feel

T
o describe how you feel after a girl explodes in your pre-calc class is a tad tricky. I imagine it's similar to how you feel when any tragedy comes hurtling into your life. You're scared. You're fragile. You flinch. All the time. You may have never even thought about what holds life together. Until, of course, it comes apart.

Same with our bodies. You can imagine cancer and other horrible things wreaking havoc on our doughy shells, but you don't ever expect our doughy shells to, quite literally, disintegrate. So when the unimaginable happens, when the cosmos tears into your very notion of what's possible, it's not that you become jaded; it's that you become unsure. Unsure that you'll ever be sure about anything ever again.

You get what I'm saying, right? No? Well, you will.

For now, maybe it's easier to speak about practicalities, to describe what exactly happens after a girl explodes in your pre-calc class. You get the rest of the day off from school, and the rest of
the week too. You talk to the cops on three separate occasions, and Sheriff Tibble looks at you weird when you don't whimper as much as the guy they interviewed before you. You are asked to attend private therapy sessions with a velvet-voiced woman named Linda and, if you want, group therapy sessions with a leather-voiced man named Vince and some of the other kids who witnessed the spontaneous combustion.

That's what they were calling it in the first few weeks: spontaneous combustion. I had never heard of such a thing, but there was a precedent for it—for people catching fire, or exploding, with little-to-no explanation. Now, unless you've been living in the jungles of New Guinea for the last year, you already know all this, but if you want a refresher on the history of spontaneous combustion, head on over to Wikipedia. Skip the section on “The Covington Curse” if you want the rest of this story to be spoiler-free.

From Linda, I learned that it was normal to feel completely lost when a girl spontaneously combusts in your pre-calc class. Because in those first few weeks I'd find myself crying all of sudden, and then making really inappropriate jokes the next moment, and then going about the rest of the day like it was all no big deal.

“When something traumatic happens, you fire your entire emotional arsenal,” Linda told me. “A war is going on inside of you, and I'm here to help you reload and make more targeted attacks. I'm here to help the good guys win.”

At the group sessions, Vince didn't peddle battlefront metaphors. He hardly spoke at all. He simply repeated his mantra: “Talk it out, kids. Talk it out.”

So that's what we did. Half of us “kids” from third period
pre-calc met in the media room every Tuesday and Thursday at four, and we shared our stories of insomnia and chasing away bloody visions with food and booze and all sorts of stuff that therapists can't say shit about to your parents because they have a legal obligation to keep secrets.

Nutty as she was, Linda helped. So did Vince. So did the rest of my blood-obsessed peers, even the ones who occasionally called me insensitive on account of my sense of humor.

“Sorry, but my cell is blowing . . . spontaneously combusting,” I announced during a Thursday session when my phone kept vibrating with texts. It had been only six weeks since we'd all worn Katelyn on our lapels. In other words, too soon.

“I realize that jokes are a form of coping,” Claire Hanlon hissed at me. “But tweet them or something. We don't need to hear them here.”

“Sorry but I don't tweet,” I told her.

That said, I did fancy myself a writer. Long form, though. I had even started a novel that summer. I titled it
All the Feels.
I think it was young adult fiction, what some might call paranormal romance. I didn't care, as long as I could sell the movie rights. Which didn't seem like an impossibility. The story was definitely relatable. It was about a teenage boy who was afraid of his own emotions. In my experience, that summed up not only teenage boys, but teenagers in general. Case in point:

“This is a healing space and that makes it a joke-free zone,” Claire went on. “I don't want to relive that moment and you're liable to give me a flashback.”

“I like Mara's jokes,” Brian Chen responded. “They help me
remember it's okay to smile. I don't know if I'd still be coming to these things if it wasn't for Mara.”

“Thank you, Bri,” I said, and at that point I began to realize that we were a bit of a cliché. Stories about troubled teenagers often feature support groups where smart-ass comments fly and feelings get hurt, where friends and enemies are forged over one-liners and tears. But here's the thing. Even if we were a bit of a cliché, we were only a cliché for a bit. Because almost immediately after announcing his dedication to my humor, Brian Chen blew up.

sorry

I
did that on purpose. I didn't give you much of a chance to know Brian and then I was all, like, “Oh yeah, side note, that dude exploded too.” I understand your frustrations. Because he seemed like a nice guy, right? He was. Undoubtedly. One of the nicest guys around. He didn't deserve his fate.

That's the thing. When awful fates snatch people away, sometimes it happens to someone you know a little and sometimes it happens to someone you know a lot, and in order to shield yourself from the emotional shrapnel, it's better to know those someones a little. So I was trying to do you a solid, by getting the gory details out of the way from the get-go. Unfortunately, you won't always have that luxury. Because to understand my story, you're going to have to get to know at least a few people, including a few who blow up.

A bit about Brian, because he deserves a bit. He was half Korean and half Chinese. I'm not sure which half was which,
which is racist I guess. I don't doubt that Brian knew that Carlyle is an English name while McNulty is an Irish name, but all these months later and I still can't be bothered to find out if Chen is Korean or Chinese in origin. I know. I'm a total dick. As I said, I'm not necessarily proud of it.

Thing is, I liked Brian. I even kissed him once. On the eighth grade trip to Washington, DC, we were in the back of the bus and he rested his head on my shoulder. We weren't good friends or anything, but it was one of those moments. Hot bus. Long drive. All of us tired and woozy.

When no one was looking, I kissed him on the lips. No tongue, but I held it for a couple of seconds. It was more than a peck. I did it because I thought it would feel nice. His lips seemed so soft. And it did feel nice. And soft. But Brian pretended to be asleep, even though it was obvious he was awake. My elbow was touching his chest and I felt his heart speed up. So I also pretended to be asleep, because that's what you do when you kiss a guy and he pretends to be asleep. You follow suit, or you end up embarrassing yourself even more.

We went on with our lives after that. Went to the Smithsonian Air and Space Museum, the Washington Monument, the Pentagon. Then we went home. We didn't talk about what I did. Which was fine by me. Brian didn't spread rumors or try to take advantage of the situation. Like I said, one of the nicest guys around. He still smiled at me in the hall, used my name when he saw me.

“Good to see you, Mara.”

“How'd that bio test turn out, Mara?”

“Can I offer you a baby carrot, Mara?”

Brian liked baby carrots. Loved them, actually. Ate them all the time. Raw. Unadorned. No dip or peanut butter or anything to make them taste less carroty. He kept a bag of them in his backpack and munched his way through life. I don't know if it was an addiction or a discipline, but either way you kind of had to respect it.

What you didn't have to respect was that he wore the same pair of filthy neon-blue sneakers everywhere, even to dances and Katelyn's memorial service. He called them his “laser loafers,” a term that didn't catch on, as he'd obviously hoped it would. He'd gone viral once and figured he could harness that magic again. It doesn't work that way, though.

Viral, you ask? The boy went viral? In a manner of speaking, yes. Because Brian Chen was the proud creator of Covington High's favorite catchphrase: “Wrap it up, short stuff!”

It was dumb luck, really. He had first said it during a group presentation in English class when the five-foot-two-inch Will Duncan kept blabbing on and on about how sad it was that Sylvia Plath “offed herself by sticking her head in the oven because she was actually pretty hot, in addition to being crazy talented.”

“Wrap it up, short stuff!” Brian blurted out to shut his pal up and everybody lost their shit. By the end of the week, “Wrap it up, short stuff!” was something we said to long-winded people. Then we started hollering it at my parents' deli to the guys who literally wrapped up the sandwiches. Then we started using it as shorthand for “please use a condom or else you're gonna end up with a baby or a disease, basically something that will ruin your life.”

I know. Wrap it up, short stuff.

So, yeah, Brian Chen was a nice guy. A carroty guy with soft lips, filthy sneakers, and a catchphrase. Now you know him, and I hope you understand that when I make jokes about him and the other people who were here and gone in an instant, it's because of a billion things that are wrong with me. But it's not because they deserve it.

what was wrong with us

H
ere's what happens when a guy blows up during your group therapy session that's supposed to make you feel better about people blowing up. The group therapy session is officially canceled. You do not feel better.

What also happens is all nine remaining members of the group therapy session are escorted to the police station in an armored vehicle. With Katelyn, they let us shower before the cops got involved, but no such luck with Brian. It was too much of a coincidence. Same group of people, same
wa-bam
.

This wasn't terrorism. Or, to be more accurate, Brian wasn't a suicide bomber. Around here, nobody thinks an East Asian person would be a terrorist. Which is silly, really, because East Asia has plenty of terrorists. Back in the nineties, there were a bunch of Japanese terrorists who filled a subway station with poison gas and killed a shit-ton of people. No Turk has pulled off something
that audacious, as far as I know. It's definitely racist to think that Katelyn was a terrorist and Brian wasn't.

But that's what people thought. Or they thought someone else in our class was behind both incidents. So the cops shuffled us pre-calc, group-therapy saps into a conference room where we sat, bloody and stunned, under awful fluorescent bulbs that flickered every few seconds.

“Gahhh!” Becky Groves screamed as soon as the cops left us alone. They had gathered in the hall to talk to some FBI agents. To strategize, I guess.

“Let 'em cool their heels a bit,” they were probably saying as they blew on their coffee. “Get their stories straight and then, blammo, we'll work the old McKenzie Doubleback on these perps.”

Yes, yes, I know, I know. There's no such thing as the “McKenzie Doubleback,” but I'm sure they have names for their interrogation techniques.

Anyway, once Becky Groves was done screaming—which was a few seconds later because she's Becky Groves and she has the lungs of a water buffalo—Claire Hanlon said, “So who did it?”

“Really?” I replied.

“Really!” Claire snapped. “The police know this can't be a coincidence . . . and I know this can't be a coincidence . . . and I know I didn't do it . . . and so it has to be one of you.” An aneurysm seemed imminent the way Claire was panting out the words.

“How?” Malik Deely asked.

“However . . . people like you . . . do these sorts of things,” Claire said.

You don't use the term “people like you” around people like
Malik (that is, black people), but he had a cool-enough head to let logic beat out emotion.

“Seriously?” he said. “Seriously? There was no bomb. The guy's chair was completely intact. Becky was sitting right next to him and she's fine.”

“Gahhh!” Becky screamed again, this time with her eyes squeezed shut and her hands clawing at her frizzy red hair.

“Physically fine, I mean,” Malik said. “We all are. Something inside these kids just . . .
went off
.”

Greyson Hobbs, Maria Hermanez, Gabe Carlton, Yuki Dolan, and Chris Welch were all in the room too, but they weren't saying anything. Their perplexed eyes kept darting back and forth as we spoke. It was like they were foreign tourists who'd stumbled into a courtroom. They weren't trying to figure out who was innocent or guilty. All they wanted to know was “How the hell did we end up in this place? Which way is the way back to Disney World?”

When the door opened, those perplexed eyes all darted to Special Agent Carla Rosetti of the FBI. I would learn later that she wasn't necessarily the best and brightest, but at that moment, compared to our schlumpy local boys-in-blue, she looked like the real goddamn deal.

She stood in the doorway decked out in a white shirt, dark blazer, dark pants, and dark pumps. Standard FBI attire, I assumed, though a bit baggier than what the chicks on TV rocked. The clothes were obviously chain-store bought, but from a nice chain store. Ann Taylor or something. Even without the outfit, her name was Carla Rosetti and how could she not be an ass-kicking federal agent with a name like that?

“Your parents are here to collect you,” Special Agent Carla Rosetti said as she stepped into the room. “But first you will be surrendering your clothing. There are showers and sweat suits. You'll wash down, dress up, and go home. You'll be hearing from us tomorrow morning.”

“No.
You
will be hearing from
my lawyer
.
Tonight
,” Claire said. “I have rights, you know?”

“I never said you didn't,” Special Agent Carla Rosetti remarked. “I simply asked you to give me my evidence, evidence I obtained a warrant to collect. The alternative is to walk out the door and face some serious criminal charges, which I'm sure will delight your parents, especially after you've covered the interiors of their Audis with bloodstains. Kids have been getting changed for gym class for time immemorial. This is no more a violation of your rights than that. I'll blow a whistle and force you to play dodgeball if that'll make you feel more comfortable, though I'm not constitutionally obliged to.”

Special Agent Carla
Fucking
Rosetti.

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