Read Everyone We've Been Online

Authors: Sarah Everett

Everyone We've Been (36 page)

AFTER
January

Katy is still talking about it as we pull into her driveway. As we wave hi to her mom, watching a crime-investigation show in the living room, and take the steps two at a time to her room.

“I mean, of all the things, who would have thought what that little skeeze responds to is, ‘I'm in a relationship.' ” By “little skeeze,” she means Kevin. “He backed right off.”

“Sure it had nothing to do with your rant on
A Vindication of the Rights of Woman,
which you have never even read?” I ask as we enter her room, which smells just like my best friend. Like lavender. When I'd finished talking with Zach, I'd walked back to find Katy giving a purple-faced Kevin a piece of her mind. (“Do you know what girls
ACTUALLY
do at sleepovers? They talk about the pervy guys who catcall and lick their lips and how nobody likes them. Do you want that to be you, Kevin?
DO YOU?
”) I guess she needed to blow off all the steam she was holding in at Zach.

Now Katy drags a chair up to her closet and retrieves a cardboard box.

“Nah. I think the brat just knows Mitch has the hardest thighs in Lyndale and could crush him in a fight.”

“Oh God, Katy,” I say as she cackles at her own joke. “Ew.”

She shrugs and climbs down, handing the box to me. It is full of all the things we took from my room before the procedure, full of things that are in any way related to Zach. Pictures, horrody DVDs, notes. The clothes I wore on the day of the procedure.

I hold up a DVD with a person covered in what seems to be a whole lot of ketchup. It has Zach's name on the spine.

“Maybe I should mail this to him?”

“How do you know he didn't give it to you?” Katy says, dismissing the idea. “Anyway, half my belongings are from exes. Remember Marvin Mouth?” I nod, and she points to a lamp on her desk. “And Josh What's-His-Face?”

“MacPherson?”

“Whatever. These are his gym shorts. And, God, I wouldn't own any T-shirts at all if I gave back stuff,” she says. “No, no, Grasshopper. You wouldn't listen to my wisdom when you were heartbroken right after the Zach-or-Mac-or-Jack thing, but now I will teach you my ways. You borrow stuff from other people—books, clothes, DVDs, mannerisms, jokes—and after a while, you break up, and you stop remembering who it's from. It all melds together and it doesn't even matter, because now it's yours. Such is the circle of life.”

“I think that's called stealing,” I say, eyebrow quirked in skepticism, mirroring her signature look.

“It's called
appropriating,
” Katy argues.

“Also theft.”

“Fine. Maybe I have a condition,” she concedes with a shrug. “But I thought the rule was that you get to keep one item for every time his tongue has been down your throat.”

“Ugh.”

“Oh, and there's this!” she says, reaching back in her closet and giving me the biggest-ass umbrella I've ever seen in my life. “Part of the Zach Pile.”

“What's it from?”

“Two Dollars or Less,” she says. “And the day of the best car wash of your life.”

I don't understand what that means.

Zach told me the highlights of our relationship, but he obviously left out some things. And maybe the details he thought were important are different from those I did.

“I'll tell you what I know,” Katy says, squeezing my arm. “Whenever you want.”

“Okay.” I nod, fighting a sudden swell of emotion in my throat. I throw my arms around her. “Thank you.”

We hug for a moment, and then Katy fake-pushes me off her. “Love you, Sullivan, but
I'm in a relationship,
or did you forget? Who knew that line was so powerful? God, no wonder normal people date for ages!”

“You mean other people don't date for
rock-hard thighs
?” I ask, feigning surprise as I back out of her room, the box in my arms. Katy's pillow just nearly misses my head, but she's blushing. Happy.

I drive home as quickly as I can in the snow, desperate to go through the box. I grip the box tightly as I carry it carefully up the stairs. I sit on the floor in my room and start taking the items out one by one. There are two ticket stubs for a concert at the community college during the September I was with Zach. Is that where I first heard “Air on the G String”? Does the real Zach know that was our song? I'll never really know.

I hold the stubs close to my chest, missing Memory Zach, and then take them away.

There are a bunch of DVDs, a nun habit. There are pictures of me and Zach. In one, we are sitting in a room I don't recognize—his?—and he's smiling at the camera while I kiss the side of his face.

Something stings the inside of my chest.

There's a picture of me and Zach and Raj, and I miss them, some kind of friendship I don't know.

There's so much I don't know.

I look through the last items: the clothes I wore on the day we went to get Zach erased. A pair of light jeans, black kitten heels, a white button-down, and a blue blazer. Did we think these would make me pass for nineteen, for Kathleen Kelly? I can barely walk in heels.

Too soon, there's nothing left to discover. Nothing that tells me more about who I was and what happened. These things are something, but I want more.

I want artifacts. Proof that I lived another life, a way to remember.

And what about Rory—what do I have of him? Why aren't the walls lined with pictures of his face? Why don't I have a box full of things to remember him by?

I allow everything to sink in—the things I've just seen that give me hints about my relationship with Zach, the things I'll never know about being with him, about having a baby brother—and the force is so great I have to lie on my bed.

I keep drawing in breaths, even though my lungs feel like they are full of too much air. Several minutes pass like this, and then I reach for my viola. I hold it by the neck, fingers fumbling over its strings, over its curves, like following the ridges of words written in braille. I bring it to my chin and play. Just a few bars, a few seconds of the Prokofiev piece I've been working on the past month. Its sound is really more suited for a violin, and the piece I have is actually Katy's, transposed to a lower key, but its mood—its wistful, desperate, heavy sound—is made for my viola. It does something to steady me, to help me find a kind of rhythm in the rushed staccato of too many and too few faces and seconds and emotions that are crammed in tightly packed corners of my mind. And then I improvise, making up my own melody, one about getting lost and finding your way home, about the thickest fog you can imagine and pushing, fighting, breaking your way through it. About waking up.

It's not so good yet, but it's familiar. And I can work on it—I can start writing my own story. One where no one thing—music, a boy, my broken family—is my
whole
story. Anyway, Mrs. Dubois says what's important is how joyfully you play.

Later, I head across the hall and knock on Caleb's door.

“Hey,” he says when I walk in.

I hesitate. He hesitates, too. Then I sit on the edge of his bed. I know I'm making a face as I survey his room, but I can't help it.

“When was the last time you picked up this room?”

“You can have it if you want,” Caleb says.

“What?” I frown at him.

“That day you used my computer, I was applying for aviation academies. Well, starting to fill out applications and then chickening out and then starting again. Around and around. But a couple of days ago, I sat down and forced myself to do it. To finish.” He shrugs. “Maybe I won't get in anywhere. In which case, I'm keeping my fucking room.”

We both laugh.

“But you applied?” I repeat, shocked, delighted. He nods. He looks happy.

“Why didn't you before? I mean, I know you felt like you had to stay and make up for my not remembering or something….” I trail off because it sounds stupid. Why
did
Caleb stay?

“Everyone talks about the day Rory died,” he says.
Nobody talks about the day Rory died,
I want to argue, but I let him continue. “Dad was at work. Mom was sleeping. But where was I? Nobody ever talks about where I was.”

I ask the obvious question. “Where were you? Mom said you weren't home.”

“I was at the Lyndale Air Show. Me and Victor from next door rode our bikes to the grounds that morning, even though Mom had told me not to go.” There's a pause, and then Caleb continues. “Before he left the night before, Dad told me to ‘look after things on the ground,' because he always did. Because I was the oldest.”

“Caleb,” I say, hearing where he's going with this. “You were thirteen. Why
shouldn't
you have been out with your friend? And what would you have done if you were home, anyway?”

“Maybe
I'd
have taken Rory out of his crib when he started crying. Maybe I'd have seen that the basement door wasn't shut before it was too late. I don't know. I've always felt like I had to stay. Like I was atoning for something by sticking close to home, by never leaving Lyndale. And I wanted to look out for you, too, but when
you
started making plans for New York…”

“It made you angry.”

“You were going to leave me here, and none of it had fixed anything. Rory was still erased and you were going to have a life and I wasn't.” He shrugs again. “After everything, I kind of just want to get out of here. Even if I don't go to aviation school straight away, I'm ready to leave Lyndale.”

“To move on?” I offer.

“Sure,” he says. It feels a little bit sad to think of being in this house alone with Mom. Dad gone. Both my brothers gone.

When I say this, Caleb snorts. “Maybe the Asshole can move in, if you feel like you need a strong male figure.”

I pretend to gag.

“You'll be out of here soon enough, anyway. You're going to go off to New York, become so big with your music that the Asshole will be name-dropping you to get tables everywhere—though, God, I hope Mom's not still dating him then.”

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