âYou gonna show up for practice today?â Landon asks. Heâs already standing outside my door and I donât even remember pulling into the parking lot of the school, much less turning off the car. I nod, but fail to make eye contact with him. Iâd been so lost inside my own thoughts during the drive over, I didnât even think to prod him for information.
Iâve been hung up on the fact that I didnât wake up with memories. I was hoping Charlie was rightâthat we would wake up and everything would be back to normal. But we didnât and itâs not.
Or at least I didnât wake up with memories. I havenât spoken to Charlie since last night, and her text this morning revealed nothing.
I didnât even open the text. It flashed on my lock screen and I read enough of the first sentence to know I didnât like how it made me feel. My thoughts immediately wandered to who might be picking her up and if she was okay with it.
My protective instincts kick in whenever it comes to her, and I donât know if itâs always been that way or if itâs because sheâs the only one I can relate to right now.
I get out of the car, determined to find her. Make sure sheâs okay, even though I know she more than likely is. I donât have to know any more about her to know that she doesnât really need me to take care of her. Sheâs fiercely independent.
That doesnât mean I wonât still try.
When I enter the school, it occurs to me that I donât know where to begin searching for her. Neither of us can remember which lockers are ours, and considering this happened to us both during fourth period yesterday, we have no idea where our first, second or third period classes are.
I decide to walk to the administration office and see about getting a new copy of my schedule. Hopefully Charlie thought to do the same, because I doubt theyâll give me hers.
The secretary is unfamiliar, but she smiles knowingly at me. âHere to see Ms. Ashley, Silas?â
Ms. Ashley.
I start to shake my head no, but sheâs already pointing me in the direction of an open office door. Whoever Ms. Ashley is, I must visit her enough that my presence in the office isnât unusual.
Before I make it to the open office door, a woman steps out. Sheâs tall, attractive and appears extremely young to be an employee. Whatever she does here, she hasnât been doing it long. She barely looks old enough to be out of college.
âMr. Nash,â she says with a vague smile, flicking her blonde hair back over her shoulder. âDo you have an appointment?â
I pause and stop my advancement toward her. I glance back at the secretary right when Ms. Ashley waves it off. âItâs fine, I have a few minutes. Come inside.â
I move gingerly past her, taking in the nameplate on the door as I enter her office.
AVRIL ASHLEY, GUIDANCE COUNSELOR.
She closes the door behind me and I look around the office, which is decorated in motivational quotes and typical posters portraying positive messages. I suddenly feel uncomfortable. Trapped. I should have said I didnât need to see her, but Iâm hoping this counselorâone I apparently visited regularlyâwill know a few things about my past that may be of help to Charlie and me.
I turn, just as Ms. Ashleyâs hand slides down the door and reaches the lock. She turns it and then begins to saunter toward me. Her hands meet my chest and right before her mouth connects with mine, I stumble backward and catch myself on a filing cabinet.
Whoa.
What the hell?
She looks offended that I just shook off her advance. This must not be unusual behavior with us.
Iâm sleeping with the guidance counselor?
I immediately think of Charlie and, based on our obvious non-commitment to one another, I question what kind of relationship we had. Why were we even together?
âIs something wrong?â Ms. Ashley says.
I turn slightly and take a few steps away from her, toward the window. âNot feeling very well today.â I look her in the eyes and force a smile. âDonât want to get you sick.â
My words put her at ease and she closes the space between us again, this time leaning in and pressing her lips against my neck. âPoor thing,â she purrs. âWant me to make you feel better?â
My eyes are wide, darting around the room, mapping out my escape route. My attention falls to the computer on her desk, and then a printer behind her chair. âMs. Ashley,â I say, gently pushing her away from my neck.
This is wrong on so many levels.
She laughs. âYou never call me that when weâre alone. Itâs weird.â
Sheâs too comfortable with me. I need to get out of here.
âAvril,â I say, smiling at her again. âI need a favor. Can you print a copy of mine and Charlieâs schedules?â
She immediately straightens up, her smile whisked away at the mention of Charlieâs name. Point of contention, apparently.
âIâm thinking about switching a couple of my classes so I wonât have to be around her as much.â Couldnât be further from the truth.
Ms. AshleyâAvrilâslides her fingers down my chest, the smile reappearing on her face. âWell, itâs about time. Finally decided to take the counselorâs advice, I see.â
Her voice drips with sex. I can see how things must have started up with her, but it makes me feel shallow. It makes me hate who I was.
I shift on my feet as she works her way to her seat and begins clicking at her keyboard.
She pulls freshly printed pages from the printer and walks them over to me. I attempt to take the schedules from her hand, but she pulls them away with a grin. âUh-uh,â she says, shaking her head slowly. âThese are gonna cost you.â She leans against her desk and lays the sheets of paper beside her, face down. She brings her eyes back to mine and I can see Iâm not leaving without appeasing her, which is the last thing I want to do right now.
I take two slow steps toward her and rest my hands on either side of her. I lean in to her neck and can hear her gasp when I begin to speak. âAvril, I only have five minutes left before I have to be in class. Thereâs no way I can do all the things I want to do to you in just five minutes.â
I slip my hand to the schedules lying on her desk and I back away with them. Sheâs tugging on her bottom lip, staring up at me with heated eyes. âCome back during lunch,â she whispers. âWill an hour be sufficient, Mr. Nash?â
I wink at her. âI guess itâll have to do,â I say as I head out the door. I donât pause until Iâm down the hallway and around the corner, out of her line of sight.
The eighteen-year-old irresponsible side of me wants to high five myself for having apparently snagged the school counselor, but the reasonable side of me wants to punch myself for doing something like that to Charlie.
Charlie is obviously the better choice, and I hate knowing that I was putting that relationship at risk.
But then again, so was Charlie.
Luckily, the schedules list our locker numbers and combinations. Hers is 543 and mine is 544. Iâm guessing that was intentional.
I open my locker first, and find three textbooks stacked inside. Thereâs a half empty coffee in front of the books and an empty Cinnamon roll wrapper. There are two pictures taped to the inside of the locker: one of Charlie and me, the other just of Charlie.
I pull the picture of her down and stare at it. Why, if we werenât happy together, do I have pictures of her in my locker? Especially this one. I obviously took it, as itâs similar in style to the pictures hanging around my room.
Sheâs sitting cross-legged on a couch. Her head is tilted slightly and sheâs staring directly at the camera.
Her eyes are intenseâlooking into the camera as if sheâs looking into me. Sheâs both confident and comfortable, and although she isnât smiling or laughing in the photo, I can tell sheâs happy. Whenever this was taken, it was a good day for her. For us. Her eyes are screaming a thousand things in this photo, but the loudest is, âI love you, Silas!â
I stare at it a while longer and then place the photo back inside the locker. I check my phone to see if sheâs texted. She hasnât. I look around, just as Landon approaches from down the hall. He tosses words over his shoulder as he passes me. âLooks like Brian isnât quite out of the picture yet, brother.â
The bell rings.
I look in the direction Landon came from and see a heavier crowd of students at that end of the hallway. People seem to be stalling, glancing over their shoulders. Some are looking at me, some are fixated on whatever is at the end of the hallway. I begin to walk in that direction and everyoneâs attention falls on me as I pass.
A break in the crowd begins to shape and thatâs when I see her. Sheâs standing against a row of lockers, hugging herself with her arms. Brian is leaning against one of the lockers, looking at her intently. He looks deep in conversation, whereas she just appears guarded. He spots me almost immediately and his posture stiffens along with his expression. Charlie follows his gaze until her eyes land on mine.
As much as I can assume she doesnât need rescuing, relief falls over her as soon as we lock eyes. A smile tugs at her lips, and I want nothing more than to get him away from her. I spend two seconds deliberating. Should I threaten him? Should I hit him like I wanted so badly to hit him yesterday in the parking lot? Neither of these actions feels as though theyâll make the point I want to make.
âYou should get to class,â I hear her say to him. Her words are quick, a warning, as if sheâs afraid Iâve decided to punch him. She doesnât have to worry. What Iâm about to do will hurt Brian Finley a hell of a lot more than if I were to just hit him.
The second bell rings. No one moves. There are no students rushing to class to avoid being late. No one around me shuffles down the hall at the sound of the bell.
Theyâre all waiting. Watching. Expecting me to start a fight. I wonder if thatâs what the old Silas would do? I wonder if thatâs what the new Silas should do?
I ignore everyone but Charlie and walk confidently toward her, keeping my eyes trained on her the entire time. As soon as Brian sees me approaching, he takes two steps away from her. I look directly at him while I stretch out my hand toward her, giving her the choice to take it and go with me or remain where she is.
I feel her fingers slide between mine and she grips my hand tightly. I pull her away from the lockers, away from Brian, away from the crowd of students. As soon as we round the corner, she drops my hand and stops walking.
âThat was a little dramatic, donât you think?â she says.
I turn to face her. Her eyes are narrowed, but her mouth could pass for smiling. I canât tell if sheâs amused or angry.
âThey expected a certain reaction from me. Whatâd you want me to do, tap him on the shoulder and ask politely if I could cut in?â
She folds her arms over her chest. âWhat makes you think I needed you to do anything?â
I donât understand her hostility. It seemed like we left on good terms last night, so Iâm confused as to why she seems so angry with me.
She rubs her hands up and down her arms and then her eyes fall to the floor. âSorry,â she mutters. âI justâ¦â She looks up at the ceiling and groans. âI was just prodding him for information. Thatâs the only reason I was with him in the hallway just now. I wasnât flirting.â
Her response catches me off guard. I donât like the look of guilt in her expression. Thatâs not why I pulled her away from him, but I realize now that she thinks I really am upset with her for being with him. I could tell she didnât want to be there, but maybe she doesnât realize how well Iâve learned to read her.
I take a step toward her. When she lifts her eyes to meet mine, I smile. âWould it make you feel better to know I was cheating on you with the guidance counselor?â
She sucks in a quick rush of air and shock registers on her face.
âYou werenât the only one who wasnât committed to us, Charlie. Apparently we both had issues we needed to work out, so donât be so hard on yourself.â
Relief probably isnât the reaction a girl should have to finding out her boyfriend has been cheating on her, but itâs definitely what Charlie feels right now. I can see it in her eyes and I can hear it in the pent up breath she releases.
âWowâ¦,â she says, her hands falling to her hips. âSo technically, weâre tied?â
Tied? I shake my head. âThis isnât a game I want to win, Charlie. If anything, Iâd say we both lost.â
Her lips spread into a ghostly grin, and then she looks over her shoulder. âWe should figure out where our classes are.â
I remember the schedules and pull hers out of my back pocket. âWeâre not together until fourth period History. You have English first. Itâs back in the other hallway,â I say, motioning toward her first period classroom.
She nods appreciatively and unfolds the schedule. âSmart thinking,â she says, glancing it over. She looks back up at me with a wicked smile. âI guess you got these from your guidance counselor mistress?â
Her words make me wince, even though I shouldnât really feel remorse for whatever happened before yesterday.
âEx-guidance counselor mistress,â I clarify with a grin. She laughs, and itâs a laugh of solidarity. As screwed up as our situation is, and as confusing as the new information about our relationship is, the fact that we can laugh about it proves that we at least share in the absurdity of it all. And the only thought I have as I walk away from her is how much I wish Brian Finley could choke on her laugh.
The first three classes of the day felt foreign. No one in them and nothing discussed seemed familiar to me. I felt like an imposter, out of place.
But the instant I walked into fourth period and took a seat next to Charlie, my mood changed. Sheâs familiar. My only familiar thing in a world of inconsistency and confusion.
We stole a few glances at each other, but we never spoke during class. We arenât even speaking now as we enter the cafeteria together. I glance at our table and everyone from yesterday is already seated, save our two empty seats.
I nudge my head toward the lunch line. âLetâs get our food first.â
She glances up at me, briefly, before looking back at the table. âIâm not really hungry,â she says. âIâll just wait for you at the table.â She heads in the direction of our group and I head toward the cafeteria line.
After grabbing my tray and a Pepsi, I walk over to the table and take a seat. Charlie is looking down at her phone, excluding herself from the surrounding conversation.
The guy to my rightâAndrew, I thinkâelbows me. âSilas,â he says, jabbing me repeatedly. âTell him how much I benched Monday.â
I look up at the guy sitting across from us. He rolls his eyes and downs the rest of his soda before slamming it on the table. âCome on, Andrew. You think Iâm stupid enough to believe your best friend wouldnât lie for you?â
Best friend.
Andrew is my best friend, yet I wasnât even sure of his name thirty seconds ago.
My attention moves from the two of them to the food in front of me. I open my soda and take a sip, just as Charlie clenches her waist. Itâs loud in the cafeteria, but I still hear the rumble of her stomach. Sheâs hungry.
If sheâs hungry, why isnât she eating?
âCharlie?â I lean in close to her. âWhy arenât you eating?â She dismisses my question with a shrug. I lower my voice even more. âDo you have money?â
Her eyes dart up to mine as if I just revealed a huge secret to the entire room. She swallows and then looks away, embarrassed. âNo,â she says quietly. âI gave my last few dollars to Janette this morning. Iâll be fine until I get home.â
I set my drink down on the table and push my tray in front of her. âHere. Iâll go get another one.â
I stand and go back to the line and get another tray. When I return to the table, sheâs taken a few bites of the food. She doesnât tell me thank you, and I feel relieved. Making sure she has food to eat isnât a favor I want to be thanked for. Itâs something I hope she would expect from me.
âDo you want a ride home today?â I ask her, just as weâre finishing up our meal.
âDude, you canât miss practice again,â Andrew shoots in my direction. âCoach wonât let you play tomorrow night if you do.â
I rub a palm down my face, and then I reach in my pocket and retrieve my keys. âHere,â I tell her, placing them in her hand. âDrive your sister home after school. Pick me up when practice is over.â
She tries to hand the keys back to me, but I wonât take them. âKeep them,â I tell her. âYou might need a car today and I wonât be using it.â
Andrew interrupts. âYouâre letting her drive your car? Are you kidding me? Youâve never even let me sit behind the damn wheel!â
I look over at Andrew and shrug. âYou arenât the one Iâm in love with.â
Charlie spits out her drink with a burst of laughter. I glance over at her, and her smile is huge. It lights up her entire face, somehow even making the brown of her eyes seem less dark. I may not remember anything about her, but I would bet her smile was my favorite part of her.
This day has been exhausting. It feels like Iâve been on a stage for hours, acting out scenes I have no script for. The only thing that appeals to me right now is either being in my bed or being with Charlie. Or maybe a combination of both.
However, Charlie and I both still have a goal, and thatâs to figure out what the hell happened to us yesterday. Despite the fact that neither of us really wanted to bother with school today, we knew school could lead to an answer. After all, this did happen in the middle of the school day yesterday, so the answer could be related somehow.
Football practice may be of some help. Iâll be around people I havenât spent much time with in the last twenty-four hours. I might learn something about myself or about Charlie that I didnât know before. Something that could shed some light on our situation.
Iâm relieved to find all the lockers have names on them, so it isnât hard to locate my gear. What is hard is trying to figure out how to put it on. I struggle with the pants, all the while trying to look like I know what Iâm doing. The locker room slowly empties out as all the guys make their way to the field until Iâm the only one left.
When I think Iâve got everything situated, I grab my jersey off the top shelf of the locker to pull it on over my head. A box catches my eye, located in the back of the top shelf of my locker. I pull it toward me and take a seat on the bench. Itâs a red box, much larger than a box that would just contain a piece of jewelry. I pull the lid off and find a few pictures at the very top.
There arenât any people in the pictures. They seem to be of places. I flip through them and come to a picture of a swing set. Itâs raining, and the ground beneath the swing is covered in water. I flip it over, and written on the back, it says, Our first kiss.
The next picture is of a backseat, but the view is from the floorboard, looking up. I flip it over. Our first fight.
Third is a picture of what looks like a church, but itâs only the picture of the doors. Where we met.
I flip through all the pictures until finally I get to a letter, folded at the bottom of the box. I pick it up and unfold it. Itâs a short letter in my handwriting, addressed to Charlie. I begin to read it, but my phone buzzes, so I reach over and unlock it.
Charlie: What time is your practice over?
Me: Not sure. I found a box of stuff in the locker room. Donât know if itâll help, but thereâs a letter in it.
Charlie: What does it say?
âSilas!â someone yells from behind me. I spin around and drop two of the pictures in my hands. Thereâs a man standing at the door with an angry look on his face. âGet on the field!â
I nod and he continues on down the hall. I put the pictures back in the box and set it back inside my locker. I take a deep, calming breath and make my way out to the practice field.
Two lines are formed on the field, both rows of guys hunched forward and staring at the guy in front of them. Thereâs an obvious opening, so I jog toward the empty spot and copy what the other players are doing.
âFor shitâs sake, Nash! Why are you not wearing your shoulder pads?â Someone yells.
Shoulder pads. Crap.
I skip out of line and run back to the locker room. This is going to be the longest hour of my life. Itâs odd I canât remember the rules of football. Canât be that hard, though. Just run back and forth a few times and practice will be over.
I locate pads behind the row of lockers. Luckily, theyâre easy to put on. I rush back out onto the field and everyone is scattering, running around like ants. I hesitate before walking onto the field. When a whistle blows, someone shoves me from behind. âGo!â he yells, frustrated.
The lines, the numbers, the goal posts. They mean nothing to me as I stand on the field amongst the other guys. One of the coaches shouts an order and before I know it, the ball is being thrown in my direction. I catch it.
What now?
Run. I should probably run.
I make it three feet before my face meets the astroturf. A whistle blows. A man yells.
I stand up, just as one of the coaches stalks in my direction. âWhat the hell was that? Get your damn head in the play!â
I look around me, the sweat beginning to trickle down my forehead. Landonâs voice rings out behind me. âDude. What the hell is wrong with you?â
I turn and look at him, just as everyone huddles around me. I follow their motions and lay my arms over the backs of the guys to my left and right. No one speaks for several seconds, and then I realize theyâre all looking at me. Waiting. I think they want me to say something? I get the feeling itâs not a prayer circle.
âYou gonna call a play or what?â The guy to my left says.
âUhâ¦,â I stutter. âYouâ¦,â I point to Landon. âDo thatâ¦thing.â Before they can question me, I pull apart and the huddle breaks.
âCoach is gonna bench him,â I hear someone mumble behind me. A whistle blows and before the sound even leaves my ears, a freight train crashes into my chest.
Or at least it feels that way.
The sky is above me, my ears are ringing, I canât pull in a breath.
Landon is hovering over me. He grabs my helmet and shakes it. âWhat the hell is wrong with you?â He looks around and then back down at me. His eyes narrow. âStay on the ground. Act sick.â
I do what he says and he jumps up to a stand. âI told him not to come to practice, Coach,â Landon says. âHeâs had strep all week. I think heâs dehydrated.â
I close my eyes, relieved for my brother. I kind of like this kid.
âWhat the hell are you even doing here, Nash?â The coach is kneeling now. âGo to the locker room and get hydrated. Weâve got a game tomorrow night.â He stands and motions for one of the assistant coaches. âGet him a Z-pack and make sure heâs ready for the field tomorrow.â
Landon pulls me up. My ears are still ringing, but Iâm able to breathe now. I make my way toward the locker rooms, relieved to be off the field. I should have never walked on in the first place. Not smart, Silas.
I make it back to the locker room and change out of my gear. As soon as I get my shoes on, I hear footsteps nearing the locker room from down the hall. I glance around and spot an exit on the far wall, so I rush to it and push it open. Luckily, it leads right out to the parking lot.
Iâm immediately relieved to see my car. I rush over to it just as Charlie climbs out of the driver side, hopping onto her feet as I approach. Iâm so relieved to see herâto just have someone to relate toâthat I donât even think about what I do next.
I grab her wrist and pull her to me, wrapping my arms around her in a tight hug. My face is buried in her hair and I let out a sigh. She feels familiar. Safe. Makes me forget that I canât even rememberâ¦
âWhat are you doing?â
Sheâs stiff against me. Her cold reaction reminds me that we donât do things like this. Silas and Charlie did things like this.
Shit.
I clear my throat and release her, taking a quick step back. âSorry,â I mutter. âForce of habit.â
âWe have no habits.â She pushes past me and walks around my car.
âDo you think youâve always been this mean to me?â I ask her.
She looks at me from over the hood and nods. âMy moneyâs on yes. Youâre probably a glutton for punishment.â
âMore like a masochist,â I mutter.
We both climb into my car, and I have two places I plan on going tonight. The first being my house to shower, but Iâm sure if I asked her if she wanted to come along, sheâd say no just to spite me. Instead, I head in the direction of my house and donât give her a choice.
âWhy are you smiling?â she asks, three miles into our drive.
I didnât realize I was. I shrug. âJust thinking.â
âAbout what?â
I glance at her and sheâs waiting for my answer with an impatient frown.
âI was wondering how the old Silas ever broke through your hard exterior.â
She laughs. âWhat makes you think he did?â
I would smile again, but I donât think Iâve stopped. âYou saw the video, Charlie. You loved him.â I pause for a second, then rephrase. âMe. You loved me.â
âShe loved you,â Charlie says, and then smiles. âIâm not even sure if I like you yet.â
I shake my head with a soft laugh. âI donât know myself very well, but I must have been extremely competitive. Because I just took that as a challenge.â
âTook what as a challenge? You think you can make me like you again?â
I look over at her and give my head the slightest shake. âNo. Iâm gonna make you fall in love with me again.â
I can see the gentle roll of her throat as she swallows, but just as fast as she let her guard down, it flies back up. âGood luck with that,â she says, facing forward again. âIâm pretty sure youâll be the first guy to ever compete with himself over the affection of a girl.â
âMaybe so,â I say as we pull into my driveway. âBut my moneyâs on me.â
I turn the car off and get out. She doesnât unbuckle. âYou coming? I need to take a quick shower.â
She doesnât even look at me. âIâll wait in the car.â
I donât argue. I close the door and head inside to shower, thinking about the small smile I could swear was playing in the corner of her mouth.
And while winning her over again isnât my main priority, itâs definitely the new back-up plan in case neither of us can figure out how to revert back to who we were before yesterday. Because even through all the bullshitâher cheating on me with Brian, me cheating on her with the counselor, our families in turmoilâwe still obviously tried to make it work. There had to be something there, something deeper than attraction or a simple childhood bond, that made me fight to keep her.
I want to feel that again. I want to remember what it feels like to love someone like that. And not just anyone. I want to know what it feels like to love Charlie.