His lips fold in and he shakes his head. He wants out of here. I can feel his edginess.
âMaybe we should go back and ask her more detailed questions,â I suggest.
âNo way,â he says. âIâm not entertaining that again.â He starts to walk away, and I consider going back in there myself. Iâm just about to take my first step toward the shop when the âOpenâ sign in the window turns off. The shop is in sudden darkness. I chew on the inside of my cheek. I could come back when Silas isnât around. Maybe sheâd talk to me more.
âCharlie!â he calls.
I run after him until weâre walking side by side again. We can see our breath as we walk. When did it get this cold? I rub my hands together.
âIâm hungry,â I say.
âYouâre always hungry. Iâve never seen someone so small eat so much.â
He doesnât offer to feed me this time, so I continue to walk beside him. âWhat just happened back there?â I ask. Iâm trying to make a joke of it, but my stomach feels funny.
âSomeone tried to scare us. Thatâs it.â
I look up at Silas. Mostly everything together except those shoulders, which are tense. âBut what if sheâs right? What if there werenât any blank cards in her tarot deck?â
âNo,â he says. âJust no.â
I bite my lip and sidestep a man dancing backward down the sidewalk.
âI donât understand how you can dismiss something so easily, considering our circumstances,â I say from between my teeth. âDonât you thinkââ
âWhy donât we talk about something else,â Silas says.
âRight, like what weâre going to do next weekend? Or how about we talk about what we did last weekend? Or maybe we talk aboutâ¦â I smack my hand against my forehead. âThe Electric Crush Diner.â How could I forget about that?
âWhat?â Silas asks. âWhatâs that?â
âWe were there. You and me, last weekend. I found a receipt in my jeans pocket.â Silas is watching me recount all of this with a look of mild annoyance on his face. âI took Janette there for dinner last night. A server recognized me.â
âHey!â he yells over my shoulder. âIf you touch her with that Iâll break you in half!â
I glance behind me and see a man pointing a foam finger at my butt. He backs off when he sees the look on Silasâs face.
âWhy didnât you tell me that?â Silas says under his breath, directing his attention back to me. âThatâs not like tarot readers, thatâs something important.â
âI really donât know. I meant toâ¦â
He grabs my hand, but this time itâs not for the pleasure of our palms pressing together. He drags me down the street with one hand while typing something into his phone with the other. Iâm both impressed and mildly annoyed at being spoken to like that. We may have been something in our other life, but in this life I donât even know his middle name.
âItâs on North Rampart Street,â I say, helpfully.
âYeah.â
Heâs pissed. I kind of like the emo-ness of it. We pass through a park with a fountain. Street vendors have set up their artwork along the fence; they stare at us as we pass by. Silas is taking one step to my three. I trot to keep up. We walk so far until my feet hurt and finally I yank my hand free of his.
He stops and turns around.
I donât know what to say, or what Iâm mad at, so I place my hands on my hips and glare at him.
âWhatâs wrong with you?â he says.
âI donât know!â I shout. âBut you canât just drag me around the city! I canât walk as fast as you and my feet hurt.â
This feels familiar. Why does this feel familiar?
He looks away and I can see the muscles working in his jaw. He turns back to me and everything happens quickly. He takes two steps and scoops me off my feet. Then he resumes his pace with my bouncing ever so slightly in his arms. After my initial squeal, I settle down and clasp my arms around his neck. I like it up here where I can smell his cologne and touch his skin. I donât recall seeing perfume among Charlieâs things, and I doubt I would have thought to put any on. What does that say about Silas? That in the midst of all of this, he thought to pick up a bottle and spray cologne on his neck before he left the house this morning. Was he always the type of person who cared about the little thingsâlike smelling good?
As I think these thoughts, Silas stops to ask a woman who has fallen in the street if sheâs all right. Sheâs drunk and sloppy. When she tries to stand up, she steps on the hem of her dress and falls back down. Silas sets me down on the sidewalk and goes to help her.
âAre you bleeding? Did you hurt yourself?â he asks. He helps her stand, leads her back to where Iâm waiting. She slurs her words and pats him on the cheek, and I wonder if he knew when he went to help her that she was homeless. I wouldnât touch her. She smells. I step away from both of them, and watch him watch her. Heâs concerned. He keeps his eyes on her until sheâs stumbled off down the next street, and then he swings his head around to find me.
In this momentâright nowâitâs so clear to me who Charlie is. Sheâs not as good as Silas. She loves him because heâs so different from her. Maybe thatâs why she went to Brian, because she couldnât live up to Silas.
Like I canât.
He half smiles at me, and I think heâs embarrassed to be caught caring. âReady?â
I want to tell him that what he did was nice, but nice is such a silly word for kindness. Anyone could pretend to be nice. What Silas did was innate. Boldfaced kindness. I havenât had any thoughts like that. I think about the girl in class the first morning who dropped her books at my feet. Sheâd looked at me with fear. She expected me not to help. And more. What else?
Silas and I walk in silence. He checks his phone every few minutes to make sure weâre headed in the right direction and I check his face. I wonder if this is what a crush feels like. If watching a man help a woman is supposed to illicit these types of feelings. And then weâre here. He points across the street and I nod.
âYeah, thatâs it.â
But itâs almost not. The diner has transformed since I was here with Janette. Itâs loud and pumping. There are men lined up on the sidewalk smoking; they part for us as we walk by. I can feel the bass in my ankles as we stand outside the doors. They open for us as a group leaves. A girl walks past me laughing, her pink fur jacket brushing against my face. Inside, people are defending their space with widened elbows and jutted hips. People glare at us as we walk by. This is my space, back off. Iâm waiting for the rest of my groupâkeep moving. We bypass the few empty seats in favor of walking deeper into the building. We press through the crowd, walking sideways, and flinching when raucous laughter erupts next to us. A drink spills on my shoes, someone says sorry. I donât even know who, because itâs so dark. And then someone calls our names.
âSilas! Charlie! Over here!â
A boy andâ¦who was that girl who picked me up this morning? Annieâ¦Amy?
âHey,â she says, as we draw close. âI canât believe you actually came back here after last weekend.â
âWhy wouldnât we?â Silas asks.
I take the seat I am offered and stare up at the three of them.
âYou punch a guy, throw over a couple of tables and wonder why you shouldnât come back?â the boy says, along with a laugh. I think heâs Annie/Amyâs boyfriend by the way he looks at herâlike theyâre in on something together. Life, maybe.
Itâs how Silas and I look at each other. Except we really are in on something together.
âYou acted like an ass,â she says.
âAmy,â the spare boy says. âDonât.â
Amy!
I want to know more about this person Silas punched.
âHe deserved it,â I say. Amy raises her eyebrows and shakes her head. Whatever sheâs thinking, sheâs too afraid to say it, because she turns away. I try her boyfriend next. âDonât you think so?â I ask innocent-like. He shrugs. Goes to sit next to Amy. Theyâre all scared of me, I think, but why?
I order a Coke. Amyâs head snaps around to look at me when she hears.
âRegular Coke? Not Diet?â
âDo I look like I need to drink diet?â I snap. She shrinks back. I donât know where that came fromâhonest to god. I donât even know how much I weigh. I decide to shut up and let Silas do the detective work before I offend someone again. He drops down next to Amyâs boyfriend and they begin to talk. The music makes it impossible to eavesdrop, and Amy is doing her best not to look at me, so I people-watch. Peopleâ¦they all have memoriesâ¦know who they are. Iâm jealous.
âLetâs go, Charlie.â Silas is standing above me, waiting. Amy and her boyfriend are watching us from across the table. Itâs a big table, I wonder who else is coming to join them and how many of those people hate me.
Out of the restaurant and back onto the street. Silas clears his throat.
âI got into a fight.â
âI heard,â I say. âDid they tell you who it was?â
âYeah.â
I wait and, when he doesnât offer the information, I say, âWellâ¦?â
âI punched the owner in the face. Brianâs father.â
My head snaps around. âWhat the hell?â
âYeah,â he says. He rubs the scruff on his chin thoughtfully. âBecause he said something about youâ¦â
âMe?â I get a sick feeling in my stomach. I know whatâs coming, but I donât know whatâs coming.
âHe told me he was giving you a job as a waitressâ¦â
Okay, thatâs not so bad. We need the money.
âBecause you were Brianâs girl. So I punched him, I guess.â
âDamn.â
âYeah. That kidâEllerâtold me we needed to leave before Brianâs dad called the cops.â
âThe cops?â I echo.
âI guess Brianâs dad and my dad have worked together on some stuff. He agreed not to press charges last week because of it, but Iâm not supposed to go back there. Also, Landon has been calling around, looking for me. Apparently my dad is wondering why I left practice. Everyoneâs pretty pissed about that.â
âOops,â I say.
âYeah, oops.â He says it like he doesnât care.
We go back the way we came, both of us quiet. We pass a few street artists I didnât notice before. Two of them look like a couple. The man is playing the bagpipes while the woman draws pictures in colored chalk on the sidewalk. We step over the drawings, both of our heads down, examining. Silas takes out his camera and snaps a few pictures while I watch her turn a few lines into a couple kissing.
A couple kissing. That reminds me.
âWe need to kiss,â I say to him.
He almost drops his phone. His eyes are big when he looks at me.
âTo see if something happensâ¦like in the fairy tales we talked about.â
âOh,â he says. âYeah, sure. Okay. Where? Now?â
I roll my eyes and walk away from him, toward a fountain near a church. Silas follows behind. I want to see his face, but I donât look. This is all business. I canât make it into something else. Itâs an experiment. Thatâs it.
When we reach the fountain, we both sit down on the rim of it. I donât want to do it this way, so I stand up and face him.
âOkay,â I say, coming to stand in front of him. âClose your eyes.â
He does, but thereâs a grin on his face.
âKeep them closed,â I instruct. I donât want him to see me. I barely know what I look like; I donât know if my face contorts under pressure.
His head is tilted up, and mine is tilted down. I put my hands on his shoulders and feel his hands lift to my waist as he pulls me closer, between his knees. His hands slide up without warning, his thumbs grazing my stomach and then making a quick swipe along the underside of my bra. My stomach clenches.
âSorry,â he says. âI canât see what Iâm doing.â
I smirk this time and Iâm glad he canât see my reaction right now. âPut your hands back on my waist,â I command.
He puts them too low and now his palms are on my ass. He squeezes a little, and I smack his arm.
âWhat?â He laughs. âI canât see!â
âUp,â I say. He slides them a little higher, but slowly. I tingle down to my toes. âHigher,â I say, again.
He takes them up a quarter of an inch. âIs thisââ
Before he can finish his sentence, I lean my face down and kiss him. Heâs smiling at first, still in the middle of his little game, but when he feels my lips, his smile dissolves.
His mouth is soft. I lift my hands to his face and cup it as he pulls me tighter, wrapping his arms around my backside. Iâm kissing down and heâs kissing up. At first, I expect to just give him a peck. Thatâs all they ever show in the fairy talesâa quick peck and the curse is broken. Weâd have gotten our memories back by now if this were going to work. The experiment should be over, but neither of us stops.
He kisses with soft lips and a firm tongue. Itâs not sloppy or wet, it moves in and out of my mouth sensually as his lips suck softly on mine. I run my fingers up the back of his neck and into his hair, and thatâs when he stands, forcing me to take a step back and change position. I do a good job of hiding my gasp.
Now Iâm kissing up and heâs kissing down. Except heâs holding me to him, his arm wrapped around my waist, his free hand curled around the back of my neck. I cling to his shirt, dizzy. Soft lips, draggingâ¦tongue between my lipsâ¦pressure on my backâ¦something pressing between us that makes me feel a riot of heat. I push away, gasping.
I stand there looking at him, and he looking at me.
Something has happened. Itâs not our memories that have awoken, but something else that makes us feel drunk.
And it occurs to me as I stand here, wanting him to kiss me again, that this is exactly what doesnât need to happen. Weâre going to want more of the new us and weâll lose focus.
He slides a hand down his face as if to sober himself up. He smiles. âI donât care what our real first kiss was,â he says. âThatâs the one I want to remember.â
I stare at his smile long enough to remember it, and then I turn and walk away.
âCharlie!â he yells.
I ignore him and keep walking. That was stupid. What was I thinking? A kiss isnât going to bring our memories back. This isnât a fairy tale.
He grabs my arm. âHey. Slow down.â And then, âWhat are you thinking?â
I keep walking in the direction Iâm certain we came from. âIâm thinking I need to get home. I have to make sure Janette has eaten dinnerâ¦andâ¦â
âAbout us, Charlie.â
I can feel him staring at me. âThere is no us,â I say. I bring my eyes back to his. âHavenât you heard? We were obviously broken up and I was dating Brian. His dad was giving me a job. Iâ¦â
âWe were an us, Charlie. And holy shit, I can see why.â
I shake my head. We canât lose focus. âThat was your first kiss,â I say. âIt could feel like that with anyone.â
âSo it felt that way for you too?â he asks, running around to stand in front of me.
I consider telling him the truth. That if I were dead like Snow White and he kissed me like that, surely my heart would kick back to life. That Iâd be the one to slay dragons for that kiss.
But we donât have time to kiss like that. We need to find out whatâs happened and how to reverse it.
âI didnât feel anything,â I say. âIt was just a kiss and it didnât work.â A lie that burns my insides itâs so foul. âI have to go.â
âCharlieâ¦â
âIâll see you tomorrow.â I lift a hand over my head and wave because I donât want to turn around and look at him. Iâm afraid. I want to be with him, but itâs not a good idea. Not until we figure more of this out. I think heâs going to follow me, so I wave over a cab. I open the door and look back at Silas to show him that Iâm fine. He nods, and then lifts his phone to snap a picture of me. The first time she left me, heâs probably thinking. He then buries his hands in his pockets and turns in the direction of his car.
I wait until heâs past the fountain before I lean down to speak to the driver. âSorry, I changed my mind.â I slam the door and step back to the curb. I donât have money for a cab anyway. Iâll go back to the diner and ask Amy for a ride.
The cabbie peels off and I duck down a different street so Silas wonât see me. I need to be alone. I need to think.