: Part 2 – Chapter 7
If Only I Had Told Her
A week after the funeral, I get a text from Charlie, my next oldest brother and therefore, by Murphy tradition, the one responsible for things like getting me off the kindergarten bus and teaching me to drive.
Translation: Are you okay?
I text back.
Translation: Iâm fine.
Charlie replies.
Translation: Bullshit.
Translation: Iâm fine.
Translation: Bullshit.
Translation: Iâll get it together.
Translation: Iâll tell Mom youâre fine but donât make a liar out of me.
So now I have to go for a run.
The reason I hadnât gone for a run yet was because I knew I was going to have to find a place. Itâs not like I only went running with Finn. We went running together a few times a month. Finn liked to go to different places to run, for scenery or whatever. I always thought it was stupid to drive somewhere to run, so heâd invite Sylvie when he wanted to go running at a sculpture park or a nature reserve.
But sometimes, heâd call or text me and say he wanted to go running right that moment, and I wanted to be running already, and we would meet at the halfway point between our houses and just .
We would run all over Ferguson. There isnât a street within running distance of my home that isnât painted in memories of trash-talking with Finn, pushing myself to go harder because of him, or giving myself a break because he said it was okay.
So thatâs why I was putting this off. Now I have to drive somewhere to go running, which is stupid. But here I am putting on my running clothes and getting into my car as if there isnât a perfectly good sidewalk outside. I went with Alexis to her cousinâs birthday party last May at this gazebo in a park, and Iâm pretty sure it had a path around a lake or something, so I drive in the direction I remember the park being in until, to my surprise, I find it.
So fine. Iâll go running.
Iâm not going to stretch any more than I normally would, though Finn was always saying I didnât stretch enough. Just because heâs dead doesnât mean everything he ever said has to be right.
After a normal amount of stretching, Iâm off and itâs fine.
But obviously Iâm thinking about Finn since itâs the first run.
Because he wonât run again.
I feel like Finnâs death has rattled my brain. How many times am I going to remember that being dead means youâre never going to do shit again?
I should have checked how many times around this lake makes a mile. The gravel spread over the dirt path is ground down and causing more slippage than absorbing impact. This will be a stamina run, not a speed run. And thatâs fine. I didnât check the time before I started, and Iâll have no idea when Iâve hit my first mile.
âLetâs run and not worry about why,â Finn would say, and we would just .
Fuck. Fuck. Fuck.
Why couldnât he have stayed in the car? What did he think he was going to do? Save Sylvie with his bare hands? I mean, fine, this one time, we were watching a TV show, and he was all like, âThatâs not how you do CPR.â
I said I figured somebody had looked it up before filming, but Finn started going on about how sheâd never break through his sternum in that position. I said they probably wouldnât have gotten the cleavage shot in the position he was describing. He glanced at the screen and said, âOh right,â in this disappointed tone, as if the show had failed him by choosing boobs over accurate first aid. Which was weird, because I knew for a fact that he liked that actressâs boobs.
So maybe Finn could have done CPR on Sylvie if she had needed it.
Iâm starting my second time around the lake. It doesnât feel like Iâve been running for even a quarter of a mile.
Still, Finn should have been more careful.
Thatâs the other thing that pisses me off. He was an annoyingly safe driver. What the fuck happened? Being in his car when it was raining was torture. He was so paranoid about it.
Suddenly, I realize who I should be angry at.
Finn once made us wait forty minutes because Kyle wouldnât put on his seat belt. Admittedly, Kyle is a bigger asshole than normal when heâs drunk, and it was funny seeing him lose it when Finn said, âIâll just text my mom that a jerk in my back seat wouldnât put on his seat belt. She wonât be mad if we sit here all night. Letâs do it.â
But my point is why didnât Sylvie have on her seat belt?
Until now, the whole âand Sylvie went through the windshield but is fineâ thing has kinda run through my brain without being examined.
For that to have happened, her seat belt had to be off, and Finn never drove an unbuckled passenger.
Sylvie says she canât remember the last few minutes before the accident.
For about six yards or so, I wonder if she murdered Finn, but all the pieces of the puzzle are too random to be orchestrated.
It was evening when he called me. He died around midnight.
Finn would have wanted to find some kind of resolution with Sylvie, and she wasnât going to let him off easy, so after hours of driving, he mustâve been distracted or tired enough to spin out and hit that median. But why was her seat belt off?
I stop midstep and almost trip but catch myself and pull out my phone. Before thinking about what Iâm doing, I pull up Sylvieâs name and type I go back to running and let that anger course through me.
I let that question be my only thought, over and over again, until the words become meaningless. I keep running until there is no more anger, no more thinking, only my breathing, only telling myself to keep pushing. I keep running, and I keep running, and I just .
I donât consciously choose to stop; I think my body must demand it, because I stop short in a way that Finn would remind me was bad for my circulation.
I check the time. Iâve been running for forty-five minutes, and I have four messages from Sylvie.
Forty minutes ago:
Five minutes after that:
Eleven minutes ago:
And a minute after that:
Translation: Iâm an asshole.
I stare at her last message, still gulping air. A drop of my sweat drips on the screen and blurs her words. What would Finn say to her?
, I type and hit Send.
She doesnât reply.