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    Saving Red

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      Red to crack up too.

      But when I look over at her,

      I see that she’s not laughing.

      She’s not even smiling.

      And she says,

      “Why were you standing

      so close to the edge of the cliff?”

      “I . . . I wasn’t standing that close,” I say.

      “Yes you were,” she says.

      “You were gonna jump.”

      “No I wasn’t,” I say.

      “I thought you were gonna jump.

      So I pretended I was going to—

      hoping you’d try to save me,

      just like Jimmy Stewart

      saved the angel.”

      Her eyes get wide when she hears this.

      “I wasn’t gonna jump either,” she says.

      “I was just pretending I was gonna jump

      to keep you from jumping!”

      And We’re Just Sort of Sitting Here

      Shaking our heads in disbelief

      at the weirdness of what just went down,

      when a thought suddenly strikes me:

      “Red—

      if you didn’t come here to jump,

      then why did you come?”

      She shrugs and says, “The Duke told me

      we were the ones who were lost

      and that Pixel was searching for us—

      here on the bluff.

      So I raced straight over,

      hoping he was right.”

      “Well,” I say, burying my face

      in Pixel’s infinite softness,

      “please tell him thanks for me!”

      And Just Then

      I hear some kids singing “Jingle Bells”

      at the top of their lungs.

      I glance up and see a family,

      walking along the path toward us—

      the four of them holding hands,

      with the boy and girl in the middle,

      their parents gazing down at them

      like they’re these two little miracles.

      My parents used to look

      at Noah and me that way . . .

      My parents . . .

      Oh my God!

      They don’t even know

      that Pixel’s okay!

      I pull out my phone and switch it on.

      But the warning message pops on again—

      telling me I’ve only got 15 percent

      left on my battery.

      I’ll have to

      tell them later.

      I Hold My Phone Out to Red

      “Let’s call your mom,” I say,

      “before my battery runs out.”

      Red’s face clouds over,

      and I can tell right away

      that The Duke and Lana

      are weighing in.

      “No thanks,” she says.

      “I changed my mind.

      I better not . . .

      I better not.”

      “But your mom and your little sisters

      must be so worried about you.

      And missing you awfully,

      this being Christmas and all.”

      Suddenly she’s glaring at me with ice-chip eyes.

      “How would you know?” she says.

      “How could you possibly know

      how they’re feeling today?”

      So I switch off my phone

      and tell her how.

      I Tell Her All About Noah

      About how when he returned

      from his tour of duty last October,

      it was as if his body had come home,

      but his mind was still stuck in Afghanistan.

      I mean, I’d be telling him some story

      about what had happened at school that day,

      and all of a sudden he’d start shouting

      and pointing at stuff I couldn’t even see.

      Or he’d be struggling

      to unscrew the lid from the jam jar

      and he’d get so pissed off

      he’d hurl it through the kitchen window.

      Or we’d be

      in the family room watching

      his favorite scene from Anchorman

      and he wouldn’t even crack a smile.

      My parents were flipping out.

      They took him to see a psychiatrist.

      She said he had PTSD—

      post-traumatic stress disorder.

      She prescribed medication for him

      and started seeing him twice a week.

      Which was when Pixel came to live with us.

      And having him around really did help Noah.

      But he’d still wake up screaming

      in the middle of the night.

      He’d still drop to the ground and cover his head

      with his arms whenever a door slammed.

      He’d still push his dinner around on his plate,

      the tears streaming down his cheeks,

      like he was listening to a really sad song

      that only he could hear.

      The Ice in Red’s Eyes Has Melted

      She asks me

      how my brother’s doing now.

      “That’s the thing,” I tell her.

      “I don’t know how he’s doing.”

      And then a torrent of words

      comes gushing out of me,

      like storm water

      crashing through a dam.

      And I’m telling her all about

      how the therapist told my parents

      that Noah shouldn’t be left alone,

      even for a minute.

      And about how after that,

      they decided to tag-team it.

      So that whenever one of them went out,

      the other one stayed home.

      My mom even closed down

      the art gallery she ran,

      so she could look after my brother

      while Dad was at his law firm.

      And then, before I can stop myself,

      I’m telling Red the rest of the story—

      the whole hideous story

      of what happened

      last New Year’s Eve.

      My Dad Doesn’t Really Like Alcohol

      And back then,

      my mom never smoked pot.

      She rarely even had a glass of wine.

      But by ten o’clock that night

      the two of them had already emptied

      an entire bottle of champagne.

      And then they decided they wanted to go

      to our neighbor’s New Year’s Eve party.

      Just two doors away.

      They asked me if I’d mind

      keeping an eye on Noah.

      And without thinking I said, “Sure.”

      Before they staggered off into the night,

      my father paused in the doorway

      and called back, “See you kids next year!”

      All of us laughed at this—

      like it was the funniest joke

      we ever heard.

      All of us

      except

      Noah.

      He just smiled faintly

      and then went back to pursuing

      his new favorite hobby—

      staring at the blank TV screen.

      The Truth Is

      I didn’t feel like

      keeping an eye

      on Noah.

      It weirded me out

      to see him sitting there

      like that,

      absentmindedly

      stroking Pixel’s head,

      staring at that blank TV.

      And I know

      it made no sense

      whatsoever,

      but I started to get this creepy feeling—

      like if I kept on sitting there

      in that room with him

      I’d start seeing

      whatever he was seeing

      on that blank TV.

      And I really

      didn’t want that

      to happen.

      I Just Wanted to Have Some Fun

      I was fed up with hav
    ing my whole life

      always be about my brother

      and his problems.

      I wanted to celebrate New Year’s Eve,

      just like every single other person

      on the entire planet.

      So when

      Rosa and Jasmine

      rang my doorbell a few minutes later

      and told me

      to put my shoes on

      because they were kidnapping me,

      taking me

      to Beachy Cream

      for a New Year’s Eve sundae,

      I felt like I was

      about to be released

      from prison.

      “But how are we going to get there?” I asked.

      “My uncle Marco’s driving us over,” Rosa said,

      pointing to the Mini Cooper waiting by the curb.

      I was halfway up the stairs

      to grab my glittery silver high-tops,

      when I remembered

      Noah.

      I Stopped in My Tracks

      And cursed under my breath.

      Then I trudged back downstairs,

      past Pixel and my zombie brother,

      to tell my friends I couldn’t go.

      They didn’t even ask why.

      They seemed to understand somehow.

      They exchanged a quick glance,

      and then Jasmine said,

      “But you have to come with us.

      We’re kidnapping you, remember?”

      And Rosa added, “Don’t worry, Mollywood.

      You’ll be home in fifteen minutes. We promise!”

      “Let me . . . Let me just check on something,”

      I said, still not sure what I should do.

      But when I ran back into the family room,

      I saw that Noah had fallen asleep.

      What was the point in my sitting there

      watching him snore?

      I mean, I’d be back in a flash.

      He’d sleep right through it!

      So I tiptoed away,

      closed the front door quietly behind me,

      and the three of us skipped down

      the front walk to the Mini Cooper.

      As we sped away,

      I shouted, “Happy New Year!”

      to no one in particular.

      And in that moment,

      I felt so alive . . .

      But

      Fifteen minutes later,

      I felt like I’d died.

      Because

      when I returned home

      and hurried up the front walk

      with a pint of fudge ripple for Noah,

      I heard Pixel

      barking his head off.

      And when I rushed inside

      to find out why,

      Noah wasn’t where I’d left him—

      sleeping on the couch in the family room.

      He wasn’t

      in the living room either.

      Or in his bedroom.

      Or the bathroom.

      Or the kitchen.

      Or the backyard.

      Noah wasn’t

      anywhere . . .

      Red Squeezes My Hand

      And asks me what happened next.

      I tell her that it’s all just an ugly dark blur.

      Though I do remember doing

      some serious praying—

      that eyes-squeezed-shut,

      hands-clasped-together kind of praying.

      I prayed to God

      and to good . . .

      But I can’t remember

      much else of what happened.

      Except that they searched

      the water around the pier.

      And they scoured the hiking trail

      at the top of Paseo Miramar.

      And they trolled the lake

      at the Self-Realization Center.

      All the places my brother used to go

      before he went to war.

      They searched

      for hours.

      For days.

      For weeks.

      Until

      they didn’t.

      Then Red Gathers Me into Her Arms

      And I hang on to her like

      I’ve fallen overboard

      and she’s my life raft,

      thinking if only

      I hadn’t gone out for ice cream

      last New Year’s Eve,

      if only

      I hadn’t let Noah out of my sight

      that night,

      if only

      I hadn’t been such

      a freaking self-centered idiot . . .

      “I hate myself,” I hiss.

      “I hate myself . . .

      I hate myself . . .”

      Suddenly Red Pulls Away from Me

      She grips me by my shoulders,

      her eyes blazing, and cries,

      “Holy Moly, will you please stop

      being so mean to my friend Holy Moly!”

      Then she tugs me up off the bench

      and starts dancing around me,

      punching the air like she’s battling

      a gang of invisible demons.

      “The other day,” she says, “you told me

      you were almost fifteen years old, right?”

      “Yeah . . . But what does that

      have to do with anything?”

      “Everything!” she cries,

      continuing to jab at the air.

      “Because that means you were

      only thirteen when all this happened—

      which was

      way too young

      to be stuck with that kind

      of responsibility.”

      Red starts whirling around like a dervish now,

      karate-chopping monsters only she can see.

      “Your parents should never

      have put you in that position,” she says.

      “You were just a kid.

      You’re still just a kid . . .”

      Then she stops and brushes my cheek

      with the tips of her fingers.

      I swallow hard, then manage to croak,

      “What are you . . . What are you saying?”

      “You know what I’m saying.

      And you know it’s true.”

      “That it’s . . . That it’s not my fault?”

      She folds her arms across her chest,

      then smiles at me and says,

      “Not one single bit of it.”

      Pixel Cocks His Head at Me

      But he doesn’t

      say anything.

      It’s not

      my fault . . .

      It’s not

      my fault . . . ?

      I want to believe Red.

      I really do . . .

      Is it

      possible . . . ?

      Is it

      possible

      she could actually

      be right?

      I Suck in a Breath

      And when

      I let it back out again,

      I can feel

      something,

      something like

      a steel plate

      splitting

      apart

      deep inside

      of me,

      splitting

      apart

      into

      a thousand pieces

      and

      dissolving . . .

      I Give Red a Giant Bear Hug

      The kind of hug Noah was famous for.

      Then I say, “So that’s how I know

      that your mom’s so worried about you.

      That’s how I know

      what she’s been going through

      every single day since you’ve been gone.

      That’s how I know

      that all she wants for Christmas

      is you.”

      I reach into my pocket

      and switch on my phone.

      It’s down to 10 percent!

      I offer it to Red.

      And for a few seconds, she just stares at it,

      with big, scared eyes—

      a
    s though

      it’s a grenade with its pin

      pulled out.

      Then she gives me a weak smile,

      and with trembling fingers

      she plucks the phone from my hand

      and punches in a number.

      I Can Tell By the Look on Her Face

      That someone

      has picked up on the other end.

      Her cheeks have gone

      pale as paste.

      She clutches her throat,

      then shoves the phone at me.

      “It’s my mom,” she whispers.

      “You talk to her.”

      So I do.

      But first I put the phone on speaker

      so Red can hear how she reacts

      when I tell her mother she’s okay.

      “Oh, thank God!” she cries.

      “Thank God Red’s all right!

      I’ve been so worried.

      Where is she? Can I talk to her?”

      Red shakes her head no,

      but her eyes

      are lit up brighter

      than Christmas lights.

      Pixel gives me a look like, “You did it, kiddo!”

      I’m so overcome, I can hardly speak.

      But somehow I manage to tell Red’s mom

      that she’s safe.

      That she’s in Santa Monica with me.

      That she’s doing pretty well,

      but that she misses her family.

      And that she’s ready to come home now.

      Ready to come home for the holidays.

      I Wish I Could Say

      That this phone call

      has a happy ending.

      That Red’s mom says

      she’ll hop into the car right now.

      That she’ll drive down from San Francisco

      and be here in five hours to pick her up.

      But real life

      isn’t a fairy tale.

      Real life isn’t

      an easily answered prayer.

      Real life

      is a hot mess.

      So What Red’s Mom Actually Says Is This:

      “Is she taking her medication?”

      Red hesitates, nibbling on her lower lip.

      Then she shakes her head no.

      When I tell Red’s mom this,

      she says she loves her daughter,

      loves her dearly.

      But that she still has two small kids at home

      and when Red’s not doing well

      she poses a threat to their safety.

      She tells me

      that right before Red ran away,

      she set fire to the living room curtains—

      a fire that might have burned

      the house down with the whole family in it,

     

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