Page 1 of Me Since You




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  For my parents

  Geza William and Barbara Sellner Battyanyi,

  who have always gone above and beyond for their family,

  for Scott and Suzanne,

  who make me so proud to be their sister and

  for Bernie,

  who is always in my heart

  Acknowledgments

  Sincere thanks to my editor, Abby Zidle, for her enthusiasm, insight and wonderful, thought-provoking questions, and to Louise Burke, Jen Bergstrom, Parisa Zolfaghari, John Paul Jones, Jillian Vandall and Anna Dorfman at Simon & Schuster for lending their considerable skill, talent and expertise to Me Since You.

  It’s always a pleasure to thank my agent, Barry Goldblatt, for his advice, encouragement, support and belief in my work.

  Heartfelt thanks go out to retired Franklin Township Police Department Sergeant Rich Recine for answering my questions with patience, humor and grace. He was trained by the best and is one of the best, so any narrative license taken or errors regarding police procedure in Me Since You are all mine. Next time, Rich, the coffee’s on me.

  Much love to the incomparable Bonnie Goodwin Verrico, who gently told me to Just keep breathing and the answers will come when I was certain they wouldn’t. Thank you, kindred spirit. You were right.

  I’m very thankful for dear friends and virtual diner talks that ease my writing angst.

  I owe a debt of gratitude to wildlife rehabber Terri Coppersmith, and to Drs. Michele Zajac, Audrey Zajac, Denise Hardisky and the wonderful staff at Bunker Hill Veterinary Hospital—Mark, Leslie, Sarah, Sherry, Kelsey, Sandy, Jackie, Karla, Lisa, Sue, Trish, Susie, Cindy and Garrett—for their generosity, compassion and the invaluable care they give the animals. I admire them greatly for it.

  Thanks to Wendy Gloffke for her friendship and support, our excellent adventures and for being the gamest, most intrepid person I know. I count myself lucky to be your friend.

  To the beloved Petose and Wiess families, Stew Russell, Jane Russell Mowry and John Verrico, who always listened, opined and supported even when I became truly tiresome. You’re the best, and I’m forever grateful.

  Me Since You is a story of hope, love and family, and so to Bill and Barbara, Scott, Rose, Sue, and Paul . . . thank you. You guys are my heart, my joy and my home base, and I love you madly.

  There are two ways to be fooled:

  One is to believe what isn’t so;

  the other is to refuse to believe what is so.

  –SØREN KIERKEGAARD

  The Last Friday in March

  8:27 A.M.

  Nadia and I scramble down the hill at the edge of school property right as the morning’s final late bell rings behind us.

  “Come on, hurry,” I say, passing her and leaping across the little creek that divides the school from the back of the businesses on Main Street. “We can’t get caught.”

  “Relax, will you?” she says, stepping neatly across the creek and stopping beside me. “This is an adventure, Rowan. It’s supposed to be fun.”

  “Yeah, well, we have to get there first,” I say, because we’ve cut school twice before and crossing this flat, empty lot stretched out before us is always the most nerve-wracking part. Stay alert. Always be aware of your surroundings. How bizarre that I’m pretty much using the key points from my father’s personal-safety lecture against him. “All right, let’s go. And try to act casual.”

  “Whatever you say,” Nadia says with laughter in her voice.

  And maybe I’m just all tensed up, knowing there’s no turning back now, but the moment I step out of the sparse trees and onto the open lot my back gets twitchy, like the entire school faculty is watching us ditch and the principal has my father on speed dial.

  I break into a jog, heading for the back of the row of businesses.

  “Panic is not casual,” Nadia calls from somewhere behind me.

  “Run, will you?” I yell, speeding up.

  “No,” she says amiably. “They’re not going to see us and even if they do, so what?”

  “Easy for you to say,” I mutter, hurling myself into the shadows behind the bank. High drama maybe, but too bad. This is serious stuff for me. My parents are way stricter than Nadia’s, so if we do get caught all she’ll get is a resigned sigh and a slap on the wrist while I’ll get lectures, grounding, no computer and even worse, no phone.

  This had so better be worth it.

  I press myself against the cold brick wall and watch Nadia’s easy, ambling approach. Her jacket’s open and her white top is cut in a low V. Her jeans hug her legs and disappear into a pair of her mother’s over-the-knee, black stiletto-heeled boots. Her long hair, twenty shades of rippling, layered blond highlights, makes her recognizable at least a mile away, and my parents know that wherever the social butterfly Nadia is I usually am too, so—

  “Could you maybe even try to hide?” I say, scowling.

  “No. It’s Senior Cut Day,” she says, sauntering up. “That’s the whole point, isn’t it?”

  “Well, it would be if we were seniors,” I snap, grabbing her arm and pulling her against the building beside me.

  “So? We’re sophomores hanging out with seniors,” she says mischievously, and pulls out her phone to check messages. “Text from Brett: ‘Still waiting. Where are you?’”

  I snort and give her a speaking look because Brett would know exactly where we were if he and Justin had just picked us up at the corner fifteen minutes ago like they said they would instead of going straight to McDonald’s and then texting us to meet them there. I don’t say it though because Nadia really likes Brett and she says Justin thinks I’m hot. This morning’s rendezvous is the farthest we’ve ever gotten with them and so for now we’re willing to overlook their bad behavior, or justify it, or whatever kinds of deals girls make with themselves just so they can stay in the game.

  “Tell them we’re on our way,” I say, sidling along the brick wall to the corner and stopping.

  “Mmm-hmm,” Nadia says distractedly, texting away.

  I take a deep breath and release it.

  Stay alert. Always be aware of your surroundings.

  Right.

  I inch forward and peer around the corner to Main Street, to Dunkin’ Donuts, where yes, of course, there is a local cop car parked right up front in the lot. “Damn.” I pull back, heart pounding. “He has to get coffee now? I can’t believe this.”

  “Is it your dad?” Nadia says, sighing and leaning against the brick.

  “I don’t know,” I say, rubbing my forehead. “He’s on duty this morning but I don’t know which patrol area he has, so yeah, it could be him.” I peek around the corner again in time to see a very tall, solid, stern-looking cop with mirrored sunglasses and iron-gray hair step out the door and head for the patrol car. “Shit!” I whip back out of sight, praying he hasn’t seen me. “It’s Lieutenant Walters.”

  “Did he see you?” Nadia asks, finally sounding concerned. “Here, let me look.” She starts to step around me. “He might not recognize—”

  “No!” I hustle her toward the back of the building and we stand for a moment, listening for footsteps and hearing nothing but sirens in the distance. This is bad. He could be sitting there waiting till we come out or walking right up on us. “Forget Main Street. We’ll go the back way and come out down by McDonald’s.”

  “That’s going to take longer,” Nadia says, frowning.

  “
Don’t care,” I say in a singsong voice, and take off across the back of the buildings. “Watch for white cars pulling up to corners,” I say, cutting down a side street. “And keep checking behind you, too. He’s good at sneaking up on people.” My tone is grim because Lieutenant Walters and I have a history, part of which Nadia already knows but part I will never tell her because it’s just too humiliating to ever say aloud.

  It happened three years ago, during the annual PBA picnic. I’d been spending every day at Nadia’s that summer watching all the trashy reality show reruns I wasn’t allowed to watch at home, and on the day of the picnic I was thirteen, trying hard to look eighteen. I’d been sent storming back to my room to change my clothes three times before my appalled father, calling the rejected outfits “middle school stripper” and asking where in the almighty hell I’d gotten them (“borrowed” from Nadia’s mom’s drawers), decided my lame, midthigh white shorts and stupid turquoise tank were respectable enough for me to set foot out the door.

  Ugh.

  I’d been allowed to bring Nadia as my guest though, and when we stopped to pick her up she came sauntering out of her house in almost the exact same outfit I’d had on—tiny black boy shorts and a black halter (mine had been red)—smiling and waving good-bye to her mom standing at the pool gate, who waved benignly back and hitched up the strap of her little black bikini with the thong bottoms.

  “It’s not fair. I look stupid and Nadia looks hot,” I said from the backseat, where I’d been working up a mighty case of outrage. “And I swear, Dad, if you tell her to go back and change I’m gonna—”

  “Hey, watch your tone,” my father said, frowning at me in the rearview mirror. “Who do you think you’re talking to?”

  “He’s not going to say anything,” my mother said at the same time, giving him a smile and her peacemaking look. “It’s the style, Nicky, and she’s not your daughter. If Nadia’s mother thinks that outfit is appropriate for a thirteen-year-old child—”

  “Thirteen isn’t a child,” I cried, highly insulted. “How can you say that? She looks like she’s at least sixteen!”

  “Physically, in those clothes, yes,” my mother said, shifting and glancing over her shoulder at me. “But her emotions and logic, Rowan, and her decision-making capabilities . . . no. There’s still a thirteen-year-old brain controlling that body.”

  “So, what’s wrong with that?” I said, scowling.

  My mother, ever the librarian, hesitated as if searching for just the right words.

  “Nothing, if you’ve got a good head on your shoulders and aren’t trying to grow up too fast,” my father said as Nadia opened the back door and plopped onto the seat beside me. “Hi, Mr. Areno. Hi, Mrs. Areno. Hey, Rowan.” She shook back her blond mane and her dancing gaze took in my outfit. “Um, cute top. Is it new?”

  I gave her a black look. “Right.”

  “Hi, Nadia,” my father said, glancing at her in the rearview mirror. “You bringing a jacket? It might get chilly later.”

  “Oh, c’mon,” Nadia burbled, leaning forward and poking his shoulder. “It’s like a hundred degrees, Mr. Areno. You’re so funny.” She sat back and buckled her seat belt. “So like, are they going to have all kinds of food there or what? Because I’m starving.”

  My father glanced over at my mother, mustache twitching. “Butter wouldn’t melt in her mouth.”

  “Ah, the peril and glory of youth,” she said, and, smiling, turned up the CD player to drown us in some ancient Isley Brothers tunes.

  Nadia and I glanced sideways at each other and cracked up.

  And it wasn’t until dusk, after we’d been good long enough for my parents to relax their vigilance, after my father and his best cop buddy, Vinnie, joined the softball game and my mother was lounging on the bleachers cheering with the other cops’ wives, that Nadia finally nudged me and nodded toward the two guys hanging out near the tree line past the bathrooms.

  “They’ve been watching us,” she said, lifting up her hair and fanning the back of her neck. “Want to take a walk to the bathroom?”

  “Uh . . .” I sneaked a peek and even from here, I could tell two things: One, they were definitely not part of the PBA picnic, and two, they were cute. And older. Like, “out of high school” older. Like “facial hair, college and real muscles” older. A thrill ran through me. “Okay, I guess.”

  And so we eased away from the picnic table with studied casualness, taking our time smoothing our shorts and acting like we were totally bored and in absolutely no hurry to go anywhere for any reason. Nadia whispered updates as we strolled across the lawn toward them—“The one in the green T-shirt just smiled and said something to FUBU T-shirt and they both kind of turned toward us like they’re waiting. I want FUBU and you can have green T-shirt, okay?”—but I felt awkward and obvious, like my whole body was a neon sign flashing our intent to my parents.

  I kept expecting to hear my father’s voice stopping us but it didn’t happen, and every step screwed the tension in my stomach tighter. Moths fluttered around the bare bulb lighting the girls’ room door. Peepers sang in the deepening shadows. The heat coming off Nadia was scorching, my was heart pounding so loud I could barely think and suddenly we were there. The guys were lounging against the side of the cinder-block building, smiling, gazes smoky with the kind of dazzling, open appreciation that seventh-grade boys wouldn’t master for years. They asked if we wanted to hang out, drink a few beers and smoke a little, exchanging mocking grins and saying what a farce it was, partying in the middle of East Mills’s finest. I didn’t like the tone in FUBU’s voice but green tee was staring at me like I was the best thing he’d ever seen, handing me a beer and easing back into the shadows while FUBU lit up and passed Nadia the joint.

  I’d never really partied before—my father ran the DARE program from middle school up through junior high and was always on the lookout for deviants—but when Nadia handed me the weed, her gaze brimming with dark excitement, I took it without hesitation.

  This was an adventure and we were in it together.

  I don’t know whether it was the weed, beer or desire that made me so woozy; I don’t know how I went from laughing and giddy at flirting with college guys, smoking a joint, draining a beer and feeling green tee’s sinewy arm claiming me, his hot breath in my ear, to melting against him weak-kneed and wanting, feeling an insistent tug at my waist and then hands on my bare skin, sliding high, leaving a shivery trail of ripples in their wake, prying up my bra and closing around—

  A burst of light blinded me. “Okay, come on, break it up.”

  “Shit,” green T-shirt muttered against my mouth, and suddenly his groping hands were replaced with a cool wash of air and emptiness. I stood there blinking and confused until the dim realization that my boobs were exposed penetrated the slow fog in my brain. Belatedly, I folded my arms across my bare chest.

  “Stay where you are,” a stern voice said, and then, “Fix your clothes, young lady.”

  I drew a deep, hitching breath and, mortified, wrestled down my bra and tank top.

  There was a sharp snort from behind the flashlight. “Jesus Christ, you’ve got to be kidding me. Nick’s kid?”

  I squinted in the direction of the light, recognized the tall, forbidding-looking man behind it and burst into tears.

  Lieutenant Walters, my father’s by-the-book, hardass training officer—and boss.

  The flashlight beam did a quick sweep of the area, over green tee lounging against the wall, and returned to me. “Where’s your friend?”

  As if by magic, Nadia appeared out of the girls’ room door behind Lieutenant Walters. “Rowan?” she said, rushing over in concern. “What’s wrong? What happened?”

  I gazed at her, bewildered. Her eyes were bloodshot and her breath sour but her clothes were in place and other than her puffy lips and missing gloss, she looked totally normal.

  There was no sign of FUBU, and nobody mentioned him.

  The next ten minutes were torture: T
he look in Lieutenant Walters’s eyes, reminding me of what he’d seen; the sick knot of real terror that he would tell my parents in horrifying, irreversible detail; the weight of Nadia’s arm around my shoulders as if in comfort but actually making me feel like a stupid, pathetic baby, a victim instead of a hot girl who knew how to party and not get caught.

  Like her.

  But the worst was when Lieutenant Walters flagged down my father and drew him aside, and they spoke quietly for a moment. I saw the relaxed good humor in my father’s face tighten to anger, saw Walters’s gesture at the empty beer bottles, heard him say, “. . . caught your daughter and this guy getting a little too friendly . . . ,” and when my father glanced over at me with a look of disbelief and, worse, disappointment, I hated Lieutenant Walters like I’d never hated anybody.

  I hated Nadia for a minute too, because somehow she’d ended up the innocent one.

  The rest was a humiliating blur of green tee going into shock when he found out I was only thirteen and babbling that he didn’t know, didn’t even know my name, that we were just hanging out, no big deal, and of me nodding tearfully when my father glanced at me for confirmation—I lied, yes, but I was willing to agree to anything just to get it over with.

  I didn’t dare look at Walters.

  I never told Nadia what he’d caught me doing and I guess he never told my father the details either, because the questions, lecture, grounding and forced return of Nadia’s mother’s clothes were nowhere near as bad as they would have been had my parents known what really happ—

  “Row, c’mon,” Nadia says, hip-bumping me and, since I’m not paying attention, almost knocking me off the curb. “Whoa.” She catches my arm, keeps me from falling and grins. “Nice save, huh?”

  “What would I ever do without you?” I joke, bumping her back, because the McDonald’s is there right across the street and so is Brett’s car, parked in the lot and waiting. The Big Plan is that the four of us will head to an out-of-town diner (where my father won’t catch me) and then go back to either Brett’s or Justin’s empty house to hang out until three o’clock, when I have to be at work.