ONE
WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 3
Everyone needs a ābury a dead body in the woodsā best friend. I mean, itās the highest level of friendship possible. Someone you can trust, without question, to cover your ass when life goes sideways.
For me, that person is Kacey Hodge. Loyal to her core, my exact opposite in almost every way. If I ever had to bury a dead body in the woods? Kacey would be right beside me, shovel in hand, wiping sweat off her brow. Sheās my ride or die. However, Iād rather bury a dead body than help Kacey clean out her bedroom, which is how Iām spending my afternoon. Because Iāve never met someone who owns more clothing and random shit than my best friend.
āI canāt believe my mom is making me do this,ā Kacey mutters from the depths of her closet, where sheās pulling out her lesser worn items and tossing them into the cardboard box in the center of her bedroom. āI swear, Florie, sheās using college as an excuse to finally purge my room. Sheās wanted this for years. Itās so unnecessary.ā
Iād argue that itās very, very necessary. Rosemary also said that if Kacey doesnāt clean her room, she canāt go on the Hodgesā family vacation next week. Since that trip is the last remotely exciting thing weāre doing together before Kacey leaves for college, this cleaning spree isnāt optional.
I hold up a Russian nesting doll from her knickknack shelf. āReally? Because thereās literally no reason for you to bring a Russian nesting doll to college. None. Whatsoever.ā
āItās vintage,ā Kacey says, but, after a hesitation, nods. I place the doll into the box. āHey, can you turn the speaker up?ā
I grab the Bluetooth speaker, shaped like a retro radio, off Kaceyās dresser and nudge the volume button on the side. Weāre listening to our favorite podcast hosts, Eleanor and Trish, cover the murder of Joan Dawley.
āThe guy, this asshole,ā Trish is saying through the speaker, āhired two felons to kill his wifeāā
āWhat a dick,ā Eleanor responds dryly, like sheās not the least bit surprised.
Trish snorts. āYou want to hear the worst part? The plan fell throughāone of the hired men was arrested for parole violationsābut someone still bludgeoned the wife to death.ā
Episodes drop every Wednesday, so Kacey and I get together at her house for our weekly dose of Eleanor and Trish. Murder Me Later is more than a podcast to meāitās held a special place in my anxious heart for the last two years. Because their podcast is about murder, sure, but itās also about mental health and listening to your gutāone thing Iām often ashamed of, and the other I almost always ignore. Plus, itās the whole reason Kacey and I are even friends.
Even if they hadnāt brought me together with my best friend, Iād still be a huge fan.
Maybe itās weird, but I love true crime. Learning about all the worst-case scenarios, the survival stories, the tragedies, is almost calming. Probably because my obsessive-compulsive disorder feeds off all the unknown bad in the world. For me, the monster you know is always better than the one you donāt.
Iāve composed emails to Eleanor and Trish, trying to tell them how much their podcast means to me, but I never hit send. That fear, that doubt, always creeps up. Iāll check the time and realize Iāve spent two hours writing one paragraph. I have dozens and dozens of emails Iāll never send gathering electronic dust in my drafts folder.
Iām a cowardāeven on the internet.
āOkay,ā Kacey announces fifteen minutes later. Sheās surveying the pile of clothes and random crap inside the cardboard box. Her thick, dark brown curls escape wildly from a sloppy bun, and her brown eyes are scrutinizing. āDo you think my mom will notice if I donāt go through my shoes?ā
āDefinitely.ā I join Kacey on the floor by her bed, beneath which sheās stored dozens of shoeboxes. Even though I love a good cleaning session, the whole afternoon has left me feeling off balance. Messes are a part of who Kacey is, and this is another reminder that she wonāt be around for much longer.
When the podcast ends (the husband did it, but his mistress helped), Kacey groans and stretches out on her back. Despite the constant mess, I love Kaceyās bedroom. The hexagonal green wallpaper, the four-poster bed and gauzy canopy. The small window overlooking the backyard. Thereās just something so joyful about her room. I stretch my legs out and lie down between the many piles of clothes.
āDo you have to be home for family dinner?ā she asks, bundling a cable-knit sweater beneath her head like a pillow.
I stare at the vaulted ceiling. āYep. My dad got home from Seattle a few hours ago.ā
āBut youāre still coming over tomorrow night for the live-stream?ā She tosses a pair of socks into the air and catches them.
āWouldnāt miss it.ā Eleanor and Trish are hosting their very first live Q&A tomorrow. I smack the socks out of the air when she throws them again, and they land on her dresser. āSeven, right?ā
āSeven,ā Kacey confirms, then stretches her arms overhead with a sigh. After a moment, she says, āHow have we done nothing this summer?ā
āWeāve done⦠stuff,ā I say defensively, but sheās right. All weāve done the last two months is binge all fourteen seasons of the original Unsolved Mysteries, learn how to read tarot, and get sunburns at the lake on weekends.
Now summerās almost over. Soon Kaceyās trading small-town life for Portland and college. And Iām staying in Barmouth, whether I want to or not. Turns out, when you have a mental health disorder, what you want doesnāt matter anymore. No, what matters is what everyone elseāparents, therapists, counselorsāthinks youāre ready for.
When the guidance counselor, provided by my homeschooling program, chatted with my mom at the start of senior year, he suggested I take a gap year. Put college on hold until thingsāaka my OCDāwere more settled and under control. Mom agreed with him, and last year, I agreed too. But itās hard to feel good about that decision when Iām helping my best friend pack her life away so she can leave me behind.
Kacey shifts onto her side, her hands folded beneath her cheek. āWeāre pathetic. This summer was totally unmemorable.ā
āHey, itās not over yet. We still have the beach house next week,ā I point out, though I know the Hodgesā annual family beach trip isnāt what Kacey had in mind.
āIām still pissed that Sam stayed in Idaho,ā she says with a pout.
āUm. Same,ā I say, even though Iām actually relieved that Sam, Kaceyās older brother, decided to stay at his vocational school for the summer, where heās studying carpentry.
Before I found out that Sam had decided to stay in Idaho for a summer workshop, I spent weeks panicking over his return to Barmouth. Like, I gave myself actual stomachaches thinking about it. Worrying over what to do when I came face-to-face with him for the first time in eight months. Turns out, all that worrying was for nothing, and to say Iām relieved that Samās in another state is the understatement of the century.
If only his lack of physical presence could erase him from my brain.
I shove aside all Sam-related thoughts and stare across the floor at my best friend. āYou sure you have to go to college?ā I joke. āWhat does Portland have that Barmouth doesnāt, anyway?ā
Kacey rolls her eyes. āEverything.ā
āThatās rude.ā
āEverything but my best friend,ā she says with a small smile.
I try to smile back, but itās hard. Because what will happen when Kaceyās in Portland? Our friendship might be solid, but itās still new. What if we grow apart? What if she finds way cooler, city friends to hang out with? Iām not saying the thought keeps me up at night, butā¦
My phone dings in my sundress pocket.
MOM: Dinnerās at six. Do you need me to pick you up?
ME: Nope! See you in a bit
āI gotta head home.ā I stand up, trying not to cringe at how much messier we made Kaceyās bedroom. But we successfully cleared out her closet, bookshelf, and shoes. Goodwill is going to be very pleased. Or horrified.
Kacey sits up. āWanna sleep over after the livestream tomorrow?ā
I step gingerly around the piles and grab my purse off her bed. āYeah, for sure.ā
āWait, donāt forget the pictures.ā Kacey points to an envelope partially hidden beneath a jean jacket on her bed. She came across a stash of photos Rosemary printed out for her graduation party in June and wanted me to have the extras.
āThanks.ā I stuff the envelope into my purse. āIāll see you later.ā
Kacey gives me a mock salute. āBye, babe.ā
I wave before shutting her bedroom door behind me, and I head downstairs.
The walk from the Hodgesā to my house takes ten minutes, tops. Handy, considering I donāt drive. Our small town of Barmouth, Washington, is about an hour northeast of Seattle and two hours south of the Canadian border. To put it simply: the middle of nowhere. As a tourist town, Barmouth is usually pretty busy during summer and winter, but thereās jack shit to do here if youāre a local.
The upside to small towns, though, is most things are within walking or biking distance, and itās been great being able to walk to Kaceyās whenever I feel like it. The Hodges are always welcoming; I even know where their Hide-A-Key is.
Kacey and I didnāt become friends until the start of junior year, during those brief months before Mom decided homeschooling was the Answer. Junior year was a shit show. Back-to-back obsessions and panic attacks in bathroom stalls between classes. But at least one good thing came of it: befriending Kacey Hodge.
I was packing up after homeroom on the second day of school when I hit play on an old episode of Murder Me Laterāand loudly broadcast Trish explaining how Lizzie Borden axed-up her dad. (Did you know Lizzie Borden was acquitted? Yeah, me neither.) My earbuds werenāt plugged in like I thought, and everyone turned to stare at me. Mortifying. That is, until a girl with wild curls and a mischievous smile walked over to me and said, āI love Eleanor and Trish. Did you listen to this weekās episode yet?ā
While Iāve had friendsācasual friends, people to hang out with at schoolāI never had a best friend before Kacey Hodge. I never knew friends like Kacey existed. People who love you fiercely, who understand you, and stick by your side. Even though I was homeschooled for the second half of junior year and all of senior year due to my OCD, I still saw Kacey every day. The fact that sheās leaving so soon feels like another one of the universeās cruel jokes.
I have no idea what our friendship will look like when she no longer lives down the street, just a ten-minute walk away.
Three weeks. I have Kacey for three more weeks, and I need to make every single moment count.
When things were really bad with my mental health, the only place I felt comfortable was my house. Not surprising because I was struggling with mild agoraphobia at the time, but itās always familiar, always comforting, and above all else: always the same. Tidy rooms, carpets with vacuum lines indented into the fibers, and vanilla-scented candles. A soundtrack of jazz humming in the background. Schedules, routines, and color-coded calendars.
Kacey thinks itās weird as hell, but I donāt mind it.
For a few months after winter break, I went to this OCD group therapy Lauren, my therapist, runs. So many of those kids had parents whoād dismissed their diagnosis or outright didnāt care. My mom doesnāt work, and she devotes a lot of her free time to me. She cooks all my meals, picks up medications, and always prints out new articles sheās found about exercise methods and breathing techniques for stress reduction. And even though my dadās only home a few times a monthāhe quit his local accounting gig when I was in elementary school and works at a tech startup in Seattleāhe cares too.
Maybe my parents are a little much. But itās better than having parents who donāt care.
After dumping my keys and shoes in my bedroom, I wander back downstairs to the dining room. Papers are strewn across the table, covering the lace-edged place mats, and Dadās laptop is open, the screen pulled up to some spreadsheets.
He looks up as I enter, and a wide smile breaks across his face. āThereās my girl!ā I lean down and loop my arms around his neck as he hugs me. āDid you just get back from Kaceyās?ā
I step out of the hug and claim the dining chair beside him. āYup.ā
Mom bustles out of the kitchen and sets a big bowl of butternut squash pasta in the center of the table, and a smaller salad bowl beside it. āHey, honey,ā she says, and sits across from me.
āSo.ā Dad slides all the loose papers and his laptop into his briefcase before serving himself some pasta. āHowās Kacey doing? She must be nervous about college, huh?ā
I spear a ravioli with my fork and pop it into my mouth. āMore excited than nervous, I think.ā
Last year, the thought of starting college made me want to curl up in a constant anxiety ball on my bedroom floor. Thatās why I agreed with my mom and the counselor about putting college on holdāuntil my mental health got...