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Suzanne Beecher


Dear Reader,

I'm putting together another Summer Fun Recipe week, and I'd love to add one of your favorite recipes to the Book Club Recipe Box. You can snap a photo of the recipe or type it up. I've got the urge to cook something new so please, please send me your recipes. Email: Suzanne@firstlookbookclub.com

In the small town of Cuba City, Wisconsin, population 2000 where I grew up, nobody thought twice about knocking on a neighbor's door and asking, "Can I borrow a cup of sugar?" 

Yes, if you were in the middle of a recipe and in desperate need of an ingredient, knock on your neighbor's door. And there was no need to replace the borrowed this or that, because nobody took advantage. Eventually the favor would be returned.

I live in Sarasota, Florida, population 57,000. The other day when I was making an apple pie from scratch and I needed nutmeg, my cupboard was bare. I know our neighbors.  I've even fed their Koi fish in their outdoor pond when they were out of town. So it shouldn't have felt strange for me to ask to borrow some nutmeg. 'But in this day and age, asking someone if you can borrow a food item? I don't know, maybe those days were long gone?' 

But I had to get this pie finished, because my husband had signed up to bring a pie to his meeting later in the day. And my only other option was to take an Uber to the grocery store.

So I decided to call my neighbor. "I know it's old fashioned, but I'm making an apple pie and I don't have any nutmeg. Could I borrow some?"

"I'm so delighted you called! Yes, I have nutmeg. I'll grab it and be out the door right now. I'll meet you halfway."

We were both giggling like schoolgirls reminiscing about the days of borrowing from your neighbor.

"And don't worry about returning it," my neighbor said as she was heading back home. 

Who would've thought it would be so much fun to borrow some nutmeg from my neighbor. 

Thanks for reading with me. It's so good to read with friends.

Suzanne Beecher
Suzanne@firstlookbookclub.com

P. S. This week we're giving away 10 copies of the book Until Alison: A Novel by Kate Russo. Click here to enter for your chance to win. 



1

Nobody deserves anything. I can promise you that. Maybe you think you earned what you've got, but I can guarantee you someone else has worked just as hard for the same thing and they don't have it. They probably think they deserve better. And then there are those who've been served a real shit-sandwich, wondering to themselves what the fuck have I done to deserve this? They don't deserve that either. Nobody gets get what they deserve, because nobody deserves anything. Nothing happens for a reason. Good shit, bad shit, it all just happens. Justification is nothing more than counting sheep, a way to get to sleep at night.

Alison didn't deserve to die.

I don't deserve to be sitting here typing this sentence. And yet.

The night Alison was murdered, I could have stopped it. But retrospect is as useless as justification. That night, there wasn't a tab in my brain that suddenly opened up to inform me that 'in one hour someone will drive Alison to a remote pond and hit her head on a rock. Would you like to stop what you're doing right now and save her?' For the record, I would have. If I had known someone was going to kill her, I would have saved her. I mention that because, at some points while you're reading this, it'll probably seem like the opposite is true.

On the night in question, in the fall of 2016, I saw her leaving a campus party. It was a Saturday night and there were dozens of people around, so why do I feel like I was the only one who watched her leave. But it was always this way. She was always in the corner of my eye, like one of those fucking floaters, trapped in my vision. I couldn't help it, whenever she was around, it was like I didn't know who I was anymore. I'd only ever known myself in relation to Alison.

The party was hosted by my boyfriend Cam. Alison wasn't supposed to be there. As far as I knew, the two of them had never met. Most of the girls at Cam's parties were either the girlfriends of his friends or freshman girls who didn't know any better; they hadn't yet been invited to more exclusive parties or learned to be wary of Cam's antics. Alison didn't fit into either of these categories, plus she lived in the chem-free dorm, but there she was, nonetheless, drinking a hard seltzer and talking with some guy with heavily shellacked helmet hair that I didn't recognize. But I never knew who anyone was. The two of them were leaning into each other because 'American Girl' was blaring, even though I'd told Cam a thousand times that Tom Petty wasn't party music. Perched alone on a windowsill, I wasn't talking to anyone, so I watched Alison and the guy flirt. What was she doing in my world? Why had she infiltrated it? I spitefully pondered these very questions while swigging Bacardi Limón from the bottle.

Once again, I'd allowed myself to get far too drunk. Not pacing myself was becoming a pattern. Back then, I was one of those people who drank to feel more sociable, but I'd gotten into a routine of drinking past sociability and straight back into introversion. Cam wasn't paying attention to me; he was holding court behind his makeshift bar, pouring Toasted Marshmallow Smirnoff directly into the mouths of freshman girls. I didn't really know anyone else besides Alison, though we didn't make a habit of talking to each other. I suppose I could have known more people if I'd made any effort at all, but it was senior year and I'd long since told myself it was too late. There were three girls, my colleagues on the newspaper staff, whom I considered friends. I think they considered me a friend, too, but it's no secret they all had closer friends than me. Lindsay and Brie had said they might come to the party, but they'd let me down. I knew they had been secretly hooking-up since last semester. And Jen wouldn't be caught dead at one of Cam's parties. She was probably already in her pajamas, reading Audre Lorde.

Alison, at one point, was also my friend. Ages six to twelve. I think she would have considered me her best friend back then, but at Cam's party, she pretended not to see me, even though we could not have been more than ten feet apart. Instead, she laughed performatively, a little drunk, to the musings of this random guy, who'd spilled beer down the bottom of his blue shirt. I barely noticed him, only scoffed when his eyes stayed glued to her tits, large milky mounds, still a little tan from her summer in Rome, peering over the soft cotton of her flowery dress. When she started talking about life after college, I squinted, hoping that impairing my vision would improve my hearing. 'Harvard', I heard. And' Fulbright'. She'd have her pick. Her life was charmed like that. The short flowery dress swayed as her head bobbed in explanation. I watched it caress the tops of her thighs, remembering how she used to dress when we were girls: wide denim shorts and oversized Disney themed t-shirts to hide her big boobs from the ridicule of all the boys in our class. Just then, the guy leaned in and whispered something in her ear. She laughed again, both timid and flirtatious.

The intimacy of this scene was so grotesque I dropped my gaze down to the dark grey carpet tiles, but then the tiles started spinning, so I closed my eyes. When I opened them, the room started to tip and tilt like a fun house. I closed them again and rested my head on the windowsill, instructing myself to breathe. A few deep breaths and I'd probably, just about, be able to get myself back to Cam's room and into his bed. I inhaled, counted to four, then exhaled and counted to eight, just like the school therapist taught me to do.

My eyes opened when the song ended and I heard the front door unlatch. Alison and her guy were leaving. Suddenly I was up from the windowsill and feigning sobriety. Several people stopped what they were doing to witness my sudden movement. As straight as I could, I walked past Cam's bar, where now the freshman girls were pouring the Smirnoff into Cam's mouth, to the front door. I didn't think Cam had seen me until I heard him shout out, "Babe, where are you going?"

I ignored him. I flung open the door of his suite and let it slam behind me. Down the end of the hallway, Alison and the guy spun around.

"Woohoo, Alison!" I shouted, waiting for her to engage. She turned away from me, just shook her head.

When the guy put his arm around her waist, they continued walking away.

"Be nice to her!" I shouted even louder, addressing him, but determined it was she who should acknowledge me. "Don't be like Brad Hutchins!"

She didn't turn around, but I swear I could detect a chill emanating from her body. That's when Alison's stranger glanced over his shoulder and grinned at me. Did he wink, too? Or was I just making that up? He pulled her down the hall and they disappeared around the corner.

When they were out of sight, I let my back hit the corridor wall and I slumped down to the floor. I closed my eyes and let all the colorful dots spin. The suite door opened, again, and Cam came out. "Nardelli, you're fuckin' hammered," he laughed. "Get in here."

2

I found out Alison was dead when Brie came running into my dorm room on Monday afternoon. I'd just returned from "Physics for Poets" – the study of the physical world for the meta-physically minded – the last of my two required science credits needed to graduate. But who was I kidding? I didn't understand poetry either, so I was barely passing. I hadn't even set my books down, when Brie came barging in. "Did you know Alison Petrucci's roommate reported her missing?"

I wasn't sure I heard her right. It was one of those moments where my brain couldn't compute the question. But my body understood immediately. I froze, dropped my notebook and my copy of Galileo's 'Siderus Nuncius' on the floor. "No."

"They're pretty sure they just found her body at some nearby pond."

I sat down on the edge of my bed. A million Alisons paraded in front of my eyes, from first grade all the way to Saturday night. "What pond?" was all I could manage.

Brie shrugged. She was from New York City and, like most students, had seen little of Maine beyond campus. "Pleasant? Do you know it?"

Yes. I'd only been there once, on the final day of eighth grade. I remembered the sun was shining that day. Us kids all smelled of tropical sunscreen. Alison was lying on her towel far away from the all the rest of us, wearing a black one-piece and a large straw hat that shaded her face. She was reading her dog-eared copy of 'The Hunger Games'.

I winced, then nodded to Brie, hoping to block the lingering memories from that horrible day. I thought I was over it, then last year at Cotillion it all came flooding back. That was the night when Brie and Lindsay found me passed out drunk in a bathroom stall. They'd shaken me until I woke up, then I'd proceeded to vomit all over both of them. According to Brie, I'd put my head in her lap and kept saying, "I wish it never happened." When she asked me what happened, I kept saying, "Everything."  And it was washing over me again, all because Brie said "Pleasant." Why not the ocean, or a lake or any other pond, Alison? What was she doing 'there?'

"Some of my crew teammates went there this morning to row," she said, stuffing her hands in the front pouch of her Denman hoodie, where the string of a navy-blue Denman lanyard hung out. Brie was the kind of person who wore all her loyalties right out in the open. Her corkscrew blonde curls were tied in a tight bun and tucked into her Yankees cap. Like the words that came out of her mouth, her clothes said what they needed to say and nothing more. "The cops were there. I guess a dog walker found her body?" When I flinched, again, at the word 'body,' she intuited that I needed her to stop. "You alright?"

"I'm fine."

"Rach, your eyes are blood shot. What's up?"

I was hungover. Badly hungover. Two days in a row. I'd barely made it to my one p.m. class. The night before, I'd hung out at Cam's and drunk what was left from Saturday's party. I'd spent all day wondering what Alison was doing at Cam's party. Had I imagined her? Had I shouted something at her? I'd only intended to have one hard seltzer, to ask Cam what she was doing there, but he was in a mood so I didn't. I drank by myself on his sofa.

"Nothing," I said to Brie. "Stayed up late finishing a paper. Do Lindsay and Jen know?"

"Not yet. I'm on my way to the newsroom."

Me, Lindsay, Brie and Jen comprised the senior editorial team of our campus newspaper, The Denman Weekly Review. Freshman year, we started as lowly reporters, but by junior year we all held assistant editorships. Now, senior year, it was ours. For most reporters, the newspaper was just a club, an extra-curricular activity, but juniors and seniors with positions on the editorial board were eligible for academic credits, and for English majors with a concentration in journalism, like me and Lindsay, these credits were necessary to graduate. This made it difficult for us to publish stories that criticized the administration. "Let's not bite that hand that feeds us" was Lindsay's constant refrain. She was our Editor-in-Chief, voted to that position by a committee of her peers the previous spring, ahead of me, the only other applicant. I'd been crushed, but secretly, I understood why I didn't get the job: I lacked big picture vision and was far too easily overwhelmed and discouraged. Lindsay, on the other hand, was patient and methodical, not easily defeated like me. Plus, under pressure, she had these epic giggling fits that endeared her to everyone. Like me, Lindsay had also been the editor of her junior high and high school newspapers. But growing up in an affluent Boston suburb, she had a lot more competition for these achievements.

(continued on Tuesday)

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