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Authors: Nonye Acholonu,Kelechi Acholonu

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Chapter Twenty One

Cameron

I woke up in a cop car lying face down on sticky leather seats. My hands were painfully cuffed behind my back. I lifted my head carefully and looked around, not knowing why I was in a police car in the first place.

But then I remembered. I had blacked out during my kiss — oh, that wonderful kiss — with Olive. They must've called the police or something. But that doesn't explain the handcuffs. Or the reason why the cop in the passenger seat was yelling at me.

When I sat up, I came face-to-face with the angry cop. He peered at me through the metal wiring with a red face and angry eyes. “I could come back there and snap your neck, kid! I'm serious!” he barked at me, spit flying through the screen.

I shrunk back, wishing I could be at least two feet away instead of a measly one. “What are you talking about?” I asked, trying to get into a more comfortable position and obviously failing.

“Don't you smart talk me, you idiot. If I could arrest you, I would,” he roared. If the screen hadn't been separating the two of us I knew he would've been much more action than talk. “But you know what? I have to take you back to your pretty little mansion. Screw you!”

I decided not to say anything more. I mean, all that mattered was that I was going home. So what if I was handcuffed, so what if I was riding in a cop car, and so what if this cop was mad at me? Once I got home, I could figure things out a little more.

The cop in the driver's seat hung a left and drove up my familiar street. I sat, avoiding the angry glare of the cop, trying to somewhat disappear into the leather. Despite all of my efforts, the cop wasn't done with me.

“Oh, so
now
you wanna shut up?” he said with a condescending tone. “A minute ago you were about ready to gouge my eyes out. Pretty little boy all talk? Is that what it is?” His grin was enough to feed into the stereotype of “Bad Cop".

Thankfully, we arrived at my house. The cop in the driver's seat leapt out of the car and yanked my door open. As he pulled me from the car, the Bad Cop stuck his foot out, causing me to fall flat on my face. I let out a moan of pain.

“Get up!” Bad Cop said, tugging me up by the back of my collar. I jumped to my feet and struggled to keep pace with them.

When they reached my front door, Dad opened it before they even had the chance to ring the doorbell. Dad's face showed caution and confusion. He peered at me, staring deeply into my eyes.

“Cameron?” he asked, sounding unsure of himself.

I nodded, not understanding why he had to question that.

Dad nodded firmly and then glanced at the cops. “Thank you, officers,” Dad said gruffly. Judging by the sound of his voice, I knew he hadn't slept much last night.

The officers nodded and gave him the run through; they found Dad's car at a local club, saw me getting into it, and immediately arrested me. Because I was Dad's son, I was brought back home.

When the officers un-handcuffed me and left — after Bad Cop tripped me again — Dad shut the door and grabbed my arm. “Cameron? Cameron, are you okay?” he asked, his heavy eyelids furrowing.

I rubbed my wrists and stretched out my aching neck. “I guess so,” I said. Then I looked at him. “What happened, Dad? Why was I arrested?”

Dad rubbed his eyes and sighed, exhaustion flooding around the room. “Come into the living room, Cameron. I have to talk to you.” He wrapped his arm around my shoulders and led me to the living room. There, he set me onto the couch and asked Mila to bring me something to drink. When I looked at the time, I saw that it was a little after seven in the morning.

Clenching his hands together, Dad sat across from me and gave me a hard stare. “Cameron, I know what's wrong with you,” he said with a tone similar to the one telling me that his wife — my adoptive mother — had died.

I immediately tensed up. Something was horribly wrong and Dad was about to tell me. I never reacted well to bad news and judging on the situation, I knew bad news was seconds away. “What's wrong with me?” I asked, knowing right off the bat that this had to do with my blackout problem.

“You're schizophrenic.” Dad said it with a wince as if it had hurt him.

My face immediately cracked. “What?” I asked, not comprehending what he'd just said. There was no way I was schizophrenic. I couldn't be schizophrenic!

But Dad just nodded slowly, not a hint of hesitation in his expression. “While you weren't yourself, Cameron, you'd stolen my car and gone off somewhere,” Dad explained. “Your friends were here — Armando and his girlfriend and Olive and that stunning blonde. We'd seen you take off and were completely confused. That's when Armando told us his suspicions.”

Armando? How could Armando think I was a schizo? He'd never even been around when I was blacked out! But how should I know that? If I weren't myself, then who's to say he hasn't been hanging around with me the whole time?

Dad continued. “He told us how pleasant you are as Cameron. Then he told us how nasty and rude you were as Cam.”

“Cam? What do you mean?” I asked, trying to understand it all.

Dad frowned. “You see, you're schizophrenic, Cameron. Being schizophrenic, you…” Dad struggled to find the words. “…I guess you have a split personality. From what I've researched online, it's a mental illness that alters your behavior.” He stood up and joined me on the couch, handing me his research. He pointed at one of the bullets. “I think you're mostly catatonic,” he said.

I read the paper, struggling to take this all in. According to the research, those who suffer from catatonic schizophrenia display symptoms of agitation, negative feelings, insensitivity, and hyperactive motion. Last time I checked, I barely fit into this category of schizophrenia. Not even a little bit.

As if hearing my thought process, Dad took the papers away and said, “Okay, so you might not suffer all of these symptoms. But, Cameron, you're a completely different person come nighttime.” Dad squeezed my shoulder. “At night, you hate me and Mila, you boss everyone around, you sneak out of the house, you make a mess out of things, you call us names, you break important things, you trip me multiple times…”

As Dad told me all of the horrible things I do at night, an increased understanding of what was going on with me began to sink in. Everything all made sense now. Like the time when Olive said she'd seen me jump out of my window — that had been me, or should I say
Cam
. Or when Dad yelled at me for interrupting his photo shoot — that had been Cam, too. It also made sense why everyone called me Cam regularly.

And what about all those times when my room was messed up, my clothes were dirty, and I woke up in random places. It was all because it wasn't me — technically.

It was
Cam
.

“…you called Mila fat, you killed both our dogs, you spat at the neighbors twice, you totaled my car, you took a hammer to the flat screen TV, you peed in my coffee, you kidnapped Olive, and you disrespected Abby,” Dad finally finished. “You're
horrible
at night, Cameron.”

“Wait,
I
did all that?” I asked, still horrified by my peeing in my father's coffee and killing both our dogs. All this time Mila had told me that they'd run away.

When I told this to Dad, he nodded his head expectantly. “Yeah, Mila knew you were schizophrenic since we got you so she took her anger out on
Cam
and not on
Cameron
. Do you get it?”

Not really. I mean, my father and Mila had been treating me entirely different during the night? How was it possible that they could separate the events of the night with those that took place during the day and not even hint to me about them? And how come they're just realizing all of this now?

As if reading my mind, Dad slid back into his chair, rubbing his forehead. “I'm such a crappy father,” he groaned, shaking his head and looking up to the ceiling. He looked as if he were going to cry. “I never even thought twice about getting you checked out. I just thought this was how all teenagers acted. I should've realized all of this when you kept insisting I call you Cam. Or how your eyes go all funky and your hair gets lighter. Or that mischievous expression you get during the night.” Dad blew out a loud sigh. “Why hadn't I realized all of this?”

“Because you're too busy with your work, Mr. Sloane.” I hadn't even realized that Mila was standing there, holding a few glasses of orange juice. She set the cups on the table and took a seat on my other side. “Cameron goes to school in the morning and you work during the night. You can rarely see how he acts. There are moments when you do encounter him but you're too busy to notice.”

Dad nodded his head in solemn agreement. We all just kind of sat there staring at the floor, taking all of this in.
I
personally was freaking out. All this time I thought I'd been passing out for twelve hours just to wake up at the same time every day. I had no idea that I was an entirely different person during the night.

How was I supposed to explain this to Olive now? She'd known that I always went to sleep around seven and never hung out at night. Now, thanks to Armando's bright idea about me being schizophrenic, she probably thinks I'm the biggest freak. She'd
never
want to stay with me.

We were back to square one.

Part Two
Chapter Twenty Two

Cameron

I didn't have to go to school today for obvious reasons. Instead, I had to sit at home with Dad as we researched ways to fix my schizophrenic problem.

“I still think we should be taking him to the doctor, Mila,” Dad said, staring blankly at his computer screen. He scrolled through what seemed like the millionth article on schizophrenia.

Mila just shook her head, her hair flapping around her face. “No, no, no,” she insisted. “We can fix this at home. See, look at all the links.” She pointed a bony finger at the screen.

“First off, Mila,” Dad said, running a hand through his thick hair, “it's
the Internet
. Millions of links will show up regardless of what you type in. Secondly, I'm pretty sure schizophrenia — a disease that's been affecting Cameron all his life — is pretty dangerous. What are we — a modeling agent, a maid, and a kid — supposed to know about curing it? Get real, Mila.”

Mila just smacked his arm and rolled her eyes. “I just know we don't have to get others involved.” She leaned down and took the mouse away from Dad. She clicked into the input box and typed in SCHIZOPHRENIA TREATMENT. “Just—let's just see how we can get rid of him.”


Get rid of him
?” I asked, swiveling around in my chair and staring at her in shock. “Get rid of me?”

Mila stepped back, her eyes widening as though she'd been caught with her hand in the cookie jar. “No, no,” she stammered. “I mean, get rid of Cam — you know, cure your disease. Get rid of
schizophrenia
. That's what I mean. Not get rid of
you
. No!”

“Chill, Mila,” Dad said, taking back the mouse and clicking on another link. He scrolled down, skimming the words. “No need to freak out.”

I stared at the screen with him, bored out of my mind. It'd already been three hours and we hadn't even figured out what to do yet. After reading millions of books and doing a ton of “mind strengthening” exercises, we'd only ended up with pretty much nothing but sour moods and headaches. Even when we were remotely close to figuring out what to do, Mila would always shut the plan down. I was surprised that Dad seemed to go along with everything she said.

Now we had to resort to going through every link online. Oh, joy.

As we stared at another site, Dad yawned and pointed at the screen. “I could get you medicine,” he suggested. “It says it could cure you.”

I picked up my glasses and slid them on over my nose. Staring at the screen, I read about how it could help, hope filling into my mind. According to this website, the medicine could help me feel better in weeks and I'd only have to take the pill once a day. That sounded like a sure-fire plan.

But Mila disagreed, of course.

“It's a prescription,” she said flatly as she clicked away from the site. “And besides, that won't fix your blackout problem, the fact that your eyes change colors, and give us reasons as to why your hair gets lighter. Moving on.”

I didn't want to move on. Frankly, I didn't care enough to. Without a doctor and a proper diagnosis, there was no curing this disease. I was going to be stuck blacking out and waking up a different person for the rest of my life.

“I'm gonna take a nap, guys,” I said, shrugging out of the seat and standing up. “Tell me if you find out anything.” Mila and Dad nodded their heads, their eyes glued to the computer screen. I watched them and smiled. They were trying everything they could to help me out. “Thanks for everything guys; I really appreciate this,” I said as I left Dad's office.

“We'll fix you, Cameron, don't worry,” I heard Dad say as I left.

****

Soft knocking at my door caused my eyes to peel open. I stared blankly, wondering if I should answer. Deciding that I should — it was probably Dad checking up on me — I rolled out of bed and walked to the door.

“Dad?” I asked, as I pulled open the door.

“Hardly,” Olive said with a smile. “It's just lil' ol' me.”

“Olive,” I said — well
sighed
would be a better word for it. She had no clue how happy I was to see her standing there in my bedroom doorway. Olive was wearing a yellow tank top and white jeans. Her thick, dark hair was pulled into a loose ponytail and her hands twiddled by her sides. She was just so beautiful.

Before I could realize that I was staring, Olive said, “Can I come in?”

“Right, yeah, sure,” I said, pulling my door open wider. As she walked in, I realized that I should probably tell Dad about her, you know, just in case anything was to happen. I stepped out into the hallway and called, “Dad, Olive's hanging out with me upstairs.”

Dad's voice rose up a second later. “Alright. We won't disturb you.”

After thanking him, I walked back into my room where Olive was spread out on my couch. Looking around, I thanked the Lord that everything was clean and nicely put together. Even my bed was slightly made. But then came the problem with the door. Should I leave it open so that anyone who walked by could possibly see the two of us doing who-knows-what? Or should I close it implying that Olive and I
were
going to do you-know-what?

It was a hard decision, but thankfully I didn't have to make it.

“Let's go to your back yard,” Olive suggested, sitting up on my couch. “I love your patio.”

So it was settled. The two of us headed downstairs and sat outside on my incredible — and outstandingly expensive — patio, sipping on the lemonade that Mila so kindly provided.

“You weren't in school today,” Olive said from across the table. “Is everything okay?”

I stared at her, not knowing which information I should release. “Well,” I said, choosing my words carefully, “Something came up and we just had to check it out.” That sounded like a perfectly legitimate truth (sans the
real
truth, but whatever).

Olive nodded her head, sipping on her lemonade with her full, pink lips. I tried not to stare but I really couldn't help it. Remembering how my lips were on those just last night made my stomach do a back flip.

“How are you taking the news?” she asked finally.

So she knew. Great.

“Um,” I said, rubbing my chin helplessly, “I guess I just kind of…” How
am
I taking the news? So far I've just been on autopilot this whole time. But have I really even thought about what was happening to me? What has
been
happening to me all my life? “I just… well, I have to deal with it, you know?”

Olive nodded, staring at me with concern in her huge brown eyes. “That sounds like a good idea,” she said, pushing away her empty cup of lemonade. “Just as long as you don't let it consume your life.”

“Yeah,” I said, her words ringing over and over in my head.

BOOK: 6:59
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