We Were Liars

We Were Liars Read Online Free PDF Page A

Book: We Were Liars Read Online Free PDF
Author: E. Lockhart
most likely some kind of head injury, though the brain scans turned up nothing.
    Mummy stayed by my side, got a hotel room. I remember the sad, gray faces of Aunt Carrie, Aunt Bess, and Granddad. I remember my lungs felt full of something, long after the doctors judged them clear. I remember I felt like I’d never get warm again, even when they told me my body temperature was normal. My hands hurt. My feet hurt.
    Mummy took me home to Vermont to recuperate. I lay in bed in the dark and felt desperately sorry for myself. Because I was sick, and even more because Gat never called.
    He didn’t write, either.
    Weren’t we in love?
    Weren’t we?
    I wrote to Johnny, two or three stupid, lovesick emails asking him to find out about Gat.
    Johnny had the good sense to ignore them. We are Sinclairs, after all, and Sinclairs do not behave like I was behaving.
    I stopped writing and deleted all the emails from my sent mail folder. They were weak and stupid.
    The bottom line is, Gat bailed when I got hurt.
    The bottom line is, it was only a summer fling.
    The bottom line is, he might have loved Raquel.
    We lived too far apart, anyway.
    Our families were too close, anyway.
    I never got an explanation.
    I just know he left me.

13
    WELCOME TO MY skull.
    A truck is rolling over the bones of my neck and head. The vertebrae break, the brains pop and ooze. A thousand flashlights shine in my eyes. The world tilts.
    I throw up. I black out.
    This happens all the time. It’s nothing but an ordinary day.
    The pain started six weeks after my accident. Nobody was certain whether the two were related, but there was no denying the vomiting and weight loss and general horror.
    Mummy took me for MRIs and CT scans. Needles, machines. More needles, more machines. They tested me for brain tumors, meningitis, you name it. To relieve the pain they prescribed this drug and that drug and another drug, because the first one didn’t work and the second one didn’t work, either. They gave me prescription after prescription without even knowing what was wrong. Just trying to quell the pain.
    Cadence, said the doctors, don’t take too much.
    Cadence, said the doctors, watch for signs of addiction.
    And still, Cadence, be sure to take your meds.
    There were so many appointments I can’t even remember them. Eventually the doctors came through with a diagnosis. Cadence Sinclair Eastman: post-traumatic headaches, also known as PTHA. Migraine headaches caused by traumatic brain injury.
    I’ll be fine, they tell me.
    I won’t die.
    It’ll just hurt a lot.

14
    AFTER A YEAR in Colorado, Dad wanted to see me again. In fact, he insisted on taking me to Italy, France, Germany, Spain, and Scotland—a ten-week trip beginning in mid-June, which meant I wouldn’t go to Beechwood at all, summer sixteen.
    “The trip is grand timing,” said Mummy brightly as she packed my suitcase.
    “Why?” I lay on the floor of my bedroom and let her do the work. My head hurt.
    “Granddad’s redoing Clairmont.” She rolled socks into balls. “I told you that a million times already.”
    I didn’t remember. “How come?”
    “Some idea of his. He’s spending the summer in Windemere.”
    “With you waiting on him?”
    Mummy nodded. “He can’t stay with Bess or Carrie. And you know he takes looking after. Anyway. You’ll get a wonderful education in Europe.”
    “I’d rather go to Beechwood.”
    “No, you wouldn’t,” she said, firm.
    IN EUROPE, I vomited into small buckets and brushed my teeth repeatedly with chalky British toothpaste. I lay prone on the bathroom floors of several museums, feeling the cold tile underneath my cheek as my brain liquefied and seeped out my ear, bubbling. Migraines left my blood spreading across unfamiliar hotel sheets, dripping on the floors, oozing into carpets, soaking through leftover croissants and Italian lace cookies.
    I could hear Dad calling me, but I never answered until my medicine took effect.
    I missed the Liars that
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