Excerpt from Beautiful Midnight
ONE
~ September 2001 ~
I should have been dead long ago.
Midnight Madison looked at herself in the bathroom mirror, her wet body, skeleton-scrawny and lacking curves, dripped on the cold, cream-coloured ceramic tiles. She noticed a pimple on her forehead and sighed. Seemed she couldn’t keep up with them lately and frankly she didn’t care. Her short brown hair, which was almost dry, wouldn’t help her hide this small blemish. Everyone at school would notice. Again, she didn’t really care. It really didn’t matter. Maybe once it would have, but lately it seemed like these things so many kids her age stressed about meant so little to her. Even her hair. It had been long most of her life, but last year she’d decided it was time for a change and cut it. A move her friend Samantha had questioned.
I was tired of taking care of it, she’d told Samantha.
Apparently not the only thing, Samantha had said.
Samantha just didn’t understand. They’d been friends since grade one, but as sophomores in high school, their differences had become more and more apparent over the last three years and were now taking them in opposite directions. Midnight didn’t think they were going to remain friends, let alone best friends, much longer. Life had a way of making that happen.
Midnight grabbed the plush purple bath towel off the rack and dried herself.
Why did He spare me?
It wasn’t the first time the thought had crossed her mind. She wasn’t anyone special. Hadn’t done anything really great or mindful or caring in the last fifteen years. She was just another teenage girl trying to fit into a world she didn’t understand and which seemed to be going to hell anyway. Just yesterday, two planes had crashed into the World Trade Center and now everyone waited for the world to end.
God spared me for this bullshit?
Midnight gave her reflection in the mirror the middle finger, walked out of the bathroom with the towel wrapped around her, and crossed the hallway to her room. She could hear her dad snoring in his bed. He’d probably been up late, as he normally was, either working on his writing or working on a bottle.
She hoped it had been his writing this time.
She pulled on a pair of low-rise blue jeans and a short-sleeved black t-shirt and headed to the kitchen to grab a piece of toast with blueberry jam. She made a pot of coffee, not so much for her but for her dad, hoping the smell would get his butt out of bed. If he’d actually hit the bottle last night, he would need his black java.
Midnight poured herself a cup as well and drank it black, just like her old man. She sort of hated it, but figured if she was making it, she might as well get addicted to it too. After she’d finished eating her breakfast, she put the dirty dishes in the dishwasher, brushed her teeth, grabbed her backpack, and headed for the door.
“What, you don’t have a kiss for your old man?”
“Hey Dad,” she said and kissed his cheek. “Guess the black java tickled your nostrils.”
“Yes, thanks for making it.”
“Headache?”
“A little.”
“Told you not to drink so much.”
“Have I told you how much I love you?”
Midnight grinned. “I know. Got to go. Love you too.”
“Have a wonderful day at school,” he said. “Make someone happy.”
She closed the door behind her and didn’t look back. Sometimes, her dad worried her. It had been twelve years since his dream life had ended, but he still bled it every single day. Funny how he felt it was her Christian duty to make someone happy, yet she couldn’t make him happy. Not that he was unhappy with her—she was a straight-A student, didn’t get into trouble, took care of him best she could. But he was such a mess most of the time. His heart was so full of love and goodness and Midnight hated to see him wasting away like he was. She would even welcome a stepmom if that pulled him out of his lifelong misery.
He deserved that much after everything he’d done for her. After everything he’d given up for her. Midnight stopped and glanced back at the old house she’d called home since the day she was born. The roof shingles had needed replacing for years, but still they’d managed to get through one more winter. The heat of last summer had made more of them curl at the corners. She knew they didn’t really have the money, but eventually the roof would get damaged and they’d be looking at a whole lot more money to fix that.
Her gaze shifted to the living room window, where she could see the shadow of her father looking out at her, a cup of coffee in his hand. She resisted the urge to wave, letting him think that she couldn’t see him. She knew he worried about her, probably felt guilty about the state of their lives. She had never complained. He’d done his best to raise her and Octavia, her older sister. He’d figured a way to work from home and be there for them. Being a freelance writer had meant spells where assignments didn’t come and money had to be stretched, but they’d never gone without life’s basic necessities. Sure, some of the kids at school nowadays were showing up with cell phones, but she didn’t see the need for one. They had basic cable at home, which was fine and kept her TV-watching to a minimum, and their groceries fit within a tight budget, but she’d never gone hungry.
Midnight didn’t let these trivial things bother her.
It’s just the way her life was and she was fine with that. Some might think she were poor, especially by twenty-first-century standards, but she had a roof over her head, clothes on her back that Octavia had passed down to her, and maybe they weren’t as fashionable as when her sister had worn them, but Midnight didn’t really care. She liked the retro style. For the most part, she was happy. Not somersault-and-backflip happy, but by her definition of the word, she was. All that really mattered was that her dad was there for her, that she never had to worry that he wouldn’t be there when she came home after school, that he would never abandon her.
And she would never abandon him.
He needed her probably more than she needed him now. The drinking was bothering her, though. It was a demon he struggled with—had been for a long time—and sometimes he seemed to be winning, but most times it owned him.
Midnight pulled her lower lip between her teeth. She wondered what would happen to her father if she weren’t there to take care of him.
Maybe that’s why He spared me.
* * *
Samantha Carmichael sat at the beautifully crafted cherry makeup table in her bedroom where she went through her morning ritual, applying black eye shadow, black eyeliner, and black mascara—the look she preferred lately. She pulled it all together with glossy pink lipstick that made her already full lips look that more delicious.
Samantha smiled, but there was venom in that smile, cobra-venom, like she owned you if you stared at her for too long. That smile bordered on a sneer. Careful what you wish for, it seemed to taunt.
A few unfortunate past boyfriends—four, to be exact, in the last twelve months—walked wide circles to avoid her now.
With broken hearts.
Samantha braided her long golden blond hair, then changed her mind and combed it out a dozen times, until all the knots were gone. She let it fall over her shoulders, down the middle of her back. Satisfied, she stepped into a pair of skin-tight, low-rise blue jeans and donned an antique white blouse, untucked, sleeves rolled up, the top three buttons undone. She knew it would tease the boys at school as they tried to get a good look.
Samantha admired herself.
Perfect.
Totally BBM.
Beautiful.
Blonde.
Money.
A lethal combination, she knew, but so what? So what if her daddy had made his money in the stock market? So what that most of her friends were her friends because she now had money? So what if all the boys wanted to get into her pants?
Let them think they could.
She was just a teenage girl, and this was what teenage life was about. A time to screw up and not care because it didn’t really matter. Teenage years were the audition for the rest of your life, and you weren’t expected to get it right. It was a time for foolishness and experimentation, and that was exactly what Samantha Carmichael was doing. Sure, she felt like a fraud at times, but weren’t they all at that age? Most of her friends, she wouldn’t trust to turn her back to, but then again, most of them wouldn’t dare cross her. Samantha was it-girl, the in-girl, the one they all wanted to be seen with.
And she relished it.
Why shouldn’t she?
But all good things had to have a bad side, and as popular as she was at school, home life wasn’t like the facade she wore at school. No, home life was full of tension, anxiety, and high expectations.
“Your grades slipped last year,” her mother had reminded her last week when school started. “You had better pull it together this year if you want to get the grades for university. You’ve got opportunities I never had.”
Samantha was so bored of that conversation. At least her dad didn’t bitch at her all the time. Then again, she rarely saw him. He came home late, when he came home at all, and was gone before she woke. She actually didn’t really know what he did, had never cared to ask. They had moved to this five-bedroom mansion last summer, a far cry from the tiny three-bedroom townhome they’d lived in. Now her room was more than twice the size as before, she and her younger sister Emily shared an ensuite, one of the spare bedrooms was a gym for her mom, and the fifth bedroom was for when visitors stayed over; the kitchen was the size of the first floor of their old house, and the backyard had a gigantic in-ground pool that looked tiny in the expanse of the entire yard.
All because her daddy had become rich in stocks. At least, that’s what they were told. She didn’t care. It was nice to live in a house big enough that if she wanted to avoid her mother, she could do so easily. It was nice not to hear her parents fighting because their room wasn’t adjacent to hers anymore. It was on the other side of the house, at the end of the hallway, separated by three other bedrooms and the ensuite. It was nice to wear designer clothes, and to have straight teeth—her braces had come off last September, which is when her popularity had climbed to new heights. She’d started to blossom two years ago and now she was absolutely gorgeous.
And she knew it.
And she used it.
And to hell with those who didn’t like it.
But she wasn’t all bravado. She knew how quickly everything had changed for the better and when she was alone in her room, lying in bed with the lights turned off, she worried that all her good luck could evaporate as quickly as it had come. At those times, she pulled the blankets over her head and cried quietly so that Emily didn’t hear her, and she cried until exhaustion dragged her into troubled sleep.
Her parents fought a lot. Too much to be happy. Too much to be in love. It had been that way at the old house, mostly fighting about money and the lack of, but now it was about Dad never being home, Dad always working and leaving Mom alone, and well, where the hell did the money come from if it wasn’t because he was working his ass off, so cut him some slack. Samantha had no idea if one had to work hard to make money in the stock market, barely understood what the stock market was, and she’d heard that yesterday’s attack on the U.S. could be disastrous for the stock market. She just hoped her dad didn’t lose all their money, and if he needed to work like a dog to make sure they didn’t lose it all, then her mom should just shut up about it and let him work.
Samantha had always thought her mom to be somewhat needy and she often wondered what had brought her parents together. They seemed so different.
“Samantha, we’ve got to go,” her mother shouted from the bottom of the stairs. “Come on or you’ll be late for school, which means Emily will be late too.”
Samantha took one last look at herself in the mirror, nodded, grabbed her backpack that was sitting on her bed, and hurried down to the foyer where her beautiful mother waited with the patience and grace of a rabid Dalmatian.
* * *
Midnight decided to wave to her dad after all and then started to walk away. Out of habit, she glanced at the neighbour’s house, an identical home to hers built some thirty years ago. It seemed that builders lacked imagination back then, as they’d built the same model with just slight variations in elevation, siding or brick colours, and window offerings. An older couple with a Shih Tzu—her name was Snow, which was appropriate because she was mostly white with a few blazes of light chocolate running across her back and belly, and she always ran up to Midnight with her tail wagging—lived there now. They were a nice couple of Russian origin and had thick accents. Now that she was older, Midnight chatted with them on occasion, mostly about Snow, who had been a five-month-old puppy when they’d bought the house from the Murphys. Tyler Murphy had lived there.
Her first and only boyfriend.
His family had moved away when she was five and she hadn’t seen him since. Every morning, as she walked by his old house, she wondered if he ever thought of her or even remembered her. It had been ten years, and he was a boy, so she doubted he ever gave her a passing thought.
Midnight crossed the street and glanced at the park where they used to play soccer, football, tag, and any other games they could think of. She had kissed him, full on the lips, behind the spruce that now stood twenty feet or more but back then had been half the size and width. The park looked really old now.
And empty.
Seemed all the little kids in the area had grown up and barely ever came to the park now, except late at night to drink and smoke behind that row of spruces close to the fence that stood between the park and the next row of backyards.
Midnight picked up the pace. She didn’t want to be late. Being late was a sign of disrespect—another thing Samantha didn’t quite grasp. She believed everyone should be waiting for her, that the whole damn world should pause until she showed up.
It truly irritated Midnight.
The friendship had been in a slow decline, it seemed forever. Somehow, they’d managed to remain friends. For now. She should feel sad about that, and there were times, mostly when she was home alone, that she did, but when the two of them were together, it just made Midnight’s vein in the middle of her forehead throb. She reached the end of her street and waited for Samantha’s mom to pick her up. Midnight was more than willing to walk to school even though it took her thirty minutes, but Mrs. Carmichael said she didn’t mind, that it was on her way. Not exactly true, as she had to get off the main road, but come winter Midnight would be grateful for the ride. Her dad could drive her, but he couldn’t always be depended on.
Less than five minutes later, the beige minivan pulled up.
“Need a ride, mister?” Samantha said and laughed. “Oh sorry, you’re not a boy after all.”
“That joke was old months ago and now it just reeks of decay,” Midnight said and climbed in to take a seat beside Emily. “Hey Em.”
“I have no idea why you’re friends with my stupid sister,” Emily said.
“I often wonder that too,” Midnight said. “Morning, Mrs. Carmichael.”
“Morning, honey. Hope we didn’t keep you waiting too long. Had to wait for Miss Princess to put herself together. How’s your dad?”
“He was just getting ready for work when I left,” she said.
“He’s still doing that writing thing?”
“I think you asked Midnight that just last week,” Samantha said. “It’s his job, so why wouldn’t he still be doing it?”
Midnight felt the temperature dip ten degrees so she quickly jumped in. “He likes it. And I like it that he’s there when I come home.”
Her father had converted Octavia’s bedroom to an office after she’d moved out, which had been better than being stuck in a cold damp basement like he’d been all the years before that. Octavia was seven years older and had moved in with her boyfriend Mark last year. Midnight missed her sister and often visited, although it took her two buses and nearly an hour to get to her place.
“I’m glad to hear that,” Mrs. Carmichael said. “You guys doing okay?”
“We’re fine,” Midnight said. She knew Mrs. Carmichael worried about her and even though Midnight had never told Samantha’s mom, she was grateful. It was nice that someone other than her dad cared. “We are.”
Midnight saw Samantha’s mom look at her in the front mirror, and if she didn’t quite believe Midnight, she didn’t call her out on it.
“Okay, so let’s drop Emily first and then the big girls.”
“Ugh,” Samantha said. “I really hate it when you call us that.”
“Better than being called a tramp,” Mrs. Carmichael said. “Or worse.”
“Seriously, Mom.”
“Guess next year when I’m in grade seven, I’ll be one of you,” Emily said.
“Fantastic! You can be the big girl in my place. I’ll gladly give up the moniker.”
“Wow! Did you hurt yourself?” Emily said. “You don’t usually use big words. Oops! There’s that word again.”
“Shut up.”
“Make me.”
“Girls.”
Midnight looked out the side window and tuned out the nonsense that was going on with the Carmichaels. She couldn’t remember ever bickering with Octavia. Maybe the age difference had something to do with that. Or maybe it was because she loved her sister. Maybe Samantha and Emily did love each other and this was their way of showing it.
Midnight shrugged. The minivan moved away from the curb and instinctively she tried to look down the street, but she couldn’t see her house, nor Tyler’s old house.
* * *
Midnight always enjoyed Art Class, except that today she simply sat there staring at a blank piece of paper, a frown on her brow. So much had happened yesterday, and the world had become a little uglier.
Last night, she and her dad had watched the news, which kept showing the planes flying into the towers over and over again, and he had looked completely devastated.
“This is so close to home,” Midnight said.
“New York city doesn’t seem that far from Ottawa,” Jim said.
“Will we have a war?”
“I don’t know,” he said after downing the last of his third beer. “Terrorism has no borders. It’s not like a specific country can be blamed. These people are almost impossible to find.”
It was during that conversation that she really noticed that her dad had grown older over the past year, the crow’s feet around his eyes deeper, and his hair thinner and greyer, as if this latest world tragedy was his burden to bear alone. He was a man of deep feelings, something that made him a wonderful man, but also a tormented man. He seemed unable to let go of things he couldn’t change.
He’d had too much to drink again last night and her thoughts drifted to two years ago, when out of desperation and anger, she had gotten rid of all the booze in the house, pouring it down the kitchen sink while he took a nap—well, he’d passed out, to be truthful—but when he’d woken up, it had been an ugly sight.
“Why did you do that?” he’d yelled. “D’you have any idea how much that stuff cost? I can take care of myself; I don’t need you to look after me.”
Midnight had never seen her dad so hot, his anger exploding behind his eyes and pinning her with such ferocity that she’d started to cry and had run to her room and had hid under her blankets, shaking, a hole in her heart so big she could have fallen into it.
“Can I come in?” her dad had said after knocking gently on her door a few minutes later. “I’m . . . I’m sorry, honey. I totally overreacted.”
She’d pulled the blankets over her head and remained silent. She’d heard the door open and then felt her dad sit on the edge of the bed.
“I know you meant well,” he’d said. “And I’m an ass for blowing up like that. I drink way too much, I know. I know. I’ll join AA. I will. I need to.” He’d sat quiet for a moment. “I’ll never yell at you again. That’s a promise.”
He had joined AA.
But his loneliness and emptiness had needed solace and he’d lapsed with the AA meetings, and a six-pack had started to come home with him with regularity, and even though he drank most nights, he had been true to his words and had never yelled nor gotten angry with her again.
Midnight hated to see him so damn broken.
But what was she supposed to do? All she could do was look out for him and love him. Because he really was a great guy and when she saw what her mother leaving had done to him, it made her hate the woman that she barely knew even more. On more than one occasion, Midnight had hoped that her mom was dead, that she had died a horrible death because what she had done to the man she had vowed to love forever, through good and bad, until death, was unforgivable.
The bell rang, class ended, and Midnight made her way to her locker where she grabbed her gym clothes and headed toward the change room. She hated gym. Not because she wasn’t any good—in fact, she was better than all the girls in her class. No, what she hated was seeing every other girl with boobs and curves while she remained boyishly shapeless, puberty seemingly bypassing her or playing a cruel joke on her.
So she put up a front, one that showed indifference, but she was still just a teenage girl with feelings, and as hard as she tried to stifle them, it still hurt to hear what the other girls said, murmurs behind her back, murmurs that she was weird, murmurs that her mom hadn’t loved her enough to stay.
Her armour wasn’t impervious.
Maybe Samantha was right about her haircut and maybe she should let her hair grow back. It’s just that she’d heard her dad compliment her too many times how like her mother she looked before she’d cut it.
Midnight changed as fast as she could and headed out to the soccer field where she did her best not to kill anyone when she pounded the ball—an outlet that helped her unleash the frustration bottled up inside of her.
* * *
When Midnight got back to her locker after gym, Samantha was waiting for her. No matter what might be happening between them, whether their friendship was really slowly burning itself out or not, the two friends always ate lunch together and Samantha always waited for Midnight at her locker. It was like Samantha cut class a couple minutes early to make sure she was there when Midnight showed up.
For a moment, when Midnight saw her friend standing there all beautiful and sexy and having it all, a surge of hot blood rushed through her veins and she wanted to scratch Samantha’s perfect skin off her face, dig deep painful and scarring grooves that would make her invisible to the world like Midnight was.
She loved Samantha and her heart felt like a tiny aching fist inside of her chest. How could she have these thoughts about her best friend? Midnight knew Samantha had never asked to be born so beautiful and lucky, just like she herself had never asked to be born so ugly and unlucky.
Okay, until a year ago Samantha hadn’t been that pretty. She’d worn glasses and had braces on her teeth, and lived in a tiny house down the street from Midnight, but Samantha’s luck had changed.
Midnight frowned. What was getting into her today? She felt out of sorts, angry and lost and feeling a bit sorry for herself.
So not Midnight Madison.
“Hey girl,” Samantha said. “Gym, huh?”
“My favourite,” she said and any ill thoughts she’d had disappeared.
“Next year we don’t have to take it, so look forward to that.”
“I am, believe me.” Midnight stuffed her sweaty gym clothes into her locker and grabbed her lunch bag. “I’m starving.”
“Why do you still bring a lunch bag? You can buy food here.”
“I’m not eating that crap. Full of refined sugars and who knows what. Not a chance.” Her body might not be the body of a goddess, but Midnight respected it. She was afraid of what might happen if she didn’t. It had once turned on her and she was doing her best not to let that happen again. “I like to know what I ingest.”
“Who says ingest? You’re so weird sometimes.”
“It’s really not such a difficult word to say. And it is what we do with food.”
“Whatever,” Samantha said. “Let’s just go ingest our lunch.”
“Shut up!”
“You shut up!”
The two girls walked away, and all eyes followed Samantha—the boys wanted to be with her, and the girls wanted to be just like her—and all the mean-spirited whispers were aimed at her geeky freaky friend Midnight.
What if He’d spared me so stupid teenagers could torment me?
The thought slammed into her like a fist out of darkness, but it wasn’t the first time it had crossed her mind. Lately, her thoughts seemed twisted, morose, self-deprecating.
“Hey, Night-Night, you with me?” Samantha said.
Midnight pulled a fake smile out of the depth of her darkness and plastered it onto her face. Samantha had given her that nickname back in grade one, and she used it occasionally, usually to get Midnight’s attention. “Yeah, I’m with you.”
Samantha stopped her with a hand on her forearm. “You okay? You seem off today, more than usual. Your dad okay?”
Midnight nodded. “Yeah, we both are. I mean, he’s drinking again, but it’s not too bad. It’s not that, really. It’s . . . what happened yesterday.”
“The towers.”
“Doesn’t it bother you that people died for no reason?”
Samantha looked uncomfortable. “It does. It’s unbelievable. But what are we supposed to do? I mean, we’re just teenagers living in another country.”
“I know,” Midnight said. “It would just be nice to do something, you know, to make the world better.”
The two girls started walking again. “I’m not sure we can change the world. It’s so messed up.”
“Maybe not the whole world,” Midnight said as they reached the cafeteria doors and Samantha pulled on the left one. “But maybe we can do something here. We do have to fulfill our forty hours of community work and I haven’t put in a single hour yet. Have you?”
Samantha shook her head. “Please don’t go all nuclear on this like the time they found that girl’s body in the woods.”
Just last year, Jordan Lachance had disappeared and three weeks later her body had been discovered by a jogger over at the pit. Jordan had been a senior at their school and lived just three streets over from Midnight. She had volunteered for Jordan’s search, and the longer the search turned out empty, the more freaked out Midnight had become, to the point that her dad had had to insist she stop helping.
The week that followed the discovery of Jordan’s body, Midnight had been haunted by extremely violent nightmares where she woke up screaming so loud it left her throat sore and raw for days.
“I just want to do something,” she said, but her words where swallowed by the cacophony that filled the cafeteria, a noise that could only be generated by two hundred teenagers controlled by raging adolescent hormones.
Midnight followed Samantha, who led her to their table on the other side of the room where some of Samantha’s friends waited. Midnight was sure they only tolerated her and on days that Samantha wasn’t at school, Midnight normally skipped lunch or took it outside where she’d find a quiet spot and eat alone with her notebook. She sometimes drew, sometimes wrote her thoughts. On the front of the notebook she had written Make Someone Happy.
Maybe she could make someone happy like her dad told her every morning when she left for school, like he truly believed that she had the power to do such a thing.
Maybe she did, if she’d try.
* * *
Samantha saw Kim and Julie sitting at their table and sort of forgot about Midnight. Those two were her audience; she could manipulate them as she pleased and Samantha loved the rush it gave her. Knowing that Kim and Julie idolized her was an incredible high and right now she needed that. Midnight, as much as she loved her, could exhaust Samantha. Right now, she just wanted light and fluffy.
Kim and Julie were light and fluffy.
Sure, she tired of them quickly. Intellectually, she and Midnight were a better match, which was why she was still friends with Midnight, but the bad girl in her, the one that wanted to have fun and not feel guilty about it, tended to gravitate towards her other friends. Besides, Kim’s older brother Derek, a senior now, was really hot and Samantha was ready to move on from the guys in her grade to an older boy.
“Does she have to sit here?” Julie said. “She’s like mosquito repellent.”
“That makes no sense,” Samantha said. “Besides, Midnight is cooler than you’ll ever be.”
“I think not,” Julie said. “But whatever.”
“SO-ooo, my parents are away this weekend,” Kim said, “and Derek is throwing a party.”
“I thought you and Derek were throwing a party,” Julie said, sounding a bit confused. “I thought—”
Kim gave her the duh face. “Sounds better if I say he’s having the party, that way he’s the one getting in trouble if my parents find out. I’ll just happen to stay home that night and have a few girlfriends over.”
“Brilliant,” Samantha said. “So, how many girlfriends are you having over?”
“Well, the two of you, of course—”
“And Midnight too,” Samantha said.
Kim and Julie looked like they’d rather run naked through the cafeteria right now than invite Midnight.
“Yeah, sure,” Kim said. “You can come too, Midnight. If you want.”
“I think I’ll pass,” Midnight said.
Samantha turned to her friend. “Why? It’ll be fun. You need to loosen up.”
“Not my style,” Midnight said and popped a baby carrot into her mouth. “I’m sure you’ll all have more fun without me there.”
Julie didn’t even try to hide her relief. “Yeah, probably—”
“Shut up,” Samantha said. “If I say Midnight is coming, then she’s coming.”
“I really don’t want to,” Midnight said. “It’s not my thing.”
“What is your thing?” Kim said.
Julie was about to add something but Samantha shut her down with a glare. “Don’t bother.”
“It’s okay, Sam. I know they don’t want me there and I don’t want to be there. I don’t need to be Carrie.”
Samantha saw the lost look in Julie’s eyes. God, she really was dumb. “You won’t be.”
“Because I won’t be there,” Midnight said. “Please Sam, just let it be.”
Samantha turned her back on Kim and Julie. She looked at Midnight, hating that her friend was purposely cutting herself out. It wasn’t right. They were fifteen and this was supposed to be the best time of their lives. Why couldn’t Midnight just go with it for once?
“Why?”
“Because I’m asking you,” Midnight said and popped another baby carrot into her mouth. “And I really don’t want to go. They don’t want me there either. So just let it be.”
Samantha held out her hand and Midnight dropped a few carrots into her palm. She ate them all. She was starving and should get something to eat before lunch was over.
“I just hate to see you not want to be part of us.”
“I’m not part of you, Sam. I’m just your friend. And I sometimes don’t even know why we’re friends.”
Samantha got up, grabbed Midnight’s hand, and pulled her along as she headed for the line-up. She’d grab one of those sawdust burgers and greasy fries.
“Don’t do that,” she said to Midnight.
“What? Say I don’t want to go to a stupid party?”
“Embarrass me in front of them,” Samantha said. “If they see you saying no to me, maybe they’ll think they can say no to me, and then all the lines will be blurred.”
“What are you talking about? What lines?”
“The line that separates me from them. The line that says I’m the alpha.”
Midnight looked at Samantha just like Julie had earlier. “You did not just spit that shit out of your mouth.”
Samantha stared back. “You don’t get it, do you? I used to be just like you. Don’t you remember when I wore those stupid thick glasses and my teeth were all crooked and my face was full of pimples? I was a real leper.”
“Is that what you think of me?”
“No,” Samantha said, shifting into damage control mode. “Don’t put words in my mouth.”
“You put them there yourself.”
“It’s not what I meant.”
“So what did you mean?”
“I just meant that I wasn’t always popular, and now that I am, I really like it. And I can help you.”
“Maybe I don’t want your help. Maybe I’m just fine being who I really am.”
“What is that supposed to mean?”
“Yes, you’re pretty. Yes, your dad’s got money. And yes, you’re now popular and I’m just the same old Midnight. We used to make fun of girls like that and now . . .”
“And now I’m one of them.”
“You’re trying to be.”
Samantha took a step back and the two friends stared at each other, cold glares that left little room for maneuvering. Kids tired of waiting for them to move up the line just went around them.
“I’m the only friend you have.”
“I never asked you to be.”
“So you don’t care about our friendship?”
“I didn’t say that.”
Samantha crossed her arms and poked her cheek with her tongue. “You know, when everyone makes fun of you, I stick up for you. I tell them they have no idea what it’s like to have your mom walk out on you when you’re barely three just because you got sick. I mean, I have no idea either. Most times I can’t stand my mom, she so annoys me. But at least she’s there. I know it must suck for you to take care of your dad instead of the other way around. I’m just trying to make you happy. You know, include you.”
“I don’t need you to feel sorry for me.”
“That’s not what I’m doing. We’ve been friends forever.”
“And maybe forever just arrived.”
Midnight turned to go but Samantha grabbed her arm.
“You don’t mean that.”
Midnight pulled her arm free. “Even long-term friendships can wither away. We’ve been growing apart since the end of grade six.”
“You’re throwing this away?”
“We’re not the same, you and me. Not anymore.” Midnight pointed at Kim and Julie. “Maybe those aren’t true friends, but that’s where you belong now.”
“Then go,” Samantha said. “Don’t let me hold you back from being miserable.”
Midnight left and Samantha watched her childhood friend walk away, leaving her feeling a little less important, a little less self-righteous, a little less whole.
She wouldn’t go after Midnight to beg, though. Maybe, hopefully, Midnight just needed some time to herself, to sort things out. Maybe. Hopefully. When she couldn’t see Midnight any longer, Samantha turned and saw Kim and Julie watching her, and she knew that they’d seen it all, and she knew that the only thing she could do was go and join them.
Someone important had possibly walked out of her life, someone she knew could never be replaced, but she couldn’t let her new fake friends see her bleed. No, she couldn’t. That would have to wait until later, when she was home alone in her room.
Samantha got her lunch and returned to her table, the smile on her face showing every penny of the seven thousand dollars her orthodontist had charged her daddy for those perfect pearly whites.
* * *
Midnight let herself into the house and locked the front door. The drive home had been icy and quiet, uncomfortable really. Midnight hadn’t wanted the ride home, but Mrs. Carmichael hadn’t known what had happened earlier and Midnight hadn’t wanted to seem rude. Maybe tonight Samantha would tell her mom and starting tomorrow, Midnight would need to walk to school.
She would wait and see.
Midnight heard the television playing and poked her head into the living room to find her dad asleep on the couch. There were five empty bottles of beer on the coffee table. She should be angry with him, but what use would it be? She switched the television off and pulled a blanket from the linen closet to cover him.
She kissed his forehead and whispered, “Oh Daddy.”
She headed to her room to do her homework, but had trouble concentrating. She lay on her bed and stared at the ceiling. There was a dusty spider’s web going from her light to the corner that she should wipe, but she couldn’t be bothered. Instead, she lay there and worried about her dad, worried about Samantha, worried about the world. So much ugliness everywhere. How could she make a difference? Who was she really? The thought rolled around in her head like a pinball being bounced in all directions, the answers crushed before they formed. Life—her life—just seemed to be getting more complicated. She’d hoped, as she grew older, that it would finally start to make sense, but the opposite seemed to be happening.
Life is a gift, her dad had told her more than once. How many people’s lives you can better is really what it’s all about, he’d also said often.
She couldn’t change the entire world. That just wasn’t possible. But what if she could change the life of one person? Her father would be her first choice. He needed help in the worst of ways. Samantha was another. Midnight saw trouble ahead for her friend, but after today, she didn’t think Samantha would listen to anything she said.
So who could she help? Maybe it had to be a stranger.
Volunteering.
Where could she volunteer that would satisfy her school curriculum obligations and also make a difference for someone?
Make someone happy.
The answer became obvious.
* * *
Grab your copy of Beautiful Midnight now!