“Sure.”
“So, um …”
“I know I owe you a better explanation. I just—let me close the door.” She did so, and returned. “A week before we had coffee, a girl I’ve barely even talked to before saw me shopping at the mall and asked if I could hook her up with some snow for the holidays.” She sounded far away.
“What?” I said, trying to draw her voice closer, scared she might fade to nothing.
“Yeah. I didn’t know what she meant.” I could tell this was hard for her to talk about—that maybe she was afraid her parents would hear, even with the door closed. She affected a dumb drawl. “I was all, ‘Are ya goin’ skiin’?’”
“What’s ‘snow’?” I asked, even though I had a pretty good idea.
“Cocaine.” She attacked the Cs, then lowered her voice again. “She heard I was the girl to ask.”
I was shocked. “What? Why?”
“I chalked it up to a misunderstanding at first, but then it happened again, a couple days later. Someone asked me to bring ‘refreshments’ to a party.”
“Why would they think—”
“Because I was dating you. And you work for Ryder.” Her voice solidified—hardened—and formed edges. “Apparently I have the hook-up, and I didn’t even know it. So, what’s fair-market price these days? Think I could get a discount?”
“Okay, okay.” I nodded slowly, as though she could see me, or at least sense how seriously I was taking this. They say if you smile when making a sales call, the person on the other end will feel it in the tenor of your voice, so I nodded like my life depended on it. “Okay … I sometimes do favors for him, but it’s not—it’s not drugs. It’s not what you think. It’s the history classroom. I leave the window unlocked once a week.”
“Why?”
I took a moment. “I’ve never asked.”
“Sure. Why ask, as long as the money keeps coming in?” Her voice was soft again, but sarcastic, and it stung me like a cut lip squirted with pomegranate juice.
I swallowed. “Look. It didn’t seem like a big deal. He’s my oldest friend.”
She exhaled, a brief snort. I could practically hear her rolling her eyes, and it drove me nuts. Everyone was happy to write off Ryder, because they didn’t know him, but they were willing to use him when it suited their purposes. Even Ellie.
“Okay, remember when you got a parking pass junior year? And so did I? And so did all our friends?” I said.
She seemed perplexed by the subject change. “The parking lottery, yeah.”
“Did you really think it was luck?”
“That’s what a lottery is.”
“There were only twenty-five passes available for juniors. Out of the whole school, you and I both got passes. And you didn’t think that was strange?”
There was a pause. “You rigged the lottery?”
“I told you I’d take care of it, and I did. You were thrilled. You weren’t asking too many questions then.”
She gave a sound that was half laughter, half horror, like she couldn’t decide if she should be impressed or concerned. “I can’t believe you rigged the lottery.”
“Ryder and I did it together. It was easy. We paid off the hall monitor who collected everyone’s slips, and he paid off the dot-gov to read the names of our friends and yours and mine.”
“You bribed the student council president?!”
“No, we paid off the VP, and Ryder ‘delayed’ the president from attending.”
“Is that supposed to be better?”
“C’mon. You had to have known something was up, but you didn’t say anything.”
“Maybe,” she conceded. “I guess I didn’t want to know. And I didn’t think it was a big deal—I mean, someone had to get those passes.”
“Right,” I said. “And if you’d ever spent time with Ryder, you’d know he’s not like that. Yes, he gets high sometimes, but he’s not a dealer. You’d get high, too, if you got beaten up every day freshman year. He’s had a rough time at home, but he’s a good guy.”
“What he did for you in Little League was amazing,” Ellie said carefully, “but that was a long time ago. I think you have to open your eyes to who he is now.”
“He threw the bat for me,” I said. “There’s nothing else to say.”
She didn’t reply.
“Why didn’t you tell me about the drugs?” I asked. “I could’ve explained all that to you.”
“There were other things, too,” she said quietly, reluctantly.
I hung on every word, nervous and sick.
“Like what?”
“When I met you, you played center forward—you were like this blur of light all over the field, assisting goals, taking shots. You were a leader.”
“You dumped me because I got moved to fullback?” I said, incredulous.
“No, of course not!”
“Then what are you trying to say?”
“You were different. All of a sudden, it was like you wanted to hurt people—”
“It’s a sport, Ellie. There’s going to be contact.”
“You used to play for sixty, eighty minutes … Now you’re a hit man, in and out in five to kick people or shove them down.”
“I’m just trying to help my team! I didn’t want to be put on defense. It just happened, so I’m trying to make the most of it.”
“It happened because you got more aggressive.”
As the phone call had gone on, I’d been sliding inexorably toward the floor, until by this point I was basically lying down, a puddle of ooze, defeated. “Anything else?” I asked the ceiling.
“Both things made me scared for you. I got this feeling something terrible was going to happen, either with Ryder or with soccer. Like you were on the edge of something bad and you were going to get hurt, or you were going to hurt someone, and Jonathan—”
“What’s this have to do with Jonathan?”
“He looks up to you. So much. And I didn’t want him to see you this way, or have him be around drugs or—”
“I would never—”
“It just scared me, okay?”
“But you don’t—you don’t think I had anything to do with West Side Story Maria’s overdose, do you?”
She didn’t reply, which was worse than a straight-out accusation. At least you can defend yourself from those.
“I didn’t … I swear to God I’m as much in the dark as anyone else is.” My parents believed me unconditionally; why couldn’t Ellie?
“I know. I think. I mean …”
“I wish you’d told me all this so I could’ve fixed it, you know?”
The silence was so long, I had to make sure she was still there. “Ellie?”
“I wanted to, but I got the feeling you don’t trust me anymore,” she said, which broke whatever was left of my heart.
I dragged myself upright again and propped my back against the bed. “Did you really apply to Lambert, or was that just something you told me?”
“See? That’s exactly what I’m talking about. You don’t trust me. Your first instinct when you saw me with Fred was to accuse me of, like, cheating on you.”
I took a deep breath, painfully aware that she hadn’t answered my real question. “I miss you,” I murmured. “You said you still care about me, too.” She hadn’t, I knew; she’d said she still “worried” about me, but it sounded better to use the word “care.” “If I change all those things, do we have a shot?”
“But you can’t change those things,” she said. “You didn’t think they were a problem. So if you change them, you’d only be doing it because I asked you to, not because you agree with me.”
There was a clicking noise, and we both quieted.
“Charlie?”
It was Jonathan.
I exhaled. “What up, J-Dawg.” Maybe it was kind of mean that I called him that. He was a scrawny sci-fi nerd in glasses, hardly gangsta. But he seemed to like it.
“Jonathan, hang up. We’re having a p
rivate conversation,” said Ellie.
“I haven’t been listening. I just got on because I need to ask Charlie something.”
“Go for it,” I said. Any distraction would be better than the conversation Ellie and I had been having.
“Do you remember saying you were going to take me to Blood of Mars this Wednesday for the sneak preview? We saw the trailer over Thanksgiving? Do you remember saying that?”
“Sure,” I said. “The only problem is, I don’t have a car right now.”
“Oh, maaaan,” he said.
“I know,” I said. “My thoughts exactly.” I waited a beat, as if the idea had just occurred to me. “Maybe Ellie could take us. If she’s feeling generous.”
Ellie laughed, a nice laugh, not a sarcastic one, and it felt like sparkling water being poured down my throat, bubbly and cleansing. “Subtle.”
“Ugh, I don’t want to go with Ellie. She hates sci-fi,” said Jonathan.
“I know, but I don’t think we have any other options. If you want to see it before everyone else, I mean.”
This was torture for him. If he didn’t see it the first possible night, he may as well not see it at all. It’d be ruined; the other kids or the Internet would spoil it for him. He must’ve read my mind because he nearly burst my eardrum. “Pleeeeease, Ellie?”
“Pleeeeease?” I echoed.
“Oh my God, fine, but only if you stop whining. Both of you.”
“Pick me up at seven?” I said quickly, before she could change her mind. “I’ll buy the tickets. See you Wednesday night.”
Maybe I’d only succeeded in prolonging the inevitable. But for now, that was enough.
We hung up and I pulled my shoe box of Ellie memorabilia out from under the bed and turned it upside down, shaking the contents onto the floor. There were a bunch of folded, handwritten notes on her signature stationery, which was dark blue, like her Homecoming dress. She used to write in white pen—occasionally backwards, if she had snoops breathing over her shoulder, so I’d had to use a mirror to read those.
A few loose photographs and seven thick Post-it pads were mixed in with the notes. I picked up one of the Post-it pads and flipped through it. Ellie liked to draw these elaborate animated flip-book cartoons for me when she was bored in class. Sometimes she’d re-create me on the soccer field, or draw us kissing, or draw herself at Wahoo’s Fish Taco, gobbling up tacos like Pac-Man. She loved California cuisine; couldn’t get enough of Asian fusion and Cobb salads and tacos and sushi.
For our first date, at her request, I’d taken her to Wahoo’s Fish Taco.
I’d been wolfing my food down, but she’d kept rotating her plate, taking a bite from each section of rice, guacamole, and taco, and when I asked her why, she said she was trying to plan it so she ended with a piece of avocado. She’d decided in advance what she wanted the last bite to be; she liked to end her meal on just the right note.
I ate that way now. Sometimes. Just because it reminded me of her.
She wasn’t my alcohol; she never had been. She was my water, the thing I’d been thirsting for, the thing that would save me.
But how do you hold on to water? It never stops moving. It flows away, it changes shape, it returns to its source.
It evaporates.
IN THE BACK OF THE BUS
THE NEXT DAY, TUESDAY, I WONDERED IF BRIDGET WAS RIGHT. That I didn’t move fast enough, hadn’t moved fast enough with Ellie. But we’d talked about it—a lot. Neither of us wanted empty sex, or stressful sex, or covert, rushed sex in a car or on the couch while her parents and brother were out. We didn’t want all the time we’d spent together, all the hours we’d talked on the phone, to end up being nothing more than a prelude to Getting It On. I was afraid if we did it, the whole relationship would become about sex, the way it had with Bridget and me.
Bridget was the kind of girl you dated because everyone else seemed to want her. I’d loved the idea of her, and I’d loved having a girlfriend, but I was never in love with her. She was pushy and abrasive, and she was always pointing out my supposed flaws. We went parking at Devil’s Punchbowl hiking preserve on our first date, and when I walked her to her door, she made fun of me for not getting to second base. I didn’t think it was okay to just go ahead and grab a girl’s tits. I figured you had to build up to it. She decided I needed coaching and I was a willing student, but when she showed me the condom in her purse a few weeks later, I didn’t feel excited; I felt dread. We’d barely been together a month. I didn’t want to have sex with someone I wasn’t in love with, at least, not for my first time, so I told her no thanks, and she was insulted, so she broke up with me.
When Ellie moved here, I knew instantly what I’d been missing. We moved slowly, but that was hotter because instead of feeling rushed, like I had with Bridget, I felt like Ellie and I were testing boundaries together. I just wanted her to be happy and relaxed, and I didn’t care if sex happened in a month or a year.
Bridget didn’t think I was aggressive enough, and Ellie thought I was too aggressive (at least, on the soccer field). How the hell was someone both too much and not enough?
Like a cat with burrs on its back, I tried to shake my dark musings loose, but some of them stuck. If we’d had sex, would Ellie still have broken up with me? Or would we have been tied together in some stronger way that was more difficult to undo?
At breakfast, my dad shoveled in his Shredded Wheat like he was halfway out the door, so I asked quickly, “Did the sheriff’s department call with an ETA about when I can get Amelia back?”
“Not until Thursday. And I can’t drive you this morning because I’m already late for a faculty meeting. Sorry.”
Maybe this makes me sound like I was still drunk, but for the first time since my car had been impounded, it dawned on me what the situation really meant.
It meant—oh Jesus God—I had to take the bus.
I hadn’t ridden the bus to school in two years. I wasn’t even sure where it picked people up. Squinting in the January sunlight, I looked in both directions and saw a couple of underclassmen hunched over their smartphones across the street and down a block.
I adjusted my backpack and strolled over to wait in line, trying to look like I didn’t care that I was a senior waiting for the goddamn yellow-and-black. The two clogged pores were playing Guttersnipes Versus Woodpeckers, but then one of them looked up and saw me.
“Charlie Dixon?” he nudged his friend. “That’s—are you Charlie Dixon?”
Since they’d initiated the conversation, it was okay to reply. “I also answer to Dix, Chazz, or Chuckles. Actually, I don’t. What do you want?”
“You’re on the soccer team.”
The second clogged pore looked up now. “No way.”
The first guy went into a frenzy of elbow nudges. “I told you he lived on our block.” He turned back to me. “I saw you wipe out that guy from Agua Dulce last fall. Red card in the fourth minute. Suhweet.”
It was disconcerting that what they remembered from the game was me fouling Steve, not me scoring or assisting or defending the box, but hey—I happened to be the player who slid cleats-first into opponents to steal the ball. Someone had to be, right?
“Who are you with?” I asked, trying to change the subject.
“Orchestra. Are you gonna nail him like that again on Friday?” the second frosh asked.
“Haven’t decided,” I said. Maybe I’d rather be remembered for something else. It was a little too much philosophizing for 7:15 in the morning. “You guys play?”
“Hellz yeah. We have a game in the street every Thursday night,” the first guy said. “You should come.”
His buddy shoved him. “He has real practice every night, ’tard.”
“It’s cool,” I said. “Hey, is that today’s issue?”
“Yeah.”
“How’d you get a copy already?” I asked.
The Palm Valley High Recorder came out on Tuesdays, with issues appearing in stacks outside the principa
l’s office, cafeteria, and journalism room. They shouldn’t be available outside school yet, but this one had today’s date on it.
“My sister’s the coeditor. She brought one home last night.”
“Can I take a look at it?” I said.
He was delighted, practically threw it at me. “Yeah, here, keep it.”
The bus pulled up and I motioned for the little dudes to go ahead in front of me. It was friggin’ embarrassing climbing up the steps inside the bus, like I was returning to childhood. I half expected Mom to appear on the sidewalk outside the house, waving goodbye in exaggerated motions or racing after the bus to hand me my brown-bag lunch with a smiley face drawn on it.
I strolled to the back of the bus, doing my best to ignore the rows of curious eyes and excited murmurs following me. The clogged pores had already spread the word that Charlie Dixon, local soccer antihero, was inexplicably gracing them with his presence this morning.
“I saved a spot for you,” one of them chimed from the very last seat.
“Move,” I said, pointing to a spot in front. I wanted the back seat to myself, so I could have privacy while reading the school paper.
I settled in and flipped straight to the last page—the classifieds and gossip section. Not everyone’s parents let them use Facebook, so if you wanted to get a message out schoolwide, establish an introduction to an underclassman, or make romantic intentions known, the newspaper was still the best way to do it.
A little over a year ago, Ellie had signaled her interest in these pages. I still had the scrap, faded and yellowing, in my shoe box of Ellie stuff. It read, “Which East Coast transplant doesn’t want to be too Forward about her crush?” At the time, junior year, I was center forward, and everyone knew it.
I still found it strange that she’d aligned herself with girls’ choir when she moved here. A lot of groups in school wanted to claim her, but she belonged nowhere—and everywhere. The chekhovs came closest, at first, until she explained she wasn’t reading Chekhov’s stories or plays for anyone but herself. Not for a teacher, not for a grade. She told me once the reason she liked his work was because she could never tell if she’d understood it. Finding out if she had or hadn’t by discussing it with other people seemed vulgar to her; it would’ve sapped all the joy out of it.
High and Dry Page 6