right?â Oh God, please let her tell me sheâll be home by Friday.
Pause. Longer pause. My hair is going grey.
âThe doctor that came to see me this morning â he said I might be here until Monday.â
My nails dig into my palm. I squeeze until the taut flesh on my knuckles feels like itâs going to split. âHe went on and on and on and on about putting pins in my bone. Said something science-y about my wrist healing wrong,â Mom slurs, and she either swallows water or slurps back some drool. I jam my fist into my mouth and bite down. I absolutely refuse to whimper into the phone.
My mom is hurt. She does not need me to fall apart. Plus, I donât want to freak her out. She sounds pretty jazzed, and I remember reading about this girl who had a heart attack and died while she was high. That probably works differently with medical highs. Legal drugs. Pain meds . . . but then, you can get addicted to pain meds. I hope that doesnât happenâ
âSweetheart? Are you still there?â
Mind melt. Thereâs too much to think about.
âIâm here.â I slam the heel of my hand into my forehead, the equivalent of spanking my brain for misbehaving. âMy headâs a mess. I donât know what to do about the party.â
âWell, I think the first thing you need to do is take some deep breaths.â She tries to walk me through what adeep breath should sound like, but all I hear is her hyperventilating. Think Darth Vader in labour. Still, it works because my OCD uses my lungs to correct her off-kilter pace.
âRemember what Dr Reeves says about being unable to control everything? Norah, honey, my sweet baby girl, Iâm afraid this is beyond your control.â
The beyond-your-control speech is my least favourite of all the pep talks. Itâs the hardest one to corrupt. Itâs immortal, the adamantium of arguments. There is no âbut . . . but . . . butââing my way out of this one. Sometimes, things are going to happen and the only way out is through. Like childbirth; it doesnât matter how afraid you are, that baby has to be born.
I sit on the kitchen floor. Momâs voice turns to whale song as she talks me down off this impossibly high life ledge. At least sheâs a smart stoner.
We talk for two hours, and she convinces my broken mind that I am safe. Even if the party turns into the hybrid love child of freshersâ week and spring break, it wonât affect me if I just stay locked in my room and ignore it. This is a wave I have to ride, but at least I can do it buried in a blanket fort.
Itâs a good talk, a little wordy, a lot off-topic. But when the advice comes, itâs easy, obvious. Like always. And, like always, by the end of it, Iâm wishing I could have slowed my mind down sooner and processed this like a normal person. Thatâs the dream.
âOne last thing before you go,â Mom says. âA boy asked you out?â
I look over at the trash can, envision the crumpledpiece of paper turning to rot in yesterdayâs garbage.
I donât know.
There was no time to analyse that. But there should have been. There should have been excitement. Excitement should have been bigger than fear. I wonder how many of my former friends would have been freaking out over being invited somewhere by a boy instead of sinking in possible party-apocalypse scenarios. Depression blows on the back of my neck, and I feel cold to my core.
It canât come in.
I force a smile and clear the clump of sadness from my throat. âI mean, technically , yes. But itâs a party, with lots of people. So does that technically mean heâs asked out everyone he sent an invite to? There are many subcategories to consider.â
âWow. Dating has subcategories these days?â
âOf course. God, Mom, sometimes itâs like youâre a dinosaur and we donât even watch TV.â She
Jeff Gunzel
Noire
Victoria Hanley
Raymond L. Weil
Tim Curran
David A. Adler
Yuwanda Black
The Cowboy's Convenient Proposal
Nicole Williams
Lynsay Sands