Life on the Level: On the Verge - Book Three

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Life on the Level: On the Verge - Book Three Page 22

by Zoraida Cordova


  I find his mouth and answer him with a long, deep kiss.

  After a little while of listening to the sounds of the night, I say, “That was a yes, by the way.”

  He just holds me close, and chuckles. “I know.”

  Chapter 32

  River Anne Thomas has a boyfriend.

  As I walk down the halls of HCRC, I repeat this over and over again. My kickboxing class is excellent, though Nerd Boy Nick isn’t there. Ransom tells me I look different. And, because he’s a man, he stutters, “Uh, good different. Not bad different.”

  “Just. Stop,” I tell him, and smile.

  I actually punctuate everything with a smile.

  “Hey Helen (smile). Good morning (smile).”

  She shakes her head and busies herself with a stack of paperwork. A couple of people are stringing glittery bats all over the walls. I helped draw a face on a giant pumpkin (we aren’t allowed to carve), but it looks more smiling than sinister. I even smile at Debbie as Taylor walks her out of the building with her bags.

  “Don’t come back, Debbie (smile). I mean that in the best way (smile)!”

  “If you ever see me ‘round here again, do me a favor,” she says, walking backwards into the crisp, fall air. “Shoot me.”

  “Will do (smile).”

  “Are you that excited about family day?” Vilma asks me during breakfast. She’s done up. Her hair is in a bun and she’s wearing makeup. She’s wearing clothes that are not pajamas for the first time since I met her. Before, I couldn’t really picture her as a mom, but now I can. She drums her fingers nervously on the table.

  That puts the brakes on my smile punctuation marks. “Family day?”

  “Why do you think everyone’s dressing up?”

  I blink a few times, and realize Julie is wearing a dress. Her hair is combed away from her face. She gives me a tight-lipped smile that I can’t return. Pete and Randy are in something better suited for Sunday Mass, or the country club. They sit down at our table.

  Vilma points a thumb at me. “This one didn’t know it was family day.”

  Pete looks at me with sympathy. “You can still change. No one gets here until around eleven.”

  “It’s not that,” I say. “I don’t have anyone coming. I forgot about it. My friends travel a lot.”

  “You can have an awkward time with me and my folks,” Randy says. “I might’ve told them I have a serious girlfriend while I was here. And she might fit your description.”

  Girlfriend. That’s right! I, River Anne Thomas, am someone’s girlfriend!

  “Sorry, Randy,” I tell him. “I think your mom would have a heart attack if you brought a girl like me home.”

  “That’s the point,” he says.

  Vilma slaps the back of his head, and Pete asks him to behave for once. There’s something different between the two of them. I would bet anything that there was something there, except I’m not really taking bets right now. The last couple I’ve taken have been way, way off. It’s probably for the best.

  “You can sit at the loser table,” Randy tells me. “Apparently that’s where everyone who doesn’t have a visitor sits.”

  “You’re a dick (smile).”

  He shrugs, and bites down on an apple like he’s taking a bite out of the center of the earth.

  • • •

  Relegated to the “loser table,” I decide to put on the only dress that I own. It’s long-sleeved and heather gray, and I might’ve stolen it from Sky’s closet last fall. I top it off with my chunky black boots, trade Greta at the front door a pack of cigarettes for a lipstick the color of a bloody heart, and I’m done. I walk down the hall, the parents and family members looking at me with disapproving stares.

  Randy barks in my direction. His mother, an ivory-sweater-and-pearls kind of lady, purses her lips at both of us. I wink at him, then keep walking. Nerd Boy Nick drops his paper cup of water. His older brother leers at my ass.

  Then there are the families that are too happy being reunited to pay attention to me. My heart squeezes at the sight of Vilma’s two little daughters racing down the hall. Vilma looks frozen, like she might not be able to get through the day. Then she opens her arms and lifts both of them into a hug.

  I take a deep breath and head for the loser table. It feels weird, sitting with others and intruding on what should be private moments. Pete is in a somber conversation with an older lady. She’s holding a handkerchief to her nose and crying.

  “You too?” Jermania asks me. She holds her head up with her fists.

  Maddie is scribbling in a notebook with her head on the table. I go to take the seat next to her, but there’s a bowl of Jell-O there.

  “She doesn’t want anyone sitting next to her,” Jermania says.

  “Okay.” I take the seat on the other side of the circle table. There are a few people here that I’ve never spoken to before. They don’t seem as pissed as Maddie.

  “Maddie,” I say. She won’t look up at me. “Maddie.”

  She slams her head down into her arms. Her whole body shudders as she tries to sob quietly. Jermania puts a hand on my arm and shakes her head.

  “We tried. She’s not responding. I got Scrabble. Maybe she can make words instead of speak them.”

  “Highest word score buys a round,” a big redhead says.

  “A round of what?” I ask.

  “I don’t know. Chocolate?”

  “I’m game.”

  I’m getting ready to settle in when I hear someone shout, “River Thomas, I’ve been looking for that dress for a year!”

  I jump out of my seat. Heads swivel toward the entrance of the cafeteria, where Sky Lopez and Leti Delgado stand. I don’t even realize I’m crying until I start running toward them with wide-open arms. We fall into a giant, screaming girl-hug. I don’t even care that people in Eastern Montana can probably hear us.

  “Aww, nena,” Leti says. “Don’t cry.”

  “I’m not crying. I woke up with dry eyes.” I lead them out of the cafeteria and into the courtyard where the fire pit is lit. We pull three chairs as close to the fire as we can without getting burned. I sit in the middle and squeeze both of their hands.

  “Why didn’t you tell me you were coming?” I ask.

  Sky brushes my hair away from my face. She’s always been the most motherly out of the three of us. Her long dark hair is pulled into a sleek ponytail. She’s decked out like it’s the middle of winter in New York. She hates the cold.

  “We wanted it to be a surprise, duh,” Leti says. Her cheeks are rosy. The star on her tooth twinkles in the firelight. Her hair’s gotten long, and there are streaks of blond at the end. Then she leans in. “Where is he?”

  “Soon, my pretties,” I say, drumming my fingers together conspiratorially. “Tell me. Tell me all the news and all the things. I don’t even go on the computer anymore.”

  “I’m sorry I’ve been shitty about getting back to you. I didn’t get a SIM card in Prague. And then I dropped my phone off the side of a boat in Ireland.”

  I make a face and hold a finger in her face. “Do you hear yourself right now?”

  “I know, right? She’s traveling the world with her sexy man, and we’re supposed to feel sorry for her?”

  “What happened to your guy?” I ask Leti.

  “We had fun. It kind of fizzled when we were in Italy.”

  “I hate both of you.”

  Sky smirks. “Though I’m sure you’ve been keeping yourself pretty busy. I got your letter in the mail and got nervous when you told me what was happening. Spill. You’ve been keeping something from us for far too long.”

  I lean back, staring at the fire. Here are the two people I have to be honest with, even if I can’t be honest with myself. I never told them about Kiernan and how bad it got. But now I do. I watch their faces go from disapproving to angry, to shocked, to horrified, then back to disapproving.

  “I was embarrassed,” I tell them. “I’d never let someone treat me like th
at before. I didn’t even realize it was happening because I was so messed up over my dad. After he threw me through that glass, and I cut his face… I knew he’d come after me. My godfather told me not to worry, that he’d take care of it. But when Kiernan started coming up again, I didn’t know what to do. I feel pretty safe here.”

  “Despite the barn action,” Sky mutters.

  “I’ll get to that later,” I tell them. “I’m clean. I’m the cleanest I’ve been since I was twelve.”

  “Damn, we were bad,” Leti says. “Remember when we would take your dad’s vodka, drink all of it, then replace it with water?”

  I laugh so hard it hurts. “I forgot about that. He never said anything. Just replaced the bottles because he thought he’d drunk them and forgotten.”

  “Remember that Halloween we cut school and stayed in my family’s new house?” Sky says. “Only we hadn’t moved in yet, so the heat wasn’t on, and we froze our asses off for hours?”

  “How come I turned out bad and you guys did okay?” I ask them.

  “Don’t say that.”

  I shrug. “I’m sorry. I’ve just been doing a lot of thinking about it lately. That’s all I do, talk and think and then talk to other people.”

  “You do more stuff,” Leti says with a naughty wink.

  “I almost drowned while camping. I fell of my horse. I’ve gotten better though. Look at my guns, bro.” I fold my arm so they can feel my baby bicep.

  “Damn,” Leti says. “Are there any other hot guys here? I might just commit myself.”

  “It’s not a psych ward,” Sky says, giving her cousin a long look that says, behave.

  “You have no idea how much I missed you guys.” I squeeze their hands tighter. They’re like my lifelines in this great big, crazy world. “I wanted to tell you both that I’m really sorry for everything I’ve put you through.”

  “Oh, River, you don’t have to,” Sky says.

  I shake my head. “I do. You guys have always been there for me. You always put up with my messiness, even though it’s gotten worse in the last year.”

  Leti runs a hand over my head. “We’re sisters. No matter what you do. No matter what.”

  “In the beginning, I didn’t think I belonged here. I thought that I wasn’t like the rest of the people here. But I think we have one thing in common. We’re all lost. Some in more ways than others. I lost my way and then I stopped recognizing myself. Even if I don’t have a hardcore heroin dependency, I was still harming myself. Being the least addicted of all the addicts doesn’t make me less of an addict.”

  “You are being careful,” Sky says. “Aren’t you?”

  “Like with sex or—”

  “Both!” Sky says. “Do I have to lecture you about safe sex the way I do to pregnant teenagers?”

  I shush her, but can’t help but laugh. “Chill, Sky.”

  “Yeah, chill Sky,” Leti says.

  “I mean the other thing. I don’t want you to get involved in something that might be out of your league. You’re not back home. You don’t have your godfather there to send a bunch of goons after someone who messes with you. You don’t have an army of bouncers to scare off some lowlife not playing by the rules.”

  “This is like the Wild West,” Leti says, more excited than she should be.

  “I know I’m not back in New York.” I don’t know why I don’t call it home. Home is Leti and Sky. Home is my dad. Home is Hutch. How can my home be so scattered and still feel so tangible? “But I can’t just turn my back on what I’ve seen.”

  I tell them about Taylor and his threat to Hutch and me. How I went to the barn. How I hid the pill in my things.

  “I think if I have enough evidence against him,” I say, “I can go to Helen and tell her everything and she’ll have to believe me.”

  “Why wouldn’t she believe you now?”

  “Who would you believe? An addict with a penchant for getting herself in trouble, or the hand who’s been working beside you for years? Besides, this is Hutch’s life. I can’t just go in River-style and wreck everything the way I always do. I think this is the only way we can come up winners.”

  Sky takes in the mountains, the trees, and the facility behind us. Then she looks at me with concern. “What if you do everything right. What if you get your evidence and expose this creep. What’s to stop him from ratting you guys out?”

  “We’ll deny it. There’s no proof.”

  “River, think this through.”

  “I’d personally like to see the person that’s got our River Thomas so spun.”

  “I’m not spun.”

  “You’re totally spun.” Leti grins and pokes my ribs. “Speak of the devil,” I say.

  Hutch steps into the courtyard, followed by Helen and a few parents. I can’t hide the smile that Hutch brings to my lips, and neither can he. Helen stops by first. She shakes hands with Leti and Sky.

  “So you complete the trio I’ve heard about.”

  “You have no idea,” Leti tells her.

  Helen makes her way further down and does her shaking hands and kissing babies thing. Meanwhile, my heart flutters when Hutch approaches us. Leti and Sky giggle, and make fun of me.

  “Would you look at her face,” Leti says. “I don’t think I’ve ever seen her smile at a guy like that.”

  “I don’t think she’s smiled at anyone before.”

  “I take great umbrage to that.”

  “How big is his penis?” Leti asks.

  We collapse into a fit of laughter the second Hutch reaches us.

  “Are the New Yorkers causing trouble already?” he asks.

  I love his voice. I love the rich, deep brown of his eyes. I love the way he smiles at my friends. The way he looks at me.

  “Why does everyone think we’re trouble?” Leti asks. “We’ve been here for an hour. Not even.”

  Hutch shakes Leti and Sky’s hands. I don’t know where to put my hands, so I alternate between smoothing the material of my dress and picking at the dirt under my nails.

  “I can usually spot trouble when it walks through my door,” he says, and I have the feeling he’s talking about me.

  “Thank you for all you’re doing for our girl,” Sky tells him. “I hear she’s been in good hands. Though I’m concerned about her doing all this outdoors stuff. What’s the score now? River: 0, Nature: 3?”

  “Funny,” I mumble, but really I do love them joking at my expense. Just this once.

  “She’s getting better,” Hutch says. “You should’ve seen her the first week she was here. She wouldn’t even come out of her room. Now she’s volunteering to go on nature trails.”

  “Are we talking about the same River Thomas?” Sky asks.

  “The one and only.” He says that so adamantly, so matter-of-factly, that even Leti gasps a little.

  “So, hey,” Leti says. “What are you?”

  Hutch looks startled, but laughs.

  “I’m just saying,” Leti says. “I get asked that question all the time and I’m like, I’m a queen, baby. Really I’m Ecuadorian. But I feel like I need to know the mix that created all of this. Because I might have to go try to replicate that. Also, do you have any hot brothers who like curvy girls?”

  “Leti,” Sky and I hiss at the same time.

  Hutch takes a seat on the lawn chair beside me. I can feel his warmth instantly. He looks at me with those coffee brown eyes. Mmm, way better than caffeine. Never thought I’d say that.

  “It’s a little complicated,” he says.

  Leti bats her long black lashes, that star on her tooth winking with feigned innocence. “We love complicated.”

  “You don’t have to answer her, Mr. Hutcherson.”

  “It’s just Hutch. I’m a mutt, I guess,” Hutch says. “My dad’s side is British, Irish, and I have a Blackfoot great-grandmother. My mom’s side is Polish-Italian, and I have one Mexican grandfather. If an ethnic group tried to settle in the Northwestern Territories, they’re probably in my
blood. But when people ask me what I am, I usually just tell them ‘I’m dysfunctional.’ Which isn’t entirely untrue.”

  “Wow,” Leti says, gazing at him dreamily.

  I pinch her arm.

  “So let me get this straight,” I tell him. “The entire facility has been hounding you about this for, like, ever. Now these crazies ask you, and you answer them in a heartbeat?”

  “Yep.” He sets those eyes and that wicked grin on me. “Well, ladies. It’s been a pleasure. Are you staying in Missoula?”

  “We got an airbnb across from the mountain with the M. It’s so lovely.”

  “How long are you staying for?” I ask.

  “Just the weekend. I have to get back to work before my manager stops liking me after all the time I’ve taken off.”

  “I’ll leave you guys to it.” This time he hugs them, and he jumps a little because I’m pretty sure Leti pinched his ass.

  “Wow,” Leti says.

  “I love him for you,” Sky says. “He’s the perfect balance.”

  All I can do is grin like fool. I take them to the stables, where they pet Apollo and the others. They meet Jillian, and Jillian is so happy to have someone to speak Spanish with that I think she might cry. They meet Ransom and Simmons. Nurse Jean and Sky talk shop. We’re probably the loudest people in the entire place, but I don’t care. I haven’t felt this unflinchingly happy in so long. They stay the longest of any family. We play Candyland with Vilma’s girls in the game room. Jermania is fascinated with Leti’s life of traveling and freedom. Julie is in love with Sky’s outfit. They’re exotic in a New York kind of way, in a world where everyone dresses for comfort. I try to get Maddie to come hang out with us, but she banishes herself to her room.

  “Are you going to come tomorrow?” I ask them, seeing them off to their car.

  “Of course,” Sky tells me.

  We hug so hard and long that I’m afraid we’re going to need a crowbar to pull ourselves apart. I stand in the driveway until their car is a tiny dot on the road. I’m sad to see them go, but at least they get to see that I’m okay. Better than okay, I think. I’m happy.

 

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