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Authors: Holly Cupala

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BOOK: Don't Breathe a Word
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Chapter 12

After his victory at the Safeway, Stench paraded around the streets with my backpack and gloated over his prizes. He'd taken most of my money and supplies and could probably make a killing with my drugs, if he didn't decide to use them himself. I was down to one inhaler, and I had to make it last.

That meant I had to manage breathing on my own. Outside of Chop Suey with Asher was the first time I'd had to do that in a long time. Normally I had three inhalers with me, and everyone else had extras. An asthma attack out here could be fatal.

What doesn't destroy me makes me stronger,
Asher would say. I was stronger now than I had ever been. Besides, my backpack was one of the last things connecting me with my former life. Without it, I felt weightless. In a way, Stench had set me free.

When Stench went AWOL for a few days, it gave me a little breathing room. I hoped he used my cash to catch a bus out of town or drink himself to death under a bridge—good riddance. But I still had to figure out what to do next. I needed money. I needed meds. I needed a more permanent place to sleep. The garden shed worked for now, but any day I could get caught. My time was quickly running out.

The homeless boy—I'd seen him twice now. Didn't that mean something?

Neeta would think so.
If you see someone more than once, you are meant to cross paths.
That's what she said about our friendship. She'd moved to Issaquah with her parents when we were eight years old. We saw each other two times in that stretch of woods between our neighborhoods and had been friends ever since.

She kept calling me after the Chop Suey incident, and I avoided every call. “Why did you leave without telling me?” she demanded in the earlier messages. And then, when I didn't answer, the tone shifted. “What's going on, Joy? Why don't you call me back?”

I wanted to tell her, but there was nothing she could do—nothing I could do, short of running away, and that would mean leaving my family to take the fall. He might follow through on the threat against my dad's job. And what else? I remembered the bottle he hurled at the wall, the thousands of glass slivers.

They were just words now, and I could handle those.
Besides,
I thought,
it was only some of the time
. Telling Neeta would only make things worse.

When she finally reached me a few weeks after Chop Suey, she didn't ask any of the questions I knew were crowding each other to be heard. Instead, she said, “Let's go on a trip. No Asher, no Ellerie, no Ari. Just you and me.”

I hesitated. We'd barely spoken for the last year, didn't even know each other anymore. Being trapped in a car for hours could make a person say things they didn't want to say.

“Come on,” she urged. “We could go somewhere, anywhere you want. Maybe up to Bellingham to see Jesse.”

My breath stopped in my throat.

Neeta couldn't help, but maybe Jesse could.

That one desperate thought took me all the way to Western with her, two hours in the car. I'd left without telling Asher, so I knew he would be furious. It didn't matter, though, because Jesse could help me. And then all of the secrets I'd been keeping for the last year could come out. He was always the responsible one—he'd know what to do about Dad and Valen Ventures. He'd tell me what to do about Asher. Maybe he'd even let me come stay with him for a while.

But that's not what happened. When Neeta and I showed up at the old house he shared with a bunch of other students, he almost slammed the door in my face.

“What are you doing here?”

It was nearly dark, and Asher would be getting out of the lab right about now. He'd call me soon, calling for his
little bird
, and I wouldn't be there. There would be consequences, I knew.

Just seeing me on his doorstep was enough to set Jesse off. “I have school, I have a job, I have a life!” he shouted, as if Neeta wasn't even there. “Get a
life
, Joy. I'm not responsible for you anymore.”

Neeta and I didn't say much on the way home, only the bare essentials. Did I want to stop at Dairy Queen or Taco Time? It didn't matter. I couldn't eat. But I could pretend to sleep.

“You're different, Joy,” Neeta said softly.

When we were younger, we'd gather a group of girls and lift each other one by one with our fingertips, chanting,
light as a feather, free as a bird. Light as a feather, free as a bird
.

We'd actually convinced ourselves that we could fly, until the one time I'd had an asthma attack midflight and everyone dropped me in shock—all except Neeta, who was still holding my hand.

I was falling now, and she was reaching out. But it was already too late.

After dark, I headed back to my garden shed. Home, sweet home. As long as I arrived at night and left before dawn, I might be able to get a few more days out of it.

My Vans scraped along the sidewalk in a quieter part of Capitol Hill, and I tried not to think about what was happening at home. A flap of rubber came loose, reminding me I'd need better shoes soon. I stopped to tug at the rubber, and a rock skittered behind me.

Suddenly, I was on high alert.

An oddly bulky figure was following a block or so back, his face dark in the shadows.

I picked up the pace and considered alternate routes. Broadway was a few blocks away, and my garden shed seemed like it was ten. He matched me step for step.

I was almost to Twelfth. I could head off to the right and see if I really was being followed, then maybe I could double back. Mohawk would be all too willing to protect me. How could I have been so stupid, to think the guitar boy would?

The man behind me turned the corner at Twelfth, matching my speed. I couldn't make him out in the pool of darkness, but a whiff of him sent me back to the struggle outside Safeway. The smell ignited my adrenaline.

Stench.

My pounding heart would set off a chain reaction. I had to slow down.
One. Two. Three
.

The park was up ahead and off to the right—I could run through the field, past the fountain, and maybe make it back to Broadway. I didn't actually know where Mohawk went at night, but I did know he'd added another girl to his harem.

What he extracted for his protection, I could only guess . . . but it had to be as bad or worse than what Stench had in mind. I shuddered at the thought.

The park was slippery under my Vans, the dampness soaking first into the canvas and then into my feet. A streetlamp lit the grin on Stench's face. I slipped and fell forward, streaking my hands with grass and mud. I wasn't fast enough. His boots squished through the green at an easy pace. Even if I ran, he was almost close enough to tackle me. I smelled the sewage embedded in his skin and clothes and breath.

Then all at once, someone pounced out of the shadows and tackled Stench, punching him first in the gut and then in the face—a wiry form, lean and strong, with dark wavy hair falling around his face. Whoever it was, I didn't stop to find out. I picked myself up off the grass and ran toward Broadway. I was a block away before I stopped to look back at the brawl. Stench was crumpled in a heap on the grass, and the other one strode toward me, lamplight bouncing off his figure and illuminating his face.

I knew him.

The one who made a promise in the alley, whose music made promises of its own.

He was right here in front of me, and he had just saved my life.

Chapter 13

“It's you.”

My lungs were still burning from the encounter with Stench, but I couldn't hold the words back.

Up close, he was even taller than I remembered, his eyes more cloudy, his hair a little longer. It hung in chocolaty strands around his ocean-blue eyes, which were watching me carefully. He wore the same clothes as when I'd seen him outside Hot Topic—an army surplus jacket, grubby jeans and tee, saggy black combat boots. Everything about him seemed familiar, as if we already knew each other. We
did
know each other.

He'd offered his help.

He wishes he could cure the scars,
he'd sung to the deepest layer of my being.

“Do I know you?”

There was the voice—not angry or condescending, but . . . puzzled. And out of breath, from saving my life.

Slowly I felt the clench of my airways relax, and he waited for me to answer. I was still staring at him, willing him to recognize me. Didn't he recognize me? How could he not remember?

“I . . . I'm sorry, I didn't mean . . . I mean, thanks. Thanks for helping me with Stench.” My voice felt strange in my mouth, and I realized I hadn't used it for days.

“Stench?”

I felt myself blushing. “That's what I call him, anyway.”

He laughed, though not harshly. “It's as good a name as any—he smelled like . . . so wait, I've seen you, but how do you know . . .” He stopped himself as if he'd hit a wall. His eyes narrowed, looking deeper, and I had the sensation of total exposure. “What's your name?”

The word stuck in my throat. Joy was wrong. It didn't fit.
Tristesse,
I thought, would be better. Sadness.

“Triste.”

It seemed true enough. Already, I had left Joy behind, the second I said good-bye to her in the mirror. I couldn't be her again.

He gave me a dark stare, then nodded. Like he knew it was fake, but it would satisfy him for now.

“What about you?”

His face clouded over. Did he recognize me from Chop Suey, and from the sidewalk outside Hot Topic? Could he see into me now the same way he could then?

“We've been watching you for days—you're new around here, aren't you?”

The clothes and the hair—they'd be enough to fool everyone from my old life, but not him.

“Yeah,” I said carefully, “but—”

“Wait,” he interrupted slowly. “
Wait
. I know who you are.”

A bubble of hope rose in my chest. I knew it. “You remember me!” I cried. I was almost laughing as I said it, laughing with happiness and relief, that he could see through my pathetic disguise.

Until I realized he wasn't laughing. Far from it. His eyes had gone stormy, his hands clutching the hair away from his face so that the veins and sharpness of his forehead were thrown into high relief.

“No. Oh no,” he was saying. “Oh no, you can't be.
Damn
.”

I was stunned. I'd thought, once I met him . . . something was there. A spark. He had to feel it, too. So different from Asher, something I couldn't quite place.

He continued to stare at me in horror. “Did I meet you at Chop Suey?”

I nodded, not daring to look at him.

“Yes, and you were . . . you were outside, crying . . . no, you can't be here. What are you doing out here?”

“But you said—”

“I know what I said.” He was pacing now. “No, I don't know what I said. I didn't tell you to run away.” The last part he muttered to himself. “Did I?”

The hunger and utter fatigue after being out here for days and days suddenly hit me like a flood, a vast wall of disappointment. I had a made a huge mistake. The enormity of it could easily crush me.

“Yes,” I said, my voice trembling. “You said if I ever needed help, I should find you.” I couldn't keep the hurt out of my voice. I slipped my hand in my pocket and felt the scars through the fabric, the ones I thought he could somehow see.

But that, I knew now, was completely delusional.

“Well, you should get out of here,” he spat, his face darkening into the same anger I'd first seen at Chop Suey, when he watched me with my friends. With judgment, I was realizing now. Not at Asher and his cruelty, but at me.

“Go home,” he continued. “This is no place for somebody like you.”

It felt like a slap. But he'd made a promise,
dammit
. The tears, the damn tears, they were threatening to fall. The only thing that could stop them now was to get angry.

“What's that supposed to mean? Somebody like me?” He'd seen what Asher had done to me, first with words and then with fire. Hadn't he?

“If you knew . . . ” He trailed off, pressing his lips together. “Look at yourself. You can't even find a place to sleep on your own. How long have you been out here? Are you eating garbage yet?”

I must have made a face, because his voice split with frustration. “Because that's what it takes to survive out here. You'd be better off going back home, before something even worse happens to you. Trust me.”

Asher would laugh, if he could see me now—my inhalers gone, no food, nowhere to go, chased down by some scary homeless guy. Like a helpless, abandoned bird that had fallen out of its cage. I knew exactly what would happen if I turned back now.

“No,” I said. “I'm not going home. And who are you to tell me to? What are you doing out here? Where do you sleep?”

He gave me a hard look, made harder by the set of his jaw.

“At least tell me where I can go,” I said softly. “Someplace safe.”

I couldn't tell what he was thinking, but his shoulders slumped. A stray drop of rain landed on his face, like a tear from the sky.

Abruptly he turned. “Come on.”

“Huh?”

“Come on! Unless you want to spend another night in a shed waiting for that asshole to come back for you.”

How did he know I'd been sleeping in the shed?

“Besides,” he continued, “sooner or later, they'll see you and call the cops. You can come with me, or you might as well turn yourself in right now.”

While we were talking, I didn't even realize Stench had gotten up and was now limping across the park with murder in his eyes. He would come back—there was no doubt in my mind. Then there was Mohawk, who couldn't wait to get his hands on me.

Could I trust him? I'd been so wrong before.

“First, I want to know your name.”

He smiled, breaking through the roughness of his exterior and giving me a glimpse of the person I thought I knew. “It's Creed.”

Creed
. Like a code of honor. He held out his hand, rough and cracked with dirt.

I had no choice but to take it.

BOOK: Don't Breathe a Word
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