Swansong (6 page)

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Authors: Rose Christo

BOOK: Swansong
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“Wanna hang out sometime?” Marguerite asks.

I rub my eyes with my hands, my fingers sprinkled with paint.

I freeze.

My hand.  My left hand.  Where is—

I flip my hand over, inspecting the fingers, the knuckles.  The charm bracelet jangles around my wrist.  I turn my hand over and peruse my palm lines.

Clean, fresh skin.  Unblemished.  No skin grafts.  No burns.

I can feel the cold sweat beading on the back of my neck.  I can feel the pulses in my temples jumping, erratic, afraid.

“Wendy?” says Miss Rappaport, turning around.

“C-Can I be excused?”

 

* * * * *

 

I run down the hallway, down the staircase, seldom aware of where I’m really going.  My head is bursting with pain.

A paintbrush disappearing—I can accept that.  Maybe I misplaced it somewhere obvious, but I can’t remember.  I’ve had memory lapses already.

How do you misplace scar tissue?

Was the scar tissue even there to begin with?

Am I losing my mind?

The soles of my shoes echo loudly on the staircase.  Panting, I emerge somewhere on the tenth floor.  My breath echoes through the stuffy steel hallway.  I feel like I’m traversing a metal prison.

I have to sit down.

Shivering, I push open the heavy swinging door to a gymnasium.  The school motto hangs from the overhead arch: 
Semper Ubi Sub Ubi.
  I step underneath it.  I step onto the poured urethane floor, the tiles gleaming in the darkness.

I sit down.

Scar tissue doesn’t just disappear.  It’s called scar tissue for a reason.  I bring my hands to my face.  I feel the dent in my left cheek.  That’s one scar that’s still there.  I run my fingers across my left wrist.  The flaking, bumpy redness—it’s gone.  My wrist is as smooth as it was on the day I was born.

My head splits with sudden pain.

Sickness wells up in my stomach, in my chest.  I hunch over.  The pounding in my skull is as loud as war drums.  I squeeze my eyes shut against the onslaught of white blindness.  Searing, screeching, screaming, my head is on fire, my skin is as hot as the stars, bursting and bright—

“Hey.

My eyes feel as if they’ve swollen shut with tears.  I force them open.  The whiteness dissipates in a cool mist.  And when the clouds part—I see a boy’s face looming in front of my own.

It’s a sharp face, a dark face, cheekbones angling down to a sharp chin, nose long and curved in an ode to the Levant.  It’s a dark brown face framed by light brown curls, tight brown curls, long curls pulled back in a careless ponytail.  Its eyebrows are thick and black and nestled above the most unsettlingly striking eyes—an emerald green bordering on poison.

“Hello?” says the boy, expressionless.

The pain subsides.  “Sorry,” I say, because it feels right.

“For what?”

I don’t know.

The boy offers me a dark hand.  Dizzy, I accept it.  I stand up.  He’s lean but muscled, his arms and legs defined.  He’s wearing a gymnast’s singlet and shorts.  One of the overhead lights is turned on; and when I look past the boy, I realize the gym plays host to bars and beams.  He came here to practice, and I got in the way.

I reclaim my hand.  It’s the hand that’s supposed to be burned.  I don’t understand why it isn’t burned.

“Are you just going to stand here, or what?”

This boy is very forthright.  I mutter another apology.  I turn around, skin stinging, reaching for the door.

“Wait.”

I wait.

But then he doesn’t say anything.  Silence rings loudly through the gymnasium, my dim shadow stretched before me on the double doors.

I turn around.

The boy’s lips are pursed, his eyebrows sagging.  He doesn’t look annoyed; more like…upset.  Apologetic.

“Do you need me to take you to the sick bay?” he asks.

I shake my head quickly.  I stop quickly, too, because it hurts.  “Shouldn’t you be in class?”

“Free period.”

Oh.

“Shouldn’t
you
be in class?”

Should I?  I think I should be home.  I think Jude was right.  I acted too soon.  But how soon is too soon?  I’m never going to be normal again.  I know that.  Then what am I supposed to be waiting for?

“Sick bay,” the boy decides.  “Come on.”

I follow him.  I don’t know why.  I don’t want the nurse calling Judas.  Jude’s done so much for me already—he shouldn’t be bothered with this, too.  But here I am, trailing after a stranger, trudging down hallways and staircases.  We’re on the seventh floor before I remember the elevators.  I suggest them; and the stranger looks at me like I’ve grown a second head.

So I laugh it off.  I try.  “Who are you, anyway?”

“Azel Asad.”  There’s an accent in his voice.  It’s faint, but it’s there.

“I’m Wendy.”  As if he doesn’t already know.

“Nice to meet you.”  But if he does—and he must—he doesn’t let on.

We wind up switching to the elevators.  I’m not in the best shape, and I guess Azel realized as much.  He leans back against the transparent wall with his arms folded loosely, his eyes on the transparent doors.  Where Kory would be chatting up a storm, this boy is very taciturn.  All the more reason for me to feel guilty.

“I’m sorry,” I try again.


Now
what for?”

“Interrupting your practice.”  Twice.  “I could have taken myself.”  But I don’t know where the sick bay is.

Azel turns his head.  Maybe he’s watching the city rise slowly around us as our lift descends.  Maybe he’s watching the heartless corporate buildings pierce the sky.  I’ve done that before.  Back then, I had a stronger stomach.

“Who says you should be alone?” Azel posits.

I look at him.  It’s difficult, because all he’s showing me is his profile.  But those words funnel their way into me, reaching something I’ve tried to hold closed until now.  I’m not alone.  I have Judas.  I don’t have Mom and Dad.  I don’t have Joss.  I’m not alone; but I’m alone.

Azel catches me looking.  “What?”

He sounds…I don’t know.  Embarrassed.

I sneak another glimpse at my hand.  The scar is gone.

“Thanks,” I say.  I don’t know what else to say.

Azel turns his head again.  This time it’s almost defiant, his shoulder twitching, his ponytail bobbing.  I hold back a laugh—a
lmost a real one.

Boys.  They’re so weird.

 

* * * * *

 

The sick bay makes me think of a beehive, the walls gauzy and yellow.  In a school the size of Cavalieri—student body five thousand strong—you’ve got to prepare for the worst.  Threadbare mattresses on thin bedframes line every inch of the wing, a few of them already occupied.

The matron—a big, scary woman in her sixties—checks my temperature and my pulse.  She looks at me sternly.  “You’re pushing yourself,” she diagnoses.

I rub my elbow.  “It’s been three months.”  Three months since the car crash.  I still don’t remember it.

“What’s your point?  Go home if you have to,” she says.  She gives me a hearty slap on the shoulder that nearly sends me sprawling to the floor.  “I’ll write you a note.”

Azel sits reading an archery magazine.  The date on the cover says it’s three years old.

“Should I call your brother?” the matron asks.  She reaches for the phone on the wall.

“No!” I say quickly.  My protest is louder than I expected; a bandaged boy seven beds down turns and stares at me.  I lower my voice.  “Don’t bother him,” I say.  “I’ll walk, it’s not far.”

“On your own?  With a head injury?”

“It’s a head injury, not a leg injury…”

“Don’t you get smart with me.”

“I could go back to class.  Ma’am.”

“No, you can’t,” Azel butts in.

“Who the heck are you?” the matron asks him.

“Are you saying you didn’t see me bring her here?”

“Then you can bring her home, too, hotshot.  Go on,” she says, when he balks.  “I’ll write you a note.  Not like you kids ever get any work done on the first day of school.”

“My sister…” Azel murmurs.

“You want to be back in time for her?  Then I suggest you hurry.  Shoo.”

Azel slaps his magazine closed with a kind of quiet-quelling fury.  Great.  I stand, rubbing my head.  I don’t want to be my own burden, let alone anyone else’s.

“Take care,” Matron says vaguely.

Azel walks me down the stairs to the first floor.  The few students graced with a free period sit lounging around the water fountain, or else ambling off to the canteen.

I feel like apologizing; but I’m tired of apologizing.  “You have a sister?” I ask instead.

“Two of them,” Azel says, without looking at me.  “Aisha’s too little to go to school here.  Layla’s in the year below yours.”

“How do you know what year I’m in?”  He must be a senior.  There’s no way he’s a freshman; and I’m a junior, and he said…

“I’ve seen you around.”

His eyes are straight ahead, focused on the sliding doors.  And then the doors slide open, and we step through them; and his eyes aren’t focused anywhere at all.  And my face is hot—and my head—and I think, well, that happens, when you’re Frankenstein’s brain-damaged monster.

Hot, dry winds whip at my face.  For a place called The Spit, we sure don’t see a lot of rain.  Azel follows me past the 24/7 laundromat, past the faded, peeling banners that lost their relevance over the years.  I wish Azel wouldn’t dog me, even if the matron ordered him to.  I appreciate his help, but I feel like an invalid.  An invalid wasting his time.

It occurs to me that I only hear one set of footsteps slapping the ground.  The bustle and din of the ant colony fall into the backdrop of the city.  I turn around to check on Azel.

He’s standing in one spot, still, silent, watching me with a pensive expression on his face.  Soon as he notices he’s been caught, the expression clears.

“Oh, jeez.”  I try to turn it into a joke.  I try to smile.  “What now?”

Azel doesn’t have the chance to answer me.  The sky opens up in a torrent of rain.

Azel’s shoulders jerk.  He honestly looks like a dog on the end of a leash.

“Go figure,” I say, a little weirded out myself.  I tug the hood of my jacket over my head.

Azel must really hate the rain, because suddenly he’s determined to get away from it.  He walks past me without so much as a word of explanation.  He walks underneath the filthy, dusty overpass.  He sits on the gutter, his sodden curls drooping down his back.

I contemplate walking home without him.  A streak of lightning overhead changes my mind.  I scuttle under the overpass.  Cautiously, I sit beside Azel, the sounds of thunder and tires racing above us.

—But this is weird, isn’t it, because everybody knows The Spit doesn’t see rain.  And to get caught in the rain with a stranger, no less—

“Where are you from?” I ask.  Icebreaker.

“Oman.  Arabian Desert.”

I realize I’ve never met anyone from another country—unless you count Mom and Dad.  Mom and Dad.  The thought of them sends pangs of longing coursing throughout my entirety.  I try and push them from my mind.

“Do you miss it?”  I miss them.

Azel lifts his shoulders in a halfhearted shrug.  His eyes are a little distant.  “They say you can never go home again.”

Don’t I know it.

The rain rages loudly outside our overpass.  The city streets run slick.  It’s funny how dim the day suddenly became.  It looks like early evening, but it’s not even noon.

“Everybody knows,” Azel says quietly.  “About you.”

In a city this size, they shouldn’t.  But it’s always going to be there, I guess—that fascination with the macabre, that heartless curiosity that arbitrarily unites us as members of the same race.  We’re all human.  That makes us hideous.  That makes us beautiful.

“So you pity me?” I ask.  I can feel myself smiling.  Maybe this is my routine now.  I smile when I don’t mean it.

“Of course I pity you,” Azel says.  “Are you going to tell me I shouldn’t?  How can I help it?”

“Some people would say I’m lucky.”  Lucky to have survived.

“Some people are idiots.”

The lights under the overpass are dim with dirt and dust.  Azel’s hair frizzes as it dries.  I’ve never seen anything quite like it.  I can’t help but laugh.

“What?” he asks, cautious.

“You need a brush.”  I’m still laughing.  It feels good.

 

* * * * *

 

The rain lets up long enough for Azel to walk me the rest of the way home.  He follows me into the lobby.  I take off my jacket and ring it out over the rubber doormat.

Azel lapses into a thoughtful silence.  “Are you going to take some time off?”  His silence doesn’t last long.

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