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Charles Benoit - You

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Youre just a typical fifteen-year-old sophomore, an average guy named Kyle Chase. This cant be happening to you. But then, how do you explain all the blood? How do you explain how you got here in the first place? There had to have been signs, had to have been some clues it was coming. Did you miss them, or ignore them? Maybe if you can figure out where it all went wrong, you can still make it right. Or is it already too late? Think fast, Kyle. Times running out. How did this happen? You is the riveting story of fifteen-year-old Kyle and the small choices he does and doesnt make that lead to his own destruction. In his stunning young-adult debut, Charles Benoit mixes riveting tension with an insightful and unsettling portrait of an ordinary teen in a tale that is taut, powerful, and shattering.

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Charles Benoit You 2010 To you You know who you are Youre surprised at - photo 1

Charles Benoit

You

2010

To you. You know who you are.

Youre surprised at all the blood.

He looks over at you, eyes wide, mouth dropping open, his face almost as white as his shirt.

Hes surprised, too.

Theres not a lot of broken glass, though, just some tiny slivers around his feet and one big piece busted into sharp peaks like a spiking line graph, the blood washing down it like rain on a windshield.

He doesnt say anything clever or funny, doesnt quote Shakespeare, he just screams. But no one can hear him, and it would be too late if they could.

Youre thinking, this wasnt the way it was supposed to go, this shouldnt be happening. And now things are only going to get worse.

Youre just a kid.

It cant be your fault.

But then theres all that blood.

So, maybe it is your fault, but that doesnt make things any better.

And it doesnt matter one way or the other.

Think.

When did it go wrong?

The break-in?

No, before that.

The party?

That was part of it, but that wasnt when it started.

Zack?

Of course, yeah, it would be easy to say it was Zack. But thats not it, is it?

Before Zack.

Before Ryan. Before Max or Derrick or that whole thing with the wallet.

Before Ashley.

Before tenth grade even began.

You run your finger down the list of homeroom assignments until you spot your name.

Kyle Chase-room 202-Mr. Lynn.

Youre looking through the other names when Max comes up behind you, pretending to bump into you as if he didnt see you, like he always does. You ignore him. Like you always do. Max is the closest thing you have to a best friend in this school, and that pretty much says it all, doesnt it? Back in eighth grade you never said two words to him, but that was before everybody you hung with went to Odyssey High. Things are different now.

See whos in your homeroom?

Of course you see whos there. You walked halfway around the building to check the list, but you act as if you dont hear him.

Ashley. He leans in as he says it, his voice getting all nasal like hes five frickin years old.

So? You shrug, wondering for the thousandth time why you ever told him anything.

What do you mean, so? Hes getting loud now and you just wish hed shut the hell up. Hed be all right if he wasnt so immature or deliberately stupid, but thats pretty much everything he is. When hes not around anybody, when its just you two, hes different. Not a lot, but enough. You ignore his question. Hes used to it.

I got Lynn, you tell him, and he nods. Mr. Lynn is the whacked-out English teacher who likes poetry way too much, but hes always been fair to you and to the other so-called hoodies, the name coming from the black sweatshirt jackets you wear. The rest of your schedule might suck, but at least homeroom will be tolerable.

I got Perez, Max says. Derricks in there, too.

You nod, but youre thinking about Ashley Bianchi, something youve been doing since June, when she left for her familys cottage up on some lake. You tell yourself that summer would have been a lot better if she had been around, positive that you would have actually called her up and gone out to the movies or something. And there would have been times when her parents were out or your parents were out and you could have been together without everybody standing around staring. But before you can think too much about it, about this hookup that would have been excellent, two chimes sound and teachers step into the hall to corral everybody into their homerooms.

Welcome to the official start of tenth grade.

Welcome to the last year of your life.

Mr. Lynn reads off the attendance list and you raise one finger when he calls your name. He smiles at you and says Welcome, just like he did for the lacrosse players and the honor-roll students and you wonder why the other teachers cant treat you like that.

The rooms dead quiet. After months of sleeping in till noon, six oclock came too early and everyone has that glazed-over, already-bored look in their eyes. You recognize most of the people in the room, know about half of their names, but there are some kids who are obviously new, doing their best to look like theyve been here before. Shes sitting up front on the other side of the room, and when Lynn calls your name she turns in her chair, a look on her face like shes surprised to see you, and she smiles and waves. You cant help but smile back and you give a goofy wave and immediately feel like an idiot. She has that effect on you.

Shes got a dark tan, helped along by her Italian genes, and like every other white girl in the class, in the school, in the country, shes wearing her hair long and straight and parted on the side. You remember her hair being longer at the end of the year but then realize that she must have gotten it cut for the start of school, probably the same weekend she bought the jeans and shirt she is wearing. You know every outfit she wore in ninth grade. This one is definitely new.

Last weekend you were supposed to get a haircut too, but you told your parents that you forgot. And you didnt buy any new clothes, either. Youve got drawers full of black T-shirts and worn-in jeans, and there are three hoodies in your closet, two regular black ones and a black one with these flaming skulls on the arm that your one cool aunt bought you last Christmas. Your friends drill on the sheeplike posers in their Aberzombie & Fitch sweaters and Aropostale button-downs. You never bother mentioning the T-shirt/jeans/hoodie uniform you all wear.

Lynns reading off the days schedule. He tells the class things they already know, like how the school has a rotating schedule and that today youll spend a short time in all of your classes and that lunch will be blah blah blah and tryouts for blah blah blah will be after school in the auditorium and right then, ten minutes into your first day back to school, you start counting how many days it will be till the end of the year so you can get back to what you did over the summer.

Which was nothing.

But it wasnt this.

Math.

Its your favorite subject. Which surprises you.

Last year your teacher tried to convince you that you had a real aptitude for math, but all you got in the end was a B minus. The truth is you werent even trying. But then you got low Cs and Ds in all your other classes and you werent trying there, either, so maybe you are good at math after all.

You like it because either youre right or youre wrong. Not like social studies and definitely not like English, where you always have to explain your answers and support your opinions. With math its right or its wrong and youre done with it. But even thats changing, with Ms. Ortman up there at the whiteboard saying how this year youll be writing something she calls Mental Notes, which explain how you solved the problem and support your answer, saying that having the right answer isnt as important as explaining how you got it and bam, just like that, you hate math.

Now, tomorrow youll have a quiz worth sixty percent of your grade this quarter. She pauses like shes some stand-up comedian before she adds, Only kidding, as if it wasnt obvious. But then you notice half of your classmates sitting there with their eyes all popped out and you think, are they really that stupid?

She glances up at the clock, so of course everybody else does, and she sees shes got eight minutes left in the shortened period. Time to launch into the math version of the same speech youve heard in all of your classes so far and you wonder if they teach this time-wasting crap at teacher school.

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