“Emma!” A male voice that sounded familiar permeated the haze. “Hold on. I’ll get something to pull you up.”
Hold on. Right. Just… One of my hands slipped free of the root I was holding and my heart slammed into my ribs so hard I lost my breath. I yelped and reached out, grabbing onto more half-exposed roots in the dirt wall to catch myself. Numb from shock, I pressed the side of my face into the mud wall. “I’m going to fall!”
“No, you’re not,” the male voice answered. “I won’t let that happen. Here.”
He swung a big branch over the side and I looked up at the shadow of a boy holding on to the other side. “Grab it.”
I nodded and adjusted my hold to the branch. “Please don’t break,” I whispered.
“You’re going to have to help me out a little.”
He pulled on the branch, and at the same time, I jammed my feet into the mud wall to climb up.
Once I was up over the edge, I spilled onto my hands and knees. My fingertips tingled. My brain felt numb from fear. I dug my nails into the soil and gasped for air.
“It’s okay. Shh.” Someone settled beside me and my insides buzzed with awareness. “She’ll never hurt you again, I swear it. I don’t care what I have to do,” he whispered as if he were mainly talking to himself.
I wiped my face on my sleeve and looked up. It was the boy from the quad. He sat with his elbows resting on his knees, his head in his hands. Wait a minute—she? He’d said
“Is she gone?” I choked out. “Where is she?”
His green eyes connected with mine and ignited with an emotion I couldn’t comprehend. He nodded and sat up, leaning a few inches closer to me. He held out his palm the way you would to a frightened animal. I wondered if that’s what I looked like just then, eyes wide, flinching from his touch. I knew that’s how I felt. Like a deer that someone had just grazed with a bullet.
“She’s gone,” he said.
I wrapped my arms around my knees, rocking until my tailbone went numb and I couldn’t feel the ground beneath me anymore.
“Was she real?” I asked. “Someone was there, right?”
The boy leaned back, a wary look spreading out over his face as he scratched the back of his head.
“Yeah.”
I rubbed my scraped palms. I didn’t understand. It had never happened like this before. All of the other times they had been accidents. Like the sign at school, or the woman whose steering wheel locked and she almost hit me on my bike. This was purposeful. This was someone trying to hurt me.
Mystery guy held up my camera like an offering, then sat it in front of my feet.
“I think your strap broke when I was pulling you up,” he said. “Sorry.”
I stared at the cleanly sliced strap, at his long tan fingers tapping against his knee.
“How did you know I was here?” I finally asked. “Are you stalking me or something?”
He laughed. It was a nervous, broken harmony of sound that did funny things to my insides. He picked up a twig and scratched something into the dirt between his thighs. “Just good timing, I guess.”
I wanted to laugh, but it wasn’t there. I wasn’t sure
“Hey, are you okay?”
I looked up and for maybe the first time really saw the boy sitting across from me. He had a sad look on his face. Not the kind that showed how he was feeling at that second, but the kind that’s branded there after seeing things that can never be unseen. His light-brown hair was cropped close around his scalp, the longer pieces on top stained gold from the sun. His jaw was strong, classic looking. He looked like he belonged somewhere else, a place where it was normal for boys to look like James Dean and rescue damsels in distress.
He looked like he belonged at this bonfire about as much as I did.
I nodded and closed my eyes, trying to puzzle out the weird fluttery sensation that invaded my stomach when I looked at him. “Thank you,” I said. “I…I didn’t say thank you before.”
He looked at me for half a second, then back down to the dirt. His lips tipped up into a lopsided smile that looked incredibly underused. “Anytime, Emma.”
“How do you know my name?” I hadn’t told him at school. He hadn’t given me the chance.
“It’s…it’s complicated.”
“Can’t be that complicated. It’s actually a pretty simple question.” I stood up, hoping my shaky legs would support me. My heart started a slow and steady pound. Someone had pushed me. And this guy was the only person around. It was too convenient. I didn’t believe in convenient. I peered into the darkness, hearing only crickets. How far had I wandered from the party?
“Look, I have to go,” I said.
He looked up at me with those kryptonite eyes, confused. “Where are you—” He clutched his hip and his words choked off into a groan. His face paled.
“Hey are you okay?” I reached out and he jerked back from my touch.
“I’m…fine. Maybe…you should…find Cash…now.”
I realized he was shimmering. Every second that passed, his face twisted with more pain and he grew a little more iridescent. I backed away, and for reasons I couldn’t place right then, grabbed my camera and snapped a picture of him.
He glared at me in disbelief. “Wh-why did you do that?”
I shrugged, playing nonchalant when really I was terrified. “Why not? I need pictures for the yearbook.”
He groaned again and for a split second, he flickered out of existence. “Emma…
Hands shaking, I lifted the camera up to look at the display. He wasn’t there. I blinked, hoping the image would change, but it didn’t. He…he wasn’t there. Just an out-of-focus white cylinder of smoke where a cute boy with amazing green eyes should have been standing.
An orb.
“Please. I don’t want you to see this.” He gripped his knees.
I stared at him, everything blank within me, and realized I wasn’t breathing. With a crash, the reality of what was happening fell down around me. I inhaled a deep, shuddering gasp of air and my knees nearly gave out. Something in me said to stay. Something in me said to run. And every inch of me wanted to touch him. To grab hold of him and not let him disappear again. He was my proof. If he disappeared, so did any hope I had of convincing myself I wasn’t crazy.
“Go find Cash,” he choked out. “Don’t leave his side. Go home and don’t stop until you get there.
Do you hear me?”
I nodded dumbly, gripping my camera. A gust of wind rushed between us, and in one blinding flash, he was gone. There wasn’t any denying it. He was…he was…
“Oh, God.” I stumbled back, unable to breathe. Fear pulsed through my veins until everything went fuzzy. My head spun with so many thoughts, I couldn’t keep track of them. But the one that stood out from the rest was his voice.
He sounded afraid. And if
I didn’t think about it anymore. I turned around, refusing to think about the things that lurked in the shadows around me, and ran.
Chapter 8