Chasing Brooklyn
   Also by LISA SCHROEDER
   I Heart You, You Haunt Me
   Far from You
   Chasing Brooklyn
   LISA SCHROEDER
   Simon Pulse
   New York London Toronto Sydney
   This book is a work of fiction. Any references to historical
   events, real people, or real locales are used fictitiously. Other
   names, characters, places, and incidents are the product of the author’s
   imagination, and any resemblance to actual events
   or locales or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.
   SIMON PULSE
   An imprint of Simon & Schuster Children’s Publishing Division
   1230 Avenue of the Americas, New York, NY 10020
   www.SimonandSchuster.com
   First Simon Pulse hardcover edition February 2010
   Copyright © 2010 by Lisa Schroeder
   All rights reserved, including the right of reproduction
   in whole or in part in any form.
   SIMON PULSE and colophon are registered trademarks
   of Simon & Schuster, Inc.
   For information about special discounts for bulk purchases,
   please contact Simon & Schuster Special Sales at 1-866-506-1949
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   Designed by Mike Rosamilia
   The text of this book was set in Adobe Garamond.
   Manufactured in the United States of America
   2 4 6 8 10 9 7 5 3 1
   Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
   Schroeder, Lisa.
   Chasing Brooklyn / Lisa Schroeder.—1st Simon Pulse ed.
   p. cm.
   Summary: As teenagers Brooklyn and Nico work to help
   each other recover from the deaths of Brooklyn’s boyfriend—
   Nico’s brother Lucca—and their friend, Gabe, the two begin
   to rediscover their passion for life, and a newly
   blossoming passion for each other.
   ISBN 978-1-4169-9168-7
   [1. Novels in verse. 2. Grief—Fiction. 3. Nightmares—Fiction.
   4. Interpersonal relations—Fiction.] I. Title.
   PZ7.5.S37Ch 2010
   [Fic]—dc22
   2009019442
   ISBN 978-1-4169-9882-2 (eBook)
   ISBN 978-1-4169-9168-7
   For Michael del Rosario—
   I couldn’t have done it without you
   Acknowledgments
   It takes many, many people to make a book and then to get said book into the hands of readers. I’d like to take this opportunity to shine the light on the team of people who have worked tirelessly behind the scenes on my behalf. Please know I appreciate your work more than I can say.
   A HUGE thank-you to:
   The electric editorial team—Bethany Buck, Jennifer Klonsky, Mara Anastas, Anica Rissi, Annette Pollert, Emilia Rhodes, and Michael del Rosario.
   The pristine production team—Carey O’Brien, Brenna Franzitta, and Ted Allen.
   The delightful design team—Cara Petrus and Mike Rosamilia.
   The marvelous marketing team—Lucille Rettino, Bess Braswell, and Venessa Williams.
   The legendary library and education marketing team—Michelle Fadlalla and Laura Antonacci.
   The perky publicity team—Paul Crichton and Andrea Kempfer.
   The SUPERspectacular sales team, who are too many to list here unfortunately, and a special shout-out to Victor Iannone for his enthusiasm and Jim Conlin because the third book might not be here if it weren’t for his incredible support of the first.
   Sun., Jan. 1st—Brooklyn
   One year ago today
   I lost my boyfriend, Lucca.
   He was
   an artist
   like me,
   a dreamer
   like me,
   a nature lover
   like me.
   We met in September
   of our sophomore year.
   By November,
   he was my first
   “I love you”
   boyfriend.
   Some thought it was impossible
   after only two months.
   I’d reply, love doesn’t tell time.
   Love is simply there
   or it isn’t.
   Every day,
   in every way,
   it was there.
   Sun., Jan. 1st—Nico
   One year ago today
   I lost my brother, Lucca.
   He was a son,
   a brother,
   a friend.
   The whole school was in shock when he died.
   Just six months earlier,
   another guy from our school died.
   Everyone went on about too much tragedy.
   Want to know about tragedy?
   Come to my house.
   A year later, tragedy is still here.
   Every damn day, it’s here.
   Sun., Jan. 1st—Brooklyn
   It’s early when I take flowers
   to his grave.
   I don’t want to see
   anyone else.
   The yellow Gerber daisies
   aren’t flashy,
   but beautiful in their own special way.
   Like he was.
   How many times
   have I wondered
   if he’d still be alive
   if I had stayed home?
   How many times
   have I wondered
   if there’s anything
   I could have done?
   How many times
   have I replayed
   it all in my head?
   More than there are
   blades of grass in this cemetery,
   that’s how many.
   Last New Year’s Eve.
   He said he’d be careful.
   He said he wouldn’t drink.
   He said he loved me and he’d see me soon.
   I was in North Dakota, at Grandma’s, for the holidays.
   We talked just a few hours
   before it apparently happened.
   In the early morning hours,
   while I had sweet dreams
   of me in his warm, loving arms,
   my phone filled with messages.
   Messages from friends telling me
   my boyfriend was
   dead.
   #277
   Dear Lucca,
   I don’t like cemeteries. Although, does anyone
   really like cemeteries?
   I mean, really? So many
   dead people, and they’re just creepy. But here I sit
   in one, writing you a letter.
   I remember one year when I was six years old,
   Daddy drove me through a cemetery Halloween
   night. He said when he was younger, he liked to
   have spooky fun in a graveyard. I was excited,
   until we got there and walked around. He told me
   we might get lucky and run into a real live ghost. I
   turned around and ran back to the car as fast as I
   could, crying so hard I thought I was going
   to throw up.
   But for you, I’ll do anything. Hope you like the
   daisies.
   Love always,
   Brooklyn
   Sun., Jan. 1st—Nico
   I go by myself
   to see Lucca.
   Ma will be too loud,
   wailing for him to come back,
/>   as if Heaven will hear her cries and do as she says.
   Yellow daisies tell me Brooklyn’s been here.
   His flower girl.
   I brought nothing.
   Just myself.
   Seems fitting.
   Feels like that’s all I’ve got anymore.
   Sun., Jan. 1st—Brooklyn
   At home, in my room
   I pull out the shoebox
   filled with Lucca
   keepsakes.
   Notes passed
   between classes
   with words of adoration
   and little cartoons
   telling the story
   of me and him.
   Love
   Pictures of us
   smiling
   making faces
   kissing
   around town
   one sunny afternoon.
   Joy
   Ticket stubs
   from time shared
   together at
   plays,
   movies,
   concerts.
   Happiness
   After a while,
   I put the box away,
   the love,
   joy,
   and happiness
   right along with it.
   Sun., Jan. 1st—Nico
   On the way home
   I stop at the park
   where we used to
   run
   slide
   swing
   jump
   boys being boys,
   our happiness measured
   by how far we could jump from the swings.
   Today I swing,
   my legs pumping hard and fast
   to that magical place where it feels like any second,
   my feet will touch the clouds.
   But this time, I don’t jump.
   I
   just
   stop
   pumping.
   Sun., Jan. 1st—Brooklyn
   I grab my Lucca notebook
   and make the weekly trek
   to Another Galaxy.
   Lucca loved going to
   the comic book store
   where the shelves are filled
   with the best of
   art and storytelling.
   It was his home
   away from home.
   Now, I find strength in the pages
   of the skinny little books.
   Who doesn’t love to see
   characters overcoming
   the greatest of odds?
   So I go, combing the boxes,
   picking up a couple each week
   with some of my allowance.
   I keep them by my bed
   and when I can’t sleep,
   I pull a comic out
   and hope a little of the
   courage and strength
   comes to me
   through the pages.
   Tom Strong is my favorite.
   Sure, the story is good.
   But it’s his name
   I love the most.
   When I get to the store,
   the sign says CLOSED.
   New Year’s Day.
   A holiday.
   I forgot.
   The anniversary of the day
   your boyfriend died
   will do that to a girl.
   Sun., Jan. 1st—Nico
   Time for a run.
   How far today?
   Five miles?
   Six?
   It’s only noon.
   I have the whole afternoon.
   Might as well go eight or nine.
   “Don’t you want lunch?” Ma calls after me.
   I wave at her and head out.
   Lunch can wait.
   Everything can wait.
   Time to run.
   Mon., Jan. 2nd—Brooklyn
   The walls of death
   are closing in around me.
   My best friend, Kyra, calls to ask
   if I’ve heard the news about Gabe.
   Gabe Gibson, Lucca’s friend.
   The driver that night.
   The one who survived.
   When she tells me what’s happened,
   her words hit me hard,
   like a hammer to my heart,
   I fall to the floor.
   “Brooklyn?
   Brooklyn!
   Are you okay?”
   It’s hot.
   Stifling.
   Need. Air.
   “Brooklyn!
   Should I come over?”
   I make it outside,
   where the sun is setting,
   the sky a canvas splattered
   with vibrant red and orange.
   Clouds stretch across the sky
   like cotton balls pulled apart by a child.
   It looks so soft, I close my eyes,
   trying to imagine the sky
   wrapped around me,
   comforting me.
   But it’s impossible
   to feel comforted
   in this uncomfortable
   moment.
   “Brooklyn, speak now or I’m calling 911!”
   “Kyra—” I whisper,
   and that’s all I can manage.
   Every part of me feels
   numb.
   “I know,” she says.
   “I know. You okay?”
   “No … no!
   How could he…
   I don’t …
   Are you sure?
   I mean really?
   God, I feel sick.
   Was it an accident or—?”
   “Don’t know.
   A drug overdose.
   That’s all they’re saying.”
   My mind races,
   a million questions
   chasing one another,
   eluding any
   logical answers.
   He lived.
   He made it.
   A second chance,
   given to one
   and not the other.
   And this?
   This is what he did with it?
   “I can’t believe it, Kyra.”
   “I’m so sorry, B.
   I knew this would upset you.”
   “I gotta go,” I say.
   “I’ll see you tomorrow.”
   As the red and orange
   fade into grayness,
   I can’t hold it in
   anymore.
   I sob and think,
   Why, Gabe?
   Why?
   Mon., Jan. 2nd—Nico
   I’m so pissed,
   I can’t stop throwing things.
   I threw the Guitar Hero guitar across the room and broke it.
   If Lucca was alive, he’d be pissed too.
   Except if my brother was alive,
   his friend wouldn’t have gone off the deep end,
   so they’d both still be here
   and there wouldn’t be anything to be pissed about.
   I don’t care how guilty you feel about driving your car into a tree,
   you don’t go and do something stupid like that.
   Asshole.
   I don’t get it.
   Was he trying to punish himself?
   No. He didn’t punish himself.
   He punished
   his bandmates,
   his family,
   a whole school.
   A school that’s had more than its fair share of grief.
   I pace the floor, my heart racing while I resist the urge
   to throw more stuff around.
   Finally, I put on my running shoes.
   I’ll run until I can’t run anymore.
   Mon., Jan. 2nd—Brooklyn
   Gabe was one of those guys
   who was full of life.
   Always talking.
   Always laughing.
   Always wanting to be the center of attention.
   Big guy
   with a bigger smile
   and the biggest heart.
   After Lucca died,
   it changed Gabe.
   Of course it wou
ld.
   He went from front and center
   to just fading into the background.
   We hung out for a while
   after it happened.
   Didn’t talk much.
   Mostly we sat in his room,
   me writing letters,
   him strumming on his guitar.
   Still, we promised
   we’d help each other through it.
   
 
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