Read The Summer of Broken Things Page 1




  For Meredith

  How It Begins for Avery

  “We need to talk,” Dad says.

  He’s got his hand on the door to the garage when I walk into the kitchen for breakfast. He’s wearing his Important Business Deal suit, with the power tie I gave him last year for Father’s Day. (Mom picked it out. Of course she wouldn’t trust my fashion sense.) And, yes—there—he glances at his watch.

  I translate: Body language + watch consultation + four terse words = He doesn’t want a conversation. He’s going to talk; I’m supposed to listen.

  “Oh, sorry,” I say, flipping my messy just-out-of-bed ponytail over my shoulder. I add an eye roll for effect. “I didn’t get the memo from your administrative assistant. Did we have a meeting scheduled this morning?”

  “Avery,” Dad says, and I’ve succeeded. There’s an edge of helplessness in his voice, a hint of How is it that I can negotiate multimillion-dollar deals practically in my sleep, but I can’t get my fourteen-year-old daughter to treat me with respect?

  I just have to be careful not to push him into You know, my parents spanked me when I was a kid, and that kept me from back-talking them . . . and I did three hours of farm chores every morning before school . . . and even though we didn’t have two pennies to rub together, we had one another, and that’s all we needed . . .

  Blah, blah, blah.

  For the record, my parents have never spanked me, and never would.

  And Mom would never allow Dad to force me to do farm chores, even if we lived on a farm.

  I don’t think.

  “About this summer,” Dad says, and I regret the eye roll.

  “Yes?” I say cautiously. I can hear in my head how my friends would tell me to play it: Beg. Or go over and kiss your daddy on the cheek and throw your arms around his shoulders and tell him, “You’re the best dad in the world! You decided I can go with Lauren and Shannon to soccer camp for the whole summer, right?” And then he’s got no choice. He has to agree.

  That kind of thing doesn’t actually work very well with my dad. It’s like my friends’ fathers were all stamped out from some generic Business Executive Father mold—some Easy-to-Wrap-Around-Their-Daughters’-Little-Fingers mold—but mine wasn’t. I think it’s from the spankings and the farm chores and the being born poor.

  “Where’s Mom?” I ask.

  “She had an early meeting,” Dad says. “Important new client.”

  Mom’s an interior designer. Dad and I secretly make fun of the slogans she’s been trying out for her new business. Her latest is “The things around you can set the tone for your entire life.”

  Dad glances at his watch again.

  “But your mother and I talked last night, and—”

  “Don’t you mean, ‘argued’?” I ask. I reach into the refrigerator for a yogurt. I pretend I really care whether I get blueberry or pomegranate. “I heard you when I came downstairs to get my phone charger. What was Mom saying? ‘Fourteen is the worst age for a girl to be unhappy’? And ‘Three months with Avery furious and miserable, and you’ll wish she were a thousand miles away’?”

  Dad has pretty good posture to begin with, but I see his back stiffen.

  “What else did you hear?” he asks.

  You think I stuck around to hear my own parents trash-talking me? I want to ask. But we don’t ask questions like that in my family.

  I open a yogurt and slide a spoon into it.

  “Nothing,” I mutter. I only skim the surface of the yogurt. Then I change my mind and dig the spoon in deep, flipping it to bring up the blueberries hidden on the bottom. “Dad, you know I want—”

  He isn’t listening. He holds up his hand in that way he has, all Wait your turn. I’m talking now.

  “We figured out a compromise,” he says. “You get one week at soccer camp. Then you come to Spain with me.”

  That’s a compromise?

  “But, Dad, you’ll be away working all the time, and I won’t have any friends there, and even Mom wouldn’t be able to come for very long, not that I’d want to spend the whole summer just with her anyway, but . . .”

  There’s a word I can’t quite bring myself to say, because it’d be too much like groveling, or admitting a weakness: Lonely. Don’t you know how lonely I’d be? Or how much that would wreck me? Dad wouldn’t understand how the summer before freshman year has to be all about building up confidence, getting ready to start strong. Lauren has an older sister, and she’s told us about girls who messed up their whole high school careers the first week of ninth grade.

  I switch tacks.

  “And you know soccer’s my thing, and I have to get really, really good at it this summer if I’m going to make varsity in the fall, and . . .”

  And what if Lauren and Shannon make varsity, and I don’t?

  Dad has been talking about Spain for weeks, and it’s like we’ve developed rules for this argument. At some point, I’m supposed to say, Look, I know it’s a big deal, you offering me the chance to go to Europe for a whole summer. I get it. I’m not a spoiled brat. It’s just, this isn’t the right summer. And whenever I bring up varsity, Dad is supposed to say, You’re already an amazing soccer player. You’ll make the team no matter what. He’s supposed to be my biggest cheerleader.

  But Dad doesn’t say any of that now. It’s like he’s deaf. He keeps talking, like I haven’t said a thing.

  I realize I haven’t heard what he said either.

  “What?” I ask.

  “I said, this is what we came up with: You can bring a friend to Spain with you.”

  “I can?” I take a step back. This is new. This is . . . well, acceptable. Maybe.

  “You mean Lauren and Shannon could come with me?” I ask. “Or Maya or . . .”

  Suddenly, I’m picturing my whole eighth-grade soccer team with me in Spain. We’d play soccer in some really cool Spanish park. (Or fútbol. I know they call it fútbol there.) We’d shop in a pack, grabbing up all sorts of European fashions. We’d flirt with really hot European boys. We’d sightsee just enough that we could drop a casual Oh yes, when I was at the Alhambra . . . into conversations when we went back to school in the fall.

  We’d go back as the coolest freshmen in the history of Deskins High School.

  “One friend,” Dad says. “One. And it has to be someone responsible and trustworthy and, preferably, older. I thought of the perfect person. Kayla. I checked with her family last night, and they’re thinking about it, but it’s probably going to work.”

  “Kayla?” I repeat blankly. “Don’t you mean Kennedy? Or Kylie?”

  I can’t decide which is more annoying: that he thinks he can pick a best friend for me, or that he can’t even remember the names of the friends I already have. Not that Kennedy or Kylie are such close friends. I’d call them second-string. Maybe third.

  “No, I mean Kayla,” Dad insists. “Kayla Butts.”

  I almost drop my yogurt.

  “Kayla Butts?” I repeat. “She’s not my friend! When was the last time I even saw her?”

  Kayla Butts is this girl whose mom was best friends with my nanny when I was little. They live out in the middle of nowhere, an hour or two from Columbus, so it was always a big deal when they’d visit. Angelica, my nanny, always wanted to show me off, so she’d put me in some frilly dress. And then Angelica would bribe me to be good by letting Kayla and me do things that weren’t usually allowed: drinking chocolate milk, not white, with lunch; climbing to the top of the jungle gym at the park, instead of having to stop halfway up . . . I can remember Kayla’s mom laughing and saying she’d catch us if we fell. But we never fell. I almost always cried when it came time for Kayla to leave, because I’d gotten the
frilly dress dirty, or Angelica was extra-mean when she went back to enforcing rules—or I just didn’t like having to stop playing what I wanted.

  But my crying when Kayla left made everyone think Kayla and I were BFFs.

  Back then, maybe we were.

  But for years after that, Kayla and her mom would still swing by at the holidays and drop off Christmas presents for me. Which was silly, because I’m pretty sure Kayla’s family is kind of poor.

  Maybe Kayla and her mom even came this past Christmas, and I just don’t remember.

  “You and Kayla always played together better than any of your other friends,” Dad says. “That’s what Angelica always said.”

  “You mean when I was five?” I ask. “And she was seven? Dad, news bulletin—five- and seven-year-olds, fourteen- and sixteen-year-olds—it’s not the same! I don’t play with Barbie dolls anymore either. I bet I couldn’t even pick Kayla out in a crowd. You really want to make me spend the whole summer with a total stranger?”

  “No,” Dad says. “With a whole country full of strangers. Some of whom might become friends. It’ll be good for you.”

  And then he opens the door and walks out, like the conversation is over.

  I grab my phone and immediately text Shannon and Lauren: My dad is crazy! He IS going to make me go to Spain!

  Shannon texts back, Nooooo . . .

  Lauren texts a bunch of frowny face emojis, along with the one that’s crying so hard the tears flow upward. Then she writes, You have to talk him out of it!

  I can’t, I write back. Then I just stare at the words on the screen. I can’t bear to send them.

  But it doesn’t matter. I know my dad.

  This is really going to happen.

  When It Registers for Kayla

  “I am a girl who’s going to Europe,” I whisper to myself in history class. “I am a girl who’s going to Spain.”

  I’m trying out the idea, trying to make it seem real. I’m carrying the words around the way Grandpa carries a lucky penny everywhere he goes.

  But maybe I’m a little too loud, because Stephanie Purley turns around in front of me.

  “What’d you say, Butt-girl?” she asks.

  Kids started calling me “Butt-girl” in kindergarten, because of my last name. The nicknames got worse over the years, so it’s like she’s bringing back a golden oldie. Maybe she thinks she’s being nice.

  But it’s crazy how nobody forgets anything in Crawfordsville. Roger Staley is still the kid who ate paste in kindergarten. Jayden Allen is still the kid who peed in the principal’s office in second grade.

  I’m still “Butt-girl.”

  Stephanie Purley was Little Miss Snowflake for the whole town of Crawfordsville in first grade. She’s always on a float in the annual Christmas parade for something. She was “Prettiest Girl” in eighth-grade superlatives. She was freshman-class homecoming attendant last year. She’s been a cheerleader forever.

  She’s wearing her cheerleader uniform now, even though I kind of thought sports to cheer for were over for the year. Maybe it’s just one of her outfits that look like her cheerleading uniform.

  Most of them do.

  The rules of Crawfordsville High School—the rules that let people like Stephanie Purley tolerate people like me—are that I’m supposed to mumble, “Nothing,” and look down at the study guide on my desk. The one I’m supposed to be filling out. And then Stephanie Purley will go back to flirting with Ryan Decker in front of her, and I’ll be like an annoying fly she shooed away, or an ugly cockroach she squashed flat.

  But today I am not just Butt-girl. I am also a girl who’s going to Spain.

  Someplace not even Stephanie Purley has been.

  “I was talking about what I’m doing this summer,” I tell her. I look her straight in her pretty blue eyes. “I’m going to Europe.”

  “You?” Stephanie asks, and there’s everything in that one word: How would someone like you afford that? People like you, it’s a big deal just to go to Dayton or Toledo or Columbus. You are not going to a whole other continent!

  Truth is, it’s kind of a big deal for anyone from Crawfordsville to go to Dayton or Toledo or Columbus.

  Truth is, even Stephanie’s not so dumb that she can’t find her way to the natural conclusion: that I’m lying. Kind of like back in fourth grade, when I had that unfortunate episode of making up stories that nobody believed.

  “I have a job,” I say quickly. “I’m traveling with a family that wants me to be, like, kind of a nanny.”

  And even though this is Stephanie Purley I’m talking to, not anybody I’m remotely friends with, I suddenly want to spill everything. How when Mom got off the phone last night with Mr. Armisted, she had tears in her eyes, and she kept saying, “Oh, Kayla, you are going to have opportunities I never had! This is, like . . . a godsend!” How she’d been worrying that everything I’d been dreaming of for the summer—getting my driver’s license, working at the Crawfordsville Dairy Queen—wouldn’t happen because the car insurance would cost too much. Because the nursing home cut her hours again.

  But I can already see the smugness flowing across Stephanie’s face.

  “Oooh,” she says. “Should have known. You’re the type who’d go all the way to Europe and still do nothing but change diapers. Only, baby’s diapers this time, not old people’s.”

  “I don’t change diapers at the nursing home!” I protest, outraged for Mrs. Hudson and Mr. Lang and, well, certain other people I care about who have to live in nursing homes.

  Like my dad.

  Before Stephanie can say anything about him, I go on.

  “The girl I’m ‘babysitting’ in Europe is fourteen,” I say. “Almost as old as me. So there. No diapers. Her dad has to go to Spain for a business trip, and he wants her to go along. For the experience. But her mom can’t go, because of her own job. So they want me to go with Avery instead. To keep her company.”

  If I were talking to almost any of the old ladies at the nursing home, I would have added, It’s like I’m a paid companion. Like in those regency romances you’re always reading.

  But I have learned something since kindergarten, when I thought I could talk to other five-year-olds the same way I talked to my best friends at the nursing home—all of whom were over seventy.

  Metamucil jokes—not a big hit in the kindergarten set.

  To Stephanie, “paid companion” would probably sound like something dirty.

  And suddenly, I’m not so thrilled with the comparison myself. In the regency romances Mrs. Lang, Mrs. Shrivers, and Mrs. Delaney are always urging me to read, the paid companions are mostly there to find lost gloves and tell the hero that the heroine truly is in love with him, no matter how much she pretends otherwise.

  The “paid companions” never get to be the heroines themselves.

  They might as well be maids.

  This is not the 1800s, I tell myself. Nobody’s expecting you to be a maid. Nobody will even know you in Europe. You can be anyone you want.

  But I can feel my face settling into the patented how-Kayla-Butts-gets-through-the-school-day empty expression. The one that pretends that nothing anyone says can hurt me.

  Stephanie snorts.

  “Whatever,” she says. “Even in Europe, you’ll still be Butt-girl.”

  Stephanie turns back around. But I can’t bear to pick up my pencil and start filling in blanks on the answer sheet about all the European explorers who came to America, and what two hundred forty years of American history have done to us all.

  What if the whole world outside Crawfordsville is just full of Stephanie Purleys, there to put me down?

  What if Avery is like that now too?

  Avery, Leaving Home

  “You know you’re going to miss me,” I tell Mom.

  We’re standing in my bedroom, my suitcase between us—packed, zipped, and ready to go. I know how Mom will play this: She’ll ask if I’m sure I packed enough underwear, or remind me that if my
clothes are wrong for the European scene, I have to make Dad let me go shopping.

  She won’t say anything about missing me.

  But Mom surprises me by wrapping her arms so tightly around my shoulders that I fall forward, my knees banging against the suitcase, its telescoping handle digging into my ribs. For a moment, she’s the only thing holding me up.

  Instinctively, I push her away.

  “Mo-om!” I protest. “I can’t breathe!”

  She lets go, and I right myself, solid on my own two feet again. But there’s a weird moment where our eyes meet. Hers have gone all watercolor, a flood of tears kept penned in place by her eyelashes and perfectly applied mascara. On her face—with her blue eyes, her straight nose, and her gently framing ash-blond hair—the effect is really pretty. Of course, everything’s always pretty on Mom. She works hard to keep it that way.

  “Oh, no,” I say. “You are not doing that to me. I’m not going to cry.”

  Anymore, I think.

  Mom’s gaze slides away. She still hasn’t said anything. She swallows hard.

  I ignore the lump forming in my own throat.

  “I was going to be away this summer regardless, remember?” I ask. “Only, soccer camp would have been a whole lot closer. You could have even come to visit some weekends, if you’d just . . .”

  Mom keeps her face turned to the side. I see the first tear escape the mascara corral and slip daintily down her cheek. Then her face quivers and twists. The pretty crying has gone ugly.

  “Mom?” I say uncertainly. This isn’t like her. But I’ve never traveled so far away from her before. It’s not like I have hope anymore, but I still seize the opportunity. “Mom, really, you could stop everything right now, if you just tell Dad—”

  Mom’s shaking her head hard. No, no, no . . .

  “Don’t you see?” It’s like the words are ripped from her mouth. She’s almost snarling, which is so not like my mom. Not with me. “I can’t stop anything. I don’t have any control over . . .”

  She spins around and sprints toward my bathroom. This is totally not like her. I’ve never seen her move so gracelessly.