were going to screw it up again like they had all the other years. Everyone
was looking up at the top of the building as though Jesus Christ himself had
appeared and was tossing out chocolate-covered salvation, like just because
some crazy glitter ball was falling on their heads it gave them another
chance to be happy. Only I could tell them it never changed, that no matter
how many glitter balls fell in New York City, the year would still suck and
their lives would still be screwed up and everything would still turn out
wrong.
“Use the razor!” I shouted at the television. “Use the razor!” But none
of them did. Just me.
That’s when I did the other wrist, and that was even better because I
knew—knew what it would feel like, knew what would happen. Man, did it
feel good, like slicing open the ribbon on a Christmas present you’ve been
staring at under the tree for a month and been dying to open. Then it’s
finally time to open it, and you just kind of hold your breath while you rip
off the paper, hoping that what’s inside will be what you want it to be. And
for once, it was.
Afterward I just lay there watching everyone kiss while I died, thinking
how cool it was to be on my bedroom floor bleeding while everyone in
America celebrated the end of my life and the idiot hosting the countdown
smiled his goofy fake smile on the TV like the Angel of Death doing a
toothpaste commercial. There was none of that tunnel-of-light crap either.
No angels waiting to lead me over. It was just dark and quiet.
That’s when I woke up and saw my parents bending over me. At first I
thought I was dreaming. My mother still had on all her makeup and her
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