A Mother’s Love (Fiction)

“I think you’re going to be just fine.”

Those were the words that made Liam’s eyes well up as the light of the computer bounced off his horn-rimmed glasses. His pink face turned into a puffy hot blimp as the tears streamed down in twisty little trails, leaving dark splotches on the collar of his shirt.

You see, those were exactly the words Liam needed to hear after the fight that led up to where he was now.

He’d been agonizing over what to tell his mother for months — no, years. He’d always kind of known. He never did fit in with the girls his age, and he felt drawn to this different, alternate version of himself, a version he was actually comfortable with. He’d made a clandestine ritual of throwing out his femme clothes and began seeing a doctor in secret for testosterone. 

After several months, though, the changes were impossible to hide. His flute-like voice had started deepening into a warm tenor. His peach fuzz had begun turning into a proper smattering of patchy teen boy facial hair. He’d been concealing his already-small breasts with a binder. He even started smelling like your average 18-year-old guy (well, part of that was admittedly the Axe).

He had to say something. Anything.

“Mom,” he started, appearing in the doorway of the living room where his mother was seated watching Jeopardy. “I need to tell you something. I’m a boy. My name is Liam.”

“Leah—“

Liam, Mom.”

His mother snatched the remote and made a show of muting the television. “Leah, this isn’t you. You’re my little girl.”

Liam crossed his arms. “Mom, I’ve never felt like a girl. I don’t want to be a girl. That’s not who I am.”

“Who put these ideas in your head?” she hissed indignantly.

“No one, I promise! I’ve always felt like I was different! I just have a word for it now, Mom. I’m trans.”

The remote flew across the room. “No child of mine is going to fall for that transsexual nonsense. Leah, go say your goodbyes to your internet friends, because starting tomorrow, I’m going to be monitoring everything you do online.”

Liam’s bright blue eyes went wide. “You can’t do that! I’m eighteen!”

“And you live under my roof until you graduate, Leah. I’m not entertaining any of this. You are a girl and you always will be. I named you Leah and you will die a Leah.”

Silence.

“I just wanted you to understand me,” Liam muttered, thankful the darkness of the dimmed living room concealed his tears. He turned away from his mother and bolted up the stairs to his room.

“‘Say goodbye to my internet friends,’” Liam repeated under his breath. “Like I have any.”

Desperate for advice, he booted up the search engine on his laptop and frantically searched “FTM forums.” FTM, of course, being the widely used abbreviation for “female-to-male,” or more precisely, trans dudes.

What Liam didn’t know is that “FTM” had another meaning he wasn’t aware of, one he’d not considered when he received a DM from a certain stranger.

WildHeart39: I see you’re looking for some advice?

LonelySloth2007: hi, I’m 18 and really scared

WildHeart39: Yeah, I was there too not too long ago.

LonelySloth2007:  really? how did you tell your mom??

WildHeart39: It just got really obvious after a while and I had to say something.

LonelySloth2007: that’s exactly what happened to me

WildHeart39: How did she take it?

LonelySloth2007: not great lol

WildHeart39: That’s a shame. It should be a happy occasion, you know?

LonelySloth2007: exactly, and it’s like she doesn’t even know who I am anymore

WildHeart39: Were you close before?

LonelySloth2007: we were always really close but she can’t accept me like this

WildHeart39: That’s a real shame. You seem like a really sweet person.

LonelySloth2007: I needed to hear that, thank you 🙂

WildHeart39: I won’t lie, I’m a little scared myself. No one gives you a how-to guide!

LonelySloth2007: yeah, like the body changes are exciting but scary

WildHeart39: It’s almost like going through puberty again! Like what the hell are my titties doing?

LonelySloth2007: I heard all the fat gets redistributed though with all the hormones and shit lol

WildHeart39: Don’t get me started on the hormones! I feel like I’m going crazy all the time!

LonelySloth2007: is that normal?

WildHeart39: I think it is, but I think you get used to it eventually.

LonelySloth2007: how long did it take everyone to be accepting?

WildHeart39: I’ll be honest, a lot of people weren’t accepting. I come from a very religious family.

LonelySloth2007: my mom’s not religious, she’s just mean sometimes

WildHeart39: Sadly some people are just that. I always say that if religion never existed, people would find some other excuse to be a dick.

LonelySloth2007: that’s so true tho

WildHeart39: I don’t know a lot about being a parent yet, but I know that you’re supposed to love your child unconditionally, you know? I already love mine.

LonelySloth2007: you seem really kind

WildHeart39: I’m just trying to be a light, you know? The way they always taught us in Sunday school. Be a light unto the world, or whatever. At least I’m living out that part of Jesus’s message. Even if I’m a filthy sinner to most people.

LonelySloth2007: you’re not a filthy sinner!

WildHeart39: And neither are you.

LonelySloth2007: you really mean that?

WildHeart39: I know we’re just internet strangers, but I really appreciated talking to you tonight. I don’t think you’re a bad person or a sinner. I think you have a beautiful heart.

LonelySloth2007: …

WildHeart39: Did I say something wrong?

LonelySloth2007: no, just no one’s ever been this nice to me before

WildHeart39: I’m glad I could be that to you!

LonelySloth2007: I’m really scared things are gonna go wrong

WildHeart39: Listen, there’s a lot of uncertainty in this world, and to be honest, I’m worried for my little one. I hope I can give her the kind of life she deserves. And I hope if she ever comes to me with something that’s bothering her, that I can be there for her.

LonelySloth2007: you sound like a good dad

WildHeart39: *mom, but it looks like I’m going to be doing both duties anyways!

LonelySloth2007: fair enough haha

WildHeart39: Anyways, the cravings are hitting me hard tonight, so I’m gonna go DoorDash myself something. But keep your head up. I think you’re going to be just fine.

At that exact moment, a young woman logged off the first-time mom forum to order herself some cookies. She rested her hands on her swollen belly and smiled.

And somewhere on the other side of the nation, Liam smiled, too.

Venona: A Novella

If you’ve been following me for a while, you probably know I’m writing a story. In fact, you might remember my first few attempts to share this before I chickened out and stopped posting new chapters. Maybe you remember Stairway to Heaven, which is kind of a prequel to this one. But I’ve basically been sitting on this completed story for several years now — I started writing this in high school after all! I feel like I’m finally ready to let this creation loose in the world. It’s all here, the entire first story arc for the Venona series (and yes, I’m planning a few more installments at least, if my ADHD cooperates). This is huge because this is the first “book” I’ve finished as an adult. I felt like I couldn’t start anything new until this story was out there. As always, if you like what I write here, feel free to share it. I hope you grow to love these characters as much as I do!

FOREWORD

​The year was 2008. It was a halcyon year for absolutely no one, a time when MySpace was serious business, “rawr” meant “I love you,” and the American automotive industry was dying a slow, cruel death. Detroit had devolved into a bleak hellhole, and the suburbs to its south, known as the Downriver community, had become little more than an industrial wasteland.

​It was against this charming backdrop that the band Venona was crapped into existence.

See, I’ve always found myself most intrigued by artists that fell through the cracks of public memory, the ones who found themselves on the cusp of rock-stardom and all its trappings only to recede quietly back into obscurity. The ones who faded away, yet never burned bright enough to even have the option of burning out. After decades of industry turnover and snuffed dreams, popular music is brimming with such “almost-beens.” Venona was just one bloated carcass on the mountain of musical casualties, but having followed their rise and fall through many years, I consider myself most qualified to pen this little memoir, or at least curate the anecdotes you will find here, including many of the writings of the band members themselves. The events recounted in this book are lovingly edited and fact-checked by yours truly to ensure accuracy. Everything in here is true, or at least as true as it needs to be.

​Throughout the years they spent together, Venona experienced many close brushes with fame, but never amassed a significant amount of popularity. These days, the band is mostly forgotten — until now. My aim is not to revive the career of this band. To be honest, the world isn’t missing out on much by not knowing who they are. Musically, they’re average at best, and almost laughably generic. That’s not the point of this small collection of personal stories. Rather, my one goal is to preserve their story to the best of my ability, before all chances to document it have vanished. The saddest stories are the ones that are left to be irretrievably forgotten.

​To be fair, Venona never set out to make a mark on the world, and — probably for the best — they never did.

***

PROLOGUE

Alex

​I never planned to watch my entire life, future, and dreams literally turn to ash from the second story of a shitty motel, but there I was, clad in only boxers, staring out the cracked window at the billows of smoke.

​The air reeked of piss, vomit, and mildew. A menagerie of half-empty booze cans — some of them spilled — littered the rough, speckled carpet (which looked like it hadn’t been replaced since the construction of the building). Casey, Leo, and Shawn were on one of the two guest beds in a tangle of limbs and blankets. Kit was curled up in the bathtub, his mess of wild curls obscuring his face. Brooke was…passed out on the floor, maybe? Charlie was nowhere to be seen.

​I didn’t remember a whole lot about how I got there. It felt like one moment, I was there in the crowd watching Billy’s band, and in the next, I was half-dead and lying in a puddle of my own puke, which had soaked into the garish comforter covering the bed. There was an overwhelming sour taste in my mouth. At that point I would have severed my own pinky toe with a nail file for a toothbrush. And my freaking head. Everything was spinning.

​What the hell had happened?

​Outside, emergency responders were still circling the taped-off property next door like flies on a corpse. The sun began to peak over the top of the buildings, casting a pale, pink, somewhat unsettling glow over the scene. Suddenly, the door to the motel room flung open, and Charlie’s unmistakable voice filled the room.

​Only instead of her typically cheerful tone, her voice was dripping with sheer, unbridled rage.

​“Alex,” she said, almost too calmly considering the harshness in her voice, like she was one thread away from going on a murderous rampage. She was holding a rolled-up News-Herald, boasting a photo — one of the recent promo shots of the band. “We are in deep, deep shit.”

​We were Venona, and this time, we really screwed the pooch. Hard. With something large and sandpapery.

***

CHAPTER ONE

Alex

​When I was a child, my father gave me one piece of advice that shaped my entire perspective on life.

​“Whenever you feel like criticizing any one,” he said, “just remember that all the people in this world haven’t had the advantages that you’ve had.”

​Years later, I realized that line was an exact quote from The Great Gatsby and felt incredibly dumb.

​You see, I wasn’t born with a silver spoon in my mouth, but you could say one was forcibly shoved in there shortly thereafter. As infants, me and my sister, Amy, were adopted from a third-world country (well, Ohio, but that didn’t look as nice on the press releases). My father, John Alexander Aponte II, was heir to the Aponte Rubber Co., living comfortably off the family’s tire fortune for years. We had a very not-humble home in Bloomfield, one of the posh, upscale suburbs north of Detroit. I attended a prestigious prep school, where I maintained a 4.0 (a 4.12, counting the AP courses) and played on several of the athletic teams. I had a sizable trust fund set aside for my future college endeavors, where I’d pursue medicine, or perhaps law or whatever else rich kids end up studying. And there was, of course, my beautiful girlfriend, Katie, whom I had every intention of marrying and sharing my own perfect white picket fence life with.

​I realize I sound perfectly punchable at this point, and you’d be absolutely right. Don’t worry — things get much worse in a few paragraphs, I promise.

​You see, I had a lot going for me, much more than I honestly deserved, but my first love was always music.

​After spending years performing for an audience of Michael Jackson posters and Star Wars figurines, I decided to enter a middle school talent show with three classmates and one hastily thrown-together Blink-182 cover. Against all odds, we won. We dubbed ourselves Five Minute Drive, and a few short years and dozens of all-ages gigs later, a handful of labels began to take notice.

​Yet nothing prepared me for the three little words that completely derailed my charming life.

​“We’re cut off.”

​Indeed, after the automotive industry crash and the bankruptcy of the family’s once-lucrative tire company, my father was left without a steady source of income and a way to finance our family’s lavish lifestyle. Thankfully, my grandfather graciously let us live in his waterfront condo in Trenton, one of the Downriver communities, at least until we got back on their feet.

​And it was there that my life would take a turn for the weird.

***

​“The air smells like farts.”

​Amy was brimming with complaints as always as she mindlessly kicked a rock on the ground. A few steps behind her, I glanced nervously around the crowded parking lot. Not wanting to let their darling children attend a plebeian public school, my parents enrolled us in Triumph Academy. Had they taken the time to do their research, though, they would have realized that Triumph Academy was neither triumphant nor academic. Rather, it was the free charter academy you went to after being kicked out — or bullied out — of every other school in the Downriver region. Nestled between a landfill, a highway, and a sketchy flea market, Triumph was a stark contrast to the classy prep school I had become accustomed to.

​A vibration jarred me from my thoughts. Katie. Sighing, I read the small text on my custom gold flip phone:

FROM: Katie (Sent 7:32 am)

Hey sweetie, have a good day at ur new school ❤

​I smiled and for a moment, the world seemed a little more bearable, but my happy little reverie was interrupted by a swift fist to the face.

​“Hey, it’s that new kid!”

​And those were the last words I heard before waking up face-down on the asphalt.

***

​The last place I expected to end up on the first day of school was the principal’s office. There, I was sandwiched between a young man who definitely reeked of a certain herb and a bottle blonde with an assortment of stick-and-poke tattoos littering the visible parts of her body (which, to be frank, was the majority of her body). Sketchy-looking teenagers funneled in and out of the cramped office, interacting with the rather apathetic secretaries. It was clear nobody wanted to be there. Feeling defeated, I sank into the uncomfortable chair, jostled the bloodied Kleenex that had been shoved into my nostril, and began to sift through my backpack. Of course, my wallet was $40 lighter, and my Pop-Tarts were missing, that monster. And then, through the doors, appeared a spark of life in the form of a small, blithe cheerleader with dyed black hair tied up in a shimmering blue ribbon.

​The girl danced over to the PA while relaying some anecdote from cheer camp to the secretaries, who seemed to hang on her every word. Her voice had a sweet, sing-songy quality.

​“Good morning, Cougars!” she said with a grin. Her poorly concealed freckles stretched across her face. “This is your senior class president, Charlie.”

​I’ll be honest here — I would have never admitted it, being so madly in love with Katie and all that, but I was strangely enthralled by this Charlie character, whoever she was. She began rattling off a list of students for…something or other, every now and then glancing over from the list to me. I couldn’t help but feel a welling up of some kind of emotion in my gut, this knowing excitement that somehow, someday, she would go on to ruin my life in all the best ways. And, as you can probably infer by the fact that I’m describing her in such loving detail, she does go on to play a fairly significant role in this story. But, as I would soon find out, she wasn’t the only girl in that room who’d irreversibly, irrevocably change my world.

​“Ain’t you that kid from Five Minute Drive? ‘Alex’ something?”

​The comparatively raspy voice came from the blonde next to me.

​I shrugged. “Yeah, I mean—“

​“Holy shit dude!” she yelled a little too loud, prompting a glare from the closest secretary. “I saw you guys at the Fillmore a few months back! What are you doing here?”

​There went the blood to my cheeks. “It’s a long story.”

​“We’ve got time,” she replied. “Trust me, these people here are slow as f—“

​“Miss Bueller!” a secretary shouted from her desk.

​The blonde scoffed. “Anyways, I’m Brooke. What’s with all the blood man? First day of school and you already got into a fight?”

​“Not—I mean, uh…somewhat,” I mumbled, realizing how pathetic I would sound admitting I got sucker-punched not even five minutes after getting here. “It was a real…um…close one. What about you? Why are you here?”

​“Just smacked a hoe,” Brooke said, almost humorously nonchalant.

​“Oh, um, that’s…nice.”

​Okay, I was definitely sounding pathetic.

​Brooke looked at me inquisitively through dark mascara-ed eyes. “Didn’t you guys sign with Fueled By Ramen? You’re like, all famous and shit now. Shouldn’t you be on a yacht sucking Pete Wentz’s dick?”

​“Look, Brooke…” I bit my tongue as I struggled to avoid explaining the situation. “I’m not in the band anymore.”

​Brooke scrunched her heavily makeup-ed face in disbelief. “You quit?”

​I really, really didn’t want to tell her the truth about my departure, that it wasn’t entirely on my terms. After I had told my bandmates about my family’s planned move Downriver, I started to get a feeling that I was being “phased out” in a sense. They brought on some kid from my old private school to play rhythm guitar in order to “take some pressure off” of me. Slowly, the lead vocals were being split between him and me. Eventually, I came to find out, Five Minute Drive were playing shows without me altogether, and when I confronted the guys about it, they said they were letting me go because I lived too far away to practice as frequently as they wanted. To be fair, I had a strong hunch that there were darker motives behind their decision. I knew I wasn’t as useful to them without my parents’ financial support.

​One short month after I was more-or-less fired, the band signed a record deal. Their songs — my songs — were all over the local alternative rock station, my own words sung by someone who was little more than a stranger. Since the band had written everything collectively, there wasn’t a lot I could do. The songs belonged as much to the other guys as they did to me.

​In the time since being let go, my guitars languished in the corner of my bedroom, untouched. Perhaps I’d pawn them eventually, or donate them to some needy kid. At least it was better than letting them continue collecting dust.

​“Actually,” I began, unable to look Brooke in the eye, “I don’t really play music anymore. I’m kinda just focusing on school and athletics now.”

​“Seriously?” asked Brooke, arching her painted eyebrows. “That’s a shame.” There was a brief silence, and we looked away from each other before Brooke added, “You know, if you wanted, my band’s looking for a lead vocalist.”

​“I don’t think…”

​“Mr. Aponte?”

​I jolted up when the school nurse said my name. Before I could step away, a hand flew up and grasped my wrist.

​“Here, take this.” Brooke scribbled something on a tissue with a Sharpie from her purse. “Just think about it,” she said, handing me the tissue.

​The sloppy script was barely legible, especially with the marker bleeding through the thin material, but I could read her name and a phone number. I shoved the tissue in my pocket and probably would have forgotten about it. But life is weird. Sometimes, I’ve found, the most insignificant moments are the ones that linger, like unresolved feelings. Or, as my little sister would bluntly put it, a particularly obscene fart.

***

​The rest of the week went by in a huge stupid blur. I didn’t see Brooke again and I had no real desire to change that. I tried to keep a low profile and avoid human interaction until that Friday, which was the first football game of the new school year.

​It was a much-needed reprieve from the monotony of the week (which mostly consisted of ice-breakers designed for first-graders and me desperately avoiding eye contact). We actually ended up winning, miraculously, and no one beat me up. My family even made an appearance, and even though I begged them not to show up, it kind of felt nice knowing they gave a crap. After the game, the team, the cheer squad, and some of the marching band were planning to have a celebratory dinner at Ram’s Horn, a place nobody knows or cares about unless they’re from Southeastern Michigan (and even then, I’m pretty sure most people still don’t care about Ram’s Horn).

​My voice reverberated through the dark, vacant hallways.

​“Guys, I kind of need my shoelaces. This stopped being funny. Guys?

​At that point I knew I wasn’t going to make the dinner, so I leaned back against a locker and took a breath. Something strange was in the air, though, and it wasn’t the janitor’s cleaning products. It was a faint sound — piano? Who would be playing piano at this ungodly hour? I noticed at the end of the hallway, the band room light was on. As I approached the door, the music became louder and louder. It sounded like something I’d heard before. Curiously, I peeked inside.

​Charlie?

​Still in her uniform, though now with her cheer hoodie pulled over her outfit, she sat at the bench, seemingly lost in her own playing. Her small delicate hands danced gracefully over the keys, drawing out a melody I felt like I’d known my entire life, although I still couldn’t put a name to it. The door closed a little harder than I’d intended, startling her. She looked up, visibly flustered.

​“I’m sorry!” she blushed. “I didn’t realize anyone else was here. I hope I wasn’t being too loud.”

​“No, not at all,” I said, coming a little closer. “It was beautiful, that song you were playing. Was that Elton John?”

​She turned even redder. “Uh…it was…um…Radiohead. I love Radiohead.”

​“Close,” I grinned. “Why aren’t you at Ram’s Horn with everyone else?”

​I sat beside her on the bench. This was the closest I’d ever been to her. Her eyes were even more enthralling up close, a deep, bittersweet brown, brilliant even beside the copious amounts of glitter. She continued to play a little tune absent-mindedly as she smiled at me.

​“I don’t usually go to those things,” she said. “Games are already draining enough. That’s why I come here. There’s something oddly peaceful about this place at night, just letting yourself fall away into the music.”

​I don’t know how late it was before I finally left. Charlie and I talked for what felt like years. She moved to the Downriver area from West Bloomfield, which was near my hometown, following her parents’ divorce a few years prior. I guess her mom got a job as the elementary art teacher for Triumph. She said she actually preferred living here, and that in time I’ll probably like it a lot more as well. I told her I trusted her.

​Back in my room, well past midnight, I broke out my laptop and searched Radiohead’s entire discography trying to find that one song. Nothing seemed to fit the chord progression. Eventually, I gave up and picked up my acoustic guitar instead, for the first time in months, and plucked out the melody from memory. I didn’t realize how much I missed the feel of the strings on my fingertips. It had been a long time since I’d felt anything I couldn’t express in only words. I drifted off on the hardwood floor, guitar in hand.

​That morning, I awoke to the crumbled-up napkin Brooke had given me and a text I’d sent the night before.

TO: Brooke (Sent 4:15 am)

hey, it’s alex

TO: Brooke (Sent 4:16 am)

i’m in

***

CHAPTER TWO

Leo

​I’ll be honest, I did not want anything to do with Alex Aponte when I met him. In fact, my first interaction with him involved throwing my fist directly into his face.

​I still don’t regret it. We ate good at Five Guys that night. The Pop-Tarts were a nice bonus.

​So imagine my surprise when I get to the band room after school and I see that asshole sitting there.

​“Guys, this is Alex,” Brooke said, throwing an arm around him and showing him off the way a newlywed flaunts her ring. “He’s our new frontman. I told him he gets full creative control if he helps us make it in the music business.”

​Shawn rolls his eyes. “Him? The Aponte Rubber Co. heir? I’m appalled you’d associate with such garbage. Alex, you realize your family sent millions of jobs overseas. Your daddy supports slave labor.”

​Casey, bless his little heart, had a much different reaction.

​“Wait, I met you when you guys played the Crofoot last year! Y’all were like, my favorite local band! I got your shirt and everything and sometimes I still wear it to bed and speaking of beds I have your poster right above mine and this is really embarrassing but sometimes I think about you when I—”

​“Don’t scare him away!” Brooke scolded us. “We need him if we ever want to be a legit band. Fetus Slurpee hasn’t seen the outside of this room.”

​Alex visibly cringed. “Hey, um, is that the band name?”

​I chimed in. “What the hell is wrong with Fetus Slurpee?”

​I hated the idea of bringing this complete stranger into our circle. As idiotic as the others were at times, they were my idiots, and heaven help whoever threatened our dynamic. I’d known Casey the longest. We grew up in the same neighborhood and our families had gotten pretty close (well, my family liked him — his family were mostly racist hicks though, so I never bothered). Shawn and I knew each other from the school band, where he played trombone and I played percussion. As for Brooke, she was Shawn’s ex. Shawn dated her in middle school because everyone thought he was gay. As it turns out, Shawn actually is very, incredibly gay, but they remained friends. None of us really cared for her though. She was caustic, critical, sometimes violent, and seldom went a single practice without a tantrum.

​The band was Brooke’s idea, so none of us had the heart to kick her out. And to be fair, we enjoyed playing music together. It was the one thing I had to look forward to. She played guitar and was, up until that day at least, our de facto leader. I played drums, natch. Shawn picked up bass and Casey … Casey was something else. We gave him the role of “unclean vocals” since he could do some pretty okay metal screams, but our band didn’t have any screams. So he didn’t really do anything.

​“Whatever,” I said. “I don’t care. We need to get this over with. Casey and I have to meet … someone after this.”

​“That’s vague,” Alex said. “Are you guys like, drug dealers or something?”

​“No—“

​“Yep!” Casey said, cutting me off.

​“Fine. Casey’s a grower.”

​“And a shower!” Casey beams.

​Alex looks like someone shot a kitten in front of him. “You—I—I was just kidding! I didn’t think—Frick…” He takes out his fancy-ass gold-plated Razr and starts dialing furiously.

​“What are you doing?” I snapped.

​“I don’t feel safe,” Alex said. “I’m calling someone.”

​“No you’re not.” I rip the phone from his hands and set it on top of the projector, which was up way too high for him to reach. Kid was maybe like 5 feet tall, and even that was being generous.

​Alex sat on the riser, defeated. “This is ridiculous.”

​Brooke stood on a chair at the front of the room, commanding all attention to herself, which wasn’t unusual. “Alright, you pieces of shit. We have important things to discuss. I’m sure you all are excited about our upcoming first show in two weeks opening for Arkelly.”

​“R. Kelly?” Alex asked, eyes wide.

​“No, dumbass. The band Arkelly. Shawn’s brother is the drummer. They invited us to perform at their EP release show at the Meltdown. And it’s going to be a huge freaking deal, okay? Their lead singer is Billy Reuben. He made it to the ninth round on American Idol last year, so let’s not screw this up.”

​“Wait, the Billy Reuben?” Alex piped up. “We went to Cranbrook together!”

​“Cranbrook? Alex, you went to Cranbrook?” Just when I thought this couldn’t get any better. “Shawn, it’s Clarence from Cranbrook!”

​Alex was visibly confused. “Clarence? What?”

​“Do you live at home with your parents?” Shawn laughed. “I bet they have a real good marriage.”

​“I feel like you guys are referencing something I don’t—“

​“Shut the hell up, Clarence.”

***

​To the surprise of absolutely everyone involved, our initial session went swimmingly, resulting in the skeletons of a few original songs. As irritating as he proved to be, Alex had a natural chemistry with us. At the end of the evening, we even started making plans for the next time. I was hesitantly excited for this project, although I was enough of a realist to have my doubts.

​“Something’s off about him,” I said to Casey as we walked home from the party store that night. “I don’t trust him.”

​Casey brushed a greasy dishwater-blond strand of hair out of his eyes. “Why not? We get to work with the Alex Aponte! We get to be friends with like, a minor celebrity!”

​“Friends? No, he’ll never be our ‘friend.’ Colleagues at best. But people like him don’t become ‘friends’ with people like us. To them we’re just a pestilence to society.”

​I shoveled a handful of Better Made chips into my mouth as we kept walking. I felt a twinge of guilt, not the kind one usually gets from eating potato chips but the kind that came with how I obtained them. I hated stealing, especially from the quaint little party store down the street, but it had become a method of survival for Casey and me. The second-worst feeling in the world is not knowing where your next meal will be from, second only to not knowing where your family’s next meal will be from.

​My mom used to make enough to provide at least basic meals for us, but she lost her job when the Kmart she worked at shut down, and it wasn’t easy finding another position. As for Casey, after his mother died, his older siblings were put in charge of the townhome, and they were probably the most useless pieces of shit I’d ever met. Casey learned to play Mom quickly, taking it upon himself to cook for his little siblings and provide basic needs however he was able to. This was usually through less-than-legal means, plenty of shoplifting and, of course, our gardening business.

​Back in our neighborhood, the kids were out enjoying the last glimmers of summer before the occasionally cruel Michigan autumn set in. Casey’s younger brother Brandon, who had just turned 10, ran up to greet us.

​“How are you liking that game I gotcha?” asked Casey. “Call of Duty or whatever?”

​“April took it away,” he lamented. “And she threw away your cool plants you always tell me not to touch.”

​“Wait, what?”

​Before his brother could say anything else, Casey stormed into his townhome. I could hear them screaming from outside. Sitting on the steps, I wondered where we could even go from here. Those “cool plants” were important for my family’s well-being but absolutely crucial for his, especially since April and Mike started making him pay rent. If he couldn’t stay with Brandon and his two younger sisters, there wasn’t a guarantee they’d even get taken care of.

​Casey finally huffed back out, the left side of his face an angry red. April and Mike were notoriously aggressive at times. At night I could hear them scream at each other and at whatever flavor of the week was staying with them through the shared wall of our townhouses.

​“They’re such hypocrites, Leo,” Casey said, his eyes watery. “April’s been drinking all day.”

​“Sounds like her,” I said.

​Brandon had wandered off and was now playing basketball with several of the other neighborhood kids, wearing Casey’s hand-me-down Pistons jersey. All he ever talked about was how he wanted to play professionally someday. I was envious of that innocence, to be able to live in this hellhole and not lose that sense of hope. I’d lost it years ago.

***

Alex

​Charlie and I had exchanged numbers and talked frequently throughout the next week. I kept telling myself I wasn’t falling for her, that my fascination with her was strictly platonic, but I couldn’t help but light up whenever I saw her name on my phone. We talked a lot about music, how she spliced together all the music for the cheer routines and occasionally made her own remixes with her laptop. I mentioned that I’d started playing with a band that met after school in the band room, and she seemed interested in checking us out sometime. Fetus Slurpee (or whatever we were gonna call ourselves, ugh) wasn’t exactly my thing, but if playing in some mediocre emo band earned her respect, I was okay with that.

​I did, in fact, invite her to the next practice, not really thinking anyone would mind. After all, she agreed to stay out of the way and not interfere with practice itself. Friday afternoon came quickly and we walked down to the band room together.

​“I see you’re getting along just fine here,” she grinned. “I told you there was nothing to worry about.”

​“I mean, I’m not going to say it’s been easy, but you’ve helped a lot,” I said.

​“Dude, I’ve been there before. I remember switching schools and trying to find my niche. You just have to make the best of it. I was actually kind of excited to get the chance to start over, you know? I didn’t really have a lot of friends at my old school.”

​I laughed. “I can’t see that. You? Not having friends? That’s ridiculous Char. You’re so … cool.”

​“Clearly you don’t know me very well,” she said, and then smiled again as her hand brushed against mine. “But I guess that just means you’ll have to get to know me a little better.”

​I touched her hand. Panic. Immediate panic.

​Thankfully we were at the end of the hallway. Casey, Leo, and Shawn were already in the band room, setting up. Well, Leo and Shawn were setting up. Casey was playing GameBoy.

​“Brooke’s late,” Leo whined, looking up from his drumset. “Again.”

​Shawn’s eyes met Charlie’s, then darted to mine. “Wait, ain’t that Charlie?”

​“Yup” I said. “She’s just here to watch. She wanted to check out the band!”

​“Brooke is going to be fuming,” Leo said disinterestedly, and immediately went back to playing paradiddles on the snare.

​Charlie sat down at the piano bench, probably out of habit, and I took out my phone, stomping out to the hallway. I guessed I had to be the one to yell at Brooke. I furiously typed her name into my contacts.

​“Where are you?” I asked, exasperated.

​Her mouth was clearly full. “Relax, I just got a friggin’ Baconator. Tell the guys I’ll be there in a minute.”

​“This is insane,” I said. “We have the band room for what, two hours, max? And I have someone here who wants to meet you.”

​“Ugh, Alex, you can’t just invite randos to practice. I put you in charge of the band and you already act like you run everything.”

​“I thought that was the point? You wanted me to … Brooke? Did you hang up on me?”

​I sighed, slammed the phone shut, and leaned against the locker until I slid to the ground. This was going to be harder than I thought. Then I heard it. Charlie?

​Back in the band room, Leo, Shawn and Casey were gathered around the piano. Charlie was dancing around, playing “Bennie and the Jets” and screaming along. Her hair bow was on the ground as she whipped her head about. The guys were enthralled.

​“I forgot how good she was at piano” Shawn exclaimed. “She’s amazing!”

​“She can even play that Tupac song!” Casey added.

​While we waited for Brooke for what seemed like an hour, Charlie regaled us with snippet after snippet of whatever song the guys yelled out. She wasn’t just a talented musician but quite the performer as well, jumping and kicking and dancing, channeling her inner Jerry Lee Lewis while never missing a beat. She got along with the others too. At one point she even had Casey sit next to her on the bench, and she tried to teach him some easy four-chord song (he didn’t pick it up that easily, but bless his heart, he tried). But then…

​“What the hell is she doing here?”

​ Brooke.

​“Hey, Brooke!” Charlie excitedly yelled across the room, eyes bright. “I didn’t know you were in Alex’s band!”

​Brooke huffed over to the piano and grabbed Charlie roughly by the hair. “If it isn’t Charlotte Rose Lipschitz herself.” She spat out her full name (that was her full name?!) with enough venom to poison an ocean. “You must be Alex’s special guest.” She then turned to me, not letting go of Charlie, who let out a tiny whimper. “Get her out of here. Now.”

​“Let go of her!” Leo shouted as he leapt across the room. “She’s done nothing to you, Brooke.”

​Brooke was practically steaming with fury. “Oh, so you’re defending her? How cute. Remember, I’m your best friend!”

​“Look, she’s actually kinda cool,” Shawn interjected. “And you’ve been nothing but horrible to us the entire time we’ve known you.”

​The considerably larger Brooke threw Charlie to the ground, the chunk of black hair in her hand proof enough that it wasn’t a light push. “I want her gone. Or I’m walking.”

​“Walk,” I said sternly. “We can find another guitarist. But you do not hurt Charlie.”

​The guys nodded. Brooke turned even redder and ran to the door.

​“I can’t believe you’re choosing this dumb bitch over me,” Brooke said bitterly. “You’ll be sorry, all of you.” And with that, she slammed the door behind her, leaving the rest of us in shocking silence.

​After about a minute, Leo sat back down and took a breath. “Is it weird I’m actually kind of relieved? We’ve been trying to think of an excuse to get rid of her for months now. And now that we have Charlie, I mean…”

​Charlie pushed herself up from the ground. “Wait, you want me in the band?”

​“We mean, if you want,” Shawn said. “We could use another person who actually knows what they’re doing.”

​Charlie’s lips curled into a small smile. “I’d love to.”

***

​Hello again, dear reader. It is I, your nameless, faceless, omniscient narrator. So here we are, with the band that would eventually become Venona finally taking shape. In the time between the practice Brooke left and the following week, Alex and friends were busy distributing flyers to recruit another lead guitarist in time for the Arkelly show. Meanwhile, in Dearborn, an industrial town just north of the Downriver area, another Triumph Academy student, Khaled Hachem, stared down at the tacky lime green sheet of paper.

​Guitarist wanted for pop-punk/emo/post-hardcore project. Contact Alex A. for audition info.

***

CHAPTER THREE

Shawn

​Alex said he recognized the kid who came in to audition from football, although I didn’t see how. He was just barely taller than Alex, with a mess of dark curly hair obscuring a good portion of his face, and appeared nearly skeletal in stature. But he could play. We watched in awe as his long, scrawny hands moved across the fretboard of his white Les Paul. He swayed to the sound, his body almost becoming an extension of his instrument.

​“We’re playing a show in a week,” Alex said after the kid finished. “Are you sure you can commit to this band … uh … Kit Katastrophe?

​Kit looked up and we could finally see his face. He had dark, brooding eyes and almost feminine features. I would almost go as far as to call him pretty, which feels incredibly weird to write.

​Casey chimed in. “What’s the matter? No habla ingles?” Casey, of course, said this in the whitest way possible, like pronouncing the “h” and everything, which resulted in eye rolls from everybody in the room.

​“Casey,” I sighed, “he’s Arabic.”

​Kit and some other guy were the only people who actually showed up to audition, and the other guy was awful at everything, so Kit was our only real option. This was cemented after Leo threw his shoe at the other guitarist who came in. And so the “classic lineup,” if you will, was complete — Alex, Charlie, Kit, Leo, Casey, and I.

​We had one week to get a six-song set playable in front of other people, so we spent the every school night rehearsing at my place. Alex, Kit and Charlie would all come together after football and cheer practice was over and we’d run over the songs we’d thrown together — a cover of “Lose Yourself” by Eminem, a few Five Minute Drive songs Alex suggested, a song Casey wrote about Captain Crunch which blew chunks, and our first song written all together, “Fiesta Fist,” which was lovingly written to be about absolutely nothing.

​My parents managed a self-storage facility, which was where we relocated. A few years back, a dead body was found in one of the units, so nobody wanted that one. This unit is where we chose to set up our new practice space. Of course, I never told anyone about the dead body. Especially not Casey. Casey’s a frickin’ wimp.

​Here is the part where I’d give some sad backstory about myself, but honestly, my life hasn’t been so bad. My dad’s an elder at a church, but it’s one of the cool Episcopalian ones that accepts us gays. I’m personally an atheist, but I’ve never felt uncomfortable there. My mom’s a former nurse and homemaker and remarkably normal in every way. And then there’s James.

​James is the one sore spot in my life. He was always the golden child, straight A’s, conventionally attractive, ridiculously popular among pretty much everyone, and now that Arkelly was starting to take off, he couldn’t help but be even more of a cocky bastard about it.

​Speaking of Arkelly, Alex had gotten back in touch with Billy Reuben, who seemed to be pretty stoked to work with us. This only exacerbated my fears about the upcoming show. I didn’t want Billy and Arkelly to see how awful we really were. I wanted to hold onto one shred of dignity, and judging by how practice was going, that dignity was not long for this world.

​Thankfully, our new addition of Kit gave me a sliver of hope. Charlie and Alex were talented, but Kit was hardly human. We knew so little about him, not helped by the fact that we’d never heard a word out of him that entire first week. I was beginning to wonder if Casey was onto something about him not speaking English. Or perhaps — the most likely explanation — Kit was just weird as hell.

***

Kit

​My first language was not English or Arabic; it was music.

​I remember my mother bringing me to the doctor as a young child, concerned that I hadn’t yet spoken my first words. I was bored with their conversation, so I crawled from the table to the floor to the waiting room, where a grand piano sat gathering dust. Bringing myself up to the keys, I placed one finger on a key and stretched my hand to reach another key, trying to find something that sounded … right. Soon, my mother and the doctor came rushing out, finding me sitting on the piano bench, plucking out simple chords.

​You see, in Lebanon, there are two things considered more valuable than any worldly possession — family and honor.

​My father was born in Detroit, but he was the son of immigrants. My grandfather took great pride in his heritage and traditions, a trait he was sure to bestow upon my father. My mother was an immigrant herself, leaving her war-torn homeland in search of stability.

​This wasn’t something she discussed much; there are some memories that are better left forgotten.

​For me, music was the force that drove me. Not tradition, like my father, nor stability, like my mother. Not pride, like my older brother Ali, or respect, like Yousef, who was older than us both. I believed that the careful arrangement of sound was more mystifying and powerful than most of what the world had to offer.

​As a child, I remember watching my grandfather lose himself in playing the oud. The way his fingers danced so effortlessly over the strings bewildered and enchanted me. At the age of seven, I stumbled upon a dusty Led Zeppelin record that would change the course of my life. As I listened to the songs, one by one, I was entirely captivated. I begged for months for my father to buy me a guitar until he finally relented. It was a Les Paul, like I’d recalled Jimmy Page playing, except it was the brightest white I had ever seen. That guitar remains my truest friend.

​From the evening I’d first set my eyes on it, I can scarcely recall a memory in which I didn’t have a guitar in my hands. On school nights, I’d stay up until three in the morning, running through scales until I could play them as effortlessly as my heroes. I’d play until my fingers were raw and red. Sometimes, I didn’t let up until they bled. I missed out on a lot of the things Ali and Yousef took part in, but I had no regrets. Nothing was more important to me than the music. It was more than a hobby or a phase; it was the only way I knew how to connect with something bigger than myself.

I immediately fell back into one particular date — I believe it was the first week of school. It was my first year at Triumph. I had previously attended one of the high schools in Dearborn, until circumstances I’d rather not relive forced my parents to transfer me out of the district.

My mother understood that some memories were meant to be forgotten.

As it happened, I rested in my room. The wood-paneled walls were far from bare, adorned with colorful vintage Zeppelin posters, vinyl records, and pictures of the artists I’d grown to admire most that I’d cut and framed myself. The floor was littered with Dr. Pepper bottles, most empty, or left with just a drop or two that I hadn’t bothered finishing. I kept the room dark and quiet, though as I lay on the handmade quilt my mother had brought from Beirut many years ago, I strummed a four-chord song and sang softly to myself.

Ali slammed the door open, barking, “Hey kid, you’re going to the gym with us,” which wasn’t a request but a command. I reluctantly followed him to his car.

Ya habibi! Stoked for the game Friday?!”

Ali had more energy in his over-muscled body than I could comprehend. He kept raving about the game and my need to “get pumped” to the point where it was all he’d talk about with us. Yousef came with us, although since his injury in the Marines, he hadn’t been able to work out as strenuously.

I groaned. I never saw what the big deal was. The three of us were running on treadmills. Me, I could barely keep up. It wasn’t a secret that I was faster than them, but stamina was a quality I lacked. After ten minutes of running, I could almost feel my heart begging me for mercy.

Ali was quick to note my silence. “Any thoughts, runt?”

I shrugged. “I just don’t get it. It’s just a game.”

“Just a game?! What about when homecoming rolls around? Will that be just a game to you?”

“Well…yeah.”

“Wrong!” He was indignant. “It’s only the pinnacle of your school years.”

“If that’s the pinnacle, what do you have to look forward to?’

He thought for a moment. “Graduation. Hah.” Ali then turned to Yousef. “Doesn’t it feel weird knowing those days are behind you now?”

“A little,” said Yousef. “But Kit’s got this, right habibi?” Then he looked at me. “You better bulk up, runt,” he spoke sternly. “The family legacy is on you now.”

“Fun,” I said unenthusiastically.

The gym was where I felt like I spent most of my time now. My brothers practically lived there. They looked the part of the dedicated athlete; I was smaller than most others who were my age and had to pull my hair back into a braid whenever I did anything strenuous.

“I bet you won’t even find a date for the dance,” Ali mocked.

Inshallah, I will find a date to the dance.” I guess my dull tone gave away how little I meant that statement.

Yousef wiped the sweat from his brow. “You can’t tell me there’s no girl you would take to the dance.”

“I am apathetic,” I said.

“By apathetic, do you mean gay?” asked Ali.

“No.”

“Do you dig chicks?”

“No.”

“Men?”

“No.”

“Do you have weird fetishes?”

Ali!” shouted Yousef. “You don’t just ask your brother if he has weird fetishes. Now Kit, what do you look for in a lady?”

I thought for a moment, and replied, “To tell you the truth, I never really cared.”

“What do you mean, you don’t care?” asked Yousef. “Everybody cares. It’s like human nature or something. Don’t you want to get married and have a family one day?”

“Maybe,” I said.

“You don’t care about chicks,” said Ali, “and you don’t care about sports. All you care about is your stupid guitar. Where do you think that’s going to get you?”

I stepped off of the treadmill and slung my towel over my shoulder. “Hopefully far away from here.”

​Over near the drinking fountain, I pulled up my sleeves, revealing rows of healing scars, and dug my nails into my delicate flesh of my inner forearm until the pain washed over any other feelings I had.

​Music aside, pain was the only true respite from my existence.

***

Alex

​Despite our protests, Brooke seemed to weasel her way into our everyday lives, even after her exile from the band. She continued sitting with us during lunch, initially at the opposite end of the table, but gradually creeping her way toward us, until she raised the white flag at last.

​“Guys, I hate this,” she said, head in her hands. “Can we be friends again? I … ugh … I miss you guys. I’m sorry I was an ass.”

​“What do you want, Bueller?” Charlie growled, not giving her the dignity of looking her direction.

​We all traded glances, before I realized I had to be the spokesman for the group. I pushed a lone pea around my styrofoam tray and sighed.

​“Look, we don’t need you anymore. We’ve got another guitarist, and he at least hasn’t freaking assaulted anyone.”

​“Yet.” Brooke almost laughed. “If you’re talking about Kit, I wouldn’t put it past him. I’d vote that human mop most likely to bomb the school.”

​I’d never seen Leo more furious, and this is the kid that socked me in the face.

​“Why in the everloving hell would you say that, Brooke? Because he’s an Arab? I always knew you were a racist-ass bitch.”

​“No, because he’s crazy. Ever notice how he’s not in any of your classes? That’s because he’s in the classroom for emotionally disturbed kids. I heard he takes like twelve pills a day to function. And I heard he spent like, two months in an insane asylum.”

​It was at this exact, very inopportune moment that Kit came and sat beside us, looking silently but warmly at us.

​“Whether you like it or not, you guys are going to have to work with me,” Brooke smirked. “James just asked me to fill in on guitar for Arkelly.”

***

CHAPTER FOUR

Alex

​Two major accomplishments happened between Brooke’s botched apology and the show at the Meltdown. For one, we decided on a name for the band that wasn’t god-awful. One of our after-school practice sessions was almost entirely dedicated to finding a new moniker. We holed up in the (almost certainly haunted) practice space and thumbed through every book we had on hand, mostly assigned reading from our classes. Everything from poetry to “The Grapes of Wrath” to my American history textbook, which Casey immersed himself in, despite, as Leo informed me, he was “functionally illiterate.” That didn’t stop him from fixating on a random word he found on one of the pages, in the Cold War section. “Venona.” No one bothered to look up what it meant, and all Casey could glean with his limited reading skills was that it had something to do with “some spy shit.” But Fetus Slurpee set the bar pretty low, so anything that would look halfway decent on a flyer was a step in the right direction, as far as I was concerned.

​Also, we were starting to cultivate an image. My little sister decided she would take on the task of promo photos. Armed with the fancy DSLR she received for her birthday, we all lined up against the plain brick wall of the school, looking as smug as we could muster. The final pictures were given a dark filter, and she penciled in a makeshift logo, which was basically just some typeface she found online. We’d finally have a basic social media presence before the show. We were finally, marginally, a legitimate band.

​The day of the release party came quickly, and I made the poor choice of carpooling with Shawn and his brother. Unfortunately, Brooke was the one driving. We all piled into the rolling eggplant, as she affectionately named it, and she threw a Happy Meal at me. I assumed it was another half-assed peace offering, especially considering it was clearly already rummaged-through. There were maybe ten fries left. Maybe.

​I wasn’t in the mood to say much, and I really wasn’t looking forward to the show, if I was completely honest. I kind of wanted the whole thing to blow over, and maybe we would quietly disband and all forget that any of this ever happened. Clearly this wasn’t the case. Oh, if only I had known.

​Now, the Meltdown wasn’t a new setting for me. Five Minute Drive had played there countless times, as it was the only all-ages venue in the Downriver area at the time. It was a small family-owned place, two main rooms. The front room was used as a thrift shop, mostly for vintage clothing the higher-end boutiques wouldn’t accept, riddled with holes from moths and cigarette ashes. The back room had the stage, as well as a sizable balcony area, which was where the girls would run away to during the heavier sets, when the lower level would become overrun with moshing dudes waving their arms about like flightless helicopters. There was also a tiny concessions booth, but aside from the straight-edge kids buying Red Bulls, no one paid much mind to it. The “cool kids” brought as many Four Lokos as they could shove into their backpacks.

​Before you ask, yes, I was one of the straight-edge kids.

​Billy Reuben greeted us outside the load-in area. Now, Billy was the kind of guy you’d picture as the frontman of a post-hardcore band — tall and lanky with dark brown hair that just covered his ears, with bangs that delicately swooped atop his comparatively thick eyebrows. He was sickeningly pale with sharp features and high cheekbones and piercing blue eyes. Imagine the pop-culture image of a vampire dropped into a pair of skinny jeans. I felt just a little inferior next to him, if I’m honest.

​(Please edit all of that out. I never said any of that.)

​Anyways, Billy was all friendly toward me at the start, thanking us for coming on at the last minute and all of those kind pleasantries.

​“How’s the new school, Alex?” he asked, sucking down a Red Bull. “It’s weird not seeing you in the hall every day.”

​I shrugged. “Different. It’s not Cranbrook, that’s for sure.”

​“I assumed,” he grinned. “Much different demographics, eh?”

​I wasn’t sure what that was supposed to mean. I was one of the few not-white students in our class, although that never really registered with me. I was adopted by the whitest family in existence, after all. Like, birdwatching-for-fun white.

​“Yeah, I guess,” I said. “It’s different.”

​“Well, I’m interested to see who you’ve thrown together for this show, Aponte. I bet there’s some real undiscovered talent Downriver.”

​I started rattling on about the guys and Charlie until I realized he wasn’t actually listening, so I decided it was easier to just walk away. Billy had the depth of a shower.

​Speaking of Charlie, she was inside the load-in area, which was a garage just behind the stage area. The walls were covered in stickers and graffiti from every band that had ever played the venue. Charlie was doodling a tiny picture in the corner with a Sharpie.

​“We don’t have a real logo yet, so this is just us as little stick people,” she smiled. The picture looked like the tiny decals soccer moms put on their vans to depict their broods. She even added the little blond streak in my bangs. “I wanted us to leave a mark on this place.” 

​Little did she know, we would definitely leave a mark on that place.

​Inside, I met up with the rest of the band. Kit, who came with Ali, had already set up his gear and wasn’t concerning himself with fraternization. He and Ali were sitting on one of the filthy couches in the back of the auditorium area, puffing on a hookah Ali brought, since he clearly wanted something to do other than chaperone his brother. I guessed smoking was prohibited in the venue, but alas, the Meltdown was a lawless land, a punk-rock speakeasy of sorts. It’s a wonder they never got shut down.

​At this point, Leo and Shawn were dragging their instruments onto the stage. Charlie had emerged from the back room to set up her keyboard and shot a smile at me. A small crowd had already begun to trickle inside. I didn’t realize how nervous I was until then. A pit started to form in my stomach. We were the opening act, and the show was set to start soon. I beckoned Kit to follow me to the front of the room.

​Looking out over the audience, I didn’t recognize anyone, save for Ali, who was still puffing away in the back, entirely disinterested. Then—

​“Amy? What are you doing here?”

​My sister was in the crowd, with a few of her friends I vaguely knew from Cranbrook. She came up to the front of the stage.

​“Don’t flatter yourself,” she pouted. “I’m here for Billy.”

​I noticed Billy’s little sister, whose name was too stupid to remember, was with her too, along with a pack of whiny fangirls who were too busy squeeing over Billy to care about the other bands. Amy did a heel-turn and walked back out into the store area of the building, leaving two disinterested dudes in the “crowd.”

​“Who are you pricks?” one of them called out.

​I went to the mic, slinging my turquoise Telecaster around my shoulder. “Hi! We’re Venona, and we’re gonna play you guys some songs, alright?”

​“Really? I thought you were gonna knit sweaters.”

​“That’s a good one,” I laughed awkwardly. Every bit of confidence I had from my Five Minute Drive days had shriveled up and died. I felt like I was back on the stage of the middle school auditorium, mouthing the words to “What’s My Age Again?” in a sad effort to not forget them until the curtain opened. Kit and Shawn had already checked their instruments and were started to noodle mindlessly. I knew if we were going to make any kind of impression, we needed to start soon.

​“Leo?” I whispered. “Count us off.”

​He wordlessly clicked his sticks together, and Kit launched into the opening riff. The first song was a FMD song, albeit altered a little to fit our new band’s style. It was freeing having this many musicians — my old band was simply drums, bass, and me on lead vocals and rhythm guitar. Kit and Charlie added a whole new layer to the sound.

​Maybe this wouldn’t be so bad, I thought.

​If you’ve been following this story at all, however, you’d realize how painfully wrong I was.

​Kit, while incredibly talented, had no performance experience, and stayed within a tiny square of the stage, his eyes never leaving his pedalboard. Charlie, who was a gifted performer, could hardly move around at all, both due to her being stuck behind the keyboard and the limited room on stage. Shawn had all the charisma of a pool noodle, and Casey was simply a trainwreck, getting in everyone else’s way and screeching incomprehensibly over every song. I tried to hide how hard I was cringing, but I think it showed. By the last song, not even Ali was in the room. We were playing to absolutely no one.

​If I had my way, that would have been our first and last performance. Any desire I had to ever play music again had been entirely quashed.

​Billy snuck into the auditorium at the end of our set, grinning and clapping.

​“Hey, good first performance!” he said.

​I leaned down to him from the stage. “That has to be sarcasm,” I lamented. “I don’t know how this could have gone any worse.”

​“Chill, dude. It was your first gig together. It never goes as planned. You’ll smooth things out in time.” He gives me a fist-bump. “I hope you’ll all stick around for the rest of the bands. We’ve got a good line-up. The Virtue is playing right before us. You know, the Canadian Christian crunkcore quartet. They opened for Skillet.”

​“Exciting,” I said, unenthused. “Look, we’ll stay ’til the end. I want to support you guys.”

​“I appreciate it, man.” He fist-bumped me (again?!) and disappeared into the crowd, which was starting to steadily grow.

​The rest of the evening was a bit of a blur, for multiple reasons. I was in a funk for a while after the performance, and no amount of pep talks and fist-bumps from Billy Reuben himself would fix that. After we hauled our equipment back out to our cars, the band all walked together to the Little Caesars down the road for several Hot N Ready pizzas. I was quiet the entire time. Everyone else seemed to be in good spirits, however. I was starting to wonder if I was being irrational, if we did better than I’d initially thought. In all fairness, the others had never played a show in this kind of setting and had nothing to compare this performance to. I remembered opening for big-name acts and selling out large theatres. This gig seemed so below me. Maybe I was just being an entitled dick.

​We took the pizzas back to Meltdown and hid in the corner with Ali and his hookah. A few of my bandmates partook, but I’d never smoked anything in my life. Leo and Casey broke out a bottle of booze, which they all began to share, laws and communicative diseases be damned. After a while, I took my slice and went to sit with The Virtue instead. I’d played a few shows with them in the past, and they were completely straight-edge. I didn’t feel all that comfortable around substances.

​“You look parched, my dude.”

​Andrew, the lead vocalist of The Virtue, handed me a spare water bottle. He took a liking to me because he’s Filipino, and he swears I am too, although I have no idea what my actual heritage is.

​We caught up for a while. Five Minute Drive would often open for them when we’d play over in Windsor, and we became pretty tight since we were the rare few in the scene who didn’t get drunk or high after every show.

​I kept glancing over at my band, who looked at me, confused. The confusion started to turn to contempt after some time. Maybe they really did think I believed I was too good for them. Charlie waved me over.

​“Do you wanna go watch the band that just went up?” she asked. “I heard they’re pretty good!”

​“Of course!” I grabbed her hand and helped her up.

​Brooke intercepted our walk to the front of the stage.

​“Hey, Alex,” she started. “I got these for everyone. You’re welcome.”

​She slipped a large can into my hand and walked away. Four Loko. I slipped it into my backpack with every intention to toss it into the trash when the night was over.

​At the front of stage, Charlie and I stood side by side. At one point, I felt her hand brush against mine, the way it had when we were walking to the band room that one fateful day. I considered it for a moment, but then—

FROM: Katie (Sent 7:21 pm)

Hey babe. I miss u ❤

​I pulled my hand away, but smiled at her. She bumped me with her hip, playfully. Then, a familiar voice broke through the loud music.

​“Hey, Charlie, right?” It was Billy. “I wanted to ask you about your gear. I’m in the market for for a new key—“

​Suddenly, the two of them disappeared. I refocused my attention on the band that was playing. I’d never heard of or played with them before — I think they were from Ohio. They were pretty forgettable, but I needed something to distract me from this night. I was standing so close to the speakers, I could feel the bass in my chest. All I wanted was to melt away into the sound.

​Several minutes later, Charlie reemerged from the back room, absolutely glowing.

​Here’s where things took a turn.

​She smiled at me and went on about how cool Billy is, about what an accomplished musician he is and all that. I couldn’t help but wonder if something else had happened back there in that dark room. I felt my fist clench. I had no reason to be angry at Billy, but something perturbed me about the way he could just make her wander off with him so easily. I felt … protective. I know I sound like a dick, but my stupid brain wouldn’t let me let it go. And the next sentence—

​“Billy really is a great pianist.”

​—is what Charlie actually said to me.

​However, in the sheer loudness of the music, I heard:

​“Billy really has a great penis.”

​Enraged, I stormed away, but not before glaring at Charlie.

​“I don’t want to hear about it, okay?”

​I pushed my way through the crowd and past the concession area, back to the bathrooms. I collapsed onto the disgusting floor, panting and throwing my backpack onto the ground. The Four Loko rolled out, seemingly tempting me. I knew I shouldn’t. I knew it. But I was so blind with anger, I needed something to numb my brain. As I cracked it open, the sound of the fizz intermingled with the buzz of the yellow fluorescent light and the dulled sound of the band outside. I held my breath and downed the entire can in a single gulp. It burned going down — I’d never had alcohol before, so it was a gross, foreign feeling. The taste was akin to fruit-flavored bathroom cleaner. People do this for fun?

​After a minute on the ground, I stood up, crushed the can, and tossed it in the wastebasket. I didn’t feel all that different, but I was starting to cool down a little at least. I meandered out through the crowd, which was dissipating somewhat, as the Ohio band had just finished playing, and headed straight to the exit. I needed air. 

​The night sky was clear and star-speckled. I could hear the distant chatter of concert-goers taking a smoke-break, but I couldn’t focus long enough to decipher any words. Right next to the venue was a motel, the kind of run-down place drifters would take refuge in. A tiny tricycle stood outside one of the occupied rooms. Pulling my legs up to my chest, I sighed. After this night was over, I’d retreat to my grandfather’s three-story waterfront condo. Who was I kidding? I had nothing real to worry about. I wandered over to the trike and placed a folded up 20 into the basket. Smiling to myself, I went back to the Meltdown, where I could hear The Virtue soundchecking.

​Only now, for some reason, things were starting to feel a bit weird. My limbs felt light and barely attached. The scenery started to seem unstable. Was this what drinking felt like? Was the Four Loko finally hitting me? I felt altogether uncomfortable yet calm.

​In the corner, my band was still occupying the couches, now playing a game of Apples to Apples and passing around a bottle of clear liquid.

​“C’mon Alex,” Casey prodded me. “Stop being a prude!”

​Nothing bad had happened, right? I could take a sip or two. Or three.

​Whatever they were drinking burned even more than the Loko, but I was flying too high to care at that point. I gleefully guzzled half the bottle, slamming it down on the table hard enough to spill quite a bit.

​“Damn, man,” Leo said. “Careful with the everclear.”

​I hooted loudly and slammed myself down on the couch, throwing my feet up onto the table in front of us and knocking over the rest of the bottle.

​“Yeah, he’s cut off,” Shawn mumbled.

​We stayed there for the rest of The Virtue’s set, smoking and drinking. I joined in the game, but I was almost too inebriated to contribute. The others seemed to be amused by my drunken ramblings. To be fair, they were pretty tipsy themselves. Somewhere between me sitting down and Arkelly taking the stage, I completely lost all sense of time and being. Honestly, I don’t remember much about the rest of the night at all. All I remember was rushing to the stage when I heard Billy on the microphone, clumsily knocking the coal off of Ali’s hookah in the process.

​At the front, the lights were bright. Charlie came beside me, looping her own arm through mine and laying her head on my shoulder. Arkelly began playing their opening song and the music overtook me. Everything began to fade to white. The credits were rolling.

​And then, the alarms and sprinklers began. The music came to an abrupt halt. I passed out.

​And with that, the entire trajectory of our lives would be altered forever.

***

CHAPTER FIVE

Alex

​I never planned to watch my entire life, future, and dreams literally turn to ash from the second story of a shitty motel, but there I was, clad in only boxers—

Leo

​Um, they already read that part. Anyways, I guess I’ll take over from here.

​When I woke up, I was crushed between two sweaty half-naked masses in the forms of Casey and Shawn. After peeling myself from a tangle of hairy limbs, I sat up to see Alex at the window, wearing nothing more than a pair of cartoony heart-print boxers and an expression that could only be described as despair.

​The night before, the dumbass knocked over a lit coal into a puddle of highly flammable liquid. No one noticed right away, since we were all drunk and high off our asses, until Arkelly started playing. When the sirens went off, everyone who was NOT Alex scrambled to grab their belongings and flee the building. Me? I had to carry Alex’s incoherent carcass outside.

​Charlie was smart enough to get us a room in the next door motel, which was just barely large enough for all of us to comfortably fit inside. Obviously, we couldn’t have driven home in the shape we were in. Somehow, Brooke ended up with us as well. Even with all the hate between them, part of me wondered if she and Charlie still cared about each other.

​Charlie was also the one who ventured out to bring us snacks and shit. She stormed through the door like a freaking tsunami, slammed a case of Tim Hortons on the table, and waved a newspaper in Alex’s face.

​“Alex, we are in deep, deep shit.” She paused. “Also, touch the blueberry bagel and I will end you.”

​“I…uh…what happened?” Alex sputtered stupidly. “I seriously don’t remember anything.”

​“You did this. You spilled the alcohol. You knocked a burning object into it. And we’re all getting blamed for it. ‘Downriver area band torches local all-ages venue.’ Our faces are on this!” She waved the paper in his face. “Because of a stupid thing you did! You’re really lucky they’re not pressing charges, Aponte, because they’re estimating $40,000 in damages. The PA system, all the furniture. All smoke-damaged beyond repair. You might not think that’s a lot, since you’ve been living in your little gold tower your whole sorry life, but the family that owns the Meltdown? They’ll never be able to recoup all of that in their lifetimes.”

​She sighed deeply and sat on the bed we were all piled on, jostling Casey awake. Cradling her head in her hands, she started tearing up. Alex came over to comfort her, throwing an arm around her neck, but she shoved him away.

​“You don’t understand, Alex,” she went on. “The Meltdown was the last all-ages venue in the Downriver region. Music was one of the only things we had left around here.”

​There was a frantic rustling and a single arm reached out from the pile of stained sheets.

​“Man, last night was WILD!” Casey said, stretching. “Ugh, gotta pee.”

​Casey staggered into the bathroom, flicked on the light, and shrieked like a little girl.

​“GUYS. KIT’S DEAD.”

​Alas, our guitarist’s emaciated form was contorted inside the confines of the grungy bathtub, his face obscured by a mess of thick black hair. I couldn’t blame Casey for freaking out, since he looked like a still from a horror movie.

​“Hold on,” Charlie said. “I’ll handle this.”

​She pushed Casey out of the way and kicked at the edge of the tub. A skinny hand emerged and Kit pulled himself out, brushing his long bangs out of his face. He stumbled out of the tub and fell into Charlie, who in turn tumbled into the radiator by the window with a clang.

​Another voice called from behind me. “Can you guys…urgh…keep it down?”

​And there was Brooke, flat on the carpet, of course, groaning in her hungover stupor. She managed to push herself up just enough to vomit, then immediately smashed her face back into the mush.

​We sat in the motel room for a few hours, until Brooke insisted she was well enough to drive Alex and Shawn home. And for the rest of that morning, no one dared to say a word.

***

Casey

​I guess this is the part I get to narrate! Yay me! Anyways, this isn’t a fun chapter. This is the chapter where I go back to my house and Mike beats me up.

​So anyways, Leo drives me home and April and Mike are sitting on the front porch, and they look mad pissed. Mike’s got that paper Charlie had earlier, and he’s all like “What the hell did you do, man?” and I’m like, I don’t know, I just tried to walk past him, but he got all defensive and shit. And he’s like “You stayed out all night and burned down a building? I told you you’d never amount to anything!” Which to be fair, he says that to me a lot.

​And I told him I just wanted to play in a band and have fun, you know, and pretend I’m like, Poison or something. When I was little I used to put my sister’s pom-poms on my head and dance around and put on a show for my mom and she’d always really love it and tell me I was her little Bret Michaels and like, that shit sticks with you. But Mike didn’t like that answer and shoved my face into the toilet bowl. I think I passed out for a minute, I don’t know.

​Then he was all like, you can’t live here anymore until you give us the 500 bucks you owe us for rent and I’m like, where do I go, dude? You can’t kick me out. I’m the one who does all the cooking around here. Like, the kids are gonna starve. Last time April cooked something she put the ramen in the microwave without water and it caught on fire and yeah, that’s why we don’t have a microwave anymore. So now I had a black eye and had to sleep on Leo’s couch for a minute, which Leo’s little sister didn’t like because she liked to stay up late in the living room and play video games. Also, she liked to eat Cheetos on the couch and that dust gets everywhere, you know. I was finding that shit in my belly button for days. It was a real bad time.

​So yeah, that’s what happened. Did I miss anything?

***

Alex

​Casey did, in fact, miss quite a few things. When school resumed, we were practically ostracized by the rest of the student population. Whenever someone did deign to talk to one of us, it never progressed past “Did you guys really burn down a building?” We now bore the scarlet letter of delinquency. We were the kids you absolutely do not want to associate with.

​Because of this, in spite of the tensions between us, we were still confined to the lunch table we’d been occupying. For better or worse, we were stuck together. This band was truly a marriage, and there were no divorce lawyers.

​On the Monday after the unfortunate string of events, we compared notes on our families’ reactions.

​“My mom grounded me from the computer and she’s making me stay after school and clean her classroom,” Charlie said.

​“You’re lucky,” said Shawn. “My parents are making me go to youth group at my dad’s church. It’s so boring.”

​“You guys are complaining?” Casey’s usually vapid expression turned angry. “I got kicked out of my house!”

​We all looked at him in a somber silence. No one really knew anything about Casey’s home life, save for Leo. Then, it happened. A tiny voice spoke up from the other side of the table.

​“Maybe you can stay with my family.”

​Kit?

​“My mom’s looking for someone to work in her cafe, and we’ve got a spare bedroom. It’s Ramadan. She won’t let you sleep on the streets.”

​“Hell yeah, dude! I’ll do anything!”

​Brooke, who was at the opposite end of the table, as per usual, scooted down to our end. “Guys, I have an idea.”

​“No one wants to talk to you, Brooke,” Shawn snorted.

​“Are we just going to ignore the fact that Kit said words?” Charlie interjected.

​Brooke continued, shoving a flyer into the center of the table. “SlayFest. It’s the battle of the bands 89x is hosting. Arkelly is competing, but I wanted to invite you guys. $50,000 grand prize. You know, if you guys win, you can pay for all the damages at the Meltdown, and even have some left over. Just an idea, but what do I know, right?”

​“Give us one reason to trust you,” I said. “This sounds too good to be true. What’s in it for you?”

​She scoffed. “I’m just trying to do you a favor, okay? Forgive me for trying to raise the white flag. It’s free to enter, but spaces are limited. Just say the word and we’ll write down Venona’s info when we go to sign ourselves up. And, I hate to say it, but I think you guys have a chance. You’re easily the most talked about band in the area right now. I can even help you get your shit together. The fire affected me as much as it did you. As much as I love the guys in Arkelly, you’re the realest friends I have.”

​“She’s right,” Leo said. “We’ve literally got nothing to lose. I’m in.”

​I sighed. “Whatever. Sign us up. But we need a plan. If we’re going to do this, we need to figure out how to grow a fanbase — fast.”

​The rest of the lunch was spent planning gigs for the next month, leading up to SlayFest. I recognized the date as the date of the football playoffs, but I seriously doubted our mediocre team would even get that far. And part of me had doubts that this SlayFest was even a real thing. Something felt a little suspicious about a contest I’d literally never heard of with an absurdly huge grand prize, but I pushed aside that odd feeling for the rest of the band, who were now buzzing with excitement. I didn’t trust Brooke, but I didn’t see any real reason for her to lie to us about something like that.

​Brooke scribbled a list of bands and venues to contact and assured us she’d get us on the bill for a number of upcoming shows. She wasn’t the easiest person to deal with, but it turned she did have some decent managerial and networking skills. With the help of our questionable new ally, we fleshed out a plan to gain a following, flip the public opinion of our band, and actually have a chance at winning SlayFest.

​My mind slipped back to that photo in the newspaper. We weren’t going to manage this feat without a new image.

***

Kit

​I convinced my mother to let Casey temporarily stay with us. It may have been a mistake.

​The first night, while my mother was downstairs in the cafe, I caught him in her closet, wrapping one of her scarves around his head while pretending to ride a broomstick, screeching that he is, and I quote, a “babushka.” Later, he badgered me to play one of my guitars, my seven-string Schecter, which he insisted was pronounced “sphincter.” Then, I caught him with his face shoved under my bed, mumbling something about vampires.

​Again, this was the first night.

​He wasn’t a bad busboy, though, so I figured my mom would let him stick around for a while. During his break, she offered him a shawarma, which he stared at for at least a minute before cautiously biting into. Then, I heard the bell on the front door ring. It was Tessa, the one person in the world I didn’t mind seeing.

​Tessa was two grades below me, but Triumph was small enough that the middle and high school “special” classrooms were combined. She was the only person I talked to in the class. Tessa was the one who first reached out to me, actually, when she noticed my Led Zeppelin tee. She, too, was interested in music, but from another angle — her dream was to be a band photographer. When she came to visit, her DSLR was hanging around her neck.

​My mom greeted her warmly and offered her the usual — a chicken shawarma without pickles — and she slid into her typical spot in the corner.

​“Who’s the new guy?” she asked.

​“He’s from my band,” I said, sitting beside her. I was technically on the clock, but I didn’t mind, and my mother typically didn’t either. She loved Tessa.

​I look over at Casey, who now had some handheld game out on the table. He shushed me.

​“I’m feeding my Nintendogs.”

​“Your what?

​“You saw nothing.”

​Tessa twirled a Kool-Aid-dyed strip of hair between her fingers. “Your new friends are weird.”

​“Anyways, um, I was kind of thinking we need your help,” I said. “We need new promo pics, and I, uh…”

​Tessa laughed. “I thought you’d never ask.”

***

Casey

​But like. They don’t eat during the daytime, and they speak some weird language, and his mom even has to cover up outside. There’s only one explanation.

​Vampires.

***

CHAPTER SIX

Kit

​Prior to the photoshoot, Brooke wanted to “hang out” with me, alone. This, along with many of the decisions I had recently made, was a mistake.

​She came to the cafe with a Meijers bag and immediately dragged me up the stairs and into my family’s apartment. My parents and brothers (including my insufferable new adopted brother) were downstairs working, so it was just the two of us. Once in the living room, she pulled several papers from the bag, and I immediately recognized the pictures as screenshots from my MySpace profile.

​“So, 26,000 ‘friends,’ huh?” she snarled. “When were you gonna let us in on that little detail? When were you going to tell us we were working with a minor internet celebrity?”

​“I don’t know,” I shrugged. “No one asked.”

​“I have to admit, your Photoshop skills are impeccable.” She pushed the profile picture toward me. “Kind of sad though. This looks nothing like you in real life.”

​She wasn’t wrong. I never felt comfortable with my own looks, if I were honest. Whenever I posted anything, I worked meticulously to make my nose smaller, my skin whiter, my eyes blue. I suppose the most egregious lie was my hair. After straightening it into submission in real life, I would always edit it bright red. It was kind of my trademark online at least.

​“What if I told you I can help you? Every band needs a good image, you know?”

​“What are you planning, Brooke?”

​“I’m gonna dye your hair.”

​Twenty minutes later, I was sitting on the ledge of the bathtub while Brooke texted mindlessly on the toilet.

​“Is it supposed to hurt?”

​“Beauty is pain, my dear Kit. You’ll be a ravishing redhead in no time!”

​“I hate this.”

​I think she left it on a little too long, since my hair was almost straw-like and lifeless when she peeled off the foils. At first, it was a terrible orange, but she mixed up some other concoction that left it firetruck red, not unlike the pictures I’d post. Once dry, she straightened it and cut a few layers into it. At last, she was happy with her creation. I didn’t even recognize myself in the mirror.

​To this day, I’m not sure how I got away with it. My mother simply uttered “Ya allah, this child…” and went back to sweeping the cafe. I think I’d already disappointed her enough.

***

Tessa

​So, the photoshoot. Where do I even start?

​We shot at an old insane asylum I frequented a few towns over. My specialty, aside from band photography, was urban exploration. There were several abandoned storefronts and homes within walking distance of my house, and when I was feeling especially adventurous, I often bribed my older brother’s friends to drive me to more exciting abandoned places further away. Sometimes, Kit would come along. I felt better having him, despite the fact that he wasn’t exactly large and intimidating. I valued his presence more for the companionship than anything. If I was gonna get murdered, I didn’t want to die alone.

​When we all met the afternoon of the shoot, the others seemed skeptical to say the least. Especially Brooke. I did not like this Brooke character. The moment we met, she was all like, “Oh, Strawberry Shortcake is shooting you guys?”

​“I know what I’m doing,” I retorted. “I’ll show you my portfolio.”

​“Aw, she’s so cute,” Brooke mocked. “She can say big words.” She turned to Kit. “I’ll admit, I didn’t know what to expect when you said you found a photographer, but I at least expected someone who’d already hit puberty.”

​“I’m thirteen, thank you. And my work is way better than anything else you’d find around here. See, this camera is top of the line. I saved up all the money I got from my brother’s friends whenever I sold them my Adderall.”

​“Wait.” Alex looked concerned. “You’re telling me even the kids sell drugs around here?”

​“What are you gonna do, narc on me? You have the energy of a middle-aged woman named Susan and frankly, I do not like you.” I looked over at the rest of the band. “Everyone, against the wall, before I change my mind.”

​I staggered them according to height, Leo, Casey, and Shawn in the back. It should have been simple, right? Like, how hard is it to look badass in an abandoned loony bin? Kit had the advantage of having gone with me to shoots in the past at least, and whenever I did shoot people, he was typically the model. The others weren’t so cooperative, paying absolutely no attention and generally not understanding the concept of shutting up and looking fierce. It was a constant stream of “Stop smiling, Charlie” or “Shawn, stand up straight” or “Casey, please put down that toilet seat where did you even find that?!

​And they think I’m the child?

​I endured probably thirty minutes of this nonsense. The “golden hour” for photography was coming to an end and I hated being in that building after the sun set. I flipped through the shots I got, content I had a few that were passably okay.  I sighed. There was always Photoshop.

***

Kit

​After the shoot, Tessa and I waited on the front porch of the asylum for our rides.  We watched as the sky dimmed to a deep, speckled indigo, with streaks of silver clouds illuminated by the light of the moon. She wordlessly laid her head on my shoulder. These were the moments that made surviving worth it. I lamented the fact that I rarely had any time alone with her anymore, my truest friend, the only person I’d die for.

​Late summer had just begun to give way to autumn, and whether it was the changing of the seasons or the ghosts who remained on this cursed ground, this night felt particularly chilly. I unzipped the white jacket I’d been wearing and placed it over Tessa’s shoulders. She placed her hand on my now-bare arm, delicately tracing the pink scars, including the one that ran perpendicular to the others like the fifth line on a tally. They say if you truly want to die, that’s the way to make the cut.

​It had been exactly one year to the day since the night I tried to end it all.

​I didn’t like to talk about it. Not to anyone, not even Tessa, although she had a vague idea that it happened. Someday, I would tell her everything.

​“You haven’t been doing it lately, have you?” she whispered.

​“Sometimes I still dig my nails into my skin. No more cutting though. I just want to be okay.”

​“I think you’ll get there eventually. It’s not an overnight thing. You have to fight for it. I think this band is really good for you, Kit. You seem happier than you’ve ever been.”

​“I suppose.” My gaze dropped back down to the long scar that ran down the length of my forearm. To think I came so close. Had my brother barged into the bathroom a minute later, I likely wouldn’t have lived. “I guess I hate having so many reminders.”

​“Maybe you can get a tattoo or something over these,” said Tessa. “Turn them into something beautiful.”

​“Right. Like my mom needs more reason to kill me. Besides, I can’t even think of anything I care about enough to get etched into my skin forever.”

​“Well, you etched your own death wish into your skin forever.”

​She wasn’t wrong, and I hated that.

​But someday, I would tell her everything, even the parts I desperately wanted to hide.

***

CHAPTER SEVEN

Alex

​The photos taken by Tessa ended up on the flyer for the first post-Meltdown gig we played, at a skatepark/venue hybrid on the southern border of Dearborn. I wasn’t too familiar with the bands, save for The Virtue, who were the headliners. They were mostly other Christian bands from the area — I was pretty sure a church was sponsoring the show — so I knew we had to be on our best behavior for this one.

​We grinded hard trying to prepare for this gig, rehearsing every single night after our after-school activities for the day wrapped. Shawn’s parents were nice enough to make us dinner or order pizza most nights, and something about eating with the rest of the band was refreshing. I felt like these people were actually becoming friends of mine, which was a feeling I never had with Five Minute Drive. Everything was strictly business with them, and we never really hung out outside of practice. I found myself becoming weirdly attached to this ragtag bunch, who I would have never sought the companionship of had I not gotten back into music.

​The rest of the band beat me to the venue, along with Ali, who’d signed on to act as roadie for us. Ali scared me more than I’d like to admit. I heard he’d beat some kid within an inch of his life at his and Kit’s old school and spent a few months in juvie for that reason. He was polite enough to me, at one point even remarking that me and him had the same name — after 9/11, he and his brothers adopted English names for safety, and his was Alex. But I could tell he was fiercely protective of his much smaller younger brother.

​I found Casey eating fruit snacks while Leo dragged his drum kit out of the moving van Shawn’s family lent to us. The benefits of having a bassist whose parents run a self-storage site, I suppose.

​“Try one, man,” Casey said, offering me a tiny gummy. “Each one has the same amount of vitamin C as, like, ten oranges. Ten! I didn’t do the math, but I think I’m at like, 600 oranges!

​“Are…are you gonna die?”

​“Alex!”

​A pair of skinny arms wrapped around my shoulders. Charlie appeared behind me with a smile I hadn’t seen since before the Meltdown incident. She was carrying a gig bag with her keytar, which she’d started rehearsing with as of late. I’ll admit, I thought it looked a little dorky at first, but it kind of suited her. Plus, it gave her more mobility onstage, which added significantly to our stage presence. And what other local band had a keytarist?!

​Charlie threw the bag on the ground and unzipped one of the front pockets. “Surprise!” She pulled out a small but fresh-looking apple and handed it to me. “We’ve got a bunch of these in our backyard.”

​She grabbed the bag and skipped toward the stage. I looked down at the apple and smiled before setting it inside the back of the van for later.

​Inside, the auditorium was filled with raucous kids with skateboards zipping around the half-pipes that surrounded the stage area. Girls with teased hair sat on the ledges facing the stage, waiting in anticipation for our sure-to-disappoint opening act. Ali was talking to a large crowd, presumably from his old school, since this area was his old stomping grounds. I couldn’t help but wonder what had happened between him, Kit, and their previous school.

​And it hit me. Eavesdropping on the conversation, I could tell they were talking about Kit, and not in the most pleasant way, using certain lovely epithets rhyming with “maggot” and and speculating about his, uh, sexual preferences. Ali tried to seem unbothered by it all, but I could tell he was restraining himself from doing something rash. Hell, Amy drove me nuts half of the time, but even I would have decked someone who talked about her like that. I looked over at poor Kit, tuning his guitar in the corner, entirely unaware of the assholes talking about him fifty feet away.

​“Last one!” Casey interrupted my thoughts with yet another orange gummy.

​Sighing, I took the gummy from him. “Did you eat…all of those?”

​“Yup! It’s not playing nice with my tummy though. I think it’s all the sugar.”

​“Where did you find those, Casey?”

​“They were in Kit’s mom’s bathroom cabinet. I thought it was weird too. Like, who keeps candy in their bathroom? Must be a lesbian thing.”

​“They’re…Lebanese. And that’s not candy, Casey!”

​“Whatever you say. Anyways, gotta poop. Come get me when the show starts.”

​“Casey! We go on in five…Casey? Casey!

​During Casey’s extended vitamin overdose-induced potty break, I found Andrew in the green room in the back, sipping on a Red Bull.

​“I’m so glad you guys could come out tonight,” Andrew said. “It was kind of risky putting Venona on the bill after, you know, everything, but I know you, Alex. You really are good at what you do. I heard you guys are even competing in SlayFest.”

​“SlayFest is real?!” Andrew looked at me as if I’d suddenly sprouted a second head. “Oh, yeah, SlayFest. It was kind of a last minute decision. I don’t think we’ll actually win or anything.”

​Andrew laughed. “Don’t be stupid, dude. I think you have a fighting chance. Just keep at it. To be honest, I’m actually jealous of you guys! We tried to sign up for SlayFest too, but there were too many bands on the list already. So I guess we’ll just have to cheer you on, right?”

​After a brief delay thanks to Casey’s poor choices, we found ourselves onstage together at last. This time, we were armed with a few new songs, including our second collectively written song, “The Only People That Don’t Like Pirates Are the People That the Pirates Pirate,” and something Casey came up with called “Balloon Pimp,” which was mostly just him screaming improvised nonsense over an extended breakdown. To be clear, we did not like this song, but Casey locked himself in the trailer until we agreed to play it. We kept the Eminem cover, which was the only song that earned us any applause during the Meltdown performance.

​Immediately, the jeers began.

​“Didn’t this band burn down The Meltdown?”

​“You guys are what’s wrong with this scene!”

​Before I could say anything, Casey opened his big stupid mouth.

​“Hey! We’re Venona, and y’all are gonna shut up and listen to us!”

​Oh no no no no no.

​We opened with “Pirates,” which could be summed up as a cheap Panic! At the Disco knock-off. Casey had already provoked the audience, who stared at us in hostility during the entire song. Nevertheless, we threw ourselves into the performance, with twice the energy we’d put into the Meltdown show.

​Our second song was “Lose Yourself,” which, by some divine miracle, seemed to win the crowd over. From the moment Charlie began playing the piano intro (which, I may add, looked very ridiculous on keytar), everything was silent. All eyes were on us, and this time, without the antagonistic glare we’d started off with. Before we knew it, we were at the chorus, and the entire room was singing the words in unison. Little by little, concertgoers hesitantly crowded around the stage, gaping in awe at Leo’s drum solo toward the end of “Captain Crunch” and the entirely sweep-picked instrumental break in “Fiesta Fist,” which Kit nailed without looking down once.

​Finally, we reached Casey’s stupid song, which we’d tacked onto the tail end of the set, not expecting anyone to actually stick around that long. I immediately realized this was a mistake. I tried to motion to the rest of the band to play anything — anything! — else, but Leo was already counting everyone off, oblivious to my wild gesticulations. Casey grabbed the mic and started spewing whatever came to his mind, crouching as if he was trying to shit in the woods, whipping his greasy blond hair around. Then, clear as day, I heard:

​“I WILL SHIT ON YOUR GOD’S GRAVE! BOW BEFORE ME, PEASANTS! I AM THE ONE TRUE GOD!”

​In the back of the room, Andrew looked mortified. I couldn’t let this go any further. I leaned my guitar against one of the amplifiers and attempted to grab the microphone out of Casey’s hands. Casey, naturally, did not want to relinquish his time in the spotlight. He edged his way to the other side of the stage, not once pressing pause on his wildly offensive tirade. I crawled over the monitors, trying to get a solid grip on him, before he elbowed me out of the way. He held the mic high above his head. I had no chance — he was a good foot taller than me, possibly more. Desperate, I channeled the energy I’d bring to a football game and tackled him off the stage. I’ll admit, we probably looked more like a comedy troupe than a band at that point.

​“What is wrong with you?!” I yelled loud enough to be heard over the band.

​The band, now realizing we were actually fighting and not miming some ridiculous stunt, stopped cold. The audience looked beyond petrified. There was no way in hell The Virtue would ever let us open for them again. And speaking of hell, I was about ready to send Casey there with my bare hands.

***

​“Are we gonna talk about this?” Leo said, slamming a spoon against his drink, finally breaking the silence that had fallen over the band for the rest of the night.

​Leo had demanded we all go to eat and hold an impromptu meeting following the confrontation in order to “sort things out.” Leo was gradually becoming the “band dad” in a way. As the oldest and most mature, he was even more well-suited to handling conflict than me. I was nothing more than the pretty boy frontman, and I was starting to doubt my prowess in that realm as well.

​“Casey,” I said, trying to stay calm. “You are never, ever doing lead vocals for Venona. Ever again.”

​“That’s all I can do, man!”

​“And you can’t even do that right! Why would you make up lyrics like that when we’re opening for The Virtue?! What made you think that was a good idea? You almost got us kicked out!”

​“Me?! You almost broke my neck! You could have killed me!”

​Charlie hushed us. “This is a Denny’s.”

​Glancing around the table, no one wanted to be there. Perhaps Leo thought it was best to have the meeting somewhere public where the sharpest nearby object was a fork. I sank into the booth, wishing for an instantaneous, painless death. This band had been a horrible, horrible idea. We’d played exactly two shows together and both of them ended with chaos.

​We sat in further silence, the only audible sound being Charlie’s surprisingly loud noshing on a strip of turkey bacon. I passed the time — it felt like hours — watching the lights of the cars on the adjacent highway. Anything to avoid eye contact with the others. If I had my way, Venona would have disbanded right there in that corner booth.

​“SHIT!” yelled Casey.

​“WHAT?” I snapped.

​“I forgot to feed my Nintendogs.”

​I took a breath. It was all I could do to not murder him over his plate of Moons Over My Hammy. “Casey, you’re out of the band. You can hang out with us, you can handle our merch whenever that becomes a thing, I’d probably even let you join again if you’re smart enough to learn an instrument, but as it stands, you are not going back onstage with us. Not ever.”

​Casey looked down at his plate of smiley-face eggs and bacon, which looked hilariously inappropriate in this situation. “I can still hang out with you guys?”

​“Yes!” Leo said, before I could go on. “You’re a part of this family too.”

​Family. I rolled my eyes.

​Shawn chimed in. “And you’re living with Kit now, right? Maybe he can teach you guitar. Alex’s parts are pretty easy. If you take over the rhythm stuff, that will free him up to focus on singing and performing.”

​Kit crossed his arms. “I’m so glad you volunteered me for this, Shawn.”

​“I think after this, we need a night to just hang out,” Shawn suggested. “I was going to invite everyone over tonight for a sleepover, if you guys are still down.”

​I grimaced. “That sounds like a terrible—“

​Charlie slapped her hand over my mouth. “We’re in.”

​***

​We literally raced to Shawn’s house — that’s not a figure of speech. Shawn, Casey and Leo piled into the moving van and Charlie, Kit, and I jumped into Ali’s bright blue Mustang after Shawn bet he’d make it there first, even with his big stupid van. We careened across the highway recklessly, as the van swayed precariously in front of us. I looked over at the speedometer, which was clocking 100 mph. I’m not sure how either of the vehicles crashed. In the back of the car, Charlie’s hand found my lap.

​“Scared?” she asked, grinning.

​“Just a little.”

​“You’ve been screaming this entire car ride. Look!” She opened the sunroof and popped out her head. “See, Alex! You gotta loosen up a little!”

​“You’re crazy!”

​“Maybe you’re just a bore!”

​I don’t know what got into me, but I lightly brushed the bare back of her knee, playfully. She giggled and fell back into her seat. Her hair was a ratted-up mess, and I’m pretty sure the bow she’d been wearing all day flew off.

​“That’s what you get for calling me a bore, Charlotte.”

​“I calls it as I sees it, Alexander.”

​Following a very exhilarating, adrenaline-fueled ride I wished to never repeat, we wound up at Shawn’s once again. After loading our gear back into the practice space, we set up a blanket fort and piled several sleeping bags and quilts in the living room. Shawn’s parents had gone out of town, so we had the house to ourselves. The rest of the guys had gone outside to smoke, which wasn’t my thing, so I went back out to the van to find my apple. In the parking lot, I could see the faint glow of the back porch and the voices of the others mingling happily. Everyone seemed to be in a better place now, I supposed. I smiled to myself. Everything had gone better than expected.

​I looked around near the spot I’d left the apple using the tiny bit of light from my phone.

​My phone!

​I hadn’t checked it all day, but Katie had been blowing it up. Lots of “hey, what’s up?”s that eventually turned into “where are you”s and “is everything okay?”s. A twinge of guilt overcame me.

TO: Katie (Sent 12:07 am)

sorry, was busy all day

TO: Katie (Sent 12:07 am)

i’ll tell you everything tomorrow, okay

TO: Katie (Sent 12:07 am)

love you <3​

​The apple wasn’t there, and clearly, neither was my head. I slipped the phone back into my pocket with no intention to look at it for the rest of the night and found the living room still empty, save for a now-slumbering Charlie. I pulled the bundle of blankets I’d called dibs on into the fort, where she was sleeping. I nudged her awake.

​“What’s wrong?” she mumbled.

​“The guys are still outside smoking. I was just, um…”

​“Lonely? Here.” She cleared a spot next to herself.

​“Thanks.”

​I lay beside her and pulled the sheets over myself, facing away from her. She rolled a little closer to me, pressing her body against mine, and draped an arm over me. Her hand searched for mine and sought out the spaces between my fingers.

​We fell asleep that night, hands interlaced, with the dull light of the TV peeking in through the cracks in the blanket fort.

***

CHAPTER EIGHT

Leo

​“The Blind Pig!” Casey ran up to the legendary venue with glee. “Nirvana played here!”

​I groaned. “That’s not where we’re playing tonight.”

​Ann Arbor. The cosmopolitan college town a half hour west of the Downriver area. It was a welcome change of scenery. My pipe dream since I was a kid was to study there and eventually make a living as a professor. Of what, I wasn’t sure. I enjoyed literature, or perhaps I’d study music and march in the prestigious U of M band. These were all thoughts I had as a naive child, mind you. At my age, I’d already realized things of this nature were unachievable missions for people like me and Casey.

​Especially Casey, who, I loathed to admit, was the stupidest human I’d ever met.

​We got there early, so we walked around the town, exploring all the quaint little shops we could barely afford to breathe in. In lieu of lunch, which we definitely couldn’t afford in this city, we raided one of the gift shops that specialized in Michigan cherry, well, everything. It was a frickin’ buffet. Cherry jam, cherry barbecue sauce, cherry salsa, cherry cherries, all laid out for us. They were samples, too, so it’s not like we had to finesse these treats into our possession. The lady working did follow us around pretty closely, to be fair. I bought a dollar’s worth of cherry-covered cherries, which came out to two cherries, to throw her off.

​ Afterwards, we stopped by a cafe, one of the fancy-ass ones where you can add flavors and toppings and shit. Casey demanded the cheapest thing on the menu along with the cheapest topping, which happened to be water with a dollop of whipped cream.

​He’s real lucky he’s my best friend. I didn’t think I could ever show my face in Ann Arbor again.

​Finally, we found the others at a little rec center for at-risk youth, whatever that’s supposed to mean. We were playing a benefit for some kid with cancer, which meant, once again, that we had to be on our best behavior. I was starting to think Brooke was purposefully booking us at shows we couldn’t get drunk at.

​Brooke met us at the front of the building.

​“Remember, dying kid.” Brooke squinted at us, Casey in particular. “Just trust me guys. This is good for PR. Nail this event, and you’ll have everyone in this town singing Venona’s praises, alright?”

​We set everything up as usual, this time with a hastily put-together merch table consisting of T-shirts painted by Charlie herself. They all featured a new logo that may or may not have been the Freemason symbol now that I think of it, surrounded by a handful of colorful roses. We also made up little cards with our social media info on them. The MySpace band page was gaining more and more traction, thanks in no small part to Kit’s rabid online fanbase, most of whom were in Japan and could obviously not attend SlayFest. It was a start, at least, and having 1,000+ internet fans made us look somewhat legitimate.

​I found Alex in the green room, aggressively biting off a piece of Pop Tart and sneering at the setlist he’d scribbled on printer paper.

​“We need new music,” he said.

​“What?”

​“A new song. None of these are really doing it for me. I just think we can do better as a group. We’ve got the talent. We need that one great song.”

​“Well,” I start, “you’re the songwriter. All the great songs are about love. Write about your girl.”

​Alex sighed. “I guess I could write about Katie.”

​“Yeah, write something for…Katie? Who the hell is Katie?”

​“Forget I said anything, Leo.”

​“Alex. Who is Katie? I was talking about Charlie.”

​“Katie was…is…my girlfriend. It’s complicated.”

​“Well, you should probably mention that to Charlie. I think she’s really into you.”

​“For real?!” Alex almost choked. “I mean, for real? I really like her too. It’s just hard, you know? I built a life with Katie. We’re gonna get married once we graduate. Maybe I should tell Charlie.”

​“I won’t tell you what to do, but I think that’s a good idea, man. The last thing we need is that kind of drama in the band. Don’t want to Fleetwood Mac up the situation.”

​Alex looked away. ”I’ll talk to her.”

​I pushed that conversation to the back of my mind for the remainder of the night. As for the performance itself, it surprisingly went on without incident. Unsurprising was the fact that “Lose Yourself” was the showstopper once again. Perhaps Alex had a point — our most popular song wasn’t even our song. Still, the originals were well-received this time. Not having Casey was a notable boon. I hate to say it, but his presence was the weak link that kept us from being taken seriously.

​***

​I drove the moving van we’d been using to schlep our stuff around that night, Shawn in the passenger seat and Casey squashed in the not-quite-seat in between us. Thankfully, they were almost completely conked out the whole ride home. Leaving the Ann Arbor city limits, a strange sadness came over me. That post-show low was something I wasn’t sure I’d ever get used to. How, after the rush of performing and being part of something greater than myself, I’d return to the same run-down townhouse, the same dying city that shat me out and have to pretend none of it ever happened. What if we did “make it” in music, whatever that even means? Would I still feel like the low-class kid who had to smuggle ramen noodle cups out of the local party store so my own family wouldn’t starve? And worse, what if that wasn’t who I wanted to be? That was absurd, right? Who wouldn’t want a better life for himself and his family?

​That night, I brought the tips I’d made from the show into the party store I’d frequented. I snuck into my little siblings’ rooms and left them candy bars, all of which I’d actually, legitimately paid for. I’ll never forget their faces the next morning, or the way my mother beamed at me.

​These were the moments that was what made it all worth it.

***

Alex

​So, I didn’t tell Charlie.

​In fact, I asked Charlie to hang out with me later that week.

​It was a normal…Tuesday? Was it a Tuesday? Maybe it was a Wednesday? Either way, I wound up in the front yard of the Lipschitz family, in a quaint Taylor neighborhood, not too far from Triumph. The house seemed even closer to the unfortunately placed landfill than the school. Every building appeared copied and pasted, each perfectly replicated, down to the brick.

​Ms. Lipschitz greeted me warmly. “Welcome to our little home!”

​Charlie’s mom was a copy-and-paste of her, or rather, the other way around — dark hair, dark eyes, and a slight frame with pale skin, marked only by splotches of freckles. She wore a long dress that brushed the floor and a plaid scarf with covered in splats of paint. Although noticeably older than my own mother, she retained a youthful aura.

​“I made an apple pie and some pizza rolls, and if you want anything else, just ask!”

​“Mom! Leave Alex alone!”

​Charlie emerged from just beyond her, smiling, wearing nothing more than an old cheer T-shirt and a pair of red shorts.

​“Come on! I have so much to show you!”

​The world of Charlotte Rose Lipschitz was not quite what I was expecting. Drying paintings hung over the room on a clothesline, houseplants everywhere, and a huge box of a tv near the fireplace. People still had television sets like this? This seemed so unlike what I was used to. And who just lets you eat in the living room? Her mother put on a film, some hilarious musical biodrama that happened to be even cheesier than the hors d’oeuvres. Hah, perhaps we’d be the subject of some kind of biodrama some day. Who would be unlucky enough to play me? I laughed a little to myself at the thought.

​A huge orange cat greeted me as we sat together, curling up practically on top of the pizza rolls I’d been snacking on.

​“That’s Freddie Purrcury,” Charlie said. She scratched behind his ears as he pushed his head into her hand, craving more attention. “We found him near the dump and he followed us home. We thought he was a Maine Coon, but it turns out he’s just fat and hairy. And also a bit of an attention whore.”

​Halfway through the movie, Charlie grabbed me by the hand and led me down the hallway, showing off all the family pictures and heirlooms on the way.

​“That was my first recital — surprise! I’m naturally a ginger!— and that’s my mom at Woodstock. You’d never believe it now, but she had a wild streak when she was my age. And that one there is my grandmother.“ She pointed at a black and white photo of a young woman with a familiar face seated at a piano bench. I would have believed it was Charlie herself if I hadn’t been told otherwise. “She wanted to study at the Paris Conservatory. Unfortunately, Europe wasn’t a great place to be a Jewish girl at that point in history. It’s a miracle she survived at all. After the camps were freed, she came over here and started a family. She died two months before I was born, though.” Her solemn expression bent into a tiny smile. “When my mom was pregnant, she’d ‘play’ for me, and my mom swears she could feel me dancing.”

​She continued down the hall, stopping at a photo in a polka-dot frame. Two girls, no older than 12, were wearing oversized coats and several colorful scarfs, their hair teased into ridiculous ‘80s puffballs. “You’ll never guess who this is!”

​“I’m assuming you’re going to tell me.”

​“The other girl, that’s Brooke! Way before she started bleaching her hair, obviously. Believe it or not, we didn’t always hate each other.”

​At last, we reached her room at the end of the hallway. She kept a gallery of even more paintings on clothespins and ceiling galaxies mapped out in glow-in-the-dark stars, just barely outshone by the strings of lights on the walls. Just outside, you could see the outline of the landfill. From here, in the light of the setting sun, it wasn’t a heap of trash but something of beauty, a set of rolling, graceful hills. I guessed anything, from a far enough distance, could be beautiful.

​She put a vinyl record on the vintage stereo she had set up in the corner of her room. Everything in her house seemed years, decades even, behind, but I could have gotten used to the aesthetic. The wood paneled walls, the orange shag carpet, there was even a stack of VHS tapes by her bedroom TV. She flopped onto the bed, and I cautiously sat down beside her, not wanting to give her the wrong idea.

​The song that was playing though…

​Was that the song Charlie was playing the night we met?

​“‘Your Song.’ Elton John,” she grinned. “Don’t tell anyone, but he’s kind of my favorite.”

​“What happened to Radiohead?”

​“I like them a lot too but, you know…I have this theory, right? Everyone has two favorite artists. Their favorite, and the one they tell people is their favorite. So tell me,” she says as she grabs my hand, “who’s your favorite?”

​“Blink-182.”

​“That’s the one you tell people. Don’t worry Alex. I’m good at keeping secrets.”

​“I don’t have any secrets!” I blurted. Oh, if she only knew.

​“Really? You know you can trust me.”

​“Fine. Michael Jackson.”

​“There it is.”

​“I used to have a Michael Jackson cardboard cut-out in my room. Seriously. And when I was little, my parents got me this little replica Thriller jacket, and I’d dance around and pretend I was him. I know, I know.”

​“That’s adorable though. No judgment here.”

​She took me by the wrist and pulled me down to her level with a playful giggle. Her brown eyes never looked so bright as they did under the faint glow of the string lights. Threading her fingers through my hair, she gazed up at me mischievously before leading my lips to hers. An excited panic flooded every single nerve inside me as she drew me even closer, until I was lying on top of her. I kissed her like she was oxygen and I was gasping for air. This was so far removed from anything I’d ever done or felt with Katie, and I won’t lie and say I wasn’t scared. I was about as virginal as you can get — Katie and I never progressed past light makeout sessions, and here was Charlie, her hands beneath my shirt, tracing my form with her fingertips, her hips bucking against mine. But then, without warning, she pulled away.

​“Alex, I want to show you something.”

​She pushed me off of her and tumbled to the edge of the bed. Still smiling, she began to pull off her shirt. I looked down out of instinct.

​This is really happening. Oh god, this is really happening.

​When I looked up, she had her shirt hiked up to reveal a little turquoise bag taped to her belly.

​“What is that?” I asked, trying to hide my shock as to not sound like a dick.

​“Ostomy bag. I got it when I was younger because my Crohn’s was getting to be too much to deal with. My old school made my life hell because of it. Well, that, and liking Elton John. That’s why I was so happy to move to Triumph. No one here knows about it. Not even the cheer team. Except Brooke. And you now, I guess. Told you I was good at keeping secrets.”

​“So…it’s a poop bag.”

​She sighed. “Yes, Alex. It’s a poop bag.”

​I reached for her hand. “Charlie, I don’t care if you have a poop bag. I think you’re the most beautiful girl I’ve ever laid eyes on.”

​We didn’t get back to making out — I wasn’t sure if I was disappointed or relieved — but we spent the rest of the evening showing each other music we’d written. I showed her some of the old Five Minute Drive songs, stuff we hadn’t played in eons, and I tried to tiptoe around the fact that so many of them were about my secret girlfriend. I hated that she’d just revealed this personal, painful part of herself to me and I couldn’t freaking man up and tell her the truth about Katie. I absolutely hated myself for it. And then, she showed me her songs. Including the one about me.

​“I wrote it the week we started talking,” she said, sitting at her keyboard. “I had the weirdest feeling you’d ruin my life in all the best ways.”

​You make me wanna try again

​Even though I know you know the road is rough and my heart is restless

​You make me wanna fall in love

​Later, up in my room, I found myself at my computer, debating whether or not to send that message to Katie. It seemed so easy. Just break it off. But it wasn’t. Katie and I had history. Katie and I were going to start a family. I couldn’t throw it away for Charlie, could I? But Charlie represented everything Katie wasn’t. Where Katie was safety, Charlie was a nosedive into a different world. Katie was familiarity, while Charlie…Charlie was adventure, and isn’t that what love is supposed to be? Charlie made me want to fall in love, and that was terrifying. And captivating.

​In the end, I watched stupid Flash cartoons until I fell asleep, the message to Katie left unsent.

***

CHAPTER NINE

​Once again, it is I, the faceless, nameless narrator who has no further function in the story.

​Anyways, life had been fairly awesome since the Ann Arbor gig. Alex and Charlie’s little “relationship” was chugging along, never mind the fact that Charlie still had no idea about Katie. The poor soul, she had no clue of the shitstorm to come.

​Every Saturday until the big day, the band played its little heart out. Sunday too, if they were feeling feisty. As football season ramped up, life became a delicate balance, plotting around practices and games. It was absolutely not a great time. Football games are unjustifiably soul-suckingly boring, no matter how much Alex insisted otherwise, but spirits remained high as the team continued to win.

​The weekend of the homecoming dance, the band decided to forgo the festivities in favor of playing a show in Westland. This was a very easy decision for Alex, who was panicking over ways to invite his real girlfriend to the dance in lieu of his fake one. This was also a very easy decision for everyone else, who collectively hated such frivolous things. Everyone else except Charlie, that is, the would-be homecoming queen, who angrily wore her dress in ostensible protest.

​But this show was arguably the most important, barring SlayFest itself, as Arkelly and The Virtue were co-headlining. This was Venona’s chance for redemption in the eyes of the very bands it had embarrassed itself in front of, and there was no way anything would go wrong this time.

​Right?

***

Alex

​“What do you think?”

​Charlie did a little spin, the fringe of her silver flapper-esque dress glowing in the dim light of the club.

​“Fit for a queen,” I smiled.

​We had just finished loading in. Kit and Casey were in the green room, wrapping up a lesson that was punctuated by frustrated groans. Leo and Shawn had gone next door for pizza. For the first time that night — and likely the last time that night — Charlie and I were alone.

​“You really think they’re going to like this new song?” she asked, studying the chessboard tiles on the floor. “We haven’t done anything like this before.”

​“Well, it’s not like what we were doing before was working,” I said.

​I placed my hand over hers, and she curled her fingers around mine. The club was blasting classic rock through the loudspeakers. Some old Journey song came on, the only song I really recognized in the mix, and there, in the tiny backstage area of this dingy club, it was clear what I had to do.

​“May I have this dance?”

​Her glossy pink lips twisted into a sly smile. “I thought you’d never ask.”

​It felt silly, and I hoped to God no one else saw, but there was something cathartic about twirling around behind the stage with her. Somehow, this felt even more intimate that what had happened in her room what seemed like forever ago. She laid her head on my shoulder, and I felt her soft breath on my neck. I could have stayed there forever, and I probably would have, if Billy hadn’t barged in.

​“Oh! Alex!” he began, turning red. “I, um…”

​Shit.

​Billy went to my old school. Billy knew Katie.

​I pushed Charlie away and tried to muster a surprised face to cover up the utter panic I was feeling, but Billy was already gone by the time I looked back at him again.

​We relocated to the front of the stage as the opening band began to soundcheck. I don’t remember who they were — some random metalcore band from Ohio again. I didn’t bother to learn their name. The entire time, I was panicking about Billy, which was probably just my overthinking getting the best of me yet again. What were the chances he’d say anything to Katie? For all I knew, he was too stupid to put it it all together. Maybe he’d think nothing of it. Maybe.

​Who the hell was I kidding? Even if he said nothing to Katie, I was on a sinking ship. I couldn’t keep this up with Charlie. But I couldn’t bring myself to stop her hand from creeping into mine as the first song began, and I hated myself for it. As the center of the ballroom opened up into a violent pit, we edged off toward the wall. I watched cautiously as Billy eyed me, unsure whether or not he could see our joined hands.

​At last, the band ended its final song and it was our turn to take their place. Charlie ran ahead of me to set up her equipment, but I lingered in the crowd. I didn’t want to do any of this. Perhaps Venona was a mistake. I wished with everything within me I was back home, back with Five Minute Drive, back with Katie, back before I gave Billy any reason to stare suspiciously as I sauntered toward the stage. It wasn’t too late. I could end this. I could focus on my academics and athletics. I could take the lump of tuition money saved up in my name and become a doctor, or lawyer, or something respectable, anything besides the frontman of some mediocre emo band busting its ass trying to win over sweaty adolescents in some trashy club. But Charlie and the guys were already in their places, and my fingers found the fretboard of my guitar as I stepped into the spotlight.

​“We are Venona,” I spoke into the mic, my voice quivering. “And we’ve got something new for you tonight.”

​Some jackass yelled “Play that Eminem song” as I began to play the opening riff of the tune Charlie wrote. I mouthed the counts to myself, one-and-a-two, closing my eyes and letting the hum of my guitar drown out the jeers and my own self-doubt.

​“I never was one for giving away affection,” I sang. “I couldn’t bother with the simple things like that.

​The crowd grew silent, their collective gazes burning into my bones. Shawn and Leo came in and the mass of humans in front of me began to sway ever so slightly.

​“You make me want to fall in love.

​Charlie steps up to her own mic. She’d never sang before, not with Venona. This was new.

​“You make me wanna try again,” we sang in harmony as the chorus kicked in, our voices blending over the PA. “Even though I know you know the road is long and my heart is restless.”

​This was about me, wasn’t it. My heart sunk, but this was not the time to dwell on it. Not when the audience was wide-eyed at our band, hanging on our words like moths to a porch light. I tried to hide my own amazement. This silly pop song that made Taylor Swift look heavy in comparison managed to win over this crowd of hardcore kids, against all odds.

​The second verse went by in a haze, and Kit played the solo flawlessly. At the head of the last chorus, Charlie leapt into the middle of the stage, right beside me. Together, sharing a mic, we belted out the lyrics to a mesmerized crowd.

​“You make me wanna try again, even when I want to run, I look at you and remember the reasons you make me want to try.”

​Finally, the last chord rang out through the speakers. Charlie smiled at me, gave me a chaste peck on the cheek, and returned to her post. Leo hit play on his MacBook, triggering the intro to “Lose Yourself,” and the rest of the show went as planned. Still, a strange energy echoed through the air. Something was different now. Venona was no longer some mediocre local emo band. We were a force to be reckoned with, and Arkelly was forced to take notice.

​I knew this, because Billy confronted us at the end of the night.

​“Ah, Mr. Aponte,” he sneered as we were loading out. “You’ve really stepped up your game.”

​The poor innocent soul I was, I took this as a compliment. “Thanks, man.” I didn’t bother to look up at his insolent face as I shoved my amp into the trailer.

​“You certainly seem at home with these…degenerates. I’m glad you found your place.”

​“Excuse me?”

​“Face it, Aponte. They’re scum. White trash. To think you went to Cranbrook. Absolutely laughable. Just so you know, I haven’t forgiven you for the CD release. And neither has anyone else. You’re the laughingstock of the Downriver music scene. Hell, you’re the laughingstock of the Michigan music scene. And no one is going to take you seriously at SlayFest. You know that.” He leaned in so close I could taste his breath. “So just. Give. Up.”

​With that, he turned and disappeared into the dark of the night. I shivered. We weren’t on good terms, and this solidified that.

​As I turned back toward the building to collect the rest of the band, a now-familiar scent overtook me as a small cloud wafted out of the trailer. I heard coughing, and Leo’s voice echoed from behind the stacks of amplifiers.

​“I can’t believe he called us white trash. What a prick.”

​Casey’s big stupid voice followed. “Yeah! We’re obviously not all white! We’re like, rainbow trash!”

​I shook my head. Idiots.

***

​“One, two, three, whip your hair, throw the guitar to your left — no, no, the other left — and…”

​“Ow, shit!” cried Shawn, as the headstock of Kit’s guitar stabbed into his girthy midsection.

​“Charlie, this isn’t cheerleading,” Kit said as he inspected the damage on his own instrument. “You can’t just … choreograph headbanging.”

​Charlie looked down at her own notes. “Trust me, guys. It’ll look badass if we get this down. Now Kit, let’s cooperate so we can try the part where we stand back-to-back and I do a backflip over you.”

​We were running low on time, and this would be our final rehearsal before SlayFest, but I figured I’d indulge Charlie’s visions of synchronized stage moves. I sat cross-legged in the corner of the room watching the three of them batter each other senseless with their respective instruments. We were doing alright as a band for the time being, better than I would have really expected from us at this point. Following the show with Arkelly, our online following grew exponentially. The week leading up to SlayFest, we distributed flyers in every mall within 50 miles of the Downriver area. Tessa even took a stack and handed them out throughout several neighborhoods.

​Brooke was at my side as I watched Kit, Charlie, and Shawn lurch over like a bunch of crabs mid-seizure. She scribbled something in her notebook and turned to me.

​“You guys made the playoffs,” she said. “You know, SlayFest is the same night, right? I just … I don’t think you guys should go to Slay— I mean, the playoffs. Don’t go to the playoffs. You won’t make it in time.” Her voice trailed off.

​“What? We’ve planned this for a while, Brooke. It’s too late to back out now. Even if we go into overtime, the game should be over by 9 at the latest. We don’t go on until 10, right? You’re the one who signed us up. You’d know.”

​She silently studied the cracks in the concrete floor for a moment before sighing. “Yeah, you’re right. Forget I said anything, okay?”

​After “practice” wrapped, we ventured into the wooded area behind the storage complex. Apparently Shawn, Casey, Brooke, and Leo had a hideout from their younger days. The leaves crackled beneath our feet as we made our way through the pitch dark, illuminated only by the light of Leo’s phone and the full moon over our heads. Leo and Casey took the lead, as Casey rambled on unintelligibly about their youthful misadventures. Even Charlie had gone along on some of them, back before whatever had driven them apart. I never realized how close everyone had been growing up, and suddenly, I felt like a bit of an outsider in my own band. They’d experienced things together I’d never be able to comprehend. I thought back to that framed picture of Brooke and Charlie. Brooke had to have meant something to Charlie for it to have remained displayed in her home for so long.

​At last, there we were, the seven of us, criss-cross applesauce on the wood floor of this shoddy excuse for a fort, amongst rain-soaked porno mags and booze bottles, their labels bleached from sun exposure. Directly in front of where I was sitting was a splotch of what appeared to be a wine stain. Or blood.

​Leo must have noticed me staring at it. “Don’t worry, that’s just blood.”

​“That’s reassuring,” I said, still not convinced they hadn’t dragged me out there to sacrifice me to the old gods of the Detroit suburbs.

​Before I could bolt away in terror, Shawn clarified. “It’s from our blood ritual back in, what, eighth grade?”

​“Was it really that long ago?” asked Leo.

​“Well, Brooke got this idea from a Bon Jovi song—“

​“It was not from a Bon Jovi song, thank you,” Brooke interjected. “It was definitely from a Buffy episode.”

​Shawn scoffed. “Buffy, right. Anyways, we all came up here and took this piece of glass and—“ he mimicked the motion of slicing into his own hand.

​I’m sure I visibly grimaced. “Ew! Why would anyone do that?”

​“Because we were like, thirteen and thought we were edgy,” Leo said. “I guess it worked. We’re all still friends.” He glanced between Charlie and Brooke, who were squinting suspiciously at one another. “Kind of.”

​Casey kicked at a broken bottle. “Hey, Alex and Kit weren’t here when we did it! We should induct them into our clan!”

​This man is even more nuts than I thought.

​“I ain’t doing shit with y’all,” Brooke said, folding her arms in front of her. “I don’t know who all you sluts have screwed since eighth grade. This is a good way to get like, mega-AIDS.”

​Shawn rolled his eyes. “Says the girl who gave herself stick-and-poke tattoos with her aunt’s heroin needles.”

​“I mean, we could always just say a few words or something,” Leo mused. “Renew our vows.”

​“This isn’t a marriage, dumbass,” said Shawn. “What are you going to say? ‘I, Leonard Antoine Marshall—’“

​“Do not call me Leonard.”

​As the night wore on, we all sat around the lights of our phones, placed together in the center with the flashlights on, creating a makeshift campfire of sorts. The others reminisced about wild band camp pranks and how when Charlie’s mom used to doodle on her lunchbags, she’d take Casey’s lunch down to the art room before school to have her draw him something too, and the one time Leo beat up some kid for calling Shawn the f-slur, even though he couldn’t compete in that year’s solo and ensemble because of it. After a while, we all began to open up to each other. I learned their stories. How Casey was the one to find his mother dead of alcohol poisoning when he was only eleven, and how Charlie’s father walked out on her family. How Kit had attempted suicide, and how Shawn came pretty damn close a few times as well. Even Leo, who had become our rock, shared his insecurities, how his uncle, a Motown drummer, died penniless in the streets of Detroit, and how he was scared to death of meeting the same fate.

​My stomach twisted and I felt something akin to guilt. I’d lived this charmed life. The worst thing that ever happened to me was my dad losing the financial support of my grandfather and having to move to some low-class suburbs. I’ve never had to fight for anything. And when this whole band thing blew over — and it inevitably would — I’d leave them all behind and take my trust fund and go to some prestigious college alongside some fake-ass dudebros in Abercrombie polos.

​As much as I wanted this nightmare to end, part of me wanted to hold onto the warmth and realness of it for as long as I could.

***

CHAPTER TEN

Leo

​Ah yes, our biggest show yet.

​The playoffs, mind you. Not SlayFest.

​I ran through the warm-ups with the rest of the drumline, rudiment after rudiment. Somewhere in the distance, I could hear Shawn’s section leader barking out orders, this scale and that scale. Farther in the distance, Casey was adjusting his stupid mascot costume, a big blue housecat we tried to pretend was a cougar. The gym teacher caught us smoking behind the bleachers one year and promised not to rat us out to the authorities if Casey agreed to act as the mascot, as he was one of maybe four students in the entire school who was tall enough to fit in it.

​Let’s go Triumph High School

​Silver, blue and white!

​Claws out, mighty cougars,

​Ready for the fight — rah rah rah!

​“Ever notice how the fight song is basically just ‘Jolly Old Saint Nicholas’?” Shawn blew the spit out of his instrument. “Just, ya know, marchier?”

​“I try not to think about Christmas songs in the middle of October,” I said. “But thanks. Now I can’t unhear it.”

​We were now in our little corner of the field. The air was thick with the typical pre-game noodling, the occasional discernible melody poking through the cacophony of sound. This would continue until the drum majors took their place in front of us, commanding our attention.

​The band played the usual, the national anthem and fight song and all that. To me, it was running through the same motions that had been rattling through my brain for four years now. We marched through the clouds of mosquitos and stood at attention as the bugs feasted on our exposed flesh. At last, we were released to our stations on the sidelines. To our left were the cheerleaders, Charlie at the front and center, with a corny-ass smile plastered on her face. I knew she was terrified of what would happen. So was I. So was everyone else who knew what was really happening.

​Let’s go Triumph High School

​Silver, blue, and white!

​We were the first to score. Fight song, then “Seven Nation Army.” It’s always “Seven Nation Army.” The teams geared up for the next round. Are they called “rounds?” I’m not much of a football buff. My extent of football knowledge begins and ends with whatever I witness as part of the marching band. Another few minutes of running back and forth. I recognized the members of our team. I knew when people I had AP literature with caught the ball. I wanted to root for them. I wanted to cheer on Kyle K., whose presentation on why “The Great Gatsby” sucks managed to hold my attention somehow. Or Cody D., who actually read “The Grapes of Wrath,” unlike literally everyone else in our class. Or Alex, who I’d go on to perform in the SlayFest competition with later that night.

​The other team scored. Shit.

​“Seven Nation Army.” Again.

​Just score already.

​7-7. A tie.

​I left with Shawn to get a hot dog. The rubbery kind. Its foot-long length did not compensate for its inferiority. I doused it with enough mustard to make disguise the taste, if not make it edible. The sky was fading into a pinkish purple as the temperature noticeably dropped several degrees. As we settled back in our places, we watched nervously as the players hustled from one side of the field to the other, then back again, as the score remained the same. Then, a startling silence.

​What the hell?

​One player was lying motionless on the turf. We all traded glances — Shawn and I to Brooke in the stands, and Charlie and Casey in front of the stands, to Kit on the bench. Something had gone terribly, terribly wrong, and time came to a halt as the emergency responders on deck rushed the field. My hands felt cold around my sticks as I pressed them to my chest, trying to keep my heart from falling out of it. A listlessness fell over the crowd as we realized the still silhouette on the field was Alex.

What followed was the longest five minutes of my life.

​As the moths danced in the light above us, we stood somberly while the EMTs assessed the damage. Alex was carried off the field and taken into the ambulance, and we all stared in anticipation of the lights and sirens. Instead, the door opened once again and a disheveled Alex emerged with a twisted look on his grimy face. As he sauntered past the band, he stopped and looked up at me specifically.

​“I think I fractured something in my arm, but I told ‘em I’m fine. Just said I can’t afford the hospital bills and they let me go.”

​“You’re absolutely insane,” I sighed. “The show’s not that important. Go to the hospital, dumbass.”

​“We’ve come too far.” He made a face as he bent his arm. “I’ll have Casey play rhythm for me tonight.”

​“Yeah, we lost.”

​“The game or the battle of the bands?”

​“Yes,” I said, stifling a laugh.

​As Alex took his place on the bench, I noticed who was missing from it — Kit? There he was, on the field, braid sticking out of his helmet and looking comically small compared to the rest of the players.

​We were definitely losing tonight.

​We played “Seven Nation Army” a-freaking-gain as the players took their places. The music came to a stop and the game resumed, the big 7-7 looming over us on the scoreboard. There was some running about, some cheering from the stands and from the cheerleaders, and the occasional sound of the whistle. The fourth quarter was down to little over a minute as the sky blackened. This was the end. I snuck a look at my phone. 9:16. I twirled my drumsticks anxiously. Then—

​Kit?!

​He was at one end of the field, ball in hand, as the other players stood like statues. A member of the opposing team looked down at the braid in his hand, which had clearly come straight from Kit’s head.

​Did…did Kit’s hair just win us the game? Does this even count?

​Kit removed his helmet and shook out his now-shoulder-length locks. The refs looked around in confusion. He had gotten the ball past the other team’s goal line, which counted for something. That much I knew. He’d outrun everyone, even if one of them managed to grab him by his braid — which broke off, I assumed, because of the damage from Brooke’s impromptu makeover. From what I’d later learn, it’s an entirely legal move, grabbing your opponent by the hair, as the hair is considered part of their uniform. We played several of the tunes in our repertoire as the referees debated whether or not what had just happened would result in a point for us.

​And, as they decided, it did. We’d won the game, quite literally, by a hair. But there was no time to celebrate. For us, the night had just begun.

***

Alex

​By the time we made it out to the parking lot, stealthily evading the attention of the coaches and zealous observers, my arm was throbbing. We had the same arrangement as before when we’d raced down the highway to Shawn’s, only this time, we were en route to Detroit. The clock read 9:39. I held out my arm and Charlie made a makeshift sling from her undershirt, not even phased by being half-naked in front of Ali and Kit.

​“Don’t worry,” she said, wrapping the shirt around my forearm. “My mom packed us some clothes in my bag.”

​“Us?”

​“That was supposed to be a surprise,” she smiled. “My mom made us ‘uniforms.’ She said we need a schtick. All the good bands had a look, ya know? I told her not to, but she insisted.”

​Even if it was a dorky idea, I couldn’t turn down Ms. Lipschitz’s act of generosity. “Your mom is too good for this sinful earth.”

​The suburbs gave way to the lights of the city factories and the edifices of Detroit came into view like Oz at the end of the yellow brick road. I watched as Kit attempted to make some kind of sense of his new shorter hair. Ali had quipped that his new look was part of his “character development.” Kit brushed him off. He was going to grow it back eventually anyway, he said.

​We arrived at 10:05 sharp. As we congregated in front of the venue, we heard the sound of another band on stage, and I immediately recognized the vocalist as Billy Reuben. Weren’t they supposed to be done by 9:50? Inside, we saw him and Brooke and the rest of the band performing, presumably eating away at our time slot. We quickly loaded in, throwing our gear haphazardly in the backstage area while Charlie gave us all our new shirts, a set of navy blue baseball uniforms, lovingly sewn by her mom. There was our band name on the back and a new logo, a pair of interlocking triangles, embroidered on the front. I have to admit, they looked pretty good on us.

​Charlie came up beside me and grabbed my hand without a word. Her strawberry-scented hair fell onto my shoulder. I kissed the top of her head and gave her hand a squeeze. Maybe this adventure would be worth it after all. I had Charlie now. I had the band, and even if they hadn’t been my first choice of companions, they’d proved to be some of the truest companions I’d ever had. Somewhere out there, Five Minute Drive was selling out enormous venues and traveling the world, and for the first time, I didn’t even care. I had everything I could ask for inside the walls of this dingy club. All that was left to do was win this prize.

​At last, Arkelly was finished. My stomach dropped as the house lights came on and we were given the cue. We dragged our amps and instruments onto the stage and scrambled to assemble our setups. Casey was to my left, a foot behind Shawn, my Tele hanging from his shoulders. To my right, Charlie was stretching and Kit was frantically tuning. Leo shot me an “OK” and I signaled to the sound guy that we were ready. This was easily the biggest crowd we’d ever played for, probably the biggest crowd I’d ever played for, Five Minute Drive included. Leo pressed a button on the laptop, clicked his sticks together, and it was time. What happened in the next ten minutes would decide our fates, as a band and as individuals.

​We had two songs — “Lose Yourself” and Charlie’s song, “Try.” As the intro to “Lose Yourself” ended, Kit began playing the main riff. Thankfully, Casey didn’t have much to do on this one, but I was worried for our next song, which required him to play the intro. With all the energy I could summon, I prowled around the front of the stage, enjoying the freedom not having to play guitar myself afforded me. Sure, one of my arms was useless, but I was much more able to interact with the crowd now. As the song came to a close, I saw the door burst open with another swarm of onlookers. Amy and Ali barged in, followed by the would-be Ram’s Horn crew. I saw Kit smile, probably for the first time ever. In the quiet between songs, I heard one of Ali’s asshole friends mutter “Isn’t that your faggot brother?” To which Ali responded with a well-deserved swift fist to the face. I couldn’t help but smile myself. Kit wasn’t the only experiencing character development.

Tessa skulked around snapping photos of us while Brooke stood aloof in the corner. It was like the entire world had come out to see us. All except my entire world, that is. Katie wasn’t there, and as I looked over at Charlie, who was waiting in anticipation of Casey’s opening lick, I felt that familiar twinge of guilt. Charlie was beautiful, and fun, and talented, but Katie was my person, and I hated that I was living this double life without her. I shouldn’t have led Charlie on like this. I was going to say something after the performance. It would kill me, but I needed to.

I heard the intro to “Try,” Casey’s clumsy hands somehow managing to play the intricate part I’d written for it. The rest of the band kicked in and I sang the first verse, awaiting Charlie’s second verse, which she’d sing without the knowledge that I was planning on breaking her heart once this all was over. But we went through the motions, her deep brown eyes gleaming at me as we shared a mic. FInally, the last line — “You make me wanna fall in love” — and the crowd went wild below us. We were shuffled off the stage almost as quickly as we’d been corralled onto it, but there was no time to rest. We were the last band on, so the MC took the stage to announce the winners and runner-ups.

We waited patiently at the foot of the stage, Charlie taking my hand into hers once more. I saw the others scattered throughout the audience, watching in anticipation as the lights went down. I felt Charlie’s fingers curl around mine as the names were listed off. Third place, that Ohio band I can never remember. Second place, Arkelly. First place — wait, there must have been a mistake? But my feet took me to the stage once more, the rest of the band meeting me there, I saw Ali and Tessa and Brooke cry out in glee. Charlie leaned in to kiss me in celebration.

“Your 2008 Slayfest Battle of the Bands Winner is Venona of Taylor, Michigan!” the MC shouted into the mic as the crowd erupted into cacophonous applause. “This year’s winner will open for 89x’s annual Christmas extravaganza and win a hefty sum of $500!”

Here’s the record scratch and the subsequent mood whiplash. There really had been a mistake.

“Wait, $500?” I say, looking down at the little black numbers inked onto the check.

Brooke mouthed from the audience “I can explain.

I knew I shouldn’t have freaked out the way I did, but in that moment, I knew Brooke had lied to me. There was a reason I’d never heard of Slayfest. The check read “SleighFest.” Did she change the spelling so I couldn’t search the name and find the information? She’d definitely bent the truth, but why? Those questions didn’t matter to me in that moment. All that did matter was that I was furious. But just then, the worst possible thing that could happen, did happen.

Katie!

She stormed right up to the stage and grabbed Charlie roughly by the neck of her shirt. Her mom’s craftsmanship tore slightly from the force.

“Who. Is. This?!” Katie, who I’d never seen any more than mildly perturbed in my life, grasped Charlie with sheer menace. Charlie tried to defend herself, and put up a decent fight to be fair, but she was much smaller than Katie. The two of them struggled for a minute until Charlie tumbled ungracefully to the ground. She lied still and dazed, flat on her stomach, until I realized what had happened. Her bag!  

When she stood up, we all watched in horror as the…fluid…dripped from the seams of her baseball tee, her eyes watering. She darted out of sight, and I was tempted to run after her, but then I remembered the check in my hands.

“Fuck this!” I yelled, ripping the check in two and throwing it to the ground.

But by the time I turned the corner into the backstage area, Charlie was nowhere to be seen.

***

Charlie

It’s about time I get to tell my side of the story. But my side of the story starts way back, back before Venona, before Alex, before any of this. Like Alex’s story, it started with a swift fist to the face — of my middle school bully.

I looked up to see who had defended me from the cheap jabs I’d grown used to. Standing before me was a large girl with long dark hair and Spongebob pajama pants.

“I don’t think you have to worry about that bitch anymore,” the girl said. “I’m Brooke. I just moved here.”

“Charlie,” I muttered. “But…why? Why did you do that?”

She grinned. “Just wanted to smack a hoe I guess.”

I smiled awkwardly. I’d never heard anyone my own age use that kind of language. A tiny bead of steel gleamed from the side of her nose. She seemed so effortlessly cool, unlike me at the time.

Still, we became inseparable from that moment on. I remember the first time she came over to my place after school. My mother greeted her at the door with apples from our backyard and ushered her into the living room, where she excitedly showed off my paintings. Brooke looked in awe at our walls, covered floor to ceiling with artwork, family photos, and miscellanea from our years of collecting things we found fascinating. She focused in on one particular canvas.

“Woah,” she said, tracing the letters. “Is this Russian?”

“Hebrew,” my mother smiled. “It’s a Jewish blessing.”

Her dark brown eyes opened wide. “Are y’all Jewish? My aunt says you guys rule the world!”

My mother laughed. “Well, if that were true,” she started, “we wouldn’t be living in Taylor, Michigan.”

In my room, she started flipping through all of my CDs, loudly declaring which bands she liked and which were lame. At one point, she stopped her exploration of my music stash and looked up from the hardwood floor.

“Okay, favorite artist of all time.” It was a demand, not a question.

“Radiohead.”

“That’s the one you tell people,” she said. “Now what’s your real favorite?”

“Radiohead. Why do you—“

“Be honest. I won’t judge you.”

“Fine. Elton John.”

“There it is.” She laughed. “Mine’s GNR.”

I flipped the question back onto her. “Real favorite?”

“Bon Jovi. When I was a kid, I’d watch the Behind the Music of them religiously. It always made me feel better somehow.”

“When you were a kid,” I laughed. “You’re like, twelve.”

“I’ve lived a lot of lives,” she said, half-jokingly.

We would do this a lot after school. One of our favorite things to do following her “confession” was to play Bon Jovi. It sounds absolutely absurd, and it was. Most of the time we’d argue over who got to be Jon Bon Jovi and who would be relegated to Richie Sambora status. Most of the time, I was Richie. When we both decided to dye our hair (with the help of my mother, of course), my fate as the Richie of the two of us was cemented. “You’re the dark-haired one now,” Brooke would say. “You have to be Richie.” But I’d grab my fake guitar (read: broomstick) and she’d grab her fake mic (read: hairbrush) and we’d lip-synch the entire Slippery When Wet album every Friday night until my mom yelled at us to stop.

We had a lot of firsts together. I remember when I got my first period — she’d had hers way before me — and she guided me through all of the awkwardness of that experience. She got her first boyfriend, Shawn, and along with him came his dopey friends, Leo and Casey. We became a little family, so much so that we had a “ceremony” in the woods one night. And of course, Brooke spent the night every Friday after we’d finish hanging out with the guys.

“Have you ever kissed a boy?” Brooke asked during one of our weekly sleepovers.

“Ew, no!” I yelled, and then my eyes got big. “Have you?”

“Duh,” she grinned. “I’ve kissed lots of ‘em. Do you even know how to kiss a boy?”

“I’m sure I could figure it out,” I lied. “it’s supposed to come naturally, right? Like sex.”

“It’s kind of like…um…drinking from a pop can.” She took the can of Coke she’d been sipping on and held it to her lips. “The can is the boy’s lips.” She made out with the can, rubbing her cherry-glossed lips over the rim seductively. Then, she handed the can to me. “Wanna try?”

I grabbed it and looked at the greasy lip-splotches hesitantly. “It’s got your germs all over it now, weirdo.”

“That’s the fun of kissing! It’s supposed to be slobbery and gross.”

We were tired and slap-happy at this point, and I fell onto my bed, wheezing. Then, out of nowhere, she leaned in and kissed me — not the icky kind she’d just demonstrated, but a sweet, delicate, chaste kiss. I was young and socially awkward and not sure if this was a thing normal straight female friends did, but I didn’t mind it happening. I loved Brooke more than anyone, and something about the moment just felt right. Gay, straight, friends, lovers. It didn’t matter to me. No one got me like she did, and no one ever would.

I also remember the one time I went to her place. I don’t think I could forget it.

The entire place reeked of cigarette smoke, the smell clinging to the ugly shag carpeting. The trailer was a wreck in general, and in the center of the living room, like a filth queen, sat Brooke’s aunt, Scarlett. She was scarily pale and skinny with neglect-clumps of red hair. Her arms were wracked with what I could only assume were track marks from drug use.

“Ah, you must be Charlie,” she rasped from her throne. “Brooke told me a lot about ya.”

I took a second to investigate the surroundings. A makeshift meth pipe — promising. Rat droppings — lovely. A Confederate flag — maybe she likes Dukes of Hazzard? A book collection — at least she was well-read. Mein Kampf — yikes.

I picked up the book and laughed uneasily. “I take it you’re a history buff?”

“Oh, yeah,” she said. “Did Brooke ever tell you her grandpa died in a concentration camp?”

“Really?” Maybe she wasn’t so bad after all. Just into the darker parts of world history, that’s all. “My grandma actually—“

Before I could finish my sentence, she cut me off. “Fell out of a guard tower.” She laughed as if that was the funniest possible thing she could have said in the moment. I cringed. “Ay Brooke,” she added. “You forgot to do the dishes again. If you wanna live here, you gotta do the work.”

“Scarlett—“

“Aunt Scarlett, you mean?” She tried to stand up, but her knees buckled and she fell back into the decrepit recliner. “You’re lucky I’m not feeling good. I’d beat your ass right in front of your friend.”

Brooke turns to me. “Let’s just go to my room.”

Once we’re safely in Brooke’s room and out of earshot of her aunt, I whispered, “What’s her problem?”

“She’s not used to company I don’t think. Don’t take it personal.”

“Does she really beat you?”

“Don’t worry ‘bout it. Let’s play Mario Kart.” She booted up the N64, looking away.

“Brooke. You can talk to me.”

She didn’t remove her eyes from the load screen. “It’s better than my dad’s place, trust me. She lets me stay here as long as I do all the chores. Sometimes I feel more like a slave than anything, but whatcha gonna do?”

I didn’t say anything. I didn’t know where this girl came from or what she’d been through. I just wrapped my arms around her and wished I could protect her from the world.

One time at my place, we watched Bring It On, and that’s when she confessed her real deepest, darkest secret — she wanted to be a cheerleader.

“They’re always so cool and confident. I wish I was like that. I think I could do it.”

I shrugged. “It can’t be too hard. Can you do a cartwheel?”

So we went out into the front yard and helped each other tumble about until we were both dizzy and laughing our brains out. Then, we took turns making up the most obnoxious “cheers.” “2, 4, 6, 8, let’s watch porn and masturbate!” (Give us a break, we were middle schoolers and thought that was hilarious.) And then we made up a dance. 80s music, natch. “What a Feeling” from Flashdance to be precise. We were convinced we were going to take the cheerleading tryouts by storm.

And…we did. We somehow, miraculously did. I didn’t even want to try out — it was more of Brooke’s thing. She was so excited to be part of something, and especially to be part of something with me. We were going to be the Jon Bon Jovi and Richie Sambora of cheerleading. Except…

The cost. She couldn’t afford the uniforms we were required to buy.

I didn’t know what to do. I wanted to be part of something as well. I’d been teased my entire life, and here I was, handed my big break. Maybe I should have handled it differently. But Brooke…

She definitely should have handled it differently.

After I broke the news to her that I was going to go forward and join the cheer team without her, she berated me with a fervor I’d never seen from anyone, not even my childhood bullies. All of this ending with a certain slur that rhymes with “bike.”

“But wait, Charlie,” you say. “There are at least two slurs that rhyme with ‘bike.’” And whichever one you’re thinking of, I can assure you that she did, in fact, use that one.

And there you have it. Of course Brooke made off with our mutual friends, and I made my own on the cheer squad, but there was always a hole in my heart where she should have been. Part of me never wanted to forgive her, and the other part of me wanted nothing more than to see her when my world was crumbling, sitting on the curb in the rain just outside of the Sleighfest venue.

Suddenly, a familiar voice. “Hey, Richie Sambora.”

***

So now, we meet with our heroine Charlie, despondent in the rain and covered in her own filth.

Or should I say, I meet with Charlie. The narrator was me, Brooke. Surprise!

And I guess I have a lot of explaining to do.

For one, SlayFest — or should I say, SleighFest — was real the entire time. The only thing I lied about, barring the spelling, was the prize money.

Okay, there were a few other things too. Like how I signed Venona up out of the kindness of my little heart. That wasn’t true. Not at first, at least. Only ten bands could enter, and I knew Arkelly would easily beat anyone who competed — barring The Virtue. In my humble attempt to keep them from entering, I volunteered Venona, convinced they’d absolutely bomb as they’d proven entirely capable of.

My ruse about the prize money wasn’t going to stick for long, not with everyone that wasn’t named Alex Aponte. The thing about Alex Aponte is that when you grow up rich, you really can’t tell $500 from $50,000. It’s all chump change to him. But we all knew. Charlie, Kit, Leo, Shawn, even Casey, as dimwitted as he is. Everyone figured out I was lying to them about the real prize. And the real prize, as corny as it seems, wasn’t the $500, but the friends we made along the way (cue the sappy music, whatever). That’s the reason no one filled Alex in on the sham. If he knew we weren’t actually competing for money to pay back our debts to the Meltdown’s owners, he would have backed out. But this stupid little family we’d built for ourselves was too valuable to throw away, so they all played along until the very end. We all played along.

None of that mattered much to me as I ran out to the shaking mass of human that was Charlotte Rose Lipschitz, who was as fallen from grace as one could get, sitting there on the curb.

I wrapped my jacket around her shoulders. “You smell like shit.”

“I wonder why,” she half-smiled. I couldn’t tell where the rain stopped and her tears began, but it looked like she’d been crying for a good minute.

“I’m sorry about everything,” I said. “Everything. Everything everything.”

“That’s vague. Why did you follow me out here?”

“Because no matter what, you’re still my best friend. I hate that I hurt you. I know I said some things that I—“

“Brooke, it’s okay. It’s over. I just want to be—“

I’ll be there for you,” I sang softly.

“Oh god—“

These five words I swear to you.

Her big brown eyes locked with mine. “You came out here to quote Bon Jovi at me, like that’s going to magically fix everything?” Then, her face softened into a real smile. “Because it’s working.”

I put an arm around her, ignoring the fact that she smelled like death crapped itself. “I’ll be Richie Sambora this time.”

“It’s okay,” she giggled. “I kind of like being the Richie. He was the better singer anyways, and he was cuter if we’re being honest. And he gets to make out with all the hot blonde chicks.”

“Like me?” I joked.

“Don’t flatter yourself, Jon.”

I stayed out there with her until her mom came to pick her up. At last, I felt some semblance of peace. We were going to be alright.

***

Alex

Those next few days, I felt like nothing short of a pariah.

The band continued to sit together, but I was an unperson of sorts to them. Casey was pissed I tore up the check, and understandably so. That $500 would have been his ticket back into his family’s townhouse. The others couldn’t get over how arrogant I’d behaved. And Charlie, God, I was never going to make things right with her. It was bad enough that Katie blocked my number, but Charlie wouldn’t even look at me. A full gray cloud loomed over those days. Band practices had ceased, or so I thought. Turns out, the rest of the band continued practicing without me. Even Brooke was welcomed back into the loop. But I was, for all intents and purposes, dead to everyone.

The Friday after everything went down, I found myself in Kit’s mother’s cafe, puffing away at a hookah I had no business even accessing. Kit knew I was down, so he promised not to tattle to his mom that I was underage. Kit was at least attempting to be civil with me, for what it was worth. Casey stayed in the kitchen, avoiding eye contact.

“I just don’t know what to do,” I moaned, taking another hit of the hookah. Might as well start another bad habit, I thought to myself. What’s the point in trying to be the golden child anymore? It all backfired in the worst way. “Everyone hates me. I feel like a failure.”

“At least you’re finally seeing what it’s like,” Kit said, sitting in the booth across from me and staring out the window at the bustling Dearborn streets. 

“What do you mean?”

“To be human. The worst thing that’s ever happened to you was moving here. For us, being here was the starting line, you know?”

“I really don’t know what you’re talking about.”

He leaned in toward me. “Listen Alex, do you really want to make this better? There’s this Lebanese proverb — he who took the donkey up to the roof should bring it down. Do you know what that means?”

“What does it mean?”

He blew smoke in my face before crossing his leg. “I don’t know either.”

***

I debated on disbanding Venona, but it was no longer mine to break up. They’d given it a life of their own, and I was stranded on the outskirts of this community they’d built.  At least I had athletics — not like our team made it past the next round of playoffs. And I had academics — not like my family had any money left to send me to a prestigious school. Except, I did have money. The savings account my father had put together years ago, which had been left alone, even with all the financial turmoil. That was something I could fall back upon. I’d apply for Harvard, or U of M, or Notre Dame, or any number of schools that would be fighting over me, and I’d go on to live the charmed life I knew I was destined for.

But who would I be leaving behind?

I flashed back to the night we cut our hands in the old clubhouse. This was a bond I couldn’t easily break, and I knew it. Before I moved on with my life, I had to do something to make it up to them.

We had one more show.

EPILOGUE

Alex

“Alex.”

Charlie looked up from her whirlwind of wires and cables, her big brown eyes gleaming under the stage lights.

“This is our biggest show yet.”

I sighed. “We’re opening.”

“Yeah,” she grinned. “For Fall Out Boy. At the freaking Filmore. Look alive, stupid.”

“We’re playing two songs.”

“While opening for Fall Out Boy. At the freaking Filmore.”

I guess I could have been a bit more appreciative of how things turned out. Sure, I drained my college fund in order to rebuild the Meltdown, better than before I should add. The Downriver music scene was flourishing more than ever now that we’d spearheaded the reopening of the venue. The owners were even kind enough to bring on Casey as a barista for their newly refurbished coffeeshop, and I’d sent in my own application. I had to recoup my tuition money somehow. Then again, pre-med was the last thing on my mind. Perhaps my calling really was music after all. 

I reached into my guitar case and felt a bundle of envelopes.

“Guys. Quick band meeting.”

The rest of Venona (and Casey) circled around me. Maybe it was just the stage lights, but something was different about every single one of them. I couldn’t help but smile a bit as I gathered the envelopes in my hands.

“Listen. I had a little leftover after I paid off the Meltdown. So—” I handed everyone an envelope with their names written on them. “This is for your hard work in the band. Merry Christmas, happy Hanukkah, blessed, uh, Kwanzaa? And Ramadan?”

“Hanukkah is next week,” Charlie mumbled.

“And I know I’m black and all,  but my family doesn’t do Kwanzaa,” Leo said, suppressing a tiny laugh.

“And like, do you even know what Ramadan is?” Kit rolled his eyes.

“Whatever. Happy Sunday. Just take the damn money.”

Casey about leapt in excitement. “I can pay off my sister! Heck yes! But…” He looked over at Kit. “I wouldn’t be here without you and your family.”

Kit flashed a rare smile. “God Casey, it’s not like you can’t visit us. You know you’re part of the family now.”

“We’re all family,” I said. “Which reminds me, there’s someone I need to talk to.”

I crawled off the stage and searched the crowd for the signature tuft of bleached blonde hair. Brooke was mulling about in the back corner of the ballroom area.

“Hey.” Two heavily eyelinered eyes peaked up beneath a thick fringe.

“We need to talk,” I said.

“No, I need to talk,” she countered. “I know I lied. We all lied. We knew the prize money wasn’t going to be that much. The thing is, we were all scared you wouldn’t want to go through with it if you found out the truth.”

“That doesn’t matter, Brooke. Here, it’s not a lot but it should cover a few community college business courses. Consider yourself the official manager of Venona.”

“You’re lying now. There’s no…” She opened the envelope and watched as several bills flickered through the air to the ground. “Alex. I can’t believe it.” Suddenly, her sloppily tatted arms wrapped around my neck. I thought she was going to break my spine. “Now I just gotta make it through senior year.”

I heard a voice ring through the PA. Casey was hooting and hollering into the microphone, trying to get my attention. 

Why did we ever let him back on stage?

The lineup was finalized. Casey’s lessons with Kit paid off and he was able to crank out a couple of power chords, enough to play barebones pop-punk at the very least. On my left was Shawn, who, even with his signature scowl, looked lighter than air for once. Leo reclined in the back on his throne, clicking together his drumsticks with the confidence I imagined his late uncle had. I knew he would have been proud. There was Kit to my right, his now-natural black hair falling down to his shoulders. The scars on his arm were now covered in a tattoo Brooke had done for him a few weeks prior. He told me it was Arabic — “I suffered, I learned, I changed.” And by my side was Charlie, who I’d be splitting lead vocals with. She slung her keytar around her shoulders and stepped up to her mic, looking as ravishing as the first time I’d seen her in the principal’s office, a day that seemed like centuries ago. To think this was just the beginning! I could already envision late night practices, long recording sessions, and more post-show Coney Island outings than I could count.

“I never was one for giving away affection,” I started singing. “I couldn’t bother with the simple things like that.” 

It felt like coming home.

I don’t remember much of the rest of the night. I briefly met the guys from the other bands, which should have been monumental, but everything was overshadowed by one sentence spoken by Charlie as she packed up her gear.

“It will take a long time.”

“What?”

“I won’t say never it’ll never happen again. But it will take a long time.”

I knew what she meant. “I’m glad we can at least be friends.”

The air was cold as we loaded everything into the trailer. Tiny snowflakes began to fall from the sky. Casey tapped my shoulder and handed me a tiny rolled-up something.

“You gotta try this man. These famous guys know where to get the good shit.”

“It’s okay,” I laughed. “Last time I tried something new, I burned down a building.”

“I’ll give ya that.” He disappeared into the trailer. “Ay Leo, do you think you can score another one of those apples?”

“Perfection is the Enemy of Completion”: My NaNoWriMo Experience So Far

I realize I haven’t been very active on here as of late. That’s for a couple of reasons. First of all, I’ve been busy packing and preparing for the move to Fort Wayne this January, which is rapidly approaching. To be honest, clearing out our apartment and getting together all the things we’ll need for the sixth months of the internship is kind of a full time job. Especially when you’re me and have an ungodly amount of clothes. Like, dragon hoard levels of clothing.

I’d be a very fashionable dragon.

Most importantly, I’ve been working on NaNoWriMo this year. Will I actually finish a novel? Probably not, if I’m being realistic. I restarted my story like five times already and decided to ditch it altogether for an idea I had like a year ago, so there’s that.

I haven’t actually finished a story since elementary school. When I was a kid, I’d come up with stories all the time, and while the teacher was rattling off about long division, I was busy penning the first great children’s book written by an actual child. I was kind of legendary among the staff at my school for my precocious writing abilities. It was one of the few things I was good at, because God knows “obeying social norms” and “paying attention in class” was not among those things.

The signs were right there.

I still remember the series I sunk my heart and soul into: The Great Adventure. Creative name, I know. And the plot was equally creative — three pets get lost and have to find their way home. No, I definitely didn’t steal the idea from Homeward Bound.

Why would you think that?

As I got older, the stories I came up with got more complex, and the middle school teachers I had weren’t as keen on me writing during class, so I just kind of…stopped. For a while at least. When I finally picked up the pen again, or rather, booted up the word processor on my family’s shiny new computer for the first time, I found myself unable to get past the first chapter of, well, anything. All of my amazing story ideas were dead on arrival.

I think as I got older, I lost that sense of fun I had when it came to writing. Now that I was in my teens, and eventually twenties and thirties, I held myself to higher standards than I did as a child. Everything had to be perfect. I couldn’t half-ass anything, lest the entire project turn to dog crap. I couldn’t even write a few pages without having to revise everything and eventually rewrite what I had altogether.

“Chapter Two”? I don’t know her.

For NaNoWriMo this year, I decided to try something different. I have this character from the project I’ve been working on (that I’ll probably never finish) named Tessa, and she’s canonically thirteen years old at the start of the story. I thought to myself, what if I write the story from her perspective? Perhaps writing from the point of view of a literal child will allow me to get into that headspace I had when I was a kid, when I could write anything. There was room for errors because hey, I was a kid. I don’t have to hold myself up to these ridiculous standards because realistically, a thirteen year old’s diary would be a trainwreck of ideas and stream of conscious blathering.

And so far, it’s been working. I’m kind of excited to follow this character through seven years and watch her grow. I plan to adjust my writing as she gets older, which will be a fun experiment in style. I don’t think I’ll finish this project by the end of November, but I’m off to a great start finally creating something, anything.

My girlfriend often tells me perfection is the enemy of completion, and it’s better for something to be published and imperfect than flawless but unpublished. What use are stories if no one ever gets to hear them? For once, I want to finish something I’ve started, and I’m feeling good about this one.

Without further ado, here’s a little snippet of what I’ve been working on:

Saturday, September 13, 2008

Dr. Roberta told me to start keeping a journal to track how I’m feeling every day. She also told me to stop selling my Adderall to the high schoolers. Welp.

My mom bought me this college-ruled notebook from Meijer. It’s got enough pages to last until I’m like, twenty. The front has a bunch of flowers and crap. (Wait, am I allowed to say that?! Crap crap crap CRAP!) I don’t really know what I’m doing as far as writing goes. Do I just write down whatever pops into my big dumb head? Do I address this to anyone? Like, “Dear Diary, this is Tessa Mae Harlow reporting on my boring life.” I don’t even know what to write about. I’m thirteen, I’m not interesting yet.

I’m writing this from the stoop of the old brick house down the street. I usually come here after school to get away from my parents and brother and listen to the cassette tapes my mom passed down to me. That is, if I’m not hanging out with Kit or going to youth group for the evening. The house itself was built in the 20s I think. It’s “has a radiator in the living room” old. Sometimes I sneak through the window when I’m feeling brave and take pictures of the interior. It was probably a pretty place in its prime, but now it’s what you’d call dilapidated. “Dilapidated,” incidentally, was one of the words I had to spell for the spelling bee last year, and the definition is “decayed, deteriorated, or fallen into partial ruin especially through neglect or misuse.” I could spell that, but not “below.” I’m still salty about that.

Yeah, I’m having a lot of fun with this. I’ll keep y’all posted.

Stairway to Heaven

This is a prequel to the series, The Downriver Kids, focusing on Kit’s backstory.

Huge content warning here, this story deals with self-harm, suicidal thoughts, mental health issues, and sexual assault. If these things are sensitive topics for you, don’t feel obligated to read tbis! The rest of the TDK storyline will still make sense without the information here. Consider this a standalone story that gives just a little more detail on Kit’s background.

“Astaghfirullah.” Forgive me, God.

My skin goes numb as I whisper it to myself. I glance around the chemistry lab. These are the kids I grew up with. Every one of them is a stranger.

Everybody knows.

The thermometer by the door tells me the room is 73 degrees Fahrenheit. That’s a lie. It is an arctic hellhole, and I feel as if my entire body is a moment away from falling into hypothermic shock. My organs will readily shut down if I stay any longer.

They are talking about you. Every single one.

My mind screams at me in many languages, some I don’t even understand. I try to silence them by focusing on the worksheet in front of me. The letters are incomprehensible to me and link together to form entirely nonsensical statements. “What is the weight of .30 mol of oxygen?” “Where is oxygen?” “Did you put a mole in the oxygen bathtub?” “Did you forget to ask the chocolate shake society about the hammock in the freezer?”

Everything is nonsensical. My body wretches with thoughts of memories I no longer wish to have, and the atmosphere is loud, louder than the bombs from my mother’s separate, no less traumatic memories. Louder than the screeching, piercing sound my amplifier made when I first plugged it in. Louder than my family’s cafe at peak time or the local shows I’d sneak into when I was supposed to be at football games.

Everybody knows. They look at me with disgust and disdain. Everybody knows.

I can’t be here. I can’t. I can’t.

I don’t bother to grab any of my belongings off the table. I throw down my pencil and run out of the room, ignoring my teacher’s pleas.

“Mr. Hachem!” I hear him say as I slam the classroom door behind me. “Khaled! Is something–”

I couldn’t make out the rest of his sentence, not with the chaos in my head. I’m almost in tears as I find my older brother’s class. I barely see his greasy, spike-haired head look up as I scream through the window.

“Ali! I have to go home!”

His class goes silent.

“What? Kit?”

“I’m going home! Tell Mom I love her!”

I hear his chair crash into the linoleum and the door flies open with the force of a hurricane. My brother is much larger and stronger than me, but I can outrun him easily.

In what seems like just a few seconds, I’m halfway down the street, with Edsel Ford High miles and miles behind me. A memory. A very distant, very unpleasant memory.

They’re coming for you. All of them. You need to leave.

At once I feel sick and dirty and torn and scared, overwhelmed with emotions I’d always been able to suppress to some extent. Now, the floodgates have opened. My heels dig into the cold, wet ground as the rain catches in my hair. I whisper prayers and proverbs my parents taught me to no avail. God closed his eyes and the weight of the world fell onto me. I feel it more than ever.

Astaghfirullah, I say again, under my breath.

I no longer wish to be alive. 

My home feels like a forbidden castle. My hand touches the doorknob and electricity flows. My parents are downstairs, managing the cafe, unaware of my steps as I ascend the stairs to our apartment. Breathing deep, I fall onto the carpet, clawing fruitlessly at the threads, trying to force myself onto my feet. Strength is a commodity I cannot find. All around the home are works of art and keepsakes from my family’s homeland. I feel unattached, as if every trace of my DNA rewrote itself into a crossword puzzle too convoluted to decipher. I have no history, no name, no identity. I no longer feel human.

The voices grow louder as I reach the door to my parents’ room. I shed my hoodie and jeans and set a bath. The unclothed person in the mirror is a stranger, emaciated with sunken features. My once-bronze skin has become a sickly, alien pale, and my dark, unkempt hair is thrown into a half-assed braid. Fresh, healing wounds line my inner arms and occur in small bursts along my frail body like macabre tattoos. I don’t like the image I see looking back at me.

Water rushes and gurgles. It becomes the soundtrack to my prayers. I fall onto the lush rug and press my face into the ground. It takes everything in me not to claw my own hair out. The bathroom is loud and frightening. I curl up for a moment, hugging my legs to my chest, and whisper one final time.

”Astaghfirullah.” Forgive me, God.

Cautiously, I step into the bathtub and sink into the warmth of the water. Breathing deep, I reach for the tiny sliver of metal I learned to hide so discreetly under my mother’s candle. I press the edge against the inside of my arm, carefully, watching little lines of red flow and dissipate. Holding my breath, I press it deeper into my skin. Deeper and deeper, tearing new fissures in my flesh. The sting is familiar, but this time, it’s final. The water in the bathtub begins to overflow, spilling out onto the floor. I close my eyes and fall into unconsciousness.

As I slip away, I hear the front door creak open, followed by my mother’s voice. “Kit? Ali said you went home early. Are you okay?”

Her steps continue up the stairs. All is blurry, but I can make out her familiar silhouette appearing in the doorway to the master bedroom. It’s the last thing I see.

”Khaled! Habibi!”

I don’t know what I expected when I finally transferred to Triumph Academy. The halls lack the heavy air that comes with unwanted memories, but the voices haven’t died down much. The pills don’t do much either. I take them each morning, divvying them up the way my brothers and I would split M&Ms during our younger years. Here was a blue one, here was a green one. Part of me is convinced my psych actually replaced my meds with M&Ms and that’s why they haven’t been working, but I’m afraid to bite into them. I fear I’ll find a chocolatey center and know that the last few months have all been a lie.

I’m not a stranger to the special education room. When I was little, the doctor diagnosed me with a bunch of words my mom couldn’t pronounce. I remember being in the office and sneaking away from the watch of my parents, back to the antique grand piano in the waiting room. I hadn’t said a word during the entire appointment, but as I pieced together individual notes into chords, not having the slightest idea what any of that meant, I said all I needed to say. That night, my dad found my grandfather’s oud — a Middle Eastern lute, the ancestor to the modern guitar — in the attic and gave it to me. When I played, the voices were quiet, and I could say everything I couldn’t articulate. Even after learning to speak fluent English, Arabic, and French, music was my first and favorite language.

The teacher doesn’t attend to me much. I’m not here because I need help with any of my work. That’s not why I’m here. I’m here because I take a handful of M&M pills everyday just to function. I’m here because I’m crazy.

A small, pink-haired girl sits down beside me, tossing her patched-up corduroy backpack onto the table. She locks eyes with me, and I immediately focus back on the math worksheet in front of me.

She’s going to speak to me. Oh god, she is going to speak to–

“Hey, you.”

Shit.

“What’s your name? I’m Tessa.”

I continue to stare blankly at the numbers on the page. I feel her stare burning into the side of my head. Perhaps if I ignore it, it will go away. Perhaps—

“I like your hair,” the pink-haired girl chirps. “You don’t say much, do you?”

I am not dealing with this. I consider moving to another table, but I’m practically cornered. Leaning back into the wall, I glance at the patches on her backpack. Several bands, mostly older ones, names I recognized from the old vinyls my dad passed on to me. One in particular caught my eye.

“You like Led Zeppelin?” I utter, halfway hoping she didn’t hear me.

“Yeah,” she says, her deep blue eyes looking up toward me. “How did you know?”

I smirk. “It’s on your backpack.”

She starts fidgeting with the threads on the backpack. Tessa appears a bit younger than me, with a sickening amount of energy and optimism. She’s wearing a t-shirt with the KISS logo emblazoned on the front and ripped up jeans. She wiggled her leg incessantly, shaking the entire table. Her existence is infuriating, but something about her presence is comforting.

“I’m Kit,” I say. “And Led Zeppelin is probably my favorite band.”

“I’m a little more Beatles,” she says. “Why are you in here?”

I don’t know how to respond to this.

“Like I have ADHD,” she says. “You know, so they put me in here for an hour each day. What are you doing in the ‘sped’ room?”

I tried to sound out the word my mom stumbled over. “Skit-so-fran-ya?” I manage to spit out. “I don’t know how to say it very well. My mom can’t even pronounce it, but English isn’t her first language.”

She backs away somewhat, squinting her eyes at me. “Are you…my parents told me not to talk to you people.”

“With skit-so—schizophrenia people?”

Her eyes become little angry slits. “No.” Her voice gets deep and raspy, as if she’s imitating someone. “Damn dirty Ay-rabs. They like to charm pretty white girls into marrying them so they can make them wear burqas and have a bunch of babies for them.” She grins again. “And probably schizophrenics, too. I don’t know. My parents didn’t say a lot about those. But—” She locks eyes with me again. “—my parents are assholes and you like Led Zeppelin. Let’s be friends.”

I haven’t been this happy to be home in a while.

My mom’s making dinner. I pick at the bowl of fattoush she set in front of me and my siblings. My younger brother, Bashar, shares a pack of animal crackers with Miriam, my baby sister, while my oldest brother, Yousef, watches on. Ali and I just got back from football practice, or for me, bench-sitting practice. The coaches do their best to keep me on the sidelines, and I did whatever I could to help them keep me there. I never wanted to be an athlete. It was just something that was expected of me.

My father sits down beside me, still wearing his work apron. He was the family cafe’s chef, although he’d be the first to admit my mother was the brains of the operation. “Habibi,” he begins as he brushes my bangs out of my face, “please tell me you’ve been feeling better. You know you worried me sick.”

“Baba, I’m better now,” I say, forcing a smile. “The medications are working.” This is a lie, but I don’t want him to stress over me. He has enough to worry about as it is.

My mom brings out several plates, beaming with pride. Everyone in our family says I most resemble her, far more than any of my other siblings. We share the same willowy build, the same eyes, the same long, thick, curly hair, although hers is usually tied up in a bun and loosely wrapped in a headscarf. My dad says I look almost exactly like she did back when she was young, which is somewhat disconcerting, since I am for all intents and purposes male, but I’m sure he means it as a compliment. After all, she’s arguably the most beautiful person I know.

We start piling food onto our plates and my mom asks, “How was everyone’s first day?”

Ali is first to pipe up. “It sucked. I still don’t get why we had to transfer. I wanna go back to Edsel Ford. At least their football team doesn’t suck.”

“Don’t be an asshole, Ali,” Yousef scolded him. “It’s not all about you.”

My mom shushes them. “We had to do what’s best for your brother, and he wasn’t thriving there.  You saw what happened.”

I pull my hoodie over my head and slouch a bit lower in my chair. I hate feeling like I’m a burden to them.

Ali’s voice is rough. “‘What happened?’ So I could slit my wrists and get what anything I want?”

My father swears in his native tongue and slams his fist down on the dining table, rattling all of our plates. “Your brother is sick! Have some respect.”

I feel the tension in the air, almost as heavy as the atmosphere back at the halls of Edsel Ford. Ali lowers his head. I know he regrets his outburst, but it doesn’t make a damn thing better for me. I leave the table, having barely touched my food, and excuse myself to my bedroom.

The voices come back. They tell me I’m a burden, that I should have driven the blade deeper the first time, that my family would be better off without me. I bury my face into the pillow, trying to silence them, but here, face down on my quilt, they seem so real to me. I go back to the halls of Edsel, to muffled conversations in the locker room. The words are so clear to me now.

Why is he even on the team? He doesn’t do shit.

He’d make a hot chick. I’d hit it.

What a fucking faggot.

He’s only on the team because his brother’s the captain.

He should kill himself.

The last one cut the deepest, and it keeps repeating and repeating in my head until it’s louder than my family’s tense dinner conversation and the sound of the radio I left on earlier. I peel myself from the bed and start to thumb through my record collection. Zeppelin, old blues vinyls, Kinks, Clapton, Beatles, Johnny Cash…

I recall the conversation I had with Tessa, that strange, odd creature, and how she offhandedly mentioned that she liked the Beatles. I hadn’t listened to them much, but something compels me to pick up the album titled Let It Be. I drop the needle at a random spot and lie flat on the floor, folding my hands on my chest, imagining I’m listening to my own dirge. I wonder if Tessa has even spent a second thinking about me. The idea of having friends — no, a friend — is unfamiliar and foreign. She’ll forget I exist, I decide as I begin to fall asleep on the cold hardwood floor.

Tessa hasn’t forgotten about me.

“Why do you find me interesting?” I ask her. School just let out, and she says she’s taking me to a “secret place,” which may or may not lead to my death, which may or may not be a welcome thing.

She shrugs. “I dunno. You’re a lot more interesting than I am.”

We’re walking through a suburban neighborhood, your stereotypical brick house farm. The first couple of blocks were a middle-class haven of SUVs and garden gnomes, but the further we go down the road, the less pleasant the area. Boarded up homes with graffiti are abundant. She holds onto my arm, and I immediately shake it off. After all, she’s the one who led me here. If anyone is going to be afraid, it sure as hell shouldn’t be her.

“This is the creepiest part,” she says, hiding her nervousness behind a facade of confidence. She sounds like a tour guide. “If you’re going to be going to be exploring abandoned houses, you have to look for ones that don’t seem like they have any squatters in them, and you have to find a way to get in without damaging the building. That’s the first rule of urban exploration.”

I stop and glare at her. “Wait, what did you say?”

“The first rule is don’t do any damage,” she says. “What do you think we are, hooligans?”

“Tessa,” I begin, in all seriousness. “Are we in Detroit?”

She laughs. “It’s all semantics.”

“Tessa,” I repeat. “Are we in Detroit?”

“Technically yeah, but like I said—”

“You’re going to get us killed!”

She opens up her denim backpack and grabs two cans of Arnold Palmer. “Someone needs to learn to live a little. Come on, this is the fun part!”

She runs into a neglected yard full of weeds and trash and begins inspecting the perimeter of the house. I see her pile up a few stray bricks into a makeshift step-stool. She peers into the window and gives me an enthusiastic thumbs up.

“Just so you know, I totally lied!” she yells to me. “The first rule is make sure no one lives there!”

We find a pre-existing opening — the back window was already broken open. She’s first to crawl in, giving the interior a quick look to make sure all is safe and structurally stable. I take it that’s a skill you pick up after breaking into houses a number of times. She gives me the okay, and I climb through the open window, tumbling over an old-fashioned radiator and landing face-first on the living room floor. I brush off the mystery dirt — where the hell does the dust in an abandoned home come from anyways? — and follow Tessa into the kitchen.

She opens the refrigerator and pulls out the most nauseating jug of milk I’ve ever laid eyes on,  inspecting it thoroughly for reasons I’d rather not know.

“Kit! Look, it expired last year!” She offers it to me. “Wanna sniff?”

“God no!” I yell, nearly passing out from just the sight.

She shakes the jug, making the contents jiggle horrifically. “Wiggle wiggle wiggle,” she sings.

This girl is literally insane. I may actually die here.

Upstairs, we find an old waterbed. She flops onto it like a dead fish, and I sit down beside her, still mystified by her infinite strangeness.

“See? Look at all the cool stuff you find!” She flails her arms and legs, making the bed practically impossible to sit comfortably on. I crash down into the bed. We stare at the hideous popcorn ceiling for a good minute, letting the smoggy city air flow over us through the open window. It’s starting to get dusky and I’d rather not be in Detroit after dark, but I’m afraid I’m at the mercy of Tessa. I’ve never met anyone crazier than her, not even at the loony bin I got dumped in.

Still, we talk and talk and stare at the hideous ceiling until nothing feels real anymore.

“Where are you from?” she asks me at one point.

“Lebanon,” I say. “Well, my family is at least. My dad, my siblings and I were all born here, though.”

She kicks her leg against the waterbed, making the entire earth shake below us. “Lebanon? I don’t even know where that is. Why did your family come here?”

I sighed. “They just didn’t feel safe anymore.” I recalled the way my mother teared up remembering the sound of the bombs. “My parents always told me you don’t know pain until you watch your home get destroyed.”

“I know a little how it feels,” she says. “Not like, bombs, but losing your house. I wasn’t going to say anything, but do you know where you are, right now?”

“Detroit?”

“This is my childhood home,” she says with the kind of jadedness you rarely hear from someone as young as her. “This is my old bed. We lost our home after my dad lost his job.”

Everything feels surreal. The sun starts to paint twisted shapes onto the far wall. I wonder how many times she’s watched the sun set from this bed. I wonder how many memories were formed here. I wonder how much of this place remains with her.

“This isn’t the only house like this. There are lots more around,” she says. “That’s why I like doing what I do. Everyone has a story, and every place has a story. I just like to see what people leave behind.”

I turn to her. “I’m glad I met you.”

She grins. “Same.”

At home, in my own room, I throw off my hoodie and grab my acoustic guitar. Strumming it lightly, I find myself mumbling along to an old Beatles melody.

“I wanna hold your hand,” I catch myself singing. “I wanna hold your hand.”

Nights are never easy. I find myself in the cot assigned to me back at the psych ward, sleeping next to a stranger whose name I vaguely remember as being Kyle. Or was it Colin? I think it was Kyle. I hear the tortured moans of all the people who were here long before I was, and will remain long after I leave. At least I have a chance to live in mainstream society. My heart broke for the poor guy next to me, whose illness was so severe, he’d never be able to live a life without constant care.

My first week there was the most difficult, and it’s what I remember most clearly.

“Hachem,” a voice says. “Khaled Hachem?”

I raise my hand meekly. My parents are on either side of me. My mom drapes her arm around me as I’m led to a back room. My mom and dad draw me in for one last embrace, hoping that the next time they see me, they’ll be taking home a slightly more stable son. I’m left alone with nothing but my thoughts, fears, and complete strangers.

They take me to an isolated room and ask me to take off my clothes. Begrudgingly, I oblige, but only after they leave. They want blood and urine samples. The latter is easy enough. Then, I feel the sting of a needle in my inner arm, inches away from the now-healing self-inflicted gash. I wince, remembering how it got there in the first place. That’s why I’m here, right? So I can stop carving myself like the world’s most miserable jack-o-lantern.

The voices are full force, uttering nonsense at me, something about beach volleyball and lamb chops. I can’t make heads or tails of it.

They need to check for vitals now. I’m still half-naked and vulnerable. I wonder if they’re sizing up my scars, comparing them to the ones they’d seen before. I wonder if they ever make a game out of finding the nut with the most scars. I wonder where I rank.

Don’t let them near you.

The nurse speaks to me softly, asking me irrelevant questions about what grade I’m in and where I’m from (I still get that a lot) and what I like to do for fun. I know this is part of her job, making me feel comfortable, but I’m shivering, both from cold and fear, and she can see it. The voices come strong.

This is bad. Run. Get up and run. Bad. Bad. Bad—

She listens to my heartbeat. I close my eyes and try to think of something, anything but this. She says something about medications, but I can’t hear anything. Now her hands are on my skin, asking with each prod whether something hurts. She feels around my ribs, my belly, lower, lower…

Bad!

I don’t know exactly what happened, but I hear the nurse shriek and call for help. I keep saying sorry, over and over, not even sure what I’ve done. I’m no longer lying down, but curled up, holding my legs tightly to my chest.

“He…he bit me,” the nurse says. “The patient bit me.”

Everything is loud. I don’t know what’s going on. I’m screaming and crying and panicking. A moment later, and my arms and legs are seemingly tied down. I pull against the restraints, helpless and agonized, thrashing until I’m out of breath, and another needle slides into my vein.

I wake up, back in my own bed, in my own room. My sweat has soaked through my bedsheets. It’s only three in the morning. Everything is where I left it. The comforting presence of Robert Plant and Jimmy Page look down from my wall. Half-empty Dr. Pepper bottles are scattered on the floor. I pull the quilt tight around me, observing the little bit of light leaking into the room under the door.

The memories continue to flood back. This time, I find myself back at my old school, in the gym. Football practice, or the time immediately after. I’m alone on the bleachers. My brother is off somewhere, packing up. A couple of the guys said they’d wanted to hang out after practice. Until then, no one gave me the time of day. They told me to wait, so I did.

I now know exactly what was going to happen next. I want to scream at my former self. My skin crawls. I tear at the sheets. My hand slips beneath my mattress, to a bottle of pills I didn’t want to need.

Nothing is real.

Everything is real.

“See, I take pictures, and I post them online.”

Tessa stands atop a counter, twisting and ducking with her camera, trying to get the perfect shot of the trash on a kitchen floor. This is just what we do now, I guess. I can’t complain. She is a human and she likes me, for some reason. Best of all, she actually exists. That’s not something I take for granted lately.

“There are other people who are into this?” I ask.

“Oh, lots,” she says, snapping a few more before jumping down. “Entire forums for urbex stuff. That’s what the internet is for. Finding more people who are weird like you.” She hoists herself onto the dishwasher. “What about you, Kit? What do you do?”

“What?”

“What’s your thing?”

“Guitar,” I say. “I play guitar.”

“Oh yeah? Are you in a band?”

“Nah. Would like to be someday, though.” I glance out the open window we snuck through. “But I’m much too shy for that kind of thing.”

I watch her try to climb onto the refrigerator, to no avail. “You don’t know that,” she says. “You might be a natural. My dad plays drums. You should come jam with him, just to get a feel for it.”

“Will your parents even like me?” I ask. “I thought they didn’t like…”

“It’s okay,” she says. “I’ll just tell them you’re Italian or something. Besides, it’s not like you’re my boyfriend or anything.”

“Oh, god no. Not at all.”

“We’re too young for that shit.”

“I don’t even like girls.”

Tessa whips her head up with wide eyes. “You’re…you’re…”

“I mean, I don’t like guys either,” I say. “I’m just not into anything.”

She smiles. “Hey, nothing wrong with that.”
Tessa lives in a trailer in the next town over. It’s a quaint little place, better than I would have expected from a somewhat dumpy trailer park. She leads me through the door — there’s a hand-carved sign that reads “The Harlows” with stick figures of each family member. Inside, she leads me around, adopting her stately tour-guide tone, showing off the collections of items in her house with the amount of pride typically reserved for freshly unearthed ancient artifacts. Everything here has a story, and if it doesn’t, she finds a way to give it one.

“My mom collects these little statues,” she says, waving her hand in front of a line of pastel-painted cherub figurines. “She thinks they’re cute. I think they’re creepy. And here’s a pair of drumsticks my dad got from the guy in Rush back in the 70s. These are the realistic birds my grandma used to collect back when she was alive. Now, we take a few to the cemetery every couple months and bring the old ones back here.” She holds up one of faded grave-birds. “And here’s a picture of my brother when he played with the marching band in Warshington.”

“‘Warshington?'” I repeat back to her. I use it as an opportunity to ask the question I’m so used to hearing myself. “Where are you from?”

She turns red. “Sorry, I’m so used to hearing my dad pronounce it that way. We’re from down south, Kentucky specifically. I was born here, but e’ry now and then–” She puts on an exaggerated Southern accent. “—mah roots come out.”

A certain picture catches my eye. A girl — Tessa? — is standing in an elaborately decorated hall, wearing what looks like a wedding dress and a rejected costume from the Swan Lake ballet had a love child. It looks relatively recent.

“Is that you?” I ask.

She rolls her eyes. “Unfortunately. That was last year, at the purity ball.”

“What the hell is a purity ball?”

“Oh, it’s just this ceremony where little girls promise their dads that they’re not gonna go out and bang anybody before marriage,” she says. “It’s like a bat mitzvah for creepy people.”

“Is that a Kentucky thing?”

“Not at all. It’s because after my grandma died, my parents got all weirdly religious. They weren’t like that before.” She turns the picture around so I can no longer see it. “I don’t even get the point of the whole ‘purity ball’ thing. Most of the girls there weren’t even old enough to know what sex is. I’m still not entirely sure how that thing works.”

Tessa’s mom comes into the living room. I’m overwhelmed by the smell of some kind of perfume.

“Oh, you must be Tessie’s new friend,” she says, wrapping her arms around me, getting her suburban-mom-stink all over my flannel. “I’m Sherry, Tessa’s mom.”

I pull away from her grip. “I’m Kit. I like your…uh…” I look around the room for something, anything. “…statues. The angel ones.”

She sighs. “I just love these little guys. Here.” She holds up one riding a heavenly motorcycle painted in colors resembling floral barf. “You can have this one. From me to you.”

It’s hard to force a smile, but I manage. “Thanks.”

Dinner is a nightmare — ham, biscuits with gravy, and greasy green beans littered with bits of bacon. I consider filling my plate with nothing but mashed potatoes, the only halal, or permitted, option on the table, but I don’t want to seem like an ungrateful asshole in front of these people I just met. Reluctantly, I slice off a piece of ham from the pink slab in front of me.

“So where are you from?” Sherry asks.

That question again.

Before I have a chance to answer, Tessa chimes in. “Italy. He’s from Italy.”

Her father, whose name I learned is Jim, takes a bite of his ham. “That’s far away. What brings you here?”

I slice a cube of the forbidden meat and stab it with my fork, hesitating. “A lot of things.” I decide to change the subject before they ask any more questions. “Tessa says you play drums.” I take a bite of the ham, and something on my face must have given away the fact that this was new to me. The family collectively stares at me as I struggle to swallow the bite. Every second of this dinner is humiliating. “I…play…guitar.” I spit out between coughs.

“Tessie was telling me,” Jim says. “You looking to play with other musicians? Because the youth praise team at our church is looking for new members. Do you go anywhere now?”

Already sick of the ham, I try the green beans, which are surprisingly not terrible, although I feel a bit guilty for just thinking that. “I go to a lot of places. Uh, school, football practice, um…”

“I mean, does your family go to any church? I’m assuming since you’re Italian, you’re probably Catholic.”

I am not at all ready for this. “Yes, yes, very much Catholic,” I manage, and imitate the cross-yourself motion I’ve seen people do on TV, hoping they don’t notice that I really have no idea what I’m doing.

Thankfully, Tessa’s older brother, Brenden, changes the subject, ranting about some girl in the marching band who won’t give him the time of day. Tessa and I stare at each other, and she rolls her eyes.

I don’t know how to feel about Brenden. He strikes me as a bitter person, especially as he talks about this girl. Freshman year flute player named Amy. I guess they’ve been friends for a while, and he doesn’t seem to grasp that she’s not interested in much more. I didn’t pay any of his ranting much mind until one statement caught my attention.

“Last I heard she was going to homecoming with some Ay-rab kid,” he says. “Fucking assholes, coming in and taking all the good girls.”

Jim slams his fork into his mashed potatoes and stares him down. “We don’t talk like that at the dinner table.”

“You’ve sure made quite a bit of progress, Mr. Hachem,” the counselor says, scanning over my records. “You should be ready to be discharged soon.”

The stay in the psychiatric ward became increasingly bearable as the weeks went by. I don’t know if I’ve actually gotten any better or if it’s just the meds numbing the right parts of my brain. The voices don’t scream as loud. They’re still there, but hushed, and not as menacing. They’ve gone from paranoid at best and threatening at worst to mostly nonsensical babbling.

The ward itself is not as “One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest” as I imagined it. If you don’t count all the locked doors and security measures, it’s actually kind of homey. I might miss it here once I leave. The schedules are rigid. Wake up, breakfast and morning meds, free time, lunch and afternoon meds, counseling, visitation, dinner and evening meds, and for the last couple of waking hours, they put on movies. Usually, during movie time, I’d go to the piano in the common room to work on compositions. I’ve played a few of my pieces for the psychologist, who’s been encouraging it as part of my therapy. I’ve also given miniature recitals for the nurses and other patients. Some guy keeps calling me Beethoven and trying to touch my hair. I hate it.

It’s a youth ward, so the other patients are somewhat close to my age. Many are suicidal or anorexic. My roommate, Kyle/Colin, is also a paranoid schizophrenic, but his symptoms are far more severe than mine, to the point where he almost never leaves the room. My mother always taught me to be thankful, and Kyle/Colin’s incessant, incomprehensible strings of words just remind me of how much worse of a hand I could have gotten. Still, I’d trade him any day. He seems just detached enough from reality to be somewhat happy. I have one eye in the real world, and at times I was it were blind.

After my initial outburst on the first day, the doctors put me on Xanax, which has calmed me down considerably. Even after I ran out, I managed to convince Kyle/Colin to lend me his. Questionable, yes, but at this point, I need to do what I can to feel stable.

Therapy resumes. I’m one of several teenagers here slapped with the suicidal tendencies label. A girl named Kaitlyn sits next to me, her arms bearing a number of scars she passed off as cat scratches for years. To my right is Liam, whose parents caught him not a minute too late, noose in hand.

“Who would like to begin?” the counselor asks, notepad in hand.

Kaitlyn raises her hand. “I’ve been really anxious lately. I don’t even know why.”

The counselor scribbles something on the pages in his notebook. “How long have you been feeling like this, Kaitlyn?”

“A while,” she says. “I was starting to feel a lot better, my medicine was working, I thought I was out of the woods. Then I remembered the last time I was in here and how I had the same thought. And I probably will again.” There’s a silence. “I’m afraid of the…the…what is the word? The relapse, I guess. I don’t know if the next time will be worse.”

She’s been here before. A lot of these kids have been here before, it seems. I bite my lip out of nervousness.

“Kaitlyn,” the counselor says, “you realize you do have a mental illness. And there is no cure for that. You’ll always have scares like this unless science can come up with a more permanent solution. But as long as you take your medication and keep up with your therapy, you will have a much better chance of suppressing your symptoms.”

“I just wish there was a way to be normal,” she says.

The otherwise stoic counselor cracks a small smile. “There’s no such thing as normal people. And if there are, I don’t want to be friends with them.”

I’ve been playing with Jim’s worship team for a few weeks now. The church is a completely different world from what I’m used to. Not like I ever felt like I fit in at my family’s mosque, either, but even while I’m on stage, in my element and entirely removed from everyone and everything around me, I feel uneasy.

My one refuge is Tessa. Sometimes as I play, I’ll look into the congregation (or perhaps more appropriately, audience) and see her staring up at me, Kool-Aid pink hair aglow in the dark. I’ve also grown somewhat close to the keyboardist, a slightly older girl named Sarah, who also happens to be the only person besides Tessa who knows the truth about my religious orientation. One day, after Sunday service, she came up to me while we were packing up our gear.

“Kit, I’ve noticed you don’t close your eyes during prayer,” she said. “Is something wrong?”

I whispered to her, making sure no one was within earshot. “To be honest, I’m not actually Christian at all. My family, I mean, we follow Islam.”

She looked confused, though not at all apprehensive. “So you’re Muslim?”

As I stowed my guitar in its case, my sleeve rolled down slightly, revealing a set of neatly drawn scars. “To be honest, I’m not sure I believe in anything anymore.”

Her eyes softened. “I still wouldn’t care about you any less.”

School doesn’t get easier, but it’s become so routine, I’ve hardly even noticed it happening to me. My brother hasn’t made things better, and to be honest, it’s painful to hear Ali talk about the incident as if everything was alright now. It comes up at football practice now and then, basically whenever anyone asks why I’m on the team at all. I’m his responsibility, and even if I was a skilled athlete, my calling card would still be “the crazy one who tried to kill himself.”

Since the start of the new school year, Ali had moved up in status on the team, becoming the new favorite among all five people who actually care about Triumph’s athletic program. I’d be the first to admit I do feel like a bit of a black sheep. Even my father played while he lived in Detroit in his youth. That was one of the things that helped him connect to American culture as the child of immigrants and feel more at home. In fact, once he moved to Lebanon for college, one of the few things he missed about the U.S. was the prevalence of football.

There is one member of the team aside from my brother I have talked to. His name’s Alex, and it was only in passing, but I guess he just switched schools as well. He’s a musician too, and he left a band behind in his old city. I was going to ask him if he wanted to collaborate, but I’m sure he has much better things to do than associate with the token suicidal maniac.

Although something did happen that gave me a brief, fleeting sense of hope. Before practice, I saw him and another kid posting flyers around the outside of the school. I couldn’t read the small print at first, but I managed to piece together the message on the tacky lime green paper. He was looking for a guitarist for a new project, it seemed. As I passed him by on the way to change into my practice clothes, he stopped me.

“Kit, right?” He hands me a sheet from the stack of flyers. “Ali was telling me you’re a guitarist. If you’re not busy next week, you should try out for this.”

“Should I try out for this?”

I hand Tessa the ugly green flyer from earlier. She looks at it and squints.

“Ew, they look like a bunch of crappy Blink-182 wannabes. I say go for it.”

Our legs dangle out the window of a large abandoned building in Detroit, the Michigan Central Station, which Tessa tells me is the Holy Grail of urban exploration in Michigan. She’s been wanting to come up here for a while, but never felt comfortable going to the sketchier parts of Detroit alone, as plucky as she is. She’s kept a tiny pink can of pepper spray in her hand during the entire adventure, but so far, nothing too alarming has happened. A homeless guy approached us and asked for cash, and being the broke kids we are, we didn’t have much to contribute, but I gave him half of the Nutella-and-banana sandwich Tessa made me before we left. Tessa gave him the plush Pikachu keychain from her backpack. She said if she was in that situation, she’d want a cute thing to keep her company.

The sun is starting to descend behind the Detroit skyline. We watch the birds from our concrete perch, and I pick pieces of bread from the remainder of my sandwich to throw to them. Tessa’s rambling about video games and her love affair with those dollar cans of tea from the gas station and all the abandoned places she wants to break into. At one point, she lays her head on my shoulder, which startles me at first. I think she noticed me squirm, as she looked at me sorta hurt that I moved away, and I immediately feel guilty that my knee-jerk reaction to physical affection offended her. I wrap my arm around her and a shock of pink hair falls onto my chest.

She sighs. “To be honest, you’re the only person I’ve ever been able to call a friend,” she says. “I feel like I can talk to you about anything.”

God, I wish I could say the same.

I don’t know much about how my family was before I was born, but I can safely assume Ali and Yousef were a much different situation from me. I can’t fault my mother and father for freaking out when I didn’t merrily skip through the earliest stages of life quite as easily as my brothers.

My earliest memory, for example, was the sadness in my mother’s voice.

“Habibi,” she said, “why won’t you look at Mommy?”

I didn’t talk until I was four, not a single word. Autism was a word that was being thrown around somewhat, I remember, and I don’t think the doctors entirely ruled out that possibility. All that was known at the time was that whatever was going on inside my head was not normal.

My mother held me against her breast in the waiting room. I felt her breathing deeply, watching as my brothers played with the toy train in the corner. It was a children’s clinic, with toys scattered about and coloring books at a tiny table. There were magazines for parents, mostly celebrity gossip and fashion mags, all things my mother rarely concerned herself with. In the corner was a dusty Steinway, which hadn’t been touched in years it seemed.

Finally, a nurse appeared, beckoning my mother and I.

We followed her into the back, Ali and Yousef in tow. They did the usual stuff, taking my temperature and weight. Then we went to a small room, and I sat at my mother’s side as she answered a bunch of questions full of words I didn’t understand. I don’t remember how it happened, but my mother said at one point, I’d slipped out of the room without her or the nurse noticing. I guess the staff searched the halls fruitlessly until one of the nurses heard the Steinway in the waiting room. They found me at the old piano, pressing down the keys and finding notes that sounded pleasant together, complete harmonies. My mother was about to scold me until the nurse she’d been talking to stopped her.

“He has more to say than you think,” the nurse said.

Ali was the one who gave me my nickname. He couldn’t pronounce my real first name, Khaled, as a three year old. At first, my parents objected to the name, but my dad eventually caved and started calling me Kit as well. He said it made sense. I was quiet yet intelligent, not unlike a fox kit.

The third person to call me by that name was a little girl who was, for all intents and purposes, my first friend. We met on a playground when I was barely old enough to walk, and just barely able to speak. My brothers were on top of the jungle gym, seeing who could spit farther. I was alone in the sandbox, tracing shapes in the sand as my mom looked on. Uninvited, a blonde girl in purple overalls ambled into the sandbox, dropping a pair of dinosaur figures onto my sand-drawings.

“Hi, I’m Stephanie!” she said with a huge grin. “What’s your name?”

“K-Kit,” I uttered without looking up.

“Hi Kit!” she sang. “Let’s play dinos! I’ll be triceratops and you be t-rex. That one’s my favorite.”

We stayed in the sandbox for what felt to me like hours. We built a giant dinosaur castle and had our figurines fight the invisible enemies she made up and at one point we pretended the dinosaurs built a rocket ship and went to space and in that time, I felt for the first time something resembling happiness. I wish I could say Stephanie and I became friends, but really, it was nothing more than a single afternoon of foolish, childish adventures cut short by something I couldn’t comprehend at the time. At one point, her mother came over and saw my mom, draped in her maroon scarf. At once, she pulled Stephanie from the sandbox. I stared dumbfounded, t-rex figure still in hand, as they started walking toward the parking lot.

“Stephanie,” the mother said, “you know we don’t hang out with those people.”

I tell this story to my therapist during my stay at the psych ward. She taps her pen against the clipboard, a sound that has become familiar to me.

“From what you’ve told me, you haven’t had the easiest time making friends,” she says. “How were things as you got older?”

“Not a lot better,” I say. “I mean, my brothers had a lot of similar experiences like that — and it got even worse after 9/11 happened. My mother got called all kinds of nasty things, so much that she stopped wearing her scarf for a few years, and our restaurant got vandalized once. That’s part of the reason my brothers and I adopted ‘English’ names. My dad got really scared for everyone’s safety. It’s just…when you’re so little and dealing with all of that, and then meanwhile, your brain is fighting you from the inside.”

She scribbles something down. “You’re right. You were very young when you started experiencing mental issues, and having the added pressure of the outside world and worrying about your family and not fitting in, you know? I understand why you feel so alone.”

I’ve lost track of the time I spent in the psych ward. The wounds still seem fresh — or have I been making new ones this entire time without realizing it? My inner arm is tender to the touch, and I try to keep the markings hidden from everyone else in the ward. It seems pointless. Everyone here is wounded. Isn’t that why we’re all here?

Tessa, Sarah, Brenden, and a few of their church friends are going to some amusement park in Ohio, a few hours away, and Tessa invited me to come along. We’re all in Sarah’s mom van, with Tessa and me sitting in the trunk. We’re younger than everyone else in the van, so we figured it would be best to stay out of everyone’s hair for the most part.

Tessa will not shut up about the roller coasters, especially the one that towers above the rest of the park. I’m biting my nails, hoping she doesn’t drag me on it. So far, it’s not looking too good for me.

“…and it’s the fastest one there, and it’s really tall. Like, REALLY tall. Maybe even taller than that building we climbed. And they tell you that you can’t put your arms up because they might snap off!”

“Well that’s reassuring,” I say.

I don’t like Brenden, and with every passing minute, I dislike Brenden even more. I know it’s not fair to judge him after only being around him twice, but something about him infuriates me. He seems like good friends with Sarah, which means I should probably give him another chance, and he’s Tessa’s brother, which means he’s not leaving my life anytime soon, but that doesn’t mean I have to like him. Right now, he’s talking about this time he and that girl he’s obsessed with were playing Mario Kart and he just knows there’s something there between them and she won’t just accept that he’s her soulmate. I don’t know if it’s him or the car ride, but I swear I need a Dramamine.

We’re taking the back roads to this place, through the wilderness of Ohio, “wilderness” a term I use loosely. The scenery is largely cattle farms and shady liquor stores and at one point, there was a giant nuclear power plant that intrigued Tessa. She said she wants to explore a place like that. She said she might get some kind of superpower. I told her more realistically, she’d probably get radiation poisoning and die. She said that’s a risk she’s totally willing to take, and if she’s right, she won’t let me be her sidekick.

For most of the trip, we just dozed off in the back. Sarah had a playlist of average emo bands playing as a constant backdrop to Brenden’s stupid voice. I don’t know what the other kids’ names are, nor do I actually care. I’ve seen them around on Sundays when I play in the praise team with Sarah, but they’re the ones who yell at the younger members of the church youth group for jacking off, then go out by the dumpsters and have sex.

We left Michigan early enough to make it to the park when the gates open. The place is right on the coast of Lake Erie, a place called Cedar Point, and it’s basically the Disneyland of the Midwest I learned. Despite living here most of my life, I’ve never been to this place. My brothers went a few times with their friends, but I never got an invite.

Tessa has a map of the place with a game plan. We go off on our own and hit the smaller coasters first, since I told her I’d never even been on a coaster and was honestly petrified. She said if I can get used to the easier ones, the huge one at the end wouldn’t be as scary. She didn’t want to concern herself with the little carnival games that dotted the park, since those are for dweebs like her brother who try to win stuff to impress chicks. At some point during the day, we had to meet up with everyone else for dinner.

“This is it?” I say, gazing up toward the monstrosity that is the first coaster Tessa picked. “Are you sure you want to go on this?”

“You know this is the smallest roller coaster in the entire park, right?” she says.

I begrudgingly follow her into the line. Thankfully, we picked a somewhat chilly day to come here, so there aren’t too many people at the park. Tessa passes her time spitting into the water below the platform and watching the fish devour her saliva. She’s admittedly not the classiest person I’ve ever met.

At the front of the line, Tessa fights with me to sit at the very front, a decision I wholeheartedly protest. We make a deal — we don’t have to sit at the front for any of the coasters except the final one, the stupidly huge one she’s obsessed with.

We sit down in this little cart-thing. My bony knees bump into the metal bar, the only thing keeping us from a bloody death. One of the workers comes by to adjust the bar, and Tessa sees me wince as the worker’s hand brushes my leg.
She looks over to me. “You really don’t like being touched, do you?”

The carts start slowly moving toward a small hill. My grip tightens on the bar. Tessa’s not holding on at all, but flailing her arms around and hooting and hollering like a lunatic. I don’t know how she does it, honestly. The cart latches onto a chain, which drags it to the top of the hill. At the top, I realize how small this coaster really is compared to the others in the park, and I feel like even more of an idiot for being afraid. We descend down the hill, and I can barely see anything at all with my own hair whipping in my face. I’m screaming and freaking out as the carts move along the wooden track and I swear the entire thing is going to come crashing down and every one of us will die gruesomely at the bottom of the coaster. We twist and turn and finally reach a point where the carts come to a stop, right before the boarding platform. My head is nothing but a black, knotted mess, which I immediately cover with the hood of my jacket.

“Now wasn’t that fun?” Tessa says with a dumb smile plastered on her face.

At this point, I can’t do anything but laugh.

During the next few waits for progressively larger coasters, Tessa explains the science behind why I have nothing to worry about.

“You see, the reason we don’t fall out of roller coasters is because of the cent-tri-fa…cent-tri-fru…some kind of force.” She skips down the crowded walkway. “And they safety-test this stuff every single day. You have a better chance of dying on the way to Cedar Point.”

“That’s reassuring,” I say.

We walk past a string of carnival games. Most of them offer huge plushes as grand prizes. One stand has a selection of knockoff Stratocasters hanging from the ceiling.

“What if I won one of those for you?” she asks, nudging me.

“Those ones are all cheaply made and really crappy,” I say. “They’re only good guitars for someone who’s never touched a guitar. Still–” I crack a grin. “—I could fix them up, probably. Replace the pickups and the electronics and—”

“I’m gonna win you one,” she says, and races over to the booth.

At least an hour passes. Her eyes are half-glazed over, with nearly every balloon on the board popped. She’s dropped almost every dollar she brought here trying to win a piece of wood disguised as a guitar for me, to the point where she probably could have spent the same amount of money on a real instrument. There’s a pile of stuffed animals at her feet from failed attempts. I’ve been guarding them, since it seems like these prizes are going to be all she has to show for the energy she’s wasted on this dumb game. A couple darts later, a bell rings. Somehow, she managed to hit the grand prize and two seconds later, we’re walking away with a banana yellow Strat.

The sun starts to set as we go out to find Brenden, Sarah, and the others. There’s a noticeable dip in temperature, and I look over to see Tessa shivering. I offer my hoodie, and she throws it on over her t-shirt. I then realized the map of scars on my arms are entirely visible, and I become uneasy at the thought of explaining them to her.

But she’s already noticed them.

“Where did you get those?” she asks.

I don’t want to talk about it with anyone else around, so we go to the edge of the park. The walk is long enough that the anxiety becomes unbearable. How do you explain to your best friend that you’ve tried to kill yourself?

We find ourselves near the edge of the water. She’s still holding onto the guitar and strumming nonsensical chords.

“So a few months ago, I…” I try to catch my breath. “Something really bad happened. Something…I thing I did. These, I mean.” I show her the scars. “I did these.”

“You cut?” Her eyes are big and watery.

“I mean, well, yeah, and worse. I tried to…I wanted to…I wanted to be dead, okay? That’s what happened. I was a fucking wreck.”

She’s actually tearing up a little now. I feel guilty for bringing her into this.

“Why did you do it?” she said with a whimper. “What made you want to do that?”

My hands are shaking. “There are still a lot of things you’ll never know about me. I can’t even explain everything that goes on in my head. That’s the thing nobody tells you about this…this thing I have. I’m afraid of everything. I’ve been hurt in ways I don’t want to talk about. And the voices…there are so many voices and I can’t stop them. They’ve always been there. And for once I just…I just wanted to have control of something, for once.”

There’s nothing but darkness. For once, the voices have been silenced. There are blips and mechanical beeps and a weight is holding me down. I open my eyes to find a white ceiling above me. My arms are bloodied and bandaged. My barely-revived body is connected to a machine by several wires, and a needle has been plunged into my hand.

For better or worse, I’m alive.

Ali is in the room with me, looking down with piercing brown eyes.

“Khaled, you have no idea how pissed I am at you,” he says, before his voice turns from a quiet anger to a full-on rage. “What the hell were you thinking, you literal human scum?!”

It takes me a moment to remember how to even use my voice. “This is one way to wake up,” I say.
“Do you think life is some fucking game? Do you realize you were dead?! The doctors had to bring you back to life. You’re lucky you don’t have any brain damage. Although I wouldn’t be surprised if you didn’t have any already, considering you shoved a fucking razorblade in your wrist.”

“What are these?” I rip out the IV and the wires and sit up in the hospital bed. “This isn’t how I imagined the afterlife.”

“Mom hasn’t stopped crying since she found you in the bath,” Ali says, still fuming. “Who do you think you are?”

“I should have bled out,” I say. “Why did you bring me back?”

The sun is bright and painful. A doctor rushes in to find me awake and aware and proceeds to replace the IV despite my protests. My parents walk in after him, eyes red from crying. I hear someone mutter something about the psychiatric ward, and the doctor comes to my side with a syringe.

I cry out again before the doctor succeeds in sedating me. “Why didn’t you just let me die?”

“Because you’re family,” Ali says. “And that means more than anything else.”

I push my hair out of my face. Everyone else from group therapy left, but the therapist wanted to keep me. Something I said was alarming, I suppose.

“You said your brothers are still mad at you,” she says. “What makes you say that?”

“Ali, the oldest,” I begin, “he’s always had a thing about me. He never liked admitting I was his brother. Something about having a little brother in the special ed classes made him uncomfortable. It didn’t go with his image I guess. He was the popular one, quarterback and all that. It wasn’t a good look to be associated with me.”

“Why did you beg your parents to switch schools after the attempt?” the therapist asks.

My spine stiffens. “I thought we didn’t have to talk about that.”

The atmosphere in this small room is foreboding. My eyes fix on the tacky blue wallpaper. Everything is a blur and the therapist’s eyes turn into prodding little beads.

“I’m your therapist, Kit,” she says. “You can talk to me about anything.”

The voices are louder than ever, telling me to run, among other gibberish in a language I can’t understand. I go back to the old school and hear conversations and my feel my hair become heavy with sweat and all I want are my fucking pills.

“When I was on the team, the football team, I mean, with my brother, and a few of his friends…” My voice is scratchy and words become difficult to form. “They told me they wanted to hang out after practice once and I thought they were good people and I believed them and I met them in the locker room like they said and what happened…fuck, I can’t…I just…I just wanted friends for once and they…”

The therapist’s gaze dropped. “They took advantage of you?”

For a single moment, the voices stopped.

“I was raped.”

Nobody tells you how to react after something like that happens to you. You never actually think anything like that will happen to you, especially not as a male. For the longest time I swore it was my fault for being so trusting and desperate, and in the weeks after it happened, I didn’t speak a word to anybody. I barely finished that year, and when it was over, I begged my mom to let me go to a different high school. I’ve never told anyone, not my mother or especially not my brothers. God knows I’d never tell Tessa. Admitting I tried to commit suicide was hard enough.

I don’t know how long she and I have been by the shore, but neither of us have said a word to each other. She’s been at my side this whole time, one hand on the guitar and the other on my arm, tracing the scars with her fingertips.

She finally breaks the silence.

“I’m just scared,” she says. “Now that I finally have someone like you, I don’t want to lose you.”

Dinner is a refreshing break from the heaviness of the conversation with Tessa. We found this corny diner with dancing waitresses and old-fashioned malts and little jukeboxes for each table. I’m the only one who recognizes any of the songs, so the group put me in charge of DJ-ing our little shindig.

Tessa wasn’t the only one who spent some time at the carnival games, it seems. Sarah came to the table with the biggest, stupidest hat I’ve ever seen. Brenden and his sister seem to have one thing in common — a tendency toward thrill-seeking — and he’s bragging about the fact that he went on this giant bungee thing, which I guess is the only attraction in the park that makes you sign a waiver. The only thing stopping Tessa from checking it out is the fact that she’s not old enough, but I’m guessing the second she turns sixteen, she’ll be back.

Sarah eyes me and her suspiciously from underneath her stupid hat. She gives me a knowing glance.

“Where were you two all day?” she asks me playfully.

Tessa blushes a bit. I don’t think I do, and I try not to, but judging by Sarah’s “aw,” I failed.

“I took this one on his first roller coaster,” Tessa says like it’s some kind of accomplishment.

“You guys are too cute,” Sarah says, smiling.

“Psssh, you say that like he’s my boyfriend or something,” Tessa says.

Sarah takes a sip of her chocolate malt. “What, he’s not?”

“We’re too young for that stuff,” she says.

“Hey, you won’t always be,” Sarah says. “I think you caught yourself a good one, Tessie.”

Brenden looks me dead in the eye. “He better be good to her, or else.”

After we left the diner, the others immediately went to the giant coaster Tessa was saving for last. We didn’t want to go with the crowd, necessarily, so we took a detour through the arcade, getting lost in the lights and sounds. Even with everything I’d been through, with the fall air and the life around me and Tessa, I actually felt at peace, for once.

By the time we reached the back of the line, the activity at the park was starting to die down. She’s still wearing my hoodie, and although I’m starting to get a bit cold myself, I doubt I could ever pry it from her. We move quickly toward the front of the line — the ride is only 17 seconds long, I heard. Despite this, and despite the sheer volume of people getting off the ride and clearly not dying, I’m still nervous.

We’re halfway through the line when I start shaking from anxiety, and I’m second-guessing this entire adventure. To be honest, I don’t know if I’m ready to do this at all.

“You’re still afraid, aren’t you?” Tessa says, disappointed. “We can just go if you want.”

“I’m fine, I promise,” I say unconvincingly. “I’ll be okay.”

“What are you afraid of? I told you this ride is really safe. They test it all the time.”

I can’t hide my fear from her. She knows me too well now. “I don’t really want to go through with this.”

“Seriously. What are you scared of?” she says. “Obviously you’re not afraid of dying. You tried to kill yourself.”

Those words cut deeper than the razor.

“You don’t fucking know what you’re talking about,” I say. “That has nothing to do with anything.” I turn away from her. “I knew I shouldn’t have told you anything. And I want my jacket back.”

I leave the line and start walking toward the exit. I don’t even want to be here anymore. I walk through the same arcade and the same colorful lights, which all feel so much dimmer and less festive now. Tessa’s probably still in line, probably trying to find her brother and his friends, probably worried about getting on that stupid ride before the park closes and definitely not thinking about me.

At the front of the park, I look back at the now-aglow rides Tessa and I went on earlier. Everything seems much smaller and insignificant from where I am now. Perhaps I was being irrational. Maybe there never was anything worthy of being feared in the first place. Maybe I wasn’t afraid of dying. Maybe the thing I really feared was living.

I hear a shrill voice calling from inside the park and look up to find Tessa running toward me. I stand up and start walking to her, only to have her practically tackle me. She wraps her arms around me and her eyes turn into those familiar watery blue saucers.

“I’m sorry about everything back there,” she says. “That was insensitive. I shouldn’t have said that.”

“Weren’t you supposed to go on that ride?”

“That’s not important.”

“I mean, do you still wanna go?” I ask. “I’ll go with you.”

“It’s too late now. By the time we get there, the park will be closed.” She cracks a smile through her crying. “Besides, I’d rather be with you right now. I don’t care what Brenden or anyone else would say. You’re the best friend I ever had and I don’t wanna lose you ever.”

I don’t say anything. I just hold her until she stops crying.

It’s well past midnight when we get back to Detroit. I spent the entire car ride home coiled up in the trunk next to Tessa, which admittedly did nothing to quell Sarah’s suspicions about us. After I got home, I took the stupid yellow junk guitar to my room and set it next to the others. Next to my Les Paul, vintage acoustic, and authentic Middle Eastern oud, it looked like trash. But even if it meant nothing else to anyone else, it meant everything to me, if only for its story.

Robert Plant and Jimmy Page keep watch over the room as I drift off to sleep. At last, the voices are somewhat calmed.

The Sound

Here’s a bit of short fiction I wrote a few years back. In the spirit of Halloween, I thought I’d share it here. It’s loosely inspired by some personal experiences, but I think I’ll leave it up to you to imagine which parts are real. 😉

As a musician, I never doubted the power of sound on the human mind. But the strangest thing happened to me the finals week of my freshman year of college, something I don’t think I’ll ever be able to explain.

During that first year on campus, nothing particularly out of place happened. I stayed in room 313 of one of the older dorms, the honors dorm, to be exact, which housed four students in one modestly-sized suite. I didn’t interact much with my suitemates, instead choosing to spend what little free time I had with my fellow music majors. I played classical guitar and was very serious about it,using most of my time to practice new pieces or relearn old ones. Around the end of the year, I befriended another guitar major named Trevor who was just as obsessed with his art. By the time the last month of classes rolled around, he and I were officially a couple.

As my freshman year came to an end, though, I encountered one character flaw in myself that had never quite reared its head. I cracked under pressure, the kind of pressure I’d never had until college-level finals. My music theory class had a huge final project due, I had to rehearse relentlessly for my semester-end juries (which is basically you performing alone in front of the scariest crowd you’ll ever play for – music professors), and I still had to start clearing out my dorm room. I realized I was far more stressed than I could handle on my own and my anxiety started getting to me, so after confiding in Trevor, he persuaded me to contact the on-campus counseling services.

My first appointment was spent pulling nervously at my sundress and absent-mindedly rambling about my fears. I hated the idea of failure. I hated the idea of being less than perfect. I hated the idea of other people knowing Iwas less than perfect. I told her about my rigorous practice routine and how I’d hardly seen any friends my entire freshman year because I’d practically locked myself away in the laundry room, which was my usual study spot.

“Music major, I see,” Dr. Patterson said, scribbling on a yellow notepad. “Have you ever heard of guided imagery?”

“A little bit,” I said. “They talked about it some at this music therapy seminar last fall.”

She smiled. “How do you feel about trying it? Meditation is always healthy for someone with such high stress levels, and because it’s set to music, it’ll be easier for you to hold your interest.” She scribbled a few more words and ripped out the sheet. “Here are a few experiences for you to try.”

That night, I completed my typical nightly ritual – run through scales, fix a cup of warm chamomile tea, and flip through flashcards with theory notes – but this time adding a final step. I fired up my laptop, searched for the name on the little yellow sheet Dr. Patterson gave me, and plugged in my headphones. Lying on my bunk bed, I closed my eyes and listened as a disembodied voice instructed me to “Close your eyes and feel the weight of your body on the bed, letting the feeling stay with you for a while.” I did, letting the background noise of soft synth and rolling waves wash over me, but it wasn’t long before my thoughts began racing again. I needed something more to reach me.

Trevor and I sat in the grass in front of the music building the next day, strumming our guitars and discussing how therapy went.

“The meditation isn’t cutting it for me,” I said. “I did exactly what Dr. Patterson told me to do.”

He paused for a second. “There are these songs this guy made, they’re almost like auditory drugs. You play the song, and it’s supposed to be scientifically engineered to recreate a certain feeling. Like happy, relaxed, even high.”

“But do they work?” I asked.

“I can’t speak for everyone, but I do them sometimes, and believe it or not, I actually feel something,” he said. “I can’t place what it is, but there’s something there.”

“Something?” I shot him a puzzled look. “What do you mean?”

For a split second, it looked as if he was staring at something behind my head.Then he snapped back into reality. “You have to try it yourself to know. I can’t explain it.”

That night, Trevor sent me the link to a video that was simply titled “Happy.” I scoffed a little at the video, which had a background of a smiley face. Sipping my tea, I played the first few seconds of the video, which filled the room with a blaring bleep sound.

“What the hell is that noise?” one of my suitemates called from the living room.

I quickly shoved the headphones in the jack and positioned myself on the bed the same way I had the night before. Only this time, instead of being treated to gentle ocean sounds and a quiet keyboard backing a soothing voice, a constant tone played through the tiny speakers. The tone, which consisted of two dissonant notes, came together within the confines of my body, reverberating in the crevices of my brain. The lights in the bedroom were already off, so I let my eyes close and mind be calm. I didn’t know how long the calmness would last,but I savored every moment of it. But it didn’t take long for the constant tone to grow irritating, almost like the feeling of someone rubbing sandpaper against my skin. I removed the headphones, gathered my thoughts, and searched for a song I liked, letting that lull me to sleep.

The next day, I found Trevor in the same spot I’d met with him before. He looked like he hadn’t slept the night before, which was understandable since his jury was that day. I imagined he had spent the wee hours of the morning in one of the music building’s practice rooms rehearsing his jury pieces. Still, even with his long blond hair in a greasy ponytail and wearing a wrinkled black t-shirt, he looked handsome.

“I listened to the song you sent me,” I said, taking a seat beside him.

He smiled. “What did you think?”

“It was alright for the first few minutes,” I said. “Got annoying, so I shut it off.”

“That’s fine,” he said. “You get used to it. It took me a few tries to get the right effect as well. Are you feeling more relaxed lately?”

“I’m getting there. I think once finals are done, I’ll be better. I need this summer break.”

Laughing, he said, “You’re telling me.”

That night, I decided to give the video he sent another try, this time resolving to let it play through. The experience that night was, quite honestly, uneventful,but I managed to get through the ten-minute tone without shutting it off.Honestly, I felt rather proud, if not a little uneasy. The slight dissonance made me feel a bit dizzy, but aside from that, I didn’t feel anything out of the ordinary during the time the video played. On the list of suggested videos was another by the same creator, this one called “Ecstasy.” I figured since ecstasy is kind of like an even happier happy, this video might have an even stronger effect.

I clicked on the link to “Ecstasy” and put the headphones back on. I settled into my bed, hoping the sound would put me in a deep euphoric trance. The tone played, this one different, higher pitched, but retaining that grating dissonance. A minute into the song, I felt an odd feeling gathering in my stomach, a feeling that something was a little off. I paused the video,glancing around the darkened room. A little stream of light poured in from the living room, where my suitemates were still awake, studying and doing some last minute packing. Nothing was in the room besides my guitars, carefully stacked boxes of my suitemate’s soon-to-be-moved stuff, the bunk bed and a pair of desks. After surveying the room, alert to any unusual sounds or shadows, I put on one of my favorite songs and tried to forget about the incident.

The next day, I received a call from my mother, who lives on the other side of the state, saying that she wasn’t going to be able to pick me up on the last day of finals due to car issues. I was going to have to stay an extra couple of days on campus, which was fine with me – at least I could postpone packing and focus on practicing and finishing my final project. It was Wednesday, everything was due Friday, and the earliest I could leave was Sunday. I wasn’t going to argue with that.

 

I spent that day putting the final touches on the project, a composition. Trevor helped me a little, but he seemed paler than usual when I met up with him.

“Sick?” I asked.

“Maybe a teeny bit,” he said, mumbling.

That night, I went to pick a song to fall asleep to. There, in my browser history,were the videos, “Ecstasy” being the most recent. I knew it probably wasn’t a good idea, considering how much the last time freaked me out, but I felt compelled to try it again. I left the lights on this time, hoping it would make the experience more pleasant. Closing my eyes, I let the tones envelope me.This time, nothing that unusual happened, but when I opened my eyes, the lights weren’t on anymore. My suitemate probably turned them off because she thought I was asleep, which was understandable, and I accepted that thought as truth.

Friday finally came, and by that time, I’d practiced until my fingers were worn raw and red and my final project was as done as it was going to get. After breezing through the final jury, I raced outside to meet with Trevor before he went home for summer. He seemed to have already left, though, so I sent him a text telling him I’d miss him.

After my suitemates were gone for good, my dorm took on a different feeling. I was never much of a people person, but having no one around at all was quite eerie.I was used to being around people, so left to my own devices, I wasn’t sure what I was supposed to be doing. I sulked around catching up on episodes of TV shows I hadn’t been able to watch since the semester started and playing modes on my guitar from memory, making sure I hadn’t forgotten them already. At somepoint during the evening, I received a text from Trevor, but he didn’t write anything. The message was blank.

I sat up until around one in the morning, when I began to grow tired. I decided that I would rather crash in the living room than climb all the way up to my bed, so I curled up on the beanbag chair and searched for my sleep music. Once again, the strange videos were right there waiting for me. Somewhat leery but still intrigued, I put on “Ecstasy” one more time for kicks.

The first couple minutes were uneventful. At around the four minute mark, my gut began tying itself into knots. I stared uneasily at the doors – the two that led to the bedrooms, the one leading to the bathroom, and the one to the hallway, which had a tiny peephole with a little bit of light coming from it. My guard was high. I kept my phone close to me, ready to call my mother or Trevor if something went seriously wrong.

Five minute mark. Nothing.

I looked behind me, out the window overlooking a somewhat wooded part of campus. The window was

open and the cool breeze felt chilling on my bare skin. At this point, I was huddled into the beanbag chair entirely, clutching my legs against my chest in an almost-fetal position. I didn’t want to touch the ground. The unsettling tone almost made the feel of the floor seem foreign to me. Every feeling was amplified.

Seven minute mark. Still nothing.

At this point my hands were sweaty. I nibbled at the calluses on my fingertips nervously, as I sometimes did before a recital.

Ten minute mark. Still nothing.

The tone came to a halt, and as soon as the pretty background image faded, a number of related videos came up. One was by the same user, titled “Despair.” A little proud I’d made it through “Ecstasy” and wildly curious, I clicked on “Despair” and put the headphones back on.

The tone was deeper than the last one and even more dissonant. The sound literally made every hair on my body stand on end. The room was still dark, but the tone seemed to make everything around me an uncanny dark.

Still, nothing was happening. I could still see every corner of the room with the light of my computer and with the peephole in the main door.

Three minute mark. Nothing yet.

My body was quivering, mostly from nerves. My senses were heightened. About halfway into the video, I thought I heard the neighbors who lived above me, even though I was certain nearly all of the dorm’s residents had moved out save for a scarce few with circumstances like my own. Perhaps someone in the room above me was stuck here, I thought.

Five minute mark. Nothing.

I closed my eyes, hoping that would take my mind off of the more frightening thoughts I was having, but instead, my mind was taken to a place even darker than the room I was in. While my eyes saw shadows, my mind saw fire, fire with an almost-human expression. My leg slipped off the beanbag and as it hit the rough carpet, it almost felt like pressing it to warm concrete. I opened my eyes in shock.

Something really  wasn’t right.

I glanced around the room, making sure nothing was out of place. My guitars were there. My clothes were there.

My mini-fridge was there. My laptop, my phone, my microwave. The doors were all in the same position I’d left them.

THE PEEPHOLE. There was no light coming from the peephole.

I was now in a state of panic. I couldn’t see the handle on the door clearly, but I recognized the sound it made when someone was trying to wiggle it open. The door was locked –I wasn’t that dumb – but I wasn’t going to take my chances. I ripped off the headphones, ran across the room to the light switch, and fell down against the wall, dizzy. I reached up to touch the handle on the door. It was hot, like metal laying in the sun, but otherwise, looked completely untampered with. I cracked the door open and peeked my head out into the hall. Nothing out of the ordinary. I then broke down in the middle of the room and called my mom. I had to get out of here. Soon.

The next day, I cleared the history on my computer and resolved not to watch the videos again. For the rest of my time on the campus that weekend, I didn’t even touch my laptop. Saturday night was spent with every light in the dorm on full blast and with the radio on. I texted my mom constantly as well. I tried to contact Trevor,but he never responded. In fact, I never heard from him again.

I moved back in with my parents that summer and didn’t have any more odd experiences like I did that week. One weird thing did happen, though. My parents were watching the news when it was reported that there was an incident at my college. I guess one of the dorms, the honors dorm, experienced a pretty bad electrical fire. The funny thing is, the fire was confined to only one room – room 313.