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THINNER by Antigone Chapter 6
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The Chapters
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“Hey,”
Frank smiled as Joe stumbled in the back door, tripped over a pair of
shoes, and cursed good-naturedly. “Who
left these here!” the younger Hardy snapped. “They’re
yours kiddo.” “Oh.”
Joe blushed and offered his brother a sheepish grin. “How
was your walk?” “Fine.” He’d
had to stop not his usual once, but twice today, too dizzy to keep
walking straight. The past month had seen not ten, but close to twenty
pounds disappear from the younger Hardy; needless to say, Frank was not
the only one to begin to mention that Joe was not eating enough. His
parents commented nightly as Joe picked his way around dinner, his Aunt
fretted whenever she came over, and his girlfriend had begun to touch his
arms and shoulders more often, to see how much weight was disappearing
from his back, shoulders, and chest. It’s
just a few more pounds, the younger Hardy insisted to anyone who
mentioned that the weight was going too fast, that he was taking the diet
perhaps too seriously. I’m
feeling fine. Great, really. No need to worry. But
Frank was worried, and he knew his parents were worrying too. Joe had
needed all new pants and undershirts—the old ones were just too loose.
Besides that, he’d begun napping more and going to bed earlier, and
struggling with dizziness on and off, despite the abnormally large amount
of water he downed daily. “Vanessa
called,” the elder Hardy said as Joe set his bag down and came slowly
into the kitchen, pausing to fill a tall glass with water from the sink
before coming to sit across from Frank. “What’d
she say?” “She
wants us to go hang out with the gang tonight. You know, get dinner, see
Tony at work…” Joe
instantly frowned. “You mean, go to Mr. Pizza.” “Sure.” “I
have homework.” Frank
bit back a sigh, expecting the response. “It’s
Friday night, Joe.” “I’m
tired. It’s been a long
week.” “Let’s
just go for an hour then. We’ll pop in, grab something to eat—you
know it doesn’t take long—and then I’ll drive you home. Please? You
haven’t been out with us in weeks. Isn’t Vanessa ready to take you
hostage or something?” Joe
drained the glass and avoided his brother’s gaze. “We’re fine,”
he said shortly. “But
you never go out. With her or with any of them.” “I
go out with you.” “No.
You come into my room and we talk, but we don’t go out. And never
to eat.” “So
what? Why is everyone
on my case about food all the
time. Leave me alone, okay? Look at me, I’m fine. Coach said a few
more pounds—“ “I
don’t care!” Frank almost shouted. Joe jumped, glared at his brother
and started to get up; Frank reached out and caught his arm. “Let
go—“ “Joe,
wait, sit, I’m sorry. I didn’t meant to shout. I just—“ “Don’t
talk about it.” “Joe—“ “No
more. Please,” Joe said
through gritted teeth. “I don’t want to fight with you.” “Come
tonight?” The
brothers watched each other, Frank slowly letting go of his brother’s
arm, in dismay at how slender it was growing. “You’re
scaring me,” the older Hardy murmured, his voice wavering. Joe’s face
slowly softened, and he sat back across from his brother. Joe looked down
at the table, rubbing his arm where Frank had touched it. “Did I hurt
you?” “No.” “I’m
just—“ “If
I come tonight, will you feel better?” “I
want you to want to come,
that’s all. You’re isolating yourself.” “I’ll
come out then.” “Joe—“ “I’ll
come Frank.” The
elder Hardy sighed and nodded, letting Joe get up and leave the room,
resisting the urge to touch his brother’s shoulder, knowing it wasn’t
out of affection, but to check to see if any bones were beginning to rise
through the skin. * “You’re
here!” Joe
bent and quickly pecked his girlfriend’s lips. “Hey babe.” “I’ve
missed you. Are you all right?” “Fine,”
he said, forcing a smile and clenching his hands into fists to hide the
sweat on his palms. Frank was eyeing him closely, although Joe was
pretending he didn’t notice. The drive to the restaurant had been
awkward, the two brothers making small talk, not their usual friendly,
easy-flowing banter. “You
all right?” Callie asked as her boyfriend fumbled with his chair. “Yeah,”
he murmured, pecking her on the cheek. “Joe?”
his girlfriend whispered, then patted her boyfriend’s arm when he
nodded. “Who
wants what?” Chet asked after greeting the Hardys as Tony arrived at
the table. The
gang agreed on the usual pizzas and side orders while Joe, staring down
at the table, mumbled that he wanted a salad and diet soda, then glanced
at Frank, as if daring him to object. But Frank didn’t look the least
bit confrontational; Joe was surprised to see his brother looked…well, sad.
“We
haven’t seen you around much,” Callie said carefully to the younger
Hardy, smiling. Joe slid his hand in to Vanessa’s and shrugged. “I’ve
been busy.” “You’ve
been sleeping more than usual,” Frank commented, his face critical. Joe
flushed a bit. “Coach
keeps us working,” Biff jumped in, attempting to ease a bit of the
tension gathering at the end of the table from the obvious distance the
Hardy brothers were keeping from one another. “I’ve been napping more
than usual myself.” There
was an awkward pause as Frank and Joe watched each other, but the food
arrived shortly after and Joe broke his brother’s gaze, leaned in to
his girlfriend and kissed her temple. “Are
you okay?” she asked softly. He just nodded, as his friends began
passing plates around, pulling slices of pizza from the racks, passing
sodas down the table. He swallowed, surprised by how much the smell made
him crazy, how hungry he
actually felt; and, at the same time, how disgusted
by the grease, cheese, and bread. “Sure
you don’t want some?” Chet asked, gesturing to the slice as Tony
handed Joe his salad. “No,”
Joe forced a grin, “I’m fine.” He glanced at his older brother,
daring Frank to comment, but the elder Hardy was dabbing grease off his
slice without meeting his brother’s gaze. Conversation
passed as usual between the friends: school, break-ups, hook-ups, sports,
dances, weekend plans. But while the group ate and laughed and joked,
Frank watched his brother eat with increasing anxiety; before, Joe would
have attacked the salad; now, he picked around the tomatoes, cucumbers,
and carrots to individual pieces of lettuce that he carefully cut into
tiny pieces.
“You’re not having much,” he said carefully when his brother
pushed the bowl aside. Joe shrugged.
“I had a big lunch.”
Vanessa turned to him, frowning. “No you didn’t. You just had
an apple…remember? You said you had a big breakfast.”
“I did.”
“No,” Franks said slowly, “you didn’t have anything for
breakfast. You said you were running late.”
“I was,” Joe avoided their eyes and shifted uncomfortably.
Vanessa looked anxiously at Frank, but his eyes remained locked on his
brother.
“Joe, what…”
“I’m fine, Frank. It’s fine.”
“Joe,” Vanessa murmured, “are you okay? I mean, if that’s
all you’ve eaten…” “Don’t
mother me,” the younger Hardy snapped, shoving himself away from the
table. “Both of you. I’m fine.” “Where
are you going?” “You
said we could go home after we ate.” The
conversation died at the table as everyone turned to stare at the younger
Hardy. “Don’t
you want to stick around a little longer? Look, you’re not even
finished—“ “I’m
finished,” Joe snapped.
“Look, can I have the keys?” Vanessa
turned, wide-eyed, to Frank; in fact, all eyes were slowly turning toward
Frank, as if to say what’s wrong with your brother? You should know;
you always do. I
don’t, Frank realized, I have
no freakin’ clue. “I’ll
drive you,” the elder Hardy said, leaving his second slice half-eaten
and handing Callie a twenty to help pay. He bid the group good-bye,
kissed his girlfriend quickly, and hurried out the door after his
brother. Let the author know what you think of this story
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Home Library Authors Rogue's Gallery Vehicles Chums Message Board Rap Sheet Links Contact Disclaimer The Hardy Boys belong to Simon and Schuster and the Stratemeyer Foundation. The Hardy Boys Fan Fiction authors of the Hardy Detective Agency have just borrowed them for an adventure or two. The authors promise to put the boys back when they are done with them. The authors do claim copyright to the original characters in this story. Please do not borrow original characters without express permission of the authors. |
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