Don't Breathe a Word
DON’T BREATHE A WORD
HOLLY CUPALA
Dedication
For my family,
and for Amy, Pam, Deanna, Glynis, Kristine, and Alice—
sisters not by blood, but by choice.
And for Shiraz. Always, always for you.
Contents
Cover
Title Page
Dedication
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
Chapter 17
Chapter 18
Chapter 19
Chapter 20
Chapter 21
Chapter 22
Chapter 23
Chapter 24
Chapter 25
Chapter 26
Chapter 27
Chapter 28
Chapter 29
Chapter 30
Chapter 31
Chapter 32
Chapter 33
Chapter 34
Chapter 35
Chapter 36
Chapter 37
Chapter 38
Chapter 39
Chapter 40
Chapter 41
Afterword
Acknowledgments
Back Ad
About the Author
Credits
Copyright
About the Publisher
Chapter 1
Slyt. Slyt.
Sliding metal cut through the still night, spiraling ribbons of hair into the sink.
But better the sound of scissors than the rattle of my lungs. One wrong breath would set off the alarm.
I scooped up the strands and thrust them into a plastic bag, right next to what was left of the Manic Panic bleach kit and the sack full of dirt from the garden. An unknown girl stared back in my bathroom mirror. Jagged white bob. Pale eyebrows, oddly light against fading summer skin. Black rings around the eyes, transforming her . . . me . . . from a suburban girl into a hollowed-out specter.
That’s what I’ll be, if I’m lucky. Invisible.
And silent. I had to be. There was only one chance for escape.
Headlight beams flashed through my open window, putting me on alert. Earlier today, my mom had asked if I needed some new curtains, with Dad’s job and everything going so well. As if new curtains would make me forget this beautiful birdcage, suffocating my beating heart. As if they could keep me, now that I’d come to the edge.
No.
I’d already fallen, and there was no one to catch me. Not here, anyway.
I took a harsh swig of my inhaler and suppressed the cough. As long as I was angry, I wouldn’t have to feel afraid.
Even in August, it was cold enough in the middle of the night to pull Asher’s flannel close, over the T-shirt and ragged grey PVC pants I found at the thrift store. His smell—hand sanitizer, cigarettes, clean custom scent—still permeated the fibers. I would leave everything else, but at least I’d get the flannel out of the deal.
I ran a tissue across the sink to capture any lingering strands. Who knew what forensics team they might call out when they found me missing? It would be worse than when I’d almost died of pneumonia. The only trail they’d find would be the one carefully laid by me—a scrape of mud, a smudge on the windowsill. No note. No fingerprints.
My eyes scanned the bedroom one last time for anything I might have forgotten. My window was open to the breeze and my bed unmade, as if I were snatched right out of it. The clock read 1:26 a.m. A muddy pair of men’s work boots waited next to my old backpack, stuffed with water bottles and Clif Bars and inhalers. I only took a handful of each so they wouldn’t notice what was gone.
Those were the things I’d prepared for, but now that I was leaving, the unexpected reached out to hold me back. Not the laptop or the closet brimming with clothes. Not even the cluster of photographs of me with my best friend, Neeta, at mock trials or by the pool. Or me with my two brothers, a trio of J’s: Jesse, Joy, and Jonah. I was always crushed between them, as if they could put the air right into my lungs.
They were a collection of poses, like everything else. A smokescreen, veiling the truth.
Then there was the picture of Asher.
Asher stared at me, leaning back, arms crossed, with a look at the same time blank and challenging. The look that made me ache with hot dread.
Neeta couldn’t have known why I’d finally given in to a girls-only trip with her. The photos didn’t tell the real story. We hadn’t talked, really talked, since I’d been with Asher. You can know someone your whole life, and a year later they know nothing about you at all.
“You’re different, Joy,” Neeta had said on the way back.
Maybe it was because we’d just gone to see the oldest J at college. Maybe it was because I’d left Asher behind.
But when Neeta said it, I had to push back tears.
The me in the photos mocked the one reflected in the mirror: two of us, divided. J2. Joy. That name didn’t even fit me anymore. I would become someone she could never be.
“Good-bye, Joy,” I whispered. “It’ll be better out there. I promise.”
The new me would not be powerless. The plan would work. It had to. No one would believe I could do this—least of all Asher.
I did feel a little bad for what I was about to do to the carpet.
J1 had been out of the house for a year now, his old bedroom an empty cell. He didn’t have to watch over me anymore, now that the job belonged to Asher. J3 slumbered like the dead—or at least like an exhausted four-year-old, his breathing even and thick. My parents had nothing to keep them up at night.
Even still, I held my breath against the earthy smell as I put on the work boots and dumped out the bag of dirt, smearing its contents from the window to the bed and wrestling with my pillows. Dirt could trigger an asthma attack, and that would bring my parents flying into the room. I stuffed the boots into the bag, then swiped my feet through the mud to give the illusion of a struggle. I would leave no other trace. Soon, police would be crawling this room for evidence.
And then—
Crunch.
Pain stabbed into my bare arch, and I clutched my foot to keep from crying out—a Lego wagon from J3, which he’d left here to blackmail his way into my room. The crushed driver dangled pitifully. He’d have no one to watch over him once I was gone. I stuffed the little Lego man into my backpack before he could make me change my mind.
Nobody would be up and about in our neighborhood at this hour, at least in theory. But that didn’t mean I wouldn’t get caught by some guy up late with his laptop, who happened to see the ghost of a girl in the night. What the neighbors saw and what went on behind closed doors were often two different things in suburban paradise. I should know.
But I didn’t when I met Asher. He dazzled me as much as he did everyone else.
To my parents, he was the perfect replacement for my older brother—even better, he could protect me for the rest of my life. From pneumonia, from poverty, from abandonment.
To me, he was an escape from my parents’ obsessive worry. That, and he could shatter me and put me back together again with one tender, electrifying breath, leaving me gasping for more. Delicious danger wrapped in a package of utter security.
Except that for everything he gave, there was a price. If Jesse hadn’t been at college, if Mom hadn’t been consumed with the details of my medicines and schedules, if Dad hadn’t been une
mployed for six months and Asher hadn’t gotten him the job at Valen Ventures . . . maybe someone would have noticed that I’d stopped breathing.
I didn’t even notice, until the night we reached the edge.
Neeta and I were home from our trip. I was still reeling from Jesse’s rejection. If I could count on anyone, it would be him. But he slammed the door in my face.
Asher would be angry—that much I could count on. But I couldn’t have guessed the punishment. He took me to his apartment like he’d always done, only this time there was a candle burning. The calmness in his grey, grey eyes conflicted with the set of his jaw, made even sharper by the flickering light. He drew back the sheets. Something metal gleamed in the candlelight.
I don’t care if anyone else knows . . . I only care if you know, Joy.
That night, I sacrificed myself on an altar of skin and ashes. But I wouldn’t bow down.
I skimmed the darkness toward the community entrance: elegant by day, spiked by night. My skin pulsed in that secret place, a blistering reminder that everything Asher did—good or bad—was about power.
My parents were always complaining about the Hopkins girls wedging the gate open for their boyfriends. But this new me was counting on it. I would slip through the bars before anyone knew I’d escaped. I didn’t dare glance back.
What drew me forward was a glimmering, singular thought. A memory, a promise.
Help was out there, if only I could find him.
Chapter 2
The twinge in my lungs was the least of my problems as I passed from shadow to shadow. I would have to take a shortcut through the woods to make the two a.m. bus. If I didn’t, I was completely screwed. The next one didn’t come until dawn.
I tore through the evergreen belt where Jesse and I used to build forts and where I first met Neeta, long before Jonah was even imagined. J1, J2, J3.
Jesse left for Western last summer. J1 would be fine without me. Better, even—he said so himself.
J3 would forget me soon enough. What did Mom always say about memories? Mine began when I was five years old. Jonah had one sweet year left.
The dried-out creek at the bottom of the ravine plunged me through more memories, but I would erase them with every gulp of mossy air. The dirty Vans I found at St. Vincent’s would leave the trail of some other girl in some other life, and I would vanish in a flutter of dirt and leaves.
1:52 a.m. on my cell phone. I would turn it off as soon as I hit the city. Life would be in a new time zone, synchronized with a different speed of flight.
At 2:02 a.m., Metro Bus 216 rolled up to the Issaquah Transit Center and I flipped up my hoodie, ready for action.
The bus door jiggled open, illuminated by a fluorescent glow. I had a crumpled ticket in my pocket, torn out of my parents’ Eastside Savings book. I held it out to the driver, who looked like he hadn’t eaten anything but greasy drive-thru noodles for a very long time.
Runaway teen, I could see on his face. I wondered if he could see the desperation on mine. I didn’t look too closely, officer. But no, it wasn’t this girl. She had blond hair, not long and dark, and the eyes . . . black and empty.
The driver sniffed impatiently at my outstretched hand. “Just put it in the slot,” he sighed. Stupid suburban kid, doesn’t even know how to ride the bus. How was I going to survive on the street?
The only other passengers were a woman leaning across the handicap seats and a suit guy in the back. I claimed a bench near the middle and curled into a ball around my backpack.
All I had to do was get to Bellevue, where I could wait for the first Seattle-bound bus. Then it would take another to get to the Capitol Hill neighborhood, where I would disappear into the ample teen homeless population. Until then, I had to blend into the scenery. That wouldn’t be too hard. No one I knew rode the bus.
We rumbled away from the Transit Center and onto the highway. I looked out the back window, past the businessman and into the blackness of my receding life.
“Let’s go for a drive,” Asher had said, just a few days ago.
We didn’t talk about what happened the night before. His anger was expended, once I’d fallen asleep at his apartment and spent the night raging with fever and chills. He took care of me and brought me back to life. He bandaged my wounds and took away the hurt. Now we were at the tender point, the part I hungered for. He was always so kind afterward.
But this time, he’d gone so far. My skin throbbed at the memory.
“Where do you want to go?” I asked, once we were settled into his DeLorean, detailed every week to keep it satiny and fingerprint-free. He could have any car he wanted, but he chose one that required constant care. Like me.
He gently lifted the seatbelt away from my hip and offered me my inhaler, then tilted my mouth to his so that I could taste his familiar mix of smoky and sweet. A warm tingle spread through me—even after the last twenty-four hours, he could still have this dizzying effect.
“How about you choose, Joy.”
Normally this kind of statement would be a test. If I could navigate the land mines, I wouldn’t be punished. Not this time. A couple of crows picking at roadkill shot us curious looks, giving me an eerie chill.
I tucked my head onto the thickness of his shoulder, feeling it soften under my weight. He touched my hair, my shoulder, everywhere but where the pain was, as if soothing me. It was over now, and I wouldn’t run off with Neeta again without telling him. It was going to be better . . . he would stay close, watch over me.
If I could walk this balance, everything would go back to the way it was in the beginning.
We passed a Starbucks on the way out of the neighborhood, where I used to go with Neeta. She could be there now with Ellerie and Ari, her new friends since Asher came along. They’d be sipping Frappuccinos, maybe talking about the trip. I hadn’t gotten a chance to ask Neeta what she meant, if she saw through it all. You’re different, Joy.
I couldn’t risk running into them with Asher. As long as I stayed away, I could make sense of what had happened, first with my brother and then last night. Seeing Neeta would jeopardize everything. I would crumble with one look, which would only make things worse.
“We could go to the city,” I said. “Maybe get something to eat?” Though food was the furthest thing from my mind.
He nodded, tipping his aviator sunglasses down over his eyes. I let out the air captured in my lungs. It was what he’d wanted all along.
Seattle unfolded before us, the Puget Sound and the mountains and the entire city crammed into the low, wide windshield. The last droplets of summer rain strained to hold on as we sat in silence.
“You haven’t talked much since you got back,” said Asher. I fingered the Tiffany bracelet he’d given me, the one with the crow dangling from the edge of the plate. It identified me wherever I went, even to the ends of the earth.
“It wasn’t a big deal. It’s just . . . Neeta and I haven’t hung out in a long time, and she thought we could visit Jesse at Western.” The truth was, I didn’t even know why I was going to see my brother until I got there.
We got off at the Olive exit, taking us into Capitol Hill. As we drove toward Broadway, the landscape changed from shiny to gritty, silk to leather, boutique to clothing exchange. Street parking became dense, and we circled to find a spot.
“I thought you didn’t hang out with Neeta anymore,” Asher said, with a hint of disdain. It was no secret he didn’t like Neeta. The words annoying and know-it-all came to mind, even if he had only ever treated her with the utmost politesse.
“We’re about to start senior year together,” I answered. “She thought we should go on a trip.” My skin felt like it was on fire, and I shifted for relief.
The DeLorean growled to a stop at Olive and Harvard. Asher opened the winged door and left it up while he came for me, coolly noting the attention it attracted.
“So what did you do there? It had to have been good if you didn’t want to tell me about it. A party?” H
is question skewered me with dead calm.
We joined the stream of pedestrians, dodging students and people talking to themselves, grimy homeless kids who probably hadn’t changed clothes in weeks. When my brother still lived at home, he came down here all the time, handing out food and socks. Asher stayed close to protect me from the mumbling, smoking, unpredictable flow, the softness of his hand contradicting his words.
“No, no party,” I backpedaled. “We just stopped by to see Jesse, hung out, and came back.” Asher waited for more, for the point that would betray me. Usually I didn’t see my error until it was too late.
What I couldn’t tell him was that Jesse, the brother who always watched out for me, the one who found me when I’d stopped breathing, didn’t want to see me. He would feed the homeless and build houses in Mexico, but he’d had enough of me. There would be no help from him.
“Hung out? And you couldn’t tell me about that?” Asher and I stopped in front of the Smoke Shop, the only place around here that imported the cigarettes he liked. A group of crows dive-bombed for a bit of french fry left on the street. He watched them with interest.
Air scraped in my throat like shards. I took a slow breath to calm my voice. I wouldn’t cry. I fumbled with my inhaler, and he steadied it in my hand.
“Don’t,” he said, running his finger along the outline of my jaw and tracing up to the corner of my eye. “Just tell me the truth. Why did you take off like that?”
“Asher, I’m sorry, I didn’t think—”
“True. You didn’t think,” he cut me off. Then he smiled, and I couldn’t tell if it reached his eyes under the lenses. “I know it was a mistake. I forgive you.” He put his lips to mine, reminding me of that thrilling place between love and danger. I could barely feel the pain anymore. “It’s just . . . I missed you. I love you, Joy.”
Internally, something released. It wasn’t all bad, I would tell Neeta if I could. Sometimes he was incredibly, incredibly gentle. I loved him, too.
What happened last night would never have to happen again.