Read Broken Hearts, Fences and Other Things to Mend Online
Authors: Katie Finn
Tags: #Juvenile Fiction, #Social Issues, #Friendship, #Emotions & Feelings, #Family, #Marriage & Divorce
stocked up on fl ip- fl ops, canceled the fl ight to Colombia, and re-
turned all the gear I’d gotten for the trip (well, technically, I asked
my mom to return it, since the thought of going back to Target
was still too traumatizing).
My dad was happy I would be spending the summer with him,
and my mom and Walter were happy that they wouldn’t have to
convince a laird to take me in. The only person who wasn’t pleased
with my summer plans was my BFF. Sophie had taken great ex-
ception to the fact that I was now deserting her for the whole
summer, especially since I’d spent the bulk of the last week re-
fusing, for various reasons, to leave my kitchen and/or room. So
when she’d pressed me to take a late- afternoon train, so that we
could spend my last day in Putnam together, I’d agreed without
even suspecting an ulterior motive.
Which was foolish, because it was how I found myself sitting
in an all- white salon with a frightening Swedish hairdresser. So-
phie had a theory that you needed a make over after a breakup.
She thought that you had to do something, right away, to sepa-
rate yourself in a very clear way from the person you’d been when
in the relationship (it probably didn’t help that Sophie adored
make overs and that both her parents were shrinks). In her opin-
ion, the more serious the relationship, the more signifi cant the
make over had to be. This meant that after most of her own break-
ups, Sophie simply changed her nail polish color or bought a new
lip gloss. But because Teddy and I had been together so long, and
—-1
because I still wasn’t quite able to say his name without bursting
—0
—+1
S 29 T
105-56018_ch01_3P.indd 29
105-56018_ch01_3P.indd 29
10/2/13 7:32 AM
10/2/13 7:32 AM
into tears, Sophie decided that drastic mea sures were needed,
and had booked me an appointment without my knowledge or
consent.
“You need a change,” she said, sitting in the swivel chair next
to mine. “I’m telling you. You’ll feel better once you do it.”
“I don’t think short hair is the way to go,” I said, brushing
some droplets off my face. Sophie had hustled me into the salon
with such skill and stealth that I hadn’t even realized what was
happening until my hair was being washed.
“Okay, maybe not short,” she relented, giving herself a push
and spinning around once in her chair. “But a change. A
real
one.
Okay, Gem?”
I stared back at my refl ection and saw only who I’d been for
the last two years— Teddy Callaway’s girlfriend. Maybe a change
wouldn’t be the worst thing in the world. “Okay,” I said, taking
one last look at myself. Sophie motioned Sigrid over and I let out
a breath. “Let’s do it.”
O O O
Two hours later, a stranger stared back at me. The hair that
had always been light brown was now a bright auburn. My
one- length, slightly shaggy hair had been cut to just beneath my
shoulders, with long, sideswept bangs. I looked nothing like my-
self. I certainly didn’t look like the girl who’d been dumped in the
gardening aisle of Target. Or the girl who’d been dumped again
-1—
in the parking lot of a pizza place. I ran my hands over my new
0—
bangs as Sigrid fi nished up.
+1—
S 30 T
105-56018_ch01_3P.indd 30
105-56018_ch01_3P.indd 30
10/2/13 7:32 AM
10/2/13 7:32 AM
“You fi nd new man with this hair,” she pronounced as she gave
a fi nal snip. Sophie had told her the whole story of my breakup as
I’d gotten my color applied. Sigrid hadn’t been that impressed
with Teddy, starting with his name. “Like the bear?” she’d asked.
“No. Is no good.” I’d tried to explain that it was a nickname for Ed-
ward (which he never went by), but this hadn’t seemed to make a
difference. After hearing the story, she’d said something in Swedish,
then pronounced me better off without him, telling me that I was too
young to settle down, that there were plenty of herring in the sea.
Sophie had headed out to get us drinks as I was fi nishing up,
and as I walked to the register to pay, I couldn’t help taking little
glances at my new self in the mirror. Maybe Sophie was on to
something after all. I certainly felt better than I had since the
Target trip.
“Love it!” Sophie shrieked as I stepped out of the salon. “Turn
around.” Rolling my eyes, I obliged, and she bounced up and down
in her fl ip- fl ops, grinning at me. “Didn’t I tell you?”
“You told me,” I said, picking up one of my new red locks and
staring at it. “You were right.”
Sophie smiled wide at that; it was one of her favorite phrases
to hear. “For you,” she said, handing me a plastic cup from Stubbs,
the local coffee chain. I saw she’d gotten me an iced soy vanilla
latte, extra vanilla, my summer standby.
Sophie
was scrawled across
the cup in huge letters. On her own plastic cup— lemonade with
raspberry syrup— her name was also written, along with three
hearts, a smiley face, and a phone number.
“Thanks,” I said, taking my cup from her as we walked to her
—-1
car. “You heartbreaker, you.”
—0
—+1
S 31 T
105-56018_ch01_3P.indd 31
105-56018_ch01_3P.indd 31
10/2/13 7:32 AM
10/2/13 7:32 AM
She glanced down at the phone number. “Oh, that.” She smiled
as she beeped open her car. “He
was
pretty cute.”
“What about Doug?” I asked, settling myself in the passenger
seat and immediately fl ipping down the visor mirror to continue
to look at my hair.
“Ugh,” Sophie said as she started the car and headed away
from the salon, toward Putnam’s main train station. The appoint-
ment had taken so long— it seemed that turning your hair a dif-
ferent color was a very time- consuming process— that I no longer
had time to go home and get my bags. So Sophie was driving me
to the station, and my mom was meeting us there with my suit-
case. “Doug is getting on my nerves lately. He’s starting to be a
drag.”
I shook my head and smiled at this, already seeing Sophie’s
summer romance playing out, Doug being ditched for this barista.
Since I’d only ever dated Teddy, I’d had no experience with rela-
tionship drama, and frankly preferred it that way.
“What am I going to do all summer with you gone?” Sophie
sighed as she turned into the station parking lot, double- parked
illegally, and killed her engine.
“I was going to be gone anyway, Soph,” I reminded her.
“I know,” she sighed. “But just for a few weeks. Not the
whole
summer
.”
On impulse, I suggested, “Why don’t you come and visit?”
She brightened at that. “Really?”
“Sure,” I said, blithely, even though I hadn’t checked with my
-1—
father or Bruce. But I was sure it would be fi ne. All of Bruce’s houses
0—
seemed to have more rooms than anyone ever actually used. I
+1—
S 32 T
105-56018_ch01_3P.indd 32
105-56018_ch01_3P.indd 32
10/2/13 7:32 AM
10/2/13 7:32 AM
saw my mother’s car pull into the station, and winced, as I always
did, when I saw the FISHERMEN LIVE IN THE REEL WORLD and GO
AGAINST THE CURRENT bumper stickers Walter had put on. “That’s my
mom,” I said, getting out of the car.
Sophie got out as well and met me around the back. “Call me
tons,” she said.
“I will,” I promised, giving her a tight hug. “Thanks for . . .” I
gestured to my hair, but hoped she knew it included this whole
week and the years of friendship before that. “You know.”
“I do,” she said as she climbed back into her car and started
the engine. “Say hi to your dad, okay? And have fun. Forget about
what’s-his- name. Make out with someone!”
She practically yelled this last statement, and several people
walking to the train platform turned and looked at me. I just gave
her a small wave as she grinned and sped out of the station park-
ing lot.
I walked over to where my mom was standing by her car, looking
around the parking lot, my quilted duffel at her feet. I waved, but
she only glanced in my direction for a second. “Mom!” I called,
but again, she turned to me for only a moment before looking
away again.
What was going on? “Hi,” I said, when I was a foot in front of
her.
My mother turned to me, her expression blank and polite, be-
fore she did a double take and recognition dawned. “
Gemma
?”
she asked, sounding incredulous. “I didn’t even recognize you!”
I brushed my new bangs back self- consciously. “Is it really that
—-1
different?”
—0
—+1
S 33 T
105-56018_ch01_3P.indd 33
105-56018_ch01_3P.indd 33
10/2/13 7:32 AM
10/2/13 7:32 AM
My mother just looked at me for a moment longer, then shook
her head. “It looks great,” she said, and I couldn’t help wishing
she had led with that. “It’s just . . . a change.” She reached out
and touched a lock of my hair. “You look like a whole new girl,”
she said with a smile.
I heard the sound of the train, and looked up to see it rum-
bling down the track. “I’d better go,” I said. “Have fun in Scotland.”
My mother gave me a quick hug, then handed me my bag.
“You have fun too,” she said. “I’ll bring you back a kilt. Or some
lox!”
I tried to look enthusiastic about these possibilities as I waved
at her, then hurried up the steps to the platform. I boarded the
train, iced latte in hand, and walked back until I found a half-
deserted car. As I stowed my bag in the overhead rack and settled
into a window seat, I thought about what Sophie had yelled to
me, that I should make out with someone. I hadn’t had the time
to set her straight, and now I thought about texting her to tell
her it wasn’t going to be an option. Because while I might man-
age to have some fun this summer, I certainly wasn’t going to be
making out with anyone.
That was one thing I was totally sure of.
-1—
0—
+1—
S 34 T
105-56018_ch01_3P.indd 34
105-56018_ch01_3P.indd 34
10/2/13 7:32 AM
10/2/13 7:32 AM
I noticed the guy just after we stopped for the second time.
He was sitting across the aisle from me, also in the window
seat, head turned toward the window. He had a pair of white
earbuds in, and his head was moving slightly in time to the music
he was listening to. He seemed like he was around my age, and
though I couldn’t see his face— not even his profi le— it struck me
that the back of his neck was really nice.
A second later, I came to my senses. What was I thinking?
I had
just
been dumped and my heart was freshly broken. What
was I doing looking at other people’s necks? I was beginning to
think that Sophie had been on to something with her mourning
period theory. I was not going to think about boys for at least a
year, if not longer. I couldn’t even imagine wanting to date some-
one new. I turned away from the guy and focused my attention
out at the scenery passing by the train windows.
When we made one of the last stops before the longer stretch
—-1
that would take us to the Hamptons, a very large and very loud
—0
—+1
105-56018_ch01_3P.indd 35
105-56018_ch01_3P.indd 35
10/2/13 7:32 AM
10/2/13 7:32 AM
family got on the train, the mother loaded down with mono-
grammed canvas bags and screaming children, the father ignor-
ing the ubiquitous NO LOUD CELL CONVERSATIONS signs and yelling
into his phone. When they approached, the nice- necked guy got
up and offered them his row, which the family took, the mother
looking almost absurdly grateful as the father screamed some-
thing into his phone about the Tokyo markets.
The guy picked up his backpack and duffel bag and looked
across the aisle to me, and the two empty seats in my row.
“Hi,” he said, setting his bag down on the aisle seat. I noticed
now that he was
really
cute, the kind of cute seen more often in
ads for orange juice and family smartphone plans than in real
life. He had light brown hair, cut short, and eyes that looked green-
ish, but that might have just been because he was wearing a pale
green T-shirt. He had dark eyelashes and eyebrows and even
though it was the beginning of the summer, he was already tan.
It was hard to tell because I was sitting, but it looked like he was
a few inches taller than me, which meant he was pretty tall.
“Is this seat taken?” he asked, and I noticed that his voice was
nice, deep but not scary Batman- deep.
“Nope,” I said, hoping he hadn’t noticed me staring. “Just let
me make some room for you.” I stood up and shifted my bag over
on the luggage rack.
“Don’t worry about it,” he said, standing behind me and push-