Contents
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Title Page
Contents
Copyright
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
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18
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20
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Acknowledgments
Find Your Story
More Books from HMH Teen
About the Author
Connect with HMH on Social Media
Copyright © 2021 by Sarah Everett
All rights reserved. For information about permission to reproduce selections from this book, write to [email protected] or to Permissions, Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company, 3 Park Avenue, 19th Floor, New York, New York 10016.
hmhbooks.com
Cover illustration © 2021 by Rebecca Mock
Cover design and hand-lettering by Mary Claire Cruz
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Names: Everett, Sarah, author.
Title: Some other now / by Sarah Everett.
Description: Boston : Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, [2021] | Audience: Ages 14 and up. | Audience: Grades 10–12. | Summary: Jessi is caught between two brothers as the three navigate family, loss, and love over the course of her seventeenth and eighteenth summers.
Identifiers: LCCN 2019042911 (print) | LCCN 2019042912 (ebook) | ISBN 9780358251866 (hardcover) | ISBN 9780358359043 (ebook)
Subjects: CYAC: Family—Fiction. | Sick—Fiction. | Friendship—Fiction. | Dating (Social customs)—Fiction. | Depression, Mental—Fiction. | Racially mixed people—Fiction.
Classification: LCC PZ7.1.E96 Som 2021 (print) | LCC PZ7.1.E96 (ebook)
DDC [Fic]—dc23
LC record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2019042911
LC ebook record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2019042912
v2.0221
1
THEN
If you had asked me before the night when everything changed, I’d have said that I was family. That the Cohens were flesh and blood, as ingrained in me as every cell in my body. Not because I was as clueless about genetics as my bio teacher, Mr. Waters, seemed to think I was, but because we shared things that mattered: history, memories, secrets, and time.
So the evening we sat around the dining table waiting to hear Mel’s news, it didn’t even occur to me that I could be somewhere else. That it was summer and the lake was glistening and I had my own home across town.
I was sitting in my usual spot, across from Rowan and beside Luke, the same spot I’d occupied since Ro and I met at tennis camp when we were seven and became best friends.
“Pass me the salad.” Naomi, Mel’s best friend, was sitting on my right, and she tapped my wrist to get my attention.
Mel had gotten home from the doctor less than an hour earlier and, instead of answering the barrage of questions we threw at her, immediately insisted that we sit down to “a nice dinner.” She said we would talk after we’d eaten. One of the things I’d always loved about Mel was that she never treated me, Luke, and Ro like kids. She told us the truth and spoke to us like we were her equals. Which made the way she was acting now all the more unsettling. She was talking and laughing with Naomi, as if everything was completely normal, as if everything was fine. But it couldn’t be, could it?
If the doctors had given her good news, she would have just said so.
She had to know that the way she was dragging this out meant that there was only one conclusion we could reach: Mel was sick.
The kind of sick you couldn’t get over with chicken noodle soup and a warm water bottle and a couple of days spent watching Netflix in bed.
My stomach lurched at the thought.
“I need some guinea pigs for this new cupcake recipe I’m trying for the bakery,” Mel said, trying to engage us, but Ro just kept vigorously chewing, violently scraping his fork against his plate. I didn’t know it was possible to eat angrily, but he was doing it. Apparently he had even less patience for Mel’s stalling than I did.
Beside me, Luke was staring down at his plate, moving the food around but not really eating anything. Ever the opportunist, Sydney, the dog, was sitting primly beside Luke’s chair, and I caught him sneaking her a cooked baby carrot when he thought no one was looking. Ordinarily, the sight would have made me smile, but Luke looked so miserable it made me feel like crying.
Oblivious, Mel kept chattering about her new cheesecake cupcakes, her voice as raspy and as calm as ever.
She talks the way Billie Holiday sings.
I’d written those words in my journal once, many years ago, after one of the afternoons I’d spent at the Cohens’, lounging around in the living room with Mel and listening to the old jazzy songs she liked. I’d doodled hearts around the words. Honestly, most days I wasn’t sure whom I loved more: Mel or her sons. I was a little bit in love with each of them, in slightly different ways.
“Jessi.” Ro’s voice suddenly cut through my thoughts. “Can you come help me in the kitchen for a sec?”
His voice had an edge to it, but I stood and followed him out of the dining room. I wondered whether he’d come to the same conclusion I had—that something was very wrong. As soon as we were in the kitchen, I couldn’t help it, I threw my arms around him. Ro hugged me, then patted my back like he was the one comforting me.
His voice was a whisper when he finally spoke. “You have to go.”
I froze, then stepped back. “Go where?”
His arms dropped to his sides. “Home,” he said almost sulkily, staring at the ground.
It took me a moment to understand what he meant.
Home. As in, my home.
“What? Why?” I asked.
“Because you shouldn’t be here.”
I started to laugh, but then I realized Rowan wasn’t smiling. “Ro. There’s no way I’m going home before Mel tells—”
He didn’t let me finish.
“Jesus, Jessi. Do you think you live here?” he spat. “Because you don’t. This is family shit.”
I was speechless. I’d known the Cohens for ten years. I’d spent birthdays and Thanksgivings and Christmases with them. I was there when Buzz, their old cocker spaniel, died when we were nine. A few weeks later, when Mel brought home a box with a shivering Labrador retriever, I’d been the first to peek inside. I helped them choose the name Sydney. I was at their house the day Dr. Cohen packed his things into his SUV and backed out of the driveway, never to return. Never—not once—had any of the Cohens insinuated that I belonged anywhere other than with them.
“Are you serious?” I asked, my voice small.
He nodded, his jaw still set. He made to run his hand through his hair but stopped halfway through the motion, as if just remembering the buzz cut he’d gotten at the start of summer.
“Rowan, I don’t get it,” I said, starting to feel less indignant and more hurt. I felt breathless, like we’d been sparring and someone had suddenly thrust something sharp and lethal between my ribs. Had I done something wrong? This had to be Ro’s way of lashing out because of everything that was happening with his mom. Right?
“There’s nothing to get,” Rowan said, his voice a whisper. “Just like . . . imagine if this was your mom.”
He walked out of the kitchen, leaving me standing there, stunned. The last thing he said was the worst.
Imagine if this was y
our mom.
Was he fucking serious?
I didn’t need to imagine anything. I didn’t love Mel any less because she hadn’t given birth to me. I didn’t need to be a six-foot-one prick named Rowan Cohen to feel how devastating even the thought of a world without Mel would be.
I stormed back into the dining room and sat down. Beside me, Naomi was refilling her glass of water. I stole a glance at her, at the white-blond hair she wore in a stylish bob. She and Mel had been friends for twenty years. She didn’t need to pass a freaking 23andMe test, and no one was asking her to leave. Who the hell did Rowan think he was?
As I scooped more pasta onto my plate, I felt Ro’s glare bouncing off the top of my head, but I kept going until I had enough food for two people.
Even though my stomach still felt unsettled, I shoveled a forkful of pasta into my mouth.
“This is really good. Thanks, Mel,” I said.
For the next few minutes I ate in silence while Naomi and Mel kept the small talk going.
When I felt Rowan’s gaze on me again, I met his eyes, expecting to see the same annoyed look he’d been giving me for the last five minutes, but instead there was something I couldn’t place. Something like desperation.
Pleading.
His eyes were pleading.
I shot him my own look, one I hoped conveyed my hurt and anger at everything he’d said to me in the kitchen. I can’t believe you asked me to leave.
He lowered his gaze then, as if he could no longer meet my eye.
I couldn’t understand it. Was he ashamed? That made no sense—what did he have to be ashamed of? This was about Mel; it had nothing to do with him.
I kept staring at Ro’s bowed head, imploring him to look at me. This wordless conversation wasn’t over yet. But his eyes stayed fixed on the table, and in that moment, all his anger and bravado and Ro-ness was gone. He was just . . . sad.
And something else I couldn’t explain.
Shit.
I could deal with Rowan if he was just being a bully, hurting me because something bad was happening with his mom and he needed somebody to take it out on. But this wasn’t that.
I didn’t understand what was happening. I’d never seen him like this. He seemed desperate for me to do this for him.
For me to go.
My instinct was to stay and make him tell me what was wrong, to stay and hear what Mel had to say after dinner, but Rowan’s sad eyes kept avoiding mine.
Until I heard myself standing, pushing my plate away.
“Oh God, Mel,” I said. “I’m so sorry. I just remembered I have this really big assignment due . . . and also a quiz . . . and my dad will kill me if I fail.”
I heard myself mumbling a string of excuses.
In the end, I couldn’t even remember everything I said.
I just knew that Ro still wouldn’t meet my eye as I packed up and that Luke stared at me, confused, the whole time.
I remembered feeling that I was making a mistake, that this wasn’t how any of this was supposed to go. Mel wasn’t supposed to be sick. But if she was, then I was supposed to stay at the Cohen house until after dinner. I was supposed to sit on the slightly lopsided living room couch, wedged between Luke and Ro, while Mel told us her news. Ro and I were supposed to find ourselves in the dark of the backyard shed afterward, the place we always went after big moments to collect our thoughts. We were supposed to lean back against the metal walls, whispering truths too heavy for a bright summer evening in July. We would talk and cry and hurt, and it would suck, but we would do it together. Because we were family, and that was what families did.
I remembered hugging Mel before I got on my bike to ride home, tears streaming down my face the entire time because I couldn’t shake the feeling that I was going the wrong way.
And I didn’t even know why.
THEN
In the end, my mother had been the one to tell me.
As soon as I got home, I’d taken the stairs two at a time to my parents’ bedroom, where I knew my mom would be if she wasn’t at work.
Everything was blurry through my tears, but I saw her right away.
She was a lump in the bed, a blade of light slipping through the crack in the curtains just enough for me to make out her form.
I padded over to where she was, touched what I thought was her shoulder. I’d spent seventeen years trying not to disturb her when she wanted to be alone, but tonight was an exception. Tonight I actually needed her, and for once Mel couldn’t take her place.
“Mom,” I said to the mound of blanket that still hadn’t moved.
She pulled the covers away from her face and squinted at me like she was staring directly into the sun.
“What’s wrong?” she asked.
“Mel’s home from the doctor,” I said. “Can you call her and find out what they told her?”
She blinked up at me, probably wondering why I couldn’t call myself or where I’d come from, if not the Cohens’.
“Okay,” she said finally, slowly pulling herself into a sitting position.
I grabbed the phone on her nightstand and held it out to her.
Her fingers brushed mine as she took the phone, and I wondered how her hands could feel that cold in the middle of summer.
“Melanie, hi.” Her voice was bright and breezy, as if she hadn’t been lying in a dark room for what was probably hours. “Oh, me too. I meant to call and congratulate you on Luke’s graduation.”
I sat at the foot of her bed, hugged my knees to my chest, and listened to my mother’s side of the conversation. To her laughter and easy banter. She couldn’t always pull it off, but sometimes, for short spells, she could pretend to be okay. She somehow managed to pull it together for the things that were really important to her. Like work or the occasional parent-teacher meeting, though those were more Dad’s territory.
But I wondered for the hundredth time why Mom bothered pretending for Mel, who easily knew more about me than either of my parents did. Mel, who knew about the days my mother spent in bed, the medication she wouldn’t take, the therapists she wouldn’t see. You wouldn’t think my mother would be opposed to medicine; she was an optometrist, for God’s sake. But she was one of those people who believed it was okay for everybody else, but not for her. She was just tired, overworked or under the weather, or in need of some alone time. So we lived with it, this nameless, shapeless thing that had hollowed out my mother.
Mom got quiet now as Mel talked on the other end of the line.
I was far enough away that I couldn’t make out distinct words, but Mel’s voice sounded somber, like the melody of something in a minor key.
While she was talking, my own phone vibrated in the pocket of my cutoffs.
It was a text from Luke.
Why’d you leave like that?
He didn’t text me very often, and when he did, he did so frustratingly. In complete sentences, with punctuation and zero emojis. It was so aggressive.
Usually, though, I knew him well enough to know he wasn’t mad.
But tonight he sounded like he could be mad. At the very least, he was confused.
I considered telling him the truth—that his brother had told me to leave—but I couldn’t bring myself to do it. Something was going on with Rowan, and even though I wasn’t sure he deserved it right then, I felt like I had to protect him. If I told Luke what had happened, he would confront Ro, and Ro would . . . well, no one ever knew what Ro would do.
There was something I forgot to do, I texted back. I knew how lame it sounded, but I couldn’t think of anything better.
It couldn’t wait? Luke texted back immediately, and despite myself, I felt vindicated. He didn’t think I didn’t belong there.
I wasn’t an idiot. I had brown skin and a thick, curly mane of hair, courtesy of my black father and white mother. Mel’s parents were from the Philippines, and maybe that was what drew us together—that we both stood out in our mostly white town. But still, it meant I looked n
othing like her. I looked nothing like Luke and Ro either, Mel’s raven-haired boys who loomed over everyone. Nobody would look at the four of us and think we went together, but I’d always known—or I thought I knew—that inside, we were all the same. That we’d chosen one another, Luke and Ro and Mel and me, and that made us family.
Whatever Ro was going through didn’t change that.
A wave of anger mixed with regret washed over me.
I should have stood my ground tonight. I shouldn’t have left.
And honestly, I hadn’t needed Luke to tell me that. I’d known it in my bones that I belonged with the Cohens on the worst night of all our lives so far.
My mom was finishing up her phone call with Mel, so I didn’t respond to Luke’s text.
I shoved my phone back into my pocket and walked over to the side of the bed again.
“Take care of yourself, Melanie.” Mom’s voice had gone all somber now, and a lump formed in my throat.
When she hung up, she told me. She said it quickly, like she thought it was kinder to just rip the Band-Aid off, and if I was capable of thinking at that point, I would have appreciated it.
As I buried my face in my hands, blubbering like I was all water, my mother did something she’d never done before.
She slid over into the middle of the bed so I could slip in next to her.
Lying there in my parents’ room, I cried as if I’d never see Mel again. Mom said nothing, running her hand through my hair while I snotted all over her sheets.
As I was growing up, there would be days on end when I didn’t see my mother. She would be just a lump in a bed or a figure hunched in the dark of her room. She needed time, my father would say. She needed space.
Sometimes he’d make her bundle up and go for a walk in the fading sun. She’d look gaunt and pale and hollow-eyed. She needed fresh air.
There was never a time when she needed me, but every time he had the chance, my father told me that she loved me.
She just needed to get better, but she loved me.
I don’t know if I ever really believed it. But if I hadn’t, tonight would have shown me that he was right. My mother hugged me and listened to me cry about the woman I would have—and always had—picked over her, time and time again.
Some Other Now Page 1