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Black Flowers, White Lies




  Praise for Yvonne Ventresca and Pandemic

  “Pandemic is a fast and gripping story…. The plot never failed to impress me; there was always a surprise around the corner.”

  —Teen Ink

  “As is to be expected in an apocalyptic novel, there is no shortage of tension or death and a few gruesomely dead bodies, but teen disaster fans will likely appreciate that the high schoolers are portrayed as good, helpful, yet imperfect people.”

  —Booklist

  “This is an engrossing apocalyptic story, told through Lil’s eyes and newsfeeds as her neighborhood, then the East Coast, and finally the entire US buckles to its knees as the pandemic spreads…. Themes of friendship and coming together in a crisis carry the novel.”

  —School Library Journal

  “In her first novel, Ventresca pulls together three unrelated themes to create a medical thriller/romance…. This realistic page-turner will keep most readers enthralled.”

  —Kirkus Reviews

  “To be clear, this is at the end of the day a book about a pandemic and if you like those types of reads (like me), it’s a pretty good one…. Ventresca just manages to take it to new and interesting places by making her main character one who is forced to deal with the emotional struggles of abuse in the midst of the end of the world.”

  —School Library Journal’s Teen Librarian Toolbox

  “I love how the author spins her own unique twist into what might have been yet another deadly-disease-plague-that-kills-everyone story.”

  —YA Books Central

  “Pandemic is a win. I never put it down, and never wanted to. It terrified me, excited me, and moved me. It even threw in some swooniness and charm just for giggles.”

  —The YA Buzz

  “I can honestly say this is one of my favorite reads thus far this year and easily ranks in my top 25 favorite disaster novels. Yeah, it is that good…. It is obvious the author has done her homework.”

  —Survival Weekly

  “The target audience is teens and young adults, but the book is just as captivating for adults…. This book really speaks about the resiliency of the human spirit.”

  —Shelf Full of Books

  “The brilliance of this book lies in its simplicity, its crispness, its economy of detail, its characterization, and especially in its mastery of psychological horror.”

  —Boy Book of the Month Blog

  Also by Yvonne Ventresca

  Pandemic

  Copyright © 2016 by Yvonne Ventresca

  All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any manner without the express written consent of the publisher, except in the case of brief excerpts in critical reviews or articles. All inquiries should be addressed to Sky Pony Press, 307 West 36th Street, 11th Floor, New York, NY 10018.

  This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are either the products of the author’s imagination or used fictitiously. Certain places and details, such as the cemetery, the animal shelter, and Benton Books were invented for storytelling purposes.

  Sky Pony Press books may be purchased in bulk at special discounts for sales promotion, corporate gifts, fund-raising, or educational purposes. Special editions can also be created to specifications. For details, contact the Special Sales Department, Sky Pony Press, 307 West 36th Street, 11th Floor, New York, NY 10018 or info@skyhorsepublishing.com.

  Sky Pony® is a registered trademark of Skyhorse Publishing, Inc.®, a Delaware corporation.

  Visit our website at www.skyponypress.com.

  10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1

  Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data is available on file.

  Cover design by Sarah Brody

  Cover image credit iStock

  Print ISBN: 978-1-5107-0988-1

  Ebook ISBN: 978-1-5107-0997-3

  Printed in the United States of America

  Interior design by Joshua Barnaby

  To Lauren and David,

  With love

  “There are two ways to be fooled. One is to believe what isn’t true; the other is to refuse to believe what is true.”

  —Søren Kierkegaard

  1

  BEAUTIFUL BOY

  I approach Dad’s tombstone with trepidation, then breathe a sigh of relief. No mysterious flowers wilt at his grave as I had feared. Last August, someone left fresh orange lilies for him throughout the month. I never figured out who. Then, in September, the flowers stopped appearing as suddenly as they started. I always wondered, with an odd mixture of anxiety and hope, if I would run into the other mourner—someone else who honored my father. But I never did.

  Usually, the ritual of navigating the same cemetery rows, visiting Thomas Darren Benton, and putting a small rock on his headstone calms me. Now, the heat is relentless and sweat trickles down my back as I search for the perfect pebble. It needs to be a nice, roundish one. Despite the lilies left last summer, Dad wasn’t a bouquet kind of guy.

  I know this even though I never met him. He died before I was born, so I have no memories of him, only stories from Mom that I’ve heard so many times it feels like I was actually there. I see him beam during his graduation from veterinary school and feel his hand pat Mom’s pregnant belly. I hear him pick my name from the baby book: Ariella, meaning lion, although Mom insists they nickname me Ella. I smell the damp on his clothes from the night he rescued Oscar the kitten from a storm drain and brought him home to stay. These recollections have been cobbled together into my own version of Dad for the last fifteen years.

  Today the sky is gray and foreboding, but the occasional burst of wind does nothing to cool me. I finally find just the right rock nestled in a patch of grass and rub off the dirt with my fingers. My friend Jana taught me the tradition of leaving a stone as a way to mark my visits with something more permanent, more enduring than flowers.

  I’m the only person who comes to his grave somewhat regularly, other than last summer’s unknown mourner. I don’t think Mom’s been here since her engagement to Stanley, a non-reading, self-absorbed, stubby man. With the wedding only days away, Stanley’s settled into our apartment, but each awkward conversation we have leaves me yearning for the father who painted my room a cheerful yellow, who created a mini-library of animal books to read to his future daughter.

  I hesitate before Beloved Husband and Father, rolling the pebble between my fingers, then place it in line with the last one, making it the eighth in a row. I let my hand linger against the cool granite. Next week is Dad’s birthday, August 8. That number has been lucky for me since I was eight years old, when I could have died, but because of Dad’s warning, I didn’t.

  The air gusts, whipping strands of hair across my face and scattering the pebbles to the ground. My skin prickles at the eerie timing before I realize that the wind has been stormy on and off throughout the day. Still, it spooks me because nothing has disturbed my markers in months. Until now. It’s almost like Dad is giving me another sign.

  The cemetery turns out to be more peaceful than home. I’m lounging across my bed checking my phone with Oscar purring beside me when—bang—Mom pounds on the adjacent wall. Oscar scampers to the top of my bookcase, his favorite spot in times of trouble.

  The room next to mine serves as Mom’s office, and since my soon-to-be-stepbrother is expected to arrive later tonight, she’s fixing it up. Loudly.

  I give up on coaxing Oscar down and move to the doorway. “What are you doing?”

  “Look.” She points with the hammer at two new pictures of the Manhattan skyline where a framed print of The Cat in the Hat used to be. Besides changing the wall decorations, she also cleared out the closet and moved her many piles of papers from the desk. “Do
you think Blake will like it?”

  I have no idea what Blake will like. The only photo I’ve even seen of him is one that Stanley keeps on his nightstand. It’s a faded picture of a young blond boy at the beach, smiling up at him.

  “The room looks nice,” I say. “But it’s not like he’s living here forever.” Blake would only be staying with us for a few weeks until he moved into his dorm at NYU.

  “I know. But I want this to feel like home for him.”

  She certainly cares a lot about this guy we’ve never met. The filing cabinet, the now-spotless desk, and the fax machine are the sole remnants of her office.

  “After we find your dress today, I need to buy some blue sheets and maybe some towels, too,” she says. “Are you ready to go?”

  “Sure.” I sigh quietly.

  Our apartment building is directly across from the Hoboken PATH station. After a short train ride to the Newport Mall, I remember for the hundredth time why I hate shopping with Mom. Every dress she pulls off the rack is revolting. But the wedding is only days away. We need to find something suitable that won’t forever embarrass me when I see the photos in years to come.

  “How about this?” Mom holds up a mauve paisley thing with puffy sleeves, her eyes shiny with hope. “This color will look so flattering on you.”

  “Maybe.” I don’t want to hurt her feelings, so I purposely drift away to shop on my own. And then I see it: a pale yellow dress, strapless, with a flouncy skirt and sequins around the middle. The dress sparkles when I hold it against me. I can’t wait to try it on.

  Mom will hate it. She’ll want me to look conservative for the small group of friends and family at her wedding. My strategy is to show her other dresses she’ll hate even more. I find a black mini she’ll say isn’t long enough and a floral sundress she’ll think is too casual.

  When I get to the dressing room, Mom and three hideous pink dresses await.

  I try on the minidress first, which she predictably declares too short. Luckily, the mauve one bunches at my waist. She likes the sundress, but not for the wedding.

  I put on a blush-colored one.

  “It’s not bad,” she says. “What do you think?”

  “Too much lace. It’s like wearing a tablecloth.”

  She nods in agreement.

  Finally, I try on the yellow one and giggle with delight. I come out, posture perfect, feeling like a princess. “Isn’t it beautiful?”

  Mom frowns. “Strapless? You’d need something over it.”

  I twirl. “I have that silver sweater at home.”

  “Let’s see the rose-colored one.”

  “Fiiine.”

  In the dressing room, I breathe deeply as I put on the last dress.

  Her face lights up when I step out. “Ella! It’s so pretty! It brings a glow to your cheeks. And it’s perfect with your coloring.”

  She calls it my coloring because I inherited Dad’s brown hair and brown eyes instead of her fairness.

  “The rose is all right,” I say. “But don’t you think the ruffles look too childish for a sophomore?”

  “Honey. It’s perfect for an almost-sophomore. And it’s appropriate. The yellow one might be nice for a dance, but for the wedding …”

  I close the curtain and put on my shorts and favorite T-shirt, the one with the tabby cat that says Rescued is my favorite breed. It’s her wedding, I remind myself. She should get to choose. I should be mature.

  I walk out and hand her the ruffled dress.

  “Thank you. It means a lot to me,” Mom says. “I’ll pay for this and go to the bedding department. Want to meet at the food court in an hour?”

  “Sure.”

  I shake off my annoyance and detour into the accessories section, where my friend Grace had seen a cute wallet with kittens on it that she thought I’d like. I’m sifting through the clearance items when this guy approaches me, holding a bunch of ties. Whoa. He’s tall and blond, and his white polo shirt shows off his tan.

  “Excuse me,” Beautiful Boy says. “I’m trying to decide between these?” His voice lilts into a question. His smile is friendly, his eyes deep brown and intense. “I suck at this kind of thing.” He somehow manages to look model-perfect and sheepish at the same time. “Would you mind helping me pick one?”

  I blink for a minute, staring at his face instead of the ties. My delayed response verges on awkward. “Okay,” I say. “What are you wearing it with?”

  “A gray suit.”

  I’m conscious of his eyes on me as I study the ones he’s chosen. It makes it hard to think. None of the ties have any yellow, my favorite color. Maybe it’s the dress shopping with Mom, but I point to the gray one with rose-colored diamond shapes. “I like this.”

  “Thanks.”

  I wish I could prolong our interaction somehow so that I can learn more about him. He lingers a too-short moment, then gives me another smile before he turns away.

  I can’t help feeling like something momentous has transpired. I’m a believer in karma and fate and the mysterious workings of the universe. As I watch Beautiful Boy walk away, I hope that meeting him again is meant to be.

  2

  THE NEW NORMAL

  I arrive at the food court first and wait. Once Mom gets there, we each buy a salad: me because it’s vegan, and her because she’s dieting for the wedding. While we eat, she shows me the navy-striped sheets she bought as if they are vaguely interesting. It’s like being subjected to an itchy sweater. Is this instant sibling rivalry?

  “Are you going with Stanley to the airport tonight to pick up Blake?” I ask.

  “His flight lands late, around two in the morning. He said he’ll take a cab. I think he wants to show up on his own instead of relying on his father.”

  “Why is he even coming to the wedding? I thought he and Stanley weren’t talking.”

  I haven’t heard Stanley mention Blake since he’d tried to fly his son out here for a fancy dinner and he never appeared. I had felt bad for Stanley. He’d wanted it to be the “special first meeting of our future blended family,” but Blake’s empty seat at the table turned it into a dismal night.

  “I think they’ve worked through a lot of emotional issues. Stanley seems convinced this time will be different. Blake was young when his parents got divorced. He felt abandoned, I think.” She rummages through a shopping bag, no doubt to change the subject. “Anyway, look what else I bought.” She pulls out a blue plaid throw pillow.

  “Great,” I say, not bothering to fake much enthusiasm.

  “What’s going on with you today?” she asks. “You’ve been in a bad mood since you went out this morning. Where did you run off to, anyway?”

  I’m a horrible liar, so I don’t even try. “The cemetery.”

  She shakes her head, wordlessly conveying that I’ve disappointed her somehow by visiting Dad so recently. I tamp down the annoyance for the millionth time today. I have a right to visit the cemetery. Mom doesn’t understand; my friends don’t either. He’s been dead your whole life, they say.

  But especially in August, the month of his birth and death, the visits help me. It’s an uncomplicated relationship, and being in the cemetery brings me peace, quiets the anxious thoughts that often scurry through my mind.

  Mom and I don’t speak on the walk to the PATH. By the door to the station, a homeless man sits on a piece of cardboard next to his German shepherd and a garbage bag of belongings. The dog looks well cared for but pants from the heat. I dig through Dad’s worn leather messenger bag that I’ve been carrying lately and pull out some loose change.

  “No,” Mom says, steering me by the elbow.

  “But the dog looks thirsty!”

  “I know you want to help. You have a kind heart. But it’s better to give money to a homeless organization instead.”

  I yank my arm free and keep walking. I desperately want to avoid an argument in the days before she goes away for her honeymoon. As much as Mom irritates me, she’s all the family I’v
e got. We’ve had lots of fun times through the years, I remind myself. Like our trip to Disney World and the time she drove me all the way to Alliance, Ohio, to visit the Feline Historical Museum.

  I need to survive the next five days without a major blowup. Then: freedom. She’ll be on her honeymoon, I’ll stay with Grace, and when Mom returns, we’ll reach some new type of equilibrium. I hope.

  “Would you mind bringing the shopping bags up?” she asks when we reach our apartment building. “I’m due at the store by three. What are your plans for this afternoon? I could use some help there.” Mom owns Benton Books a few blocks away. When I turned fifteen, she finally agreed to start paying me by the hour. But I checked the calendar on the kitchen bulletin board this morning and I’m off today.

  “I’m going to Grace’s.”

  “Can you skip it? Please? I’ll feel better leaving for the honeymoon if the store is in good shape. And you’ll spend time with her while I’m away.”

  “I guess I can see Grace later.” I sigh, but restrain myself from the eye roll.

  “Thank you.” She gives me a hug and some of the resentment fades away. This must be a nerve-racking time for her. I need to be understanding.

  At home, I put Mom’s bags on the counter. I hang up my new dress, hoping it will somehow look better than it did in the store.

  No. It’s still dreadful.

  Stanley’s at work. I plop on the couch, relishing this time alone. You wouldn’t think going from two people to three in our home would be such a big deal, but it’s been an adjustment. Oscar jumps up and rubs his head against me. He’s a beautiful tabby, black and tan, with white around his nose and a belly the color of coffee. I pet him as I absorb the happy silence.

  Would I feel this way if it were Dad living here instead of Stanley?

  For a moment, I find myself lost in the world of what-might-have-been. If only Dad’s emergency surgery hadn’t run late. If only he had skipped the meeting afterward and come straight home. If only the drunk had given someone else his car keys and their paths hadn’t tragically collided. My life would be different. I would be different, somehow an enhanced, better version of me.