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    Clear Cut


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      Please visit our website, www.west44books.com.

      For a free color catalog of all our high-quality books, call toll free 1-800-542-2595 or fax 1-877-542-2596.

      Cataloging-in-Publication Data

      Names: Dodds, Melody.

      Title: Clear cut / Melody Dodds.

      Description: New York: West 44, 2020. | Series: West 44 YA verse

      Identifiers: ISBN 9781538385142 (pbk.) | ISBN 9781538385159 (library bound) | ISBN 9781538385166 (ebook)

      Subjects: LCSH: Children’s poetry, American. | Children’s poetry, English. | English poetry.

      Classification: LCC PS586.3 C543 2020 | DDC 811’.60809282--dc23

      First Edition

      Published in 2020 by

      Enslow Publishing LLC

      101 West 23rd Street, Suite #240

      New York, NY 10011

      Copyright © 2020 Enslow Publishing LLC

      Editor: Caitie McAneney

      Designer: Seth Hughes

      All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form without permission in writing from the publisher, except by a reviewer.

      Printed in the United States of America

      CPSIA compliance information: Batch #CW20W44: For further information contact Enslow Publishing LLC, New York, New York at 1-800-542-2595.

      AUTHOR’S NOTE

      Heather is a patchwork of people I’ve known who harmed themselves. I am one of those people.

      YOU ARE NOT ALONE.

      Our reasons were varied. None of us were suicidal.

      One person, a boy, told me that he cut himself to drive the suicidal thoughts away.

      I did it in order to feel something, because I’d been driven emotionally numb by the things going on in my life, and in my head.

      YOU ARE NOT ALONE.

      Others cut to stop feeling so much. So much pain, so much frustration, so much helplessness.

      Some did it because it made the pain they felt inside a real thing, an actual wound that they could tend to and help heal. Still others did it to regain control.

      There are as many reasons for self-harm as there are people who do it. And that’s a lot—the CDC estimates in 2018 put the numbers at one in four teenage females, and one in ten teenage males.

      YOU ARE NOT ALONE.

      People don’t typically cut because they are suicidal, but accidental suicides do happen. The emotional pain that leads to cutting can also lead to suicidal depression. If you are cutting yourself, you are overwhelmed. There is no shame in this.

      YOU ARE NOT ALONE.

      IF YOU OR SOMEONE YOU KNOW SELF-HARMS, PLEASE GET HELP.

      Crisis Text Line

      https://www.crisistextline.org/selfharm

      Text 741-741

      To Write Love on Her Arms

      https://twloha.com/

      S.A.F.E. Alternatives

      https://selfinjury.com/

      The Trevor Project (LGBTQ)

      https://www.thetrevorproject.org/trvr_support_center/self-injury/

      Befriender’s Worldwide

      Resources for people who self-harm and their friends.

      https://www.befrienders.org/help-and-support-with-self-harm

      https://www.befrienders.org/how-to-support-someone-who-self-harms

      This book is for all the kids who try hard to help each other… even if the advice is bad.

      Warning:

      This book contains scenes depicting self-harm.

      SICK

      They found Josie

      in the locked bathroom

      of a Bar Harbor café.

      She had cut herself.

      Her blood seeped

      under the door.

      I like to think

      that it couldn’t

      ever

      have been me.

      I would never be

      that careless,

      that sad,

      that sick.

      I like

      to think that.

      HEATHER WRIGHT–

      ALWAYS ALL RIGHT

      Through rain

      and snow

      and dark of night.

      And never-ending

      parent fights.

      It’s all good.

      It’s perfect.

      I’ve got

      Chairman Meow

      to purr

      and cuddle.

      I’ve got my best friend,

      Liv,

      to gossip

      and giggle.

      It’s fine.

      It’s terrific!

      My parents yell

      and I tell

      jokes about it.

      DID YOU HEAR THE

      ONE ABOUT…

      the lobster fisherman

      who spent

      all his money

      on his wife’s

      college degree?

      He was CRABBY

      about it,

      but at least

      they didn’t need to see

      a PRAWNbroker!

      And he did believe

      that education

      was SHR-IMPortant.

      So he agreed

      to going broke

      by SHELLING out money

      for everything

      all those years.

      But now,

      his wife says

      she thinks

      that the lobsterman

      doesn’t do enough

      and also

      that he may be having

      a SQUID-life crisis.

      HOW ABOUT THE ONE ABOUT…

      the bank teller

      who made

      all her own money.

      Now that she’s been working

      at the bank

      for a while,

      she’s LOST INTEREST.

      Not in banking,

      but in the lobsterman

      who put her

      through school.

      She treats the lobsterman

      like he’s a LOAN SHARK

      who wants to be paid back

      in folded laundry,

      emptied trash,

      and clean litter boxes.

      At work, she follows

      stock market crashes.

      At home, she crashes

      the dishes.

      The lobsterman thinks

      the banker is

      “too big

      for her britches.”

      STOP ME IF YOU’VE HEARD

      THIS ONE…

      about the parents

      who never

      stopped fighting?

      One day,

      the little girl asked,

      “How come

      you guys

      fight

      all

      the

      time?”

      “Oh,”

      they laughed,

      “we’re just practicing

      for when

      you’re

      a teenager.”

      I’m

      a teenager

      now.

      But they

      haven’t

      stopped

      fighting.

      And I’m just

      a one-girl

      stand-up show.

      ONE NIGHT HE’LL CRACK

      AND KILL HER.

      AND PROBABLY KILL ME.

      BEFORE DRIVING OFF

      INTO THE NIGHT

      WITH A BOX OF MATCHES

      AND A CAN OF KEROSENE.

      MAYBETONIGHT!

      These are things

      that I sometimes

      think think think.

      Can’t stop thinking.

      That’s when

      I need

      to leave.

      Can’t go

      out the front door

      like a normal person.

      They’ll suck me

      into their fight.
    />   Your daughter this,

      our daughter that.

      My bedroom window!

      It opens, but the screen won’t

      move, budge, get out of my way!

      What do I have

      that’s sharp?

      A fork!

      I stab the screen

      until there is a tear

      that I can fit through

      … almost.

      EXTREME PAIN

      shoots through

      my arm.

      Part of the screen

      rips me open

      from my armpit

      to my wrist.

      It BURNS.

      It BLEEDS.

      Just a thin line,

      like a paper cut.

      And it HURTS

      about that much, too.

      How can such

      a small cut

      HURT SO

      MUCH?!

      Except

      it kind of

      doesn’t.

      It kind of

      feels GOOD.

      EXTREME CALM

      That thin line

      of blood is

      weirdly calming.

      I feel like

      I’m watching

      myself

      watch my arm

      bleed.

      The heat

      of the wound spreads

      into my shoulder

      and my chest.

      My mind is clear

      of chatter-thoughts:

      run or die, die or run…

      Those are gone.

      There is just the pain

      pulsing with each beat

      of my heart,

      and a hush around me.

      I feel all right.

      For real for real.

      As alright

      as I pretend

      to be.

      EVEN OUTSIDE

      I can hear

      my parents

      YELLING!

      As I get to the end

      of the driveway,

      I hear

      my mom

      SMASH!

      another dish.

      You’d think

      Lobsterman-Dad

      would buy

      paper plates!

      So I

      head to

      Liv’s.

      LIV’S HOUSE

      is the brightest

      on the road.

      Her mom makes ceramics.

      All her little creatures

      decorate the lawn all year.

      Right now,

      with Thanksgiving

      in two days,

      there are three turkeys.

      Only right now,

      I can’t see

      the turkeys.

      Or the lawn.

      Because right now,

      parked in the driveway,

      is an SUV.

      White.

      Shiny in the moonlight.

      Not one I’ve seen before.

      So I’m not

      100 percent surprised

      when someone

      who is not Liv

      answers Liv’s door.

      COOPER

      Cooper Lessing

      is not a person

      I expect to see

      at Liv’s.

      I can’t even say

      he’s the last person I’d expect

      because I don’t expect him

      at all,

      for anything,

      ever.

      COOPER LIV

      wealthy middle class

      spoiled thankful

      senior freshman

      moved here born here

      hates Maine, loves Maine,

      especially especially

      the Mainland.

      Wants to leave

      definitely maybe

      for DC for NYC

      to make bank in politics. to work in theater.

      These columns

      don’t

      add

      up.

      BUT THERE HE IS

      in Liv’s doorway.

      “Can I help you?” he asks.

      Like he

      belongs here and I

      don’t.

      I can play this game, too.

      “Who are you?”

      “C’mon, Heather.

      You know.

      I’m the

      student body president.”

      “Oh, yeah.

      Connor?

      Cory?”

      “Cooper,” he says,

      and doesn’t think

      I’m funny.

      I try to

      shove past him,

      but he’s big

      and heavy

      and doesn’t move.

      I open my mouth to…

      scream?

      yell?

      shout for help?

      BUT THERE LIV IS

      “Heather!”

      She shoves him aside.

      For her, he moves.

      She gives me

      a hug, then gasps,

      backs away.

      “What happened

      to your arm?”

      I pretend

      I hadn’t

      noticed.

      “Whoa!

      I should probably

      do something

      about this.”

      “You know

      where the peroxide is.”

      And I do.

      I know

      her house

      like it’s

      my own.

      There are

      orange sodas

      in the fridge

      for me. (Liv doesn’t drink it.)

      There is

      Raisin Bran

      in the cupboard

      for me. (Liv doesn’t eat it.)

      Furrgus,

      her Maine Coon cat,

      sits in my lap,

      won’t sit in hers.

      I was more upset

      than Liv

      when her sister Paige

      left

      for Boston

      in August

      to start college.

      And yet…

      AND YET

      I hear Cooper

      through the bathroom door.

      “How do you slice open

      your whole arm

      and not notice?”

      I hear Liv:

      “It’s hardly a slice.

      It’s a scratch.

      A deep scratch.”

      The peroxide

      b b l s

      u b e

      but it doesn’t

      sting.

      The “deep scratch”

      still burns.

      Hums.

      It’s not

      soothing now.

      It just hurts.

      Like any

      other cut.

      AGAIN

      I hear Cooper:

      “It was her

      whole arm.

      How do you

      not notice?”

      “You don’t know Heather.

      She splits firewood.

      Runs trails.

      Does archery.

      She’s not wimpy.

      She’s got a CRAZY cat.

      She’s always

      scratched

      and

      bruised

      at least

      a little.”

      “You’re sure?

      She’s not one of those

      crazy girls

      who cut themselves

      to feel better,

      is she?”

      What

      is he talking about?

      TURNS OUT

      Liv

      doesn’t know

      either.

      She laughs.

      “I don’t know

      what you’re talking about.

      So I’m going to

      go ahead and say

      the answer is

      no.”

      “That’s good.

      Because

      if she is,

      you can’t

      hang out with her.”<
    br />
      WHAT DOES THAT MEAN?

      And what about it—

      his tone?

      how dad-like he sounded?

      the fact that he would say it at all?—

      makes me so angry

      that I’m shaking?

      The cut

      gives me an out:

      “This hurts a lot.

      I should probably

      go home.”

      Liv laughs.

      “And what?

      Have your dad

      look at it?”

      Because she knows

      my parents.

      Knows the fighting,

      the yelling,

      the here-is-money-

      go-get-dinner-from-Tideway.

      And she knows

      they won’t care

      about this cut.

      This deep scratch.

      Cooper

      doesn’t know

      any of that.

      And I don’t want him to.

      I shoot

      Liv a look

      that tells her this.

      She understands

      exactly

      what I’m saying

      without saying.

      To Cooper,

      she says:

      “Heather’s father

      hates the sight

      of blood.”

      I grin and wink

      at her,

      meaning, Nice save,

      then say,

      “Good thing

      he’s not a cop,

      like your dad.”

      Cooper makes

      exactly the face

      I was hoping for.

      So I know

      that he didn’t know that

      either.

      LIV’ SSISTER, PAIGE

      is coming up

      the driveway

      as I leave.

      She rushes at me

      and gives me

      an awkward hug

      around the pizza

      she’s carrying.

      “Heather!

      Where are you going?

      You can’t

      just leave

      already!

      It’s not because

      of this jerk,

      is it?”

      And she

      PUNCHES

      Cooper’s truck!

      My hero!

      “I cut myself,”

      I tell her.

      Which doesn’t really

      explain anything…

      She looks me

      right in the eyes.

      “Are you okay?”

      I force

      a laugh.

      “It’s only

      a scratch.”

      It’s not until

      later

      that I think maybe

      she didn’t mean

      my arm.

      IN SCHOOL ON MONDAY

      Liv asks me

      how my arm

      is doing.

      She knows better

      than to ask

      about my Thanksgiving.

      She knows

     

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