This should be about the time I tell the cop the truth: that I'm in Hampton by the order of the Illinois Juvenile Department of Corrections. But I won't.
"Got it," Vic says.
The officer gets back in his squad car and orders Vic and his friends to move on. He follows Vic's car. I watch until both cars are out of sight.
When I look around for my backpack, I quickly realize it's gone. One of Vic's friends probably snatched it. But that's the least of my worries.
My jaw is starting to protest Vic's punch, and I put my hand up to my face to feel if it's bleeding. When I do, Maggie reveals herself.
Our eyes lock.
The bus to Paradise comes rumbling down the street and we both get on it. I sit at my usual spot in back and she follows, sitting right next to me. I'm surprised until I notice her fingers shaking.
She's scared.
It's demented and strange after all that's happened, but she feels safe with me right now. I don't dare touch her, 'cause that would mean this is something more than it is. And I know this ... this feeling of friendship is a fleeting, temporary thing. What scares me to fucking death is that some part of my brain has decided this insignificant act of Maggie sitting next to me is the first step in fixing all that's gone wrong in my life.
Which makes it all the more significant.
TWENTY-FOUR
Maggie
I saw Caleb today at school. Rumors are running rampant about the bruises on his face. None of the rumors are true.
After school I get on the bus to go to Mrs. Reynolds' house. I walk down the aisle to where Caleb is sitting. He doesn't look up. I take the seat next to him like I did yesterday.
This time he doesn't walk behind me after we're dropped off at the bus stop by Mrs. Reynolds' house. We walk side by side, as if there's an unspoken understanding between the two of us. I'm the only one (besides Vic and his thug friends) who knows how Caleb got his bruises. The fight yesterday scared me. Did Caleb get caught up in the fight because Vic insulted me? Whatever the reasons were, it was us against them. Caleb and I were on the same team and we didn't have a chance of winning.
That's why I ran behind a tree and called 911 from my cell, to protect him/us, because he would never be able to fight off three guys by himself, and God knows my cheap book bag couldn't take much more. I've never been able to stomach a fight anyway. The fight is over, but its aftereffects have lingered.
So now it's another day at Mrs. Reynolds' house working together, but not.
Caleb still follows my conditions: he doesn't talk to me as he works on the gazebo and I plant more daffodils.
I hum songs as I work. Sometimes Mrs. Reynolds hums along with me, until she starts belting out words to the songs so loud that I stop working and blink my eyes at this old lady who doesn't care what people think about her. It's really mind-boggling.
When Mrs. Reynolds starts nodding off, I walk inside the house and pour myself a glass of water. Before I leave the kitchen, I pour one for Caleb too. Quietly, I set it down on one of the wooden planks beside him.
Heading back inside to prepare a small snack, I remember I forgot to bring the cookie plate down from the attic last week. I go up the two flights of stairs to the attic and pick up the plate.
The door closes and I shriek. Caleb is standing in the attic with me, the glass of water in his hand. "Oh my God!"
"I'm not going to hurt you, Maggie. I just wanted to say thanks for the water and ... well, and I know it's not easy working together, but I do appreciate you not kicking me out."
"You can't leave," I say.
"Why not?"
"Because that door locks automatically."
Caleb eyes the door stopper he just kicked out of the way. "You're joking, right?"
I shake my head slowly. I'm trying not to panic at the reality of being stuck with Caleb Becker in an attic. Breathe, Maggie. In. Out. In. Out.
Caleb tries turning the knob, then tries a turn-door-knob-while-pushing-on-door action. "Shit." He turns to me. "You and me. In the same room. This is not supposed to happen."
"I know," I say.
"We could yell for Mrs. Reynolds. She's sleeping outside, but--"
"She'll never hear us all the way out there. Her hearing is marginal if you're ten feet away. When she wakes up we'll hear her and then yell our heads off."
"So you're saying we're stuck here?"
I nod again.
"Shit."
"You already said that," I inform him. Caleb starts pacing while running his hands over his buzz cut. "Yeah, well, this sucks. Being locked up is getting to be the theme of my life," he mumbles. "How long before she usually wakes up?"
I shrug. "It could be a half hour, but sometimes she sleeps for an hour or more, like yesterday."
Taking a deep breath, he sits in the middle of the floor and leans against Mrs. Reynolds' trunk. "You might as well take a seat," he says.
"I'm kind of afraid of spiders."
"Still?"
"You remember that about me?"
"How could I forget? You and Leah used to make me your personal spider killer," he says. I look at him strangely.
"Sit," he orders. "I'm giving the old lady two hours to free us and then I'm breaking that door down."
Neither of us say anything for a long time. The only sound is our breathing and the eerie bangs and creaks of the old house.
"Was it scary in jail?" I ask, breaking the silence.
"Sometimes."
"Like when? What did they do to you?"
I turn and look at him. His expression is wary. "You know, you're the first one who's asked for details."