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I pull my gaze away from Sam, unwilling to watch him wear a path into the cement. The man on the bench across from me tips his brown paper–bagged bottle to his mouth, staring at me with blurry eyes. A woman nearby talks into her phone loud enough for people two blocks over to hear. Along the far wall, another man sleeps on a bench, drooling on the wood. The open-air pavilion is nearly vacant in the middle of the night. I’m guessing the inside of the terminal is as quiet.

Sam finally comes over and plops down next to me. He runs a hand down his face. “Supposedly, he’s catching a connection to Detroit tomorrow.”

“That’s good, then.”

“If he does it,” Sam says with a sigh. “If there was another bus going out tonight, I’d be able to follow him.”

I’m shocked at that. Apparently, Sam would be willing to abandon the tour to chase his brother down. I suppose, from what I’ve witnessed, that makes sense. Seth out in the big world by himself could be dangerous, mainly to himself, possibly to others.

Sam glances at his phone and sighs. “It’s past two o’clock. We should head back.”

We start walking to the hotel. From what I can gather, the bus terminal is somewhere between the arena and the hotel. Though the area is rough, the streets are empty this late at night. Sam is silent as we make our way back. His shoulders slump, as if he carries the weight of the world on them.

After the first block, I say, “The person who calls you all the time isn’t a girlfriend. It’s Seth, right?” Sam silently nods. On the third block, the main question that’s been screaming in my head all night comes out in a light tone. “What’s wrong with Seth?”

Sam glances at me, then stuffs his hands into his pockets. After a few minutes, I assume he is never going to answer, but then he says tightly, “He—he’s schizophrenic.”

“Oh, that’s . . . that’s too bad,” I say, trying to grasp that news. The little I know about the disease is what I learned in general psychology. Even with that limited knowledge, Seth’s erratic behavior starts clicking into place for me. I even recall how bizarre and unpredictable he started acting during the last two months of our relationship.

“How long has he been?”

Sam doesn’t look at me, just keeps walking. “Since senior year of high school.”

I stop in the middle of the sidewalk. “Why didn’t you tell me?”

Sam keeps going. “He wasn’t diagnosed until after Christmas,” he says roughly.

“Still,” I say, running to catch up with him. “Everything”—from the heartbreak to the rumors to Seth’s gradual change—“would have been easier to deal with if I’d known.”

Without looking down at me, Sam’s features twist into a mocking expression. “So while my parents and I were trying to understand Seth’s diagnosis, and putting him in and out of the mental ward, and doing everything in our power to make sure he’d graduate from high school, I was supposed to contact you, the ex-girlfriend who most likely hated him, to make things easier for you to ‘deal with’?”

His words have me feeling small and selfish. I look down at my feet moving over the cement. “No. I guess not,” I mumble. Throughout the entire day, my perspective on the past has been changing so dramatically that I’m having a hard time keeping up. The knowledge of Seth’s disease makes the guilt and hurt I’ve dealt with for years go away almost entirely as I realize he wasn’t in total control of his actions—and as I kind of understand why he had the demented need to fuel the rumor mill.

Sam shrugs. “Besides, we didn’t want anyone to know at first. We didn’t know how to handle it.” His mouth turns down. “We hoped treatment would turn things around and get him back to something like normal.”

“Is that why don’t you tell people about him, because you wish he would be normal? Are you embarrassed by him?” My tone has an edge of incredulity.

“That he has a disease? No. That he acts like a frickin’ idiot most of the time? A bit.”

“Well, he can’t help it.” Suddenly, I’m overwhelmed with sorrow for Seth. Knowing him before and seeing him now is sad.

“He could take his fucking meds,” Sam says, his tone exasperated. “That would help.”

“Isn’t it normal—I mean, isn’t it part of the disease for him to not trust the meds?”

“Yeah, but as you’ve witnessed he’s off his rocker without them.”

My mind whirls, and questions come tumbling out of my mouth. “Is this why he didn’t continue at the University of Michigan? It that why you didn’t go to Michigan?”

“Yes. And yes.”

As we enter the empty hotel lobby, resentment starts boiling inside of me. “Why would you do that to him? Why wouldn’t you go with him to college to help him succeed?”

I don’t say it out loud, but I know in my heart that if Jill needed support like Seth clearly does, I’d stay by her side. I would do whatever possible to help her succeed.

Sam stares at me.

Maybe it’s because I’m tired from the long day or shocked by Seth’s condition—or maybe it’s because I’m imagining Jill, who is like a sister to me, in a similar situation—but I’m truly angry. “I can’t believe you’d be such an asshole. To your twin brother, no less.”

Sam opens his mouth, then snaps it shut. He grabs my arm and drags me to the inner court of the hotel, plops me onto a chair next to an aluminum table, steps away, and lights a cigarette.

Still angry, I’m about to stand and walk away, until Sam says, “Give me a minute to explain.”

His tone, sad and guilty, glues me in the patio chair.

He takes a long drag before crushing the half-smoked cigarette under his boot. “Trying to quit,” he says absently, tossing the butt into the trash.

Really, I haven’t seen him light up that much, except for a few times and the illegal stuff.

He plops down onto the chair next to me, lowers his elbows to the table, takes a deep breath, and stares at me. “Do you know what I want?”

Thoroughly confused by the question, it takes me a few seconds to respond with a shake of my head.

“I want my brother back. We’re twins, for fuck’s sake.” He slaps a hand on the table and the ping of the aluminum reverberates across the darkness of the patio. “We shared a room until we were fifteen. We were in every class together up to the age of eleven, several after that too. Played Little League on the same team for five years. Played in a band together. Sure, we’d argue and fight, but nothing”—he glances at me—“nothing could separate us. It was like having a best friend from birth.”

He stares out over the patio as I try to keep my expression neutral, so I won’t interrupt his explanation with the growing sadness building in my chest. This isn’t about me.

“The brother I grew up with is gone. He’s not the same. I’m never getting him back.” The hum of the huge hotel air conditioners fills the silence. Sam turns to me. Even in the shadowy darkness, I can see the anguish lining his face.

He gestures to the tattoo on his arm. “I wanted to remember the real Seth with a line from a song he wrote for the Bottle Rockets.” Shaking his head, he sighs sadly. “I got wasted so I could deal with the needle, but I wanted to freeze him in my memory with the permanence of a tattoo.”

Though I’ve tried, I can never make out the black swirly writing on his arm. “What does it say?”

“Can rule the world with my twin at my side,” he says.

“It’s about you?”

“It was about both of us. From some crap song he wrote.”

“Oh,” I say softly, recalling the old Seth. The Seth who believed he did rule the world.