Wednesday, November 18, 2015

Christmas for the Special Needs Mom

Any parent of a severely disabled child will tell you that Christmas is a huge pain in the ass. Don't get me wrong; we love showering our kids with presents. What parent doesn't? But finding the right kind of presents can be a nightmare. My son, for example, loves superheroes. They are like Pokemon to him in that he wants to collect them all. Problem is, he has very little control of his arms. That means his action figures remain inactive all year long unless I help him play with them. And sadly, I am about as good with sound effects and play fighting as I am at keeping up this blog. 
So, every year, I go out in search of the perfect gift for him. I have a list of all the things it has to be. First, it has to be awesome. Second, it has to have sound effects since my sound effect board is broken. Third, it has to do something. He is 14! He wants action and speed, and he wants to control it. I don't mean that he wants to hit a switch and watch a frog dance; he wants to control what it does when he wants it to do it. 
Where oh where is the Nintendo Power Glove when I need it?
Each year, I find a toy to get excited about. Then I sell an organ to afford it (not really). Come Christmas Eve, I am so excited for him to see it and play with it that I look like a squirrel that mistook catnip for delicious pastries. I bounce up and down squealing at higher pitches than a recorder in the hands of a two year-old. Then, Christmas morning, he opens that coveted gift that Mom was so excited about. 
It runs; it jumps; it dances! All you have to do is touch this tiny little button on the remote. Which he can't do.
This happens every time.  
Well, except one. My best friend bought him Bigfoot. That thing has a remote with HUGE buttons, and he still loves it. 
But he also loves dinosaurs. 
We bought him Crusher (the interactive dinosaur) one year. While it does respond on command, the commands have to be spoken. My son is non-verbal. 
The struggle is real, folks. 
Why cant we just have amazing toys that don't cost a million dollars and can be used by any child who has limited motor function, and doesn't say "ages 2-4," huh? 
Christmas shopping sucks.


*This blog post has been brought to you by the number 7 and the time I cleaned my son's room and found all of his unopened toys from last year.*

Monday, November 2, 2015

Daily Writing Challenge, Day 2

The First Book I Ever Read (That I Remember)...

Okay, so I added that last part. Because the truth is that I have no idea what the first book I ever read was. It may surprise you to hear that I was quite the little reader in elementary school. I even won a microscope for reading the most pages back in second grade. Sadly, the microscope didn't last long, but my love for reading remains. This was back during the time of Reading Rainbow when my little brothers were so small that we all had to read to them. I probably read thousands of pages before finding the book that made me love reading. 

That's why I can only share the first book I remember reading, which was The Secret Garden by Frances Hodgson Burnett. I remember devouring this book over and over again throughout my childhood, yet I don't remember a single thing that happened in it. I should probably go back and re-read it today to see what enchanted me so much about that story. Anyway, that was the book that got me into reading. I would sit outside in the patio swing and read every word as if it were the last word ever written. 

What's the first book you remember reading? 

Sunday, November 1, 2015

'Tis The Season... For Nanowrimo.

In the spirit of Nanowrimo, I have committed to do two things. For one, I am going to meet the 50,000 word goal, and all of those words will be going to the Sentinel Series. The best part about that is that I only have about that many words left on Blood and Water. Good news, right? The other thing is that I have accepted the challenge to do a writing prompt for my blog every day. If you have suggestions about what you would like me to write about, feel free to email me at cjethingtonbooks@gmail.com and I will see what i can do. 
Until then, let's get started, shall we? 

#1. What Made Me Start Writing.

If you've read my author bio, you have seen that I claim to have been making up stories since before I could write. This is all true, though I'm surprised I remember it. 
When I was four, I used to make my mom create homework assignments for me so that I could sit at the table and do my "work" while my older sisters were doing their's. Normally, it would be math problems and coloring. This was back when I liked math. In other words, a time before my alphabet and my numbers joined together to confuse me. 
Anyway, one day, my older sister was talking with my mother about a creative writing assignment she had to do for school. I wasn't sure what she was talking about, but it sure sounded like fun. So, like any other little sister would do, I eavesdropped. 
My sister broke into an elaborate story about a little girl with an imaginary friend. Even now, I can remember the way the imaginary friend's red hair flew around her head like flames. She had green eyes and would cause mischief everywhere she went. This was back before we ever saw Drop Dead Fred, by the way. I imagined the types of mischief the red-headed girl would cause. And later on, I wished that I had an imaginary friend of my own. 
In case you were wondering, I have many now, but never had one when I was younger. 
Over the years, I must have written a story about a little red-headed imaginary friend at least twenty times and in every medium and genre possible. Eventually, that character spawned many others and she faded into the background. 
Before anyone feels the need to point out that this was plagiarism, let me say this:
A little while ago, I asked my older sister if she remembered that story and if she had been annoyed by me copying it throughout our childhood. She said she had no idea what I was talking about. That actually made me feel a lot better. 
That same sister (let's call her Wendy because, well, that's her name), inspired me more than she will ever know with my writing. She not only gave me the little red-headed imaginary friend, but she instilled a love of fairy tales within me. At one point, I even decided to write fan fiction of her favorite show when it ended. It was awful and she never saw it, but it was exceptionally good practice. 

Wednesday, October 21, 2015

An open letter to the boys who made fun of my son for being in a wheelchair.

Dear Boys, 

My daughter is in your class. When you went to the library today, she was with you. She watched you stop and look at the picture of her older brother that hangs on the wall in the front hall of your school. She saw you point at his picture, heard you remark about how he was in a wheelchair, then laugh. She saw all of this and couldn't say anything to you because her heart hurt too much. 

Yes, her brother is in a wheelchair. He also has a feeding tube, which gives him his nutrients. And no, he can't verbalize how much it hurt him to see his sister so upset over someone making fun of him. I doubt you are the first to laugh at my son and his special needs, and unfortunately, you probably won't be the last.

But that doesn't make it okay. 

Since you think this is such a funny situation, I thought I would share some other "funny" things for you to enjoy. 

My son was born the same way you were. He might have even had the same doctor deliver him. Odds are, you were born in the same hospital. But when my son was born, a huge mistake was made that left him with an intense injury to his brain. He could have walked, talked, and beat you at hockey, but someone wasn't paying as much attention as they should have been. So when he should have been taking his first breath, he was getting his first round of CPR. When he should have been receiving his first bath, he was receiving injections to put him to sleep to stop the seizures. And when he should have been coming home, he had to live in the hospital, hooked up to monitors and machines that kept him alive. 

Not funny enough for you? 

Let's talk about his connection with his sister then. My daughter loves her brother more than anything in this world. She helps take care of him and has spent nights crying while he went in for surgery after surgery, afraid that there might come a time when he wouldn't come home.  I have seen them communicate silently and watched her understand everything he couldn't say. I have also seen her stand by with sheer panic on her face as he had a major seizure that lasted 4.5 minutes. I have had to take her with us to the emergency room when he had to have his tube replaced or had to get antibiotics for pneumonia because a child like you didn't understand what going to school sick could do to someone like him. When she visited the hospital during his last surgery, she took his hand and told him that everything was going to be okay and that she would take care of him when he got home. And then she did. When he woke up in pain, she sat next to him until he could sleep. Have you ever loved someone so much that the thought of losing them terrified you? That is my daughter with her brother. That's the same boy you saw in that picture and laughed at because he was different than you.

But is he really? 

I bet you would be surprised to know that he likes movies and sports. He likes video games and superheroes. He has a collection of Ninja Turtles that would blow you away. He loves lots of things that I bet you love, too. 

He also loves making new friends and making people smile. 

The boy you laughed at because he couldn't walk and had to sit in a wheelchair would take you up on a race any day of the week. He would tell you jokes and play games with you. But all you chose to see is his chair. 

Well, I'm grateful for that chair because it is his legs. I am grateful for his feeding tube because it's the reason why he is so healthy. And most of all, I am grateful that he took his first breath, because it almost didn't come. My son, the boy you made fun of, holds no grudges against you and only wants you to be happy and accepting. 

And one day, I hope you learn to see past the things that make someone different and start to see how they are the same. Otherwise, you will miss out on knowing someone as amazing as my son and you will lose someone as sweet and caring as my daughter as a friend.
 

Sincerely, 
A mom of a superhero

Monday, September 14, 2015

Oil and Vinegar Release Date

So, I admit, I've been slacking lately. It seems everyone I know had a birthday these last two months, including the people who actually have birthdays in January through March. Don't ask me how that works, but apparently it does. Anyway, I've been so caught up that I forgot to mention the release date of Oil and Vinegar...

Which is today! Yay!

To commemorate this momentous occasion, the eBook for Cinnamon and Salt is on sale through the kindle store at http://amzn.com/B00V1105RU for 99 cents until next week. I just love you guys that much. If you guys don't have Cinnamon and Salt yet, now's your chance to take advantage of good deals. And who doesn't love good deals?

Throughout the week, I will be posting teasers and other announcements on my facebook page at https://www.facebook.com/cjethington. Look for giveaways over the next little while because I'm sure we will host a few of those, too.

Also, Cinnamon and Salt will be featured in The Books Machine newsletter on Wednesday (9/16). The Books Machine announces great deals on amazing books. You have to check it out. Like, now. Seriously. http://www.thebooksmachine.com

Well, catch you guys on the flip side.

Oh, wait! I almost forgot. The links to where you can get Oil and Vinegar are:


PAPERBACK:

http://amzn.com/0990702626
https://www.createspace.com/5661971.

EBOOK:
http://www.amazon.com/Oil-Vinegar-Sentinels-Book-2-ebook/dp/B015BWS9W2/ref=sr_1_1?s=digital-text&ie=UTF8&qid=1442243679&sr=1-1&keywords=oil%20and%20vinegar%20sentinels


When I have all the others, I will share those, too. Thanks for always being so awesome.

--C.j .Ethington

Wednesday, August 26, 2015

These are a few of my favorite things...

How about a fun, uplifting, positive blog post today? I think it's long overdue. 
First, let me say that this is not an inspirational post. Nope, not at all. In fact, you could continue right past this post without any side effects. Well, except that crazy demon flu you might contract, but that's not this post's fault. Something you may not know about demon flu is that 1 in 5 people get it in their lifetime. It's true! Look it up. You might already have it. I recommend reading about it on the very credible source cjethingtonwiki.com. That bitch knows everything. 
Okay, so that site doesn't really exist, but it totally should. 

Anyway...

On to the actual post.

A FEW OF MY FAVORITE THINGS: 

RAIN- I've been looking forward to a rain storm for the past few weeks. Today, it finally hit. Now my back porch is wonderfully damp with the smell of cedar emanating off my deck. It smells clean and natural. Not at all like the smoky smell we've had for the past week. 

WRITING GAMES- I've played writing games since I was a little girl. My first game ever was to redesign the way I saw things. I would describe an object as I saw it then I would eliminate every adjective and adverb I already used and describe it again. In high school, we played a game called "Victim or Villain." I would ask each of my friends which they wanted to be then write them into a story that way. I love my friends for mixing it up and not always choosing to be the villain. Some of them even got to be the hero, though I never gave them that option. A couple years ago, my brother and I started a game where he would challenge me with a word. That word had to appear in the next paragraph of whatever I was writing. He is immortalized in every book I write through this game. 

FAMILY- I have the greatest family ever. It's better not to argue with me. Unless your brother is Iron Man, your sister is Jennifer Lawrence, or you're married to Jensen Ackles, there's no point in arguing because you'll lose. 

COFFEE- Without you, I am nothing. 

MY WRITING TEAM- I have some of most amazing people on my team. They put their own lives aside and spend countless hours in my scary little brain just so I can create my stories. I should probably start a GoFundMe campaign to pay for their therapy. They never complain, though. Instead, they ask me what's next and make sure I have proper medical care when I bang my head against the wall in frustration. They are the reason most of my manuscripts haven't been reduced to ash or tiny shreds of paper. 

Finally, MY GRAPHIC DESIGNER- He puts countless hours into each and every image and cover. Meanwhile, he balances his full time job, his kids, and his crazy wife (me). Just look at the beautiful cover of Oil and Vinegar below. Enough said. 




What are a few of your favorite things?

Tuesday, July 7, 2015

On changing the cover for Cinnamon and Salt

What? We changed the cover? When did that happen? 
You probably didn't even notice. It's not like we made a big deal about it or anything. 
I know, I know, I probably should have said something, but I'm still new to this whole publishing thing. And let me tell you a secret: this all still seems surreal. Despite Cinnamon and Salt sitting in a pretty bound cover on my bookshelf, I still just see it as that story I heard over and over again in my head for years. 
That doesn't mean I don't still think of it. In fact, Nicky and I are still pretty good friends; I still lament over the fact that Brady is gay (wouldn't he make an awesome boyfriend?); and I still want to punch Asher in the face then hug him to make it all better. 
So lucky for me, I've been hard at work with these characters through the next installment in the series. They've made me laugh, cry, and want to kill a few of them off when they weren't behaving. 
Are you as excited as I am? 

Oh yeah, the new cover...
I was having so much fun gloating about the new book that I almost forgot to give you the details you are here for. How embarrassing. 
About the cover change: 
Well, later this week, Cinnamon and Salt will be available on most platforms, whereas it was just available through Amazon before. It's growing up so big.
So, to commemorate my little book carving a space for itself in the market, we decided to give it a new look. There have been a few minor changes on the inside as well, but nothing major. And isn't that exterior pretty? 
I love it. 
Well, I'm off to torture some characters into submission and wrap up Oil and Vinegar. 
Now who's excited? 

Tuesday, June 2, 2015

What it's like to have an anxiety disorder...

Do you know someone with an anxiety disorder? Well, of course you do. Whether you know it or not, someone you think you are close to has one. Nine times out of ten, they won't tell you about it either. Not because they are worried you will make a big deal out of it, but because they are worried you won't understand at all. You see, an anxiety disorder is not the shaky feeling you get before you perform on stage or the nervous feeling in your stomach on a first date. No, it's like effing Ebola. Okay, maybe not like Ebola. But it definitely feels like cancer sometimes in that it is silent, eats you alive, and sometimes death feels more appealing than one more damn panic attack.

Not many people understand anxiety disorders, which is why I decided to write this blog post. Because by not knowing what your friend/family member/significant other/minion is going through, you cannot fully prepare yourself to help.

Spoiler alert: Telling your anxiety riddled friend that they don't need meds if they can just learn to breathe through it is not a good way to help.

So, here we go.

This is the situation:
You go to the store for ice cream and happen to run into, let's say, an old friend. Maybe it was kismet. Maybe you both just happened to like the same rocky-road-peanut-butter-deliciousness that only one store in the whole damn valley sells. Who knows? Fact is, it's been ten years and you both are there, face-to-face, exchanging words... interacting, as it were.

This is what the person without an anxiety disorder will do:
You'll smile, tell the person (let's call her Stephanie) that it was great to see her, and head off toward the ice cream. You might say to yourself, "Hey, that was cool to see Stephanie again," or "I should friend request her on whatever social media channel I'm addicted to this week."
Pretty simple, right?
Situation leads to action leads to reaction leads to delicious peanut buttery rocky-road goodness. No harm, no foul.

Now let me show you what happens when that same person has an anxiety disorder:
You smile, tell Stephanie that it was great to see her, then continue to exchange pleasantries as you back away into the store. If you were there for anything less dire than your favorite ice cream (toilet paper or toothpaste), you would probably climb right back in your car and head home. Instead, you steer through the aisles on auto pilot. The cashier speaks to you, but you don't hear her. You are too busy replaying the interaction over and over in your head.
Her name was Stephanie right?
Did you say anything stupid or offensive?
What shirt are you wearing?
Do you smell clean enough?
The cashier hands you your change. You don't even bother to count it (something you'll agonize over later) before shoving it into your pocket. You climb into the car, start up the engine, and back out carefully. You've never obeyed so many traffic laws in your life. That's because you are convinced that if you get into an accident or get pulled over, it will be another exchange with someone else you know. Then that person will talk to Stephanie (because of course they are best friends, why wouldn't they be?) and share stories about you. They will talk about how awful you look or how you had another kid. You're sure neither of them think you should have had one in the first place. Maybe they'll even take it to the internet. #youfailatlife
We haven't even made it home yet at this point.
By the time you make it to your driveway, you've convinced yourself that Stephanie's name was really Stefanie and that you probably said it with some inflection that hinted at the misspelling. You're sure you've offended her beyond all reason. Nothing you can do about it now except feel awful.
Next, you run into the house and take off the shirt you're wearing because it doesn't matter that you got it out of the dryer that morning, you're sure it smells weird. The shirt doesn't match the pants anymore so you might as well change those, too. And you know what goes great with any shirt? Pajama pants! And what do you care? You're not going back outside where the sun is just a spotlight following you around, waiting for you to screw up so someone can pop out behind a tree to record it and post that embarrassing shit on the world-wide-trashcan so it can go viral.
Stephanie would just love that, wouldn't she?
She's probably searching out old photos of you from your awkward or fat years and showing them to everyone.
Because she's probably turned into just that kind of bitch in the ten years since you've seen her.
You empty your pockets and notice that you never counted your change. You run through that exchange in your head, too, cursing yourself for ever leaving the house at all. You're sure the cashier shorted you a dollar. Your heart is racing and your fingertips are going numb. It's just a dollar, but if someone could take advantage of you like that when you are so distracted then what else could happen?
This is all too much.
After changing your Facebook privacy settings so Stephanie can't find you if she tries, you head off to take a nap because you know the only way to calm down is to climb under your covers and sleep. This could follow a friendly visit from our wonderful friends Xanax or Klonopin, but it doesn't have to.
You agonize over the steps you took today that lead you to that store. You curse your all-consuming addiction to gooey ice cream awesomeness. You curse the show you were watching last night that had that same ice cream flavor on it. Surely, that's what made you crave it. You curse your TV for being on in the first place. You should have read. But you haven't been to the book store because your mortgage was due. The same mortgage you were out paying when you decided to stop at the store for your ice cream.
Finally, you curse your house. Without it, you never would have been where that awful person "Stephanie" was in the first place.
When you finally fall asleep, napping away, you dream of the memories you have with Stephanie. And yes, her name was Stephanie with a ph. And she was always really nice.
You wake up feeling better.
Until you look over at the nightstand and realize that your dollar is still missing. Then it starts all over again.

Having an anxiety disorder is like being your own bully. Only this bully comes in the form of illogical thoughts and irrational reactions. It sits in your head and taunts you with "what ifs," "could haves," and "should haves."

You think I'm kidding? Ask your closest friend who suffers from this disorder. Though, be warned. They are not going to admit any of this to you. Because admitting it usually only gets one of two reactions: complete ignorance or complete over-empathy. Yes, it is possible to be over-empathetic when it comes to a friend with anxiety.

So next time you see one of your friends glaze over, give you a partial smile, and shift their weight back and forth, ask them if there's something else they want to do. Keep an open ear, but unless you have anxiety yourself, don't pretend to understand it. Because despite how many books you've read or how many people you talk to about it, you don't understand until you go through it.

The struggle is real. The scenario I described to you was only ten minutes from that person's day. That's part of what anxiety is: hours worth of emotion and thought crammed into ten tiny agonizing minutes. I don't assume that anxiety disorders are the same for everyone. In fact, I promise you they're not. Sometimes they are better and sometimes they are much, much worse. This is just one of mine.

Because I have severe anxiety disorder.
Want to know how I can have crippling anxiety and still post this blog and publish books?
Well, that's a different blog post for a different day.







Return to my webpage to see more updates about projects I'm working on at CjEthington.com.
Thanks for reading. If you enjoyed this blog post and would like to see more, please comment or subscribe.












Tuesday, April 7, 2015

My first giveaway on Goodreads...

So this whole thing still feels pretty surreal. It still surprises me to see that Cinnamon and Salt is out there. So imagine how crazy it felt to do this...



Goodreads Book Giveaway

Cinnamon and Salt by C.J. Ethington

Cinnamon and Salt

by C.J. Ethington

Giveaway ends April 25, 2015.
See the giveaway details at Goodreads.
Enter to Win



That's right. There's a giveaway going on for Cinnamon and Salt over at Goodreads right now. Of course, we will continue to do some giveaways on my author profile on facebook.
Along with each book, I will even give out some of my pretty new bookmarks. I love them so much. Good luck!

Wednesday, April 1, 2015

9 years...

Today, I have been contemplating what 9 years really means to me, and this is what I've come up with: 
9 years is 2 beautiful children and the acceptance of 2 more as your own, which I'm sure hasn't always been easy. 
It's a few large mistakes and a lifetime of forgiveness. 
It's 7 vacations. Some with smiles, some not so much. 
It's 9 Christmases waking up exhausted and sharing secretive smiles as the kids tear through their gifts.
It's a hundred heartaches followed by a hundred opportunities to heal together. 
It's a thousand opportunities to accept someone else's quirks and habits.
It's a million tears offset by many more smiles.
 
A lot of people walk into marriage with expectations of an ideal coupling where there are no raised voices, no insults, and no pain. While that would be awesome, we should all remember that marriage does not bestow mind reading powers on either of you. The wedding ring is not THE ONE RING to rule them all. It is not a license to act like an asshole to your partner and expect forgiveness. Marriage, like any other relationship,  weathers a lot of storms, and I am proud to say that mine has withstood many. When our marriage has suffered damages, we have pulled together and repaired it. My husband is quite the handyman. 
So, what does 9 years mean to me? 
It means everything! 
What does it mean to you?

Sunday, March 22, 2015

The release of my first book: Cinnamon and Salt

Ever since I was a little girl, I've known the answer to one question and one question alone. 
What is your favorite cereal? 
And of course the answer was Peanut Butter Cap'n Crunch because, obviously. 
But that's not the question everyone wants to ask. They want to know what you want to be when you grow up. I'll admit, I too am one of these infuriating grown ups who ask every child I know what they want to be when they enter the unforgiving world of expectations. 
I love hearing their answers. 
Fireman.
Policeman.
Actor.
Rockstar.
My own son, despite his disabilities, wants to be a doctor. He plans to cure his own ailments one day and I, as his mother, couldn't be more giddy that he reaches for something so challenging. 
My answer, from the age of four, has never changed. Deep down in my soul, I wanted to be a writer. That's it. The joy of creating a new world and breathing life into my characters has been my ultimate desire. Not that I always admitted it.
With the release of Cinnamon and Salt yesterday and the terror that has ensued over having a book I feel so connected to out in the world, I have been reflecting on this a lot. 
I never thought I could be a published writer. So I never tried. Sure, I wrote stories here and there, but it took a long time before I considered publishing. I always thought I needed a "real job." As I entered the strange and awkward world of adulthood, I thought I needed to have a job that would make me unhappy and keep me that way. Not because of the people I worked with or anything, but because I was letting my creative side deteriorate in lieu of something that would give me a steady paycheck. The paycheck was alright, but the people were the reason I continued to show up for work every day. You people know who you are. 
Anyway, I've been reflecting on this a lot over the last 24 hours. 
Why in the world did I ever feel like I couldn't reach that goal? Why do any of us feel like we have to stifle who we really are for a steady paycheck? Is it because we are afraid that the economy will collapse when jobs go undone because they aren't as glamorous as another? Or is it because bills need to get paid and we don't believe there is any way to pay them without a frown on or face and dread in our heart? Are we afraid of the risk? 
I guarantee we all have bought into one of those beliefs at least once. 
My question is why.
Why do we feel like we need to be unhappy doing what we do every day? Why do we impress that fallacy upon our children? 
How many times have you stopped to ask a child what they want to be when they grow up and rolled your eyes when they tell you that they want to be a superhero? 
Now, why did you do that?
Wouldn't it be more productive to ask them what they think a superhero is? Maybe they don't see the cape and mask, but rather a badge, a truck, or fatigues.
Why do we do this to our children? Does the world really need less people who are unhappy with what they do? Does it really make a difference if we have one less telemarketer who goes home feeling bad about themselves because they had someone call them names at the end of their ten hour shift before they went home to take care of the baby they go to work for in the first place? 
This is my challenge to you:
This week, ask a child that age old question, "What do you want to be when you grow up?"
Then listen to their answer. And I mean really listen. Then, no matter what they say, tell them that you can't wait to see them become that dream. 
Who knows? You might have just inspired the next JK Rowling, Angelina Jolie, Stephen Hawking, or Erin Brockovich. 
I think you get the idea. If each of us takes an extra second to support our fellow human being rather than tear them down, we could do great things. 
Lose the judgement. Question the fallacy. 
Follow the immortal words of Ghandi:
"Be the change you want to see in the world."



Wednesday, February 25, 2015

Cinnamon and Salt

Copyright: C.j. Ethington 2015.
All rights reserved.

Content is subject to change before final publication.


Chapter 1

New Year’s Eve:  
A night for celebrations, new beginnings and more alcohol than one can imagine.  
I stand on the frozen lawn outside of a large, white house. The sounds of muffled music, voices and laughter waft past me. I try to convince myself that the reason I haven’t gone in yet is because I’m just not a people person, but I’m lying and I know it. 
It’s too cold to be standing out here. I pull my corduroy jacket tighter around my chest. The last two fingers on my right hand have already gone numb. Frostbite is on its way.  
Tonight will be the night. I will finally do this, I tell myself in the worst mental pep talk ever. Not even I believe me. Not after the last forty times I’ve chickened out.
The door swings open as I quietly mount the steps. Spencer Adams stumbles out the door and folds over the railing in a regurgitating heap. I’ve never been a member of the Spencer Adams Fan Club; however, I have been a little more sympathetic to the inebriated ever since I had a similar experience at the pool last year.  
“Are you alright?” I ask, only mildly concerned.  
He crumples to his knees before passing out on the porch floor. An inaudible groan writhes out of his throat before his eyes flutter shut.  
Hunkering down on my heels, I hoist him up using the infamous forearms-under-the-armpits maneuver I’ve had to learn over the years. I was bound to learn something from hanging out with drunken people who are drawn like magnets to the kitchen floor whenever they feel like puking or passing out. Being that I am usually the sober one, I’m also the one who usually has to move them. 
So why do I still do it, you ask?
Got me.
Using my elbow, I pound on the door and count how many seconds it takes before someone comes to let us in. Spencer has at least fifty pounds on me and with each one, his weight seems to double. My arms ache like my bones are bending backwards.  
Finally someone opens the door.  
Not anyone helpful, but someone nonetheless.  
“Can you… um, move out of the way, or help, or something?” I grunt at Melinda Carter, or as I like to think of her, Melin-Duh. Her expression is two shades less interesting than her normal blank expression as she slowly moves out of the doorway. If she were to move any slower, I might throw him at her. It’s not like I really expected her to help, but it would have been nice if she did something other than stand by and watch.  
Spencer makes oomph and umph sounds as I jostle his body back and forth, aiming him through the house. Halfway down the hall, I turn and push the door to Brady McGowan’s father’s study open. I don’t bother to see how many couples are tucked into the corners of the room. Why should I be considerate? These are his friends, not mine. As far as I’m concerned, they should be the ones to deal with him.  
Since the couch is occupied, I lower him to the middle of the floor. Before I leave, I turn his head to the side in case he pukes or something. If he were to asphyxiate, I would probably feel guilty as hell for leaving him there, which is exactly what I intend to do.  
A man I’ve never seen before sits on the couch watching me, his forefinger tapping against his knee. I wonder what he is doing in the designated make-out room all by himself, but decide I don’t want to know. The answer would probably just make me dry-heave. Just looking at him with his stone grey eyes and his pale blond hair makes my skin itch. And the way he stares back at me doesn’t make matters any better.  
“Can you keep an eye on him?” I ask. “He’ll probably pass out, but just in case.”  
He nods slowly, his gaze fastened to my face. It feels like he’s trying to connect me to some fuzzy memory, but can’t quite do it.  
Feeling awkward, I thank him and leave the room. I’ve done my part and in a latent gesture to be nice, I even shut the door behind me.  
I’ve been coming to this house for years now and still love it. It’s large, clean and best of all, parentless. Brady’s parents vacation a lot because they can afford it and when Brady turned thirteen, he suddenly became too much of a hassle to drag along, so he was allowed to stay home. Some people might think it a psychological cry for help that he started testing the waters of rebellion around the same time, but I call it opportunity. So far, he’s been able to get away with everything.  
I pass by the stairs and down the hallway that leads to the kitchen and entertainment room. I trail my finger along the wall just below Brady’s school pictures. I almost don’t recognize him as a kindergartner. He’s pudgy with freckles everywhere and soft auburn hair parted down the middle. I’ve seen the picture before, but it startles a laugh out of me anyway.  
I walk toward the sound of girls laughing and the relieved sigh of beer cans being plucked open. If I were to make a soundtrack of Brady’s life, this would be the introduction. 
“Nicky! Good to see ya,” Brady says. He waves a martini glass at me; gold flecks swirl in a thick, clear liquid. There’s a beer in his other hand. “Wanna drink?”  
“Yes, please,” I nearly beg, stripping off my jacket and tossing it onto the back of a chair. “What you got?”  
“Anything and everything. Name your poison.”  
Liquor store boxes line the counters and walls. In each one is a cardboard sectional that makes it possible to fit twelve bottles into one box without any breaking. Doing the math in my head, I realize that he probably has at least seventy-two bottles of liquor in the kitchen alone. Give or take whichever ones have been drained.  
“I see you’re cutting back on the alcohol, Brady,” I say, wryly, motioning around the kitchen. “How much did you spend on this thing anyway and who did you get to buy it?”  
“Don’t you worry about that, Kitten,” he replies. “Besides, the champagne is from dear Daddy’s personal stash. It’s an amazing batch and I doubt he’ll even know it’s gone.”  
Michael McGowan is as big a lush as they come.  
The kitchen is so crowded that I have to pull my arms close to avoid touching anyone by accident. Otherwise, I may get accused of trying to feel someone up. It happened once to Greg Tandy and turned into a huge debacle. Better to be safe than sorry.
“I’ll take whatever,” I say. Brady’s been a good buddy since junior high. I’m pretty sure I can trust him with whatever I might ingest.  
Brady winks at the girl beside him. Her bra is green with pink martini glasses patterned across the cups. I know this because her shirt is already missing. That is, if she ever had one. She giggles and fingers the collar of his shirt.  
Brady turns back to me. “Harder or softer than beer?” he asks.  
“Harder. But don’t knock me out. I’ll have to go home eventually.”  
“Or you could stay here. There’s a spare bedroom, you know,” Brady says, his grin so wide I can make out the sparkle of his toothpaste.
“Nah, I’ll pass, but thanks.”  
Martini Girl shoots me a sharp look. I lean forward and flip her hair behind her shoulder for her. “Do you know what a wasted effort is, darlin’?”  
She sticks her tongue out at me and stomps off.  
Her absence doesn’t even faze Brady, who is mixing cocktails like they are potions and he is a wizard.  
Moments later, I have a drink in my hand made by The Amazing Martini Master. I raise it in a toast to him and take a swig. It tastes of vodka, champagne, sprite and some sort of fruit juice. It actually isn’t that bad, just kind of tart.  
“Good, right?”  
I make a face and he laughs.  
“It gets better, I promise you. Just keep drinking.”   
I thank him and move toward the entertainment room with drink in hand. It’s stifling in here from all the natural heat being passed around. It’s not long before I realize that half the crowd doesn’t even know me. I know most of them. We’ve only attended the same schools for most of our lives, but they have no idea who I am.   
Except one person: Alex Berkley. 
He pushes his way through the crowd, patting someone on the back here, tossing out a knuckle bump there, and finally pointing in my direction to indicate that he’s seen me. I get a little thrill seeing that the drink in his hand is identical to mine. Stupid, I know.
Alex is the king of this crowd. Guys follow him like he is a snake charmer and girls beg to talk to him. It’s disgusting really.
Oh, and he’s also my best friend.
Alex bumps me with his elbow and says, “You’re late.”  
Heat floods my cheeks. I fidget with my hair to hide it. “Fashionably,” I reply.  
He laughs. “Sure. I was starting to worry that I’d have to hide the alcohol just so you could have some if you ever showed up.”  
I look toward the kitchen. It looks like a liquor store threw up in there, save for Brady dancing with another shirtless girl. “Sure you did.”  
Something to his right catches his eye. That’s why I hate these things. There’s so much going on. It’s like you can’t have an uninterrupted conversation with anyone.
“So whatcha think?” he asks, gesturing to the party with his glass.  
There are so many people here I can hardly breathe. If this were any other night, the cops would have already come and sent everyone home, but it isn’t. This is New Year’s Eve. As long as the drunks stay indoors and don’t bother the sober people, they can usually fly under the radar. Even the underage.  
I don’t fit in with this crowd. I never have. Like oil to water, I have floated among these people. While they were out drinking on weekends, I was home reading, or studying, or doing anything else I could come up with to avoid repeat embarrassments like the one last year. But here I am. I’d like to think I put up one hell of a fight when I was invited tonight, but in reality, I gave in to Alex like I always do.  
“It’s just…great,” I manage to say.  
“Don’t lie,” Alex says with a laugh. “I know you. You’d rather be home with Cynthia. Am I right?”  
Cynthia is my DV-R. Not many people know that I call her that.  
Unfortunately, he’s right. The whole walk over, I imagined what it would be like to sit in a dark room and watch episode after episode of Supernatural. It was a beautiful fantasy, albeit short-lived.
Rather than admit how lame I am, I change the subject. “So what’d I miss?”  
“Same shit as always.”  
I take a breath then down my drink in one gulp. I have to do this now and it requires a large reserve of alcohol-infused courage. And by god, I am going to do this. No matter how much it hurts. “Hey, Alex?” I say quietly, half hoping he won’t hear me.  
“What’s up, Nic?” 
It doesn’t bother me that he calls me Nic instead of a more feminine version of my name. If anything, it’s kind of comforting. That’s what he and Brady have called me since I was little.   
“Can we talk?”  
Alex glances at me sideways. When a girl says she wants to talk, it triggers a natural fight or flight response. Well, more flight than fight, but still. So I’m not surprised when he looks around with unabated panic clear in his eyes. “Good or bad?”  
I wish I could tell him it’s good – not bad at all – but I can’t.  
I slap him playfully on the arm. “You tell me.” 
“Hang on. I’ll get drinks first. The countdown is about to start.” He doesn’t wait for an answer before he turns and melts into the crowd.  
A fissure opens up in my chest. The warmth of the alcohol breathes out of it.
“He’ll be back. Just went to get champagne,” I say quietly to myself.
The gigantic television is on and tuned in to one of the fifteen stations that are airing the New Year’s celebration recorded live in New York City. Millions of people mill around, dance to music, and toast each other in Time Square. The ball sits at the ready. Big shiny numbers cling to the sphere in declaration of the next year. I contemplate all the new beginnings I will face in the year to come. Above all of them, senior year of high school scares me the most. They say it’s supposed to be one of the greatest years of my life; I have a feeling it will just bring more change. I’m allergic to change. It gives me hives.  
The ball is in motion. Soon, a chorus of drunken voices will intone the countdown like the numbers still make sense. With how drunk everyone is, it’s possible that a few of them will count out of sequence.  
My eyes dart around, trying to pick Alex out of the crowd. Stretching up on the balls of my feet, I find that almost everyone is taller than me. I can’t see him.  
An elbow bumps into my side. At first, I ignore it, thinking some inconsiderate person decided to walk through me instead of going around, which happens a lot at these shindigs, but then it happens again.  
“Got a problem?” I snap, wheeling on a stricken-looking Brady. I don’t look at him when I apologize. Where did Alex go? 
“You know, Kitten, maybe your one resolution this year should be to chill out. You’re so wound up these days,” Brady says. He never was one to waste his time on tact. “And drink more. Everyone should definitely drink more.”
“Sorry,” I say. “Have you seen Alex?” 
“Yeah. He told me to bring this to you,” Brady says, offering me a flute glass with pink champagne bubbling up the sides.  
I take it and breathe in the scent. It smells a little more girly than regular champagne, which is exactly why it’s my favorite: it’s different, unexpected. “Where did he go?” 
“Um. Jen grabbed him. I think they went that way.” He uses his head to gesture toward the front of the house where the bedrooms are.  
An ache forms in my stomach, slowly churning the alcohol into a dangerous mixture. I clutch the glass a little tighter and hope it doesn’t fall from my numb fingers.  
And the countdown begins.  
“Ten.”  
Brady wraps an arm around my shoulder. “This is it, Kitten. This is our year.”  
“Nine.”  
The alcohol is taking effect. The room spins. I rest my head against his shoulder.  
“Eight.”  
All I want to do is get the hell out of here. I want to go home, curl up in my flannel sheets, pull the blankets over my head… 
“Seven.” 
… and scream like Ive never screamed before.  
“Six.” 
Then cry myself to sleep and stay in bed until someone makes me move. Likely my parents.  
“Five.”  
On Wednesday for school.  
“Four.”  
Where he’ll be. 
“Three.” 
“You’re a good friend, Brady,” I say through the hot lump constricting my throat. My eyes water. 
“Two.”  
“And don’t you forget it,” he says. 
“One.” 
“Happy New Year!” a hundred drunken voices yell. Guys high five each other and girls fall into inebriated kisses with their dates that would make a blind man blush.  
And I stand there, my head resting heavily against Brady’s shoulder, already feeling like a failure. He turns his head and kisses my hair. “Happy New Year, Nicky.”  
The champagne flute is all but forgotten in my hand. If I were to drink it right now, I would probably puke all over the girl in front of me, declaring my first embarrassing moment of the year.  
“I’m gonna head out,” I say quietly.    
He eyes me knowingly and gently tucks an errant lock of hair behind my ear. “Okay. Text me when you get home?”  
I nod, hand him the glass and slowly push my way toward the front of the house. The door to the McGowan’s study is open and all of the lights are on. Everyone is up and has congregated in the center of the room. At first, I shrug it off. Maybe the countdown was just that exciting. 
But then, between the feet of two people, I see something that makes my stomach turn. Lying motionless on the floor is a person. 
I claw at my throat, suddenly unable to breathe. 
Because the body lying so still, so lifeless, is Spencer.   
And I'm the one who left him there.