But he was gone.
The paramedics made everyone but Mickey sit downstairs in the living room, out of sight but not quite out of earshot.
On the other side of the wide, empty space where an hour ago I had danced with Logan, Siobhan sat curled up in Connor’s arms, her tears staining his maroon T-shirt. Connor stroked her back and stared at the floor, which was still strewn with beer cups.
Brian paced beneath the wide archway leading to the dining room, crumpling his baseball cap in his hands, then unfolding it and putting it back on his head.
Instinct told me to keep my mouth shut instead of screaming at him. It felt like my fault, anyway, not Brian’s. If I hadn’t yelled at Logan for drinking the Liquid Stupid, he’d still be alive. Maybe passed out or puking up his guts, but definitely not lying on the carpet upstairs surrounded by EMTs murmuring words like “synergy” and “ventricular fibrillation.”
“Synergy,” Megan scoffed as she rubbed my cold hands between hers. “I haven’t heard that word since fifth grade. What’s the point of teaching a bunch of ten-year-olds not to mix cocaine and alcohol? We forgot all about it by the time we turned eleven, much less seventeen.”
“Oh God.” My own heart felt like it would twitch and halt. “Logan died on his birthday.”
“No, no, no.” Her voice pitched up, like she was chiding a dog. “Look, it’s already Saturday.” She pointed at the grandfather clock in the corner.
One fifteen.
“Isn’t there a song about one fifteen on a Saturday night?” Megan asked, obviously trying to distract me.
“Ten fifteen. By the Cure.” My lungs seized in a sob. Even music would hurt now without Logan. Music, food, texting, shopping, the Inner Harbor, the Ocean City boardwalk. I wanted to move far away, take someone else’s past and future. It would hurt too much to be me now.
Megan crammed another tissue into my hands just as Aunt Gina walked through the front door.
Gina looked up the stairs at the paramedics, police, and what used to be Logan. Her face remained still, like she had rehearsed this moment to stay calm. But the underside of her jaw twitched as she swallowed.
Gina turned to the living room. “Oh, sweetheart.” She hurried over, and I realized she’d been waiting up for me. Her makeup was still on, and her short blond waves hadn’t been combed out.
Somehow I managed to stand so she could hug me. “I’m so, so sorry,” she whispered. “You have no idea.”
She held me tight for several seconds, murmuring words I couldn’t make out. I wanted to beg her to take me home, but she still had a job to do.
Gina kissed my cheek. “I’ll be right back.” She strode into the foyer and hustled up the stairs. As if from a distance, I heard her ask in her lawyer voice, “Who’s the officer in charge?”
“No, it’s not an emergency.” Sitting in the corner armchair, Dylan spit his words into the phone receiver. “I’m calling at one a.m. because I have a tummyache and I want my mommy.” He paused. “Well, you’re, like, the fourth person I’ve talked to, and everyone asks the same thing, so obviously I do need to get sarcastic. Tell them to call home. Now.” Dylan hung up. “It’s such bullshit we can’t get Mom and Dad.”
“They don’t have cell towers in the middle of the ocean,” Megan pointed out.
“Call Aunt Jean,” Siobhan said, sniffling. “Or Aunt Rosemary. They’ll know what to do.”
“No way.” Dylan clasped the phone to his chest. “Mom and Dad should find out first. And the cops won’t call anyone, since you and Mickey are eighteen. You’re taking care of us.” He flinched. “Of me, I mean.”
Siobhan moaned, burying her face in Connor’s chest. Dylan sank deeper in the chair and covered his face with the end of a Halloween throw blanket. Its black and orange tassels fluttered as he breathed out a heavy sigh.
“Does anyone want a drink?”
We all stared at Brian, who shoved his hands in his pockets.
“I don’t mean-jeez, I meant like soda or something.”
“I’ll help you.” Megan gave me a worried glance and followed Brian toward the kitchen.
I sat back on the sofa. My hand slid over something cold and wet. I lifted it to see a brown-yellow stain on the creamy beige cushion. Spilled Guinness, no doubt. My cheeks flamed at the memory of Logan’s last several drinks.
I excused myself with a mumble, then slunk away to the downstairs bathroom.
Locking the door, I left the light off before remembering that, like all bathrooms, it would be BlackBoxed. That’s why Logan wasn’t in here. If he was a ghost, he’d come back to me, right?
I splashed cold water on my face until my contact lenses stung from the smeared eyeliner. I dried my face and hands, avoiding the mirror. One glimpse would start me sobbing again.
I opened the bathroom door and stepped into the foyer. From above my head came the noise of a heavy zipper.
I looked up the stairs, then wished I hadn’t.
The paramedics had placed Logan’s body onto a stretcher. One of them was sealing a long, greenish black bag.
I imagined the last glimpse of Logan, his bleached-blond hair, disappearing inside. My knees turned liquid, and I let out a little cry.
He can’t breathe in there.
“Aura.” My aunt waved her hand over the banister as if to shoo me. “Sweetie, you shouldn’t see this. Go wait in one of the other rooms.”
I wanted to launch myself up the stairs, rip open the bag, and cling to the only part of Logan I could still touch. I wanted to scream at the paramedics not to take him. Not yet.
Instead I ran into the den and slammed the door.
Light from the street filtered through the sheer curtains, glowing silver on the desk and bookshelves, and the globe that Mr. Keeley had insisted on buying, even though it was outdated by the time it arrived.
But it was dark enough for ghosts. “Logan,” I whispered. “Don’t let me remember that. I want to see you the way you are now. Please come back.”
Nothing to hear but the pulse pounding in my temples. Nothing to see but ambulance headlights sweeping across the window.
Nothing to feel but alone.
Chapter Five
In my dream, Logan was red.
So red and so deep, I could see him in full sunshine. We lay on the beach, facing each other, with no towels between our bodies and the sand.
“You look like blood,” I teased him.
He laughed, his mouth a dark chasm. “That’s because I’m made of blood.”
He stroked my face. His fingertips were warm and way too soft. He wasn’t solid like a person, or air like a ghost. He was liquid-liquid that now dripped from my cheek and chin.
“Don’t,” I told him.
“What are you afraid of?” Logan drew his hand over the strap of my bikini and down my arm, leaving a glistening scarlet trail. “I won’t hurt you. I just need to touch you again.” His slippery-slick hand t
ook mine. “Don’t you want to touch me, Aura?”
I let out a whimper that verged on a moan. “You know I do.” To prove it, I reached forward. My hand plunged into Logan’s chest.
His limbs spasmed, and he threw back his head. “Not there!”
Something pulsed in my grip. It was like shoving my hand against a Jacuzzi nozzle. Then the current reversed, sucking me in.
“I can’t let go!” My heels kicked at the sand, trying to gain traction. “Logan!”
His liquid fingers clutched my shoulders. My body slipped forward as if sliding down a steep hill.
Behind me, someone pulled. Someone as strong and solid as the earth itself.
But it wasn’t enough. Caught in gravity’s grasp, I crashed into Logan’s body of blood.
My eyes opened. Flailing my arm, I rolled over, expecting to see Aunt Gina standing over my bed after shaking me awake.
“Sweetheart?”
Her voice came from the doorway, not my bedside.
“It’s almost noon.” Gina entered and sat next to me, then brushed the sweaty bangs off my forehead. “Can I get you some soup?”
Warm liquid. Entering my body. Through my mouth.
I lunged over Gina’s lap and barfed into the trash can.
“I guess not,” she murmured as she pulled back my hair.
When I stopped retching-which didn’t take long, since there was nothing in my stomach-she handed me a tissue. I was already sick of tissues.
Gina picked up the pukey trash can. “I’ll bring you some soda.” The house phone rang, and she hurried out before I could plead, “No liquids!”
A few minutes later the doorbell sounded. I had the urge to run, or at least hide, but my limbs felt like rubber.
Soon there was a soft knock on my bedroom door. Megan shambled in, carrying a plate of saltines and a fizzing glass of ginger ale.
“I thought about calling first,” she said, “but I was afraid you’d tell me not to come. So I just came.”
“Thanks.” I sat up to take the crackers. The stoneware plate was cool and solid. “Put that drink where I can’t see it, okay?”
Without questioning, Megan set the glass on my desk, then opened my calculus book and set it on its edge, as if the ginger ale were getting changed behind one of those old-fashioned dressing screens.
“How’s Mickey?” I asked her.
“Horrible.” She slouched over from the desk and sank onto the edge of the bed. “They finally got hold of Mr. and Mrs. Keeley on the cruise. They’re flying back tonight when the ship stops in the Caymans.” She rubbed her chapped nose. “A couple of aunts are already at the house, which pisses Mickey off. He says he can take care of the family until their folks come back, but of course he can’t.”
“Has Dylan seen-I mean, has Logan-”
“No one’s seen Logan.” She squeezed my knee through the red sheet. “I think he’s really gone.”
I slumped back on my pillow, knowing I should be relieved instead of crushed. “But it was so sudden. Most people like that stay ghosts for longer than ten minutes. No way was he already at peace.” I remembered Logan’s face as his brother screamed at his dead body. Another tear dribbled out. “Maybe Logan’s mad at us.”
Megan groaned. “You too? Mickey blames himself. You blame yourself. None of what they say is true. You know better than anyone.”
I shifted my head on the pillow. “What who says?”
Her mouth formed a tiny O. “Um, nothing. People online are, you know, bullshitting about last night.”
I got so cold, it felt like my mattress had become a block of ice. “Where online?”
“Do not stress, okay? It’s covered. I told them where they could stick their stupid rumors.”
I sat up fast, my stomach somersaulting. “What rumors?”
“Aura…”
“If you don’t show me, I’ll look it up when you leave.” I rolled off the other side of the bed.
“Okay, okay!” Megan followed me to my desk and stood behind me as I opened my laptop. “Start on Amy Koeller’s profile.”
“Amy?” Our class president, future Peace Corps volunteer, was gossiping about me? She was always so sweet to everyone. I brought up my friends list and clicked on her profile.
At the top of her page, her status read, OMG Aura Salvatore’s boyfriend Logan died of cardiac arrest last night. We should send flowers or something.
“That’s nice.” I scrolled down to see a link that said, View all 152 comments. I clicked, then scrolled, and scrolled, and scrolled some more.
Megan tried to close the laptop screen. “Aura, one last time. Please don’t read this.”
I shoved her hand away and angled the screen so I could see. The first couple of dozen responses were sympathetic or shocked, lots of people remembering Logan from when he went to Ridgewood before his family moved out to the County. There were offers to pitch in five bucks for flowers, then an argument about whether they should donate the money to a charity in Logan’s name instead.
Then Casey Crawford said, You know it was drugs, right? Heard Aura gave them to him.
“What?” I shouted.
Lauren Bankford: No way. Aura pretends she’s all badass, but she’d never have cocaine.
Casey:It’s what I heard.
Mike Brubaker: I could totally see Logan OD’ing. I knew a guy who used to get high with him in eighth grade. Dude always had to take more hits off a joint than anyone else.
Lauren: You ‘knew a guy,’ huh, Mike?;-)
Amy: People, can we get back to the charity topic? Maybe we should donate it to a drug awareness group.
Mike:You mean those retards who put on skits for assemblies? I’ll feed the money to my dog instead-his turds are better quality than those plays.
Lauren:Shut up, Mike. I think it should go to the antidrug thing. When my granddad died, people gave money to cancer research.
Amy:Off to soup kitchen. Back later.
Nate Hofstetler:Maybe it should go to Viagra safety research.
Mike:ROFLMFAO @ Nate.
Casey:Wait. What’s this about Viagra?
Nate:Logan had a heart attack. Viagra causes heart attacks.
Lauren:Does not.
Nate:See the commercials? They say it at the end.
Lauren:It’s bc old guys use it and their hearts explode when they have sex, LOL.
Sarah Greenwalt:I don’t think cardiac arrest is the same as a heart attack. I just looked it up.
Nate:Maybe it’s not only old guys who use Viagra.
Casey:You are NOT saying what I think you’re saying.
Mike:I’d need Viagra to get it up for Aura Salvatore.
My stomach went cold, but I kept my face rigid so Megan wouldn’t shut my laptop. I had to keep reading, find out who had started these rumors.
Casey:No way, man, she’s hot.
Mike:She’s, like, three feet tall & she’s a total ballbuster. Ital
ians yell all the time.
Casey:Aura can yell in my ear all she wants while I’m doing her.
Nate:Yeah, she’d be yelling, “IS IT IN YET?”
Mike:Plus, you can tell she’ll be fat in five years.
Megan McConnell:YOU GUYS ARE SUCH ASSHOLES. YOU WEREN’T EVEN THERE, SO YOU DON’T KNOW SHIT!! NONE OF YOU, SO STFU!!!
Lauren:Srsly, let’s take this into chat. Amy’ll zap this thread anyway when she gets home.
Casey:Bitches.
My finger hovered over the refresh key.
“Don’t do it,” Megan said.
I hit F5 to reload the page. The thread disappeared.
“Thank God, Amy killed it.” Megan reached for the laptop lid. “Don’t worry about those idiots.”
I grabbed the base of the computer. “No, I have to find out what they’re saying now.”
“What difference does it make?”
“What difference?” I shouted. “Logan’s dead, and they’re telling lies about him!”
“What are you gonna do, huh? Tell everyone the truth?” She tightened her hold on the laptop lid. “Gina will kill you if you talk about this online.”
“I don’t care!” I wrenched the computer to the left. Megan lost her balance and knocked over my propped-up calculus book.
The hidden glass of ginger ale flooded my keyboard. My laptop sizzled as the soda soaked into the frame.
“Oh my God!” Megan yanked a tissue out of the box, then flipped it over. “It’s empty!”
I pulled the plug from the back of the laptop and held down the power button until the screen went black. Then I turned the computer upside down and propped it up like a tent so the liquid would drip out.
“Now what?” Megan dug her green fingernails into the tissue like it was the last one in the world.
“Nothing. It has to dry for at least a day.”
“How did you know what to do?”
“Last year Logan spilled Coke on his laptop and totally fried it. So I looked up the procedure in case it ever happened to me.”
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