: Part 1 – Chapter 10
If Only I Had Told Her
Autumn whimpers, and I feel one of the many reasons we shouldnât have done this spilling from us. I move, but I am without regret, because I will always at least have this memory of us.
Iâm coming out of my trance and need to know sheâs still okay.
âAutumnâ is all I can get out.
âI love you too,â she says. âI forgot to tell you.â She begins to cry, but not like before, not like when she was grieving the end of her characters. Still, theyâre tears, so I file what she said away for later and focus on her.
I lean down and kiss her face again and again.
âItâs okay. Donât cry,â I say, because all the other things I want to say canât seem to find their way out.
I kiss her eyes.
I kiss her forehead.
I kiss her cheek.
I kiss her other cheek. âDonât cry. Itâs okay.â
âWill you hold me?â Autumn asks, and it is honestly the greatest idea I have ever heard. I slide over, and sheâs quick to wipe her eyes and rest her head on my shoulder. I wrap my arms around her, and it is glorious.
âLike this?â I hold her gently but tightly.
âYeah,â she says, and Iâm never going to move again.
I breathe in the scent of her hair and feel light-headed.
Iâve never known euphoria like this.
A choir of birds is singing a tribute to this beautiful new day, to her body, to my joy. In the morning light, I can see the shadows of her eyelashes on her cheeks, the swell of her hip under my blanket.
Iâm so happy that I could die.
âI canât believe that just happened,â I hear myself say. My eyes start to involuntarily close, and Iâm glad when she speaks to help me stay awake.
âDid you mean it when you said you loved me?â she asks.
âOf course I did.â Iâm so tired and so happy that I donât think about what a silly question it is. I shift slightly beneath her to savor our skins against each other before we drift off. My eyes have closed completely when she continues.
âYou werenât just saying that because itâs what the guy is supposed to say?â
My eyes are still shut, and Iâm thinking, when I realize she means me. Iâm the guy. The guy who was supposed to sayâ
My eyes open.
Fully awake now, I replay her question in my brain.
I roll out from under her and sit up on my elbow. I need to see her face.
âCome on, Autumn,â I say. âI know that you know Iâve been in love with you for forever. You donât have to pretend.â Whatever she wants from me after this, my one rule is nothing left unsaid between us.
âWhat?â she says.
Itâs very convincing, but I know how good of an actress she can be.
âItâs okay.â I sigh. I canât help but feel a little exasperated even now. âIâve always known that you knew.â
But Autumnâs getting upset. She sits up and pulls the covers around her protectively. She frowns at me. The birds are still singing.
Iâm not mad at her for knowing it.
At least not now. Iâd forgotten about my reaction to her novel last night.
âWhat do you mean by âforeverâ?â Autumn asks.
âYou know,â I say. âForever. Since we were like what, eleven?â
âFifth grade? The year you punched Donnie Banks?â
There. She knows what Iâm talking about.
âYeah. You remember what Donnie Banks said?â
âHe called me a freak.â
âHe said, âYour is a freak,â and he knew that you didnât want to be my girlfriend and that I did.â
âYou liked me like that back then?â Her confusion is real. But if she didnât know in elementary school, what happened to us?
I sit up all the way. I need to think clearly.
âBut isnât that why you stopped hanging out with me in middle school? Because you got tired of me wanting to be more than just friends?â Thatâs what happened. I was there.
âNo,â Autumn says. âI had no idea you wanted anything like that.â
Itâs the truth. Somehow, some way, she hadnât known.
âBut after I kissed you, you knew?â Because Autumn knows I love her. I read her novel. It was there.
âNo,â Autumn says. âI didnât know why you had kissed me, and it freaked me out. I thought maybe you were experimenting on me.â
Experimenting on her? Am I hallucinating after all? My gaze wanders briefly around my bedroom. Everything else seems normal.
If Autumn didnât know that I loved her in elementary school or in middle schoolâno. No. She had to have known.
âBut this doesnât make any sense,â I tell her. âIf you didnât know, then why did you leave me?â
She drops her eyes. Is this it? Have I caught her in a lie? My stomach twists. Iâll love her even if she turns out to be cruel. Thatâs my curse.
âIt just felt so nice not to be the weird girl anymore,â Autumn says. âI liked being popular. We did kinda grow apart that year.â
Sheâs blushing with embarrassment, and I feel my mouth hanging open.
âIâm not saying itâs not my fault. Iâm just saying I didnât mean for it to happen.â
Autumn caring what people thought about her was never something I had considered. It seems incongruent with her character. I always defended her in elementary school but not because sheâd never shown any sign of being bothered by what the other kids thought or said. Maybe a couple of times, thereâd been things that happened that had made her cry, but Iâd believed her when she said she was upset about the injustice or the principle of the matter.
When Autumn was finally appreciated by our peers, she seemed to take it as a matter of course, that things had finally settled as they should. Sheâd never said anything during the early days of middle school about being excited about becoming popular overnight. Sheâd seemed distracted, not elated.
Autumn is a good actress but not that good. For example, at the moment, sheâs trying to hide her embarrassment and failing. Autumn is a good liar. Autumn is not a good liar. Itâs true and itâs not true.
âYou really didnât know?â I ask to be sure.
âNo. I really, really didnât,â Autumn says.
I believe her, and itâs more than I can handle. My nervous system decides that in order to keep functioning and engage in conscious thought, it canât hold me up. I lie on my back and stare up at nothing.
Autumn didnât know that I loved her.
Iâm staring at the blank ceiling above me, but all I see are a thousand memories being rewritten with this new information. Itâs like the DNA of my entire relationship with Autumn has mutated. Every time Iâd inwardly flinched at how pathetic I must seem to her, she hadnât known or noticed.
âAnd all these years I was terrified that you could tell that I stillâ¦you know,â I say.
âStill what?â
Because even after all this, she still needs me to spell it out. âStill wanted you.â
âReally?â
I canât even answer that one.
All my agonies had been caused by figments of my imagination. That night Iâd had to call Jack to sober drive Sylvie and me home, I found Autumn eating leftovers on her front porch. She was bummed about her parents and had been quietly patient with my inebriation while I thought I said the most obvious, drunkenly lovestruck things to her. The next morning, I lay in bed, sick as a dog and writhing with mortification.
But it had all been in my brain. None of it had been real. Autumn hadnât known. Autumn hadnât heard the love that had screamed so loud inside my mind.
That semester when we were partners in gym, I regretted so many of the things I said after class, and the moments Iâd given in to the temptation to touch her seemed especially egregious. I was certain that I was always on the verge of being cast off by Autumn again, because I was doing such a terrible job of hiding my love for her.
But she hadnât known.
It hadnât been proof that Iâd overstepped her boundaries when she said that Jamie wouldnât like it if we hung out. Jamie probably would have been a dick about it, and if Autumn had actually loved me back thenâ
What had she been thinking all these years, this girl that I loved and thought that I knew through and through?
âWhat about Sylvie?â Autumn asks, and I canât help my laugh. It all seems like such a madcap Shakespearean comedy of mistakes. Is this irony? Maybe Autumn can tell me.
âThe only reason I started hanging out with the cheerleaders after soccer practice was because I thought they were still your friends. I thought that maybe Iâd have a chance with you then, that maybe Iâd be cool enough for you to see me like that. Then when the first day of high school came, you didnât even say hi to me at the bus stop. And I found out that not only were you not their friend anymore, but you hated them. And then you started going out with Jamie, and Alexis was asking me why I was leading Sylvie on, and I didnât even know what she was talking aboutâ¦â
That had been an awful conversation. It was after a soccer game, the first one Iâd really gotten to spend time out on the field, and Alexis had pulled me aside as Iâd come out of the locker room. I was exhausted and soaking wet. She was going out with Jack by then, and it had kinda freaked me out the way sheâd grabbed my arm possessively. She looked furious.
âWhy are you doing this to her?â she hissed at me.
âWho?â My brain went to Autumn even though it made no sense.
âOh. My. God.â Alexis whispered, âSylvie, you monster.â
My feelings for Alexis after the past four years are like how a lot of people describe their feelings for their siblings. I love her because I have known her for so long, but she drives me crazy, and most of the time, I donât like her that much.
Alexis was exaggerating that day, but there is always a grain of truth to her wild hyperboles.
I was kinda into Sylvie at that time.
Sylvie talked to me at the bus stop. No one else did. The fact that Sylvie was as pretty as Autumn, though in a different way, provided a welcome distraction. Sylvie felt safe to look at.
When Alexis made her case, I could see her point. And I felt responsible. Besides, Iâd seen some guy kissing Autumn on those steps where sheâd been hanging out. My plan had failed.
So I asked Sylvie to a movie, and we had fun. Real fun. She was the only other kid Iâd ever met who listened to NPR while getting ready for school in the mornings. I liked that she read biographies and kept a shelf of her favorites. She was beautiful. She was nice. She wanted to be with me.
Sylvie has been good for me. Iâve enjoyed almost every minute with her. She has made me a better person in so many little ways. I hope that someday Iâll be able to fully explain this to Sylvie, but for now I say to Autumn, âDonât think that I never cared about Sylvie, because I did.â
âSheâs not really what you think.â
âAnd she needed me to take care of her when you didnât anymore.â
âI loved her, but I loved her differently from the way Iâve always loved you.â
I still love Sylvie, and thereâs so much Iâm not saying out loud despite not wanting to leave things unsaid.
But there is so much Autumn and I need to talk about besides Sylvie.
âOh, Finny,â Autumn says. Her voice has so much emotion in it that my heart flutters.
I fill my lungs with air to steady my nerves. I look at her out of the corner of my eyes. Itâs an old trick: looking at Autumn without really looking at her.
Autumn is watching me, still sitting up in my bed. Her hair is glowing around her face like an aura. The sheet has fallen away again. I cannot trust myself to look her in the face. Iâll lose my nerve.
âYou saidââ I start. I need to know. She was crying when she said it and, amazingly, unsure of how I felt about her. âYou said that you loved me too.â Perhaps in her vulnerability, she said more than she meant.
âYeah,â Autumn says, âI do.â Her voice is trembling but certain.
âSince when?â
âI dunno,â she whispers. âMaybe since forever too, but I didnât admit it until two years ago.â
I cannot resist anymore. I look directly up at her. Autumn has this soft, sublime smile on her face that breaks into a sigh as she collapses back on to my chest.
She loves me.
She really, truly loves me.
Iâm holding her so tightly that I order my body to relax so as not to hurt her.
Autumn.
If she wants to be.
âSoâ¦â I donât know how to ask this. Autumn loves me, but I am trying to make sure thereâre no more misunderstandings.
âWhat?â
âItâs you and me now, right?â
I feel her laughter against my chest before she speaks.
âPhineas Smith, are you asking me to be your girlfriend?â
I think wildly. My heart is beating fast. To me, this seemed like a formality, but perhaps my history of misunderstanding Autumn is catching up with me again.
âWell, yeah. Is that weird?â
âOnly because it feels like weâre already so much more than that.â
I relax again. âYeah, I know,â I say to her as I tell my brain to stay calm, that asking Autumn to elope to Vegas is absurd. âBut itâll have to do for now.â
For now.
I close my eyes.
âYou still have to break up with Sylvie,â she whispers.
My eyes open again.
âI know. Iâm going to. Tomorrow.â
âYou mean today,â she says.
My stomach drops. Of course, itâs morning. Iâm such a fool.
âOh. Right.â I hug Autumn to me. âWe should get some sleep, I guess.â
âYeah, I guess,â Autumn says.
We cuddle up close, and soon, Autumn is snoring softly.
But I donât sleep. Thereâs too much to think about.