: Part 1 – Chapter 17
If Only I Had Told Her
Part of me had hoped that Sylvie also felt we were drifting apart and suspected something so that I didnât completely blindside her, but I didnât expect this.
We stare at each other with only the sound of the rain between us.
âWhat do you know?â I ask after a moment.
âEverything,â she says, which canât be true. I didnât even know everything until last night. And Jack wouldnât have called her before I arrived.
âLike what?â I hadnât known I could feel more guilty, but apparently thereâs no end to that well.
âAre you kidding me?â Sylvie is as surprised as she is furious. âEvery time you and Autumn went to Blockbuster this summer, I got at least two emails about it from people who saw you. You didnât even try to hide it.â
âUntil recently, we were only friends,â I begin to explain, but sheâs right. Itâs no defense.
âShut up and drive somewhere,â Sylvie says. âI havenât told my parents that youâre breaking up with me tonight. They think you have some romantic gesture planned. I needed to yell at you before I figure out how to disappoint them again.â
âThey wonât be disappointed in you because of what I did, Sylvie,â I say.
Her seat belt clicks into place. âIâm not looking forward to explaining this to them, okay? But I have Dr. Giles for talking about my fear of disappointing authority figures. You donât get to give me pep talks anymore. Not after the lies youâve told me.â
âIâIââ I cannot say I never lied to her. I lied to her years ago when I told her that I wasnât in love with Autumn anymore, and I lied by omission all summer.
I suggest we go somewhere that we can sit and talk, but she says she wonât be able to yell at me if we go to a coffee shop.
âWhy donât you focus on driving and listening, okay, Smith? Because I have a list of questions I need you to answer.â
Then Sylvie Whitehouse pulls a handwritten list out of her purse and smooths it on her lap. It would make me laugh with love for her if it didnât also make me want to cry for the same reason. I wish she and Autumn could be friends.
âFirst of all,â Sylvie says, and I swallow my emotions and pay attention. âWhen was the first time you cheated on me?â
âLast night,â I reply, but that question takes the longest to answer, because she does not believe me.
It takes so long to convince her that nothing physical happened with Autumn until last night that I drive us over the river and into the rural plains outside East St. Louis. The rain comes down harder, and lightning strikes flash across the sky, stealing our words from us. It feels jarringly intimate.
âSo you didâ¦whatever it was that you did with her last night, Finn.â
I donât need to look away from the road to know sheâs rolling her eyes.
âBut that doesnât mean that you were faithful this summer,â she continues.
I drive, and we argue about the definition of cheating.
Our argument would have lasted longer had Sylvie not been on the speech and debate team, but we would have ended in the same place. Because sheâs right.
This didnât start last night.
From the phone call all those weeks ago when I told Sylvie, âIâm about to eat breakfast,â and didnât disclose that it was with Autumn, I was betraying Sylvie.
I told myself that I wasnât talking about Autumn during our phone calls for Sylvieâs sake, but that wasnât true. I didnât tell Sylvie that Autumn and I were friends again because I didnât want to explain we were platonic friends. When Sylvie called from Europe and asked what Iâd been up to, Iâd say, âWatched a movie,â and leave out âwith Autumn,â let alone âwith Autumn in my bed, and when she fell asleep before it ended, I muted it and lay beside her.â
After Iâd decided that I was breaking up with Sylvie, I considered answering honestly, giving her a chance to suspect something, but when she asked what I was up to, I would say, âNothing,â instead of âAutumn and I parked near the airport and watched planes take off while she ate so much candy her teeth have turned green.â
âYouâre right,â I say as we cross the bridge back into the city. âI lied to you all summer. Iâm sorry.â
âSo you get that this isnât only about last night?â
âYeah,â I say, âI get it.â Weâre back in Missouri. I turn north, toward home. Itâs still raining, but the thunder is far away.
âMy second question,â Sylvie says. âWere you ever in love me?â
âSyl,â I start, but I donât know where to begin. I stay on the highway, passing all the exits that could take us home.
âWere you ever in love with me?â Sylvie repeats. Her voice is firm, but sheâs saving her anger. âI donât want to hear that you cared about me or about any other kind of love besides romantic. No more lies by omission.â
I take a deep breath. âI am in love with you, Sylvie.â I wait for her to protest. Thereâs only the sound of the rain and the windshield wipers.
âI believe you,â Sylvie replies.
Iâm so surprised that my mind shuts down. I wait for her to say something so I know what to think next.
âI canât ask you to apologize for loving her more than me.â
âI donât love her more than you,â I interject. I can see her body shift in her seat out of the corner of my eyes. âItâs not about more.â
âWhatâs it about then?â Her question almost twists into a laugh.
âOur souls.â I know how ridiculous I sound. But I owe Sylvie the truth, even if itâs proof of what a fool I am.
âYour what?â
I take a deep breath.
âWhatever our souls are made of, hers and mine are the same.â
âWhâAre youââ Sylvie is so rarely without words that I instinctively glance over at her. She is pink and angry. âAre you quoting to justify cheating on me?â
âNo,â I say. âI canât justify that.â I grit my teeth and swallow the lump in my throat, because itâs time to tell the cruelest truth. âIâm quoting to explain why Iâm choosing Autumn over you.â
The wipers are too loud against the windshield, and I turn down their urgency. The rain is slowing. The streetlights are on. I occupy myself with adjusting the air so that the windows donât fog.
âYou should let me out,â Sylvie says and clears her throat.
I glance from the road to her face. Tears stream down her cheeks. Her calm voice had disguised what the streetlights reveal.
âIâll take you home,â I say quietly. The suburban road is empty. I turn on my blinker to make a U-turn.
Sylvie says, âNo, I mean let me out here.â
I make the turn anyway. Sylvie unbuckles her seat belt.
âSyl,â I say as I drive toward her house, speeding up a bit. âDonât be ridiculous. Iâve been enough of a bastard already. Iâm not letting you walk home in the rain.â
âI just want to get away from you!â she screams.
I glance at her, but Iâm not sure what happens after that. The road is wet, and the car is sliding. I try to brake and turn, but weâre going too fast toward the ditch. Weâre spinning.
This could be it. This could be how I die.
We hit something.
Suddenly, everything is still.
What happened? Iâm still alive. My face hurts. I touch my upper lip, and my hand comes away with blood. The airbags didnât go off. Did I hit my face on the steering wheel? Why is there glass?
I look to my right toâ
And then I see her.
On the other side of the low median we hit, sprawled across the wet asphalt.
Sheâs crumpled. Surely broken.
I amâ¦okay. I can move.
With a plan in place, I climb out of the car and run across the rain-soaked pavement to her.
I fall to my knees in front of Sylvie, putting my hand to the ground. Itâs wetâ