Mind Games
because I thought about it hard enough, and it wasn’t horrible or confusing. I still don’t have many visions, and can’t usually figure out what they are anyway—people I don’t know, places I can’t recognize. None as bad as the one with my parents but none particularly awesome.
    But this one! It was the beach, a beautiful narrow stretch of pale sand on the shore of the lake, a lake so wide—melting off into the horizon—it might as well be the ocean. My classmates—I saw some of them, too, but the only one I recognized was Eden because of her wild curly hair that I play with when we’re hanging out. And Clarice! I saw Clarice; I knew it was her because I heard her voice and I’d know her voice anywhere. Her hair is long and her eyes are blue, the same color as the sky. I had forgotten to miss blue. Blue!
    I flop down onto my back, tracing my stomach happily. “I didn’t tell you the best part.”
    “Oh?” Another drawer slams. “I can’t find my bra,” she mutters.
    “The best part is, I saw you.”
    “So? I’m not that great to look at.”
    “Don’t be stupid! This is the first time I’ve seen you since you were a toddler! Your hair is so shiny, and your face. Oh, Fia, you’re beautiful. You’re so, so beautiful. I knew who you were the second I saw you.” Tears trace from the corner of each of my eyes. I’m on Fia’s bed, and it smells like her, sweet vanilla, and now I know what look goes with that smell.
    She was there, on the beach ahead of whatever vantage point the vision gave me, and she looked back for a brief second before kicking a ball wildly and chasing after it through a group of adults.
    She didn’t look happy. I wonder if she always looks that way and I don’t know. Or maybe I don’t remember what happy looks like. But even with her brows knit together and her mouth pulled tight, she was so beautiful. And when she ran, she was every description of graceful I have ever read.
    “ You’re beautiful,” she says with a sigh. “And I’m glad you saw something happy. Really. That’s amazing. I hope you keep seeing happy things. It makes everything worth it.”
    “Maybe next time they take us on a Broadway trip I can see the show beforehand and ruin the whole thing for you.”
    Fia lets out a dry laugh. “You do that. I hate musicals anyway.”
    Our door flies open. “Where were you in class today, Fia?” Eden says, and then they both swear loudly and I feel a blanket get ripped out from underneath me.
    “KNOCK FIRST!” Fia screams. I’ve never heard her so angry.
    I wave a hand lazily in the air. “Relax! Eden doesn’t have to knock. Oh, wait—are you naked? Did she see you naked?” I giggle, still giddy with happiness, still seeing the beach. I know what Eden looks like. I want to touch her hair again; it was so wild in my vision. Now when she comes over, I don’t have to imagine what I think she looks like. I know! “Does Fia have big boobs? She won’t tell me, and apparently it’s not okay to feel them and see for myself.” No one laughs. “Sheesh, joking.”
    “What happened to you?” Eden says. She sounds scared.
    Fia stomps to the door. “Shut up. Get out of our room.”
    “What’s wrong?” I sit up.
    “Her body…” Eden says.
    “I SAID SHUT UP.”
    “No, tell me what’s wrong. Eden, what can’t I see? What’s wrong?”
    “She’s covered with bruises and cuts! Her whole stomach, and her arms, too! What have they been—”
    “Get out of my room!”
    Eden shrieks and I hear footsteps tumbling over each other, then the door slams and Fia’s breathing is heavy.
    “What was she talking about?”
    “Nothing. Eden’s an idiot. I hate her.”
    “She was not talking about nothing!” I stand, reaching out for Fia. She always comes when I reach out for her. But my hands meet only air. She’s staying away from my hands.
    She’s never stayed away from my hands before.
    “Are you really covered with bruises and cuts?” It comes out a

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