Part 7 (1/2)

Dear Cassie Lisa Burstein 64070K 2022-07-22

”Did you hear me?” Nez asked as she put on a lime green bra and matching underwear. We hadn't done laundry yet and I had no idea how this girl could still have clean underwear, especially considering how much time she spent making it dirty.

Troyer stopped brus.h.i.+ng and pretended to launch her hairbrush at Nez. Maybe she wasn't ignoring us.

”Nez, we don't care,” I said. I wiped my face one more time and dropped the washcloth in the bucket with a splash, only thinking afterward that Nez might have used it to clean up when she snuck back in last night.

I felt myself involuntarily shudder.

”Well, I don't care if you care,” Nez said, turning around and fixing her black eyes on me. ”I need to talk about it. It was very, very special and also,” she whispered, ”super hot.”

”How did you not wake up Nerone?” I said with a lilt in my voice that I hoped let her know I sort of didn't believe her.

”He sleeps like he's been dead fifty years,” she said, explaining my skepticism away. ”I mean, I was definitely screaming and he didn't wake up.”

I looked over at Troyer. She was writing furiously on her pad and not looking up. I guess you had a lot of feelings to get out when you didn't talk all day. Of course, she could have been writing Nez is a b.i.t.c.h over and over, filling each line on the page, like a kid being punished in school.

”Thanks for the f.u.c.king update,” I said, trying to act like I didn't care, but I did. I shouldn't have, though. If Nez were with him maybe he would leave me alone. And isn't that what I want?

I walked back over to my cot to get dressed. It was good I had no plans to be with Ben or any of the other boys stuck at this camp-any other boys ever-because they were all bound to have whatever diseases Nez did. It was clear she probably had enough that Troyer would wear out her pencil writing them all down.

”Please don't swear,” Nez said. ”I'm talking about beautiful, magical things here.” She took a deep breath, sounding very swoony.

”The only magical thing about you and any of those boys knocking boots is that it shuts your mouth for five minutes,” I spit. I was tired of hearing the way Nez threw s.e.x around like it didn't matter.

It did matter. I knew what it could do, what it could make you do.

I felt my hand go to my stomach involuntarily and punch, once, twice, three times.

”B-T-Dubs,” Nez said, completely oblivious, ”Ben is so not annoying. He's actually super cute.”

”He's all yours,” I said, the punches to my stomach making me nauseous. I turned away from her and continued to get dressed. I didn't know Ben well, but he didn't seem like he would fall for Nez's bulls.h.i.+t. I guess when you're in a place like this you'll do anything you can to forget you're here.

Even Nez.

”My only complaint is that he smells like an ashtray,” Nez said, sounding like she was critiquing a restaurant.

I turned around mid-dress and looked at her, my jumpsuit half on, the arms hanging at my sides. The fabric was still damp with lake water, still covered with sand. This was interesting information. ”How can he smell like an ashtray if we're not allowed to smoke?” It had been seven days since my last cigarette and while I didn't crave them in the same anxious, needling way, it didn't mean I wouldn't take one if it were offered, especially if someone here had them.

”We're not allowed to do a lot of things, but that didn't stop me.” Nez paused and pursed her lips. ”Or Ben.”

”I don't think a fifty-foot wall of nuns could stop you,” I said.

I left Nez bragging to Troyer. I had to use the bathroom, and it was the kind of day where peeing on the side of the cabin wasn't going to do it. Not that I ever liked using the pit toilet. Basically, I felt like I was in a metal coffin filled with s.h.i.+t-and the last time I was in there I saw a spider on the ceiling with a body as big as an avocado. The whole time I was trying not to sit, I was also trying not to stand. But it's not like I had a choice.

The way I didn't have a choice about most things at Turning Pines.

I found Rawe in front of the cabin on her knees, facing toward the sun. Her eyes were closed and her hands were palm to palm at her chest like she was praying. Her mouth was moving but not making sound. She was praying. What was she praying for? Who was she praying for?

Hopefully not Nez.

Or me.

I still hadn't figured out why Rawe was here beyond her paycheck. Why would anyone choose to be in a s.h.i.+tty cabin with three f.u.c.ked-up girls for thirty days? Three f.u.c.ked-up girls who totally didn't want to be here. Three f.u.c.ked-up girls who hated her because of who she was, who hated themselves, who hated so much, there was no room for anything else.

I tried to walk by without her noticing, but the boots they gave us were not made for sneaking around, probably by design. It made me wonder how Nez hadn't been caught yet. Maybe she was paying Rawe in s.e.xual favors.

”Morning, Wick,” Rawe said, not turning around. Her black braid was as tight as ever, the hair in it probably suffocating from lack of air.

I wasn't sure what I was supposed to say back, because she was kind of being nice and I wasn't used to it. Not from Rawe. If she used my name, it was in command, not in greeting.

”Morning,” I said. What people say when they see someone on the street that they don't know but who is nice enough to say, Morning, like an old man with a hat that he tips.

I was surprised Rawe was even talking to me. Not that I wanted to talk to her, but when I heard I was going to rehab, I was kind of expecting to be forced to confide my feelings to someone. So far I had only been confiding to myself.

”Care to join me?” Rawe asked, patting the ground next to her, calling me like a dog.

”I came out to use the bathroom,” I said. Was she asking me to join her or telling me to join her? I wasn't sure. If I didn't, would there be more push-ups? I had to use the bathroom too badly to do push-ups. I had to use the bathroom too badly to do anything.

”Maybe on your way back,” Rawe said, still not turning around. She was kind of spooking me out. I could take seeing her as a soulless, angry b.i.t.c.h or the prescriptive voice pus.h.i.+ng us to write in our a.s.sessment Diaries, but I didn't know what this was.

”Um, maybe,” I said, even though I was positive if I kneeled down to pray, the sky would open up and lightning would fly out like octopus arms and burn me to a crisp. I didn't deserve to pray. Not that anyone but my brother knew it, but I didn't deserve anything except to go take a c.r.a.p in a pit toilet.

”It's about changing patterns,” Rawe said, like she could read my mind.

”I don't have a pattern,” I said. I did before I came here. I did before Aaron, but now I was surviving. Waking up every day and struggling like a sapling against the wind.

”Sure you do,” Rawe said, finally turning around. She squinted. ”You weren't sent here because you're special. You were sent here to change.”

”Into what?” I asked. I was fine with changing. If changing meant I didn't have to feel the way I felt anymore, then I was more than fine with it. But it certainly didn't seem like that was what this place was about. How are you supposed to change when your body is so tired you can barely see? How are you supposed to change when you're forced to rehash your life nightly by flashlight?

”That's what you need to decide,” Rawe said. ”The goal here is to prepare you for your future.”

”Some future,” I said. I thought of everything I'd done since I arrived. The only life this was going to prepare me for was one as a lumberjack.

A very poorly paid lumberjack.

”Come pray with me,” Rawe said.

”I can't,” I said, instead of just saying no.

”You don't have to be religious to pray,” she said.

”But you have to be good.” I paused, looking at the orange pinecones that covered the ground. ”Deserving,” I continued, ”and I'm not.” I was surprised I'd admitted it out loud. It was one thing to punch myself until I couldn't breathe and keep everyone away like I had porcupine needles coming from my skin.

It was another thing to say it, especially when I couldn't even write what that really meant yet.

”You'll feel better,” she said.

It was tempting, but pretending to pray was probably not the best idea. I was already on a slippery slope with whatever was looking down on us.

Rawe was naive enough to think I was someone who deserved a second chance.