Read The View From Who I Was Online

Authors: Heather Sappenfield

Tags: #young adult, #ya, #ya fiction, #young adult fiction, #teen, #teen fiction, #teen novel, #native american

The View From Who I Was (14 page)

Twenty-Two

From Oona's journal:

The total amount of water in a human of average weight is approximately 60 percent, but this amount progressively decreases from birth to old age. During the first ten years of life, the greatest decrease occurs.

—Mr. Bonstuber

Mom pulled away from the curb in front of Crystal High, and Gabe and Corpse waved. Corpse could drive herself to school now, but she loathed driving, and besides, Mom liked this new ritual.

Though snow was piled high around them, the morning held spring's warm promise. As they strolled up to the entrance, Corpse leaned to Gabe and whispered, “I'm still wearing that underwear. From Saturday night.”

He raised his eyebrows and smirked at her. After two more steps, he looked at the clear sky and laughed out loud. They entered the double doors, grinning.

On the big, carpeted stairs, the immigrant girls were huddled. Two bawled. Corpse stopped. She started toward them. They looked at her with surprise. Their faces closed. Gabe took Corpse's hand and led her to the stairs. As she and Gabe ascended, she tried not to look at those girls, but her neck betrayed her. She watched them, and they watched her.

That first long hall was loud with talk and shouts and laughter and lockers banging, yet a bubble of hush followed them like on her first day back. I trailed along, out of reach. All those heads seen from above made Crystal High seem like a documentary, and I marveled at how different this was from the Indian school. Was this always what happened when bodies were squashed in one building with bells and classes and cafeteria food? What rumors had spread in our absence? Gabe squeezed Corpse's hand and kept walking.

“Hey, Oona,” Clark said. “See you in Bio.”

Her thankful hand touched his arm.

They crossed the Student Union and Corpse searched for Ash, ready to make things better with her. But Ash wasn't at the table by the windows where she usually held court. She wasn't at her locker either. Corpse stowed her books, stored her backpack, and pulled out her AP Bio textbook and folder.

Gabe set down his backpack, pulled her close, and kissed her. He looked down, beyond her books pressed between them, toward her underwear. She did too. They laughed.

“Bye,” he said.


Chingado!
” Manny called. “Get a room!”

Corpse rolled her bottom lip with her teeth. “Bye.” She banged shut her locker and took one last glimpse of Gabe. He was locked in a glare with Tanesha and Brandy. She couldn't see his face, but his shoulders were braced and the girls sneered at him. Tanesha seethed a word Corpse couldn't hear, and Gabe shook his head. Everything around her turned to echo and slow motion, yet Gabe could take care of himself.

She started toward Bio. In the Student Union, “Why don't you play with your own kind?” stopped her. Tanesha.

Corpse kept moving on the same watery legs from yesterday's walk to Dad's office. The clack of Tanesha's heels stayed close behind her. A few of the immigrant girls stood on the Student Union's far side, hugging one another goodbye. They stopped and watched with tear-striped faces. Corpse glanced around for Ash, who would love this, but she wasn't there.

“Hey, rich white princess. Like the taste of our skin?” Tanesha said, almost yelling, and Brandy laughed. I shot to the ceiling.

Corpse stopped. She closed her eyes. She heard those coyotes on the hill at the Indian school. She saw those nighttime flames across the highway. That dead guy on the stretcher.

“User bitch,” Tanesha said.

Before I knew it, Corpse had dropped her books. She spun and rushed at Tanesha with her hands out. Tanesha recoiled, but Corpse's arms wrapped around her. Tanesha smelled like shampoo.

“Get off me!” she said, but Corpse held her tight.

Corpse said into her ear, “I love him. He loves me. Can't it be that simple?” She stepped back.

“You're crazy!” Tanesha said.

Corpse nodded. “
Loco
.”

Mr. Handler arrived, in a lavender golf shirt. “What's going on, ladies?”

Corpse looked from Tanesha to Brandy. “Why can't we just get along? It's only skin.”

Tanesha's eyes narrowed. “It's more than skin.”

“Is it?” Corpse said. “We use the same shampoo.”

“Ladies—” Mr. Handler said.

“You're not Chicano,” Tanesha said. “You're not one of us.”

Corpse's spine lost its resolve. She stepped back and looked down.

“Stay with your rich white boys,” Tanesha said.

“Tanesha—” Mr. Handler said.

“What's
white
, exactly?” Corpse said. “And you're way richer, Tanesha. You have family. People.”

Corpse gathered up her book and folder. Eyes everywhere. Tanesha and Brandy stood with their mouths cocked open. Mr. Handler looked about a thousand years old. Ignoring the watchers at tables, the gapers lining her path, Corpse headed to Bio.

At the classroom door, she leaned against the wall and pressed her forehead to the hall's cool cinderblocks. Might Tanesha be right? I thought of that hole in Gabe's sneaker the first day he walked us home. How we hadn't told him about Yale. Were we using him? She opened her eyes.

Mr. Handler stood in front of her. “You all right?”

She nodded.

“You sure?”

“I've been dead. Nothing's worse than that.”

The bell rang, and Mr. Bonstuber nodded to them as he shut the door.

Mr. Handler took a breath that filled his chest, and he pressed his lips. “I thought you were going to slug Tanesha. But that hug might have been even better. Brilliant!”

Their eyes met.

“I had an email from Louise this morning. Roberta's giving up dancing.”

They both knew what he was doing: bringing Corpse back to that Indian school. But she was glad for the news. She straightened. “That's great.”

“She said seeing a white girl as screwed up as you helped somehow.”

Corpse bit her lip. I'd never considered that he'd invited her to that school for anyone but us.

“Also …” His face turned serious. “Witches. Ghosts.” He smiled and frowned all at once. “Let's keep believing.”

Across the white board in AP Bio, Mr. Bonstuber had written
Genetic Engineering
and underneath that
Bacterial Transformation.
Mr. Bonstuber walked down the row of lab tables, setting a chart for recording data on each. Lab day. One predictable thing, at least.

Mr. Bonstuber set the chart at Ash's vacant seat, and her lab partner slid it in front of him. Everyone else watched Corpse and whispered to each other like a beach-ball-sized tumor had sprouted on her forehead. She hunkered down, prepared to ride out the storm of gossip after that scene with Tanesha.

Mr. Bonstuber returned to the lectern. “At each of your tables are five petri dishes. One has the starter colony of E. coli. The other four have Luria broth agar in them. That's food for E. coli bacteria. As I said before, E. coli is the most common bacteria found in the human gut. This E. coli is naturally sensitive to ampicillin. Two of these dishes will be controls. The other two, the experimental ones. For those we are going to try to get these bacteria to take on ampicillin resistance through a humanly engineered plasmid. Remember, plasmids are circular pieces of DNA that carry their own genes for specific functions. To get the E. coli to take on the plasmid, we must make them
competent.
What does that mean? We must make the cell walls susceptible or ready to take on plasmids. We'll do this via calcium chloride and heat shock. What I'm saying is review, people, right? The steps are here on the board.”

Corpse had missed class discussion last week, but Mr. Bonstuber had assigned her the reading about the experiment. He didn't usually recap like this, so she was sure he'd done it for her benefit. She eased a hair tie from her jeans pocket and finger-combed her locks into a ponytail.

She and Clark spread out the four petri dishes for the starter colonies and labeled them
Control 1, Control 2, Experimental 1, Experimental 2
. All the while, Corpse felt eyes boring into her. The usual hum of discussion on lab days was laced with whispers.

Clark leaned over. “Don't worry; it's not you they're interested in, really. It's Ashley.”

“Ash?”

“Well, I wasn't there. I'm not her favorite person anymore. Actually, I never have been. But lately she's taken to calling me ‘dork.'” Corpse gaped at him and he shrugged. “Fine with me.”

“I'm sorry, Clark. You're not a dork.”

“We all can't be brilliant
and
beautiful, Oona.” He grinned at her slyly. “Ashley's always had a … an edge that made me … nervous. Anyway, Saturday night her parents were out of town, and she had a party. A rager. Apparently she got drunk. Drunk drunk. The cops came. Most of the baseball team was there, and they're going to end up suspended.”

Corpse looked at him.

He raised his eyebrows. “Some of the soccer girls too.”

“Oh, Ash.” Corpse inventoried which girls Ash would have corralled. She missed soccer, felt awful for abandoning the team.

Clark fixed his attention on the petri dish and test tubes in their wooden rack as he poured calcium chloride from a beaker into each tube. “But what everyone's really talking about … ”

“Clark? What?”

“You know I say this as a friend, right?”

Cold breathed up Corpse's spine. “Yes.”

He opened the petri dish with the starter colony of E. coli. He lifted the straw-like inoculating loop and scraped some of the bacteria into each tube.

Corpse sensed he was working up to something, so she took the calcium chloride beaker, rinsed it out in one sink, walked to another sink Mr. Bonstuber had filled with snow, and scooped the beaker into it. She set the beaker on the lab table, and Clark pushed all four test tubes into the snow.

“Apparently Ashley shouted something like, ‘Oona Antunes sucks! She does everything for attention! A user! That's all she is!'”

Corpse froze.

“She was really drunk.” Clark added the plasmid to test tubes three and four. He cleared his throat. “Word is, she yelled this as she was dancing on her dining room table.” His voice cracked as he said, “Topless.”

Corpse imagined cops pulling Ash down, her boobs jutting around. She'd had countless dinners with Ash and her parents at that polished oval table.

“She slugged a cop. No clue how she wasn't arrested. My bet is she's being suspended today.”

Corpse pushed a second beaker forward, crossed her arms on the chilly black tabletop, and let her head drop into them. Eyes everywhere. She didn't care. She pictured Ash's moonlit tear. She felt Mr. Bonstuber standing before her on the lab table's other side.

“Everything okay?” he said.

Corpse saw the puff of his dress shirt, the triangle end of his purple tie. She sat up and pressed her wrist against her jeans, her underwear into her skin.

“Not feeling well?” he said.

“I'll be okay.”

“Mr. Handler told me you had a good trip to the Indian school.” His German accent bouncing over “Indian school” sounded exotic. Their eyes had a conversation:

Mr. Bonstuber: Be strong.

Corpse: Thanks.

Did the entire school know about Ash's party? She heard Tanesha spit “user bitch.” How about the rest of Crystal Village? Maybe some tourists too? Maybe she was ridiculed in Spanish, French, Japanese.
DEAD GIRL DECLARED USER.

Mr. Bonstuber tapped the table twice before he moved on.

Mechanically, silently, they transferred the test tubes into the shock bath at 42 degrees Celsius. After sixty seconds, they transferred the bacteria to their respective dishes.

Clark gathered the dishes. “I'll put these in the incubator.”

“I wonder how many plasmids got through,” Corpse said.

“We'll see tomorrow,” he said.

Corpse dumped the starter colony and the inoculating loop into a biohazard trash can. She gathered the beakers and test tubes, washed them out in the sink, and set them in the drying rack. No one came near her.

Clark watched her return. “You all right?”

“I'm not sure. I'm glad you told me, though. You're a good friend.”

Clark shrugged. “It's easy to be friends with nice people.” He leaned forward so Corpse would look at him. “Oona, Ashley has been headed toward this for a while. In my opinion, she's been dragging you down.”

Corpse slouched back. “Clark, it wasn't her. I know why I tried to kill myself now, and it wasn't Ash.”

“Well, simple observation would indicate she was hindering your development.”

Gabe waited for Corpse in the Student Union.

“You didn't tell me,” she said.

“I just found out myself. Ash and I don't exactly hang out anymore.” Behind his eyes was tightness, caused, Corpse was sure, by Ash's poisonous words.

Corpse touched his dimple. “This is my favorite part of you.”

His face relaxed. “Really? I was under the impression there was another.”

Their eyes had a conversation:

Gabe: Say you love me.

Corpse: —

“I need to speak with you right away.” Mr. Handler's face was ashen, and he started toward his office without waiting for a reply.

“See you later,” Corpse said to Gabe. She followed Mr. Handler.

Mrs. Pena, swollen-eyed, watched them pass through the reception area, and Corpse turned shivery. Mr. Handler closed his door but for a sliver. He sat down and stared at his hands. Corpse wanted to tell him he could relax, that she already knew.

“I didn't want you to hear this through gossip,” he said. “Ash had a party Saturday night. Her parents were out of town, and apparently things got out of control.”

“I heard.”

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