Liar

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by Justine Larbalestier




  LIAR

  Also by Justine Larbalestier

  How to Ditch Your Fairy

  Copyright © 2009 by Justine Larbalestier

  All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publisher.

  First published in the United States of America in October 2009

  by Bloomsbury Books for Young Readers

  E-book edition published in May 2010

  www.bloomsburyteens.com

  For information about permission to reproduce selections from this book, write to

  Permissions, Bloomsbury BFYR, 175 Fifth Avenue, New York, New York 10010

  Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

  available upon request

  ISBN: 978-1-59990-305-7

  LCCN: 2009012581

  ISBN 978-1-59990-571-6 (e-book)

  For my father, John Bern

  LIAR

  Table of Contents

  Part One: Telling the Truth

  Part Two: Telling the True Truth

  Part Three: The Actual Real Truth

  Acknowledgments

  PART ONE

  Telling the Truth

  PROMISE

  I was born with a light covering of fur.

  After three days it had all fallen off, but the damage was done. My mother stopped trusting my father because it was a family condition he had not told her about. One of many omissions and lies.

  My father is a liar and so am I.

  But I’m going to stop. I have to stop.

  I will tell you my story and I will tell it straight. No lies, no omissions.

  That’s my promise.

  This time I truly mean it.

  AFTER

  When Zach isn’t in school Tuesday morning I am worried. He said he’d call me Monday night. But didn’t. Friday night was the last time I saw him. That isn’t usual.

  Zachary Rubin is my boyfriend. He isn’t the best boyfriend in the world, but he usually does what he says he will.

  If he was going to skip school he’d have taken me with him. We could’ve gone running in the park. Or ridden around on the subway all day laughing at the crazies, which is mostly everyone.

  Once we walked from the Staten Island Ferry all the way up to Inwood, right next to the big hospital and the bridge that leads to the Bronx. It took us all day. We’d get sidetracked, checking things out, looking around. Enjoying the novelty of walking instead of running.

  Broadway was our path north through the island. Zach said it used to be an Indian trail, which made it the oldest street in Manhattan. That’s why it twists and turns, sometimes on the diagonal, sometimes straight like an avenue.

  Me and Zach had an argument about what the water under the bridge to the Bronx was called. Was it the Hudson or the East River? Or did they meet in the middle under the bridge? Whatever it was called, the water was gray brown and nasty-looking. So it could’ve been either one.

  That was our best day together.

  I hope Zach isn’t doing anything that cool without me. I’ll kill him if he is.

  I eat lunch on my own. A cold steak sandwich. The bread is gray and wet, soggy with meat juice. I eat the steak and throw the rest away.

  In class I stare at the window, watch the reflection of my classmates superimposed in mottled glass over gray steel bars. I think about what Zach looks like when he smiles at me.

  AFTER

  The second day Zach isn’t at school, I wear a mask. I keep it on for three days. I forge a note from my dad to say I have a gruesome rash and the doctor told me to keep it covered. I carry the note with me from class to class. They all buy it.

  My dad brought the mask back from Venice. It’s black leather painted with silver and unfurls at each corner like a fern. The silver is real.

  Under it, my skin itches.

  They tell us Zach is dead during third period on Thursday.

  Principal Paul Jones comes into our classroom. He isn’t smiling. There are murmurs. I hear Zach’s name. I look away.

  “I have bad news,” the principal says unnecessarily. I can smell the bad news all over him.

  Now we all look at him. Everyone is quiet. His eyes are slightly red. I wonder if he is going to all the classes or just us seniors. Surely we would be first. Zach is a senior.

  I can hear the minute hand of the clock over the whiteboard. It doesn’t tick, it clicks. Click, click, click, click. No ticks. No tocks.

  There is a fly in the room. The fan slices through the air. A murky sliver of sunlight cuts across the front of the classroom right where the principal is standing. It makes visible the dust in the air, the lines around his eyes, across his forehead, at the corners of his mouth.

  Sarah Washington shifts in her chair and its legs squeak painfully loud across the wooden floor. I turn, stare at her. Everyone else does, too. She looks away.

  “Zachary Rubin is no longer missing. His body has been found.” Principal Paul’s lips move into something between a grimace and a snarl.

  A sound moves around the classroom. It takes me a moment to realize that half the girls are crying. A few of the boys, too. Sarah Washington is rocking back and forth, her eyes enormous.

  Mine are dry. I take off the mask.

  BEFORE

  The first two days of my freshman year I was a boy.

  It started in the first class of my first day of high school. English. The teacher, Indira Gupta, reprimanded me for not paying attention. She called me Mr. Wilkins. No one calls anyone Mr. or Ms. or anything like that at our school. Gupta was pissed. I stopped staring out the window, turned to look at her, wondering if there was another Wilkins in the room.

  “Yes, you, Mr. Micah Wilkins. When I am talking I expect your full and undivided attention. To me, not to the traffic outside.”

  No one giggled or said, “She’s a girl.”

  I’d been mistaken for a boy before. Not often, but enough that I wasn’t completely surprised. I have nappy hair. I wear it natural and short, cut close to my scalp. That way I don’t have to bother with relaxing or straightening or combing it out. My chest is flat and my hips narrow. I don’t wear makeup or jewelry. None of them—neither students nor teachers—had ever seen me before.

  “Is that clear?” Gupta said, still glaring at me.

  I nodded, and mumbled in as low a voice as I could, “Yes, ma’am.” They were the first words I spoke at my new school. This time I wanted to keep a low profile, be invisible, not be the one everyone pointed at when I walked along the corridor: “See that one? That’s Micah. She’s a liar. No, seriously, she lies about everything.” I’d never lied about everything. Just about my parents (Somali pirates, professional gamblers, drug dealers, spies), where I was from (Liechtenstein, Aruba, Australia, Zimbabwe), what I’d done (grifted, won bravery medals, been kidnapped). Stuff like that.

  I’d never lied about what I was before.

  Why not be a boy? A quiet sullen boy is hardly weird at all. A boy who runs, doesn’t shop, isn’t interested in clothes or shows on TV. A boy like that is normal. What could be more invisible than a normal boy?

  I would be a better boy than I’d ever been a girl.

  At lunch I sat at the same table as three boys I’d seen in class: Tayshawn Williams, Will Daniels, and Zachary Rubin. I’d love to say that one look at Zach and I knew but that would be a lie and I’m not doing that anymore. Remember? He was just another guy, an olive-skinned white boy, looking pale and weedy compared to Tayshawn, whose skin is darker than my dad’s.

  They nodded. I nodded. They already knew each other. Their conversation was littered with names they
all knew, places, teams.

  I ate my meatballs and tomato sauce and decided that after school I’d run all the way to Central Park. I’d keep my sweatshirt on. It was baggy.

  “You play ball?” Tayshawn asked me.

  I nodded because it was safer than asking which kind. Boys always knew stuff like that.

  “We got a pickup going after,” he said.

  I grunted as boyishly as I could. It came out lower than I’d expected, like a wolf had moved into my throat.

  “You in?” Zach asked, punching me lightly on the shoulder.

  “Sure,” I said. “Where?”

  “There.” He jerked his thumb in the direction of the park next to the school. The one with a gravel basketball court and a stunted baseball diamond, and a merry-go-round too close to be much use when a game was in progress. I’d run past it dozens of times. There was pretty much always a game going on.

  The bell rang. Tayshawn stood up and slapped my back. “See you later.”

  I grinned at how easy it was.

  Being a boy was fast becoming my favorite lie.

  SCHOOL HISTORY

  All the white kids sit together. All the white kids with money, I mean.

  Our high school is small and progressive and costs money. Not expensive like the uptown schools, but it’s not free. Except for the scholarship kids who mostly aren’t white. They’re here tuition free, only having to pay for their books. They mostly don’t go on field trips.

  Most of the white kids don’t believe in God; most of us black kids do.

  I’m undecided, stuck somewhere in between, same way I am with everything: half black, half white; half girl, half boy; coasting on half a scholarship.

  I’m half of everything.

  AFTER

  We are all sent to counseling. There are individual sessions and group ones. The group session is first. It’s a nightmare.

  Jill Wang (yes, really) makes us move the desks and arrange the chairs in a large circle. I’ve been forced to see Wang before. She is achingly sincere. She believes most everything you tell her. Even my lies.

  We sit in the chairs with no desks to hide behind. I wish I were in the library studying.

  Brandon Duncan stares at the boobs I barely have.

  Sarah Washington turns to look at me, too. Her gaze rests somewhere below my eyes, but not so low as Brandon’s. “Why do you lie all the time?” she asks softly.

  “Why do you?” I say, though I’ve never known her to lie. I say it quiet as her, staring right back, fierce as I can, pushing my gaze through the pores of her dark skin. I imagine I can feel the blood moving in her veins, the sound of breath in her lungs, the movement of the synapses in her brain. She is all buzzes and clicks. “Everyone lies.”

  “We’re here to talk about what’s happened, about how we feel,” the counselor says. “Is there anything you want to share about—”

  “Don’t say his name!” Sarah shouts.

  Now everyone is staring at her. Her heart pumps faster, pushing the blood through her veins.

  “I won’t,” Jill Wang says. “Not if you don’t want me to.”

  Counselors always say stuff like that. I’ve seen lots of counselors. Psychologists, shrinks, therapists. They’re all the same. They’re supposed to stop me lying, yet they believe everything I tell them.

  “We don’t,” Sarah mumbles.

  “I haven’t met most of you before. Tell me about yourselves. Let’s go around the circle. Say the first word you can think of to describe yourself.” Jill Wang nods at me.

  “Fierce,” I say.

  Sarah shivers.

  “Cool,” Brandon says. Several people laugh.

  “Hot,” Tayshawn says. He’s the most popular guy in school so there’s laughter. But I’m pretty sure he doesn’t mean it that way. Not sexy hot. More like prickly hot. Like he needs to loosen his collar. Mine itches at me. The heat is up too high. The steam pipes clank and groan, shouting their own words.

  Each student says a word. None of them is right.

  The door is behind me, less than six feet away. I imagine vaulting out of the circle, over Sarah in her chair, glaring at her own knees. I can run away.

  I will run away.

  “Gray,” Sarah says, closing the circle of words. A tear eases down her cheek to match it, clings to her chin for less than a second before falling onto the wool cloth of her pants and disappearing.

  “Does anyone want to talk about . . .” Jill pauses, swallowing Zach’s name. “I hear he was very popular.”

  “You should ask Micah,” Brandon says. “She was his girlfriend.”

  There’s laughter. They are all staring at me now, everyone except Sarah. Her head is bowed further, her breaths shallow as she tries to stop crying. She is close to losing control. I hope she will.

  “Very funny,” Tayshawn says, glaring at Brandon. I can see he doesn’t believe it. Tayshawn is Zach’s best friend. Has been since the third grade.

  I want to kill Brandon. I know why he told them: to make trouble. That’s what Brandon does. But how did he know?

  Everyone is still staring. I hold my chin high and stare back at them. When people look at me my skin crawls. But I never let them see it.

  “Do you want to say something, Micah?” Jill Wang asks.

  “No,” I say.

  “She wasn’t his girlfriend,” Sarah says. “I was.”

  Tayshawn and Chantal and others agree with her.

  “You were his at-school girlfriend,” Brandon tells Sarah. “Micah was for after hours.”

  Sarah goes back to her crying. Tayshawn looks like he might kill Brandon. I’d be happy to help.

  Jill Wang looks from Brandon to Sarah to me. I can see her weighing what to say.

  “I have a question,” Alejandro says.

  She nods for him to continue.

  “Everyone’s talking about grieving and all that shit—sorry, stuff. Whatever. But no one’s saying what happened to him. We keep hearing rumors and there are cops and that. But no one’s saying what’s up. Not really. So is the rumor true? Was he murdered?”

  The counselor spreads her hands wide, makes eye contact with all of us, to reassure us that what she is about to say is true. “I know as much as you do. The police are investigating to determine whether a crime has taken place.”

  Alejandro doesn’t say anything else. But he doesn’t look satisfied. No one does.

  AFTER

  When the counseling session ends I go into one of the stalls in the bathroom, lock the door, lower the lid, and sit down, thoughts beating loud in my head, drowning the noise of toilets flushing, faucets turning on and off, air dryers louder than a generator, and, more distantly, the sound of steam in the pipes, traffic. I hold my head with my hands to keep it from exploding. My thoughts are all Zach—all about him being dead. No air in his lungs, no blood in his veins.

  Or would it still be there? But not moving? Stale air, congealed blood.

  Zach is dead.

  I will never see him again. Never hear his voice. Never run with him. Never kiss him.

  He is gone.

  “I know you’re in there,” Sarah Washington calls, knocking on the stall door. “I saw you come in.”

  “What do you want?”

  “Is it true?” she calls.

  I open the door. Sarah steps back from me, her eyes wide—she’s afraid of me, I realize—and accidentally sets off one of the dryers. She startles. I go to the sink, squeeze soap out of metal onto my palms, put my hands under the tap and, when no water appears, go to the next sink. This time the sensor works. I wash my hands thoroughly. Under fingernails, between fingers, backs of my hands, wrists. Then rinse until each sud is gone and the slimy feel of soap erased.

  Above the sink are windows. Opaque with wire set into the glass, nailed shut, with metal bars on the other side, facing the street. My hands hover over the sink dripping.

  “You should be in class,” Sarah says.

  “So should you.�


  “Study period. So is it true?” She’s come to a rest by the door, leaning against it, staring at me. The question is eating at her. She’s much prettier than I am. Why would Zach spend time with me?

  “Is what true?” I ask. Why is she asking me about the truth? She knows I’m a liar. They all do.

  “Were you and him . . . ?” She stops, takes a few steps toward me and then away.

  “Why don’t you ask Brandon?” I ask. “He seems to know everything. Why ask me?”

  “Because,” she begins, takes another step, and then pauses. “How does Brandon know about you and him? How would Brandon know and me not? Zach was my boyfriend. He told me everything,” she says, but her voice falters. No one tells anyone everything.

  I stick my hands under the nearest dryer, wincing at the noise and hot air. Back, front, wrists, palms. It’s better than listening to Sarah.

  “So is it true?” she asks, raising her voice to compete with the roar.

  “Why would I tell you?” I say softly. There’s no moisture left on my hands, they are starting to roast, but I keep turning them back and forth.

  “He was my boyfriend,” she says. “Everyone knew that. Why would Brandon say that you were?”

  “Why don’t you ask him?”

  She shakes her head. “I did. It didn’t help. He’s still dead.” She slumps, wavering between me and the door, her eyes heavy with tears. I wonder how there can be any water left in her. “Brandon loves to make trouble.”

  I step away from the dryer, ignore the stinging of my hands. “True,” I say.

  “After-hours girlfriend?” she says, echoing Brandon’s tone of voice. “I never even saw him look at you. Not once.”

  “There you go then.”

  “He didn’t come to school sometimes. And you—you’re always skipping class, skipping whole days. Is that where he went? Was he with you?”

  “No,” I say. “He wasn’t my boyfriend.”

  “I don’t believe you. You never tell the truth.”

  “Then why ask?”

 

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