25.
The clock was always punishing, but feeling like I was closer to unraveling the
knots made time seem to stop entirely on Tuesday. We’d all decided to go to the
minimall right after school, and the waiting was unbearable. When the bell
finally rang for the end of English, I raced downstairs and was almost out the
door when I realized we couldn’t leave until Ben and Radar finished band
practice. I sat down outside the band room and took a personal pizza wrapped in
napkins from my backpack, where I’d had it since lunch. I was through the first
quarter when Lacey Pemberton sat down next to me. I offered her a piece. She
declined.
We talked about Margo, of course. The hole we had in common. “What I
need to figure out,” I said, rubbing pizza grease onto my jeans, “is a place. But I
don’t even know if I’m close with the pseudovisions. Sometimes I think we’re
just entirely off track.”
“Yeah, I don’t know. Honestly, everything else aside, I like finding stuff out
about her. I mean, that I didn’t know before. I had no idea who she really was. I
honestly never thought of her as anything but my crazy beautiful friend who
does all the crazy beautiful things.”
“Right, but she didn’t come up with these things on the fly,” I said. “I mean,
all of her adventures had a certain . . . I don’t know.”
“Elegance,” Lacey said. “She is the only person I know who’s not, like,
grown up who has total elegance.”
“Yeah.”
“So it’s hard to imagine her in some gross unlit dusty room.”
“Yeah,” I said. “With rats.”
Lacey pulled her knees to her chest and assumed the fetal position. “Ick.
That’s so not Margo.”
Somehow Lacey got shotgun, although she was the shortest of us. Ben was
driving. I sighed quite loudly as Radar, seated next to me, pulled out his
handheld and started working on Omnictionary.
“Just deleting vandalism on the Chuck Norris page,” he said. “For instance,
while I do think Chuck Norris specializes in the roundhouse kick, I don’t think
it’s accurate to say, ‘Chuck Norris’s tears can cure cancer, but unfortunately he
has never cried.’ Anyway, vandalism-deletion only takes like four percent of my
brain.”
I understood Radar was trying to make me laugh, but I only wanted to talk
about one thing. “I’m not convinced she’s in a pseudovision. Maybe that’s not
even what she meant by ‘paper towns,’ you know? There are so many place
hints, but nothing specific.”
Radar looked up for a second and then back down at the screen. “Personally,
I think she’s far away, doing some ridiculous roadside attraction tour that she
wrongly thinks she left enough clues to explain. So I think she’s currently in,
like, Omaha, Nebraska, visiting the world’s largest ball of stamps, or in
Minnesota checking out the world’s largest ball of twine.”
With a glance into the rearview mirror, Ben said, “So you think that Margo is
on a national tour in search of various World’s Largest Balls?” Radar nodded.
“Well,” Ben went on, “someone should just tell her to come on home,
because she can find the world’s largest balls right here in Orlando, Florida.
They’re located in a special display case known as ‘my scrotum.’”
Radar laughed, and Ben continued. “I mean, seriously. My balls are so big
that when you order french fries from McDonald’s, you can choose one of four
sizes: small, medium, large, and my balls.”
Lacey cut her eyes at Ben and said, “Not. Appropriate.”
“Sorry,” Ben mumbled. “I think she’s in Orlando,” he said. “Watching us
look. And watching her parents not look.”
“I’m still for New York,” Lacey said.
“All still possible,” I said. A Margo for each of us—and each more mirror
than window.
The minimall looked as it had a couple days before. Ben parked, and I took them
through the push-open door to the office. Once everyone was inside, I said
softly, “Don’t turn on the flashlight yet. Give your eyes a chance to adjust.” I felt
fingernails dig at my forearm. I whispered, “It’s okay, Lace.”
“Whoops,” she said. “Wrong arm.” She’d been searching, I realized, for Ben.
Slowly, the room came into a hazy gray focus. I could see the desks lined up,
still waiting for workers. I turned on my flashlight, and then everyone else
turned theirs on as well. Ben and Lacey stayed together, walking toward the
Troll Hole to explore the other rooms. Radar walked with me to Margo’s desk.
He knelt down to look closely at the paper calendar frozen on June.
I was leaning in next to him when I heard fast footsteps coming toward us.
“ People,” Ben whispered urgently. He ducked down behind Margo’s desk,
pulling Lacey with him.
“What? Where?”
“Next room!” he said. “Wearing masks. Official-looking. Gotta go.”
Radar shone his flashlight in the direction of the Troll Hole but Ben knocked
it down forcefully. “We. Have. To. Get. Out. Of. Here.” Lacey was looking up at
me, big-eyed and probably a little bit pissed off that I’d falsely promised her
safety.
“Okay,” I whispered. “Okay, everybody out, through the door. Very cool,
very quick.” I had just started to walk when I heard a booming voice shout,
“WHO GOES THERE!”
Shit. “Um,” I said, “we’re just visiting.” What an outlandishly lame thing to
say. Through the Troll Hole, a white light blinded me. It might have been God
Himself.
“What are your intentions?” The voice had a slight faked Britishness to it.
I watched Ben stand up next to me. It felt good not to be alone. “We’re here
investigating a disappearance,” he said with great confidence. “We weren’t going
to break anything.” The light snapped off, and I blinked away the blindness until
I saw three figures, each wearing jeans, a T-shirt, and a mask with two circular
filters. One of them pulled the mask up to his forehead and looked at us. I
recognized the goatee and flat, wide mouth.
“Gus?” asked Lacey. She stood up. The SunTrust security guard.
“Lacey Pemberton. Jesus. What are you doing here? With no mask? This
place has a ton of asbestos.”
“What are you doing here?”
“Exploring,” he said. Somehow Ben was emboldened with enough
confidence to walk up to the other guys and offer handshakes. They introduced
themselves as Ace and the Carpenter. I would venture to guess that these were
pseudonyms.
We pulled around some rolling desk chairs and sat in an approximate circle.
“Did you guys break the particleboard?” Gus asked.
“Well, I did,” Ben explained.
“We taped that up because we didn’t want anyone else in. If people can see a
way in from the road, you get a lot of people coming in who don’t know shit
about exploring. Bums and crack addicts and everything.”
I stepped forward toward them and said, “So, you, uh, knew that Margo came
here?”
Before Gus answered, Ace spoke through the mask. His voice was slightly
modulated but easy to understand. “Man, Margo was here all the damned time.
We only come here a few times a year; it’s got asbestos, and anyway, it’s not
even that good. But we probably saw her, like, what, like more than half the time
we came here in the last couple years. She was hot, huh?”
“Was?” asked Lacey pointedly.
“She ran away, right?”
“What do you know about that?” Lacey asked.
“Nothing, Jesus. I saw Margo with him,” Gus said, nodding toward me, “a
couple weeks ago. And then I heard that she ran away. It occurred to me a few
days later she might be here, so we visited.”
“I never got why she liked this place so much. There’s not much here,” said
the Carpenter. “It’s not great exploring.”
“What do you mean exploring?” Lacey asked Gus.
“Urban exploring. We enter abandoned buildings, explore them, photograph
them. We take nothing; we leave nothing. We’re just observers.”
“It’s a hobby,” said Ace. “Gus used to let Margo tag along on exploring trips
when we were still in school.”
“She had a great eye, even though she was only, like, thirteen,” Gus said.
“She could figure a way into anywhere. It was just occasional back then, but
now we go out like three times a week. There’s places all over. There’s an
abandoned mental hospital over in Clearwater. It’s amazing. You can see where
they strapped down the crazies and gave them electroshock. And there’s an old
jail out west of here. But she wasn’t really into it. She liked to break into the
places, but then she just wanted to stay.”
“Yeah, God that was annoying,” added Ace.
The Carpenter said, “She wouldn’t even, like, take pictures. Or run around
and find stuff. She just wanted to go inside and, like, sit. Remember, she had that
black notebook? And she would just sit in the corner and write, like she was in
her house, doing homework or something.”
“Honestly,” Gus said, “she never really got what it’s all about. The adventure.
She seemed pretty depressed, actually.”
I wanted to let them keep talking, because I figured everything they said
would help me imagine Margo. But all of a sudden, Lacey stood up and kicked
her chair behind her. “And you never thought to ask her about how she was
pretty depressed actually? Or why she hung out in these sketch-ass places? That
never bothered you?” She was standing above him now, shouting, and he stood
up, too, half a foot taller than her, and then the Carpenter said, “Jesus, somebody
calm that bitch down.”
“Oh no you didn’t!” Ben yelled, and before I even knew what was going on,
Ben tackled the Carpenter, who fell awkwardly out of his chair onto his shoulder.
Ben straddled the guy and started pounding on him, furiously and awkwardly
smacking and punching his mask, shouting, “SHE’S NOT THE BITCH, YOU
ARE!” I scrambled up and grabbed one of Ben’s arms as Radar grabbed the
other. We pulled him away, but he was still shouting, “I have a lot of anger right
now! I was enjoying punching the guy! I want to go back to punching him!”
“Ben,” I said, trying to sound calm, trying to sound like my mom. “Ben, it’s
okay. You made your point.”
Gus and Ace picked up the Carpenter, and Gus said, “Jesus Christ, we’re
getting out of here, okay? It’s all yours.”
Ace picked up their camera equipment, and they hustled out the back door.
Lacey started to explain to me how she knew him, saying, “He was a senior
when we were fr—.” But I waved it off. None of it mattered anyway.
Radar knew what mattered. He returned immediately to the calendar, his eyes
an inch away from the paper. “I don’t think anything was written on the May
page,” he says. “The paper is pretty thin and I can’t see any marks. But it’s
impossible to say for sure.” He went off to search for more clues, and I saw
Lacey’s and Ben’s flashlights dipping as they went through a Troll Hole, but I
just stood there in the office, imagining her. I thought of her following these
guys, four years older than her, into abandoned buildings. That was Margo as I’d
seen her. But then, inside the buildings, she is not the Margo I’d always
imagined. While everyone else walks off to explore and take pictures and bounce
around the walls, Margo sits on the floor, writing something.
From next door, Ben shouted, “Q! We got something!”
I wiped sweat from my face with both sleeves and used Margo’s desk to pull
myself up. I walked across the room, ducked through the Troll Hole, and headed
toward the three flashlights scanning the wall above the rolled-up carpet.
“Look,” Ben said, using the beam to draw a square on the wall. “You know
those little holes you mentioned?”
“Yeah?”
“They had to have been mementos tacked up there. Postcards or pictures, we
think, from the spacing of the holes. Which maybe she took with her,” Ben said.
“Yeah, maybe,” I said. “I wish we could find that notebook Gus was talking
about.”
“Yeah, when he said that, I remembered that notebook,” Lacey said, the
beam of my flashlight lighting up only her legs. “She had one with her all the
time. I never saw her write in it, but I just figured it was like a day planner or
whatever. God, I never asked about it. I get pissed at Gus, who wasn’t even her
friend. But what did I ever ask her?”
“She wouldn’t have answered anyway,” I said. It was dishonest to act like
Margo hadn’t participated in her own obfuscation.
We walked around for another hour, and just when I felt sure the trip had
been a waste, my flashlight happened over the subdivision brochures that had
been built into a house of cards when we first came here. One of the brochures
was for Grovepoint Acres. My breath caught as I spread out the other brochures.
I jogged to my backpack by the door and came back with a pen and a notebook
and wrote down the names of all the advertised subdivisions. I recognized one
immediately: Collier Farms—one of the two pseudovisions on my list I hadn’t
yet visited. I finished copying the subdivision names and returned my notebook
to my backpack. Call me selfish, but if I found her, I wanted it to be alone.
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