Authors: Carolee Dean
mobs of ants scurrying from
their holes. They walk right by us
like we’re not even there.
I know they can’t see me,
but nobody acknowledges
Elijah or Oscar, either.
A few minutes later, they come
back out of the cafeteria carrying
burgers and salads and chocolate milks.
They sit all around us but never look
in our direction.
“We’re our own little island,”
Elijah tells me,
“in a sea of wannabes,
princesses, and studs.”
“Does it ever bother you?”
I ask. He shrugs. “I’d rather
have one or two friends I know
I can depend on than a crowd of
sharks just waiting for the
scent of blood.”
I nod
because I know
popularity
isn’t what it seems to be.
So why can’t I picture
life without it?
They say people’s greatest fear
is public speaking.
I’ve got that one down.
My greatest fear
is disappearing.
But isn’t that
what will happen
if I go back to the hallway?
How long would it take
for folks to forget
I ever existed?
I’m surprised when someone sits
down next to Elijah, and I look up to see
my former best friend, Bri.
She shakes her head,
looks at the yellow tape
across the quad, and says,
“I miss Ally.”
I miss Bri too, and that surprises me,
after what she did to me.
“She’s not gone yet,” Elijah tells her.
Brianna shakes her head.
“She’ll never forgive me.”
I get up and go stand where I can look her in the eye.
“Why should I forgive you? You ruined my life.”
“I didn’t send that picture of her and Davis,”
she tells Elijah.
“Yeah, right. It came from your number.”
“I admit I took the picture,
but I never sent it to anybody.
Someone else must have done it.”
“Who?” asks Elijah skeptically.
“Somebody who’s at my house all the time.
Somebody who saw my cell lying around
and figured she’d get back
at both me and Ally.
The same person who sent the picture of her and Will.
I sure didn’t take that one.
It’s pretty sick to send it now,
after everything that’s happened.”
At the mention of Will, I feel my stomach
turning inside out.
Images flash across my memory.
Me with Will.
Darla with a camera.
“What picture of Will?” Elijah asks.
“It’s been going around school all day.
I thought you’d seen it?”
Elijah opens his phone, and there’s a picture
of me in the back of Will’s pickup.
His pants are down around his ankles,
and he’s lying on top of me.
Elijah looks up at me in
total disgust.
“I didn’t send any pictures,” Bri says.
But I don’t care anymore
who sent the pictures.
What I can’t stand is that look in
Elijah’s eyes, because now he knows
I really am a whore.
Now there’s no one left
to believe in me if I stay.
Or remember me
if I go.
I run through the crowd
just trying to get lost.
Every time a camera clicks,
somebody dies.
I hear Elijah following, but
I don’t dare turn around.
I can hear his footsteps,
but I can’t bear the sound.
’Cause if he catches up to me,
he’ll look me in the face.
And I’d rather disappear
without a whisper or a trace
than see the disappointment
in his eyes.
I dash behind the cafeteria
while Elijah gets stuck in the crowd
on the quad.
I see Will.
He’s selling dime bags
to the same freshmen
he was beating up last week,
taking their money
with the same hands
he used to unhook my bra.
When we arrived at his pickup,
the night of homecoming,
he got a bottle out of the glove box.
Then we sat on blankets he’d spread
in the truck bed and started doing shots.
I knew better than to mix pills
with booze, but I didn’t care, because
the pills had pretty much wiped out
any judgment I had left.
All I could think about was how awful
it felt to have Davis ignore me,
and how warm and wonderful it felt
to be drinking tequila by moonlight
with a varsity football player
who couldn’t keep his hands off me,
who kept saying over and over again,
“I want you, Ally.
I want you, Ally.
I want you, Ally.”
After a while
my body was burning and
the world was spinning
so fast I just needed something
to anchor me to the ground.
All I ever wanted was for
someone to want me.
Was that so much to ask?
So the next time Will said,
“I want you, Ally,”
I figured, what the hell,
and I whispered, “Okay.”
All of a sudden I was flat
on my back with the full weight
of him on top of me, my spine banging
against the metal ridges of the
pickup bed, with the blankets
providing little buffer.
He pushed up my dress and
pulled down his pants so fast
that we were already doing it
before I had a chance to ask
about condoms.
He smelled like sour fruit,
and I tried to scream out the word
“Stop!” but his tongue was too far
down my throat for me to say anything.
All of a sudden I was blinking,
because a camera flash
was going off in my eyes.
When I looked up, I saw Darla
standing next to Davis.
“I told you,” she said to him.
What? What had she told him,
I wanted to ask,
but I couldn’t string together
enough coherent words to speak.
For a long moment Davis just stood there,
looking at me in disgust,
as Will continued to heave
against me.
He never even slowed down.
Then Davis turned and ran away.
And all I wanted
was to disappear.
for the first few days after that,
except that Davis turned away
whenever he saw me.
And that was before
any pictures had been texted.
Then one day at lunch,
when we were all sitting
together, Darla said
to Megan, “Where’s Ally?”
“I’m right here,” I said.
“I don’t know,” said Megan.
“I haven’t seen her all day.”
“Very funny, Megan,” I said, poking
her in the ribs.
She didn’t even flinch.
Why were they pretending
I wasn’t there?
“Just as well,” said Darla.
“I really don’t like her
that much. What do you
see in her anyway?”
“To tell you the truth,” said Megan,
“I don’t really know.”
Was I dreaming? Was this
some kind of psycho
nightmare? I had to
pinch myself to make sure
I was awake.
“You have to be careful
about your reputation,” Darla
told her, “hanging around with a girl
like that.”
I ran to the bathroom
and splashed water on my face,
then I looked in the mirror
to make sure I was really there.
What was happening?
Was I really losing all my friends,
or my mind,
or both?
started ignoring me
after that,
treating me like
I didn’t exist.
Even Megan and the other freshmen
started whispering words
like
slut
and
whore
when I passed.
Friday night Darla changed
the dance routine and
“forgot” to tell me,
making me look like
an idiot in front of the
whole school
during the game.
Afterward
I found
ten packages of condoms
in my gym locker
with a note that said,
“Hope these get you
through the night.”
When Dad asked me why I was crying,
I told him I wanted to quit.
He said,
“There is no
I
in ‘TEAM.’”
Oh, Dad.
Don’t you know?
There
is no
I
anywhere.
I went to stay with Brianna.
She was the only person
who was still talking to me.
Plus I was
hoping for a chance
to explain things to Davis.
I didn’t love Will.
I didn’t even like him.
What happened was a mistake.
A drug-induced nightmare.
While I waited for Davis to get home,
I tried time after time to start
a conversation with Bri.
But she just sat there
watching some stupid documentary
on whaling that she’d ordered from Netflix.
We finally went to bed around eleven
in silence.
At midnight I snuck into
Davis’s room.
He wasn’t there.
I went back at one
two
three
No Davis.
When I returned I found Brianna
sitting up in bed.
“You’re not my friend,” she said.
“And I don’t want you coming over anymore.
The only reason you’re here is because
you want to screw my brother.”
Her words lay between us like a wall of glass.
Mostly because they were true.
the next Monday,
half the class giggled
and the other half looked away in disgust.
They were huddled around Megan.
My phone started to buzz.
I opened it to see the words
NEW PIX MESSAGE
It was from Brianna’s
number.
I reluctantly pressed Open,
and a picture of me,
bare-chested, lying next to Davis,
flashed on the screen—
only you couldn’t tell it was him
because at the last minute he had
covered his face with his arm.
My heart skipped a beat.
I wondered why
she was sending it then,
after all those weeks had passed.
Now I wonder
if she sent it at all.
“The Twins are looking healthy,”
said a boy in the back row,
and the whole class started laughing.
At that moment I wanted
to be invisible.
They all held up their cell phones
like they were at a rock
concert, and pictures of me
filled the room.
“Where are you going?”
Mr. Jones asked
as I tried to run out of the room.
“The bathroom,” I told him.
“Oh no, you don’t.
You know the rules.
No passes for the first
ten minutes of class.”
I cowered
in my seat
while voices
behind me giggled.
Sat watching
the clock until
the ten minutes
was up, and I swear,
time stopped.
And when it did,
a little voice
in my head
whispered,
You’d be better off dead.
In less than a minute
I was gone.
Whoever I was before
that moment disappeared.
Sometimes I can’t even
recall who she was.
The girl who wanted to
light up the stage.
The girl who would stand
up in front of class
and make her classmates laugh
with her spoofs of Poe.
Sure, they were all laughing,
but they were calling me “ho.”
I got a text from Cricket,
an old middle school friend.
I looked at my photo and cringed.
WTF. IS THIS REALLY YOU, ALLY?
DID U KNOW THERE’S A WEB POLL WITH THIS ON IT
CALLED PICK YOUR FAVORITE TWIN?
Cricket was going to a
high school ten miles away
in another town.
That’s when I knew
there was no place to hide,
there never would be.
I was going down,
and there was
No. Way. Out.
because I can’t stand to be at school
and I don’t know where else to go.
I lost Elijah on the quad,