Read I Was Here Online

Authors: Gayle Forman

Tags: #Juvenile Fiction, #Mysteries & Detective Stories, #Social Issues, #Suicide, #Friendship

I Was Here

ALSO BY
GAYLE FORMAN

x x x

If I Stay

Where She Went

Just One Day

Just One Year

Just One Night (novella)

I

WAS

HERE

BY
Gayle Forman

VIKING

An Imprint of Penguin Group (USA)

VIKING

Published by the Penguin Group

Penguin Group (USA) LLC

375 Hudson Street

New York, New York 10014

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A Penguin Random House Company

 

First published in the United States of America by Viking, an imprint of Penguin Group
(USA) LLC, 2015

Copyright © 2015 by Gayle Forman, Inc.

 

“Fireflies,” performed by Bishop Allen, used with permission from Justin Rice and
Christian Rudder courtesy of Superhyper/ASCAP

“Firefly,” performed by Heavens to Betsy, used with permission from Corin Tucker courtesy
of Red Self Music/ASCAP

 

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LIBRARY OF CONGRESS CATALOGING-IN-PUBLICATION DATA

Forman, Gayle.

I was here / Gayle Forman.

pages cm

Summary: In an attempt to understand why her best friend committed suicide, eighteen-year-old
Cody Reynolds retraces her dead friend’s footsteps and makes some startling discoveries.

 

ISBN 978-0-698-17054-4

[1. Suicide—Fiction. 2. Grief—Fiction. 3. Best friends—Fiction. 4. Friendship—Fiction.
5. Mystery and detective stories. 6. Washington (State)—Fiction.] I. Title.

PZ7.F75876Iam 2015 [Fic]—dc23 2014011445

Version_1

Contents

Also By Gayle Forman

Title Page

Copyright

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

Epilogue

Author’s Note

For Suzy Gonzales
x x x

1

The day after Meg died, I received this letter:

I regret to inform you that I have had to take my own life. This decision has been
a long time coming, and was mine alone to make. I know it will cause you pain, and
for that I am sorry, but please know that I needed to end my own pain. This has nothing
to do with you and everything to do with me. It’s not your fault.
Meg

She emailed copies of the letter to her parents and to me, and to the Tacoma police
department, along with another note informing them which motel she was at, which room
she was in, what poison she had ingested, and how her body should be safely handled.
On the pillow at the motel room was another note—instructing the maid to call the
police and not touch her body—along with a fifty-dollar tip.

She sent the emails on a time delay. So that she would be long gone by the time we
received them.

Of course, I didn’t know any of that until later. So when I first read Meg’s email
on the computer at our town’s public library, I thought it had to be some kind of
joke. Or a hoax. I called Meg, and when she didn’t answer, I called her parents.

“Did you get Meg’s email?” I asked them.

“What email?”

2

There are memorial services. And there are vigils. And then there are prayer circles.
It gets hard to keep them straight. At the vigils, you hold candles, but sometimes
you do that at the prayer circles. At the memorial services, people talk, though what
is there to say?

It was bad enough she had to die. On purpose. But for subjecting me to all of this,
I could kill her.

“Cody, are you ready?” Tricia calls.

It is late on a Thursday afternoon, and we are going to the fifth service in the past
month. This one is a candlelight vigil. I think.

I emerge from my bedroom. My mother is zipping up the black cocktail dress she picked
up from the Goodwill after Meg died. She’s been using it as her funeral dress, but
I’m sure that once this blows over, it’ll go into rotation as a going-out dress. She
looks hot in it. Like so many people in town, mourning becomes her.

“Why aren’t you dressed?” she asks.

“All my nice clothes are dirty.”

“What nice clothes?”

“Fine, all my vaguely funereal clothes are dirty.”

“Dirty never stopped you before.”

We glare at each other. When I was eight, Tricia announced I was old enough to do
my own laundry. I hate doing laundry. You can see where this leads.

“I don’t get why we have to go to another one,” I say.

“Because the town needs to process.”

“Cheese needs to process. The town needs to find another drama to distract itself
with.”

There are fifteen hundred and seventy-four people in our town, according to the fading
sign on the highway. “Fifteen hundred and seventy-three,” Meg said when she escaped
to college in Tacoma on a full scholarship last fall. “Fifteen hundred and seventy-two
when you come to Seattle and we get our apartment together,” she’d added.

It remains stuck at fifteen hundred and seventy-three now, and I suspect it’ll stay
there until someone else is born or dies. Most people don’t leave. Even when Tammy
Henthoff and Matt Parner left their respective spouses to run off together—the gossip
that was the hottest news before Meg—they moved to an RV park on the edge of town.

“Do I have to go?” I’m not sure why I bother to ask her this. Tricia is my mother,
but she’s not an authority in that way. I know I have to go, and I know why. For Joe
and Sue.

They’re Meg’s parents. Or they were. I keep stumbling over the verb tenses. Do you
cease being someone’s parents because they died? Because they died on purpose?

Joe and Sue look blasted into heartbreak, the hollows under their eyes so deep, I
don’t see how they’ll ever go away. And it’s for them I find my least stinky dress
and put it on. I get ready to sing. Again.

Amazing Grace. How Vile the Sound.

3

I’ve written a dozen mental eulogies for Meg, imagining all the things I might say
about her. Like how when we met in the first week of kindergarten, she made me a picture
of us, with both of our names, and some words I didn’t understand because unlike Meg,
I could not yet read or write. “It says ‘best friends,’” she explained. And like all
things Meg wanted or predicted, it turned out to be true. I might talk about how I
still have that picture. I keep it in a metal toolbox that houses all my most important
things, and it is creased from age and multiple viewings.

Or I might talk about how Meg knew things about people that they might not know themselves.
She knew the precise number of times in a row everyone generally sneezed; there’s
a pattern to it, apparently. I was three; Scottie and Sue four, Joe was two, Meg was
five. Meg could also remember what you wore for every picture day, every Halloween.
She was like the archive of my history. And also the creator of it too, because almost
every one of those Halloweens was spent with her, usually in some costume she dreamed
up.

Or I might talk about Meg and her obsession with firefly songs. It started in ninth
grade, when she picked up a vinyl single by a band called Heavens to Betsy. She dragged
me back to her room and played me the scratchy record on that old turntable she’d
bought at a church jumble sale for a dollar and rewired herself, with a little help
from YouTube instructional videos.
And you will never know how it feels to light up the sky. You will never know how
it feels to be a firefly,
Corin Tucker sang in a voice so simultaneously strong and vulnerable that it seemed
almost inhuman.

After the Heavens to Betsy discovery, Meg went on a mission to find every good firefly
song ever written. In true Meg fashion, within a few weeks she’d amassed an exhaustive
list. “Have you ever even
seen
a firefly?” I’d asked her as she worked on her playlist.

I knew she hadn’t. Like me, Meg had never been east of the Rockies. “I have time,”
she’d said, opening her arms, as if to demonstrate just how much life there was out
there, waiting for her.

x x x

Joe and Sue asked me to speak at that first service, the big one that should’ve been
held in the Catholic church the Garcias had attended for years, but wasn’t, because
Father Grady, though a friend of the family, was a rules man. He told the Garcias
that Meg had committed a cardinal sin and therefore her soul wouldn’t be admitted
to heaven, nor her body to the Catholic cemetery.

The last bit was theoretical. It took a while for the police to release her body.
Apparently the poison she’d used was rare, though anyone who knew Meg wouldn’t be
surprised by this. She never wore clothes from chain stores, always listened to bands
no one else had heard of. Naturally, she found some obscure poison to swallow.

So the casket everyone sobbed over at that first big service was empty, and there
was no burial. I overheard Meg’s uncle Xavier tell his girlfriend that maybe it would
be better if there never was one. No one knew what to write on the gravestone. “Everything
sounds like a reproach,” he said.

I tried to write a eulogy for that service. I did. I pulled out the disc Meg had burned
of firefly songs for inspiration. The third one up was the Bishop Allen track “Fireflies.”
I don’t know if I had ever really listened to the words before, because when I did
now, they were like a smack from her grave:
It says you can still forgive her. And she will forgive you back.

But I don’t know that I can. And I don’t know that she did.

I told Joe and Sue that I was sorry, that I couldn’t give a eulogy because I couldn’t
think of anything to say.

It was the first time I ever lied to them.

x x x

Today’s service is being held in the Rotary Club, so it’s not one of the official
religious services, though the speaker appears to be some kind of reverend. I’m not
sure where they keep coming from, all these speakers who didn’t really know Meg. After
it’s over, Sue invites me over for yet another reception at the house.

I used to spend so much time at Meg’s house that I could tell what kind of mood Sue
was in by what I smelled when I walked through the door. Butter meant baking, which
meant she was melancholy and needed cheering. Spicy meant she was happy and making
hot Mexican food for Joe, even though it hurt her stomach. Popcorn meant that she
was in bed, in the dark, not cooking anything, and Meg and Scottie were left to their
own devices, which meant a buffet of microwave snack foods. On those days, Joe would
joke how lucky we kids were to get to pig out like this as he made his way upstairs
to check on Sue. We all played along, but usually, after the second or third microwave
corn dog, you kind of wanted to throw up.

I know the Garcias so well that when I called that morning after getting Meg’s email,
I knew even though it was eleven o’clock on a Saturday that Sue would be still in
bed but not sleeping; she said she never did learn to sleep in once her kids stopped
waking up early. And Joe would have the coffee brewed and the morning paper spread
out over the kitchen table. Scottie would be watching cartoons. Consistency was one
of the many things I loved about Meg’s house. So different from mine, where the earliest
Tricia usually woke was noon, and some days you might find her pouring bowls of cereal,
and some days you might not find her at all.

But now there’s a different kind of constancy about the Garcia household, one that
is far less inviting. Still, when Sue asks me over, much as I’d prefer to refuse the
invitation, I don’t.

x x x

The crowd of cars outside the house is thinner than it was in the early days, when
the whole town came on sympathy calls carrying Pyrex dishes. It was a little hard
to take, all those casseroles and the “I’m so sorry for your loss”es that accompanied
them. Because elsewhere in town, the gossip was flying. “Didn’t surprise me. Girl
always hung her freak flag high,” I heard people whispering in the Circle K. Meg and
I both knew that some people said things like that about her—in our town she was like
a rose blooming in the desert; it confused folks—but with her dead, this sentiment
no longer felt like a badge of honor.

And it wasn’t just Meg they went after. At Tricia’s bar, I overheard a couple of townies
sniping about Sue. “As a mother, I would know if my daughter was
suicidal
.” This coming from the mother of Carrie Tarkington, who had slept with half the school.
I was about to ask Mrs. Tarkington if, being all-knowing, she knew
that
. But then her friend replied. “Sue? Are you joking? That woman is floating in space
on a good day,” and I felt sucker-punched by their cruelty. “How would you feel if
you’d just lost your child, you bitches?” I sneered. Tricia had to escort me home.

After today’s service, Tricia has to work, so she drops me off at the Garcias’. I
let myself in. Joe and Sue hug me tight and for a moment longer than is comfortable.
I know that they must take some solace in me being here, but I can hear Sue’s silent
questions when she looks at me, and I know that all the questions boil down to one:
Did you know?

I don’t know what would be worse. If I did know and didn’t tell them. Or the truth,
which is that even though Meg was my best friend and I have told her everything there
is to tell about me and I’d assumed she’d done the same, I’d had no idea. Not a clue.

This decision has been a long time coming,
she wrote in her note. A long time coming? How long is that? Weeks? Months? Years?
I have known Meg since kindergarten. We have been best friends, sisters almost, ever
since. How long has this decision been coming without her telling me? And more to
the point, why didn’t she tell me?

x x x

After about ten minutes of sitting in sad polite silence, Scottie, Meg’s ten-year-old
brother, comes up to me with their—or now his—dog, Samson, on a leash. “Walkies?”
he says, to me as much as to Samson.

I nod and stand up. Scottie seems to be the only one who retains any semblance of
his former self, which is maybe because he’s young, though he’s not that young, and
he and Meg were close. When Sue would disappear into one of her moods and Joe would
disappear to take care of her, Meg was the one to mother Scottie.

It’s late April, but no one has alerted the weather. The wind kicks up fierce and
cold, with a mean grit. We walk toward the big empty field that everyone lets their
dogs shit in, and Scottie unleashes Samson. He bounds off, jubilant, happy in his
canine ignorance.

“How are you holding up, Runtmeyer?” I feel false using the old jocular nickname,
and I already know how he’s doing. But with Meg no longer playing mother hen and Sue
and Joe lost in their grief, someone has to at least ask.

“I’m up to level six on Fiend Finder,” he says. He shrugs. “I get to play all I want
now.”

“A side benefit.” And then I clamp my hand over my mouth. My bitter gallows humor
is not meant for public consumption.

But Scottie lets out a gruff laugh, way too old for his age. “Yeah. Right.” He stops
and watches Samson sniff a collie’s butt.

On the way home, Samson straining at his leash because he knows food is next, Scottie
asks me, “You know what I don’t get?”

I think we’re still taking about video games, so I’m not prepared for what he says
next.

“I don’t get why she didn’t send me the note too.”

“Do you even have an email address?” I ask. Like this was her reason.

He rolls his eyes. “I’m ten, not two. I’ve had one since third grade. Meg emailed
me stuff all the time.”

“Oh. Well, she probably, probably wanted to spare you.”

For a second, his eyes look just as hollowed out as his parents’. “Yeah, she spared
me.”

x x x

Back at the house, the guests are leaving. I catch Sue dumping a tuna casserole into
the garbage. She gives me a guilty look. When I go to hug her good-bye, she stops
me. “Can you stay?” she asks in that voice of hers, so quiet, so different from Meg’s
garrulous one. Meg’s voice that could make anyone do anything, anytime.

“Of course.”

She gestures toward the living room, where Joe is sitting on the couch, staring into
space, ignoring Samson who is begging at his feet for the expected dinner. In the
fading twilight, I look at Joe. Meg took after him, with his dark, Mexican looks.
He seems like he’s aged a thousand years in the past month.

“Cody,” he says. One word. And it’s enough to make me cry.

“Hi, Joe.”

“Sue wants to talk to you; we both do.”

My heart starts to hammer, because I wonder if they’re finally going to ask me if
I knew anything. I had to answer some cursory questions from the police when all this
went down, but they had more to do with how Meg might have procured the poison, and
I had no idea about any of that except that if Meg wanted something, she usually found
a way to get it.

After Meg died, I went and looked up all the suicide signs online. Meg didn’t give
me any of her prized possessions. She didn’t talk about killing herself. I mean, she
used to say things like, “If Ms. Dobson gives us another pop quiz, I am going to shoot
myself,” but does that count?

Sue sits down next to Joe on the worn couch. They look at each other for half a second,
but then it’s like that hurts too much. They turn to me. Like I’m Switzerland.

“Cascades’s term ends next month,” they tell me.

I nod. University of the Cascades is the prestigious private college where Meg got
a scholarship. The plan had been for both of us to move to Seattle after high school
graduation. We’d been talking about this since eighth grade. Both of us at the University
of Washington, sharing a dorm room for the first two years, then living off campus
for the duration. But then Meg had gotten this amazing full ride at Cascades, a way
better package that what the UW offered. As for me, I’d gotten into the UW but without
scholarships of any kind. Tricia had made it pretty clear she couldn’t help me. “I
finally got
myself
out of debt.” So in the end, I turned down the UW and decided to stay in town. My
plan was to do two years at community college, then transfer to Seattle to be near
Meg.

Joe and Sue sit there quietly. I watch Sue pick at her nails. The cuticles are a complete
mess. Finally, she looks up. “The school has been very kind; they’ve offered to pack
up her room and ship everything to us, but I can’t bear a stranger’s hands touching
her things.”

“What about her roommates?” Cascades is tiny and hardly has any dorms. Meg lives—lived—off
campus in a house shared with some other students.

“Apparently, they’ve just locked up her room and left it like that. Her rent’s paid
through the end of the term, but now we should empty it out and bring everything . . .”
Her voice catches.

“Home,” Joe finishes for her.

It takes me a second to realize what they want, what they’re asking me. And at first
I’m relieved because it means I don’t have to fess up that I didn’t know what Meg
was contemplating. That the one time in her life
she
might’ve needed
me
, I failed her. But then, the weight of what they’re asking skids and crashes in my
stomach. Which isn’t to say I won’t do it. I will. Of course I will.

“You want me to pack up her things?” I say.

They nod. I nod back. It’s the least I can do.

“After your classes end, of course,” Sue says.

Officially, my classes end next month. Unofficially, they did the day I got Meg’s
email. I’ve got Fs now. Or incompletes. The distinction hardly seems to matter.

“And if you can get the time off work.” This from Joe.

He says it respectfully, as if I have an important job. I clean houses. The people
I work for, like everyone in this town, know about Meg, and they’ve all been very
nice, telling me to take all the time I need. But empty hours to contemplate Meg aren’t
what I need.

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