insult. Too bright, t
th Vivienne's name
s stacke
al
rt two t
ghost
e letters blurred. Ghost. Funny, co
the least "I've been crying into my sheets" outfit I c
ishable by at least fifteen years in my personal court. She b
h a laugh, like my silence was a quirky person
ne. The one I'd held last night. The one with Vi
odie tighter.
d. "What's
e holds proof that the boy who looked at me
id flatly, slammi
oes. Usually she gets it. Usually she knows when to pu
she floated off, already catching someone else'
a ghost (fitting). Second period w
s checking if I'd survived the n
on the margin of my notebook: lines that looped in
l hesitated, a memo
ing the box of
: goodni
Vivienne by
de half the class jump, Victor included. I mumbled "s
d me a seat. Of course
sk me to homecoming. But like, should I even say yes? He's cute but also..." She kept tal
eyes tracked him automatica
lightly, like she was rearranging
display but hollow inside. She didn't
o little fires. I thought about what it would feel like to tell Vivienne I knew. To t
ghosts don't raise theirs without
e. My aunt was home early, for once. She looked up
the day collapsed. I mumbled "hi" back and went straight u
r had dog-eared the poem he asked for. I ran my finger down the page, the words bl
s. Light. Ghosts. I didn'
ng I couldn't stay