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    Ghosting


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      ADVANCE PRAISE FOR

      GHOSTING BY EDITH PATTOU

      Seven teens, a gun, and a harmless prank turned tragedy. We see these young faces illuminated by their cell phones and hear their voices calling out from the darkness in a book that is ultimately both horrifying and healing. Edith Pattou writes with a poet’s ear attuned to the rhythm of the teenage heart. A stunning achievement.

      —DEBBY DAHL EDWARDSON,

      author of the National Book Award finalist My Name Is Not Easy

      I flew through Ghosting in one sitting. It is in a word, “unputdownable.” Nonstop action, tension and suspense fill the first half of the book; heartfelt emotion, regret, and healing fill the second. Reader, power down all your devices and find a comfortable chair because once you start reading Ghosting, you won’t be able to stop!

      —LESLÉA NEWMAN,

      author of October Morning: A Song for Matthew Shepard

      Filled with authentic detail and believable teenage voices, Ghosting is a gripping account of an all-too-plausible tragedy in a country where there are more guns than people. Pattou’s keen eye for character and ear for convincing dialogue will make this an important and accessible lesson about redemption and forgiveness for young adult readers.

      —TODD STRASSER,

      author of Fallout

      Ghosting is timely and compelling, filled with complex and interesting characters. It will hold you in your seat from the first line to the last.

      —MARION DANE BAUER,

      author of the Newbery Honor Book On My Honor

      This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, organizations, places, events, and incidents are either products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously.

      Text copyright © 2014 Edith Pattou

      All rights reserved

      No part of this book may be reproduced, or stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without express written permission of the publisher.

      Published by Skyscape, New York

      www.apub.com

      Amazon, the Amazon logo, and Skyscape are trademarks of Amazon.com, Inc., or its affiliates.

      ISBN-13: 9781477847749 (hardcover)

      ISBN-10: 147784774X (hardcover)

      ISBN-13: 9781477847893 (paperback)

      ISBN-10: 1477847898 (paperback)

      Grateful acknowledgement is made to Farrar, Straus and Giroux for permission to quote from JOEY PIGZA LOSES CONTROL © 2000 by Jack Gantos. Reprinted by permission of Farrar, Straus and Giroux Books for Young Readers. All rights reserved.

      Book design by Abby Kuperstock

      Cover design by Greg Stadnyk

      Library of Congress Control Number: 2014933207

      To Robert, who played Mouse Trap with me and who I will miss forever, and to Charles and Vita, as always.

      Contents

      Start Reading

      MAXIE

      BEFORE

      FAITH

      MAXIE

      ANIL

      EMMA

      CHLOE

      MAXIE

      ANIL

      MAXIE

      FELIX

      BRENDAN

      CHLOE

      FAITH

      WALTER

      POLICE CHIEF AUBREY DELAFIELD

      MAXIE

      EMMA

      BRENDAN

      ANIL

      CHLOE

      FELIX

      EMMA

      MAXIE

      FAITH

      BRENDAN

      ANIL

      FAITH

      POLICE CHIEF AUBREY DELAFIELD

      MAXIE

      ANIL

      FELIX

      MAXIE

      FELIX

      MAXIE

      ANIL

      MAXIE

      CHLOE

      FAITH

      MAXIE

      BRENDAN

      MAXIE

      ANIL

      FAITH

      ANIL

      MAXIE

      EMMA

      FAITH

      MAXIE

      WALTER

      EMMA

      FELIX

      EMMA

      ANIL

      MAXIE

      FAITH

      WALTER

      FELIX

      BRENDAN

      MAXIE

      EMMA

      MAXIE

      FAITH

      MAXIE

      ANIL

      MAXIE

      EMMA

      BRENDAN

      MAXIE

      AFTER

      POLICE CHIEF AUBREY DELAFIELD

      MAXIE

      CHLOE

      WALTER

      POLICE CHIEF AUBREY DELAFIELD

      ANIL

      MAXIE

      ANIL

      MAXIE

      FAITH

      POLICE CHIEF AUBREY DELAFIELD

      MAXIE

      ANIL

      MAXIE

      POLICE CHIEF AUBREY DELAFIELD

      ANIL

      POLICE CHIEF AUBREY DELAFIELD

      EMMA

      MAXIE

      POLICE CHIEF AUBREY DELAFIELD

      MAXIE

      ANIL

      EMMA

      MAXIE

      FAITH

      MAXIE

      CHLOE

      FAITH

      ANIL

      CHLOE

      MAXIE

      ANIL

      CHLOE

      POLICE CHIEF AUBREY DELAFIELD

      CHLOE

      ANIL

      MAXIE

      CHLOE

      MAXIE

      ANIL

      MAXIE

      ANIL

      MAXIE

      CHLOE

      MAXIE

      BRENDAN

      EMMA

      BRENDAN

      FAITH

      EMMA

      FAITH

      BRENDAN

      MAXIE

      EMMA

      MAXIE

      FELIX

      MAXIE

      FELIX

      CHLOE

      FAITH

      EMMA

      FELIX

      MAXIE

      EMMA

      CHLOE

      BRENDAN

      MAXIE

      BRENDAN

      CHLOE

      BRENDAN

      MAXIE

      BRENDAN

      MAXIE

      ANIL

      POLICE CHIEF AUBREY DELAFIELD

      WALTER

      EMMA

      EMMA

      WALTER SMITH

      MAXIE

      ANIL

      EMMA

      MAXIE

      Acknowledgments

      About the Author

      White bird,

      crisply folded,

      wings its way

      into Spring.

      E. P.

      MAXIE

      When I was a little girl

      ghosting was

      a sheet of paper and

      a drawing in

      black ink.

      A crudely sketched ghost,

      with a Tootsie Roll

      taped on.

      Not scary.

      A fun Halloween prank.

      You slipped it under a

      neighbor’s door,

      ran away,

      giggling.

      “You’ve been ghosted!”

      Exciting.

      Harmless.

      But now

      ghosting is:

      this can’t be happening,

      screams like knives in your ears,

      pooling glistening blood.

      Everywhere.

      And death, bellowing

      hot and loud

      in

      your

      face.

      BEFORE

      Sunday, August 22

      FAITH

      At the

      kitchen table,

      eating cereal.
    />
      Puffins,

      my favorite,

      pillowy

      with a soft

      milky

      crunch.

      The sun

      glares

      through

      the window,

      reflecting off

      the stainless-

      steel dishwasher.

      Even though

      my bare feet

      are cold

      from the

      air-conditioning,

      I can tell it’s

      hot outside

      already.

      Mom is

      at the sink,

      rinsing bottles

      for recycling.

      Polly, our

      big black dog

      who needs

      a haircut,

      lies under

      the table,

      drowsing.

      I stick my toes

      under her belly

      to warm them.

      Peaceful.

      Then

      Emma bursts in,

      noisy

      and rushed

      like always.

      Have you seen a hair band? I need a hair band, right now!

      Everything is

      “right now”

      for Emma.

      I’m so freaking late! she says.

      Polly bounds

      up from

      under

      the table,

      tail wagging

      a hundred miles

      an hour,

      panting.

      Mom’s back

      tightens.

      Emma, you were late last night. Past your curfew . . . , she says.

      Not now, Mom.

      Emma’s

      voice is

      sharp.

      Coach is going to kill me.

      She grabs

      a protein bar,

      her water bottle,

      and she’s gone

      with a flash of

      dark-red ponytail.

      Polly circles

      the table

      a few times,

      then settles back

      underneath,

      at my feet,

      with a gentle

      disappointed

      sigh.

      Mom turns

      on the

      faucet again,

      picks up a

      Gatorade bottle,

      only now

      her shoulders

      are slumped,

      tired-looking.

      Is Emma going to be grounded? I ask.

      Your dad and I are going to talk to her.

      Which means

      no.

      Dad is soft

      on Emma;

      well, we all are,

      because we love her

      so much,

      but especially

      Dad.

      Mom worries

      about it.

      I’ve heard

      them argue.

      I spoon

      a Puffin

      into my

      mouth.

      The crunch

      is gone.

      Polly sighs

      against

      my feet.

      I swallow

      the soggy

      Puffin, past

      the lump

      in my

      throat.

      MAXIE

      It wasn’t hot like this

      in Colorado,

      even though

      we were a mile closer

      to the sun.

      I forgot about Midwest heat,

      like a steamy-wet-hot washcloth

      pressed against your mouth and nose.

      And the air conditioner

      is busted.

      Maxine, Mom says (she’s the only person who calls me that), I’m going stark raving crazy in this heat.

      The making-mom-crazy list is long,

      and number one,

      at the tip-top of the list is:

      my dad.

      His chewing too loud.

      His interrupting when she’s on the phone.

      His beer drinking.

      I could go on.

      But most crazy-making of all,

      the fact that

      he dragged us out to Colorado

      for four years

      for this fabulous job opportunity

      that turned out to be a bust.

      A big bust.

      So here we are,

      back in the house where I grew up,

      the house that

      was never sold

      for four years,

      which also drove my mom nuts.

      Of course now it’s a nightmare turned

      blessing in disguise.

      My mom is little-miss-busy,

      getting the house fixed up,

      enrolling in nursing classes

      to update her skills.

      Someone’s got to have a steady income, she says.

      And she says it with all kinds of

      righteousness.

      Not meaning to hurt,

      but wounding just the same.

      My dad is still recognizable as my dad,

      just a flat, joyless version.

      Like a light has

      gone out.

      Except when he’s drinking his beers.

      Then he gets jolly and sweet,

      which almost

      makes me

      look forward

      to that pop-squelch

      of the flip-top on

      the Miller can.

      Almost.

      Wednesday, August 25

      ANIL

      1. Wednesday morning, 7:30 a.m.:

      I am alone in the house,

      eating leftover lentils and rice,

      heated in the microwave.

      I stand over the sink,

      looking out the window at the back lawn,

      perfectly mowed and trimmed

      by my father last night before dinner.

      2. Father:

      Dr. Sanjeev Sayanantham,

      who left for Highland Park Hospital

      at five this morning,

      who was named

      by U.S. News & World Report

      as one of the top ten best hand surgeons

      in the country.

      Dr. Sayanantham,

      famous not only for his skill in the operating room,

      but also for his charisma,

      not stiff like a lot of Indian physicians.

      And you’d never know he was born in Calcutta

      the way he’s smoothed out his accent.

      3. Mother:

      Dr. Rahel Sayanantham,

      who also left early this morning

      for her thriving practice as a pediatrician.

      This Dr. Sayanantham does have a wisp of an accent,

      even though she is only half Indian.

      Her father was a handsome white dentist

      who married Grandmother Rumma

      against the wishes of her family.

      Mom lived in Mumbai until she came

      to the US for medical school,

      where she met my dad.

      According to family lore

      he was swept away

      from the very moment he saw her:

      black-eyed, black-haired beauty

      with a gentle voice.

      Small, too, like a strong gust of wind

      could blow her away.

      4. Brother:

      Viraj Sayanantham

      born when my mother

      was doing her residency at the University of Michigan.

      Viraj hasn’t lived at home for six years

      and is himself a Neurology resident

      at Mass General, in Boston.

      Viraj is the golden son

      who prefers Christmas to Diwali,

      cheeseburgers to lentils and rice.

     

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