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Authors: Ingrid Sundberg

All We Left Behind (22 page)

BOOK: All We Left Behind
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I pull out my pen and draw stars on the back of my wrist till there's a solar system covering my arm. I want to connect the dots and make them into something. Invent new constellations. See if there's a way through this skin of stars to the girl underneath.

Abe takes a seat and mumbles something about my inked skin, but I don't catch it because I'm too overwhelmed by the closeness of him. Too warm and confused, and these dark-blue stars suddenly feel like a new way of marking me. His silver buttons sparkle and I can actually imagine myself unbuttoning them. Finding his skin underneath, where I could draw starbursts on his chest, scattered like dandelion
seeds. I don't know why I feel brave enough to think that's possible. For me to touch him.

“Are you all right?” Abe's voice breaks me from my daydream.

“Sorry? What?”

“You were kinda off this morning,” he says, looking me over carefully, and I don't know what he's searching for. “When Lilith came by and . . .” I flush, afraid he can read everything I'm thinking.

“No, I'm—” I start, but that's when I see Kurt in the doorway.

Kurt doesn't come in. He waits just outside the frame, watching me, and I'm not sure he's going to walk in at all. Suddenly I know I can't face him in this classroom. Not with Abe here. Not with the rest of our classmates watching.

“Marion, are—?”

“Can you excuse me a minute?” I get up and walk away from Abe, not looking back. I don't want to see the disapproving look on his face.

I grab Kurt's arm and pull him down the hall away from the door. I grab him with my star-covered hand, inked with a whole blue universe I want to disappear into.

“Don't we have class?” Kurt says, but he's not really protesting. The slump of his shoulder and the way he opens the stairwell door make me certain he's just as happy to walk away from that room as I am.

The stairwell echoes with the clang of the door, kicking
up dust, and I turn and face him. Fog clouds the window beside us, making his skin look pasty white, and in this light he doesn't look like the gold-kissed boy who was so intangible at the bonfire. Here, he's just a boy. The one boy whose hands know me.

I grip his arm to steady myself, because I'm not sure what I want to ask him. I just need this—seeing him—to happen away from Abe and everyone else. He catches my eye, but I can't read him. His gaze is honest, but I can't see anything new in that look. No secret waiting for me. Nothing to settle this starlight burning through the base of my stomach.

His hand takes my arm and he rubs his thumb over the inked stars, linking one smudged blot to the next. It's messy and lovely, smearing everything I've been trying so hard to keep clean. And then he kisses me. Sweetly. Not hot like in my backseat, or distant like the first time in the car. Just simply, in that weird way Kurt can make something effortlessly simple and at the same time overwhelming. I melt into it, because part of me doesn't want to ask questions or define us.

Part of me just wants to burn.

*  *  *

My heart thumps in my chest as I run around the track in gym class. I close my eyes and listen to the rhythm of it. Body moving. Breathing. Released. I smell the ocean far away and wonder why there can't be more moments like this one.

Just body and breath. Sand and air. No water to drag me down.

I open my eyes, running faster, to see if I can outrun that dark place in the back of my mind. The places that question Kurt and what being with him means.

I look at Lilith rounding the track ahead of me, and wonder if that's her trick. If she turns off all the questions, and exists right here, right now, without looking ahead or behind. Lives in the moment where nothing else can touch her. Is that it? To let go, do you simply have to choose to be free?

“I'll race you to the end.”

Abe pulls my attention and I see him jogging next to me. He points to the final lap and smiles, a challenge in the curve of his eyebrow. It makes me feel like a kid, my hair full of wind, and I want nothing more than to play this game.

“Eat my dust,” I yell, digging into the dirt and running ahead. Abe's pushing hard behind me, trying his best to catch up to me. Only he isn't Kurt. He isn't fast. I could beat him.

I focus on the track, on the pound in my chest, on the solid lines in the dirt. It feels good to stay between the lines, to follow the rules and race forward without questioning the possibility of what lies outside them. The adrenaline and rush melt all my questions away, and I sprint. That kiss in the stairwell makes me feel lighter, like
I've got wings to fly above this. I can forget Abe behind me and be in this moment, ahead of everything that chases me.

I cross the finish line and my heart feels like it's going to burst. My head is dizzy with exertion. I turn to Abe and we both grab the fence to keep from falling over.

“Okay, you win,” he says breathlessly. But I can't talk. I'm out of wind. I half laugh and smile, gulping down air, rather than speaking. And he nods; he feels that too. That breathlessness and clarity. That part where you just feel alive. “Man, I got my ass kicked by a girl.”

“Damn straight you did,” I say, and he's full smile and laughing.

I grip the fence to steady myself, and my arm is smeared in blue stars. Half-there, half-gone, covered in sweat and fog. Perspiration beads on my skin and I can feel the creek water again, on my wrists and elbows, wanting to drown those stars. It's fleeting, there for only a moment, and I tell myself to ignore it. I don't want it to spoil the joy of running. Of beating Abe. Of momentarily being ahead of everything.

I look at the parking lot beyond the fence. My chest pounds and I swear I see Kurt walking through the cars. Only it can't be him, because there's a dark-haired girl trailing him. Vanessa, I think that's her name. Yes, Vanessa, she's a junior. Only all the joy and air squeezes right out of me,
because the guy she's with slumps his shoulder to the side, in the way that Kurt does, and I know it's him.

And then she kisses him.

I flip around and stare at the mountain, not wanting to look back. But I have to, just to be sure. And yes, it really is him, and her, and his car. My fingers and toes go numb. That fleeting feeling rushes back, and there's water up to my chin.

Abe notices. “Hey, are you okay?” he asks, still catching his breath, but I walk away from him and head for the trees. I walk away from Kurt and her, my head swarming with an ocean of things I can't breathe.

“Marion?” Abe calls after me, but I ignore him. Silver reeds slap my shoes, and I walk until the mist smells of cedar and the fog clogs my breath.

A snap of twigs makes me look back, and Abe is following me. It's stupid, but I'm
glad
he's following me. The leaves flutter down around him like orange butterflies, blotting out the school and Kurt and Vanessa and all that, since yesterday, I no longer am.

“Hey, slow down,” he says, but I keep trudging forward. “What just happened?”

“Nothing,” I say, my limbs aching. “I just need air.” I point to the mountain through the trees. “There's a trail up this, yeah?”

“Dorsette?” he asks, confused. “I think so. I hiked it once when I was te—”

“Great,” I say, showing him my back and walking deeper into the woods.

He mumbles something that I don't catch. If he wants to go back, he can. I don't need him. But I hear twigs snap behind me and I know he's following. I feel powerful knowing he's coming with me, and I wonder if this is some of that power Lilith has. This spark that's able to lure Abe into the woods after me. I pick up my pace, tromping through the leaves that lie gold at my feet, and wonder if it's possible. Can I be like Lilith and find fire?
Be
fire? Use my skin as a spark? Perhaps
this
is what not being a virgin is. Perhaps this is why things feel different between Abe and me. Because my virginity was the one thing that always kept us apart.

We hike in silence and I can feel Abe watching me. Breathing. Not asking, just coming. We search for the trail for a long time, heading deeper into the mist, and I swallow the salt on the back of my tongue. The taste of Kurt wells inside me and it strikes me that I don't know him. Everything between Kurt and me has been ocean—fast and vulnerable and full of drowning currents. He's a stranger, like that man, and perhaps everything between us dissolves into creek water because I can't untangle them. What if yesterday had been with someone who knew me? Like Abe? With Abe I would mean something. I wouldn't be just another girl lost in the surf.

Abe slogs through the brush, and wet moss squeezes under my feet, soaking through my sneakers. Is Abe the spark that beats the water? Is he the prince whose kiss will undo the bad magic?

“This way,” I say, nodding to the fog, but Abe checks his watch.

“We're lost.”

“No,” I insist, pointing to a pair of birch trees with charcoal knots in their trunks. “I'm sure the path is up here.”

“Marion.” He pauses to wipe the sweat from his brow. “There isn't a trail.”

I spread my hand over the curls of bark. I've stepped off my normal path, with Kurt. I need to keep moving forward and believe there's a path with Abe.

“Of course there is.” My thumb peels back the husk of wood. “You said—”

“I said I
thought
there was a trail.” His voice is annoyed, and I dig my nail into the tree. “But then you just walked into the woods.”

“You make me sound crazy.”

“It's not like that, M.”

My skin prickles. It's nice to have him call me M. It's familiar, like I'm allowed to touch his hair again.

“You didn't have to come,” I say, and my throat pinches, because I wanted him to come. That was part of the lure, wasn't it? Having him come with me.

I look back and he's only a step away.

“Yes, I did.”

The white of his gym shirt is damp and his head tilts to the side. But those three words, he's said them all wrong. They've come out pointed and cross, like I'm a child in need of a chaperone.

“Of course I knew there wasn't a trail,” I say, yanking at the bark, unraveling its hangnail of flesh.

“That's bad for the tree,” he scolds, and I yank it farther to expose the pink.

“It's just a tree!”

“Fine.” He runs a frustrated hand through his curls. “You're being ridiculous. I mean, why are we even out here?”

I'm so close to him I can feel his breath.

His eyes flick to my mouth and ice reeds though me. Ice, like the water yesterday, dousing me naked. I wanted him in these woods, but I didn't think I could admit to myself why. And now all I can feel is this red heat raging through me.

Abe doesn't move.

I don't move.

Suddenly I understand that when I told Abe I'd never have sex with him, it was because I didn't think I would ever have sex with anyone. But now I'm this other person—who has—this something new, and all my lines of white and black have become fog, dissolving.

I was the one who stood in the way of Abe and me. And now all this knotted-up heat is unraveling. The flirting. The unfolding looks. Kurt doesn't care about me, his kissing that girl tells me as much. My skin flushes and Abe's fingers dig into the cotton of his shirt. I'm only a breath away from him and the fog is—

“We should go back,” he whispers, looking away, and his breath falls against my chin, rolling into the mist.

“We don't have to,” I whisper, ferns brushing the backs of my legs. His silver eyes pierce me, blue-flecked, unsure, and all the things I was too afraid to do with him before come rushing through my mind.

The moss beneath us is spongy, full of trapdoors and bog.

“We could . . .” I breathe, watching his mouth, hearing the swollen fog hush through the saplings.

“We're late,” he says, turning abruptly.

My throat squeezes, embarrassment lodging itself in my chest and making it hard to breathe. Abe slogs away, back through the tree brush from where we came.

It was stupid of me to walk him into these woods. Stupid to think that there was any of Lilith's power in me. Stupid to think that just because Kurt screws around, I should too.

The orange leaves glitter around us like confetti and I tell myself to forget Abe. To forget the gold spades and this haze inside me, and the two years of missing and wishing
I was brave enough to be the girl he wants me to be.

I have Kurt, and that's all I should want.

Only, I don't have Kurt.

And Abe has every right not to be interested. So why did he follow me into these woods?

Kurt

After fifth period, I head
outside to call Josie. To check in. Make sure she's okay. I lean against my car and pull out my cell. Marion's father's clothes are in my backseat, bunched up and flecked with sand. It makes me smile and think of the ocean. Makes me feel like I'm not covered in ash.

I hear a whistle and look up to see Vanessa walking toward me in a black skirt that shows off her legs.

“Well, well, what have we here?” she says, tossing her hair over her shoulder.

“What's what?” I ask, and she slides those legs between me and my car.

“Empty ride.” She runs a finger over the roof. “Kurt Medford.” Finger over me. “What, indeed?”

“Can't,” I say, stepping away from her.

“It's not a game day,” she counters.

“True, but—”

“But nothing.”

She kisses me like I'm playing hard to get. I don't kiss back. I just let her do it.

“You gone soft, Medford?” she says, pulling away. I roll my eyes and nudge her off.

“Bad timing,” I say, but Vanessa laughs.

“What's her name?”

I shake my head. She throws a hand on her hip and stares me down. It isn't confrontational. She knows I've been with other girls. She just wants to make a game out of it.

BOOK: All We Left Behind
12.81Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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