UNCORRECTED E-PROOF—NOT FOR SALE
HarperCollins Publishers
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Mandy’s insisting on cutting the kiss even though it changes her “vision.” I didn’t want her to compromise on my account, but she said, “Caddie, when you’re ready to kiss Peter in real life, I will do backflips, but I’m not going to complicate your mental health for the sake of a play.”
Part of me wants Mandy to push me so I’ll have no choice but to work it out, but she’s right—no matter how much I want to embrace Mandy’s vision, I don’t think I’m ready.
So, on Saturday, Peter picks me up for a private rehearsal at Mandy’s house. He doesn’t honk from the driveway when he comes to pick me up. He comes right up to the door—fifteen minutes early. “I thought Jordan and I might get in some man time,” Peter says, and they hole up in Jordan’s room with video games while I finish lunch.
“He’s great,” Mom says, and I nod, chewing. “Just a friend, or . . . ?” She’s a little too hopeful. She should know that me having “more than a friend” would be nothing short of miraculous.
When Peter pokes his head back in the kitchen, Mom tries to feed him, water him, plant him as a centerpiece and sing to him to make him grow.
“Wow, good with moms?” I say, when she finally lets us go.
“I’m good with parents in general,” Peter says, “as long as they’re not my own.”
“What happened?” I ask as we pull ourselves into the truck, and there’s one of those monumental silences, one that has to be filled with talking, but in its own time.
Peter backs out of the driveway and puts a country station on low. “Sorry,” he says. “I’m just thinking about it.”
“That’s okay. You don’t have to tell me.”
“No, it’s not that,” he says. “Please. I would tell you anything you asked. But I want to get it right. We—disappointed each other,” he says. “That seems like the best way to put it.”
“How could they be disappointed in you?” I say.
He flashes me a cocky smile. “No wonder I like you.” I flush.
“I was a ‘difficult’ child,” he says. “I told you about the roof. I think my parents spent a lot of my childhood wondering what they did to piss off the gods. My mom loves to tell this story of us in a Target. She was trying to empty her cart because she couldn’t take it down the escalator to the parking lot, and she lost track of me. She heard some commotion; turns out I was at the bottom of the escalator, flipping birds at everybody as they rode it down. When she tried to get to me, I hopped onto the up side and kept flipping birds and saying, ‘Come and get me! Come and get me!’”
“Oh, Lord.”
“Yeah, my parents are saints. And with the divorce I got worse, or at least angrier. When it was just me and my mom, I could be hard on her. We did family therapy, anger management, the whole deal.”
“And you’re better now?”
He shrugs. “I’ve got a temper, but I’m ‘channeling it in productive ways.’ That’s counselor speak for ‘I do theater instead of break things.’ And I’ve got a sense of humor about it. That helps.”
“Do you still go for counseling?”
“Not for a couple of years. My parents and I get along. They’re both remarried now, and I’ve made peace with the stepparents.”
“I’m seeing somebody now,” I say. It just comes out and I immediately wish I could suck it back in. “A doctor. Mandy knows, but nobody else.”
Peter nods. “That’s good, right?”
“I guess. I wish I didn’t need it.”
“Think about it this way—it makes you way more interesting. Problem-free people are boring.”
Knowing he knows, and that it seems to be okay, is a relief. I swell like a bright wave, like I could pour out past the boundaries of my skin. I want to know all about him, want him to know me. And I hope we’ll have time to fill in all the gaps.
“Do you remember when you invited me to the ice cream social? You were going to tell me what your favorite ice cream flavor is. I still don’t know.”
“You remember that?” He gives me a look like he’s ready to tell me the most solemn secret he has, but he can’t even look at me while saying it. He has to turn back to the road. “It’s butter pecan.”
Mandy tells us her new “concept:” we’ll perform the same actions, but with distance. “So it will be like you want to touch each other, but you can’t,” she says, “because it’s a memory, see? It might even be better this way.”
“Maybe we could work up to the touch,” Peter suggests. “You can touch through clothes, right?” he asks, holding his arm out toward me. Because it’s unseasonably warm, we’re outside on the flat lawn above the pool. Peter’s wearing short sleeves.
Mandy doesn’t say a word, but her eyes are fixed on me. They want to know how bad my fear is. It will disappoint them if I don’t at least try. I reach out a hand, touch Peter’s T-shirt sleeve, take a breath, and without giving myself time to think, place my hand on his shoulder.
Baby steps.
“Keep it there,” Mandy says.
My heart’s in a rush, but I’m still breathing. “It’s uncomfortable,” I say. “But I’m okay.”
“Yeah, you are,” Peter says. “What are you thinking about?”
“It’s so close. I feel like I’m asking for trouble.”
We stand still. I wait for the anxious wave to stop churning inside me as it tries to push me away from Peter.
“See, I can do it,” I say, “if I make myself. It’s okay.”
“Now try touching his skin,” Mandy says.
My hand pulls back—a reflex I can’t control.
“I’ve seen people touch you,” Peter says, “and you got upset, but nothing happened.”
“But I didn’t choose it,” I say. “They touched me. And I still had to wash it off after.”
“What are you afraid of?” he asks.
“I’ve always been scared of lots of things.” Even thinking about it makes me feel off balance. “In middle school, when my parents were fighting, I was always afraid that my dad would leave, or that one of them would die—it didn’t always make sense. This most recent stuff started with Dad. But it’s bigger than that now. Just . . . I don’t know . . . that the world’s going to end?”
“Oh, only that!” Mandy laughs. “Well, if it’s only that!”
I laugh too, because it’s silly. I know it is. But that doesn’t change how it feels.
“So, back to the not-touching plan . . . ,” Mandy says.
Mandy has us start with Nadia’s exercise of keeping distance between us, never less than six feet.
“It’s kind of like in middle school, when you have to dance with your arms stretched all the way out,” Peter says, and we hold our arms out and sway in time, not touching.
“You guys look like zombies,” Mandy says. “Arms down.” She pulls our focus back to work.
I speak my lines as Peter “enters” from the brick steps by the pool:
“To speak of horrors, he comes before me.”
Once Peter gets within six feet of me, I start walking backward. He circles around, and I maintain the distance.
Mandy reads Polonius’s line, “Mad for thy love?”
“My lord, I do not know; but truly, I do fear it.”
“What said he?”
“He took me by the wrist and held me hard . . .”
“So mime the action,” Mandy says, and sticks her arm out straight to demonstrate, “as if he’s pulling you.”
“. . . He falls to such perusal of my face as he would draw it.”
“It’s like the mirror game,” Mandy says, “where you follow each other’s actions. You do what she says in the air, Peter. And Caddie, follow him.”
Peter’s a good actor, but when he starts waving his hand around in the air like he’s petting my face, it looks more than a little silly.
“Here, you need to be closer,” Mandy says. “Step in, Peter.”
He does and sculpts the air close to my face. Mandy moves his hands closer, keeping only a couple of inches between my skin and their hands so I have to stay still. “Is this too much, Caddie? Am I freaking you out?”
“You are, but I think Ophelia is freaked out, so maybe that’s okay.”
Peter won’t touch me without asking, but Mandy might. Mandy might tap my cheek just to see how I react.
“Ophelia says, ‘Long stay’d he so,’” Mandy says. “So she just stands there. What’s up with Ophelia while Hamlet’s rubbing his hands all over her face? And he’s barely got his clothes on.”
“She’s scared,” I say, looking at Peter, “but it’s exciting, too.”
Mandy nods.
“Here, close your eyes,” she says.
She says it with so much authority, I almost obey without thinking. “I don’t want to,” I say.
Mandy cocks her head. She didn’t ask me if I wanted to. I close my eyes.
“Here,” Mandy says. She whispers something to Peter, and then she says, “Caddie, Peter is going to touch your face.”
Already, I’m shaking. I open my eyes.
“Keep them closed,” Mandy says. “You want to be able to touch people without having panic attacks, right? You don’t have to do anything. Just go on with the speech.”
This is more than a baby step. “I’m scared.”
“Yeah, I know, but so is Ophelia. You just said.”
If I let Peter touch me and I can stand it, maybe that will be the break I need. Take power away from the fear.
I speak.
I’m shaky, but not entirely in a bad way. My nerve endings tingle and twitch like they’re waking up after a long sleep. Peter shuffles on the grass. His hand hovers close to my face—the air trembles with its nearness—and his lips approach mine. His breath troubles the air I breathe, but he doesn’t touch me.
I lean in, oh so slightly, and inhale. His breath is warmer than the air and crisp. Smelling lightly of sharp mint and salt, it reminds me of the ocean right before a storm.
I catch myself leaning and straighten to finish my line. But I get it, what Mandy whispered. She told Peter not to touch me.
I wanted him to.
“That was amazing,” Mandy says, when I open my eyes. “That’s what I want. Just like that.”
“I couldn’t see what Peter was doing.”
“He’s so close to you but not touching, and you were so keyed up. It’s amazing to watch.”
“Okay, but now that I know Peter’s not going to touch me, how am I supposed to repeat that?”
“I don’t know,” Mandy says, smiling. “I guess you’ll have to act.”
“Oh, right! Acting!”
“Don’t you think you could get to that place?” Mandy says. “Where you’re not sure what’s going to happen—”
“I do,” I say.
“—and you’re afraid he’s going to touch you?”
“Yes.”
And afraid that he won’t.
“Excellent,” Mandy says. “Let’s run the whole thing a couple more times, and then I’ll feel good to show it.”
When we’re finished, Mandy invites us to stay. The sun’s already slipping, but for November, it’s balmy. We can sit by the pool.
“I invited Drew to come over later, but we can all hang out,” she says. “I’d really like it if you stayed.” She sends me a meaningful look. After I ditched the gloves, she told me I inspired her. That if I could quit something, she could too: Drew.
When Peter goes inside for a minute, I ask, “Are you going to do it?”
She plays with a strand of her pink hair. “I hope I can. I think it would be good for me, to prove that I’m strong enough.”
I want to squeeze her hand. With the gloves, I would have. Instead, I tap my hand to my heart and say, “You’ve got super strength, Mandy. I have no doubts.”
Peter returns with an armful of sodas, and we shift topics fast. Drew’s still Peter’s best friend.
There’s only a little sun left, when I get an idea. “How’s the camera on your phone?”
I tell them what I’m thinking . . . I still have to take a self-portrait for Nadia where she can see Ophelia in me and me in Ophelia. And the time I felt most like Ophelia, there’s no question. It was on the edge of Mandy’s pool, on the very edge of falling in.
“Well, it’s actually warm today,” Mandy says.
“I’m not going in.”
“Promise?” she says, and she pulls out her phone. “Where do you want me?”
“I think at the side there is good.” I kick off my shoes.
“Is Peter ready to play lifeguard?” Mandy asks.
Peter moves to the edge of the pool and pulls off his boots.
“You don’t need to do that,” I say.
“You don’t know what it’s like to walk around in wet boots.”
“I won’t go in. I promise. And anyway, I can swim.”
“When you choose to,” Mandy says.
I’ve earned their distrust, but I still wince.
The metal railing of the diving board ladder is warm from the sun, the board, too, and my feet have no trouble on the gritty surface. The board bounces, but that’s nothing. That’s normal.
I walk to the edge.
I have stood here a gazillion times, but it still feels scary. Even though there’s no way to get hurt. The slightest breeze teases me. The fact of my clothes, that I’m not dressed for swimming, reminds me this is not a normal moment on a diving board.
I stretch out my arms, lift my face to the sky. “How does that look?”
“It’s cool,” Mandy says, “but I don’t feel like you’re about to go in.”
“Do I need to step closer to the edge?”
“Maybe. Try it.”
“Please don’t,” Peter says.
“I’m all right.”
His eyes are worried and fierce.
I’m trying, I tell him with my eyes. I’ll try harder.
And for a second I feel just like Ophelia. Standing at the edge of a diving board doesn’t scare me. I know I can swim. Standing at the edge of Peter does.
He’s as afraid as I am—afraid of falling for a girl who might drown.
“I took one,” Mandy says, “when you were looking at Peter. It’s pretty badass.”
At my request, she snaps a few more with my feet hanging over the edge, with my arms out like angel wings, ones where I look like I’m singing.
But Mandy is right. The one where I’m looking at Peter—that’s the one.