I picture the police

  exploding into the room

  with their guns drawn.

  And as they lead my father away,

  I picture the look on Alice’s face

  and on my mother’s—

  like they’re watching a horror film

  that they can’t turn off.

  I picture all of this,

  and I know beyond a shadow of a doubt,

  that I can never ever

  tell my father about Luke.

  And I Can’t Tell Mom Either

  Because she’ll tell Dad.

  Even if I beg her not to.

  And then,

  even if he doesn’t kill Luke,

  he’ll definitely send him away.

  And if he sends Luke away,

  he’ll take his money with him

  and then my father’s company

  will be wrecked,

  and my mother will be so demolished

  by everything that’s happened,

  she’ll be too depressed to go to work.

  And before we know it,

  the four of us will be sleeping

  in our SUV.

  And then what?

  Then what?

  If Only

  If only I hadn’t

  been such an awful flirt

  that day Luke took Alice and me

  to the beach.

  If only I hadn’t tickled him

  and gazed into his eyes like I did

  when we were playing in the waves.

  If only I’d pulled away

  when he leaned in to kiss me

  that first time—

  none of this

  would be happening.

  It’s all

  my fault.

  All of it.

  What I Should Have Done:

  I should have listened

  to Taylor and Rose when they

  warned me about Luke.

  I should have ended it

  that day he carried me

  to the couch,

  unzipped his fly,

  and pressured me

  to do that stuff to him.

  Even though he knew

  I didn’t want to.

  I should have realized

  right then and there

  how sick that move was.

  How sick he was.

  But now—

  it’s too late.

  I’m

  in

  way

  over

  my

  head.

  I’m drowning.

  And no one can save me.

  I’ve Been Trying to Sleep for Hours

  I keep closing my eyes.

  But they keep springing back open—

  like one of Alice’s ballerina dolls.

  Finally, I sigh,

  switch on the light,

  and reach for Rebecca.

  Maybe if I read for a while . . .

  But when I open it

  to the bookmarked page,

  a shower of dried white lily petals

  flutters out into my lap.

  The petals from one of the lilies

  Luke gave to my mom.

  I’d forgotten

  they were here.

  I gather up every last one of them.

  Then I rush to the bathroom,

  fling them into the toilet,

  and flush.

  On Sunday

  I tell my parents

  I’m working on a school project,

  and hide out in my room all day.

  Presley calls.

  But when I see his name on my screen,

  my throat closes up

  and I let it go straight to voice mail.

  I can’t even bring myself to listen

  to the message he leaves.

  A few minutes later,

  Rose calls to ask

  if I’m feeling well enough

  to come to lunch with everyone

  before Evan heads to the airport.

  I tell her I’d love to,

  but I’m still too sick to my stomach.

  Which is the first time

  I’ve told Rose the truth

  in a very long while.

  Then I hear everyone

  shouting in the background.

  “We love you, Lil. Feel better soon!”

  But I can’t imagine ever feeling better.

  Later

  Alice knocks on my door

  and asks me if she can help me

  with my project.

  I thank her.

  But I tell her

  that this is something

  no one

  can help me with.

  She cocks her head to the side.

  “How come your eyes look so sad?” she asks.

  “Oh . . . ,” I say. “Just teenage stuff.”

  “I’ll understand when I’m older?” she says.

  “I’m afraid so,” I say.

  “Then I think I’ll stay young

  as long as I can,” she says.

  “That is an excellent plan,” I say.

  And I pull her into a hug,

  blinking back tears.

  At School the Next Morning

  It’s like I’m having

  an out-of-body experience—

  drifting along above myself,

  watching as I wade through the halls

  to get to chemistry,

  like I’m slogging through mud,

  watching the look of concern

  that springs into Taylor’s eyes

  when he sees me come in,

  watching him

  put his hand on my arm and say,

  “You look like death, Lil.

  You sure you’re over your food poisoning?”

  Then watching myself force a smile,

  and tell him it was really bad

  for a while.

  But that everything

  is fine now.

  Everything. Is. Fine.

  In Creative Writing

  Mr. Bennett says

  we have to write haikus—

  haikus that condense

  how we’re feeling

  into seventeen syllables.

  Here is mine:

  Life sucks. Life sucks. Life

  sucks. Life sucks. Life sucks. Life sucks.

  It sucks . . . sucks . . . sucks . . . sucks.

  In French Class

  I slip into the room

  a few minutes late

  and collapse onto my seat.

  Rose takes one look at me,

  then reaches over to squeeze my hand

  and whispers,

  “Etes-vous okay, ma chère Liliette?”

  “Elle est une total zombie today,”

  Taylor whispers. “But she won’t admit it.”

  Then he flashes me

  such a worried, supportive smile

  that I almost start crying—

  right then and there,

  in front of tout le monde.

  And Lunch Isn’t Any Easier

  The second we sit down,

  Taylor and Rose ask me what’s up.

  “And by ‘What’s up?’” Taylor says, “we mean

  ‘Did you really have food poisoning?

  Or did you leave the dance for . . .

  for some other reason?’”

  “You’re scaring us,” Rose says.

  “You gotta tell us what’s wrong.

  It’s a need-to-know situation.”

  I swallow the huge lump in my throat

  and tell them nothing is wrong.

  They exchange a glance,

  and then Taylor says,

  “Why can’t you just admit

  that this is about that older guy?”

  “It’s not about him,” I say,

  my voice cracking.

  Though I can tell

  that they can tell

  it?
??s totally about him.

  So

  We have

  this weird silent conversation

  with our eyes.

  Because none of it

  can be spoken out loud.

  Since even

  if they promised not to tell,

  once they heard my secret,

  they’d say some promises

  need to be broken.

  They’d say

  they have to tell.

  They’d say

  it was for my own good.

  But what about the good of my family?

  I can’t risk ruining all their lives

  just because I made

  a horrible mistake.

  In Geometry

  How can I be expected

  to grasp the function rule,

  when I can barely even function?

  How can I concentrate

  on trapezoids,

  when I’m feeling

  so totally trapped?

  What’s the point of studying rays,

  when there’s not a single ray of hope

  on my horizon?

  In Photography

  Mr. Lewis spends the whole period

  talking about self-portraits.

  Presley keeps smiling at me,

  trying to catch my eye.

  But I pretend I don’t notice.

  Mr. L says cell phone selfies

  aren’t self-portraits.

  They’re junk food.

  He says selfie sticks

  should only be used

  for one thing: kindling.

  He says a real self-portrait

  requires a shutter release or a mirror.

  An actual mirror, not the ones in our phones.

  He says a great self-portrait

  shows us what’s going on

  on the surface

  and below the surface too.

  It reveals something

  about the photographer

  that no one else can reveal.

  “The best self-portraits tell us the truth,” he says,

  “the whole truth, and nothing but the truth.”

  Homework Assignment: Self-Portrait

  I hold my camera just below my chin,

  aim it at the bathroom mirror,

  and snap a picture of my reflection.

  But when I look at it,

  I see the truth

  written all over my face—

  in the dull staring eyes,

  in the dark shadows below them,

  in the grim straight line of my mouth.

  So, of course,

  I’ve got to delete it.

  Suddenly I remember

  my photo shoot with Presley,

  and start leafing through People magazine.

  I find a photo of a smiling model,

  tear out the lips,

  and tape them over my mouth.

  Then I slip on my sunglasses,

  and shoot a second self-portrait.

  I check it,

  to make sure the truth is hidden.

  And decide that this one

  is safe to send to Mr. L.

  On Wednesday After School

  Luke arranges to “tutor” me again.

  He opens the door of the sleazy apartment.

  He motions for me to enter before him

  and says, “Ladies first.”

  Because he is such a gentleman.

  He takes off his jacket

  and helps me off with mine.

  The lily is still in the thin vase.

  But now its head is bent,

  its petals the color of dried blood.

  Luke kisses me.

  Hard.

  Though not so hard

  that I’ll look like I’ve been kissed.

  Then he smiles a terrible smile,

  and pulls the Murphy bed down from the wall.

  I see the pink satin sheets and clench my teeth.

  Luke says he needs me.

  He says he wants me.

  He says I’m his dream come true.

  And I can almost remember back

  to a time when I used to feel

  the same way about him.

  That Night

  I’m curled up on my bed,

  thinking about the leopard—

  the one that Luke shot

  after it sank its teeth into his arm.

  I’m thinking about that leopard.

  About how close it came

  to killing him that day.

  And about how different

  my life would have been

  if only

  it had succeeded.

  And when I hear Luke

  tapping on my wall,

  I don’t tap back.

  Now

  Each “tutoring” session

  is a torture session.

  I try desperately to improve

  my chemistry grade,

  so my parents will finally call Luke off.

  But I can’t seem to raise it

  any higher than a C.

  I can’t grasp liquid states

  or solid states or any states.

  Even when Taylor explains them to me.

  In fact, I’m having trouble

  in all my classes.

  I guess it’s hard to do well in school

  when you can’t even think straight.

  And it’s hard to think straight

  when you’re not getting any sleep.

  And it’s hard to sleep

  when you’re plagued

  by headaches so horrible

  that whenever you close your eyes

  you feel like there’s an ax in your head—

  an ax that’s trying to hack its way out

  through the walls of your skull.

  At School

  Madame Melvoin says she’s très perplexe

  about my mauvaises grades.

  She asks me how things are chez moi.

  “Ça va . . . bien,” I tell her.

  She raises an eyebrow and says, “Oui?”

  “Oui,” I say.

  And Ms. Peyser

  has noticed something’s up too.

  Or maybe she just feels sorry for me.

  Because she offers to let me

  take my chemistry test over,

  to try and bring my grade up.

  I take it again,

  but I don’t do any better.

  Even Mr. Bennett has gotten suspicious.

  He passes back my poetry quiz

  (which I barely managed to get a B- on)

  with a little note that says:

  I’m here every day after school,

  if you feel like chatting.

  I do not feel like chatting.

  Especially Not with My Parents

  But they come up to my room

  one night after dinner

  and tell me they’re worried about me—

  about my falling grades, my weight loss,

  the circles under my eyes.

  They tell me

  they don’t know what’s going on,

  but they hate to see me struggling like this

  and they want to help.

  I’m too worn out

  to make something up.

  So I decide to tell them the truth.

  I tell them

  I was in love with a guy.

  But he broke my heart.

  My Mother Hugs Me

  My father pats my shoulder.

  Then they offer to send me

  to a therapist.

  But I tell them I don’t need one.

  I tell them I’ll get over it.

  I just need a little time.

  But in my head

  I’m thinking:

  A little time

  or a little good luck—

  like Luke getting struck by lightning.

  “Well, Lilybelle,” Dad says,

  and my throat instant
ly closes up,

  because he never calls me that.

  “There’s only ten days till Thanksgiving.

  You’ll get some rest over the nice long weekend,

  and it will help heal that heart of yours.”

  I lean my head against his chest

  and let the tears fall.

  Later That Night

  I hear a quiet knock on my door.

  A wave of nausea grips me.

  Is it Luke?

  But then I hear Alice’s voice.

  “Can I come in?”

  I open the door and there she is—

  her chubby fingers wrapped around

  the handle of a wrinkled orange paper bag

  filled with what must be the last

  of her Halloween stash.

  “You’ve been looking a little . . .

  a little hungry lately,” she says shyly.

  Then she reaches into the bag,

  pulls out a handful of Hershey’s Kisses,

  and offers them to me.

  “Look!” she says. “Your favorite.”

  “You’re my favorite,” I say.

  And I bury my face in her silky curls.

  I Wade Through the Next Week and a Half

  In constant dread

  of each “tutoring” session,

  feeling as if my body

  has been drained

  of all its blood,

  and in its place

  is a swarm of tiny bees,

  circling endlessly

  through my veins,

  relentlessly flapping

  their tiny bee wings,

  buzzing,

  buzzing,

  buzzing,

  till I want

  to unzip my

  vibrating

  skin

  and let

  them

  all fly

  out.

  The Day Before Thanksgiving Break

  Mr. L asks me to stay after class.

  We sit facing each other across his desk.

  He studies me, then clears his throat

  and tells me he’s noticed a change

  in the quality of my work lately.

  I can feel my cheeks blaze up.

  I say I’m sorry. I say I’ll try to do better.

  I say I’ve been a little distracted lately.

  But he smiles at me and tells me

  I’ve misunderstood—he loves my stuff.

  He’s never seen such honest student work.

  “That self-portrait,” he continues.