Home > Some Kind of Animal

Some Kind of Animal
Author: Maria Romasco Moore


CHAPTER ONE


   My sister and I sit side by side in the dark. She is pulling little bones out of her heart-shaped plastic purse and tossing them down the hillside onto the empty road below.

   The bones are from a rabbit she caught earlier in the night. She ran out ahead of me, and by the time I reached her, she’d already stripped away most of the skin with her knife. Was gnawing on the raw flesh.

   “You need a new dress,” I tell her.

   “No,” she says, wriggling her bare feet in the dirt.

   The truth is I’ve given her many new dresses, but she never wears them. She prefers to wear the lace-trimmed blue party dress I gave her when we were ten. It’s five years old now, full of rips and much too short. It only barely reaches her thighs.

   “You look like a slut,” I tell her.

   “No,” she says. She sticks her tongue out at me, throws another bone down the hill.

   I shouldn’t have said that, but she probably doesn’t even know what the word means. I really should be home by now. The sun will be up soon.

       Normally, I would be home by now, but tonight I am stalling, avoiding what I have to say.

   My sister, Lee, and I don’t live in the same house. My sister doesn’t live in a house at all. She lives in the forest. She sleeps during the day and runs at night.

   I snuck out this morning around three, an hour after the bar downstairs closed, half an hour after Aunt Aggie went to sleep. Aggie has raised me since I was a baby, since Mama went missing, but she doesn’t know about my sister. No one does.

   No one but me.

   Even I didn’t know I had a sister, until I was five. Until she appeared one night, coming out of the woods like a dream. I see her only in the small dark hours, when I can slip out my window, run with her through the trees, and slip back before anyone knows I’ve been gone.

   I used to only manage it once or twice a week. This past summer, though, Aunt Aggie was busy with her new boyfriend, and my best friend, Savannah, was busy with an endless string of them and so I went to see my sister every night. No one was paying attention to me. No one cared. I could sleep all day.

   But it’s October now.

   My sister has run out of rabbit bones, so she picks up a big rock and throws that at the road instead. It bounces down the hill, hits the asphalt, and cracks in two.

   “I can’t run with you tomorrow night, Lee,” I say.

   “No,” she says.

   “Yes,” I say. I’m not thrilled about it either—I love running at night—but I’ve got no choice. “I can’t run tomorrow night, or the night after that, or the night after that. I need more sleep. They sent a letter home from school.”

       It’s true. I’m failing everything but chorus. If I don’t get my shit together I might have to repeat the whole ninth grade. Aunt Aggie was livid when she found out. She wanted to know what the hell was wrong with me, whether it was drugs or boys or just a relentless desire to piss her off at every opportunity. But I couldn’t tell her the real reason I’ve been sleeping through all the classes I don’t cut. The real reason I’m bone-tired constantly these days.

   “You can run away,” my sister says.

   Lee and I are twins. We’ve got the same build, straight up and down, though she’s far skinnier than me, skinny enough that people would probably whisper behind her back if they ever saw her, say she was anorexic or something. We’ve got the same plain face, though hers is smeared with dirt. Same mud-colored hair, except mine is chin length and hers hangs most of the way down her back in a snarled mat.

   “I’ll come run with you once a week,” I say. “Okay? Saturday nights. Like I used to.”

   “Run away,” she says again, insistent.

   And sure, it would be nice if it were that easy. If I could just let everything go, stop trying to be everything everyone says I’m supposed to be—a good girl, a normal girl, a pretty girl, a cool girl, a smart girl, a girl who gives even half a shit about school.

   My sister’s never gone to school and so to be perfectly honest she’s kind of dumb. I mean, she’s smart in some ways, knows more about the woods than anybody, but she can only read books that don’t have too many words. I used to bring her stuff from the library, comic books and picture books, but I’m banned now, after returning too many books with leaves pressed between the pages, dirt caked into the spines, spots of blood on the covers.

       “You know I can’t run away,” I tell her, as I’ve told her a thousand times. “I have a life.”

   Lee bares her teeth as she scowls, then reaches out to grab my arm, but I twist away and jump to my feet. I’m cutting it way too close.

   “I’ll see you Saturday night,” I say. “I’ll bring you some chocolate or something.”

   I try to run down the hill but end up mostly sliding. When I reach the bottom, my jeans are streaked with dirt. I turn and wave at my sister. She throws a pebble that hits me right in the shoulder and then she darts back into the trees.

   I usually go the long way home, circling through the national forest, which surrounds my hometown of Lester, Ohio, on three sides. But the sky is growing more gray by the second, the morning light erasing the stars. So I head down the road, running on the shoulder, past the old abandoned high school with the blown-out windows and the outline of a girl spray-painted halfway up an inside wall. I wave at the painted girl. She just floats there, a ghostly silhouette, someone’s misplaced shadow half.

   I cut through the No. 5 Mine disaster Memorial Park and the empty Dollar General parking lot and then I run alongside the railroad tracks, that long string on which Lester is threaded like a small, dull bead.

   In the old days, the hills around here were studded with mines, and freight trains carried away tons of coal every day. People called Lester “the magic city” because of how it sprang up almost overnight and grew like crazy. Half the people in Lester worked in the mines, but now, as Aunt Aggie likes to say, half the people in Lester work nowhere.

       The sky is getting brighter. I push myself to run faster, heart racing. It must be nearly six. If Aggie catches me out she will lose her mind. It’s bad enough that she knows I’m failing. She isn’t strict, exactly, but she worries her head off if I give her half a reason. I am usually more careful than this.

   When I finally reach Joe’s Bar and Grill, I sprint around the side and scramble up the crumbling wall. The bricks jut out unevenly here, and half the mortar has crumbled to dust. Little puffs of it fall away like cigarette ash as I climb.

   I pull myself onto the rusty fire escape and force myself to go slow, easing my bedroom window open gently, wiggling it in its socket like a loose tooth.

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