Day 1

It’s morning.

Ash knows this before he opens his eyes. The spring light has a way of turning his lids orange and they open all fluttery and confused like butterflies. Outside the birds are doing their thing and he listens for a minute before reaching for his phone, scrolling and scanning through the messages, all variations of:

holy shit, did u hear

He’s gotten a dozen Snaps about it in the last ten minutes, at least twenty texts, and it won’t be long before the Facebook posts with the crying emojis start. Britt messaged him at least thirty times, make that thirty-one.

?

He’s left her on read and she’s pissed. Like he needs that today. His phone’s blowing up: the ladder of notifications is too much to take; he tosses it in the nightstand drawer and pulls the covers tight under his chin. He could just stay there, avoid it all, but if he does, he’ll have to deal with his parents. Last night he heard them whispering about it, that loud and soft rhythm of parents not wanting their kids to hear. He grabbed the pillow, pulled it tight over his face and screamed into it, bending his whole body until that what the fuck feeling collapsed.

He sat in the blue dark, gaming, racking up kills.

This morning, the TV was turned off, the controller was on the bedside; he knows his mom must have checked on him at some point. She usually comes in, readjusts the covers and brushes the side of his face with her fingertips, imprinting just like she did when he was a baby. Even if he’s awake he pretends to be asleep so she can have that moment where everything is okay, where he’s a boy, still peaceful and content in this small room and she is the last one up, the one to turn off the lights, to lock the doors, to shut out the world. Ash wishes it was like that still, but trying to shut out the world is like trying to dam an ocean. It finds a way in.

He grabs his phone, checks if the video is still up and is relieved that it’s not. The shared links are dead and for a moment he lets himself believe that Jay’s alive and that they could be best friends again, just like they were in grade five.

Ash had been the new kid at school and Jay showed him around because that’s just what you did. On that first day, they went to the skate park at lunch. It was October, the sky was a crazy blue, as if someone had put a filter on it, and when Jay talked, Ash could see his breath, words coming out in little puffs. “You can’t overthink it,” he said, demonstrating a quick pivot of his board.

Back then it was Ash, Jay, Sullie and Joe — friends for life, secret six-move handshakes, touch football at lunch, sleepovers and all. But after a while it was just the two of them and the others were the hangers-on who found new people to hang on to. Then in grade eight, so did they. Ash became that guy — the kind who teachers love and hate, the kind who makes jokes and delivers a solid C+ effort, the kind who girls twirl their hair around. Jay didn’t change much. He still loved to skate, mostly hung out at the pit perfecting his ollie, made friends with the stoners and then eventually Winona. Thinking back on it now, Ash can see that’s where things went wrong and they stopped hanging. Sure, they nodded or chin-upped when they saw each other in the hall and occasionally they dropped a fist bump, but they never really talked again. That’s the thing about getting older, everything that was just drifts away and a best friend becomes someone you used to know.

Ash gets out of bed as his mom comes in to tell him it’s time to go and she can drop him off on her way to work and all of that other stuff she says on rinse and repeat, only today he tells her, “I’m good, I’ll walk.”

Pavan sits on the edge of the bed real gently as if she’s trying not to spook him, and he can tell she’s worried. Parents always think things like this are contagious and that they need to talk about it, make it a teachable moment. Ash glances at her to show her that he’s fine. Her eyes are puffy from crying, but still she tries to make that longer oh honey eye contact. Ash turns away not wanting to deal with her concern, not wanting to encourage the extra “I love you” that’ll get tacked on to the end of every sentence. He makes a show of opening and closing dresser drawers, rooting through his clothes, before she finally gets the hint; only now she’s hovering, the way she does when she’s looking for the right words.

“I’m fine,” he says.

“I know.” Her eyes narrow. She knows he’s not fine but lets him have the lie. “I’m here, if you want to talk.”

“Maybe later,” he says, even though he has no intention of ever talking about it, about Jay. All he wants to do is forget but he knows she’ll keep trying; it’s what she does.

“Sure,” she says.

Ash holds eye contact with her so she can get a good look and see that he’s okay, that he’s solid, that she doesn’t need to worry in that big clouded way she usually does. It’s too much to carry, her guilt, the fear, the worry of messing up. Sometimes he wishes she’d care less.

“Ash.” She pauses, adding an “I love you,” just like he knew she would.

He asks her to shut the door on the way out.


At school, the halls are crammed with backpacked bodies like always, but there’s this extra feeling, like the heaviness you get in your chest when you’re keeping a secret or telling a lie, only it’s not contained, it’s alive with a virus-like spread. The popular girls are crying in huddled masses, mascara runs down their cheeks as they work at mastering sentiment, sullen expressions, and the not-too-ugly cry — they don’t know how to do anything but pose and pretend. And the boys, they just nod and look away, never quite making eye contact. Head down, hands tucked in pockets, he avoids them all, weaving and maneuvering his way through the day as if he were a rat in a maze.

An announcement is made after first bell. “We are shocked and saddened by the sudden passing of Jacob McAlister. Our hearts and prayers are with his family and friends.” No mention of the details, only that there will be counselors on hand for the next few weeks. People who didn’t know him act sad. People who did know him are legit stunned. Teachers whisper out one side of their two faces, gossiping about Jay’s mom and how she must be feeling. Ash wants to tell them to stop talking about Jay like he’s an event, like some epic winter storm that they’ll recall when they’re old. And Jay’s mom? How she’s feeling is fucked, not in her usual too-many-night-shifts, cash-strapped, chain-smoking way, but in the life is never going to be good again way. Ash feels bad for her; Lisa tries hard, like most moms do. He can still hear her calling down the street as Jay skated away. “You come back here, Jacob McAlister,” his name caught in the whirring of the wheels, syllables eaten by asphalt.

No one saw this coming. He was a happy kid; he had a girlfriend. Sure, Winona was a bit weird but still he had someone. Jay wasn’t like the cutters who carve at their arms in the bathroom stalls or like the bullied kid who hanged himself in the art room. That’s what everyone’s saying at least. Now that he’s gone, everyone wants to know him, to know why, to insert themselves into the story and make it mean something.

But there’s no making sense of it.

Jay jumped off the Lions Gate Bridge.

And even though Ash saw it, he doesn’t want to believe it. The sky was too blue that day.


A bunch of Ash’s friends skip third block to go to the skate park, even Britt stops him at his locker, hassling him about why he’s not going. She’s wearing dark jeans and a hoodie, plain-faced, her blond hair in a high pony, nothing extra about her, which is what he likes. She’s pretty without trying.

“Are you alright? You didn’t answer my texts last night.”

Ash pulls his binder down and shuts the locker door. “Sorry, just needed some space, I guess.”

“Space? Really?” She squints her eyes and nods as if she’s getting ready to tell him how he should be a better boyfriend. He braces himself. “Don’t talk to me about space. If I don’t message you back right away you freak, but you, you just leave me on read and that’s supposed to be okay.” She’s talking with her hands, her face close to his. When she’s like this, he can’t focus on the things he likes about her, the freckles on her nose or her hazel eyes; all he sees is her mouth moving.

“Look, what do you want from me? My best friend just died.”

“Oh, so now he’s your best friend?” Her eyes are buggy, disbelieving.

“He was . . . Would you just stop?” Ash says this louder than he meant to and she goes silent. He reaches for her arm, wanting to apologize, but she backs up and yells for her friends to wait up. He turns around, resists the urge to hit the locker door and stands there, head pressed against the cold metal for a full minute before he goes to next block.

In class, he sits in the last seat of the first row, two rows down and three seats back from where Jay would have sat. He usually skipped anyways, but today when some new kid tries to take his seat, Ash tells him, “That’s Jay’s.”

“I didn’t know,” he says, quickly moving along.

Everyone else whispers and side-stares. Ash is relieved when a sub walks in. He’ll be spared Mr. Larson who, like all the other teachers, would have tried to connect in that way teachers do when they fake-care. The sub scrawls her name across the board as if this is the start of some made-for-TV movie where she, Mrs. Kaye, is going to make a difference. She’s old-lady artsy, with short cropped hair, a look at me I’m worldly tunic and an oversized turquoise necklace. By the looks of her droopy tits, Ash figures she’s probably a staunch feminist who burned her bra back in the day. Mrs. Kaye announces that they’re watching a video on World War One and for this, Ash is grateful. He’ll be able to sit there in the dark and disappear. With some difficulty, she loads the archaic film reels onto a projector and the black-and-white images of soldiers marching, bombs dropping, shrapnel flying fall over the edge of the screen. She wheels her AV cart back and the image resizes and falls into the frame. The guy doing the voice-over has that old-school TV dad voice but it’s hard to hear above the whirl and clicks of the projector. Ash leans forward, elbows on desk, cupping his ears, watching the grainy footage of dead men. There are some jumpy close-ups of the soldiers’ faces, all young and perfect, square-jawed and steel-eyed. He can’t look and closes his eyes until the bell rings.

After class, he grabs his backpack from his locker and ducks out before anyone sees him; so far he’s managed to avoid all of his friends, to ignore their question mark texts and their u ok attempts at connection. Ash walks through the ravine, where he and Jay used to ride their bikes. The trees are starting to bud, light passing through the dark boughs of evergreen. The ground is soft and springy, a mulch of fallen pine needles. If he squints, he can see Jay riding ahead, standing tall and pedaling hard. Ash picks up his pace, but still he loses him.


By the time Ash arrives at the skate park, there are only a handful of guys skimming the sides of the bowl. Near the gated entrance is the beginning of a makeshift memorial for Jay — grocery-store flowers next to his yearbook photo, an unlit tea light set against the chain-link fence. Winona walks up from behind him. She’s wearing all black today, channeling her namesake from the movie Beetlejuice, all pale and thin. Ash wonders if she stopped eating and is counting her ribs the way the girls said she did. Without a word or a sideways glance, she kneels down and lights the candle. Ash stands there not knowing what to say, watching the flame, listening to the skates grinding and popping on concrete.

She takes out a cigarette, lights it up and offers him a drag. He takes it from her and for a few minutes they do this back-and-forth until finally she catches his eye.

“Do you know why he did it?”

“Nah,” he says, shaking his head, looking over at the graffiti wall, bubble letters and random tags from stoner wannabes. “Do you?”

“Why does anyone do anything?” She taps ash into the flowers.

He stays with her there by the chain-link fence saying nothing, his mind empty, sunshine on his face. It’s the first good feeling he’s had all day.

Across the street a black Mercedes pulls over and honks. “My ride,” she says and drops her cigarette.


Clean and Tidy’s Mini Cooper is parked in the driveway and Ash wonders if his mom came home early on account of everything that’s going on. He tries to sneak by her but the floorboards squeak and she waves at him, pointing to her headset. He can tell by her smiley voice and quick laugh that she’s talking to a new customer; her everyday tone doesn’t have as much singsong in it, and in general she’s not easily amused. She’s a serious person, not in a boring bad way, just in a practical way; having a cleaning business, as lame as it is, suits her. He listens for a few minutes, thinking she’ll finish her convo and they can get the “How was your day?” over with but she’s still full-on talking about natural cleaning products, listing off ingredients like vinegar, baking soda, and tea tree oil with such hype that he can’t help but deliver a solid eye roll. She gives him the five minutes palm up and he heads to his room, drops his bag and collapses onto the bed. Ash can hear Anik listening to music downstairs, some sad retro shit on vinyl that he ordered from Amazon. He closes his eyes and imagines their rooms stacked one on top of the other like a dollhouse, each of them lying in their twin bed staring at the ceiling. Anik doesn’t come out of his room much. His dad says it’s a phase, some collegiate quarter-life crisis. His mom says that he needs some time to get it together and take control of his life. Ash doesn’t know what to think. Anik’s smart, talented and good-looking in his own way, but he hides in the basement eating microwave meals and playing weird-ass minor chords on his keyboard. Ash can’t remember the last time he had a full conversation with him. They used to talk a lot. He takes his phone out of his pocket and starts to text him.

need to talk. J is dead. don’t know what to do

He looks at the message, rereads it and then deletes one letter at a time until the only word left is need. He stares at that four-letter word, the blinking cursor and closes the app.