: Part 1 – Chapter 6
If Only I Had Told Her
Itâs only Aunt Claire and Autumnâs house. I go over there all the time. It wouldnât be weird to head over, ask if sheâs eaten, because we still have cash from The Mothers and a little rumâjust a little!âor whatever. Itâll be clear that we donât have to keep hanging out if she doesnât want to.
Then, depending on how she acts, Iâll know if she overheard anything this morning, if I need to explain myself.
No matter what, I will tell her how I feelâ¦eventually. But it can wait. Iâve waited this long. The thing to worry about now is what I will say to Sylvie. I escape the guilt of thinking about Sylvie by getting off the couch and heading out.
Aunt Claire always locks her back door. My mother often forgets to lock ours and she often loses her keys, so she keeps an extra key hidden. Aunt Claire doesnât keep a key hidden, but Autumn often loses her keys and forgets to lock the back door, so Iâm betting that she forgot to lock it today.
She forgot to lock it that day she snuck Jamie over freshman year. I saw them go inside from my window, then closed my curtains. But to my horror, Mom asked me to run next door and ask Autumn if they had eggs. As I crossed the lawn, I prayed that sheâd left the back door unlocked. She had, but it hadnât saved me from intruding on them.
Today, I knock gently, but there is no answer. I try the doorknob, and it turns.
Autumn hadnât been surprised or confused to see me that day I came over for eggs. The only awkward part had been when Jamie emerged from the hallway, making eye contact with me while Autumn was looking in the fridge. I could tell she didnât want me to know that Jamie was there. We both knew her parents wouldnât want Jamie over while they were out.
I even pretended I thought that no one had been home to save her the embarrassment.
Jamie, on the other hand, made his presence known, staked his claim. I wanted to say something, but then Autumn was handing me the eggs for Mom. Should I have exposed him? Would Autumn have realized back then that his ego was more important than her wishes?
Autumn hadnât minded me inviting myself in. She hadnât minded that day or a million times before or after. Thatâs what matters. Itâs always been that way with The Mothers and our houses. Still, my heart is beating hard. Where is she?
I expected her to be watching a movie in the living room or eating in the kitchen, but the rooms are empty and the lights are off.
I turn to the stairs and listen to the creak and groan under my feet as I climb. Surely, she can hear me? Has she gone out?
I knock and push open her bedroom door, half expecting the room to be empty. But deep in the darkness, in the far corner of her bed, I see her shape.
âAutumn?â
âHey,â she says. Her voice is calm, yet it shakes.
My shoulders tense. What happened?
âI came to check on you.â
âI finished the novel,â she says. Sheâs crying. Sheâs more emotional than with other books sheâs read, and if she means her own novel, surely they would be happy tears? These donât look like happy tears.
Still, it doesnât matter why sheâs crying, because sheâs crying. Instinct takes over, and I cross the room, pulling her into my arms the way I have dreamed of so many times before, with so many different tenors of emotions and desire.
But thereâs only one thing I want right now: to stop the pain that is making her fingers curl around my shirt. Itâs been so long since she let me see her vulnerable like this. We were so young the last time.
Autumnâs sobs reverberate in my chest as she presses her sweet face against me, and it is proof I am awful. I am taking such pleasure in comforting Autumn. Just as I have been all summer, ever since Jamie made me the happiest man alive by breaking Autumnâs heart.
My Autumn.
Sheâs in her bathrobe, but I try to push that thought aside.
She starts to quiet. Her breathing slows. I want to stroke her hair, her back, kiss the top of her head. I canât. I wonât.
.
I feel her shoulders slump, followed by the faintest of whimpers. Sheâs done crying. I could move, but I donât. I hold her gently, careful to make sure sheâs in control, and she can pull away with the slightest of movements.
âDo you want to tell me whatâs wrong?â I ask.
âItâs like theyâre dead,â she says.
Of course. Jamie and Sasha. The two people who kept her anchored through her ups and downs the past four years. She had her time and space to be numb, but now, finally, she is truly grieving the end of their friendship. Still, I give her the opening to explain it.
âLike who is dead?â
âIzzy and Aden.â
I only have time to think, before she says, âMy main characters.â
Her novel. The one sheâs finished. I donât understand why that has made her cry like this, but Iâm so relieved that I laugh and say aloud to myself, âI thought something was really wrong.â
She raises her head off my chest, and I let one of my arms fall away as she faces me. In the dying light, her tear-filled eyes are luminous. Her lovely face is pink and puffy. She looks so sweet and so absolutely devastated.
âSomething wrong!â Her voice quavers and her lips quiver. âCanât you tell Iâm upset?â
I laugh. I canât help it. I laugh because she isnât crying about something from the real world and because Iâm so happy that she finished her novel. Her devotion to her writing is beautiful, like the rest of her.
Then she punches me. It isnât very hard, but it hurts a little, and it makes me laugh again.
âStop laughing at me,â she insists.
âSorry,â I say, trying to swallow my mirth. âItâs just really obvious that youâre upset.â
, I do not say. âAnd I meant I thought something was really wrong. Like Jamie had called you.â
âWho cares if Jamie called me?â she says.
I feel my grin widen again, but I canât help it.
âWho cares about Jamie?â she says and begins to cry again.
I use the excuse to pull her close. Who cares about Jamie indeed?
âYou donât understand,â I feel her moan above my heart.
I take a deep breath of her scent.
âI know,â I say.
I understand this much: Autumn lives in this world and the fictions of her mind or those written by others like her. Whatever it is that puts us together as people, be it God, genes, or destiny, Autumn was made to tell stories. Sheâs going to be an amazing writer. Sheâs always been amazing. Whatever this novel is about, itâs going to blow my mind. I know it.
âBut I canât wait to read it,â I say. Iâm smiling again, and I know she can hear it in my voice. She knows me almost as well as I know her.
âYou canât read it.â Weâre leaning into each other like two sides of a triangle. Sheâs still sniffling.
âWhy not?â She said something before about how I might take elements too literally, how Iâd draw parallels to her real life. Maybe thereâs stuff in there about Jamie or her dad, or rather his absence. Maybe thereâs something about Sylvie? That seems unlikely.
The thing is I know that she wants me to read it. She knows what she wrote is good, in the same way she knows that sheâs pretty. She knows itâs good, but sheâs terrified that itâs not as good as she hopes. At least thatâs what I assume, because thatâs what she said about the final draft of her four-part poetic drama about the faerie-dragon wars she finished when we were almost twelve.
âNot all dragons want to wipe out faeries, only some of them, and the other dragons are finally joining the faeriesâ fight,â Autumn explained to me as if these were current events.
I wasnât enthused by faeries, but I figured I wouldnât hate her story. When I read her superlong poem, though, it was so much better than what I had expected. She surprised me. It didnât sound like something a kid had written, and I told her so afterward. I told her how I found myself caring about that dragon prince way, way more than I had expected or even wanted to. It was the truth. She was triumphant, and it was wonderful to see.
Itâs turned dark now. Her breathing is quiet. She could move if she wanted to. Why hasnât she moved?
âOkay,â she says. âYou can read it after dinner.â She lifts her head off my chest, and both of my arms fall away.
âAll right,â I say. I donât need to tell her that I ate dinner a while ago. Meals donât have time or meaning for us this summer. I hop off the bed and hold out my hand to her.
âUm, I need to get dressed?â she says.
I drop my hand.
âOh.â I try to laugh. âI forgot. How about you meet me in the car?â
I guess I canât be too bad of a guy if my concern for Autumnâs emotional state could make me entirely forget her state of undress.