Authors: Christine Hurley Deriso
Tags: #young adult novel, #Young Adult, #christine hurley deriso, #christine deriso, #teen, #teen lit, #tragedy girl, #young adult fiction, #ya fiction, #ya novel, #YA, #christine hurley, #tradgedy girl
Woodbury, Minnesota
Copyright Information
Tragedy Girl
© 2016 by Christine Hurley Deriso.
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be used or reproduced in any matter whatsoever, including Internet usage, without written permission from Flux, except in the form of brief quotations embodied in critical articles and reviews.
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Any unauthorized usage of the text without express written permission of the publisher is a violation of the author’s copyright and is illegal and punishable by law.
This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are either the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously, and any resemblance to actual persons living or dead, business establishments, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.
Cover models used for illustrative purposes only and may not endorse or represent the book’s subject.
First e-book edition © 2016
E-book ISBN: 9780738747866
Book design by Bob Gaul
Cover design by Lisa Novak
Cover image by iStockphoto.com/61823804/©AJ_Watt
Flux is an imprint of Llewellyn Worldwide Ltd.
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Names: Deriso, Christine Hurley, 1961– author.
Title: Tragedy girl / Christine Hurley Deriso.
Description: First edition. | Woodbury, Minnesota : Flux, [2016] |
Summary: “Seventeen-year-old Anne, grieving the death of her parents,
thinks she has found a soulmate in her classmate Blake, whose girlfriend
has died, until she begins to sense that something about Blake is not what
it seems”—Provided by publisher. | Description based on print version
record and CIP data provided by publisher; resource not viewed.
Identifiers: LCCN 2016002604 (print) | LCCN 2015045467 (ebook) |
ISBN 9780738747033 | ISBN 9780738747866 ()
Subjects: | CYAC: Grief—Fiction. | Secrets—Fiction.
Classification: LCC PZ7.D4427 (print) | LCC PZ7.D4427 Tr 2016
(ebook) | DDC
[Fic]—dc23
LC record available at http://lccn.loc.gov/2016002604
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Any Internet references contained in this work are current at publication time, but the publisher cannot guarantee that a specific reference will continue or be maintained. Please refer to the publisher’s website for links to current author websites.
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To my sweetie, the best of the good guys.
I love you, Graham.
One
“
Knock ’em dead, E. May I suggest the leopard-print leggings?
”
I squint to read the text as blanched sunlight seeps through the blinds of my new bedroom.
“No, you may not,”
I murmur sleepily to myself with a smile. Leave it to Sawyer, my best friend from back home, to make sure I start even the least promising day with a smile.
I lean up on an elbow and glance at the clock on my bedside table: 6:20 a.m. The first day of my senior year will start in approximately ninety minutes. Whoop.
Sawyer never lets me forget the time I was sent home from school in tenth grade for a dress-code violation, prompting my impassioned Zola-esque speech about leggings fitting every criterion of pants, particularly when paired with a shirt that practically hit my knees. Sawyer rewarded me with a slow clap, but I still got sent home. “Leopard-print leggings” have been our most well-worn meme ever since.
“
Muah, Sawbones
,” I text back, then sign off with my customary “
E
.” He’s called me that since I emphasized when we met in grade school that my name was
Anne with an E
. He actually called me that for a long time—
Anne with an E
—then switched it up for a while by calling me
E with an Ann
—then shortened it permanently to E. My parents’ joint funeral three months ago was the only time he ever called me just “Anne,” a formality that chillingly drove home the new identity foisted on someone associated with a Terrible Tragedy.
That “Anne” seared my soul, made me realize I’d never be free of pity smiles or strained formality in my hometown ever again, even from Sawyer. It took a while to work out the details, but I decided then and there to accept my aunt and uncle’s offer and move three hundred and forty miles away to their home in the beach town of Hollis, South Carolina—on tiny Hollis Island—for my last year of high school.
So here I am.
Yet what have I really gained? Now, I get pity smiles and strained formality from my aunt and uncle rather than my friends back home. Not that I don’t appreciate their kindness. They’re just too earnest when they stress, for instance, that I should call this room
my
room rather than their spare bedroom, or that I should help myself to whatever I want in the kitchen because, hey, it’s my kitchen too! I miss the day when things just
were
. Let’s face it: when someone has to point out that a kitchen is your kitchen too, it’s not really your kitchen.
I put the phone down, swallow hard, and head to the bathroom (
my
bathroom, Aunt Meg perkily insists) for one of my three-minute showers.
Short showers and lightning-fast styling time are why I chopped off my auburn hair after Mom and Dad’s accident. I can’t stand the deafening hum of a blow dryer anymore. Who can afford to be lulled by the sound of white noise when god-knows-what can be unfolding just down the street? After all, I’d been in the shower that evening, deliciously oblivious as I massaged cucumber and sage-scented shampoo into my waist-length hair, when a drunk driver ran a stop sign and crashed into my parents’ car.
I’m not superstitious; I know awful things can happen whether or not I happen to be in the shower, or whether or not I’m being lulled into complacency by the white noise of a blow dryer. Still … vigilance. That’s my new approach to life. Then, even if the unthinkable happens, at least I’ll be paying attention.
I don’t know much anymore, but I know that I’ll never, ever let myself be blindsided again.
“Your first day!”
I smile weakly. Aunt Meg starts lots of conversations like this—blurting out a basic, obvious fact—but I know she means well.
“Yep,” I say, standing at the kitchen counter pouring milk over my cereal.
She tightens the sash around her pale-pink bathrobe, walks closer, and fingers my hair, still damp from the shower.
“Your haircut’s so cute,” she says. “So sporty and spunky, but still really elegant. Your cheekbones look amazing with short hair.”
“Thanks, Aunt Meg.”
She flicks a lock of blonde hair over her shoulder.
“Maybe we can get pedicures this weekend,” she suggests, and I nod, biting my lower lip as I glance through the kitchen window at the pine trees swaying in the back yard. I feel so claustrophobic in this house sometimes. I imagine myself running at full speed into the woods, my arms pumping as my sneakers plow down the twigs and bracken in my path.
“Of course, you’ll have friends to get pedicures with soon,” Aunt Meg says, seeming to intuit my lack of enthusiasm. Damn. I try hard not to tip my hand; she’s been so great to me, you know?
Aunt Meg sips coffee from her mug, then adds, “I know you’ll make friends in no time.”
I nod noncommittally.
“And boyfriends! We’ll be shopping together soon for prom dresses!”
I pinch my lips together. “Aunt Meg, I’m mostly just going to concentrate on my schoolwork this year. You know … try to keep my grades up so I can get a scholarship … ”
“Of course, of course. But there’s always time for fun.”
She rests a cool palm on my cheek and I will my eyes not to fill with tears.
“Sure,” I say softly. “I’m sure I can squeeze in some fun. Aunt Meg, my cereal’s getting soggy … ”
“Oh, of course, of course. Go eat, sweetie,” Aunt Meg says, sweeping her arm toward the kitchen table.
I give her an apologetic look—I find myself giving her apologetic looks approximately forty times a day—and walk to the table. As I settle into my seat, Uncle Mark walks in, his dark hair tousled as he straightens a tie. He looks so much like my dad.
“’Morning, sunshine,” he says, and I’m not sure who he’s talking to. I raise a hand awkwardly in response. He pecks Aunt Meg on the lips, then sits next to me at the table.
“Gorgeous day outside,” he says, and I
mmmmm
my agreement. “It’s supposed to be nice all week. Maybe we can go to the beach this weekend.”
Oh god. Are my aunt and uncle going to be tripping over each other for the rest of the year to try to fill my weekends with fun and otherwise overcompensate for my having two dead parents? I’m not sure how much faux cheer I can muster from one offer to the next.
I yearn for the days when Uncle Mark and Aunt Meg were merely bit players in my life, perfectly nice people with cameo roles offering infusions of warm hugs and affable questions about how I was doing in school. They are no longer just the people who spend random weekends with me and bring me presents on special occasions. Now, their personalities, their quirks, their idiosyncrasies are the wallpaper of my daily existence. Even calling them Aunt and Uncle—I’d always dispensed with that formality before. They were just Mark and Meg. But now, being casual seems so … ungrateful. I feel dizzy as I contemplate the new normal of squelching annoyances and showing gratitude on a day-to-day, hour-to-hour, minute-to-minute basis.
Still, a day at the beach doesn’t sound half bad. At least, it
wouldn’t
have sounded half bad … in my old world. I can’t help but feel nostalgic as I contemplate a carefree day wiggling my toes in the sand. I remember what a treat it used to be to visit Uncle Mark and Aunt Meg when I was younger—my beach relatives! My parents and I would sit right at this table eating fresh grapefruit for breakfast, then grab our beach towels and zoom out the door for the ten-minute drive to the shore. I’d surf with Dad and Uncle Mark, then shake the water from my ears as I joined Mom and Aunt Meg for a stroll on the beach. We’d read cheesy novels, snack on chips, push our beach chairs back from the tide periodically, and basically loll away the day, splashing in the surf at regular intervals.
At the end of a long day, our cheeks rosy, we’d head back to the house—this house—for boiled shrimp and watermelon slices on the redwood deck, licking our fingers and laughing as Felix the Lab chased one tennis ball after another. Then we’d come to the sunroom and collapse on the cozy overstuffed furniture with ceiling fans whirring overhead, crickets chirping in the backyard pines.
This house was a retreat back then, an oasis. Aunt Meg’s exuberance was a sunny punctuation mark on our lazy beach days—a stark contrast to my droll, witty mom—and Uncle Mark’s resemblance to my dad was nothing more than a fleeting, offhand observation, as opposed to a jolting stab of pain.
Nothing about them, nothing about this house, feels the same any more. I wasn’t meant to
live
in this beautiful sunny home; I wasn’t meant to smile politely on a daily basis during well-meaning conversations about pedicures and prom dresses, particularly at 6:45 in the morning. I love Aunt Meg and Uncle Mark, but I want my house back. I want my wordless grumpy mornings back. I want my parents back. I want my life back.
“Nervous about today?” Uncle Mark asks.
I shake my head, averting my eyes from his hopeful gaze.
“Nah,” I say, aiming for breezy. “Hey, I’m going to school with a bunch of beach bums. How challenging can it be?”
He raises an eyebrow approvingly. “Cocky and over-confident, huh? I like it.”
“That’s me, alright.”
He glances at my cereal bowl and says, “Wheaties again? That was always your dad’s favorite, you know.”
I raise my spoon gamely. “The breakfast of champions.”
Lots of this goes on at my new home, too: references to my parents—comparisons, reminiscences, offhand comments. The references come so fast and seem so forced, I can’t help but get the feeling my aunt and uncle consulted with a therapist who recommended this strategy. I’m touched by the gesture, and sure, it helps to weave my parents into the conversation, but nothing seems natural anymore. I wonder what it would be like to have a conversation that doesn’t seem guided by the invisible hand of a professional.
Uncle Mark smiles at me as I take a bite, then leans into his elbows and says softly, “You know we’ve got your back … right?”
I lock eyes with him for a long moment. “Yes,” I say, and return Aunt Meg’s smile as she looks over her shoulder at me from the kitchen sink. “I know you do.”
“Good,” Uncle Mark tells me, rising from his chair and kissing my cheek. “Don’t ever forget that.”