Book Read Free

The Fall

Page 10

by James Preller


  KINDER

  Today Mr. Laneway asked me how I was doing and it turned out that I was okay, and I told him so. I think I was more surprised to say it than he was to hear it.

  He suggested that I should consider taking an elective next year for creative writing.

  I was like, “Really?”

  He said, “You bet.”

  Problem is I’d have to miss lunch. That’s my favorite part of the school day, the only time you can relax a little. When you give up lunch to take an elective, you have to grab snacks while you’re walking down the halls. I’ve seen those people, the lunch-missers, and they are scuttering around like squirrels munching on nuts. Hyper-achievers. That didn’t seem like me.

  At the same time: Cool, Mr. Laneway likes my writing. I’ve showed him bits and pieces of my journal. Not everything, but some of it.

  He says I have talent.

  “More than talent,” he said, “you have heart. It shows in your writing.”

  My jaw hit the floor. I probably stood there, shoulders forward and arms dangling, Neanderthal-like. Grunted, “Ugh?”

  Maybe I’ll do it. Maybe it is me after all.

  This year I’ve learned to like writing, liking the person I become when I write.

  The feeling I got was more important than what I actually (really-really) wrote.

  Right here—on the blank white page—I’m beginning to see the real me. Does that sound like I think I’m all that? Because I so don’t. But I do think that writing things down has helped me see what I really feel. Does that even make sense?

  (Doubts, uncertainties. Carry on!)

  It’s hard to describe, but I don’t know what I think until I read my words on the page. I read them back and sometimes I’m like, “Whoa, dude’s pissed.”

  I might keep going with the writing thing. Who knows? Try to read more, think more—and by that I mean think more of my own thoughts, not a bunch of ideas borrowed from everybody else. My own shit, good or bad.

  I grew up thinking that deep down inside me there waited the real boy, huddled in a corner. And if I just chip-chip-chipped away at it, it would be finally revealed: the true me. Like a sculpture made from stone.

  Now I think the opposite might be true. We create ourselves out of nothingness, we are flesh and blood only. Sticks and stones and raspberry jam. The real boy is the person I create through my actions. My deeds and my words. The choices I make.

  I am Sam.

  Sam I am.

  The real me is what I do, how I treat you …

  And you …

  And you …

  Um. I’ll have to puzzle this one out another day. Getting fuzzy, brain’s a little scrambled today (like eggs), and there’s a zombie apocalypse on television calling my name.

  I’m saying only this:

  I’ll be kinder

  Tomorrow.

  MR. SMOOTHIE

  I’m just about at the end of this journal, a few more pages to go. I’ll buy a new one soon and start fresh. But before I close this book, bury it in my dresser, I’ve got a couple more things to say.

  I bumped into Athena at the mall.

  Let me say it up front, I’m not a mall guy. My basic policy is, I’d rather not. So if I’m there, it’s usually because I got dragged by my mother, or to catch a movie at the Cine 18 with some friends. But if I do go, it’s mandatory that I stop for a mango shake at Mr. Smoothie in the food court. I’m addicted to that liquid.

  I was with Demarcus and Jeff. We were seated around a table, our trays knocking around like bumper cars. Those guys snarfed burritos. I was happy with my awesome, extra-large mango shake.

  Then D said, “Look, there’s Athena Luiken. I haven’t seen her since she left school last month. She cut her hair wicked short.”

  I turned and there she was, sitting on the other side of the food court. She looked different now, paler, thinner, more fragile.

  D snorted. “She probably joined the witness protection program. Athena doesn’t exist anymore.”

  It shook me up, sitting there listening to the bogus hum of their voices. As if they knew anything. It all came rushing back. All the old feelings, images of Morgan, and my anger. After a few numb minutes, my heart contracting like a fist, I saw that Athena and her mother had gathered up their packages and were preparing to leave.

  “Hold on a sec,” I told Jeff and D. I stood with my tray in hand.

  “Where you going?” Demarcus asked.

  “I’ll be right back,” I explained, not really explaining at all.

  I bypassed the nearest trash can, sailed through a sea of tables, and drifted into Athena’s path.

  Even at that moment, I didn’t know what I would say, or if I’d even say anything. I was tempted to turn away, not acknowledge her. Why was I even waiting here? What was it D said? Athena doesn’t exist anymore.

  I stood there watching, waiting, holding the stupid tray as if it were a sacrificial offering. They came closer, walking side by side. The ghost who used to be Athena listened as her mother talked.

  That’s when Athena’s eyes glanced in my direction. I saw her see me. Something terrible crossed her face, like a dark wind crossing over tall grass. It was a look I’d seen many times before on Morgan’s face as she walked down the hallways of school.

  Right at that moment, I knew Athena wished she could disappear. Maybe in the same way that Morgan had wished she could disappear.

  What did I want from her, after all this time?

  I didn’t know.

  I still don’t think I’ll ever understand it.

  I remembered all those times in school when I looked up and Morgan was suddenly there. How I’d always look away. How I never said a word. How I failed her.

  And now here came Athena Luikin, a shopping bag pressed against her chest, her head down, shoulders hunched, trying to appear invisible.

  I remembered The Bell Jar. “I shut my eyes and all the world drops dead” was a line that Morgan had underlined in red.

  “Hi,” I said.

  The word came out dry and brittle, like a dead leaf crumbled in someone’s hand.

  Athena looked up, startled. She almost smiled, nodded once, and kept walking.

  She didn’t apologize.

  I didn’t expect her to.

  After all, neither did I.

  I see you.

  It wasn’t forgiveness exactly, but it was the best I could do.

  ONE LAST THING

  I had one last thing to do.

  I went to Morgan’s page online. It was still up, a forgotten site in cyberspace, like a dusty attic in a big house.

  I sent an e-mail to the host, explained things as best I could, and requested they shut it down. I scrolled to the beginning and read all the way through. Every anonymous comment.

  No one was responsible, yet our fingerprints stained every word.

  Die, die, die.

  No one cares.

  Fat ugly beast.

  I opened a new comment box and wrote:

  You did not die.

  I still see your passing light

  In the fireflies

  That flicker and fade

  Outside my window

  In the invincible summer night.

  I guess I will remember

  Everything.

  —your friend, Sam Proctor

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  ABOUT THE AUTHOR

  James Preller is the author of the popular Jigsaw Jones mystery books, which have sold more than 10 million copies since 1998. He is also the author of Bystander, named a 2009 Junior Library Guild Selection, Six Innings, an ALA Notable Book, and Mighty Casey, his own twist on the classic poem, “Casey at the Bat.” In addition to writing full-time, Preller plays in a men’s hardball league and coaches Little League. He compares coaching kids to “trying to hold the attention of a herd of earthworms.” He lives in Delmar, New York with his wife, three children, cats and dog. You can sign up fo
r email updates here.

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  CONTENTS

  Title Page

  Copyright Notice

  Dedication

  Epigraphs

  Not Like Me

  Cast Out

  Slogans on Shirts

  One Spectacular Fact

  The Game

  Super Awkward

  The First Time

  Somebody Else

  The Shrine

  What’s Done is Done

  Blank

  Filling in the Blanks

  People Talking

  Still Nothing

  Accident

  The Tower Gets Tagged

  Alone, Together

  Dance Lessons

  I See Her Flying without Wings

  The Goddess

  Could Have Said

  The Library

  About Me

  I Looked Away

  Not Me

  “Go,” She Said

  I was It

  Somebody Laughed

  Sorry

  The Great Auk

  The Water Tower

  The Water Tower Again

  Sorry

  One Truth

  The Beast

  The Sister

  Doubts

  Dad’s Gun

  Somebody’s Fingerprint

  She Liked Baths

  Meeting with Laneway

  Clear All

  Groundhog Life

  Gotta Get Going

  She Quit Dance

  That Time I Kind of Tried

  Something

  Nothing

  Satisfaction Guaranteed

  The Refusal

  Handled

  The Fallout

  Identity

  Hours Seem Long

  Good Dog

  Laneway, Revisited

  Baby Steps

  Spring

  Spit and Shake

  Knew Her

  Summer Meeting

  Things She Said

  The Day I Heard the News …

  The Gift

  Dad Says

  Public Speaking

  Face Meets Fist

  I Knocked

  Things I Like

  Words

  Reading

  You Are

  The Apology

  Oh Why

  Where Dreams Come True

  I Hate the World

  The Only One

  In the Stairwell

  The Note

  Jewelry Store

  The Last Time I saw Morgan

  Kinder

  Mr. Smoothie

  One Last Thing

  About the Author

  Copyright

  A FEIWEL AND FRIENDS BOOK

  An Imprint of Macmillan

  THE FALL. Copyright © 2015 by James Preller. All rights reserved. For information, address Feiwel and Friends, 175 Fifth Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10010.

  Our eBooks may be purchased in bulk for promotional, educational, or business use. Please contact the Macmillan Corporate and Premium Sales Department at 1-800-221-7945, ext. 5442, or by e-mail at MacmillanSpecialMarkets@macmillan.com.

  Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

  Preller, James.

  The fall / James Preller. — First edition.

  pages cm

  Summary: In writing in his journal about middle-school classmate Morgan Mallen’s suicide from bullying, Sam explores whether he was a friend, or one of the bullies who ignored her at school and tormented her online.

  ISBN 978-0-312-64301-0 (hardback) — ISBN 978-1-250-06647-3 (e-book)

  [1. Self-actualization (Psychology)—Fiction. 2. Suicide—Fiction. 3. Bullies—Fiction. 4. Cyberbullying—Fiction. 5. Diaries—Fiction.] I. Title.

  PZ7.P915Fal 2015

  [Fic]—dc23

  2015002566

  Feiwel and Friends logo designed by Filomena Tuosto

  First Edition: 2015

  eISBN 9781250066473

  mackids.com

 

 

 


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