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The thing is, I’m not watching you because I want to. I’m not doing it for me at all. I’m doing it because I can’t quite figure it out: What you’re thinking. Who you are. What you’re capable of.
I’ll be with you. After all, you’re my sister.
Wayne
But sometimes I still touch the trees, if only to remind myself that even the most identical things have thumbprints.
Our dad told us the doctor warned my mother of the dangers surrounding mono-mono twins.
Apparently, Lenora didn’t hold it against me for trying to kill her in the womb. That would become our pattern. She’d always forgive me. I’d always let her. Especially when I didn’t deserve it.
On that night fifteen years ago, Lenora and I walked down a hallway together. But when the door opened, the scene unfolded like a sick feature film.
When the truth had the power to corrode my insides, looking away was the only way to save myself.
Is this about your mother, Lenora? About not knowing where she is?”
Cassie’s high-pitched voice from behind me. Lenora, what did you do? And the fear. Burning hotter than the blood on my hands.
I’m not just me anymore. Not just Cassie—a woman who lives in the middle of nowhere, avoiding a sordid past, taking care of her sister. I get to be them.
A hidden motive that borders on exploitive. If I can be them, it means I don’t have to be myself.
“Mom and Dad were complicated.” It must take every ounce of her strength to answer. To talk about this at all.
I’ve admired that about you. Your ability to think on the spot. To smooth over hard situations with delicacy and finesse. Your ability to make me feel like an idiot.
Aswell, Mrs. Rhodes’s prized pet.
She thinks I hate listening to her tell their stories, but really, I just hate that some people have to be the victims.
It’s not that I don’t want Cassie to know I sleepwalked again; it’s that I don’t want her to worry about it. To worry about me more than she already does.
A person lurking in the dark.
A coin.
Neither of us was hiding. We were just one person the whole time. And I don’t know what made us split apart, but whatever it was must have been against nature. Peeling us away from each other against our will, cell by cell, forcefully, sadistically.
And maybe the last time I really knew what Lenora was thinking was when she was me.
Lenora was in the woods. Lenora was in the woods. Lenora was in the woods. Tilly is still in the woods.
This is not a girl lost in the woods. This is a girl who gets away.
You’re hyper fixating, Lenora. Why do you think you do this, Lenora? You can’t go down this rabbit hole again, Lenora.
Tilly isn’t out there, and she definitely isn’t dead. Tilly is free.

