“Dad, can I come with you on your next fishing trip?”
My father went still, a bite of chicken halfway to his mouth. I kept my eyes on him and didn’t look at my mom. Neither did he.
He set down his fork. “By the breath of God, ice is given, and the width of the waters is frozen.”
He’d used this quote from Job before, when discussing the weather.
“I know, but I was thinking we could go south, where it’s not so cold. Unless you’re into ice fishing now.” I attempted a laugh, which was not echoed at the table.
“My lord knows that the children are tender, and that the flocks and herds with me have their young, and if they overdrive them one day, all the flocks will die.”
That sounded like a no.
I still have nightmares about the day he died. Do you, Dad?
“I’ve just noticed that you’re in such a good mood when you come back from these trips. Mom seems happy then too.” Do you still miss John? Do you feel anything at all? “I figured I could use an early spring break.”
“A break from what, exactly?” Mom asked. “Hanging out with your girlfriend? Playing baseball? Your weekly paper route? Life’s tough for you, isn’t it?” Her tone was only slightly less bitter than her words. “So much responsibility for one so young.”
I shut up, shut down. Finished my potatoes. Asked to be excused. Cleared my plate and Mara’s.
When Mom and Dad weren’t looking, I put Mara’s abandoned bean-and-butter sandwich on a clean saucer and took it upstairs. I set it on the floor outside her door, knocked twice, then went to my room.
As my door shut, hers opened. “What do you w—oh.” I heard a short pause, then my sister’s voice. “Thanks.”
CHAPTER 21
NOW
Mara grabs my arm before I can leave John’s room. “What are you talking about?”
“Remember when we left my phone in Dad’s car and he drove to upstate New York with it?”
Mara gasps. “Do you still have the coordinates?”
“They’re in a notebook. You guys stay here.”
I run into my room, which fell into such a state of chaos during the past few weeks that I’m embarrassed for Bailey to see it. It’s probably a good thing I didn’t drag her to my bed a few minutes ago. (Well, maybe not a good thing.)
Last semester’s notebooks are piled in my desk drawer. I grab the one for English composition class and dash back to John’s room, flipping to the dog-eared page from November. “Got it!”
“Mara just explained how you did this.” Bailey takes the notebook and slaps the page. “So you guys knew your dad was traveling to this place in upstate New York, and it’s just now occurring to you that that’s where they are?”
Mara snatches the notebook from her. “Hey, when your parents disappear into thin air, let’s see how clearly you think.”
Bailey crosses her arms, chastened. “Good point.”
Mara turns back to me. “We can’t just drive up there without knowing what we’re getting into. We need more information than just a set of GPS coordinates.”
“True.” I sit on John’s bed to think. “We should go through every inch of Dad’s office and their bedroom.”
“I don’t know, guys.” Bailey sits beside me. “If your parents didn’t want to be found, wouldn’t they be careful not to leave any clues?”
“That doesn’t mean we shouldn’t look.” Mara holds up her phone. “After all, Mom texted me. If Dad left his phone here, she was probably told to leave hers, too. If she disobeyed that order, she might disobey others.”
“Like an order to leave no evidence,” I finish.
“I guess.” Bailey unties her loose braid, which came partly undone while we were rolling around on the floor a few minutes ago. “Except, she disobeyed at the last second, when you guys weren’t with her. Maybe she sensed something was wrong with the escape. But when she was destroying evidence, she was thinking you guys would be going. She’d want to protect you by following all of Sophia’s rules.”
“Ugh, you’re probably right.” Mara stares at her phone. “Maybe she’ll send another text.”
“Either way, we still need to search their stuff.” I usher the girls out ahead of me, then reach back to close John’s door.
Something makes me stop and open the door wider. When I walk away, his room is open, letting out the light.
• • •
I splurge on delivery pizza for me and Bailey and Mara, figuring we don’t have time to cook, and because our parents aren’t there to tell me not to have pizza two nights in a row.
We eat while we work in Dad’s office, no longer being careful to put everything back in its place. Juno and Tod wander in and out, thrilled to explore previously forbidden territory.
“Stop chewing that.” Mara tugs the corner of a credit card statement from Tod’s mouth. He bats at it as she pulls it away. “That reminds me, David, just as Kane was leaving, the pet sitter showed up. She said Mom hired her to come once a day for the next two weeks, then wait for further instructions.”
“I wonder what’s at the end of two weeks.” I watch Juno pounce on a dust bunny, then dance around it on her hind legs. Bailey gives an adorable laugh at the spectacle.
“Maybe the cats would be put up for adoption?” Mara suggests. “Anyway, I had to think fast. I told the pet sitter our ‘trip’ was canceled, so we wouldn’t be needing her after all. I also gave her twenty-five bucks for her trouble so she wouldn’t bitch to her friends about us canceling last minute. The fewer people who know something’s wrong at this house, the better.”
“Good thinking.”
Dad’s office provides no more answers, and Mom still hasn’t sent another text, so after our late lunch, we move on to their master bedroom. Mara assigns herself Mom’s dresser, I take my dad’s, and Bailey volunteers for the nightstands.
“Just warning you.” She kneels next to my father’s side of the bed. “This is where my parents keep their fun stuff.”
“Fun stuff?” I ask her.
“You know, books like the Kama Sutra. Various oils. Toys.”
Mara puts her hands to her cheeks in horror.
Sweet baby Jesus, please let my parents’ nightstands be free of oils, toys, and the Kama Sutra. I will never, ever ask another favor as long as I live.
I’m glad when Bailey’s search turns up nothing but Bible-study books and foot cream. On the other hand, I’m also embarrassed my parents are so boring.
“Aww, this is cute.” Bailey holds up an inspirational plaque on my mom’s nightstand that reads, GOD COULD NOT BE EVERYWHERE, SO HE CREATED MOTHERS. “And kind of creepy.”
“I got it for her as a joke last year,” I tell her. “When we were kids, she convinced us that Santa used Mrs. Claus as a spy, so he’d know who’s naughty or nice. Mom claimed that each year, between Thanksgiving and Christmas, Mrs. Claus shared her powers with all mothers.”
“That’s still kind of creepy.”
Mara snorts. “Says the girl whose mom keeps sex toys in her nightstand.”
“In the real world, that’s considered normal.”
I change the subject before they can bicker. “Do you need to do Mother’s Day stuff with your mom?”
Bailey sets down the plaque. “I made her breakfast in bed. But she knows I have an O chem final tomorrow, so I can’t stay late.”
I remember Bailey’s complex carbon-hydrogen diagrams, and give a brief prayer of thanks that as a history or theology or philosophy major, I’ll never have to take organic chemistry.
As we search the dresser drawers, I try to remember the last subject I turned in for homework in Math Cave. Improper integrals? Parametric curves? On the day I quit, what was the homework I offered to share with Francis?
My mind sifts through the events of that crappy day in reverse—Bailey dumping me, Bailey wrapping her thighs around mine while I kissed her on the kitchen counter, Mr. Ralph lecturing me while we loaded his freezer with ice cr
eam and boxed soft pretzels.
I press pause on the mental rewind. “You guys.” I slam the drawer shut. “When I told Mr. Ralph I was quitting Math Cave because of the Rush, he said something to me.”
“Other than ‘you idiot’?” Mara asks.
“He said I wasn’t the only one. Somebody in his other section quit. He wouldn’t tell me who.” I think for a second. “But I bet I can find out.”
CHAPTER 22
FIFTY-TWO DAYS BEFORE THE RUSH
Kane called me three nights after tryouts, screaming. It sounded like he was being stretched on the rack.
“I got third base. I got third!!” He let out a triumphant cackle. “No more squatting behind home plate, sweating my guts out in that chest protector. Yeeeeeessssssss!”
I lowered my cell phone’s speaker volume before putting it back to my ear. “Congratulations.” I’d already known, since Coach Kopecki had called me half an hour before. Since then I’d been sitting in my room, trying in vain to focus on my history paper.
“Kopecki said you got the number one spot in the rotation and that they hired you a private pitching coach. How awesome is that?”
“Yeah.” I rolled my shoulders, which were tightening at the thought of this unprecedented level of pressure to perform—with a new catcher, no less. “Brendan Rhees is probably planning my assassination as we speak.”
“He doesn’t get the top spot just because he’s a senior. You’re a better pitcher than he is. You’re better than anyone Middle Merion has had in years.”
“I don’t know.” I got up from my desk and started pacing, flicking my ballpoint pen’s button in and out. “Doing great in tryouts is one thing. Games are different.”
“Whatever. Just relax. And don’t ever call Brendan your ‘number two’ to his face.”
I managed a feeble laugh. “It’ll be weird without you behind the plate, man.”
“Miguel’ll be great. Besides, you need to get used to different catchers. That’s how it’ll be in college. And the minors. And the majors.”
“Whoa, whoa. Let’s get through this season first.” The mere thought of a bigger stage made my stomach hurt. I reached up to the top shelf of my desk and adjusted the wooden model of John’s A-10 fighter jet, though it was already perfectly straight.
“This season is going to rule,” Kane declared. “We’re gonna sweep Lower Merion, I can feel it.”
I’d looked at the schedule. The Rush was in the middle of the regular season. Would Mom and Dad even let me play that long?
“New topic,” he said, “almost as important. Do you want to go to prom?”
“With you?”
“Only students can buy tickets, so me and someone else would put Bailey and you down as our official dates.”
Taking Bailey to prom hadn’t even occurred to me. Other than baseball, I was far outside normal high school events, and so was she. Missing traditions like prom was one of the downsides of homeschooling. The image of her in a short, hot dress—or a long, hot dress, whatever—sent my pulse racing.
But a piece of this puzzle was missing. “Who is this someone else? You have a date? Like, a real guy?”
“I thought about what you said the other day in the dugout. I felt like a hypocrite telling you to go for it with Bailey when I was afraid to ask Jon out.”
The name stopped my thoughts, as it always did, even though it was so common. “John?”
“But with no H,” he hurried to add. “Short for Jonathan. Yeah. He goes by Jonathan, usually. Sorry.”
I shook my head and focused on Kane’s monumental news. “That’s great, man. Have I met this guy?”
“No, he moved from New York last summer. Theater type, a set designer. Bailey’d like him. Hey, we should go on some double dates before prom. It’s May tenth, by the way.”
Disappointment smothered my excitement. I gave the caster of my desk chair a half-hearted kick. “Kane, I can’t. The Rush is supposed to be at three a.m. on the eleventh. I should be home with my parents when they have their meltdown over the world not ending.”
“We’ll get you home by three. Look at it this way,” he said with a laugh, “if the Rush happens, then you’ll be with them for all eternity. You’ll have tons of time to tell them about the last night of your life. Which could also be the greatest night. I hear Stephen Rice is having a faaaaaabulous after-party.”
“I thought you said Stephen Rice was a jerkwad.”
“A jerkwad who throws legendary parties. Everyone in senior and junior class is invited. We’re going. End of story. Also, you and me, tux shopping, this Friday after school.”
We hung up, but I continued to pace. Prom meant more than dancing, especially if we went to the party. The Rices had a pool and a hot tub, and their pool house was a notorious hookup locale.
Prom could mean sex. Maybe. Probably? Definitely possibly.
Between that and the top pitching position, it was almost more pressure than I could take.
• • •
“You know that guy Kane Walsh?”
Bailey looked up from her calculus textbook. We were studying at her dining room table—actually studying, because her grandparents were visiting and they were sitting in the next room chatting with her parents.
“That guy Kane Walsh who’s your best friend, who I’ve hung out with, like, ten or fifteen times?”
“Yeah, that one.”
“I know Kane.”
“Cool.” I jammed my pencil into the crease of my calc textbook so it stood up straight. “Will you go to prom with him?”
Bailey was silent for a moment, tapping her fingernails on the table like she was playing piano, even though she didn’t. “That’s a confusing question for more than one reason.”
“You’d be going with him in name only. Obviously.”
“Who would I be going with in spirit?”
“Jonathan’s date.”
“Aaaaaand what is his or her name?”
I shifted my notebook a few inches away from me. It bumped into my calc book, knocking the pencil over. “David Cooper.”
“Doesn’t ring a bell. You think he’d be a good prom date?”
“Well, he’s not a bad dancer, for a complete dork. He doesn’t drink, so he probably won’t puke on you. He’ll sell a bunch of old baseball cards on eBay so he can buy you flowers and dinner.” I repositioned the pencil in the calc book’s spine. “And he is in love with you.” I cleared my throat. “Which, I hear, helps.”
I realized, too late, that the voices in the living room had gone silent.
“Yes.” Bailey’s hand touched mine, the outsides of our little fingers pressed together. “It does help.”
It felt like my hand weighed a ton as I lifted it to rest on hers. “So what do you think?”
She leaned in close to whisper in my ear. “I think I love . . .” She laughed a little, her breath making me shiver. “I love the idea of going with Kane to prom.” Before I could react, she added, “Because I’m in love with Jonathan’s date, too. Just from hearing about him.”
“Wow. That’s really awkward. For Jonathan and Kane, I mean.”
“They’ll deal.” Bailey kissed me, leaning so far forward her chair rocked on its two side legs. I wrapped my arms around her, to catch her if she fell.
• • •
The Brynns invited me to stay for dinner, where Bailey announced our prom plans. Her grandparents were so happy, they raised their glasses in a toast. I joined them, not only to celebrate prom, but also because Holy crap, Bailey said she loves me.
Her parents, however, seemed dismayed.
“Proms are so bourgeois.” Ms. Brynn pushed her cascade of strawberry-blond curls behind her shoulder to keep them out of her food. “I wish schools would come up with some alternative. Maybe you could all spend the day building houses for the homeless. Or planting trees.”
“We already do those things, Mom.” Bailey speared a slab of stir-fried seitan that simulated beef in appeara
nce only. (It actually tasted really good, just nothing like beef.) “It’s okay to just have fun every once in a while, right?”
Now I saw why Bailey sympathized with my own parental plight. Both hers and mine judged everything against some impossible ideal, political or Biblical.
“Depends on the kind of fun,” her dad grumbled. “What time will it be over?”
“Prom ends at eleven,” I told him, “then some people are getting together for a few hours afterward.” My parents had reluctantly agreed to prom but forbade me to attend any after-parties. I had no intention of obeying.
His eyebrows popped up. “A party? Will there be adults there? What about drinking?”
“Mr. and Mrs. Rice will be home.”
“That doesn’t answer my second question. Alcohol is easy to hide.”
He probably would have felt better if I’d said everyone would be getting high. I’d seen the Brynns’ array of bongs, disguised as “incense holders.”
“David has to be home at two thirty,” Bailey said, “so he’ll bring me home at two. That’s not too late for a special occasion, right?” She gave her dad a smile completely unlike the ones she used to persuade me, but it still made my face ache with happiness. Bailey loves me.
“All right, all right, you can go.” Her dad gave her a stern frown, barely visible within his thick, Jerry Garcia–style beard. “Why can’t young people understand, alcohol kills brain cells.”
Bailey’s grandfather sighed. “I’d like to kill some brain cells right about now,” he muttered.
“Ernie, please.” Mr. Brynn glared at his father-in-law.
“What? They work hard, they deserve a little meaningless fun once in a while.”
“You tell ’em, honey.” His wife raised her glass of papaya juice, then turned to Bailey. “So what color dress do you think you’ll get? I bet you’d be stunning in red. With a slit up the thigh to show off those legs.”
I liked Bailey’s grandmother.
“Mother, please,” Ms. Brynn said, echoing her husband. “Bailey doesn’t want to be objectified.”
“Mom, I can look good without being an object.”
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