Read Broken Hearts, Fences and Other Things to Mend Online
Authors: Katie Finn
Tags: #Juvenile Fiction, #Social Issues, #Friendship, #Emotions & Feelings, #Family, #Marriage & Divorce
or memorable. I had an identity. His causes (and there were, I
soon found out, a
lot
of them) became my causes. His friends be-
—-1
came my friends. Teddy was my fi rst boyfriend— though not my
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fi rst kiss, which was a fact he didn’t necessarily know. He’d been
in my life so long now, and was such a part of it, that I really
couldn’t imagine it without him.
I smiled at him across the aisle, and he gave me a weak smile
back. He opened his mouth like he was about to say something,
when a harassed- looking woman, pushing a toddler in a cart,
rolled into the aisle. “Where are the paper towels?” she demanded
of me.
“Sorry,” I said, wishing for the umpteenth time I’d worn blue
that day. “I don’t actually work here.” She glanced at Teddy, and
at my own basket of items.
“
Clearly,
” she said, rolling her eyes and pushing her cart away
as she muttered about shoddy work ethic these days.
“Oh,” I said, leading the way to the gardening aisle to look for
bug repellant as Teddy trailed behind me. “Sophie and Doug won-
dered if we wanted to see a movie this weekend. I told them yes,
okay?”
Sophie and I had stayed close, moved out of our bivalve stage,
and my best friend had morphed into a class- A heartbreaker by
the end of sophomore year, leaving besotted guys and a string of
exes in her wake. Doug was her latest victim, but he’d actually
lasted a whole month, which was a record for Sophie, who tended
to cycle through boys in two- week increments. I’d said yes to the
movie without checking with Teddy, because when you’ve been to-
gether as long as we had, some things were assumed, like the fact
we’d always have a Saturday- night date. It was one of the million
-1—
reasons I loved being with him. I didn’t have any of the anxiety
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and stress that I saw Sophie going through with all her various
boys. Instead, I had Teddy, who was constant and brilliant and
wonderful.
“Gemma,” Teddy said, shaking his head.
“I know,” I said quickly. “Doug is kind of a meathead. And I
know you think he’s insensitive to the plight of the, um, worker.
But they promised we could pick the movie this time, so I thought
about that documentary you wanted to see. The one about the . . .
plight of the worker?” I mumbled the last part. I could never re-
member the details of the documentaries Teddy wanted to watch.
All I knew was that they were never the ones I wanted to see,
which were mostly about penguins.
Teddy shook his head again and took a big breath. “Gemma . . .”
“But we won’t have to have dinner with them again! It can be
just the two of us. What do you say?” I picked up a citronella candle
in a glass jar and gave it a cautious sniff.
“Gemma.”
“We can go to that raw vegan place that just opened, and—”
“Gemma!”
I stopped talking when I realized I’d been interrupting, smiled
at him, and thought, one last time, about how wonderful our sum-
mer together was going to be. How everything was falling into
place. How great my life was.
Teddy looked at me, right into my eyes. He seemed to be strug-
gling with something, and let out a long breath before speaking.
“I . . .” He paused, then took another breath and said in a rush, “I
think we need to talk.”
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“We are talking,” I said. Then the impact of his words— and
the tone of his voice— hit me, and I noticed again how pale he
looked. The world seemed to wobble for a second, and it was like
I was suddenly having trouble catching my breath. “What . . .” I
started, haltingly, hearing how shaky— how scared— my voice
sounded. “What do you mean?”
“Gemma,” he said, his voice choked, “I think we should break
up.”
I dropped the candle I’d been holding, and the glass shattered
into pieces at my feet.
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“And then what happened?” Sophie asked from her seat the
kitchen table, eyes wide.
It was two days later, and Sophie had shown up that after-
noon, bearing tissues and chocolate and her “life coach”— otherwise
known as
Cosmo
— clearly believing that I would be in a despe-
rate, sobbing state. Which couldn’t have been further from the
truth. I was fi ne. This was just a temporary situation, and as
soon as Teddy realized he’d made a mistake, we’d get back to-
gether. It was as simple as that. In the meantime, I was baking.
I’d always liked to bake, but I’d gotten much more into it over
the last two years, and had started providing the refreshments
for Teddy’s various clubs and meetings and protest marches. Bak-
ing calmed me down, and I liked the order of it— the idea that
when you mixed certain ingredients together, chemical change
occurred, and you ended up with something else. And ever since
I’d come back from Target, baking was the only thing that had
—-1
appealed to me. If I wasn’t baking, I found that I kept reaching
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for my phone, either to check if Teddy had called or to start to call
him and try to fi nd out what he’d been thinking. And since I
knew that neither of these were good options, I’d been keeping
myself— and my hands— occupied. My mother and stepfather,
clearly understanding that I was on a tear, had been staying out
of my way in the kitchen. And so far, I’d made three kinds of
muffi ns, four kinds of cookies, a coffee cake, and an iffy batch of
snickerdoodles. I had just put my double- chocolate- chip cookies
into the oven when Sophie had shown up at the door, despite me
texting her repeatedly that I was fi ne and that she didn’t need to
come over.
“Gemma?” Sophie prompted.
I looked up from the fl our I’d been sifting for the next batch—
white chocolate macadamia nut this time— and tried to focus on
my best friend. Sophie and I had looked a lot alike when we were
younger— it was uncanny, actually, people were always asking us
if we were sisters, which we loved— but puberty had changed all
that, and Sophie had gotten curvy while I’d gotten tall. We both
still had brown hair and freckles, but Sophie tended to cover hers
with makeup, and her hair was cut in a stylish, choppy bob while
mine was kind of long and shapeless. We no longer looked like
the doppelgängers we’d been when we were kids, especially after
I broke my nose last year. When the doctor fi xed it, he shaved off
the bump that had always been in the middle. He just assumed I
wanted it that way, but I actually missed it, especially when I saw
the identical bump still on Sophie’s nose. It seemed to have more
-1—
character than my perfectly straight nose now did.
0—
Setting us apart even further at the moment were our outfi ts.
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I was wearing jeans and an oversized pink T-shirt that had once
belonged to my stepfather but that I’d appropriated years ago
as an apron. SALMON FESTIVAL! THE KICK- OFF OF SPAWNING SEASON! was
emblazoned across the front.
Sophie, on the other hand, was decked out in her go to sum-
mer style—fl ip- fl ops and a sundress that hugged her curves, her
sunglasses pushed up through her hair like a headband. The only
thing we currently had in common, looks- wise, were our neck-
laces. We’d splurged on them together last year. Sophie wore a
gold
G
charm on a chain around her neck, and I wore a gold
S
on
mine. We thought they were much better— and more unique—
than traditional best friend necklaces. The two of us had prom-
ised never to take them off, and I knew it was a promise I’d
keep.
“What?” I asked, trying to get myself to pay attention. “What
did you say?”
“I just wanted to know what happened next,” Sophie said, lean-
ing across the kitchen table. “After Teddy said he wanted to break
up and you dropped the candle.”
“Oh,” I said, as I set the fl our aside and started mea sur ing out
the white chocolate chips. I really didn’t see why I had to go through
this whole recap; when Teddy called— which he would, of course,
any minute now— it would all be moot. “Well, then this manager
came up and handed me a broom and told me that the candle was
going to come out of my pay.”
“No,” Sophie said, shaking her head. “What happened next
with Teddy?”
—-1
I looked away and started chopping the macadamia nuts. “He
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just said that he thought we were getting too serious too young,
and that we should slow down.”
Sophie snorted. “That’s a new one.”
I knew what she meant. Slowing down was something Teddy
had never seemed to want before. Quite the opposite, in fact. He
was always telling me that it was crazy we hadn’t slept together
after two years and never seemed impressed by my argument that
Marie Antoinette and Louis XVI didn’t sleep together for
seven
years, even after they were married.
But it wasn’t like this had even come up recently. Things be-
tween us had been great . . . or so I’d thought. I’d spent the last
two days— when I wasn’t mea sur ing out nutmeg and softening
butter— trying to fi gure out why Teddy would have done this. It
was a mistake, of course, and it would all be resolved soon, but
something
must have happened to make him think we needed to
end things. I’d fi nally come to the conclusion that maybe I’d taken
our relationship for granted, and maybe expected too much of
his time when he was so committed to different projects.
But this was at least understandable, since Teddy and I had
gotten together just as I’d fi nally begun to accept my parents’
divorce was actually going to last. My mom had gotten engaged
to my stepfather, my dad had moved across the country, and just
when everything in my life seemed to be changing, forever and
for the worse, Teddy was a constant, something I could hang on
to. And so maybe I’d just held on a little too hard. But I would
change. I knew this wasn’t the end; we were still going to Colom-
-1—
bia together, after all. Soon, we’d get back together and every-
0—
thing would be like it was before, except better, because we both
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would have grown and matured from this experience. Everything
was going to turn out okay. But in the meantime, I had cookies to
frost.
“Okay!” Sophie said as the timer
ding!
ed and I pulled the cook-
ies out of the oven. I set them on the table as she fl ipped through
her dog- eared and annotated
Cosmo
and tapped her fi nger on the
page for emphasis. “So this article says that, post- breakup, the
worst thing you can do is get into a new relationship too soon. It
says you need to be in a mourning period for at least half the
length of the relationship. And since you and Teddy were to-
gether two years, that would mean . . .” She tilted her head to the
side, clearly doing some mental arithmetic. “A
year
?” she said,
frowning down at the magazine. “No, that can’t be right.”
“This is irrelevant,” I insisted, as Sophie reached for one of
the just- out- of- the- oven cookies. “I don’t need a mourning pe-
riod. Teddy just needs to cool off. Like those cookies,” I said, just
as Sophie took a gigantic bite.
“
Haaaagh,
” she yelped, fanning her mouth.
“Exactly,” I said, pointing to the cookies, glad to have a visual
meta phor to back up my idea. “But as soon as he cools down a
little and can see things rationally, he’ll see he made a mistake.”
Sophie just looked at me as she took a big drink of water. “Oh,
man,” she said after a moment, shaking her head. “You’re
so
much
further gone than I thought.” Before I could ask her what she meant