
Here’s what happened.
I stuffed those extra clothes into my backpack that morning, knowing they weren’t for running with Andrew. They were for running away. I needed some time. I needed to get out of here. Beth caught me though, and I had to lie to her. I hate lying. I’ve lied enough to myself about Andrew. I’ve lied to him plenty of times. I didn’t want to lie anymore. That’s why I needed some time. Time alone. Time to think.
That whole ride to school was awful. Beth knew. I don’t know how she knew, but she knew it. I could tell. She worries about me all the time, especially when it comes to Andrew. She’s right about him, she was always right, even when I didn’t want to see it. So I slumped into the seat, made myself smaller. I felt like I was going into a cocoon. I thought about transformation. I wanted to become something beautiful. But I couldn’t do that if I was always with people like Beth, worrying over me, never letting me process and heal on my own.
Angie was easier to talk to. I let her think that I was still trying to work things out with Andrew, when really, that note I had passed on Friday said we needed to talk. Talk about a breakup for good, that is. Joey got ahold of it, and I wasn’t great. I wish I had just talked to him after class instead, or after school. Or just sent him a text. That’s not really how I wanted him to find out, from his idiot friend who can’t mind his own business. But what happened, happened. That’s another reason why I had to get away. Just for a little while. I just had to get away for a little while.
I was feeling pretty sick by third period. It was just stress, honestly. I’m not pregnant. I never was pregnant. Andrew and I fought a lot, and people tried to find explanations for it all the time. It was pretty clear we were on rocky ground the last few weeks. People make up all kinds of things in the absence of an explanation. I didn’t really care what other students thought, but when the teachers started to notice…That’s another reason why I had to get away. Too many eyes on me. Too many concerned people wanting to help me. I don’t need help. I need space.
Andrew caught up with me after school before I could get away. I had snuck out the side of the school, into the staff parking lot. I should have known he’d be there. He was walking home that day. It was like he was waiting for me. “Hey, babe,” he said when he saw me.
“Don’t call me that,” I said. I tried to walk past him, but he grabbed my arm.
“Lizzie,” he said smoothly. “I just want to talk to you.”
He was standing in my way. I needed to get out of there! Didn’t anybody understand? I just needed some time to be alone. To transform. “I don’t have anything to say to you.”
“I don’t understand what happened,” he said. He tried to pet me, but I shrunk from him. “What did I do to you?”
“Andrew, please. Just let me go.”
He grew angry, his frown filling up his entire face. “I love you, Lizzie.” He didn’t look one bit sincere. He looked as oily as the stove top after Mom fries chicken.
I yanked my arm away from him. “I told you, I don’t want to be your girlfriend anymore.”
He got close to my face. “Then why did you say you still like me?” he hissed.
“I do like you, but you aren’t good for me.”
“I’m not good for you?” he asked. He was so wounded. It hurt to look at him.
“I told you already, Andrew. Give me some space. You’re smothering me.”
“You didn’t care before,” he hissed. “You liked it up until a month ago.”
That’s when Ms. Perkins interrupted us. I didn’t watch Andrew leave. I was too angry. I listened to what Ms. Perkins said only half interested. I wasn’t heartbroken. I was mad as hell. Maybe if I disappeared, then I could be free of him. Maybe if I transformed, then he wouldn’t keep reeling me back in. I needed wings, so I wouldn’t get stuck on his hook again.
I declined Ms. Perkin’s offer to take me home. I didn’t want to go home. Not until I was ready. Just a few days. I just needed a few days.
Beth had said the creek was flooded, but that’s where I was going anyway. I was sure I could find a place that wasn’t muddy or slick. I was thinking of going right up to where the creek empties out into the river. But if the creek was flooded, that probably meant the river was also high. As I made my way there, I started to get cold feet. But I kept going, thinking of being transformed. I kept thinking about wings. I could hide out under the bridge for a day. I’d go home tomorrow.
The water was really high, a lot higher than I expected. There was no way I was going to be able to set up a camp under the bridge. There was barely any dry ground left under it. I set my backpack on the ground and glanced up and down the bank. Now that I was here, it seemed like my plan wouldn’t work. There was mud everywhere, and no place to hide. If anyone came down this way, they would see me.
My feet were cold. I looked down, shocked to see myself sinking into the mud. I tried to slowly pull one foot upwards. The mud sucked at my foot as I raised it. It was trying to hold onto me. I twisted a little to try to free myself. It wasn’t working. I panicked, and began tugging my foot harder. I looked around me to see if there was anything within reach I could use to dig my feet out. There was a pretty large limb to my right. I squatted, stretched, grabbed hold, pulled it towards me. I lost my balance, and went face first into the mud. Now my hands were sinking too. I tried to lay flat, spreading my weight out and wriggling from side to side. It was working, but I was headed in the wrong direction. The water was lapping at my body. I was going into the river. But the more I moved towards the river, the freer I was of the mud. I took a chance, making a hard roll towards the water. I was free.
The current was strong though. And it carried me. For a moment it was sort of fun. I floated on the surface, under the bridge, staring up at the cloudless sky. But soon it grew scary, and I wanted to swim to the bank. The river was moving fast. Almost too fast. I struggled to swim. I didn’t want to get stuck in the mud again, so I looked for a place with more grass or rocks. The river turned around a bend, and I saw a place where I could more easily exit, if I could be quick enough. I pumped my arms and legs as hard as I could, making for the cluster of rocks. I reached for one, grabbing hold as the water sloshed around me. I struggled, pulling myself up onto it.
Slowly, I made my way from rock to rock, careful not to misstep. I was wet and slimy and my footing wasn’t sure. I slipped, crashing to the ground. I felt the pain in my forehead for only a moment before I lost my thoughts.
We found her around midnight. Andrew told us she would probably be at the water, and he was right. We followed him down there, and we found her backpack on the bank. We had a whole search party out looking for her, which was scary in the dark, that close to the river. She was a lot further downriver that we thought she would be. I found her among a cluster of rocks south of the bridge. Lizzie was cold, and there was so much blood that I thought for sure she was dead. She was alive though. She tried to stand up as soon as she came around, but I wouldn’t let her. Dad called an ambulance and Mom rode with her to the hospital. Dad and I followed in the car.
I watched her sleep. Nurses came in and out, checking on her, checking on us. They had sewn up the gash in her head. She looked like Frankenstein’s monster. I imagined two bolts sticking out of her neck. The doctors said she was lucky not to have broken it. Her face was bruised and swollen. Her eyes flickered open as she looked for a moment like she might fall asleep again, but then she turned her head towards me. I could see in her eyes that the motion pained her. She let out a squeak.
“Don’t,” I said. I moved my chair closer to the bed, glanced at Mom and Dad, who had somehow managed to fall asleep in the chairs they had drug in from the waiting room. “You hurt yourself pretty bad, Lizzie,” I whispered.
“On the rocks?” she asked.
“You remember?” I was a little surprised. She had been unconscious for hours. I imagined that she wouldn’t remember the accident.
“I was trying to get out of the river,” she said. She swallowed. “Everything hurts.”
“You were in the river?” I asked. It made sense now why she had been so wet.
“Yeah, I kinda…fell in.”
I studied her, aching, the question bubbling inside my chest until I couldn’t keep it to myself. “Did you do it on purpose?”
She smiled at me. “No, Beth. It was an accident.”
“Okay,” I said. “It’s just, you were so morose yesterday.”
“I know. I needed to get away. But I didn’t mean to fall in…or end up here.”
“It’s a good thing Andrew knew where you might be. I don’t know how we would have found you otherwise.”
Her face changed. I couldn’t identify the expression. It looked like grief, but it also looked like disgust. “Do you know what it’s like, Beth? To try to pull yourself free of someone, when the whole world is set up to put you together?”
That wasn’t what I had expected. I had no idea she was trying to break up with Andrew. I thought she was still pining over him, chasing him. “What do you mean?”
“He’s always there. And he’s always going to be there.”
“Is that why you were running away?” I guessed.
“I was going to come back. I just needed to…” She paused, and I waited until she had the right words. I wanted to fill in her sentence with all kinds of words. But this was Lizzie’s story and I wanted to hear what she had to say. “I needed to transform.”
“And you had to go to the water to do that?” I asked, not understanding.
“It’s where I always go,” she whispered. “Whenever I need strength. It’s like…it’s a sacred place, Beth. You know what I mean?”
All this time, she wasn’t trying to hang onto Andrew. She was trying to break away. “I’m sorry I didn’t know.”
“I’m sorry I didn’t tell you,” she said.
I took her hand. “So, did you do it?” She stared at me for a moment, thinking about the question. “Did you transform?”
I watched a peace settle over her, that kind of peace that creates a holy space around two people. Like God is coming down right between you and filling you with all the love you’ll ever need. “I don’t know yet.”
I squeezed her hand. “Well, next time you need some strength, just let me know. I’ll go with you.”
She had tears in her eyes now. “You sure?”
“Of course, I’m sure,” I said.
Lizzie sighed contentedly, and seemed to sink further into the pillows. “Okay. Thanks,” she said, before she closed her eyes. “I love you, Beth.”
I resisted kissing her forehead because of the bandages. “Love you too, sis.” I watched her fall asleep again. I kept a vigil over her until I started to sag forward, and my eyes started to close against my will. I laid my head against the stack of pillows propping her up in the bed, drifting. I could be a little less protective, I decided. Lizzie was stronger than I realized.


