The Beginning of Everything(70)
“Why would I make something like that up?” Cassidy demanded, avoiding the question.
“Did you?” I pressed.
“What does it matter, Ezra? We broke up. Not all nice things have happy endings.”
“I’m just trying to figure out what I did to make you act like this. Seriously, Cassidy, what tragedy occurred that made you wish we’d never met?”
Cassidy stared at the carpet. Tucked her hair behind her ears. Smiled sadly.
“Life is the tragedy,” she said bitterly. “You know how they categorize Shakespeare’s plays, right? If it ends with a wedding, it’s a comedy. And if it ends with a funeral, it’s a tragedy. So we’re all living tragedies, because we all end the same way, and it isn’t with a goddamned wedding.”
“Well, thanks for that. That clears everything up nicely. We’re all prisoners. Wait no—we’re living tragedies, just passing time till our funerals.”
Cassidy scowled at this, but I didn’t care. I was furious with her for being there, for being miserable, for refusing to explain.
“No one’s dead, Cassidy,” I said harshly. “I can’t decide whether you’re just crazy, or a liar, or someone who likes hurting people. You’re all riddles and quotes and you can’t give me a straight answer about anything and I’m tired of waiting for you to realize that you owe me one.”
I hadn’t meant to go off like that, and I wasn’t exactly using my indoor voice when I said any of those things. Cassidy studied the carpet for a long moment, and when she glanced up at me, a tropical storm was churning in her eyes. Two tears slid down her cheeks.
“I don’t owe you anything,” Cassidy sobbed, “and you’re right, I do wish we’d never met.”
She rushed past me, taking the stairs, where she knew I couldn’t follow.
“Yeah, well, so do I!” I called after her, not meaning it but not caring.
The door to the stairwell banged shut in response.
I took a deep breath, and ran a hand through my hair, and kept my shit together long enough to go back into that doctor’s office and calmly tell the receptionurse that it was probably best if I rescheduled.
30
THERE’D BEEN ANOTHER sighting on the hiking trail behind Meadowbridge Park, and the coyotes were all my parents talked about, eclipsing even the subject of whether or not they should return the new light fixture in the downstairs guest bathroom, which had arrived with a slight imperfection in the glass.
Even my friends made jokes about it, with Phoebe in particular relishing how, and I quote, “deeply ironic it is that our school mascot, a supposed emblem of pride, has become emblematic of our collective fear.”
Some of the tennis guys at my old lunch table had taken to making fake wolf howls, and Connor MacLeary landed himself two days of in-school suspension for it, which we all found hilarious, because the school was literally forcing him to skip class.
There was a debate tournament that weekend up in Santa Barbara, and of course I wasn’t going. Sign-ups had been weeks ago, back when we were all still obsessed with the homecoming dance, and Cassidy hadn’t wanted to. I hadn’t pressed her on it, since I figured we’d probably spend the weekend together. But one interesting thing Toby told me was that the Barrows School was on the tournament list. I assumed Cassidy had known that back when she’d suggested we both sit this one out, that the way she avoided certain things was another part of this maddening mystery.
Toby went all out, wearing his suit to school on Friday, swaggering through the quad with this purple pocket square and peacock-printed tie, and even Luke and Sam joined us sheepishly at lunch, sporting matching American flag pins in their lapels. It felt wrong, the six of us, like we were two groups that had never been a cohesive whole. And it was strange, thinking that Cassidy had been the glue connecting us.
“Still here, Faulkner?” Luke sneered.
“Still doing that terrible impression of Draco Malfoy?” I asked.
Everyone at the table cracked up, and even Sam was trying not to laugh. Luke muttered something under his breath, dragging Sam off to the breakfast line.
“It’s sort of sad, when you think about it,” Austin mused.
“What is?” I asked, figuring he was probably talking about some video game.
“How no one ever invites Luke to anything because his brother’s a cop. Man, he takes it so personally.”
“Whoa. Please be a human being more often,” Phoebe begged.
“What’s the point? I’m never going to make the leader boards.” Austin shrugged philosophically, retrieved his phone from the pocket of his suit jacket, and returned to his game.
“So Faulkner,” Toby said. “Anything specific you want me to ask the Barrows School when I see them at the tournament?”
“I guess about last year?” I suggested. “About what happened?”
“Well, it’s your call.” Toby put on his sunglasses and leaned back to catch the sun. “You know her better than anyone.”
I didn’t have the heart to tell him I was starting to think I didn’t know her at all. And that maybe whatever Toby found out wouldn’t help anything. Because the thing was, after what had happened at the medical center, I wasn’t sure if we were worth fixing. And I didn’t know what answers would make me know whether I even wanted to try.