: Part 1 – Chapter 8
If Only I Had Told Her
We head into my house without discussion. Sheâs withdrawn again. I want to reassure her that Iâll love her novel, but I know it wonât help. I gesture to the rum on the counter.
âDo you want me to pour a little in your Coke?â
She wrinkles her nose.
âIâm never drinking rum and Coke again.â She adds, âDonât laugh at me. I might actually mean that.â
âI just thought you might need some liquid courage.â I nod toward the laptop in her arms, cradled like a baby. She hugs it closer.
âDo I have to be here while you read it?â Autumn asks.
âDo you want to go home?â I feel myself frown. Iâm not sure which I want more: for her to stay or for me to read it.
âNo,â she says quickly.
âIâm not sure what other option you have then.â
Autumn sighs, frustrated by the confines of reality, then marches to the living room. I follow, and she slumps on the couch and opens her computer. A few clicks, and she sits back, then looks over at me. I sit down next to her.
She pushes the computer into my lap and says, âThereâs the title page. Scroll until youâre done. Itâs pretty short. Barely a novel.â
âYou donât have to let me read it,â I say as I finger the keyboard, because I feel like I must. As much as I want to read it, Iâm starting to worry that sheâs not ready to share it.
âNo. Itâs time.â
I glance at her beautiful, scared face, then begin to read.
âJust donât think about it too much,â she says quietly, but Iâm already falling under the spell of her words.
Sheâs taken a lot from our childhood. Thatâs obvious. That must be why sheâs worried. It isnât like she took us as kids and wrote it all down though; sometimes the character of Izzy seems like Autumn, but then I see flashes of me in her and pieces of Autumn in Aden. They do the things we did, like using our fingers to draw on each otherâs backs at night, and the things we didnât do but wanted to, like building a tree house.
I glance at Autumn, curled up with a book in the far corner of the couch. I want to tell her that Iâm honored to have glimpses of our lives in her book, but I know sheâd want me to keep reading.
Izzy has a great, present dad and a runaway mom. Adenâs parents love him but are troubled and emotionally distant, hence his spending so much time next door. Between Izzyâs dadâs constant presence and the occasional support of Adenâs, the two of them have enough parenting to get by. Itâs true, and itâs not true.
Autumn isnât good at drawing, but Izzy is, and she makes Aden comic books of her stories. In reality, I did the drawings for Autumnâs stories, and we made them for ourselves. True and not true again.
Itâs like time traveling but to a parallel world. Like a kaleidoscope, the story shifts in my vision. Itâs us. Itâs not us. Itâs us. Itâs not us.
And then comes the part that is not us, cannot be us, because Aden is kissing Izzy, and she is kissing him back. I feel my mouth pinch, but I donât frown. Distantly, Iâm aware that Autumn has switched from reading to watching a movie, and my brain, ever ready to multitask when it comes to Autumn, takes note of her occasional glances at me.
My main focus, though, is on Autumnâs novel. Of course she is worried that I will misunderstand this part. As Izzy and Adenâs romantic relationship begins, I start to see Jamie in Aden: the random gag gifts, the way he stakes his claim over Izzy so publicly. But I still see me. Thereâre the obvious details, like Aden plays soccer and has blond hair. But itâs more than that, much more.
Itâs the way Aden sees through Izzyâs insecurities and appreciates her strengths.
Itâs the way Aden grins at Izzy when he says, âI like how you take it for granted that Iâll teach you to drive.â
I get up for a glass of water.
I take a swig of rum from the bottle.
I return to the living room and sit down.
Itâs like sheâs taken slivers and slices from her life and the lives of people she knows, put them in a blender, and then very heavily seasoned it all with fiction.
Thereâs a big soccer game where Aden blocks a last-second goal from the other team, preventing overtime, and Izzy runs out on the field and jumps on him even though heâs covered in mud. Sylvie jumped on me after I blocked a pass like that a couple of years ago. Autumn wasnât there, but I guess she heard about it. Sylvie got in trouble with the cheer captain for muddying her uniform and losing poise or something.
But in the novel, Izzy isnât wearing a uniform, because Autumn was never a cheerleader. Izzy is and isnât Autumn. I see flashes of her friends Brooke and Sasha in Izzy too.
Izzy and Aden hang out in the rafters above the stage in their schoolâs auditorium, which is entirely the sort of thing that Autumn would wish she could do.
Aden isnât only me. Heâs also Autumn, and heâs also Jamie and maybe other friends that I donât know well.
But the way that Aden loves Izzy? That is me.
The way he asks her if sheâs okay with a look and understands her silent replies? Thatâs me.
The way Aden tells Izzy to ignore the teachers telling her to consider an education major because sheâs too good a writer not to try is me. Thatâs always been me.
Autumn stands and stretches, but I keep reading. Thatâs how good the story is. I donât think most peopleâs first drafts are this good, are they? Sheâs a great writer, and sheâs only going to make it better.
I stand up and realize Autumn is gone, and I head to the kitchen, get the rum, and settle back on the couch.
Iâm finishing this tonight.