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We Were Never Here




  Dedication

  For my mother

  Contents

  Dedication

  Part 1 Day 1: It Happens at Camp

  Day 1: But Still Before Any of It Really

  Day 3 Begins

  Day 3: World Building

  Day 4: A Lot of Information

  Still Day 4: The Anatomy of an Innocent Frog

  Day 5: Apparently Life Goes On

  Day 6: And On . . .

  Day 7: The Wig; the Mountain

  Day 7 Still

  Day 8: Well, Now We Know

  Day 9: Life Time

  Day 9, afternoon: Finally

  Day 10: Like Honey

  Day 11: Frog, Prince, Fairy Tale

  Day 11 Continues! We Were Never Here

  Day 12: Window Seat

  Day 13: Not Spain

  Part 2 Day 13: Lite-Brite

  Day 14: The Lone Ranger, Alone

  Day 14 Continued: Pumpkinhood

  Cutting

  Girl Groups

  Peel Back the Skin . . .

  The Shelter

  Returning

  Letter 1

  Blue All Over Again

  School Spirit

  King, Queen, Prince

  Under the Clock

  In Ether

  Letter 2

  Closet of Lost Toys

  Warm Phone

  Good Citizen

  House of Wax

  Scars Make the Body Interesting

  Fruit

  Making Plans

  Lost and Found

  Slayer

  Moorings

  Stars and Stars

  Moon Inside

  We Were There

  After

  How Lost

  Letter 3

  Making Contact

  Finally, Listening

  Canine Good Citizen

  Butterfly

  Out of the Blue

  Bones

  Acknowledgments

  Back Ad

  About the Author

  Books by Jennifer Gilmore

  Credits

  Copyright

  About the Publisher

  Part 1

  Day 1: It Happens at Camp

  It’s a single moment: It’s on the archery field on the third-to-last day of my first year as a CIT—counselor in training. I watch the campers all pull back on their bows, and they’re all in a line, ready to shoot.

  I’m thinking about the most random things. How camp is ending and all these girls still look so young. When I was a camper here, we’d toilet-paper other girls’ cabins. We used to sneak into the boys’ side of camp. We’d run out in the night and sprint through the woods, snapping tree branches. We’d shine flashlights in the boys’ faces and watch them wake up screaming.

  But now it’s different, though sometimes we slip away from the bonfires, the sound of singing behind us as we couple off, fan out, stray, lie out all night long.

  And I’m thinking about two nights before, when Nora and her friend Raymond and David B and I went down to the lake. Dave and I sat on the dock and dragged our feet through the water and kissed until our mouths were numb.

  I’m thinking about the feel of the water when, as suddenly as a heart attack, a pain tears into my side. I double over and the head counselor yells, “Put down your bows!” just like we’d practiced on that first day in the safety part of class, the part everyone barely listens to because who thinks something will actually happen?

  The campers all set down their bows, and there’s that creepy sound of the arrows not shooting, then the short, sad sound of the wood of the arrows hitting the wood of the bows.

  That’s the sound of my whole life changing.

  Just like that. Right there. That kiss on the dock, my bare feet in soft water, that was the last time I was myself.

  I had no idea then that something so small—that single stab of pain—could do that, just change absolutely everything.

  Day 1: But Still Before Any of It Really

  This is how it starts. Like this: The head counselor takes me off the field and I go to the camp infirmary, a place that’s kind of like a regular camp cabin and kind of how I imagine an old-fashioned country doctor’s office would be: jars on metal counters filled with tongue depressors and cotton balls, all this dust shifting in the light, like no one has moved in here for a week. It’s time for afternoon swim, so I imagine the lake. I can picture the girls in our cabin walking down the path, towels folded over their arms as they stick their gum on the gum tree, which is really an evergreen whose trunk is stuck with everyone’s chewed gum. Then I think of the kids all lining up after swimming, tilting their heads so Frank and Rhonda, the lake counselors, can squeeze alcohol into everyone’s ears so they don’t get ear infections from the moldy lake water. When I was a camper, we’d make paper boats and put candles inside and push them, lighted, out onto the water. I wish I wish I wish, I’d think. I wished to be skinnier, to be prettier, for green eyes. I think I also wanted to be more like my sister, Zoe, who is a year older and does everything first, including having a boyfriend, this super-nice guy named Tim, who she’s been with for over six months. Every day after school the two of them go up to Zoe’s room and close the door.

  I think for a moment of David B and me. How we could hear the sound of Raymond and Nora giggling, Ray trying for Nora like everyone else had. Guys never like me that way. Only Dave, who uses the word “wicked” all the time because he’s from Bangor, Maine, near our camp, and I guess they say that a ton there. Dave is a tennis instructor, and while he has really nice legs, tan and smooth, strangely hairless, he also makes birdhouses and God’s eyes. Like constantly. I never thought of him at all until the Fourth of July when he bought illegal fireworks and set them off, howling. There was something so reckless about that. It made me rethink David B.

  Now I lie down on the dusty cot—the pillowcase smells like a combination of insects and wildflowers—and I hold my hands across my stomach. I throw up until I’m empty. I can’t even drink water, because that will make me throw up again. The nurse calls my mother, and I tell her: I have no idea what’s happening to me. No, I say, it’s not like the flu at all. I have had the flu before, and when I did, after it was over, my mother set a flat Coke by my bed and there was this feeling of, I don’t know, finishedness. But now it just goes on and on and on, and, to add to that misery, I go to the bathroom all night long. All night. And my mother isn’t anywhere near here.

  Whatever an infirmary feels like in the day, at night it is the setting for a horror movie; everywhere there is blackness except for the gleaming bits of glass and metal that glimmer in the dark.

  I hate horror movies. Sometimes I think they are the only things that truly scare the hell out of me. I like roller coasters and running hard and I like being in the woods at night, but I don’t understand anyone seeking the fear inspired by the kind of horror in a movie.

  But now? What if every day of my life is like this? That is different fear.

  Nora sneaks in through the window that night, while everyone’s asleep, and she climbs into my little cot and we turn on our backs and look up to the wooden beams crossing the ceiling, the cobwebs threading the corners like the Jacob’s ladders the campers make with string.

  “I kissed Angelo,” Nora tells me. I can see her eyes are wide-open, like two black holes, staring in the dark.

  I wonder why she didn’t choose Raymond. Did he kiss so terribly she had to unhook him and throw him back like a bad fish? I know the real reason. Nora isn’t into anyone who wants her. She’s barely into wanting to be my friend, because I do what she says. I guess that registers as me wanting her more in some crazy way.

  “No. Way!” I hit her on the shoul
der. Angelo is the oldest boys’ counselor, and he’s been here since we were little and he is wickedly handsome, long-haired and tanned, always barefoot, kind of dangerous. Last week he snuck out of camp, got drunk in the town, and shaved off his eyebrows.

  Nora is silent. I don’t say anything either. I’m thinking about how no one wants David B. No one sits in a circle and says, I wish that guy would make me a God’s eye, in purple. It’s always the freaks who like me, never the normal, beautiful ones who tie sailor’s knots and swim the butterfly. Truthfully, though, I always like the freaks back. And truthfully, I have a soft spot for David, so eager to please. I think I’m just the opposite. I seem so normal. I play field hockey, for God’s sake. I spend a lot of time trying to get my brown hair to turn blond in the sun. I’m pretty tall. I think too much—I can see other people watching me, judging. Let’s just say I could never dance, not outside of my room anyway. I don’t hold hands with my mother. In hockey I’m the kamikaze. I’m the one between the goalie and the world. I come out screaming for the free hits.

  In that silence with Nora, the pain bites into me, like it takes out a huge chunk, and then I have to throw up, and also go to the bathroom, and so at the same time as I’m going to the bathroom, I’m throwing up in a metal bowl. Why are those bowls you throw up in shaped like lima beans? Or sad smiles? I have no idea.

  “You should go,” I tell Nora. I don’t want her to see me like this. I don’t even want to see myself like this. “I don’t know what’s wrong.” I’m crying for a lot of reasons, all at once.

  Nora is crying too.

  “Why are you crying?” I say.

  “Angelo scares the piss out of me without his eyebrows,” is what Nora says. I know it’s a friendship that, as Nana says, You need to turn the light out on and close the door, but I can’t.

  I run to the bathroom again—this time I make it—and when I come back, Nora is sliding out the same window she came in from. She gives me a salute and then she’s gone.

  Anchors aweigh, I think, because at camp, this is how we talk.

  Also because the final regatta is on my mind. And the camp talent show. And that hockey tryouts at school are in two days. And that soon all the campers and counselors will be hugging one another good-bye.

  The next day and night I’m in that infirmary and nothing changes, only I am more in a daze now and I have that feeling inside that is just like watching some crazy person come out of the woods with an ax, ready to kill the couple in the lighted house. It’s that kind of awful fluttery panic. I can hear the nurse on the phone with my mother again. Now I can only nod my head when she places the phone at my ear, but of course my mother can’t hear that.

  Outside, though, I know there is all the bustle and thrill and sadness we wait all summer for during those last two days of camp. It’s the whole summer wrapped up, the most important days.

  The last night event I had been to was a hypnotist—Rhonda from the lake got hypnotized, and she walked across the stage and sang a little of the song “Yellow,” and when the hypnotist snapped his fingers and she came to, she said she didn’t know the lyrics to that song. I wasn’t sure if I totally believed it, but I kind of did, and even if you believe it just a little, that’s all it takes really. Just the littlest part, then it can be true.

  I wish I could be hypnotized to not feel this but no, I’m in and out of this crazy haze of pain and sleep and throwing up. There is also the feel of the camp nurse and her cold and hot compresses on my forehead, like she can’t decide which one is the right one.

  Then, camp’s over. And I’m gone.

  Day 3 Begins

  I’m in a haze, but I know my mother comes for me. I feel her before she walks through the door, and I’m thinking how I’ve never been so happy to see my mother. She’s in jeans and one of the long linen shirts that she refers to as a tunic, not the suits she usually wears to work, downtown on Capitol Hill. She works for a nonprofit. My mother does all this good for the environment. Also, she doesn’t have any lipstick on.

  From there we take a plane back to Washington, DC, where I’m from. Well, I’m from Virginia, but it’s close enough. In any case, we have to take an ambulance to the airport. I think of all those hospital shows, and I know that the sixteen-year-old girl who gets flown in a special plane to a hospital in another state has something terribly wrong with her. Someone hovers over me and asks me if I’m comfortable and then it’s nighttime on the plane, and I look out the dollhouse windows and there’s the Washington Monument, the Reflecting Pool, the Lincoln Memorial. They are all so close it’s like the plane is flying in between the monuments, and then up into the sky, and then back in again.

  “Mom!” I say. “Look how close we are to the buildings!”

  “That,” my mother says, smiling at me, “is the pain medicine talking. I’m glad it’s working.” She brushes my hair behind my ears with her fingers in a way that says, I’m so glad you are letting me do this. Her fingers make my neck tingle.

  Outside it looks indigo blue, deep, and there are stars, and the lights from the city are everywhere. I can see a dangling crescent moon.

  I am in a whole other world. Camp is as far away as a circling planet. I’m in all this pain and then there’s what’s happening outside the window: Everything is horrible and beautiful, both at the exact same time.

  Day 3: World Building

  We go straight to the hospital, where I am still. Now. When my mother and I get here, my father and my older sister, Zoe, are waiting for me. The only one missing here is who I want to see most: our dog, Mabel. My father stands up when I arrive, as if I am someone very important.

  “My baby,” he says. He has a stuffed animal with him.

  “Lizzie,” Zoe says, breathing.

  Seeing Zoe like this—tentative, scared, waiting for me, and also without Tim—again makes me realize something is really wrong. Maybe I am dying. And there is something about seeing my dad there with this big teddy bear that makes me really sad. I’m also sad I might be dying. I mean that truly. I have seen the movies; I have read the books. A teenager dying is a terribly sad thing. It just doesn’t feel like it’s happening to me. How could it be? Hockey tryouts are tomorrow. I’m supposed to be there. David B and I never said good-bye.

  I’m not just sad, I’m also terrified about all the things that will never happen to me now, or all the things that I will never make happen, but it’s still in me to be a little annoyed about the teddy bear, so I stick with that. I am not seven, I want to tell him. How will this stuffed animal help me?

  But then my father sits the teddy bear down on the bed, and I bring it to my chest. It’s impossibly soft, as soft as his gray cashmere robe that I like to wear when he’s at work. It’s comforting to hold, like it fits me. I think of wearing my father’s wool sweaters. And his overcoat. I used to find all these random things in his pockets: scraps of paper, dried-out pens, old nickels. I look over and see Zoe looking at me, which she never does, and I hold the bear tightly, feel its silky hairs along the tip of my nose. If I were alone, I know I would take this opportunity to out-and-out cry. But with everyone here, my eyes sort of leak, a faucet that you just can’t turn tight enough.

  “We’re going to find out what’s going on,” my father says. “Right away.”

  “We are,” my mom says. “It’s the colon, we know that. But for now we’re on the cancer ward, Lizzie.”

  “Colon,” I say. “Cancer,” I say. My heart does that panic fluttery thing that makes me realize should I make it out of here, ever, a slasher movie will be nothing for me. I will never again be the girl waiting at Glitter or Dippin’ Dots until You’re Next and Evil Dead are over.

  My mom nods. “Yeah, not the ideal thing, but the best gastroenterologists around are in this hospital. We want you here, and sadly, this ward is the safest place for you. We’re going to get to the bottom of all this.” She kisses the top of my head. I feel her words on my scalp.

  I’m definitely dying, I think. I
think, I will never get to Spain, which is surprising because I never knew going to Spain was important to me. Also, the language I take in school is French. I look at my family again. Who are these delightful people I once thought were so boring? I think of them missing me, and I won’t deny that initially I get a pang of pleasure imagining their mourning me. They will leave my room as is, even though I never cleaned it up before camp like I’d promised my mother, and I think of what they’ll find. My notebook filled with Birdy lyrics, an embarrassment to be sure. The Converse shoe box filled with all the random things I’ve saved: an origami bird, a ticket stub to the Glen Echo carousel where I went with my friends Dee-Dee and Lydia, notes from Mark Segura when I sat in front of him in algebra. I can’t believe I saved those. English papers I got A’s on. Feathers. Pom-poms. Gold stars. Little-girl stuff all crammed in; I can barely close it anymore.

  Everything is different now, here. Here everything fits into this teeny-tiny, lonely world.

  I can’t think of the real things. Like if I go, will I miss my family? Do the people who die, especially the young people, do they go through everything alone now? Are they all alone?

  I look at my family again. Differently, just for a moment. I don’t want them to let me go.

  But a nurse comes in and says they have to. It’s way past visiting hours, she tells them. My mother clutches me before going, and my father swishes the hair out of my face. And then I am alone.

  Here is what it is now: there is a bed and a tray that moves over the bed or swings parallel to it, and an old bulky television, which hangs from an ugly white(ish) wall. I have a roommate; a thick, ugly, blue movable curtain divides our two sides. I’m hooked up to a bunch of IVs. They come right out of me; the plastic tubing is taped down along the inside of my arm. I’m not allowed to eat anymore. One of the IVs is this milky white liquid that feeds me through my veins. A plastic bracelet with my name and birth date scrawled on it scratches at my wrist.