almost dead
Rebecca A. Rogers
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This is a work of fiction. All characters, organizations, and events portrayed in this novel are either products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously.
Copyright © 2013 Rebecca A. Rogers
All rights reserved. This book or any portion thereof may not be reproduced or used in any manner whatsoever without the express written permission of the author, except for the use of brief quotations in a book review.
ISBN: 1481062085
ISBN-13: 9781481062084
First Edition: September 15, 2013
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chapter one • flora
There is no worse feeling in the world than knowing your life sucks, and there isn’t anything you can do to change it. It’s like being on a rollercoaster, constantly traveling up and down in regularity, and never fully coming to a complete stop. Day in and day out, this is the dilemma with my life…or so I think.
There is no better example of my problems than right now: my doorknob jiggles as my mom attempts to gain entrance to my room. The damn thing hasn’t been working properly for the past two years, and neither of my parents has tried to fix it. I guess it isn’t on top of their to-do list; they’re too busy being cheerleaders for my brother, Derek.
The door swings open so quickly it bangs against the wall, leaving an even bigger dent than the one already there.
“Oh, for heaven’s sake, Flora, you’re lying in bed at four o’clock in the afternoon? I want this room cleaned by the time we get back from your brother’s game. Is that understood?”
Why this woman even pretends to be my mother is beyond my comprehension. I can’t recall the last time she and I had any semblance of a mother-daughter relationship. Maybe when I was younger and she could dress me like a doll… Now, I wear whatever I want, whenever I want, however I want. She protested my “depressed-child look”—her words, not mine—at first, but then she gave up altogether on that argument.
“Whatever,” I mumble.
Just to make her point clear, as if I haven’t heard this same one-sided conversation for the past five years, she marches over to my window and parts my curtains like she’s Moses and they’re the Red Sea.
“I want your piles of clothing either hung up in your closet or placed in the laundry bin before we return tonight,” she in"2e/structs. “And since you have so much time on your hands, I’d like the dishes to be washed, as well.”
I don’t know why, but I laugh.
“You think this is funny, young lady? All I do is clean up after you.” She rambles on and on about the usual: how I’m a horrible, embarrassing excuse for a daughter, how nothing she does is ever good enough, how she just doesn’t know what to do with me. Maybe if she actually cared, things would be different.
“I think it’s funny you worry so much about how my room looks, when nobody ever sees it,” I retort with a haughty grin on my face. I can’t help it; this whole situation is pretty damn hilarious. “Remember, Mom? Remember how I’m—what was it you and Dad said?—oh, yeah, grounded until I turn my grades around, or turn eighteen, whichever comes first? And we both know I haven’t exactly made honor roll for the last couple of years.”
Not since I decided to drink Dad’s hidden stash of bourbon and take Mom’s brand-spanking-new Lexus for a spin. Not since I was practically disowned by my family.
“Anyway, I won’t be around much longer,” I say. “A couple more months and I’ll be eighteen, which means I don’t have to live under your roof.” They can have their precious son and forget I ever existed.
Mom eyes me like a bug that should be squashed. But I know her too well—she’s too squeamish and would ask someone else to grab a shoe, splat me, and wipe my entrails over the wooden floorboards.
Mom exits without a word, but not before she narrows her eyes at me.
Derek casually strolls by my room after Mom’s departure and feels the need to add, “It’s not like that, Flor, and you know it. Don’t be so hard on her. The only person you should blame for living this way is yourself.”
I snort. “Who died and made you an inspirational speaker?”
He responds by shaking his head and disappearing down the stairs, his shoes thumping against each step. Chaos ensues in our living room as my parents make sure they have everything for the state playoff game—pullovers, blankets, thermoses, cushioned seats. Everything is in order, from the sound of it.
“Bye, Flor!” Derek calls. But, of course, I don’t say anything. I don’t give a damn about his stupid football games. I don’t give a damn about this shitty life, or the person I’ve become, because they won’t take the time to listen to, to see, the world from my point of view. I don’t care about any of it.
I need a beer, or some hard liquor. That’ll solve my current situation. Plus, the house is tothe hou way too silent, and I don’t want to be left alone with my thoughts.
My cell phone glows and vibrates on my nightstand. Mia. She’s the only person I talk to, the only person who gets me.
I hit the “answer” button. “Good timing.”
“Parents are gone?”
“Of course. Where are they always on weekends?”
Mia makes a weird coughing noise. “Well, that makes two of us.”
“Let me guess…Vancouver? Oh, no, wait…Italy?” It’s custom that nearly every weekend, Mia’s parents are away on business. Yeah, right. There’s no business in Briarhaven entailing that kind of effort. Unless they work for the mafia.
Mia sighs. “Dad said something about taking Mom to Paris. Must be nice, right? Just run off on some romantic weekend getaway and leave your kids here. I mean, I shouldn’t be complaining. The idiots left Laney and me over a thousand bucks each.”
I nearly grunt in annoyance. “Um…wanna trade? All my parents do is stay on my ass about how irresponsible I am, and how I’m not going anywhere with my life. They praise Derek like he fell from heaven. Meanwhile, I’m Satan’s daughter. I sometimes wonder if they’ll ever give up on the same arguments, then I wonder why I even bother asking myself that question to begin with. They’ll never change.”
Mia’s laughter reverberates on the other end. “Hate to break it to ya, but your parents for mine? That’s definitely not a fair trade. I think I’ll keep mine for now.” She then hastily asks, “So, what are your plans tonight? Vegetating on the couch, watching old TV episodes on Netflix?”
“Well…” I draw out. “Actually, I was hoping you’d ask. I kinda want to get out of here. You know, paint the town. Cause a riot. Something to that effect.”
“Anywhere but there?”
“Anywhere but here.”
“All right. You know where I, and my stash, will be.”
I’ve been friends with Mia since our freshman year of high school, and she’s the only person I know who drinks like a fish—and as much as me. She has as many parental issues as I do. For that short instant, when liquor blazes down my throat, I pretend I live a different life, reside in a different town, and socialize with different people. I’m not me at all, and that’s the best part.
After hanging up with Mia, I sort through my closet. Despite my mom’s constant dissatisfaction with the way I treat my clothes, I actually do know where mentknow why belongings are kept. So, it doesn’t take long for me to find a clean shirt, a hoodie, and a pair of shoes to slip into.
One thing’s for certain: I definitely need a jacket today. Icicles have formed into long, sharp daggers on the edge of the roof, and on my battered car. As soon as I exhale a warm breath outside, it forms a puffy cloud, then dissipates. It takes ten minutes just to heat the en
gine on my piece-of-shit vehicle—which, I swear, obtains new dents and scratches every time I see it—and scrape the frost off my windshield before I venture to Mia’s.
The drive to her house is my least favorite road trip ever. There’s a bridge I have to go over, and I honestly don’t know how it’s supported; the sheer drop on either side—a.k.a. Death’s Cliff—is huge. There was a local news report about the history of Death’s Cliff a couple of years ago. Wind and water have continually carved out the rock over thousands of years, and the cliff got its name due to the number of deaths it produces each year. Some people drive their cars over the edge, while others leap to their demise from the overlook. Some of the locals swear that at night, you can hear the souls of the dead crying out for help.
I shudder. Thinking about the rock breaking off or disappearing until there’s nothing left makes me hate driving over the bridge even more.
But I make it across with no problems. There’s always the other way around, but it takes too long, and I’m impatient. Pulling into the Tipps’ driveway, Mia must’ve been watching for me, because her oak-and-glass front door swings open before I can reach what little excuse they have for a porch. Seriously, it doesn’t even exist.
“What took you so long?” she asks, hugging herself. Her dark brown hair sways in the Antarctic breeze. Since she’s not wearing any type of warm clothing, it’s almost a guarantee she’ll soon become a human ice cube.
“I had to see to get here,” I retort. “I don’t have X-ray vision to peek through my windshield, ya know.”
She waves me inside. “Hurry! I’m freezing.”
Glancing around from my position on the foyer, I notice the house is way too quiet. “Laney isn’t here?”
Mia shakes her head. “She had pageant rehearsal.”
“Ah, okay. What’s new, right?”
Her eyes spinning around once, Mia replies, “Right.”
I make myself at home. I’ve been in this house many times over the last few years, so I know every nook and cranny. It’s sad to say, but I doubt Mia’s parents realize she has a friend. Their lives always seem more imperative than their kids’.
The kitchen cabinets are the first thing I raid. Mia stocks up on the best munchies—Doritos, cheese balls, and a lod cls, andad of other things, including candy bars. I wish my parents would buy this stuff.
“Ta-da!” Mia exclaims in a singsong voice, presenting me with a bottle of brand-new vodka.
A wide grin stretches across my face. “How you manage to obtain alcohol is beyond me.”
She shrugs. “It’s simple. My parents buy it for Laney and me, but they tell us we can only drink it as long as we stay home.”
I give her a pointed look. “Yeah, when has that ever worked for you, Miss Queen of Partying?”
Giggling, Mia responds, “Sssh. What they don’t know won’t hurt them.” Then her face switches to a more despondent expression as she stares at the bottle in her hands. “It’s not like they’ll ever find out. I mean, most parents would know stuff like that about their kids by now.”
“Most, but not all,” I say in an attempt to cheer her up. We can’t exactly have a good time if one of us is in a depressed mood.
In true Mia fashion, she blows off her thoughts and starts the mini party. Having found apple juice in the fridge, we mix it with the vodka for a tastier beverage.
“All right. Upstairs, hooker!” Mia jokingly orders. “It’s time for a jam session. I downloaded, like, a hundred songs earlier on my iPod.”
Mia’s room might be considered one of the most dismal places on the planet, but that’s why I love it so much. Her walls are painted a shade of purple so deep that if you squint, they appear black. Her curtains are made of horrendous red lace, which matches nothing but the lingerie she bought for her ex-boyfriend, Matt, one year ago. (She had to trash the sexy outfit after she puked all over herself and Matt in the bedroom. What can I say? The girl knows how to get down and dirty.) All sorts of gruesome art and posters are paper-mâchéd on portions of her purplish-black walls, and Mia’s equally-disturbing canvas collection rests in the corner of her room.
“I haven’t painted much lately,” she says after noticing me side-eyeing her most prized possessions.
I glance at her. “Why not?”
Mia shrugs. “Don’t know. I haven’t really received much inspiration lately.”
Sitting down on the edge of her bed, I shimmy backwards, careful not to spill my drink. “It’ll come to you. I’m sure something tragic will happen to someone you know, and then you can paint your interpretation,” I say, teasingly.
Mia is always melodramatic when it comes to insignificant events. One time, Laney, Mia’s annoying sister, slipped and fell off the stage during a pageant (I wasn’t there, but I heard it was hilarious) and had to be driven to the hospital by ambulance. Laney had a mino>
Needless to say, it was depressing and overly theatrical.
“Ha-ha! Very funny,” Mia states, punching me on the arm and causing me to spill my juice. “Way to ruin my comforter, loser.”
Laughing, I run into Mia’s bathroom and grab a hand towel to absorb the spatter. “There. The rest will dry on its own.”
Mia gives me the stink eye, but then flips through her iPod and places it on the speaker dock. Let’s be honest here—neither of us has impressive dance moves. Mia makes a strange attempt at dancing, where she raises her arms above her head, bends over at the waist, and begins a hacking motion from the elbow down. I think she’s trying to do the robot, but I’m not one hundred percent positive about that. And me? My booty shakes are completely out of control. I bump my ass into Mia once, and she nearly topples over. I do, too, but from laughter. My sides hurt.
Everything is spinning. Me. The walls. My brain. It’s like I’ve been sucked into a time-slowing whirlpool and can’t escape.
I love it, though. This is what weekends are all about. People might say that Mia and I are the black sheep of our families, but we see ourselves as independent. What we do is a form of expression. While our siblings receive all the love and attention from our parents, smothered twenty-four-seven, we’re entirely free.
“I feel like I can fly,” I say, stretching my arms straight out on either side. I close my eyes and imagine I’m high above the world, watching over everyone and everything.
“Yeah, well, if you’re flying, then I want the ability to run super fast,” says Mia. She takes off, sprinting out of her bedroom and running through the hallway. Seconds later, I hear a thud.
“Oh, my God! Are you okay?” I yell, trying not to choke on my drink. I poke my head out of Mia’s room…and she’s laying face-down on the hardwood floor.
“I’m all right. I’m okay.” She pushes herself up to a sitting position, clearly embarrassed, as she won’t look at me. But she eventually stands up. “Well, that was fun while it lasted.”
Grabbing the vodka bottle in her room, clear liquid sloshes back and forth against the container. “Want some more?”
“Duh,” she says, lifting her cup. I think she forgot to add apple juice. That’s going to burn like a mother…
Focusing on the music again, I allow it to blare against my eardrums. The sound is enticing to me, and I begin to feel my body move in ways I’m not familiar with. If Mia’s dancing, I don’t care. It’s just the melody and me, like long-lost dance partners.
But my trip from reality is cut short when Mia sways her hips the wrong way and knocks over her lamp. It shatters when it hits the floor. At first, she laughs, but the longer she stares at the broken pieces, the more she begins to comprehend the mess she made.
“Shit. Help me clean this up, will you?”
I stagger downstairs to grab a broom and dustpan, surprised Mia didn’t just call for Coletta, their housemaid. When I get back to Mia’s room, she’s on her hands and knees, picking up shards of glass.
“Here, take this,” I say, handing her the broom and dustpan, “before you cut yourself.” She drops the p
ieces from her palm and uses the cleaning equipment. “Dude, where’s Coletta? I didn’t see her downstairs.”
Mia puffs out a heavy sigh. “My parents got rid of her. They said she wasn’t doing a very good job of cleaning.” She shrugs. “Whatever. It’s their money, not mine.”
While Mia’s making a concentrated effort of removing glass fragments from her carpet, I lay back on her bed, staring up at the ceiling. God, I haven’t been this fucked up in a while, and it feels amazing. The longer my eyes attempt to focus, the more they lose focus, if that even makes sense. Bright spots speckle my sight. The walls expand and shrink. Mia has a twin I never knew about.
“Have you ever seen these?” I ask, pointing toward the ceiling.
“Seen what?” Mia looks up. Instead of glancing at the ceiling, she stares at my finger.
“No, up there,” I say.
She squints in the direction I point and shakes her head.
“Look harder. There are faces, I swear.”
She laughs. “Oh, my God. We’re so shitfaced right now.”
I rise up, taking another sip. The vodka doesn’t burn as much anymore. As a matter of fact, I can’t savor it, because my taste buds are numb.
Mia dumps the remaining pieces of her lamp into her trash bin (may it rest in peace), grabs her cup, and then plops down beside me. We’re silent for several seconds, until she takes the reins on a new conversation.
“Sooo…I saw Gabe the other day.”
The party music suddenly isn’t so engaging; it’s like scraping a cheese grater across my nerves. Bringing up my ex in any conversation is a bad idea, but it’s even worse when I’m drinking. This is supposed to be my mini vacation away from reality, my getaway, except she just shoved my ass onto a plane and sent me home early.
“Oh, yeah? What’d he have to say?” I’m somewhat interested every time I hear his name. Rumors were legit, though: he cheated on me. So, while the mention of his name turns my stomach and stirs my curiosity simultaneously, the fact remains that he’s still a cheater, and I hate him for that.
Almost Dead (Dead, #1) Page 1