: Part 2 – Chapter 2
If Only I Had Told Her
As I drive to Alexisâs house, a strange thing happens. Itâs like Iâm watching myself. Itâs not an out-of-body experience; I canât see myself, but I donât make choices or feel any emotions. Everything I do is automatic and remote.
It isnât until after Iâve parked that I see that the street is crowded with cars. Iâve parked a few houses down from my normal spot.
I donât recognize the girl with the tear-streaked face who answers the door and points to the basement before heading to the bathroom. I guess she doesnât recognize me either.
In the basement there is, indeed, a strange, sad party of sorts going on, with so many more people than I would have thought. There is crying, and there is alcohol and weed mixed in with the crying, even though itâs only noon, even though Alexisâs parents could theoretically come home from work early and catch us all.
I wish I could tell Finn how seeing the foosball table makes me want to fall to my knees and sob, because he would think it was funny and make a joke about the times he kicked my ass on it. But if I could tell Finn anything at all, then it would be a meaningless foosball table. Weâd never think of that table again after next year. Now I want to both kiss that foosball table and set it on fire so no one else can touch it since Finnâs gone.
Before my thoughts can spiral, Alexis comes up to me and throws her arms around my neck as if we still love each other.
âI canât believe itâs true,â she says, as if only a few hours ago, she wasnât the one convincing me.
I pat her back with one hand as I scan the space. The feeling of living outside myself lingers. People are gathered in little knots around the room, speaking in low voices. Ricky from the soccer team is putting his hand on the shoulder of a girl who never gave him the time of day before.
âHow are you doing?â Alexis asks me.
Jasmine steps closer to Ricky, and I think about Finn telling him to tone it down, we didnât need to hear all his thoughts on her body.
âJack?â Alexis asks. She takes a step back, and my gaze pans the room before coming in for her close-up.
âIt doesnât matter,â I hear myself say.
Alexis nods. âYeah, it really puts everything in perspective, doesnât it? Remember how I said my life was over when I was wait-listed for WashU? That seems so stupid now.â
âYeah,â I say, as if sheâs responded to what I said. Sheâs clearly been using the WashU line all night.
All day.
Light from the high basement window filters into the room, illuminating dust motes in the air. This nighttime atmosphere in the afternoon has an absurdity to it that suits this horrible situation. Nothing feels as it should.
Alexis is saying something to me, but all my focus is on trying to figure out how this moment can feel like déjà vu if Finn is dead.
âYeah?â I say.
Alexis starts to reach for me, then seems to understand that Iâm not up for pretending to be a couple. I note how easily she switches modes.
âWhy donât I get you a beer?â she says.
After Alexis hands me a drink and goes off to play hostess elsewhere, I try to find a place to sit down, preferably alone.
My sense of detachment is gone, replaced entirely by a quiet horror. Iâve hung out with Finn and Sylvie so many times in this underground room. Is that the source of this new yet familiar feeling?
A few people greet me warily as I walk past. At least two people whisper, âhis best friend,â but I donât join any groups. I find a beanbag chair in the corner, far enough away from the nearest group that they donât feel the need to include me. I wipe the condensation off my hand holding the beer and take a sip. Talking with Alexis has brought back a snippet of dialogue from our phone call.
I try to focus on the golden light. I try to watch the dust motes and think about how, as a kid, I theorized that they were tiny planets and cosmos swirling in and out of existence. I figured our Milky Way was dust motes in some giantâs world, our existence from the big bang onward as brief to those who observed us as the dust motesâ dance seemed to me.
The girl who let me in upstairs crosses the room, and the dust motes swirl again like tiny, synchronized swimmers of air.
Itâs still the day of Finnâs death.
If Alexis said that Finn was pronounced dead right after midnight, did he die before midnight? I think again about the paramedics arriving, packaging him up, and delivering him to the hospital without urgency.
I scan the room for Sylvie. Alexis said Sylvie, by some miracle, only had a concussion and was allowed to go home. She isnât here though. I think about finding Alexis and asking her if hosting this party is a better idea than being with her best friend after she almost died, but I know itâs pointless, like everything with Alexis.
I wonât be able to tell Finn he was right. But if he was alive, Iâd probably still hook up with Alexis until I leave for college and over Christmas break, if she was up for it.
It seems so obvious now; it matters which people you spend time with, and it matters how you spend your time, because you donât know how much you have.
I gaze around the room again. People are laughing or crying or talking, and theyâre all going to die. Maybe not today. Maybe not tomorrow. But they will die. Everyone they love will die too, and no one can stop it.
There was a book Finn and I read in class the year we met about a boy who sees an apple change, but he doesnât understand how it changed, only that it changed somehow, and later you find out that heâs seen in black and white his whole life and was perceiving the red of the apple for the first time.
Iâm looking around at all these people in the basement, and itâs like Iâm that boy in that book, except Iâm seeing everyone as a future corpse.
All these people drinking and milling around, they are simply meat packed around skeletons. The tiniest amount of electricityâjust the right amount!âruns through each of us, but it will stop someday. We will rot or be burned, but we will be disposed of in some manner.
We are all dead bodies that havenât died yet.
The apple was always red; the boy just couldnât see it.
I take a deep breath and look down at my own chest. I imagine my pink lungs under my white ribs, taking in the air, pushing it out, taking it in, pushing it out. I feel my fleshy heart beating, beating, working to deliver the oxygen from my lungs to my blood. I even feel my arteries pulsing, pushing, working.
I am alive.
Iâve always been alive.
But today I feel it.
I take another breath and hold it until my body begs for more, and then I let it out so that I can take another.
After a while, someone puts a song on repeat from the one depressing album Finn liked. I think about finding out who so that I can either punch them or hug them. He has that now, no alarms or surprises, like the song says.
Sudden pain strikes my toes, and I look up.
âOh, sorry.â
Itâs the crying girl from upstairs. She steps off my shoe and closer to her friends, whoâve congregated near the beanbag chair. She isnât crying anymore, but I still donât recognize her.
âIâll live,â I say to no one in particular and flinch.
She doesnât notice my choice of words and turns back to her friends. Jacoby, Melissa, and SethâI know them. Seth was on the team at least.
âAnyway,â the girl I canât remember says, âI know that itâs such a small thing, him having that pencil. But it was so nice of him, and it really was a terrific pencil.â
âNo, I get it,â Seth says. âEveryone knew Finn was the nicest guy.â They all murmur agreement.
Jacoby adds, âYeah, he really was.â
I want to ask him how they can talk about Finn being dead so easily, as if heâs been gone forever.
âI shouldâve saved that pencil to remind me to be nicer to people,â the girl says somberly.
I want to ask her.
Alexisâs voice cuts through the conversations from across the room. âHe loved her so much.â
Is she speaking louder than everyone else, or do I pick her voice from the crowd because of its familiarity?
âThey were the longest running couple of our class, right? Yeah.â Alexis nods.
So thatâs going to be the story.
I donât know if Sylvie told Alexis that Finn was breaking up with her last night. Part of the reason Iâd been pushing him to do something about it was because whenever Alexis and I hooked up, she asked questions that made me wonder if she knew something was up with Finn and Autumn.
But it doesnât matter now. Alexis is going with the happy couple story, and thatâs what will be repeated. By the time Sylvie is out and about again, that will already be gospel.
âNo, he would never,â Alexis is saying.
I take another sip and discover the beer I donât remember drinking is empty. I get up and walk past Alexis and the group sheâs talking to as I head to the recycling bin.
âI mean, I used to be friends with Autumn Davis. Whether she would flirt with him? Thatâs a different story.â
I suppose I could defend Autumn, but how? By interjecting that Finn had always loved a girl who was not his girlfriend?
Alexisâs stance is starting to make sense to me.
Finn probably did one shitty thing his entire life, and it was cheating on Sylvie the day before he died. What could be gained by anyone knowing that Finn and Sylvie were breaking up that night? Itâs probably easier for Sylvie this way.
As I head back to my lonely corner with a new beer, I hear Alexis saying, âAsk anyone. Finn lived for taking care of Sylvie. Thatâs probably whyââ
I try to block her out as I settle back into the beanbag chair. The same knot of people hovers nearby. They arenât talking about Finn anymore. Theyâre sharing stories about other people they know who have died, as if their grandparentsâ deaths mean anything compared to Finn dying.
In a flash, I figure out who she is, the girl who is no longer crying.
Last week of school, Finn and I were talking in class before the start bell. I asked him to loan me a pencil. When he gave it to me, he told me that he needed it back because it was âMaddieâs pencil.â
Iâm not sure what my face did, but he hurried to explain.
âWeâve sat next to each other in trig all year, and most days, sheâs lost her pencil by last period. And you know how Ms. Fink is about not being prepared for class. I tried carrying an extra pencil for her, but sometimes Iâd loan it out and forget to ask for it back.â
Again, my face must have reacted because he rushed to finish.
âI told her to buy a box of pencils and give one to me, and that would be her pencil in my bookbag that I would never loan to anyone else. Sheâd lost all those other pencils, but I still have this one, and thereâs a fifty-fifty chance that sheâll need it today. If it was anyone but you, I would have lied and said I didnât have another pencil.â
âBecause this is Maddieâs pencil?â I said.
âExactly,â Finn said.
If it had been anyone else, I would have asked how hot this Maddie person was, because, you know, why else would it have been his problem that she didnât have a pencil at the end of the day? But this was Finn, so of course he went out of his way to help someone simply because they sat next to each other in class.
Her comment about saving âthat pencilâ makes sense in another way, because of course he made sure she left with it at the end of the school year. It was her pencil.
Maddie, Jacoby, and Melissa arenât talking about death anymore. I could interrupt and tell them that Finn loan out Maddieâs terrific trig pencil to me once. So clearly, if she has the right to cry, then I should have the right to scream. Scream like Autumn had.
Or I could get up and tell Alexis, tell everyone, that Finn didnât live to take care of Sylvie, he lived as himself, and he was someone who took care of the people around him.
But it isnât Maddieâs fault that I canât cry like her or scream like Autumn or even tell all my Finn stories like Alexis, who is busy making sure no one hears about the one shitty thing that Finn ever did.
âAutumn always had a thing for him, but she was like a sister to Finn,â Alexis says.
I would laugh, but I canât. All I can do is sit here, sip my beer, and listen to people who barely knew Finn talk about him as if they were friends.
Finn isnât here, and for a moment, Iâm envious of him.