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Six Months Later, Page 6

Natalie D. Richards


  My cursor hovers over the two words, and I frown hard at it. I wouldn’t say this. I don’t care what’s happened to me in the last six months. I can imagine myself saying some seriously stupid crap but not that. Not in any universe I can think of.

  It’s just…wrong. It’s like someone I don’t know at all—a stranger. The same stranger who smiles out at me from dozens of pictures I don’t remember taking? Maybe.

  But why nothing since September? I’m not a junkie about these social things, but it’s not like me to go more than a few days. A week, tops. Now I’m going off grid?

  If there’s an answer, I have no clue what it is or where to find it. I rub my hands over my face and glance at the clock on my laptop. I’ve been at this two hours, and all I’ve seen is forty new Facebook friends and a crap-load of extra credit assignments I’ve turned in. And by a lot, I mean an insane crap-ton of assignments. I stopped counting after twenty-six.

  I flip to my school website and find a little more there. I’m officially hot shit, academically speaking. I’m on the honor roll and in the peer tutoring club and blah, blah, blah. None of this tells me why I can’t remember the last several months of my life. Or why I’m so convinced I have something to do with Julien Miller’s disappearance. Other than the glaringly obvious fact that I need professional help.

  God, I really need to let this go. I blow out a sigh and start shutting my programs down. I move to save one of my documents when something catches my attention. Another file—a text file—in my list of recently accessed items.

  Julien.

  I rub my eyes and lean forward in my chair, but I didn’t read it wrong.

  My skin goes ice-cold, my palm growing damp on the mouse as I hover over the six letters.

  Maybe it’s about someone else. A new friend. Someone I’m tutoring. Maybe it was something I did for her before she left. The excuses pour out of me so fast I can barely keep track of them, but it doesn’t matter.

  This file scares me, and it wouldn’t scare me if there wasn’t a reason. I knew something about Julien, and I’m about to find out exactly what that something is.

  I double click and receive an error message informing me that the path is invalid. I try it again because it’s got to be there. Everything I’ve touched since we bought this computer is still there.

  No go. The file is gone.

  Heart pounding, I click to my deleted items folder.

  Empty.

  The blank white box rattles me to the core. I rarely delete and never purge my deleted items folder. Maggie used to tease me mercilessly about it. She’d say if I didn’t get this under control, I was going to be one of those creepy moms that kept my baby’s teeth and their hair and every sock they ever wore, just in case.

  No, this wasn’t me. Which means, someone else has been cleaning up. Crazy, yeah. But less crazy than me suddenly deleting things out of my computer.

  I drag my hands through my hair and take a shaky breath.

  It’s a start. Now I know what I’m looking for.

  Things that are no longer there.

  ***

  Someone taps on my door, and I jerk my head off my desk, blinking blearily. Three soda cans and an empty bag of spicy tortilla chips are lined up by my keyboard. The chips are probably responsible for the god-awful taste in my mouth.

  Mom knocks again, and I see the pale promise of sunlight drifting around my curtains. Is it morning? Really?

  “Chloe?” she asks.

  “Yeah?” I click to bring up a half-finished paper on electromagnetism. I figured it’d be a good cover last night, but I didn’t need it until now.

  “Honey,” she says, looking alarmed. “Did you sleep?”

  “I napped on the QWERTY row I think.” I manage a groggy grin, rubbing my forehead. “But not much. I’m probably going to crash for a couple of hours.”

  “Today? But it’s Saturday, honey.”

  I blink at her. It’s way too early for this. “Right. Ergo me not needing to rush off to school.”

  Mom laughs, shaking her head and wagging her finger at me. “Very funny. Blake’s going to be here in ten minutes. I can put your tea in a travel mug if you want.”

  “Blake?”

  She looks at me like I’ve lost my mind, but I’m pretty sure if anyone’s crazy, it’s her. It is oh-dark-thirty on a Saturday morning. I’m generally not even conscious on Saturdays for several more hours, so why in God’s name would Blake be on his way?

  “You’re a regular comedian,” she says. “You’re lucky he isn’t running early like he usually does.”

  “What time is it?” I search around my desk for my phone, shifting papers and knocking over an empty soda can.

  “Seven fifteen. What are you looking for?”

  “My phone. I need to text Blake. I can’t go out right now. I’ve barely slept.”

  Mom crosses her arms and looks severe. “Chloe, your Saturday mornings with Blake aren’t dates.”

  Wait a minute—I do this every Saturday? Voluntarily? I blink up at her, hoping she’ll fill me in. I can tell by her face there’s a full-force lecture on standby, so I try to look attentive.

  “Those kids depend on you,” she says, and then she waits, clearly expecting me to get with the program.

  Which isn’t going to happen since I don’t even know the program. Instead, I revert to my current default mode. Faking it as pleasantly as possible.

  “You’re right. I’ll get dressed. Ten minutes?”

  She glances at her watch. “Seven. I’ll get your tea.”

  I shuck off yesterday’s clothes and tear through my closet, finding jeans and a baby-blue sweatshirt that’s buttery soft against my skin. I’ve barely tossed my hair into a ponytail and brushed my teeth when I hear the doorbell ring, the sounds of cheerful morning-people greetings floating up the stairs.

  When I get downstairs, Blake’s standing with my mom, holding my tea. “Where’s your binder?”

  Binder? What binder? I don’t even know where I’m going and now I have to bring props?

  Mom sighs. “Honestly, Chloe. It’s in the dining room. I put it on the hutch.”

  I find it easily enough, along with a helpful label that reads: EISENHOWER ELEMENTARY TUTOR PROGRAM. So that explains the kids counting on me. Wait a minute, can I fake tutoring? I mean, what if all this brainiac stuff didn’t take?

  It took.

  An hour later, the boy across from me grins a gap-toothed smile, chin smudged with pencil marks. “How did you figure that out so fast?”

  I shrug. “Trade secret.”

  Though, truthfully, I just have no idea. Last time I checked, I still counted on my fingers. I mean, I skated by without needing summer school or anything, but I wasn’t exactly a human calculator. Now? Now, I can do triple-digit arithmetic in my head. Like the problem Tyler and I just finished.

  “You must be a super genius or something,” he says, squirming around on his chair.

  “Not even close. But I have done a lot of extra homework this year.”

  “I hate homework,” he says.

  “Yeah, me too,” I say, and then I wink. “But I like being a smarty-pants. How about number ten?”

  “Do I have to?”

  I tilt my head, playing at thinking this over. “Well, we could do a makeover instead. I could paint your nails. Braid your hair.”

  Tyler laughs, and it’s that awesome no-holds-barred kind that everybody seems to lose when they hit puberty. I grin as he simmers down to a chuckle and then looks at me with resignation.

  “I still hate math. Even if you’re cool.” He hunkers back down over his homework, and I scan the community center while he works.

  I’d heard that they hold tutoring here, but I’d never really seen it. It’s actually pretty cool. The parents can leave or wait in the lobby, though God knows why they’d want to stay. There’s nothing out there but a coffee machine and enough old newspapers to papier-mâché a small city.

  In this room, the gra
y walls offer signs for everything from AA meetings to senior yoga exercises. Six tables have been set up, but there are only three of us working. Blake, me, and Tina Stubbs—a girl I barely knew last year. Today she hugged me and blabbered on about some guy she desperately wants until Tyler arrived to save me.

  Blake is sitting two tables away from me. He’s supposedly reading Dr. Seuss with the kid in front of him. Too bad he’s not looking at the book or at the poor second-grader who’s stumbling his way over each word. He’s staring at something under the table, I think. Something in his lap, maybe?

  Ah, cell phone.

  He’s texting someone.

  “Is that right?” Tyler asks.

  I glance down at his work. 327 + 456 = 773. “Super close, Tyler. One number is off. Do you think you can find it?”

  Damn, I’m good.

  I look up again, and Blake’s student is reading even slower, his voice growing small as he tries to labor through a word that’s obviously stumping him. And my sweet-as-sugar boyfriend is apparently too busy texting the Gettysburg Address to care? Something’s very wrong with this picture. He’s the tutoring coordinator.

  “I got it wrong again?” Tyler asks, sounding worried.

  I realize I’m making a seriously ugly face, one that isn’t aimed at Tyler at all. Too bad Blake is way too absorbed in his cell phone to notice I’m shooting it in his direction.

  I check Tyler’s work and shake my head.

  “It’s perfect. I knew you could do it,” I say, forcing a wide smile. “You’ve just got to remember right to left. Opposite of reading, okay?”

  “Yeah, I think I’ve got it.”

  “You’re going to do awesome. Consider that test aced,” I say, and then I snag him an extra pencil out of the treasure box at the back of the room as I walk him out.

  I release Tyler to his parents in the waiting room. The door chimes open as we’re exchanging waves and farewells. I have no idea if I have another student or what’s going on, so I step over to the door to say hello.

  And then I just about fall over.

  “Adam,” I say. I don’t even really mean to say it, but it’s like my mouth was just waiting for a chance to get it out.

  “Hey.” He looks up, a half smile on his lips. Lips I really have to stop looking at, especially when my boyfriend is in the other room. My belly feels tight and I can feel myself smiling and this is not good.

  So not good.

  “You tutoring today?” I ask, hoping that will be a safe bet.

  Wrong answer.

  Something dark flashes over his features. He doesn’t answer me, just shakes his head like he can’t believe I would go there.

  Panicked, I turn to follow him as he moves farther into the room. It’s only then that I see the white logo in the corner of his blue shirt and the giant rolling trash can he’s pulling behind him. Yeah, he’s here to clean the desks, not sit at them.

  My heart twists in my chest.

  Obviously the me without amnesia knows he’s a janitor here, and that me wouldn’t say something so horrible. Unless, of course, I wanted to make him feel completely shitty about being a janitor.

  Fantastic.

  I stand there, wishing I could go back in time, while he collects trash and runs the dust mop under the chairs. I have to say something. I can’t let him think that I think…well, whatever awful thing he probably thinks I’m thinking.

  I expect him to head into the tutoring room, but he doesn’t. He cuts into a hallway off the waiting room, one that leads to restrooms and offices and all sorts of places I’m probably not allowed to explore.

  I follow him anyway.

  “Adam, wait!”

  “Working here,” he says, the bite in his tone as sharp and hard as teeth.

  It would make more sense to head into the women’s room first, but he moves right past it for the men’s room instead. He shrugs his shoulders at me with a false apology in his eyes. The men’s room door swings shut with a yellow “Restroom Being Cleaned” sign dangling from the handle. It’s like a silent dare.

  Yeah. Well, there’s a reason I streaked Clementine Drive in my undies in the middle of February. I’m not the kind of girl who turns down a dare.

  Chapter Eight

  I push the door open and slide into the world of urinals and general male restroom ickyness.

  “You really don’t take a hint, do you?” he asks, leaning back against the sink with his arms crossed. How anyone can look this hot in a polyester button-down with Peachy Kleen! emblazoned across the pocket is beyond me, but he’s managing it.

  He’s more than managing it.

  “I didn’t mean that,” I say. “I didn’t think.”

  Well, technically I didn’t know, but it’s not like I can say that.

  “Yeah, you’ve been doing a lot of that lately. Not thinking.”

  I take a step toward him. I’m not sure it’s a good idea, but I’m not sure I can stop myself either. “I’m sorry.”

  “It’s fine.”

  “No, it’s not. It’s not fine. And I’m sorry.”

  “Yeah, you’ve said that,” he says, and then his brow furrows. “So is that it?”

  I blink at him, stunned into silence.

  He lifts his hands briefly, latex gloves stretched over his palms. “Apology received, Chloe. Consider your conscience clear.”

  I open my mouth, and God, why is it like this with him? I’m completely defective with Blake, but I swear the whole room hums when I look at Adam’s eyes.

  He suddenly walks forward, coming close enough to steal the breath right out of me. Words continue to evade me, which is probably for the best. Nothing’s coming out right anyway. And frankly, I’d rather stand here in silence than have him tell me to leave.

  Adam clenches his fists at his sides and takes a sharp breath. His voice is low, with a pleading edge that doesn’t match his hard expression. “I have work to do, Chloe.”

  “Adam, please.” I reach for him instinctively, my fingers wrapping around the bare flesh of his wrist.

  The memory rocks through me like a shock wave. Quick and powerful.

  I see leaves. A red-gold carpet of them litters my lawn. My rake pushes them into piles, baring trails of green grass and the crisp, unmistakable smell of autumn in the air.

  Beside me, Adam looks up from his own rake. “I can’t believe you talked me into this.”

  I roll my eyes. “You’re the one who kept me up until three in the morning for, what was it? Eight Halo rematches last night? Remind me again how many of those you won?”

  Instead of replying, Adam tosses his rake and lunges for me.

  I feel his hands on my waist and laughter bubbling out of me as he hauls me into the air and then tosses me into the pile. Leaves crunch beneath me as I laugh, pulling at his feet and knees until I bring him down beside me.

  I smell the sweetness of October all around me as we lie there side by side, laughing until my cheeks ache with it. Adam rolls on his side to face me. His eyes are so blue I feel myself getting lost in them. I know I’m staring and I know it’s obvious, and somehow it’s so ridiculous that it only makes me laugh more.

  My shoulders are shaking and I should stop, but it’s just so crazy. Then Adam reaches for my face, and there’s nothing funny about it.

  His eyes go soft, and my insides curl like ribbons on a gift. I feel the ghost of his fingers on my hair. It only leaves me aching for more.

  “I shouldn’t even be here, you know,” he says softly.

  “I know,” I say. But when he moves to leave, I take his hand. And he lets me.

  “What’s going on, Chloe?”

  I jump away from Adam at the sound of Blake’s voice. And there we are, Blake staring at me, Adam staring at Blake, and me staring at the wall, cheeks burning like someone lit them on fire.

  “Chloe?” Blake prompts again.

  “I called her a bitch,” Adam says, with a shrug that says I’m making a big deal out of nothing.


  Blake and I both look at him—me in shock, Blake with disbelief. Adam just crosses his long arms across his middle again and tries to look bored.

  “You called her a bitch,” Blake says.

  Okay, I’m not sure what Blake’s trying for, but if it’s anger, he’s missing the mark. Like way missing it, because if anything, he sounds amused. And maybe he is. I don’t even care. All I care about is getting out of here. Like, now.

  “Okay, I’ll bite,” Blake says, giving an exaggerated shrug. “Why would you say that?”

  “She was spitting out your Goody Two-shoes crap. And God knows she can’t let it go,” Adam says, gesturing at me with something that I think is supposed to look like disgust.

  Okay, everyone in this room needs acting lessons. None of us are buying any of this, but I don’t see anything else for sale.

  I cringe, desperate to break the awkward silence. “I wasn’t—”

  Blake turns toward me, face expectant.

  “You weren’t being a self-righteous bitch?” Adam asks, his snarly tone a complete contradiction to his tense expression. “Sure you weren’t.”

  “Whatever. Can we just go now, Blake?”

  Blake cuts his eyes to the urinal. “Well, if you’re done here, I’d still like to use the restroom.”

  If I blush any harder at this point, I’ll actually become a tomato. I cover my face, shaking my head. “Sorry. Here, I’ll take your stuff and wait for you.”

  Blake gives me one more look and then hands me his binder and phone. I’m shooting for the door before he’s even fully let go.

  Once outside, I hear Blake speak again, his voice muffled by the door. “Don’t forget yourself, big guy. Boyfriend is my job, not yours.”

  I stop short, somehow frozen by his words. Or maybe his tone. I mean, I know I’m his girlfriend. Even if I can’t remember anything, I have about two hundred pictures to prove it. But there was something about his tone. Almost like he was joking.

  Like us being together is a joke.

  Stop it.