Authors: Kelsey Sutton
P
HILOMEL
B
OOKS
an imprint of Penguin Random House LLC
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New York, NY 10014
Copyright © 2016 by Kelsey Sutton.
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Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Names: Sutton, Kelsey.
Title: The lonely ones / Kelsey Sutton.
Description: New York, NY : Philomel Books, [2016].
Summary: The stress of her father's job loss causes Fain to feel invisible at home and in her new school, but she escapes with the monsters of her imagination until a family crisis and a human friend cause her to reconsider.
Identifiers: LCCN 2015029562 | ISBN 9780399172892 (hardback)
Subjects: | CYAC: Novels in verse. | LonelinessâFiction. | Family problemsâFiction. | Interpersonal relationsâFiction. | ImaginationâFiction. | BISAC: JUVENILE FICTION / Monsters. | JUVENILE FICTION / Stories in Verse. | JUVENILE FICTION / Social Issues / Physical & Emotional Abuse (see also Social Issues / Sexual Abuse).
Classification: LCC PZ7.5.S88 Lon 2016 | DDC [Fic]âdc23
LC record available at http://lccn.loc.gov/2015029562
ISBN 978-0-698-18311-7
Edited by Liza Kaplan.
This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are the product of the author's imagination or are used fictitiously, and any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, businesses, companies, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.
COVER IMAGES: MARK VOLK/GETTY IMAGES,
POLAR LIGHTS/ISTOCKPHOTO
COVER DESIGN BY THERESA EVANGELISTA
Version_1
To Grace Slaubaugh and Randi Georges,
for locking my window.
Claws scrape
against my windowsill.
Then, a voice,
raspy, childlike, familiar.
It calls my name
and becomes a symphony.
“Fain, are you coming?”
“Come with us, Fain!”
“Wake up!”
“Open your eyes, Fain!”
I try to be firm,
I try to say no.
There's a voice in my head
that whispers I'm getting too old
for these games and adventures.
The ground is so thick with mud
that someone could notice
my tracks.
But my little friends persist
again and again.
Their pleas batter
against my resolve,
until debris crashes down
and I am too weak to resist.
The unbearable truth is
no one will notice my tracks
because no one notices anything.
I take one of their scaly hands;
a feather tickles against my cheek.
Then I climb outside
and disappear into the night.
We run through the woods,
more magical
than fireflies or fairies.
“We love you, Fain,” they croon.
“You are beautiful.”
“You are a queen.”
Their eyes
so adoring,
I can't help but believe them.
They put a scepter in my hand
that glitters with rubies and diamonds.
They place a crown on my head
that feels so light and perfect.
I clutch their talons and hooves and claws,
dance around the fire with wild abandon,
laugh so loud and hard
my lungs burn hotter than the flames.
They are not the frightening ones;
everyone else is.
The moon fades,
my friends retreat,
the day begins.
Sunlight spills into my room,
paler and colder
than yesterday
and I know that
summer is officially over.
I sigh,
leave my bed,
face the fall.
Breakfast is chaotic:
the kitchen becomes
a street fair
zoo
grocery store
everyone clamoring and fighting
for themselves.
The Fredericks are a family
bound only by blood.
Dana smears on lip gloss,
Tyler adjusts his jersey,
Peter shrieks for juice.
Dad holds the paper
in front of his face,
searching the want ads
for someone who will want him back.
Mom pours milk,
so distracted
she does not notice
my dirty feet.
I'm not even trying to hide them.
Beside me
my younger brother frowns,
reaches for the glass
our mother gave him.
It slips off the tableâ
glass shatters,
liquid runs across the tiles.
Peter blinks,
as if he's surprised and confused
by its fragility.
Someday he'll realize
that anything can break.
Not so long ago,
Dad was a car salesman.
He put on a tie and a smile
went to the dealership
stood in a parking lot
talked about Hondas.
A coffee mug rested by his hand
cold and forgotten
as he showed his customers
where to sign on the dotted line.
Not so long ago,
Mom was a grad student.
She went to class
sat at a desk
put pencil to paper
listened to lectures.
Textbooks rested in her lap
thick and heavy
as she sat on the couch
learning how to run a business.
Not so long ago,
Dad came through the door
whistling and cheerful,
throwing down his briefcase
to smother us with hugs.
Not so long ago,
Mom devoured words,
smiling and sharing,
putting books aside
to play games or cook.
Then people stopped
buying new cars
and Dad stopped
going to work.
Bills arrived
in the mail
and Mom stared at them
with worried eyes.
No more whistling,
no more hugging,
Dad's briefcase as forgotten
as that cooling cup of coffee.
No more studying,
no more playing,
Mom's smile gone and put away
with those textbooks.
Her notes and classes traded
for a pen and ordering pad.
Dad's office and contracts traded
for the table and job applications.
Now he asks
instead of tells,
sounds desperate
instead of certain.
She smells like grease
instead of books,
looks tired
instead of thoughtful.
Not so long ago,
my mother was a student
and my father was a salesman.
Now
I'm not sure
what they are.