hot, and then icy-cold. So she wanted me to
   leave her alone and go away? Well, she was in
   for a surprise, because that was the one thing I
   was never, ever going to do!
   Tears ran down my face as I switched off
   the computer. Why was I crying? I wasn’t sad,
   I was angry. I wiped my eyes with my sleeve
   and hurried across the hallway to my room.
   I slammed the door.
   I threw myself on my bed and hugged a
   pillow. My tears dried up as I planned how to
   get back at her. Soon I knew just what I was
   going to do. I could hardly wait. She could
   throw me in jail if she wanted to. I didn’t care.
   But she was going to be sorry.
   35
   Chapter 6
   Mom’s House
   When Mom drove away in her red sports
   car the next morning, I was sitting in the park,
   waiting. She didn’t see me. In fact, it looked
   like she was singing along with the radio as
   she drove past. She didn’t have a care in the
   world.
   Her car turned the corner, and I stood up.
   My fists were clenched. It was time.
   First, I looked around the park until I found
   what I was searching for – a long, heavy stick.
   I swung it in my hand. It felt strange. I’d
   36
   never done anything like this before. I couldn’t believe that I was going to do it now.
   But I was.
   I hid the stick under my coat and headed
   for Mom’s house. My pulse raced as I went
   around the side of it. There were weeds
   everywhere, and pieces of wood.
   I walked around the corner to the back.
   A gate led into her back yard. I tugged at it.
   It was locked, so I climbed over it. I was
   panting hard now. I almost fell as I dropped to
   the ground. God, I wasn’t very good at this
   kind of thing! I heard a car drive past, and I
   froze. Nothing happened, and after a moment
   I relaxed again.
   I walked over to the house. The back door
   was locked, of course. I took the stick out from
   under my coat and smashed in one of the
   panes of glass. Then I put my hand down
   inside. The key was still in the lock, and I
   turned it easily.
   I opened the door and stepped into my
   mom’s house. The broken glass crunched
   under my feet. The house was totally silent.
   37
   I could hear myself breathing. I gripped my stick in both hands and headed towards the
   living room.
   Thump!
   What was that? I stopped in my tracks.
   My hands were cold and sweaty. Was there
   someone else in the house?
   The noise came again. I felt dizzy with
   fear. Who was in there? Soft footsteps started
   heading towards me. I made a sound like a
   squeak, and lifted the stick over my head.
   I thought I was going to pass out.
   A small orange cat came into the kitchen.
   “Oh!” I gasped. I felt like an idiot! I put down
   my stick and leaned against the wall. My
   heart was thumping like I’d just climbed a
   mountain.
   The cat meowed and patted at my shoe
   with its paw. It wasn’t much older than a
   kitten. I picked it up. “You scared me,”
   I scolded. The cat purred. I stroked its soft
   fur, and then put it down.
   OK, I had to quit messing around.
   I thought of Mom, and what she’d done to me –
   38
   and I put down my stick and went into the living room. The cat followed me, like he
   thought it was a game.
   The living room was nothing special. There
   was a sofa and a coffee table. Across the room
   was an armchair and a TV. I lifted my stick
   up. I was breathing hard. What should I
   smash first? What would hurt her the most?
   Then I saw what else was in the room.
   It felt like someone had punched me in the
   stomach. I couldn’t believe it. It couldn’t be
   true. But it was.
   Everywhere I looked, my face was looking
   back at me.
   The photos were everywhere. On top of the
   TV, on the windowsill, on the coffee table.
   There were dozens of them, and they were all
   of me. I dropped my stick and picked up the
   nearest one. It was me and Mom when I was
   about four years old. I had my arms around
   her neck, and we were both smiling. She
   looked young and pretty. Happy.
   I felt numb. I picked up another picture.
   I was pulling pink paper off a birthday present.
   39
   In another one, I was making a funny face at the camera.
   My legs felt weak. I sank down onto the
   sofa. Why? Why? She didn’t want anything to
   do with me, so why did she have my picture
   everywhere? Suddenly I felt angry. How dare
   she keep my picture around like she was some
   kind of perfect mom! She didn’t have any
   right!
   I’d smash them all. That would show her!
   I threw the photo of me and Mom onto the
   floor. I stood there with my foot over it. I was
   going to crush it with my heel, but I couldn’t
   make myself stamp down. I just couldn’t.
   I picked the photo up and threw it at the wall
   as hard as I could.
   The stick lay on the floor. I kicked it
   across the room, and started to cry. I was
   such an idiot! I might have known that I’d get
   here and then just chicken out. But I had to do
   something. I had to. I felt like I was on fire.
   There was a thick marker pen on the table.
   I grabbed it. I could smell the ink as I took off
   the cap. I wrote on the wall in great big
   letters, I’M GLAD YOU LEFT! The words looked
   40
   scrawled and shaky. I threw the marker pen across the room.
   “I am!” I shouted. “I’m glad! Do you hear
   me? Glad!”
   I started to really cry then. My shoulders
   shook as I gasped and sobbed. I sank onto the
   sofa, hugging myself. I was so fat. I felt like
   such a freak. No wonder she’d left.
   After a while, the cat crept out from under
   a chair and watched me. I felt bad that I’d
   scared it.
   “Come here,” I said. I put out my hand.
   It came slowly towards me, and then jumped
   up into my lap. I held onto it, stroking it.
   I was so tired. I felt like I’d lived a million
   years in one morning. I wiped my eyes and
   sank back into the sofa. I’d just have a few
   minutes’ rest, I told myself. Then I’d go home
   and never think about my mom again.
   I must have fallen asleep. The next thing I
   knew, there was the sound of a door closing.
   My eyes flew open.
   My mom was standing in front of me.
   41
   Chapter 7
   Secrets
   She stood staring at me like I was a ghost.
   She was holding a white plastic shopping bag,
   clutching it with both hands. I saw her read
   the big black words on the wall. She l 
					     					 			ooked
   scared.
   “Sarah?” she whispered, and looked back at
   me.
   I sat up. I felt like I couldn’t breathe.
   I wanted to run away, but I couldn’t.
   “It was you,” she said. “Why have you been
   doing these things to me?”
   42
   My chin jerked up as I stared at her. Her hair was messy again, and her glasses looked
   dirty. “Why do you think?” I said. My voice
   trembled.
   She shook her head. “I don’t know. I’ve
   been asking myself … I just don’t understand …”
   She sank down into the chair. The shopping
   bag fell open at her feet. I could see
   paintbrushes and pencils in it.
   Was she really that stupid? “Because you
   left!” I cried. “And then you didn’t write, or
   phone, or anything!”
   Suddenly I was on my feet, shouting at her.
   “You left and I hate you for it! And then you
   came back again and you didn’t even want to
   see me! I’m your daughter, you can’t just
   ignore me!”
   She seemed to get smaller with every word.
   “I wasn’t ignoring you,” she mumbled. “It was
   for the best.”
   “The best?” I opened my mouth and closed
   it again. I didn’t know what to say. “It wasn’t,”
   I said at last. I was trying not to cry. “It was
   horrible. You just left, and you didn’t say why.
   43
   Then you came back, and it was like you did the same thing all over again!”
   The cat had jumped off my lap when she
   came in, and now it rubbed against her legs.
   She picked it up and looked over at me again.
   “You’ve changed,” she said.
   I heard myself make a harsh noise,
   somewhere between a laugh and a sob. “Well,
   duh! People do change in seven years, don’t
   they! If you’d been around, you’d have
   noticed!”
   She gulped. Behind her glasses, her eyes
   were the same brown color as mine. “Sarah, I
   couldn’t be around. It was impossible.”
   “But why?” I cried.
   I saw her swallow. “Because … I know what
   it’s like, growing up with that kind of mother.
   I was scared of what I might do.”
   I stared at her. “What do you mean?”
   “I …” She looked down at the cat on her
   lap. For a long time I thought she wasn’t going
   to say anything else. Finally she said, “I was
   afraid I’d hurt you.”
   44
   “Hurt me?” I didn’t know what she meant at first.
   She nodded. “My mother did, when I was
   growing up. She was always angry, always
   shouting. I never knew why. And then she’d
   be wonderful, and I never knew the reason for
   that. She got worse and worse, and then one
   day she attacked me. She had to go away for
   treatment. That kept happening to her, all the
   time I was a teenager. I was terrified of her.”
   My throat felt dry. I couldn’t say anything.
   That was just like I’d felt, with her, when I was
   little.
   She looked right at me. Her eyes were
   bright with tears. “I shouldn’t have gotten
   married, Sarah. I shouldn’t have had children.
   I’m just like her. One day I heard myself
   shouting at you … I can’t even remember why,
   now. But I remember how scared you looked.
   I wanted to hit you for it. I almost did. And I
   knew I couldn’t trust myself any more. If I
   stayed, I’d hit you, or – or worse. That’s why I
   left.”
   45
   It felt like the world had crashed in on me.
   “So it was all my fault, then,” I said. “You
   wouldn’t have left if it wasn’t for me!”
   “No!” She put the cat on the chair and
   stood up. “It wasn’t you. It was me. Sarah, I
   felt like I had a time bomb inside me! I heard
   voices inside me, telling me things … I had to
   get out; I didn’t want you to suffer the way I
   did.”
   “But you could have explained!” I yelled.
   Tears ran down my cheeks, and I swiped
   angrily at them. “You could have said
   something – kept in touch – ”
   She snorted. “What was I supposed to say?
   ‘I’m as crazy as my mom, so you’re better off
   without me’?”
   I felt cold with fear. “You’re not crazy,”
   I whispered.
   My mom smiled sadly. “Sarah, I spent over
   five years in a mental hospital.”
   Oh, my God! I thought. “But … but you
   seem OK now,” I stammered.
   46
   She ran her hands over her arms. “Yes, I’m better, but I don’t … I don’t handle stress well.
   I start thinking all kinds of things. They seem
   so real to me, but …”
   She took a deep breath. “Anyway, I – I
   wouldn’t be able to get a job, or anything like
   that. I’m on what’s called an outpatient
   program. That’s the reason I’m in Midland –
   it’s close to the hospital that runs it. They run
   an art program … art is supposed to be good
   for you.” She tried to smile. She looked down
   at the plastic bag, and touched it with her foot.
   “I’ve been spending most of my time there.”
   Suddenly I felt almost sorry for her. She
   looked so small and alone. “Well, you – you
   must be getting better, right? Or else they
   wouldn’t let you live here, or drive a car or
   anything. Or – or have a cat.”
   “I guess.” She sat down again, like she was
   too tired to say anything else. The cat jumped
   to the floor and started to wash itself.
   “Mom?” I moved closer to her, and touched
   her arm.
   47
   My mother looked startled. She put her hand over mine and squeezed it. Then she
   quickly let go. “I think – I think you should go
   now,” she said.
   “Can I come and see you again?” I blurted
   out. Where had that come from? I didn’t
   know, but I knew that that was what I wanted.
   She hadn’t been right to just leave us, but at
   least I sort of understood it now. I didn’t want
   to lose her again.
   Mom didn’t answer. She looked at the
   words I’d written on her wall. I’M GLAD YOU
   LEFT!
   “Are you sure you want to?” she said at
   last. “I’m not much of a prize, Sarah.” She
   looked so small, sitting there in that chair.
   “That’s OK,” I said. “I’m not much of a
   prize, either.”
   She really smiled then, for the first time
   since I’d seen her. It made her look young and
   pretty. “That’s not true,” she said. “And I
   don’t deserve you, but if you really want to
   come and visit me sometimes … then OK.”
   48
   When I got off the bus that afternoon, I went to McDonald’s like last time. I bought a
   bag of fries and sat on a bench outside eating
   them. Did Dad know that Mom had been in a
   
					     					 			; mental hospital? I ate the fries slowly as I
   thought about it. I didn’t think he did. He
   must have been just as confused as I was when
   she left.
   It must have been so awful for him.
   School was out by then, and kids were
   walking past. Some of them stared at me, but
   this time I didn’t bother to glare back. They
   could think what they wanted. I didn’t care
   any more.
   Then I saw Beth walk by. She looked at me
   and quickly went on walking. I don’t know
   why, but I waved to her. “Beth!” I shouted.
   “Come here!”
   She came slowly over to me. “Hi,” she said.
   “Hi.” I remembered how mean I’d been to
   her. I wanted to say I was sorry, but I didn’t
   know how. I held out the bag of fries. “Here,” I
   said. “D’you want one?”
   49
   “Thanks.” She sat down beside me and helped herself. She pushed back her limp
   blonde hair and gave me a shy grin. “You
   weren’t in school again today.”
   “No.” I looked down at the bag of fries. I
   wanted to tell her the truth. “I was with my
   mom. She’s – she’s been sick.”
   “Oh,” said Beth. She looked puzzled, but
   she didn’t ask any questions. I was glad.
   I wanted to talk about it … but not yet.
   Anyway, I had to talk to Dad first. I needed to
   tell him what had happened – everything I’d
   done. There had been too many secrets
   between us.
   I reached for another fry, and then I
   stopped. For some reason I wasn’t very
   hungry. I closed the bag. I’d eat them later,
   maybe.
   I looked over at Beth again. I started to
   ask her something, and then bit my lip. She
   might tell me to take a flying leap. But I had
   to ask her anyway. I took a deep breath.
   “Hey, Beth … do you still want to be
   partners for that English project?”
   50
   She looked surprised. “I thought you didn’t want to,” she said.
   My face went hot. “Look, um … I was kind
   of a jerk before. I’m sorry, OK?” My voice
   sounded angry, but I wasn’t. I just felt so
   stupid. But Beth didn’t seem to notice that I
   had snapped at her.
   “OK,” she said. She smiled at me. “We’ll be
   partners, then. I’d really like that.”
   I felt happy deep inside me, like it was my
   birthday. I grinned back at her. “Yeah,” I said.
   “I’d like it, too.”
   51
   s
   Crow Girl
   k
   by