The Girl I Was Before (Falling #3)(90)



Leah nods.

“I have to tell you something, and I want you to remember that today was a really good day. And…when I’m done, I want you to know that there’s a present for you, okay?” Thank god Paige left a present.

“Present?” Leah says. Her front teeth are larger than the rest, and it makes her lisp her S’s. It’s may be my favorite sound on earth. I’ve recorded her saying the seashell thing a dozen times.

“Yep,” I smile. It takes work to hold it in place, because telling her Paige is gone is like going through it all over again—and it makes me so unbelievably sad.

“You know how Paige came to live with us because she really needed a place to go?” I start. She’s smiling at me for now, and nodding. “Well, her sister needed her to come live with her again. And she needed her just as much as Paige needed us for a while.”

She did need me. For a while. And I know she loved me somewhere in there.

“She’s not here anymore?” Leah asks, her bright smile falling. She’s looking at the closed door, her hand picking at the bottom of her dress.

“No, sweetie. But…” I walk her to her room, opening the door so she sees the gift on her bed. “She left something for you.”

Leah looks up at me for permission to go to her gift. I tilt my head toward her bed, urging her on. She walks toward it tentatively, pulling the letter out from under the ribbon that I tucked back in there after reading it earlier today. She holds it up for me to read to her, so I do. She likes that Paige calls her a princess. I like it too. It was a nice touch.

When I’m done reading, she has a faint smile on her face, and she pulls carefully at the lid on the perfectly-square pink box, almost peeking inside, afraid to see it all too quickly. She catches a glimpse of something she recognizes, then pulls the lid away, tossing the few sheets of tissue paper out of her way too. What she holds up is a very tall, very pink, very expensive-looking high heel. They’re the exact shoes Paige was wearing the first time she met Leah at the stairs. My daughter loved her then.

I think maybe I did too.

She reaches into the box for the other one, next working her fingers on her sandals, kicking them away and putting her feet inside Paige’s shoes. Her feet swim in them, but she stands and slides forward a few feet along the carpet, scooting in a circle so she can face me. Her smile—it lights up the room.

It lights up the emptiness in my heart, too.

And again, I have Paige to thank for that.





Chapter 17





Paige



Thank god they switched rooms. This is the room I started in, and I didn’t want to be somewhere totally new…again. Nate felt guilty having the bigger room, so he talked Ty into moving back. They’ve repainted everything white, too. Cass said the floor’s resident assistant got in trouble for letting them paint in the first place.

I like the white. It’s clean—like a fresh start.

It’s been a week. I don’t think time has ever moved so slowly. Every morning, my routine is the same. I wake up before Cass and Rowe. I shower. I dress. And then I spend an hour hiding out in the hallway surfing the Internet, obsessing over Twitter, looking for a sign of anything more than what’s come out.

That one story is still the only one that comes up. I know Chandra left campus. Cass said she thinks she took a medical withdrawal. I suppose that looks better on a college transcript than a forced trip to rehab. I hate that she was allowed to take a medical withdrawal. I’d rather see FAILURE stamped on her files. I’m spiteful when it comes to her—and I’m okay with that.

My video hasn’t seemed to spread any farther either. Most days, I look for that first. I care about me more than her. I’m okay with that, too.

You would think that I would grow less worried over becoming a viral hit the more time that passes, but I don’t—I worry more. I feel like the longer it takes to leak to the world, the more bang it will have when it does. But it seems that I’m just not worth going viral. I wish I could have predicted this would happen before I had a very honest and frank discussion with my father on Monday. Houston never cashed my check for the first month’s rent, which means money that was supposed to come out of my checking account never disappeared. My mom freaked out, so I lied.

I told her I moved from the sorority back to Cass, since they weren’t happy about me moving out in the first place, and the transfer messed up my payment, so it would come out later. But my lies were getting confounded—too many to keep track. Eventually, my father put together that there were holes in my story—time that I couldn’t account for, periods where it seemed like I was homeless. Rather than tell him I lived with a man, one who fathered a little girl in high school, I decided it was better to switch his focus to Chandra and the video.

My dad went on a cyber-bullying mission, wanting to file a formal complaint with the university for allowing such activity to happen. My mom—she just cried—disappointed that I would let myself be in a video “like that.” No matter how many times I explained that it wasn’t really me, she didn’t understand. I guess parts were actually of me, so she might as well be disappointed.

I’m pretty disappointed in myself, too, really.

My indiscretions have taken the focus off my sister and her MS, which is maybe the only silver lining thus far. Cass has had to endure daily calls on her health from one of our parents ever since we stepped foot on this campus. When she relapsed over the holidays, those calls became twice-daily routines. But for the last week, every time one of them calls, they ask to talk to me. My father is itching to sue someone—I think it’s part of being a lawyer; he craves litigation. As long as that video stays hidden, and my name stays out of the newspaper, though, I should be able to avoid having nightly legal debriefs with him.

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