The Last Secret You'll Ever Keep Laurie Stolarz (best books to read fiction .txt) đ
- Author: Laurie Stolarz
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âPunishment?â
âHave you ever heard of something called survivor guilt?â
I shook my head, but it didnât take a psychology degree to guess what it meant.
âMight you be punishing yourself for surviving the fire, something your parents werenât able to do? Might the vast, thick forest symbolize an overwhelming situationâone you canât find a way out of?â
Except I did get out. âThatâs not it.â
âThe burning house is gone now, Terra. But perhaps your mindâs creating its own version of a fire.â
âI am my mind. Itâs governed by me.â I squeezed the belly of my troll key chain over and over, making the eyes pop.
âThe mind processes information to the best of its ability,â she continued. âIt isnât perfect. It protects itselfâand protects you ⊠It perceives events and situations as both real and unreal.â
âI know whatâs real.â
She mustered a patronizing smile. âThink of it this way: getting abducted, surviving the well ⊠It brought you closer to your aunt, didnât it? Isnât that what you said?â
âBecause that was the truth.â
âMaybe you manifested that truth because you longed for that closeness. Maybe prior attempts didnât get you what you needed.â
âPrior attempts?â
âItâs my understanding you had a history of ditching school, disappearing for days, not telling anyone where you were. Isnât that correct? Didnât you also get in trouble for shoplifting?â
âIt was just a notebook. I needed it for school, and Iâd forgotten my wallet. I wouldâve paid the store back somehow. Plus, I didnât disappear. It was just two days at a friendâs house.â
âThe point is those attention-seeking strategies didnât seem to work. So maybe you found another wayâa more effective strategy. Thatâs survival by pure definition. Embrace it. Be proud of that will.â
I continue to sketch, burned out on everyoneâs theories, but knowing they arenât all completely untrue. At some point, during the fire, after the firefighters had arrived, all reality faded away. I know I was there, but I donât remember watching the scene unfold: the mounting flames, the irreparable damage âŠ
Supposedly, I was checked out by a medic. But I donât remember that either, or the phone call I had with my aunt in the back of the ambulance.
My patchy memoryâlike an abyss of its ownâis just one of the many reasons I ended up in the hospital after the fire, and probably a major reason why no one believed me, years later, after I got back from the well.
âYou woke up in a neighborâs house with no recollection of how you got there,â Dr. Mary persisted.
âWhat does this have to do with the fairy-tale book?â
âIt has to do with the mind, with how the brain regulates trauma. Does that make sense?â
I shook my head. âThe book is real. Iâll prove it.â
But Iâve yet to prove anything. Because I canât find the book (or evidence that it exists), which is why Iâve started writing the story myself. Iâve asked librarians far and wide, both online and in person, to help me find a copy.
âReality Bites Press?â most of them ask. âIâve never heard of it.â
A reference librarian in the town next door asked if it was a self-published title. âBut even still,â she continued, âit wouldâve been copyrighted, unless the author published it with his own âReality Bitesâ printing press, without registering the title first. Do you think that could be a possibility?â
But even she knew.
I could see it in her smirk.
I was that crazy girl from the Emo school, whoâd made the false allegations and wasted everyoneâs time.
One week prior, the news had reported about the dropped case with no leads or substantial evidence. Iâd spoken to a journalist about the fairy-tale book. In that same interview, a university professor, a supposed expert in legends, folklore, and fairy tales, was quoted as saying heâd never (in his thirty years of research and having written two dissertations on the subject) heard of The Forest Girl and the Wishy Water Well.
So, where does that leave me? With zero proof and a bunch of generic sketches of a darkly clothed man with eyes the wrong color.
I check the Jane site, but Peyton isnât on and I really donât feel like chatting with anyone else. I log on to Hulu to watch an episode of Summerâs Story, hoping that wherever Peyton is, sheâs doing the same, that weâre watching the show together. The mere idea helps make me feel a little less alone.
THEN
14
On the night I got home from the well, I fished the hidden key from the ivy planter by the door and used it to enter the house, just like any other day, like nothing bad had ever happened.
There were no police cars parked out front.
No news trucks.
No missing-person signs.
No one was investigating inside the house.
I went inside, locked the door behind me, and saw the reflection that stared back in the entryway mirror. Layers of dirt painted my face, outlined my eyes, and encrusted my lips. My hair hung down in clay-like clumps.
Somehow, I managed to drag myself up the stairs, straight to the bathroom, where I turned the shower valve to the highest setting and stepped inside, without a second thought, still fully clothed.
The sweet, hot water pounded against my chest, soaked through my shirt. I opened my mouth and drank the water up, nearly choking on the liquid. Dirt and pebbles slid down my throat. My teeth ached. My jaw throbbed.
Once my thirst had finally been quenched, I spat some of the water out as I washed my teeth. I also gargled to clean my throat. Blood and dirt ran from my bare feet.
I scrunched down to the floor of the tub, closed my eyes, and pictured a ball of flames burning up inside me. My hands screamed, the
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