A Tragic Kind of Wonderful. Eric Lindstrom

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Название A Tragic Kind of Wonderful
Автор произведения Eric Lindstrom
Жанр Книги для детей: прочее
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Издательство Книги для детей: прочее
Год выпуска 0
isbn 9780008147488



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library. Though you’re right, that is part of those two hours a day you’re wasting … getting wasted …”

      “Baked,” he says.

      “Tell you what, I’ll look up those words in Urban Dictionary if you actually go inside the library today and look up the word hairsplitting.”

      Declan snorts. “I’m grateful my girlfriend has a license, and a car, and a backseat—”

      Holly stops his gratitude with an elbow to his ribs. She says to me, “Think of the time you’re wasting on that bike. I can get you home in no time. Or work, wherever.”

      “I’m not in a hurry. It’s exercise. You should try it. When the apocalypse comes, I’ll be ready and you’ll be zombie kibble. Come to think of it, you two keep driving everywhere. I don’t want to be the slowest in our band of survivors.”

      When we leave the building, Declan takes a crumpled bag from his pocket.

      “Check it out,” he says when he sees me looking at it. “I forgot to leave it in the car for the ride home …”

      He opens the wrinkled brown sack and shows me a baggie holding what looks like a chunk of sod cut out of someone’s lawn.

      “Gross.” I push it away. “That was in your locker all day? Where’d you even get it?”

      His grin gets sheepish. Holly frowns.

      “Is that …” I say. “I mean, did your mom make it?”

      He nods. “She can’t keep track of it all—”

      “You’re stealing your grandma’s cancer brownies?”

      “Shhh! Tell the world!” He jams the bag under his arm. “She never runs out. My mom always makes more when she runs low.”

      “That’s messed up,” I say. “Although … hmmm … let me see it again—”

      “No way, Mel. If you want any, you’ll have to steal from your own—”

      “Declan!” Holly says through clenched teeth, glancing my way.

      He stands frozen. My grandma Cece died of stomach cancer a year ago. His comment doesn’t upset me, though. Not today.

      I tousle his wispy blond hair—there’s nothing wrong with touching his hair. He hates it but lets me after his blunder. He’s not fussy; it just emphasizes how I’m three inches taller than him.

      “It’s okay, short stuff. I don’t need drugs to get high.”

      Quite the opposite.

       * * *

      I say good-bye to Holly and Declan, pop the crossbeam off my U-lock, and stow the pieces in my backpack.

      “Mel?”

      This is unexpected.

      “Hey, Connor.”

      I’m not sure what else to say. Connor and I aren’t friends anymore, though he and I didn’t fight like I did with everyone else. We just never spoke again after I was out sick. I focus on strapping my backpack to the rear rack of my bike with a bungee.

      “You know what’s up with Annie?”

      The question is odd enough that I stop what I’m doing to look at him.

      It’s a normal yet pointless reaction. Connor seldom looks at anyone directly, regardless of whether they’re strangers, friends, or ex-friends. Right now he’s looking somewhere off to my left. His straight red hair hangs over his forehead.

      “She’s been sick all week,” he says, still not looking at me. “But she won’t let us come over. Zumi tried and Annie’s mom wouldn’t let her in.”

      Zumi and Annie were the other two friends I lost last year—I only had the three. The fact that he’s asking me about them now makes this conversation stranger than anything Annie might be up to.

      “And, what, you want my recipe for chicken soup to leave on her porch?”

      “She texted us today that she’s flying out to see her uncle, I guess the one in Connecticut. That’s weird for someone who’s been sick a whole week.”

      “Maybe she’s pregnant.”

      Connor doesn’t react to this. “Zumi’s really worried about her.”

      I notice the shield I’m holding up when I feel it start to drop.

      He’s concerned about Zumi being worried, not about Annie being sick or acting weird. He and I had that in common. Zumi was the best friend I’ve ever had, and Connor by association. Then Annie and I fought, sides were chosen, and I retreated. I don’t blame Zumi or Connor—they had been friends with Annie first, and it was my fault. Though Annie slandering me afterward wasn’t.

      A car slows to a stop beside us. It’s Holly and Declan on their way from the parking lot out to the street.

      “Everything okay?” Holly asks.

      “Yep,” I say.

      She peers at me, so I smile and wave. “See you tomorrow.”

      “Call me later.” She drives slowly away.

      Holly’s protective intervention reminds me that while I still miss Zumi and Connor as much as ever, him talking to me now doesn’t mean we’re suddenly friends again.

      “Did Zumi put you up to this?” I say. “Or did you already ask the second-to-last person on earth?”

      He glances at me for the briefest possible moment. His wet green eyes look sadder than I remember, but I don’t have much to draw from; he’s not an eye-contact kind of guy. Some people say it’s me, though, that I’m way too much of an eye-contact person.

      I say, “You can’t really think I’ve been talking to Annie.”

      He shrugs. “There’s no one else to ask.”

      I watch Connor walk away toward the parking lot. Someone pushes off from the retaining wall ahead and joins him. It’s Zumi: long black hair, pale jeans, and the same black hoodie she was wearing the day I met her.

       missing image

       The first day of freshman year is hard enough. It’s harder starting in a new town, like joining a game of musical chairs after the music’s already stopped when you don’t even want to play. For me, it’s even worse than that. I’m still deep in my hole, hardly speaking, a month after moving here, four months after the divorce, and less than a year after losing Nolan.

       Despite begging Mom to let me bring my lunch, so I could eat whatever I want and not wait in the cafeteria line, I’m the disappointed owner of a lunch card. For more variety of healthier food, according to Mom. I think she’s just afraid I’d sit alone outside if I brought my lunch, and I totally would.

       On the first day, I get to the cafeteria ahead of most everyone; my previous class and locker are right around the corner. I’m already halfway through my grilled cheese with apple slices—the messy spaghetti was out of the question—before the room starts filling up. Then a group of four girls lines up in front of me.

       “This is our table.”

       She says it without emotion, not snotty or falsely sympathetic. I’m not even worth a sneer. They look like freshmen, too, so they can’t possibly have a regular table. There’s plenty of room for all of us but I know the score. I grab my tray and scuttle off, silently cursing my