Every Last Word
: Chapter 30

“Hey, Colleen. Happy Wednesday!” I say, closing the door to Sue’s office behind me. Even from where she sits behind her desk, I can tell Colleen’s taken aback, like we’re actors in a play and I just went off script. For the last five years, she’s had the first line.

“Hi, Sam.” She stands, eyeing me suspiciously. “Water?”

“No, thanks.” I rest my elbows on the counter and she stares at me, a smile teasing the corners of her mouth.

“Then go on in. She’s ready for you.”

I feel a bounce in my step as I walk down the hallway toward Sue’s office. I’ve been eagerly awaiting our session, and I can’t wait to see the expression on her face when I tell her what I’ve decided to do.

“Hi, Sam.”

“Hey.” I kick off my shoes and sit down, folding my legs underneath me. Sue hands me my thinking putty, but I just hold it with one hand and squeeze a few times. I’m not sure I need it today. I’m light, not fidgety. Excited, not nervous. The whole thing feels a little strange.

Sue stares at me for a good thirty seconds before she says anything. “Well, you certainly look happy today. I take it you’re having a good week?”

I nod, but “good” doesn’t really capture it.

Ever since the lying/spying incident a couple of weeks ago, the Eights have been especially nice to me. Alexis keeps complimenting me on my outfits, and she seems to actually mean it. Last week, Kaitlyn asked me if I wanted to co-chair the junior prom committee with her, and I think she was genuinely happy when I said yes. And when Olivia’s dad got last-minute VIP tickets to a Metric concert, she invited me to join them.

Caroline came over to my house after school yesterday, and we sat in the backyard working on a new poem. It was about opening your mind, lowering your walls, and replaceing friendship where you least expect it. I’ve been trying to write it on my own for weeks now, but I couldn’t seem to replace the right words. As usual, Caroline knew exactly how to make it better.

And then there’s AJ. I was terrified when he suggested telling people about us, but if I don’t think about the “glass half empty” parts—like the Crazy Eights’ reaction or making things weird with the Poets—and concentrate on the positive elements—like the two of us walking to class holding hands and kissing whenever we want to—it makes me giddy.

When I fill Shrink-Sue in on everything, she says, “Well, no wonder you’re in a good mood.” She closes her leather portfolio and leans forward, resting her elbows on her knees, giving me her full attention. I can’t read her expression, but she’s waiting and listening, urging me to keep talking, without saying a word.

“I’ve been thinking about our conversation a few sessions ago,” I say, forming my putty into a cube. “I told you I didn’t care what the Eights think, but that’s not entirely true. I do care. AJ and Caroline and the rest of my new friends shouldn’t be a secret. It doesn’t feel right.”

“I like the sound of that.” Sue’s smile is huge and warm and contagious. She looks so proud of me right now.

And I should feel proud of myself, but there’s something below the surface that’s nagging me, and I can’t pinpoint it.

“Why are you scratching?” Sue asks. I pull my fingernails away from the back of my neck and stab them into my putty instead.

“I’m nervous.”

“What are you most afraid about?”

It’s a good question. I’m not afraid of the Eights kicking me out of the group, although it’s entirely possible they will. And I’m not afraid of them coming after Caroline or AJ anymore. I wouldn’t let that happen.

I look at her. “They’re not going to understand what I see in him.”

God, that sounds so shallow. And horrible.

“Tell me what you see in him.”

“I’ve told you,” I say, shifting to pull my legs to my chest and resting my chin on my knees. “He’s wonderful.”

“What’s so wonderful about him?”

She’s not going to let this drop. I shake my head and look past her, out the window, watching a tree limb whipping around in the wind. “I don’t know. I can’t explain it.” I stretch out my putty and say the first thing that pops into my head. “He plays guitar, and, well…that’s just hot.” I hide my face behind my hand so she can’t see my pink cheeks.

“I’m sure it’s extremely hot, but I was sort of hoping for something less superficial.”

“Fine.” I stop fidgeting and give her my undivided attention. “I’ll give you ten non-superficial reasons.” I hold my thumb in the air and begin counting. “He writes thoughtful, funny, inspiring words. When he picks up his guitar, my heart starts racing before he even touches a string. People pay attention to him when he talks. He’s humble. He kisses really well. He thinks my man-shoulders are sexy.”

I stop, waiting for a reaction to those last two, but Sue’s still in the same position, wearing the same expression. I hold up a seventh finger. “He’s kind to people, especially his friends. When he talks about his family, you can tell that he genuinely likes them. He can’t swim. At all.” I laugh, picturing that hybrid dog-paddle thing he did that night I took him to the pool. Then I blush, remembering how he kissed me in the water that night. How I wrapped my legs around his waist in the deep end, both of us clothed but kind of acting like we weren’t.

“That’s nine,” Sue says.

I drop my feet to the floor and sit up again. “When I’m with him, Sue, I don’t feel sick or labeled or broken. I feel normal. He makes me feel totally and completely normal.”

She leans forward. “Does he know about your OCD, Sam?”

I stare at her. Didn’t she hear what I said? Didn’t she hear the tenth thing?

“Of course not. The second he replaces out, I cease to be normal. He makes me feel normal because he thinks I am normal.”

Sue doesn’t seem to know what to say to that. She crosses her legs and sits back in her chair. “If he’s all those wonderful things you said about him, he’d understand, wouldn’t he?”

“I’m sure he would, but that’s not the point.”

I think about that day we stood in his living room and he said, “Everyone’s got something. Some people are just better actors than others.” I came so close to telling him my something. But I chickened out. If I told him back then and it scared him away, that would be one thing, but now there’s too much at stake.

I can’t lose him.

“You once told me that my OCD was made worse by the people I chose to have in my life. You’ve wanted me to distance myself from the Eights, to replace new, less toxic friends, and I have. We can be the ‘Poetic Nine’ or some other stupid moniker, I don’t care. I like them. I like who I am when I’m with them. I’m getting better at saying what I think. I’m not as afraid of my thoughts, maybe because I’m not holding on to them so tightly anymore. I feel like my mind is under control now. Like I’m…better.”

“What does that mean to you, Sam? To be ‘better’?”

Sane. Healthy. Not sick. Not crazy.

“Someone normal! Someone who doesn’t need medication to sleep or keep her thoughts under control. Someone who doesn’t need you.”

I clap my hand over my mouth, but it’s too late. “I’m so sorry,” I say into my palm.

“You have nothing to be sorry about.” Sue’s expression barely changes, but she’s quiet for a long time.

What have I done?

“Have I ever told you about Anthony?” she finally asks.

I shake my head.

“He was a patient of mine many years ago. He had synesthesia. It’s a disorder where, in essence, your five senses have their wires crossed. In this case, Anthony could hear in color.”

“I’ll trade him,” I say. “That sounds really cool.”

“It wasn’t to him. It affected his daily life. He had a hard time concentrating at work, especially in meetings when there were multiple people speaking at the same time. He couldn’t tolerate crowds. He felt like his brain was on overload, constantly receiving stimuli. It was physically draining.

“We worked together for a long time, and after a while, his perspective started to change. He began to realize no one else heard music quite the way he did. No one else knew that his wife’s voice was this really unique shade of purple. ‘Normal’ people couldn’t see the color of laughter, and he began to feel sorry for them, because they’d never get to experience the world the way he did. I think that’s a lovely way to look at special minds.”

I roll my eyes. “Really, Sue? Special?”

“Very. Your brain works differently, Sam. Sometimes it does things that scare you. But it’s very special, and so are you.”

“Thank you.” I smile at her. It’s a kind thing to say. But I know where she’s going here. “You’re sharing this story to make me tell AJ, aren’t you?”

“I’m not making you do anything. Whether or not you tell him is entirely up to you. I’m merely reminding you to embrace who you are and surround yourself with people who do the same.”

“Okay.”

“And you know what’s totally ‘normal’?” she asks. “To feel the way you’re feeling right now. It’s okay to want a life without medication. And a life without me.”

“I’m sorry I said that.”

“Don’t be. I’m incredibly proud of you, Sam. You’re doing great.”

I am. And it feels good. But I’m still not about to tell AJ my secret.

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