: Part 1 – Chapter 7
If Only I Had Told Her
Outside, with the moon and streetlights, itâs brighter than inside her house. I get in my car and start the engine, turning my headlights on so that her back porch is illuminated like a stage. It isnât long before she makes her entrance. Autumnâs wearing jeans and a T-shirt, casual and untouchable. She carries her laptop. Is she bringing it now so that she doesnât lose her nerve later? Autumn shades her eyes as she heads to the car.
âSo where are we going? Tacos? Burgers? Chicken?â I ask as she sits next to me in the passenger seat. The flush is gone from her face.
âOh?â she says, as if she had forgotten that dinner involves food.
âThis is a celebratory drive-through run,â I tell her. âWeâll stop at that gas station that sells those candies that you like, the one that looks like hair gel in a tube and the one that comes in the paper packets that looks like laundry detergent.â
She doesnât laugh. âOkay.â
âI mean, itâs great that you finished your novel, even if you feel like youâveââI try to choose my words carefullyââlike youâve lost your main characters?â
âYeah,â she says with a nod. She turns and faces forward, looking out the windshield. âI didnât know it would hurt this much.â
âYouâll still have to edit it, right?â I take the car out of park. âAnd when itâs published, theyâll live forever within other people, you know?â
She gives me an annoyed scoff.
âWhat?â I ask.
âYou canât just say, âWhen itâs published,â Finny.â
I catch a glimpse of her face before I turn in my seat to navigate down the long driveway. Sheâs gazing out the dark window.
She sighs. âItâs probably never going to be published. Thatâs simply a fact.â
âNo, no, no.â I wait for a car to pass before I turn onto Elizabeth Street and continue, âThatâs not a fact. A fact is that youâre good. A fact is that youâre going to let me read it.â Iâm starting to feel giddy. It must be an aftereffect of holding her.
She sighs again. I risk another glance. Autumn is curled up in the seat, leaning against the window. I want to tell her that itâs not safe to ride with her feet off the floor, but I donât want to be bossy, and anyway, Iâm a good driver.
âSo where are we going?â I ask.
Thereâs a pause before I hear her quiet voice next to me.
âTacos,â she says.
âAs you wish,â and I get the laugh I knew the movie reference would win me. When she lifts her head, I roll down the windows to let in the night air the way she likes. Autumn puts her hand out the window and rides the currents. The wind whips her hair around, and I gorge myself on her scent, filling my lungs to capacity.
There have been nights with her this summer when I only turned the car toward home because I was afraid I would be too tired to drive safely if we didnât head back. I love her next to me. I love hearing her react to the random madness of local radio stations. I love holding her hands beneath mine on the steering wheel, showing her that she will be able to drive if she trusts herself.
âAnd then what?â Jack asked me. âThen what?â
Eventually, Iâll have to tell her that it canât always be like itâs been this summer or how it will probably be this fall if Iâm being realistic. I donât want to be like all the asshole guys who canât see past her body, but I canât only be her friend. Not if I am this close to her. Not if my feelings are so much more than a friendâs. Iâll have to tell her by Christmas though, or Iâll go mad.
But tonight, she needs me. For a while, I have this excuse: her current fragility, the coming adjustment of us both going to college, and then, and then, and thenâ
I canât think about it right now.
âCare if I put on music?â I ask.
âYeah, sure,â she mumbles, and I reach with one hand for a CD in the glove box. Thereâs this song from a band I discovered that I want her to hear because, well, to be honest, thereâre a few songs on this album that make me think of her. The opening song reminds me of this summer with her, the nervous energy of us being out at night in my car, even if we arenât together in quite the same way. Itâs safe to put on this CD and pretend it isnât a message to her, because Iâm filling the silence and sheâs still in her head.
I shouldnât be enjoying this moment so much. Iâve done nothing to earn it. Autumn is trusting me to be the friend she needs, yet here I am, whispering the lyrics, pretending Iâm singing them to her.
Sometimes love is heavy, but tonight it is making me light and free. Iâm grateful to have this time with her. Itâs almost enough.
âI really liked that,â Autumn says when the song ends.
I blush, even though I know she didnât get the message. The next song starts.
âYou missed the exit,â she says.
âOh, whoops,â I say, because I missed it on purpose.
âDonât forget you promised me candy.â
Sheâs starting to sound a bit more like herself.
âI wouldnât think of it. First, tacos, and then all the high-fructose sludge and powder you desire. And theeenââI turn to look at herââwe go home so I. Can. Read. It.â
She groans. Out of the corner of my eye, I see her put her face in her hands. She makes another noise and looks up and away. Weâre turning around and getting back on the highway after the exit I âmissed,â and I glance at her while at the stop light before the on-ramp.
Autumn stares stoically out the window like someone nobly facing execution. I stifle my laugh and decide to stop teasing her. Well, about her writing.
This is what Jamie never understood. Autumn needs her friends to tease her and stop her from taking herself too seriously. Otherwise, she gets lost inside her mind. But that doesnât mean not taking seriously. Sheâs in agony over letting me read her workâI wonât let her go back on saying I can read itâbut she doesnât need me to needle her about it.
âYou know, someday, when all your teeth are gone, youâll regret being such a sugar goblin,â I tell her as we speed down the ramp, back onto the dark highway.
She laughs in the way I hoped. âIâm not a sugar goblin,â she insists, but she knows itâs true. âIâm not going to lose my teeth,â she adds.
âEh.â I shrug.
She huffs next to me, and I let myself smile but I do not laugh.
âOh, so now youâre going to dental school?â she asks.
âI might have to if you maintain your rate of sugar consumption,â I say, and I receive another playful whack.
The glowing lights of the taco place greet us.
âOkay, butââ Autumn says suddenly, as if we hadnât been silent for the past minute.
I pull the car into the drive-through.
âYouâre majoring in premed,â she says, âand youâve been eating greasy fast food with me nearly every night all summer. Admit that weâre both terrible and wasting our youthful bodies on trash food.â
Keeping my foot firmly on the brake, I turn to her in my seat.
âI admit it,â I say. âBut I go running three or four times a week. Youâre naturally thin, butââ I lean in so I can meet her eyes in the dark. âYou are lazy, Autumn.â
âThat is true,â she says primly, happily, and I have to laugh.
.
We look at each other.
The car behind us blares its horn. Weâre holding up the line.
âOops!â she says and laughs, then uncurls in her seat and stretches.
I pretend that navigating the car two yards forward takes my full concentration. Weâve hit a late rush. We arenât even to the menu yet. âDo you want what you always get?â I ask, still staring straight ahead.
âYup.â
I hear her settling back into the seat. Thatâs the thing about being in this car that makes me want to make every trip last as long as possibleâitâs close, intimate, but Iâm safe from losing my mind. Itâs like driving takes up enough of my frontal lobe activity that I can keep perspective.
I release the brake, and the car inches forward.
âItâll catch up with me someday,â Autumn says.
Involuntarily, I look at her, then look forward again as I hit the brake softly.
âWhat will?â I ask.
âMy diet or lack thereof? Right now, I can eat whatever I want.
I wonât gain an ounce. After Iâve been pregnant or am older or whatever, I bet Iâll have to think about calories or even exercise on purpose, like you.â
Itâs always fascinated me that girls can be so comfortable with the idea of constructing an entirely new human inside their bodies. I guess if it were something my body was capable of, it would be easier to imagine, let alone be casual about. My point is her train of thought would have surprised me anyway, but her confidence that someday she would be pregnant, that made me pause.
Someday, someone would get her pregnant.
âMaybe, but that wonât be for a while, right?â Weâre finally approaching the box to order.
She laughs. âYeah, Iâm not immaculately conceiving.â
The employee asks for our order, and Iâm saved from the urge to make a joke about helping her raise a little Jesus II.
Because I would help, stupid as that sounds.
With our tacos in tow, our mission is half complete. I turn us back toward the highway and the odd little gas station that sells Autumnâs arcane candies.
She finished her novel.
Weâre eighteen, almost nineteen; our birthdays are coming up.
She is as extraordinary as she is beautiful.
âDo you want the windows back down?â I ask.
, I think.
âI need to finish at least one taco first,â she says, chewing. âIâm really hungry.â
âWhat did you eat at home?â
âUm.â
âAutumn?â
âI was writing!â she cries.
âItâs eight oâclock at night!â I glance at her. âAll youâve had to eat were those two pieces of toast and that taco?â
âBut I have six more tacos right here,â she says. She finishes the first and unwraps another.
After a minute, I ask, âWould you have eaten if I hadnât come by when you didnât answer my text?â
âWhat text?â
She shifts in her seat, and thereâs light from her phone as she opens it.
âOh!â she says. Iâm glad sheâs surprised that she didnât notice. âSorry.â
âNot a big deal. Itâs good I came by before you passed out and hit your head on something.â
âOh, har-har,â she says, but I mean it.
This, this right here, is why I need to wait until Christmas break to tell her that what I feel for her is more than physical attraction, that I need some space. First semester, Iâm going to need to make sure Autumn remembers to get to the dining hall before it closes.
When Autumn is depressed or stressed or writing, she gets so inside her head that she forgets about her body. I canât imagine not noticing that Iâm hungry. I canât imagine living so outside the physical world the way she does.
Autumn would probably say that she canât imagine having a body like mine, one that runs in a confident rhythm or that can take aim and hit the desired mark.
âDo you want to steer on the way back?â I ask as I pull into the gas station parking lot. The light inside glows warmly, and I park in one of the spaces illuminated by the windows.
âIâm too tired. Iâll crash. Even you couldnât save us,â she says.
âIâll get your candy. Stay here and eat.â
I should probably tell Autumn that the ânice older manâ inside, who always smiles and says hi to her, also leers at her when sheâs facing away. I donât think heâs dangerous, but itâs gross. Heâs fifty at least. Iâm eighteen, and I have a better handle on my hormones than him.
âIâll be right back.â
Autumn nods and chews another mouthful. She looks content. I know this summer could never mean as much to her as it does to me, but I want her to remember it fondly. I donât want this creep saying something to sully the memory.
Autumnâs sludge tubes and the little powder packets are at the bottom shelf of the candy aisle with the other sugar oddities. For example, this must be the last place on earth that sells candy cigarettes. I wonder if weâve been the only ones buying this candy here all summer and if, after weâve gone, this shelf will sit untouched for months.
I get sodas despite my earlier teasing, because I know itâll make Autumn happy. I will go to dental school and rebuild her teeth if she needs it.
The older guy is there. I see him see me as I wait in line. I see him look for Autumn behind me.
As I set my items on the counter, he says, âAlone tonight?â
I look at his face, because Iâm not certain of his tone. Heâs raised one eyebrow and gives me the sort of smile he makes when he thinks no one sees him eyeing Autumn.
âNo, sheâs with me.â I emphasize the words so that they imply what I wish were trueâthat I am hers.
As heâs ringing up the items, his gaze moves out the window to my car. âSo how is it?â he asks, like I have something to share.
âI donât need my change.â I grab our stuff and leave. Tomorrow, Iâll buy the whole stock of Autumnâs weird candy so that we never have to come back here again.
âHey. Yay!â Autumn says as I slide in next to her.
I drop her loot in her lap and restart the car. I glance at the counter as I pull out, but the man is busy with another customer. Heâll never see her again.
The CD is still playing. If she hadnât liked it, she would have found something else on the radio. Weâre quiet together as another song plays that makes me think of her. I want to drive with her like this for the rest of the night, for the rest of our lives. The road stretches out in front of us, seemingly unending.
After the song finishes, I ask, âAre you certain you donât want to practice driving tonight?â
âNah,â she says. âArenât you going to eat?â
âMaybe later.â
I wonder if she notices the way I loop the long way along North County, the way I drive the speed limit. I hope sheâs absorbing the words from the songs, like my love could be a protective spell, even if sheâs unaware of it.
Christmas might be too soon. She canât keep track of her phone or her keys. How is she going to keep track of her drinks at parties? Iâm going to have to stick around to make sure whatever guy she falls for treats her right. This time, if I see something, Iâll say something.
Autumn is where she wants to be, sitting next to me, her friend, and Iâll be there if she needs me.
âHave you been thinking about what youâll focus on in med school?â Sheâs leaning her temple against the window again. The floor of my car is littered with taco wrappers.
I turn the music down. âI wonât figure that out until a couple years into classes,â I say. âItâs not like I know that much about the human body yet.â I pause, because I want to share something more with her. âIâve been thinking about the brain a lot lately.â
âWhat about it?â She sounds dreamy, but I can tell sheâs listening.
âWell.â I pause to make sure Iâm saying it right. âIâm driving, so on one level, Iâm thinking about visibility, speed, and car spacing, and Iâm making adjustments with the steering wheel, but Iâm not really thinking about any of those things. Iâm really thinkingââ
ââabout our conversation. Meanwhile, my brain is also telling my lungs to breathe and my heart to beat, but Iâm not thinking about any of that either, not at all. My brain makes sure my body is doing all this, while Iâm thinking aboutââ
ââwhether Iâm explaining any of this well.â
Iâve run out of air. I guess my brain isnât doing so hot after all.
I breathe deep and plunge back in. âOne organ is responsible for all those things, and itâs so small. Most people donât realize how small their brain really is, probably because we talk about how big the human brain is compared to other animals. But you can hold it in one hand. And itâs responsible for everything that we consider to be âus.â Your novel came from your brain, Autumn, word by word, and I wish I could understand how your brain is able to do that.â
Autumn is silent. I canât end there. It implies too much.
Then she says, âOr how a brain can know things logically but still send illogical signals and emotions? Tell you to do stupid things?â
âYeah, exactly.â I steer the car off the highway. âIt does all these things right and gets all these things wrong. It records all this information and still misses so much.â I shrug. âIâm looking forward to learning something about how it does all that.â I glance at her.
She smiles at me, making my heart beat faster.
I turn up the music. The album has started again at the first song, and maybe, on some level, her brain understands that Iâm playing this song for her.