Chapter One
"You could spend your whole life
being a bell, and never know it
'til something strikes you
and you ring."
Anonymous
Samantha's heart nearly stopped as she realized what Brian was actually telling her. Because there were other students all around them, milling past carrying books and backpacks, she forced herself to breathe evenly, look normal, perfect as always. This is what was expected of her, the blondest cheerleader with the cutest boyfriend, the prettiest girl at Maple Ridge High.
Brian sat with one ankle resting on his knee, leaning forward to allow her to hear him, speaking in low tones so nobody else could. He had one hand on his knee, one on his ankle. Samantha focused on the pattern of prominent blue veins in his big square hands, on his long fingers, on the sole of his work boot, the pebbles and twigs that had become embedded in the grooved sole, on anything but his words.
A midriff appeared directly in front of Samantha. The midriff was encased in a tight white T-shirt. It belonged to Polly Milkins, the only girl in school whose beauty Samantha feared.
"Hi, Sam," said Polly. "Will I see you at cheerleading practice later?"
"Sure," replied Samantha, turning to look up and organizing her face into its most radiant smile.
"Hi, Brian," said Polly, giggling a little. This was the effect Brian had on girls everywhere, this excitement that usually made them giggle.
"Hi, Polly." Brian looked at Polly briefly, then cleared his throat and uncrossed his legs. A brief, awkward silence ensued.
"Well-okay. Later," Polly said finally.
At the same time as Polly turned to walk across the athletic field toward the gym, Brian leaned back, far away from Samantha. It seemed, at that moment, as though Brian had pulled far, far away, beyond the distance spanned by the parking lot, beyond the new gym with its gleaming windows, beyond the end of the road to where the street disappeared into the entrance to the bird sanctuary, beyond her reach entirely. He looked down at his feet. He dug the toe of one work boot into the ground, smashing the grass into liquid green sludge.
* * *
In the village of Leeswood, thirty-five miles to the west, Hannah Bonanti sat on her bed reading Baking for Health and listening to her favorite band, Dracula Jones. They were an upstate band who'd played at a club in New York City on a night when Hannah's friends, Tanya and Kaneesha had taken her out for her sixteenth birthday. Their rhythmic guitars pounded as Hannah read about corn muffin recipes. Baking was a tradition among the women in Hannah's family. Hannah's mother had died two years before and whenever Hannah felt lonely, sad, or anxious, reading this book, which had been her mom's, helped connect her with her mother.
It was Friday, and the spring term was coming to an end (finally). She had spent the afternoon hanging out with her friends, Kaneesha and Tanya. They had talked about going to see the new Tom Cruise movie at the mall and Hannah, who loved to bake, was trying to imagine corn muffins made with whole-wheat flour.
Hannah wore her favorite jeans and a tank top that matched her gray eyes. She had painted her nails bright, iridescent green. Toenails, also green, peeked out of the open toes of her new black wedgies. It was 7:35. Where were they? Now that Kaneesha had her regular license, she was going to pick Hannah up in her dad's new black Chrysler Sebring.
Tanya and Kaneesha lived alone with their dad, too. Hannah felt comforted that she wasn't the only girl she knew in that situation. Kaneesha's mother hadn't died though; she had taken off with Kaneesha's uncle.
Kaneesha had made Hannah feel welcome from the first day they'd met in Spanish class. Kaneesha had said, "Buenas dias, me gusta tu tatuaje." She had said to Hannah, "Hi, I love your tattoo," completely in Spanish, and their friendship had grown from then on. Hannah loved Kaneesha's sense of fun, her beautiful, chocolate skin, her long, graceful, muscular arms and the curly lashes that framed her dark, upward-slanting eyes. Tanya was Kaneesha's older sister.
But where were they? It was 7:45 already, and the movie started at 8:10.
* * *
Sixty-six miles east of where Hannah waited for her friends, Jessica Blaine stood in front of her locker looking at her watch. The watch had a wide red plastic strap and a big round face with glow in the dark yellow numerals, which Jessica's little brother, Matthew, had given her. Two girls in Jessica's math class came up to her and said, "Only you could wear red plaid leggings with a striped T-shirt. How do you do it? How do you keep your stomach so flat? I think we hate you, Jess!"
Later, Jessica Blaine sat on a stool in her green kitchen, talking to Phoebe McIntyre on the phone. Though only sixteen, Jessica's voice had a gravelly quality usually associated with middle-aged women who have smoked two packs of cigarettes a day for twenty years. Though Jessica had smoked Marlboros since the age of twelve, even as a baby her voice had sounded harsh.
Tall, pale and very thin, she sat with her long brown hair piled on top of her head and her legs crossed, looking out the window at her brother Matthew's swing set. Matthew rode his new red tricycle in circles around the large kitchen. Beside her, the glass-fronted cabinets held her mother's collection of knickknacks, primarily angels, along with the useful equipment of their everyday life.
Jessica had lately begun to attract the attention of her teachers because of her increasingly emaciated appearance. She was skipping English class because it was on the second floor, and she couldn't climb stairs anymore without feeling dizzy. She appreciated the fact that she lived in a ranch house.
Other girls at school envied her. So many of them came up to her in the hall and told her how great she looked, asking how she stayed so thin. Phoebe had just asked her this, in fact.
"Try cutting out the fat," Jessica answered. "You can still eat stuff, but cut the fat way down and you'll get thin, you'll see." She jumped off the stool and walked into the hall to admire herself in the mirror.
"Well, what about pizza?" asked Phoebe, in a pouting tone. "Can't I have that?"
"No," said Jessica, looking at herself from the side. She smoothed her palm over her flat stomach, gazed with satisfaction at the sharp angle of her jaw line and then at the narrowness of her thighs in their plaid leggings.
"My dad says I need therapy," said Phoebe. "He says I have hand-to-mouth disease."
"Whatever," said Jessica, turning to look at herself from the other side. Her Limp Bizkit CD reversed itself. Her admiration for herself swelled. She could feel that familiar flow of self-satisfaction spreading from her heart in radiating arcs of warmth.
"You can't attract a boy like Daryl if you're going to eat pizza," said Jessica sternly.
"But I can't even imagine life without pizza," wailed Phoebe.
"It's a trade-off," said Jessica. One thing everyone knew about Jessica-besides how thin she was-she was blunt.
Phoebe sighed. "I can't stand the idea of not eating things I like," she said. She felt hopeless, helpless and alone.
Phoebe looked despairingly at the posters of Audrey Hepburn, which covered the walls of her room and sighed. She felt there was nothing special about herself; Jessica had everything. Jessica was not only gorgeous and a cheerleader, she was skinny, and an artist, too. Jessica's room was filled with fashion drawings she had done and the flowing lines and skillful sketching in the colored-pencil clothing showed talent. She had designed entire ensembles, including accessories, hair, shoes, handbags and jewelry, and her style combined a feel for medieval fashion with "trekky," space-age accents, which Phoebe ached to be able to wear herself.
Today, Jessica wore a silver-lamé laced bustier she had made herself, paired with black leggings and chunky silver platforms.
"You have to try harder, Phoeb," said Jessica, as she walked down the hall to her bedroom. She hunched up her shoulder to press it against the white phone so that she could use both hands to take a stack of magazines off a high shelf.
"How do you not eat when you're so hungry you could kill?" asked Phoebe.
"I tell myself that hunger isn't as horrible as the fat is," said Jessica. "I tell myself how happy I'll feel when I wake up tomorrow morning feeling clean and thin."
She sat down on her white bedspread appliqued with little Harley-Davidsons, which she had made herself, turning the pages of magazines bearing photos of tall young women as thin as she. They were wearing impractical clothes in glamorous settings. One girl wore a long yellow chiffon skirt over a teal bikini. She stood on a wide beach, her tan glorious and golden, beneath a palm tree whose leaves were ruffled by a Caribbean breeze. Long-legged, not much older than Jessica, the model looked like an exotic flower. Jessica felt herself to be exotic also. She didn't have needs like other people. She could refuse food. She was proud of this. She could say no to tacos and carrots and fried-chicken dinners.
"I tell myself how special I am," said Jessica. "I tell myself I'm different because I can be hungry and still not eat."
* * *
Hannah Bonanti dialed Kaneesha's number again at 8:30, then again at 8:45. She sat locked in her peaches-and-cream-colored bedroom, surrounded by the remains of her most recent binge. Mars bars wrappers, empty pint cartons of Edy's triple-chocolate ice cream, a few empty bags of Chips Ahoy cookies, only smudges of chocolate and a few crumbs left inside, two crumpled empty bags of baked Lay's potato chips and a jar with Mr. Peanut on it that had contained cashew nuts.
She had eaten continually and fast for forty-five minutes, and only when her stomach was so bloated that it hurt was she able to stop. She felt so hungry, but no matter how many pieces of fried chicken or jars of peanut butter Hannah stuffed into herself, she did not feel satisfied or settled or safe, but only more disgusted. She felt like dying, or throwing up. Just as she was planning to do so though, her father came home.
Tony Bonanti, who had a clothing-manufacturing company in New York City, worked long hours and often came home as late as 9:00.
"Weren't you going out with Kaneesha and Tanya tonight, sweetheart?" he said, surprised to see her in her room as he walked past it. He was a silver-haired man, with a bouncy, athletic walk.
"I got stood up," said Hannah dejectedly.
"Kaneesha wouldn't do that," said her father, unknotting his tie with his left hand as he sat on her bed to put his arm around her shoulder.
"Well, she did it," said Hannah.
Hannah leaned against her dad and smelled his familiar scent of Old Spice and cigars. It was this scent she remembered most vividly the day her mother had gotten the results of her breast biopsy. The three of them had been in the kitchen. When her mother had put down the phone, her stricken look had told them everything, and her father had held her mother, and they'd stood in the kitchen, all three of them, swaying together as the tears and fears welled up and finally flowed.
Hannah pulled herself upright and felt for the four gold studs she wore on her left ear, reassuring herself that they were still there. How could they do this to me? thought Hannah angrily.
"What do you think has happened?" asked her father, turning toward her.
Hannah could see the worry in his gray eyes. "They forgot me, I guess."
"They didn't forget you," he said. "They probably just misunderstood the time."
Hannah's jeans felt uncomfortably tight. She suddenly felt tears springing out of her eyes. They rolled down her cheeks, streaking her blusher.
"Oh, Hann," said her father, as he held her.
* * *
Gripping the tweezers tightly in her right hand, Samantha pressed their sharp points into the center of her left forearm. She flinched when the metallic edges cut through her skin to the soft flesh beneath and blood oozed to the surface. At first, there was no pain, only a kind of sighing relief, and, when the pain did come, she was soothed by it, by the sense of warmth that it brought. The pain is on the outside now, she said to herself, and I'm alive. The pain is out of me, and I'm going to be all right. It made her forget her hunger, too. She scraped away at the skin of her tan arm, until the shape of an S was carved in blood. S for Samantha, she thought, bloody S for Samantha, the fool, that's me. Samantha the slob.
A drop of blood fell from the tip of the tweezers onto her zebra-patterned bedspread. The blood looked startling against the starkness of the bedspread's black and white. She quickly wiped the blood away, though it left a tiny, brownish mark.
Samantha looked around her room. The sun illuminated the shelf of trophies she'd won for track. She loved running; it felt like flying. The shelf below the trophies held Samantha's zebra collection, soft stuffed zebras and shiny porcelain ones, zebras carved out of African wood, and framed crayon drawings of zebras she'd made as a little girl. One zebra, smallish relative to the grasses around it, looked straight out of the paper, scared, a thunderclap. Samantha looked at her new wound, then she walked into the large red- and white-tiled bathroom that adjoined her bedroom, and patted her injured arm with a gauze pad soaked in peroxide before placing a bandage over her handiwork. The blue plastic Band-Aid was printed with red stars, white moons and yellow planets. She slipped on a long-sleeved black T-shirt.
Samantha felt much better after she cut herself. At least she'd done something. Now whatever was bad about her, whatever had made Brian leave, had been properly punished. Now maybe everything would be all right. Now maybe they could start over. It was spring, the season of new starts. Samantha's friend, Alexa, thought Brian did have a point. Samantha did eat so little, but what did Alexa know, Samantha thought, what a tub she is. Her friend Jenna thought maybe Brian just needed some time to cool down.
Samantha pushed her blond bangs out of her eyes as she scrutinized her complexion in the mirror in the harsh, unforgiving bathroom light, looking for the flaws that often afflicted sixteen-year-old complexions. Freckles sprinkled her forehead and nose in just exactly the right places. There were no imperfections, none at all. Her face was smooth, radiant, framed by shining, yellow-blond hair that fell straight to her shoulders. She sighed with relief. It always amazed her that none of the pain or tiredness she felt showed in her face, but there was something like sadness in her green eyes.
Her mother would want to know what had happened to her arm if she ever got a look at it. This was not the first time Samantha had cut herself, and she was good at inventing stories about these wounds. She would tell her mother that she'd been splattered with cooking oil at the pizza place where she worked on weekends. Her mother would also want to know if she'd eaten anything that day, and Samantha would lie about that also. She'd tell her mother that she'd eaten breakfast at her friend's house, where she had spent the night. In fact, she hadn't eaten anything at all since two days earlier, when she'd been so hungry she surrendered to a fat-free bran muffin, eating it furtively, like a raccoon in the dark recesses of a hollowed-out tree. She wouldn't even think of eating pizza anymore; that was out of the question. She thought about her plump friend, Alexa, with fear and disgust: That double chin, those puffy cheeks, that soft, billowy body. She couldn't imagine letting herself get that fat-ever.
People were not the only things that could be fat. Rooms could be fat, too. Unmade beds and books not lined up in order of size could be fat, and the fatness could rub off on you.
"Sam," said Marge Rosen from the other side of the door to Samantha's room, "we're sitting down to dinner now."
"I'll be right down," said Samantha dejectedly, sliding wearily off her bed.
She smoothed the surface of her zebra-patterned bedspread and surveyed the results. Orderliness was very important to her. When her room was vacuumed and the zebras were arranged all in a neat row, and when she hadn't eaten in a whole day, life was bearable and the world seemed like a safe and predictable place. But, every now and then, even with these small bits of magic in place, Samantha experienced the world as she knew it really was, a harsh, unpredictable place, where terrible things could happen in the next moment, and no amount of vacuuming or starving could stave them off.
She took a last look at herself in her full-length mirror and her lovely heart-shaped face with its pointy chin and full lips did not reveal the loneliness, confusion and fear she felt. She frowned as she turned to look at herself from the side, placing her hand over her flat belly disapprovingly. Somehow, it was never flat enough, and she was never pretty enough or thin enough or smart enough. That was proven this morning, when Brian had told her he was tired of being with a girl who cared more about how she looked than about going to parties, a girl who was afraid of going to parties because there'd be food there that she might be tempted to eat. He didn't understand how hard it was to be her. No one did.
"Sam, I just feel so unhappy for you," Brian had said, looking at her with those incredible eyes, eyes that had once seemed so tender, but now were hard, so indifferent to her. "But I just don't feel that we're, I don't know, normal together. You're always so worried about food and your weight and everything. It makes me feel bad about myself, not being able to help you." He seemed sad, but also relieved, Sam thought, as he turned and walked down the hall to his English class.
Samantha had known Brian since seventh grade. She had enjoyed being with him because he seemed to understand that she was different, more fragile than other girls in some way. If only she was thinner, she thought, Brian would come back. She would get thinner and thinner, and everyone at Maple Ridge High would notice, and then Brian would realize what a terrible mistake he had made, and he would come back.
She pulled on her zebra-striped leggings and gave her black T-shirt a final inspection to make sure it had no bits of lint clinging to it. Then she turned away from the mirror and, giving her bangs a final fluff, stepped into the hall. Her arm throbbed a little where she'd cut herself. She knew this would stop after half an hour or so. It always had before.
The carpet in the hallway was blue-gray and plush, and there were no irregularities in the texture of its surface. Her mother always made sure that the carpet, the mirror and the top of the hall table were spotless and perfect. It seemed to calm her mother to clean them. Samantha noticed that if her mother was agitated she would vacuum or dust or polish a mirror, and it was as though she had a whole different personality when she was finished.
Samantha walked down the carpeted stairs in slow motion, holding the banister firmly and concentrating on each step. She had been feeling light-headed and was afraid of falling.
* * *
Phoebe, the student with the highest grades in her school, the student who was rated in the top 1 percent of the country's high-school students based on her SAT scores, and who would certainly graduate with many honors, felt completely stupid.
She got off the phone and thought about what Jessica had told her. She wanted more than anything to lose weight, to have a small waistline, or any waistline, to have slender thighs and to feel carefree in her clothes, instead of imprisoned by them.
Phoebe thought about her weight all the time and about wanting to be Daryl's girlfriend. Tall, cute Daryl, with his easy, relaxed laugh and the strong muscles in his bare forearms.
She visualized herself wearing a red dress and being slender in a room full of tables covered with scrumptious food in which she would be saying, "no, thank you," to pastrami and thickly sliced rye bread, to tangy pickles, to chocolate of all kinds, especially the dark, bittersweet type. Busy with the wonder of these images, she pictured donuts covered with powdered sugar and pitchers of cold milk. Suddenly, the sadness spilled over, like bright, red ink soaking across soft paper.
She took out her journal and began to write as her poodles, Tom and Nicole, scamper maniacally around at her feet fighting over one of her white socks. She wrote:
"Why can't I be like other girls? Why can't I be normal?
WHY? WHY? I have never had a date in my WHOLE LIFE. I'm a good person. I got the highest SAT scores in the country. I recycle. I floss every day. I'm nice to my parents. So what if I have some extra weight on my body? I am sick of living in a world where my body is so important and makes me so miserable. I am sick of living in a FAMILY in which my looks are so important. My mother keeps tellng me that life is not a beauty contest, but my dad seems to believe it IS one. So if life is NOT a beauty contest then what IS it?????? I just want to be normal!!!!!!!"
Galvanized by a fresh resolve to change, she headed for the little workout room her parents had installed in the basement. Her two orange poodles, Tom and Nicole, scurried after her, jumping against her ankles and each other, rushing to keep up as she resolutely pursued her mission to create a new, improved Phoebe.
* * *
Samantha sat at dinner, moving the food around with her fork. Dinner that night was broiled flounder, peas and little potatoes with parsley on them, served on plain, white china plates. Occasionally, she pierced the potato with her fork. Samantha was stalling for time. She knew if she could prolong her playing-with-the-food routine long enough that, when her mother started nagging, she could make a scene, storm out of the dining room, and dash upstairs to lock herself in her room where she would be safe from nags, threats and food. She wanted to take a look at her injured arm, too, which throbbed with pulsations having acquired the quality of a sound, a drumbeat.
Finally, Mrs. Rosen said, "Sam, you haven't eaten a single thing again."
Her mother was plump, but Samantha saw her mother as obese, as a gross, pillowy woman covered with flaccid, puckered flesh. Her mother certainly knew how to stuff herself, observed Samantha, and she poked her nose into everybody's business. She had nagged Samantha's father into giving up vodka and cigars after his heart attack. She was on his case all the time about how he should relax more, but the more her mother pestered him, the more stressed out he got.
She wanted so badly to feel close to her mother. She used to feel held together by her mother. Her mother would hold her when she was small, and Samantha would feel cradled, enfolded in her mother's softness, which yielded to the weight of Samantha's body. Her head could rest on her mother's breast, and Samantha would feel safe. Her mother admired her, adored her. Samantha could evaporate into the intoxicating fragrance of her mother's shoulder. Her mother understood her, and the completeness of their bond made Samantha feel immensely strong.
But now her mother was nagging and critical and, instead of feeling protected, Samantha felt imprisoned by her mother. So much had been lost when Samantha had gotten older, bigger.
"Stop being so nosy!" said Samantha to her mother.
"Samantha, don't talk to your mother that way!" said Nat Rosen, who usually did not participate in these discussions. The shiny bald patches at each edge of his forehead looked oily.
Samantha knew her father disagreed with her mother's dissatisfaction about her, that her father thought Samantha looked just fine. Sometimes he'd point to pictures of thin models in magazines and say, "Samantha, she reminds me of you."
Samantha felt sorry for her father. Her mother insisted he not stay as late at the college where he taught. He had to hurry to fit his meditation into his morning routine, and they all had to whisper and tiptoe around while they were getting ready for school so he could have quiet. Hah, thought Samantha, hurry up and meditate. That's some joke.
"Why don't you nag her about how much she eats?" said Samantha, referring to Patty, her ten-year-old sister, who had already had second helpings of potatoes and peas along with two slices of bread. Patty slumped in her chair and looked at her lap, a small lap due to her own plumpness.
"Samantha . . .," said her father, but Samantha had already stomped out of the room and marched upstairs, where she locked the door and turned on the vacuum cleaner. She vacuumed her room for the fourth time that day. She needed her room to be clean and orderly. Otherwise, she might follow her mother's demands and eat. She couldn't explain the connection between the orderliness and the eating, but she felt it, and now the vacuum cleaner's loud whirring also served to drown out the persistent calls of her mother standing at the bottom of the stairs, shouting, "Samantha!"
* * *
How could you do that to me?" Hannah was saying to Kaneesha. It was Saturday and the girls were sitting at the Golden Apple Café. They were at a table in front of the shop and the brightness of the morning made Hannah squint.
"Oh, Hann," said Kaneesha, with feeling, "I'm so sorry."
She hadn't touched her cream-cheese-smeared bagel. "I sideswiped a car on Sunrise Highway and I was so upset, so Tanya called that guy at the body shop. We were so freaked out."
"You didn't call me until almost eleven," Hannah said angrily.
"I'm so sorry," said Kaneesha.
Hannah looked at her own plate, empty of everything but a few pieces of toasted crumbs. They sat silently. Hannah's back ached, and her throat felt sore. She loved her friend, but she was so hurt. This letdown felt like a big loss to her and brought a tight-throated spasm of fear. Having her trusted friends forget all about her felt like her mother getting sick, and losing her breast, and losing her hair, and going to the hospital and dying. It felt like a disaster, not like only missing a movie and a night out. It made her feel like a research station in the Arctic Circle, a small square building surrounded by hundreds of flat miles of snow.
"I'm so hurt," she said finally.
"I'm so sorry," said Kaneesha in the same soft voice. "I'm so sorry I hurt you."
Hannah inhaled deeply and smelled the freshness of the air. "Will the car be all right?" she asked. "Your dad's car?"
"Yes," said Kaneesha, "but it's going to cost me a month's pay.
* * *
Samantha and Lacey got to the locker room at the same time and began to change into their cheerleading uniforms: White leather Keds, green tights, short white pleated skirts and white turtleneck sweaters, each with a bright green "MRH" on the front. Maple Ridge High, a school in a suburban community fifty-three miles east of New York City, was proud of its teams and the girls were thrilled to have the privilege of cheering them to victory.
"What happened to your arm?" asked Lacey, as she slipped into her skirt, noticing the blue plastic Band-Aid on Samantha's left arm.
"Oh, nothing," said Samantha, trying to sound casual. "I just got splattered with oil at the restaurant, is all."
"I hope you're not cutting yourself again," said Lacey, concerned.
Lacey knew that Samantha had cut herself at least twice before, and once the wound on her shoulder had become infected and Samantha had to take antibiotics for ten days. Lacey remembered how unsettling it had been for Sam, because the medication had to be taken with food.
"I'm not doing that anymore," Samantha lied, turning away to lace up her Keds.
Samantha hadn't told any of her friends that she had been taking diet pills, the prescription kind, not the drugstore kind that all the girls sampled from time to time. She had found them in her aunt's bureau drawer and stolen six of the capsules. She had taken some diuretics from her aunt's drawer also. She was happy that it was so easy to resist eating with the help of the pills, and she had lost two more pounds.
The cheerleading captain bounded onto the field and began to call out the cheers they would be practicing that day. As Samantha walked to take her place in the group, she saw dark spots in front of her eyes. She stopped, blinked and felt frightened, but, after a few seconds, the spots disappeared and she forced herself into the routine with feigned energy.
I'll be all right, she told herself. Soon I'll be able to go home and I can be with my zebras and my vacuum cleaner, and Brian will probably call, and everything will be all right.