: Part 1 – Chapter 12
If Only I Had Told Her
I wake.
My phone.
Itâs ringing, inside the pocket of my jeans, on the floor, where I tossed them when Autumn and Iâ
She stirs next to me. I hurry off the bed and try to stop the ringing before it wakes her. I see the name I expect. I decline the call. When I look up, Autumn is watching me.
âHey.â Iâm not so sorry to see her awake.
âWas that her?â Autumn asks.
I set my phone on the nightstand. Itâs one thirty in the afternoon.
âDoes it matter?â I ask. I want it to be only us, as much as possible for as long as possible.
âYes.â
âIt was.â
Autumn looks down. Her pink lips purse. I drop my jeans and climb back in bed.
âCome here.â Pulling her to me is a relief.
Autumn snuggles against me, and when she shifts her face, she breathes in deeply. It feels like sheâs breathing in the scent of me the same way I have with her. Iâm struck again by my new reality. She loves me. Autumn is in love with me, definitively. Itâs so much more than I ever could have imagined.
All these years Iâd fantasized about Autumn physically, I never let myself think about what it would be like to be her boyfriend, not consciously at least.
Iâve always been a vivid dreamer though. I could control my thoughts when I was awake, but at night, my brain dwelled on its secret obsession. It was a frequent, recurring dream over the years that Autumn and I were a couple. Always, like my conscious fantasies, there was no explanation of how we got there. We would simply be together.
No matter what the dream with Autumn was aboutâwhether it was set in deep space or in a version of McClure High School with upside-down hallsâI always felt such a sense of relief when I dreamed that we were together. It was like the dream was my reality, and when I woke, I was in a nightmare where Autumn and I were both dating other people and werenât even friends. Iâd denied my feelings to Jack, to Sylvie, to myself, but my brain had continued to stubbornly insist that Autumn and I were supposed to be together. Iâd thought that it was my lust and jealousy mixing to give me the delusion that an error had been made and the matchups that kept us apart were all a big mistake.
But.
Here we are.
âDo you feel guilty?â Autumnâs voice is feather light, like sheâs trying to gently blow the words from her mouth.
The guilt is mine alone. I need her to understand that.
I need her to understand that I had to do this. I had to be with her if the chance was there. My love for her is part of who I am.
âYeah,â I say. âBut I also feel like Iâve been loyal to something bigger.â Itâs only the start of what I want to tell her, but Iâm interrupted by a beep I should have expected.
Iâm going to ignore it, but Autumn says, âYou should see who it is.â
âI donât want to,â I say reflexively.
âIt could be The Mothers, and if we donât answer, theyâll think weâre dead and come back early.â
I would still put the odds on it being Sylvie confirming her flight details before she boards her plane from Chicago, but Autumn has a point. I donât want The Mothers interrupting our time.
I roll away from Autumn, sit up, and pick up my phone.
Iâm glad that my back is turned, because I canât help the tiny smile that cracks my face. Itâs such a text: the militaristic shorthand, the assumption that Iâll recognize the Chicago airport code. Part of the reason Sylvie underestimates herself is she doesnât recognize that most people donât possess her efficiency or candor. Sylvie assumes everyone else knows exactly what they want from life and is strategically plotting to get it as soon as possible. Autumn is the only other person I know like that.
I turn off the sound on my phone.
I lie back down, and we settle in close, facing each other.
âIt was her again?â Autumn asks, because she knows.
âI told her that I wonât be meeting her plane. Iâll see her after she has dinner with her parents.â
âOh. When?â
âWe have a few hours.â Four hours fifty-one minutes and counting. âGo back to sleep.â
âIâm not tired.â
âMe neither.â It doesnât matter what we do as long as I can look at her.
Perhaps Autumn feels the same, because she stares at me, and I do what Iâve longed to do a thousand times: I reach out and brush the hair from her forehead.
Autumnâs eyes drift closed as I stroke her temples and her hair. She looks so happy. How is it possible that Iâm making her smile like that with just the tips of my fingers? There isnât anything else I can blame the smile on: no music, no other sensations.
There must be a catch.
After four years of saying no to Jamie, why did she say yes to me?
I almost laugh because I realize she didnât say yes to me. She proposed it. I gave in to her request, despite the reasons it was a bad idea.
Autumn trembles under my touch, like the feel of my fingertips is more than she can handle.
âDo you regret it?â I ask, because surely something will go wrong.
Her eyes open. âNo,â she says. Before relief can hit me, she continues, âBut I wish it had been your first time too.â
Autumn looks away from me, and I freeze.
Without betraying Sylvie, I need to explain to Autumn how significant last night was for me.
I let my hand fall away and concentrate on my words.
âThe first time, we were both so drunk neither of us can remember it. And then it turned out that she couldnât do it unless she was drunk. And if she was drunk, it felt wrong to me. It didnât happen often or even go very well when it did. So, I mean, in a lot of ways, it was a first for me.â
I hope I donât have to say more, but Autumn says, âWhat do you mean âshe couldnât do it unless she was drunkâ?â
âSomeone hurt her once,â I say. Itâs true that Sylvie was hurt, but itâs not true to say that she was hurt only once.
âOh,â Autumn says.
Itâs a bit of a bummer to not really remember the first time I had sex, but that isnât why last night felt like a first time for me. With Sylvie, most nights ended with me telling her she was too drunk for me to keep going. There were nights she was sober enough to consent, but we had to stop in the middle. Success was rare, and I lived in fear of hurting Sylvie.
Autumn lays her hand over mine, and suddenly, I remember all the things that I still need to tell her. I twine my fingers with hers.
âI wanted something better for you,â I told her. âThatâs why I made you promise not to do it when you were drinking, but really, the idea of you ever doing it with anybody made me mad.â I need to warn her about the effect she has on me. âDo you remember how you told me that you were going to do it after graduation? And then the day after, you were sitting on the porch, and you said you were waiting for Jamie?â
âYeah?â
âI came up here and punched the wall,â I admit. âIâd never done that before. It hurt.â
âYou thoughtâ¦â
âYeah.â Also, I need to warn her how selfish she makes me. âThen, after I found out you guys had broken up, it was hard to see you miserable over him when I was so happy. I wanted to pick you up and spin you around.â Like Iâd watched Jamie do so many times.
Rather than responding to my hypocrisy, Autumn says, âYou were sad that time Sylvie broke up with you. I was so angry at her for hurting you that I thought about pushing her in front of the school bus.â
I almost laugh at Autumnâs hyperbole.
âI was sad,â I agree, âbut it was my own fault. I told everybody that I didnât like it when they made comments about you, and Sylvie got jealous. She asked me if I had feelings for you.â She asked directly that time. âAnd I told her to drop it and kept trying to change the subject. She could tell.â
Iâd tried what had worked before, saying true things in a way that hid what I didnât want to say. Again and again, I tried to get Sylvie to pretend that Iâd told her what she wanted to hear, but that time, she wouldnât play along. Sylvie dumped me, as I deserved. She was cool and brisk.
Sylvie said, âFinn, even if you werenât being purposefully obtuse, that would still be a problem. Iâm tired of the charade.â That had hurt because I hadnât thought of my relationship with Sylvie as a farce.
Part of me wishes I could tell Autumn how much I missed Sylvie those weeks. I missed talking with her about politics. I missed going on runs with her when no one else would go with me because it was too cold. I missed calling her to say good night. I missed our evenings at the library together, working side by side, not talking.
Finally, I lied to Sylvie. I lied again and again. Sure, Iâd told her I had a crush on Autumn. But I said losing had made me realize that I hadnât really been in love with Autumn at all. I told Sylvie that she was the only one I wanted to be with, and after that, she seemed to believe me again.
âWhy did you get back with her?â Autumn asks, surprising me.
âYou loved Jamie all this time too, didnât you?â
âYeah,â she says, and Iâm amazed that I still feel a flicker of jealousy.
âThen why donât you understand? I wantedâI tried to love only her.â
Autumnâs face tells me that she understands at least that much, so I continue.
âWhen I told you last month that I was going to break up with Sylvie, it wasnât because I thought I had a chance of being more than just your friend. It was because loving you from a distance was one thing, but it wouldnât have been fair to her if I were in love with my best friend.â
Abruptly, Autumn sits up. She hugs the covers around herself like bandages on a wound. I donât understand whatâs happened. I confessed to punching blameless walls and rejoicing in her heartbreak, and she smiled sweetly at me. Why is she upset now? I sit up too.
âAutumn?â
Her hair is hanging over her face. âWhat if you see her and realize this was all a mistake?â
âThat will not happen.â
âIt could.â
âIt wonât.â
âIf you love herââ Autumn says, but I canât let her go on.
âBut if I have the chance to be with youââ Itâs surreal to me, but somehow, after everything, she still doesnât understand how uncontrollably in love I am. âGod, Autumn. Youâre the ideal Iâve judged every other girl by my whole life. Youâre funny and smart and weird. I never know whatâs going to come out of your mouth or what youâre going to do. I love that. You. I love you.â
After all these years of feeling like I was holding back the most eloquent words of love, my big speech sounds weak to me, but I try to let all my emotion show in my voice.
Her brown hair parts over her face, and her huge eyes peek up at me from under her eyelashes.
I donât know how Iâm still breathing.
âAnd youâre so beautiful,â I hear myself say.
She ducks her head again, and I laugh aloud.
âNow, I know you already knew that,â I say. Iâm laughing because Iâve seen her shrug off that exact compliment so many times.
âItâs different when you say it.â She speaks so quietly I can barely hear her.
I laugh. âHow?â
âI donât know,â she whispers.
âYouâre so beautiful.â I reach for her face and tilt her chin up. I need her to see me say this. âLast night was the best thing that ever happened to me,â I tell her. âAnd I would never think it was a mistake unless you said it was.â
âI would never say that,â she whispers.
I smile and lean my forehead against hers. I close my eyes as I reply. âThen everything is going to be okay. Weâre together now, right?â I need to hear her say it. No more mistakes.
âOf course,â Autumn says, and I canât help my laugh again.
She pulls away.
I explain, âI never ever thought this would happen, and then you say, âof course,â like itâs the most natural thing in the world.â
âDoesnât it feel like it?â she asks me.
It does, and it doesnât. Being with Autumn feels natural, but it also feels supernatural. I think about the way her novel captured and displayed my love for her so perfectly without her having consciously known all that was in my heart. I think about my recurring dreams of having returned to the right timeline, where she and I have always been together.
âHow did we ever get here?â I wonder aloud. How is it possible that two people could simultaneously seem to be both destined and not destined to be together?
Again, I have that feeling that there must be a catch, that fate will not allow me to be with her; but when I look back at Autumn and see her quietly and calmly watching me, waiting for whatever I say or do next, I realize that it doesnât matter.
My face must change because she smiles and clambers into my lap. We wrap our arms around each other and settle in. After a moment, she says, âYou know, I never thought this would happen either. When Jack told meââ and then she stops.
I move my face away enough to look at her.
âOh. I didnât explain that part last night.â
âWhat part?â I hope I donât sound as panicked as I suddenly feel. What did Jack tell her?
âIt was a couple of weeks ago, after the horror movie we went to with Jack, remember? You went inside to get pretzels or something, and he was all, âIt took Finn forever to get over you last time. Are you messing with his head?ââ Her Jack impression is decent, but sheâs still talking. âI was like, âWhaaat?â because I had no idea that youâd ever felt that way. But Jack said you were over me, that he was only worried. So for the past couple of weeks, Iâve thought Iâd missed my chance with you.â
I donât say anything in reply. My head is too full of opposing thoughts and feelings.
âFinny?â
âSorry,â I say. âI was trying to decide whether I should kill Jack for telling you I was into you or if I should kill him for telling you that I wasnât into you. Tough call.â
âNoooo,â Autumn says. She kisses my cheek. âDonât be mad. He was looking out for you. It was sweet. He loves you.â
âYeah,â I admit. Jack was protecting me, but thereâs no way he believed that I was over Autumn. Iâm wondering now though. âWhat would you have done if heâd told you the truth, that I wasââI try to remember how Jack put it beforeââbonkers in love with you?â
Autumn rests her head on my shoulder. I canât believe this is real life, holding her like this.
âHmm,â she says. âI think I would have had a hard time believing him.â
âReally?â
âI mean, yeah. Iâm not exactly your type.â
âIââ I decide to skip over the whole âtypeâ comment. âLetâs say Jack convinced you. Iâm certain he could have eventually. Then what?â
âI guess I would haveâ¦â Autumn trails off and begins again. âI guess I would have flirted with you?â
âHow?â
âI have no idea,â Autumn says. âBut when I gave you my novâOh.â Before I can react, sheâs sliding off my lap and looking at me with frantic eyes. âWith everything that happened last night, I almost forgot you read my book.â
Sheâs looking at me like Iâve turned into a wild animal she does not trust.
âAutumn, it was great,â I tell her. Sheâs still looking at me dubiously. âReally.â
âItâs a first draft,â she says. âIt canât be great. But if you liked it okay, thatâs a good start.â
âI loved it,â I say.
She shakes her head, brushing off my praise.
âWhy were you so nervous to share it with me?â
âBecause.â Autumn picks at the blanket in her lap. âItâs all of me, dissected and splayed out. Iâm not nervous about how you interpreted Izzy and Adenâs relationship anymore, but last night, I thought it might be the end of our friendship. Because you got over me. After I abandoned you.â
âBut I didnât,â I say. âI couldnât get over you.â
She looks back at me.
âIâm glad you didnât,â she says, and a smile cracks her worry briefly. âSo you liked the book. Obviously, youâre biased.â
âYou remember how furious I was last night? I thought youâd recorded my devotion in perfect detail and then dropped it in my lap without considering my feelings. And I still loved it as a story. Youâre a good writer, Autumn. Youâve always been good.â
Autumn shrugs and looks away, but her smile is back. âThanks,â she whispers.
I canât take it anymore. I lean over and kiss her deeply. A few minutes are lost to that, and then I gasp as I feel her fingers close around me.
âWe canât double our chances of you getting pregnant,â I say, even though Iâm kissing her neck now and doing nothing to stop her hand.
Autumn pulls away and puts her other hand on my shoulder.
âDonât worry,â she whispers. âI know what to do.â Autumn pushes me down on the bed, and for some unknown period of time, I am entirely at her mercy.