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Excerpt from The Easy Part of Impossible by Sarah Tomp, plus links to reviews, author biography & more

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The Easy Part of Impossible by Sarah Tomp

The Easy Part of Impossible

by Sarah Tomp
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  • First Published:
  • Apr 21, 2020, 352 pages
  • Paperback:
  • Jul 2021, 352 pages
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"You stay." She handed him her full cup. "I'll see you tomorrow."

"Are you sure?"

She could see him wrestling with his options. Fun party with beer and friends vs. being a good boyfriend.

"I'm sure."

She was relieved he believed her. It was exhausting being cheered up and doted on.

Back at the car, Ria stood on the side of the road, breathing deeply. Wind whipped around her, stinging her arms and legs. Then, suddenly, it subsided. She turned full circle, arms out. She waited, but the winds were gone. An ache of missing hit her hard, in her gut.

Two

Home from the party, Ria took out her contacts, letting the world slip into its usual lack of clarity. Lying on her trampoline, she breathed in the rich smells of Maggie's shampoo mixed with the dust of the trampoline and the sharp clean of chlorine soaked into her friend's skin. Ria refused to ask about practice. She was used to denying cravings.

"How was the quarry?" Maggie asked.

"There's nothing there."

"No one showed up?"

"There were lots of people. It was a party. But the quarry, it's a big hole. It only exists because it's empty. Well, except for the cloud. There was a cloud in it."

"You're so random, Ria." Maggie laughed.

"Do you remember that story Benny told about the quarry? The one about the boy who jumped in?"

"And lost his head? How could I forget?"

"Sean said it wasn't true."

"Huh," said Maggie. "It must have been partly true. Or it happened somewhere. Benny doesn't lie. But sometimes the details aren't all there. He leaves things out."

Ria shifted to her side, leaving her arm under her heavy head. The light from her house illuminated Maggie's face and frizzy red hair against the dark beyond her yard.

"How was practice?" She'd waited as long as she could.

"Everyone misses you."

"Not everyone," said Ria. Then, before Maggie could contradict her, she said, "I know Chrissy doesn't."

"I think she actually does, even if she'd never admit it. The worst part is we're not allowed to talk about you. Temo said your name the other day and had to climb the ladder for twenty minutes."

Ria didn't trust her voice to answer. She couldn't talk about them, either.

Maggie rolled over, then clambered up. She stood on the springy surface, hovering over Ria. She bounced gently. Then more definitely. By the time she started circling, she was rising several inches into the night sky. Ria relaxed into the bounce of the old favorite game. She stayed limp, letting herself be lifted and lowered, following the rhythm of the jumps. Lost in the soothe of motion, then the rush of the drop, until she was elevated at least a foot off the bed of the trampoline. That's when the thrill of the fall kicked in, setting them both to breathless giggling. Maggie rolled into a flip and landed on her butt.

"I made my gainer two-and-a-half tonight."

"Maximum Mags! Why didn't you tell me right away? Did you rip it?"

"Duh. No way. But I didn't bruise anything, either."

"You're such a big-girl diver."

"I thought Benny was going to cry, he was so happy."

"Of course. Now the colleges are going to be knocking down your door. That's a real money dive."

"Should I call the coach at Uden College? Or wait until I get it on video?"

"Don't settle, Mags."

"It's not settling. Uden is a really good school."

"Why be good when you could be great?" Bennyisms had a way of slipping out of her mouth before she thought them.

Softly Maggie asked, "Why quit now? After everything ..."

That's what diving had been for her. Everything.

"There's no point. Not after I blew my chance at Nationals." She had to make Benny's words her own by saying them over and over again.

"You fell. You got hurt. Stop me if I'm missing something."

Excerpted from The Easy Part of Impossible by Sarah Tomp. Copyright © 2020 by Sarah Tomp. Excerpted by permission of HarperTeen. All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.

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