American Heart
Contents
Cover
Title Page
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
Chapter 17
Acknowledgments
About the Author
Books by Laura Moriarty
Back Ad
Copyright
About the Publisher
1
ONE THING SOMEONE just meeting me might want to know is why I have two first names. That was a question I always got when I was growing up, and the answer is that I’m named after both of my grandmothers. The Sarah part is there because when my mom was pregnant with me, her mom, Sarah, was thinking of giving her a car. The Mary part is there for my dad’s mom, who was really nice and already getting sick, so everyone was careful to call me Sarah-Mary each time, and they were in the habit by the time she died. My mom said that just before I was born, she’d thought about doing a combination name, like Sary or Marah, hoping that would make everybody happy. But then I showed up with dark hair and dark eyes, and she worried people would think I was foreign. She said for all she knew, I might have ended up on the registry, sent off to Nevada by mistake.
Of course, if someone was meeting me just now, and knew everything, probably the first question they would have is how a person like me ended up doing something so illegal that if I got caught, I’d be in serious trouble. Like, forget juvenile detention. I’d go to a real prison, or even solitary confinement, in part for my own protection. A lot of people would want to kill me, or at least throw rocks or spit as I went by.
I guess they’d have a case to make. But some of them might be surprised to learn that up until a few days ago, I’d never broken a law, not counting truancy. And getting a fake ID. And I guess using the fake ID to get into a club. But other than that, nothing.
Aunt Jenny says I’m still in need of moral guidance, so that’s where she’s coming from with all her rules that make me crazy: No swearing. No watching or listening to anything with swearing. No books with swearing. No books with smut or references to demons. No makeup, no nail polish, no bare shoulders. I can’t watch anything rated PG, and I’m fifteen years old. And forget the internet. Aunt Jenny’s got this thing on her computer that lets her always see what I’m doing on mine. Let me tell you, she stays on top of it.
She might be surprised to learn I’ve got my own rules for myself, just in the secrecy of my own head. I follow them because I’m the one who decided on them, so no spying or outside enforcement is necessary. One of my rules is that I keep my promises. In fact, keeping a promise is what got me into this whole situation of breaking the law.
I think for someone to really understand why I’ve done what I’ve done, and why I made the promise that started everything in the first place, I would probably need to go back and explain that eight months ago, on the first day of summer vacation, my mom drove me and my brother Caleb from Joplin, where we’d always lived and where we had all our friends, to Aunt Jenny’s house in Hannibal, which is way over on the other side of Missouri. Hannibal doesn’t even have half as many people as Joplin. When my mom drove us through the downtown on our way in, she kept saying it was “cute” and “quaint.” Caleb said something agreeable, even though he was sad, because that’s his way. I didn’t. To me, Hannibal looked like a town with nothing to do, and no friends to do it with.
We were supposed to just stay with my aunt for the summer. Our mom had gotten a job at a resort in Colorado, and she said she was going to make a ton of money, but she could only do it if she worked all the time, and anyway, she couldn’t afford a place out there big enough for all three of us. She said Aunt Jenny would take good care of us and make sure we had so much fun, and when she came back to get us in August, we’d all go down to St. Louis and spend some of the money she was going to make.
Even then, I knew enough about Aunt Jenny to highly doubt the fun part.
It turns out I shouldn’t have believed the part about our mom coming back in August, either, because now it’s January, a whole new year, and Caleb and I still live with Aunt Jenny in Hannibal. Our mom didn’t even come back for Christmas. As soon as she got out to Colorado, she met this guy Dan, and the only thing I know about him is that he has two houses: one in Denver, and another one up in the mountains so he doesn’t have a long drive when he wants to go skiing. When my mom met him, she made it sound like we’d all hit the jackpot, but really, it was just her. He might not even know Caleb and I exist. She’s sent money from Colorado, and sometimes presents, but what do we care about that? She knows her own sister, what she’s like: three hours of church every Sunday, and serious consequences if you slip up even once and say “Oh my God” instead of “Oh my goodness” or something weird like “oh by golly by gosh.”
Caleb is only eleven, and he just misses our mom. He’s not disgusted with her like I am. I do miss her sometimes. I’ll admit that. But from the start, I missed my freedom more.
Everybody at church is always telling Aunt Jenny how wonderful she is for taking us in. They say it right in front of us, like we’re homeless dogs who can’t understand, who should just wag our little tails and be grateful for our kibble. I’ve picked up that Aunt Jenny probably talks down on our mom to anyone who will listen, because nobody she introduces us to ever asks one word about her, or if we’re homesick for Joplin. They just tell us how lucky we are to have such a loving aunt, and to be in Hannibal, where we’re safe and loved. If Aunt Jenny’s standing there to hear, which she usually is, she lowers her eyes and smiles like she’s waiting for angel wings to pop out of the back of one of her cardigan sweater sets so she can fly on up to heaven with everyone watching, cue the applause.
Sometimes I feel ungrateful, thinking of Aunt Jenny like that. She does take care of us. She buys the groceries. She makes sure we have shoes that fit. She drives us to school and picks us up on time. I know she means well. She’s come right out and said that she’s trying to undo some of the damage my mom’s done to us, and trying to set a better example. But the thing is, we were way happier living with my mom. It’s true her ex-boyfriend in Joplin sold weed for a living, but they broke up like two years ago, after he got arrested. Aunt Jenny still makes a big deal out of this, calling him only “the drug dealer” and not his name, which was Tom, and ignoring that he was always pretty nice to us. I’ve got the address for the prison where he is, and Caleb and I sent him cards on his birthday and Christmas, trying to cheer him up.
Early on, I told Aunt Jenny maybe she would set a better example if she wasn’t always saying bad stuff about our mom or Tom. I think bad stuff about my mom all the time, but it’s different if someone else says it. And it’s not like I say bad things about her in front of Caleb, the way Aunt Jenny does.
After I made that suggestion to Aunt Jenny, she didn’t seem to like me so much. Now when she gets mad at me, which is all the time, she tells me if I don’t watch it, and if I don’t reach for the hand extended to me now, I’m going to end up like my mom. I’m going to be selfish and flaky, the kind of person who drops off her kids with somebody else so she can go do what she likes. Or I’ll end up like my dad. She says I need to let Jesus into my heart, even more than most people do, because obviously, whether you’re talking nature or nurture, the cards are stacked against me.
I guess they are. I can’t argue with one thing: our mom really did leave us, and she keeps on doing it. She calls sometimes to say she
misses us, which makes me so mad I can barely talk. Caleb still falls for it. Or pretends to. He’s a little kid, but he isn’t stupid. He must know that if she really missed us, she’d come back.
The only good thing about coming to Hannibal was meeting Tess Villalobos, though I barely get to see her anymore. When I was at Hannibal High, we hung out every day. Tess is a senior, and I’m a sophomore, but we had morning study hall together in the cafeteria. There were something like sixty kids in there and just one teacher, so it was easy to go up separately and say you had to go to the bathroom, and then just meet in the parking lot. Tess has a nice truck, with tinted windows and speakers that could blow your ears out. Usually we’d drive over to the river and eat wasabi almonds from the big bag she kept under her seat, and we’d listen to music and talk, looking down at the water and out at the riverbank on the Illinois side. We’d always get back to school in time for third period. I wish we would have kept doing that, and not done the thing that ruined my life. But there was this perfect day in October, the sky bright and all the mugginess gone. Some of the trees along the river had just started to turn, and I love it when leaves go orange against a blue sky.
That day, when it was time to drive back to school, Tess squinted through the windshield, nodded once, and decided we should drive to St. Louis. If we left now, she said, we could be there by noon.
“Right now?” I asked. I was still crunching on almonds.
“Right now,” she said.
She couldn’t believe I’d never been to the Arch. She said if you grew up in Hannibal, the Arch and Mark Twain’s house were the two field trips you could bet on. Mark Twain’s boyhood home is right in Hannibal, and people come from all over the world to see it. They stand around taking pictures of this little plaque by Tom Sawyer’s fence, even though it wasn’t really his fence, because Tom Sawyer didn’t really exist. The people of Hannibal know how to cash in—they’ve got a Mark Twain Avenue and Huckleberry Heights Drive, a Mark Twain Dinette and a Mark Twain Brew Company. They’ve got a big sign downtown that says America’s Hometown, as if Mark Twain was the same as America, which, if you break it down, doesn’t make a whole lot of sense.
“I’ve been sick of Mark Twain since fourth grade,” Tess said, triple-wrapping a ponytail holder around the top of the almond bag. “But I never get tired of the Arch. You get up to the top, and you’re so high up, let me tell you, it’s a view. It’d be zip on a day like this.” She put the almonds under the driver’s seat and poked my leg with her sparkly fingernail. “Come on. We leave now, we can go up to the Arch, come down to have lunch, and be back before your aunt gets home. I’ll buy your admission ticket.”
If you didn’t know Tess and were just talking to her for the first time, you might think she was on drugs. She gets really excited about things that don’t make other people excited, like Jack Kerouac books, or a new song by Sketchy, or even the way sunlight happens to be reflecting off a particular cloud. Her eyes are so big that there’s usually just a little white showing above and below her irises, so even when she’s just sitting there, being calm, she looks pretty revved up. When she gets excited, her eyes can look ready to pop out at you, like one of those rubber toys you squeeze.
So maybe I was a little hypnotized, looking at her pop-out eyes. Or maybe I just wanted to go. I’d only been to St. Louis once, at night, to get fake IDs with Tess. And she was right. It was a perfect day.
“I knew you’d say yes.” She was already backing up her truck, turning up the music. “Sarah-Mary, you’re worth three seniors any day.”
On the way down, we bought energy drinks, slammed them down fast, and sang with Sketchy into the empty cans. Tess leaned her head out the window, her blond hair slicked back by the wind, and shouted, “Stop acting so small! You are the universe in ecstatic motion!” to the drivers of other cars and to uninterested cows. Maybe she read those lines somewhere. Maybe she made them up. I don’t know. But I started saying them too, like I meant every word, which at the time, I did. “Stop acting so small! You are the universe in ecstatic motion!” I think some people have to do drugs to feel that good, but we just had the energy drinks in us, and the cool wind coming in through the windows, and the music so loud you could feel the bass pumping in your chest like it was your own heartbeat.
I was still feeling good when we parked and got out to look up at the Arch, which was bigger and more impressive than I’d thought it would be, the metal of it glinting in the sun. Before you go up into the Arch, you go through security and then underground to the history museum part. While we were down there, I took a picture of Tess in front of a covered wagon, and she took one of me beside a stuffed buffalo, holding my palm out to it like I was getting ready to feed it some oats and pat its big head. That whole time, I felt fine. It was only when we had to get in the elevators to go up to the top that I started feeling weird.
I don’t know what I was expecting—of course the Arch wouldn’t have normal elevators. But the thing the attendant told us to climb into was more like a pod, something you’d see in a spaceship or a ride at an amusement park, with five plastic seats in a tight circle and just one window that wasn’t even as big as my head. We had to sit with our shoulders hunched, and they put an Asian family in with us, two parents and a kid, all of us trying hard not to touch knees or look at each other’s faces. The mom said something to the kid in another language, then took a picture of him with her phone.
“Where are you all from?” Tess asked, because she’s like that. They smiled like they had no idea what she was saying. Then the man got it and said “Japan,” though with his accent, it took me a second to understand. I guess even Tess thought another question might be too much work, as that was as far as the conversation went, which was fine with me. I was already starting to feel uneasy, thinking that the pod should have seat belts, or at least something to hang on to.
“It’s not a long ride,” Tess whispered. I guess she could see how I was feeling. I never thought of myself as claustrophobic, but when the attendant shut and locked the door, the one little window got covered up, and there was a humming sound, and then a big clank, and it was hard not to worry about what would happen if there was a power outage and we got stuck. Then we started to move up pretty fast, and you could feel we were going up at a diagonal. My stomach squeezed upward, sort of in an opposite diagonal, and it started to seem likely I would have to throw up in front of the Japanese family, or maybe on them, as there wasn’t any room to turn away.
I put my head against my knees and counted to ten, and then twenty. And then a hundred. Tess patted my shoulder, saying it would be okay, that it would be so worth it when we got to the top, and we could look down at the Mississippi River and the barges, and all the buildings, and the stadium where the Cardinals play.
“Stay with me, Sarah-Mary,” she said, still patting. “You’re going to tough it out. You’re going to be fine.”
Finally, we clanked to a stop. When I raised my head, the Japanese family was looking at me all worried, even the little kid. The mom offered me a plastic water bottle, sealed, out of her purse, which was really just so nice. They let me out first, and Tess said, “It’s okay. I’m right behind you,” but then there were stairs and it was kind of dark, and all the people were getting out of the other pods and moving past me up the stairs to where you could see daylight coming in. I felt like everything was swinging, and I thought it was just me, and then I heard somebody at the top say, “Whoa! Cool. You can feel the whole thing swaying in the breeze.”
I guess that’s when I fainted.
I understand that they had to call the paramedics. It’s a small space up there, narrow, with a lot of people, and Tess said I looked kind of dead for a minute, lying on the hard steps with my eyes closed and mouth open. She said she was so scared she wasn’t even thinking about getting in trouble. They asked her my name and age, and she told them. Even after I was fine again, sitting up and drinking water, they said they had to call my parents.
To say Aunt Jenny overreacted about the Arch Incident would be an understatement. As soon as we got back to Hannibal, she had me tested for drugs. I’m absolutely serious. I had to go to her doctor, that very day, and pee in a cup. You would think she’d feel dumb when I tested negative, but nope. She was still crazy mad. She said she wasn’t so upset that I had missed school as the fact that I had left Marion County. She told me I wasn’t allowed to see Tess anymore. Not under any circumstances. She said she was saving me from myself, whether I liked it or not. I was thinking, okay, fine, I’ll see Tess at school, and after a while, Aunt Jenny will calm down.
But the next day, she pulled me right out of Hannibal High and enrolled me in Berean Baptist.
I don’t know where to start about what’s wrong with Berean Baptist. First of all, it’s not a real building. It’s a double-wide trailer that somebody brought in on the back of a truck. It’s good there are only nineteen kids that go there—I mean total, like K through 12—because we’re packed in pretty tight, with everyone’s cube facing a wall. That’s right, I said cube. I sit facing a wall all day, and there’s a wooden divider on each side of me. The dividers go from the height of my desk to how tall I am when I stand up, so when I’m sitting between them, it’s like being a horse wearing blinders. Which is exactly the point. Same concept. There’s just one teacher for everyone, Mrs. Harrison, but she’s more like a monitor than a teacher—she doesn’t get up and talk to the class, as we all sit facing the walls. There’s no chalkboard or video screen, nothing like that. Berean Baptist uses these workbooks called Light and Learning, ordered from the national headquarters, and everybody just sits in their cube and does their assigned workbooks, from the little kindergartners to the one guy who’s eighteen and already looks like he could be the dad of one of the kindergartners. If you don’t get through your scheduled workbook on time, or if you don’t do it right, you lose recess, and if you really fall behind, you get spanked. With a wooden paddle. I’m not lying.