Notices Me Staring I look away but not fast enough and her fragile smile melts. “Sorry,” I say. “I’ve just never seen scars like that before.” She studies me. Traces a finger across her arm. Tells me they’re her babies. She’s even got names for them. Fat baby. Ugly baby. Lonely baby. Failed- a-test baby. Dissed-at-school baby. Argued-with-mother baby. Why-don’t-you-just-kill-yourself baby. My cuts don’t have names like that. But if I gave them names, they’d all be Rennie.
UNCORRECTED E-PROOF—NOT FOR SALE HarperCollins Publishers .................................................................. Rennie Where do I begin? I guess we met around the second week of sixth grade. Right about the time I was discovering that in middle school there’s no such thing as being a wallflower. You’re either popular or ridiculed. Accepted or abandoned. Worshiped or crucified. There’s no in-between. No place for invisible. Nowhere to hide. I was a little unprepared for that, having been a houseplant all my life. Comfortably nonexistent. But Rennie took me in. Introduced me to the black-booted, purple-haired dress-code violators who would one day be the Sisters of the Broken Glass. And for the first time, I belonged to something. was seen as someone. was popular somehow. I belonged . . . Even though I knew that meant I’d have to cut too. Sometime.
UNCORRECTED E-PROOF—NOT FOR SALE HarperCollins Publishers .................................................................. Six Months Later Elbow on the sink. Right hand trembling. Drag–––––the–––––glass–––––across–––––my–––––wrist––––– chalky–––––dotted–––––lines––––– don’t–––––even–––––break–––––the–––––skin––––– Lungs are feeling tight. Heart is thumping hard. Rennie’s words are swirling in my head. Just one cut to feel alive . . .
UNCORRECTED E-PROOF—NOT FOR SALE HarperCollins Publishers .................................................................. And Then Whoosh! The skin tears and I feel this rush swirling in my brain like a waterspout. A finger-tingling, tongue-numbing, heart-pounding rush. And the pain doesn’t feel like pain but more like energy moving through my body in waves. Rushing. Cleansing. Pulsing. Purging all the broken bits out of me like a tsunami washing debris to the shore.
UNCORRECTED E-PROOF—NOT FOR SALE HarperCollins Publishers .................................................................. Afterward I feel the calm, the bliss, the sheer weightlessness of zero worry. I’m floating on a smooth glass pond with bottle-nosed endorphins swimming all around, splashing their tails, smiling their perpetual smiles. And I want this feeling to last forever. Because if the feeling lasts, it won’t matter what Avery says, or what my mother doesn’t say, or how twisted I feel inside because I know for sure that on this calm, tranquil pond nothing and I mean nothing can ever make a ripple in my heart. But here’s the bad thing: The feeling doesn’t last forever. It never lasts forever. In fact, it barely lasts ten freaking minutes. Before the guilt sets in.
UNCORRECTED E-PROOF—NOT FOR SALE HarperCollins Publishers .................................................................. I Guess That’s Why I Picked the Word Hope. Because part of me really hopes I can quit. So I can stop feeling guilty all the time. Like when I’m washing laundry in secret. Or wasting my allowance on sterile gauze. Or lying to my little brother, Sean, about why I can’t go swimming with him. Those are the times I fumble around looking for hope . I hope Rennie will still like