Clay is at first surprised, then a little bit anxious as he talks to Skye. Running through his head are all his thoughts and theories about Skye and her withdrawal from society, making him nervous and causing him to get off the bus at the next stop.
This leaves Skye alone again, and she continues on the bus, resting her head on the window and closing her eyes. The day after listening to all of Hannah's tapes, Clay is walking down the hallway when he sees Skye walking further down the hall.
He hesitates for a moment, then decides that he is willing to take the risk of rejection and catches up to her. He calls her name, and that is the end of the novel. It is likely that Clay believed Skye suffered from depression just like Hannah, and knowing what happened to Hannah, Clay is determined to prevent that from happening in the future.
There is no official, canonical information on Skye's appearance. However, upon the release of an upcoming Netflix miniseries, a canonical description of her can be made. Nonetheless, a short account of her is given by the narrator, Clay Jensen.
Knowing that Clay considers her pretty, and had a crush on her, it can be possibly inferred that Skye does not have serious physical disfigurations, and probably has a "normal" body. There is no evidence that Clay found any sort of strange feature attractive in people, so it is safe to assume that the people he found pretty were within the normal spectrum of appearance.
Furthermore, Clay's crush on Hannah Baker allows a somewhat shakier claim that Skye may have looked something like Hannah, although her loose clothing likely prevented that from ever being confirmed. Skye is known for wearing a certain, consistent style of clothing. It is typically baggy and not form-fitting, so as to hide herself and not stand out. Usually, Clay tells us, it is also gray or some other dull color, again worn for the purpose of blending in.
After being officially diagnosed with bipolar disorder, she makes the decision to move to her aunt and uncle's and start over at a different school in another state so that she can focus on her mental wellness and finding medications that work for her. She tells Clay that her mom doesn't want her to go back to Liberty High. Considering the case against the school, this isn't surprising. However, it's clear that this is Skye's choice as well.
Like I don't need to do work to get well. Like it's everyone's fault but mine. I wanna live a better life than that. It's a dramatic juxtaposition to Hannah Baker and the conceit of the series, but also serves as a reminder that everyone deals with their own struggles in different ways.
Clay has trouble reckoning with that. He spends a lot of the season blaming himself for supposedly pushing Skye over the edge and "failing" her the way he thinks he failed Hannah, but Skye's not making tapes and blaming people. One of those people on 13 Reasons Why is Skye Miller. Skye only appears less than a handful of times in the original 13 Reasons Why book.
Because Netflix's adaptation of the book expands the story from one night to multiple weeks, we see more of Skye. She works as a barista at the coffeeshop Clay and his fellow students frequent, so the two spend more time together and we get to know more about their past.
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