Unclaimed Baggage Read online




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  For the friends lost but never forgotten, and the friends we have yet to meet

  “If you don’t get lost, there’s a chance you may never be found.”

  —UNKNOWN

  PROLOGUE

  Before

  A clang rang out through baggage claim as the carousel groaned into action. Arriving passengers jockeyed for positions around the metal edges of the machine, craning their necks and tapping their feet, as desperate for a glimpse of their luggage as they would be to see friends or family members.

  Some bags had been wrapped in plastic by nervous people; others had bright ribbons tied around the handles to distinguish them from one another. There was a bossy sign warning everyone to make sure the luggage was indeed their own before leaving the terminal, but hardly anybody took the time to do that. In haste, mistakes had occurred.

  A little boy frolicked along the raised metal edge of the carousel, shouting, “Look at me!” until his weary mother collected him. “Excuse me” was the law of the land, though it was generally uttered in a way that was less polite and more “Outta my way. Can’t you see I’m standing here?!” There were elbow nudges and rude remarks and “Hey, watch it, buddy!”s. Slowly but surely, the passengers filed out into the world, taking with them their precious belongings, compactly contained in suitcases that most of the rest of the time were confined to the undersides of beds or the backs of closets.

  With a low squeal, the carousel halted. A new flight would be in soon, and the same thing would happen, and then again.

  For now, no one paid any attention to the suitcase that remained. It was small and purple and leopard-printed. It was a bag intended for adventures, intended for life. But its owner had failed to retrieve it, so it sat alone in the middle of the quiet baggage carousel, in the very place it was not supposed to be.

  PART I

  June

  1

  Doris

  HELLO. I speak to you from where I stand amid hundreds, maybe thousands, of boxes, bags, trunks, containers, and suitcases. I’m in the stockroom of the store where I work, Unclaimed Baggage, which is a place that, yes, sells baggage that was never claimed from airports and other transit hubs to lucky new owners. Think of us as an animal shelter for goods. Does anything here look like you could give it a forever home?

  As usual, I’m alone in the back. I pick up the microphone I just found in the suitcase I’ve been unpacking. It doesn’t have batteries, so humor me. Is this thing on?

  Please allow me to share my Number One top talent, the thing that will make me famous if ever I go on a reality TV show or participate in a Miss America pageant (two things I will surely never do). Are you ready?

  Wait. I should probably manage expectations. If you’re like most people, you’re not going to be that impressed by what I’m about to reveal. You’re going to say, Anyone can do that. All you have to do is pay attention. Or, maybe you’d be harsher: That’s a dumb talent. That’s not even a talent! Ugh, show me your baton, girl—get out there and twirl! To which I would say, stop being so sexist and give me a chance to speak, please. Even if I am just talking into a dead microphone in a stockroom full of used items.

  My name is Doris. I am sixteen, and—along with slightly ragged fingernails (I’ve promised myself this will be the year I finally stop biting them); long, so-dark-everyone-says-it’s-black-but-it’s-really-dark-brown hair; and two chocolate-colored irises that give looks described as both “penetrating” and “pugnacious”—I come complete with a love of lists (especially those that include parentheticals!), a passion for drawing, and the “gift of gab,” which is how my aunt Stella used to tease me about how much I talk.

  I also bear the distinction of being pretty much the Number One weirdo liberal agnostic in my minuscule Alabama town, which gives all kinds of grief to my parents. When I decided to petition against the school-sanctioned prayer at each football game, Mom and Dad retaliated by praying louder than anyone. You’d think adults would be over that kind of stuff, but nope: The desire to fit in appears to be a lifelong human condition. Unless you’re like me, I guess.

  But back to that talent.

  Imagine me leaning in close to the mic, gesturing a little, dropping my voice to a sultry whisper: I can find things. Your lost keys. The neighbor’s missing cat, awkwardly named Pussy. Maya Bloom’s retainer, let us never speak of that dark day again—the smell of the dumpster in which it was located is lodged permanently in my left nostril. Billy Pickens’s trombone, which didn’t really go missing so much as it was purposely tossed into my backyard on the last day of school because, top secret intel: Billy Pickens despises trombone. Or my mom’s sunglasses: Nine times out of ten, they’re right on top of her head.

  It’s not a superpower—that would be fairly lame, as superpowers go. Who’d pick finding things over flying or shooting fire from their eyes or being able to turn water into Diet Coke? But it’s been helpful, I have to say. Not just personally, but professionally: I find things for my job.

  Or, more accurately, things find me.

  Think about all the flights around the world happening at the same time, and how if even one percent of that luggage doesn’t make it back to its owner, pretty soon you’ll have a massive pile on your hands. What happens to all that stuff? Airlines try to reunite people with their belongings, but they don’t always succeed. After a certain amount of time, those orphaned items are sold to stores like Unclaimed Baggage and auction houses where people show up to bid for suitcases they aren’t even allowed to look inside. You might hit it big, or you might end up with a pile of soiled shirts. Game of chance, meet laundromat.

  Most days I work in the stockroom, going through shipments. What I find ranges from the spectacular (a vintage Oscar de la Renta gown with only a tiny spot at the hem; I could have worn it to prom, if I had any interest in such things) to the abysmal (old boxer shorts that require me to disinfect myself with an entire bottle of hand sanitizer). Even better, I find those items—well, not the boxer shorts—homes. For example:

  1. The doll that made my old piano teacher, Mrs. McClintock, cry because it was a replica of the one her grandpa had given her when she was a tiny girl.

  2. The skateboard that class stoner Bruno Havens yanked out of my hands with the only scream of joy anyone’s ever heard Bruno Havens emit because it was signed by some famous skater named Tony. Then Bruno actually hugged me, which is unprecedented.

  3. The designer purse sold out everywhere that Ms. Lee, our extremely stylish vice principal, simply had to have. I kept it hidden in the back until she could pick it up, ensuring my path to a really good college rec letter, even if I am a godless heathen.

  I’ve been working at Unclaimed for two summers now, so I’ve seen plenty of stuff come and go. It’s a lot like life that way. Everyone’s always looking for something. And we’re all carrying around the memories of what we’ve lost. Which, by the way, is far more than just po
ssessions.

  For example, my closest friend, Maya Bloom, who’s not only the one Jewish teenager in our town, but also the only lesbian who’s actually out (a lot of people around here seem to think that’s worse than not being so sure about the existence of God), got a job as a camp counselor in Mentone this summer, so I’m here, left behind, my life the same but also different. I miss her, but at least I know she’ll be back.

  Then there are more permanent rifts: Friendships that go awry and can’t ever be fixed. You can lose your mind, your heart, your dreams, your community, your job. You can lose someone you love. Or, to a less tragic extent, your virginity. (My parents would be relieved to know I still have my own.) Even age disappears, year after year. In two more years, high school will be gone. I’ll head off to college, and all of this life I’ve had here will be, well, if not lost, closed. A chapter behind me.

  Earlier today I was heading back to the stockroom after my lunch break when I found a kid. This kid was alone and loitering near the toy section, but he wasn’t paying attention to any of the toys. That set off the alarm bells. He was five or six years old, a chubby boy with spiked-up hair and cargo shorts and a frown on his face. He looked at me, and I knew.

  “You’re lost,” I said, and his big, round eyes, they got hopeful.

  “My mom is here somewhere,” he said, and I said, “Of course she is.” I took his hand, which was slightly sticky. He squeezed mine back in a way that felt like he was preparing to hold on for dear life.

  “Don’t worry; we’ll find her,” I told him, and walked him over to Customer Service, where my nemesis, Chassie Dunkirk, was waiting to return a pair of sparkly high-heeled shoes. Her boyfriend, Mr. Football Player Champion of the World (or at least Our Small Town), Grant Collins was holding her name-brand purse. Chassie had her arm in a sling, the result of what even out-of-the-loop me knew was a cheerleading injury from earlier in the year. More worrisome than that was the fact that their lips were pressed against each other’s so hard I was afraid they might pass out on the floor in front of me.

  “Ahem,” I said, causing them to turn around. That’s when I saw that Chassie wasn’t with Grant Collins at all. She was making out with a senior who graduated in May, which is pretty shocking information, because in the history of our town, it’s never not been Chassie and Grant.

  “Oh. Excuse us,” said Chassie.

  The guy looked at me and then at the floor, and I remembered his name. Mac Ebling. He’d been on the football team with Grant.

  Chassie noticed the kid clutching my fingers. “Blake Jarvis,” she said, “you’ve got chocolate on your shirt.” She rolled her eyes and turned back to Mac: “Let’s get out of here. I’ll just keep the shoes. My arm hurts, and this place smells like mothballs and death.”

  “I’m lost!” Blake Jarvis announced forlornly, but Chassie was already out the door, Mac Ebling’s hand tucked snugly into the back pocket of her denim shorts. I gently tugged my charge toward my boss and the owner of Unclaimed Baggage, Red Finster.

  “Found a new friend, Doris?” he asked. “Blake Jarvis, where’s your momma? I really liked that duet you sang together at the church concert last week. That was real pretty.”

  Suddenly I understood why everyone seemed to know Blake Jarvis except me—they all go to church together. Church is big in my town. Church and football, which I don’t care much about, either. A bunch of jocks hurting one another and themselves as people stand around and cheer? No, thanks.

  Blake Jarvis tried to smile, but his lip quivered. “I. Don’t. Knowwwwww,” he answered, his face crinkling into a pool of almost-cry.

  “Wanna make an announcement for her?” offered Red, and Blake Jarvis shook his head up and down, a hard affirmative. I led him over to the little stairs that take you up to what Red calls the Customer Service throne, and Red held out the store’s microphone for him.

  “I’ve been found, Momma! Momma, where are you?” he said, and while everyone let out a collective “aw” at the tiny voice emanating from the sound system, Red stepped in. “Gail Osteen, Blake Jarvis is at Customer Service. Please pick him up at your leisure.” Within minutes, there were the same hopeful eyes, with a neat bob rather than the spiked-up hair.

  “Blake Jarvis Osteen, I told you to wait outside the dressing room like a good boy, and off you go running around—you nearly scared me to death!” said Mrs. Osteen, who smelled like vanilla and was holding several one-piece swimsuits with ruffled bottoms. She hugged her little boy, and he pointed to me.

  “She found me!” he said, and though Mrs. Osteen looked at me kind of funny at first, she clutched me in a fragrant hug while Red smiled benevolently upon the scene. Blake Jarvis was promised a new toy for being so brave, and he and his mom went off together to pick it out, holding hands.

  Red gave me a high five. “Stellar job, as always!”

  You know who I thought of then? Aunt Stella. My badass, beautiful aunt, the adventurer of the family, the one who refused to be pinned down by the proprieties dictated by Southern society, much less our small town. The one who understood me completely, while my conservative parents wondered how I could have possibly resulted from their chromosomal merger. I wished desperately I could tell Stel about what had just happened with Blake Jarvis, because she would have looked at me delightedly across her Diet Coke (she drank them in extra-large mason jars, with plenty of ice, pretty much incessantly) as if I really did have a superpower, as if finding lost people was something remotely special, something only I could do. She would have told me that when I’m at college and surrounded by people who appreciate me, I will be way better off than Chassie is. Never peak in high school, she used to say. You need somewhere else to go afterward. That’s what she did after she graduated, but she didn’t just go somewhere else, she went everywhere: traveling the world, trying out different jobs, different apartments, different relationships.

  Mom was always telling her little sister to grow up and settle down, but I thought Stel was perfect just the way she was. Calling her own shots, saying the heck what other people think. She’s the one who told me I didn’t have to do everything my parents did just because they decided it was right for them. Find yourself, she said. That’s the only way.

  Last summer she was on a beach in the south of France when she noticed two little kids being swept out to sea. As a teenager, she’d lifeguarded at our town water park, and she dove right in after them. She brought one back to safety before going in after the other. She got him close enough to shore that he could make it on his own, and that’s when the riptide pulled her back again.

  They never recovered her body.

  That’s the thing about lost. It doesn’t always mean found. The worst losses are those things we never truly get over, no matter how good we are at locating misplaced car keys. Sometimes it feels like they take over completely, leaving a hole where your heart used to be.

  The grief counselor told me to hold on to the memories, that’s how I keep Stel alive forever. But there are some days I’d like to pack my memories up in a suitcase, put them on a plane, and let them fly around at thirty thousand feet until I’m ready to collect them again, which, to be honest, might be never.

  My job helps, though, it really does. Last summer it was the one thing I kept doing, a place I could go when everything else seemed bleak and pointless. Red treats me like an adult, and he’s never judged me for anything, unlike Mom and Dad. And if I cry when I’m back here, which I did pretty much every day after we got the call about Stel, there’s no one around to see me. Along with getting regular paychecks, what more can you ask for in a job?

  Well, there’s another thing. At her memorial service, Aunt Stella’s favorite yoga instructor called her a connector. That means someone who makes the world feel more welcoming and whole, who makes people feel better together in it. I keep thinking that if I can be more like Stel, if I can bring people and things together, maybe I won’t have lost her entirely after all.

  I like to imagin
e that Stella survived and is living on an island somewhere, free and beautiful and drinking from her mason jar. Of course, that’s highly unlikely, but who knows, maybe somewhere, someone is finding the things that are important to me. Being in the store makes me think about possibility, about how we only know our side of the story. Maybe there’s another side to things you haven’t even thought of yet.

  I drop the mic. These suitcases aren’t going to unpack themselves.

  2

  Nell

  Ashton and I say good-bye in my driveway, in front of my parents, who are waiting in the car, all packed and ready to go and politely trying not to look. My little brother, Jack, has no such honor code; his face is pressed against the glass, eyes bulging and trained on us. Mom has given me ten—OK, fifteen!—minutes for this final-final-final farewell. The drive to Alabama from our town in the Chicago suburbs will take at least ten hours, and we need to get on the road. As it is, with eating and bathroom breaks and everything else, it’s probably going to take two days.

  But it isn’t just about time. The truth is, my mom doesn’t get it. You and Ashton have been attached at the hip since school let out for the summer last week. What could you possibly still have to say to each other? she asked. She doesn’t understand that love isn’t a matter of having to say things to each other. We’re past that, Ashton and me. When I tried to explain, she reminded me that we could email and text all the time, as if that’s anywhere near the same. She’s never liked him much, anyway: Don’t get too serious; first relationships are just for practice, she told me when we started dating. You’ll see. My mom is a scientist; everything has to be perfect. Me, I just want to be loved, and in love.

  I grab Ashton’s hand and pull him toward the corner of the yard, where there’s a row of still spindly trees growing at different heights. I brought each of them home from school on Arbor Day—a tree for every year we lived here, fifth grade through sophomore year—and Dad helped me dig a hole and plant them, one after the other. The oldest are taller than I am now. I’ve heard the Arbor Day program is being discontinued. Just like my life as I know it.