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Authors: Elizabeth Scott

BOOK: Heartbeat
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44

Dan and I walk in silence to the elevator and as we’re waiting for it, I hear a familiar sound, a squeaky cart.

Caleb.

I look up, see him and watch him smile at me. Watch the curve of his mouth, the one I wanted to kiss last night.

The one I still want to kiss, and I fidget, start to look away, but then remember what he said. That he wanted to kiss me. That we were together, all night, and granted he spent a lot of it holding my hair while I puked, but he was there. He helped me and he held me and when I left I knew I’d see him later.

And so I smile back and it’s not like time stops—I don’t have that kind of life anymore because I used to believe that everything would be okay. That I could have a fairy-tale perfect life.

I smile back and I’m simply happy to see him.

I believe he’s happy to see me, and that’s enough.

“Emma?” Dan says, and I look at him, see he’s stepped into the elevator.

“Right, coming,” I say and just as I get ready to step on, Caleb walks by, brushing a hand against mine and sliding a piece of paper into it.

“You didn’t say hi to your friend,” Dan says as we get off the elevator, when we’re walking out to the car. “Or is he not your friend? I don’t know very much about what’s going on with you now. I know you see Olivia.”

I nod, and I know the note isn’t burning my skin. I know that. But it sure feels like it is because I want to read it so bad.

“So, I got a call from your AP History teacher and I also got a letter from the school. What’s going on with you and your classes?” Dan says, and I stop and look at him.

“Oh,” he says. “That bad?”

“I’m done,” I say.

“But you like school so much. Too much, Lisa always says. Said.” His voice cracks on that word. “It’s different now, isn’t it?”

“Yes,” I say. “Everything’s different now.”

Dan’s silent as we get into the car and then he says, “So, that guy. Caleb, right?”

I nod.

“Friend? Not friend?”

“Friend.”

Dan taps one hand against the steering wheel. “Is he who you were with last night?”

“It’s not like that.”

“Like what?”

“Like what you’re thinking. I feel like I’m taped together most of the time, like I’m a shadow of the Emma that used to be.”

“That’s when things can happen,” he says, and then blows out a breath. “That’s what I feel like I should say. But I know what you mean about being taped together and after this morning, I think that what happened last night was important because it made us talk for real. Although I do wish you hadn’t gotten drunk.”

“Not as much as I do.”

“You got sick?”

“More than once.”

“What would she do?” he says and I look at the road, my eyes filling with tears.

“I don’t—it would be different. None of it would have ever happened.”

“Even last night with Caleb?”

I nod.

“Is he like Anthony?”

“No.”

“Good. Your mother would be happy about that,” Dan says. “I am too. So, he’s nice?”

I think about what that question would have meant before, back when my life was grades and planning for the future. When I was so sure I knew what I wanted and I never looked at someone who wasn’t in my classes, who didn’t have the drive I did, the belief that grades and getting into the best possible college meant everything. When I was that girl, I would have heard the stories—if I ever even noticed him—and believed them, looked through Caleb if I happened to see him. He didn’t get what was important, and so he wouldn’t have mattered.

I think about what it means now. How I missed so much trying to be the best student. How I could have spent time with Mom and didn’t. How I never would have bothered to look past the surface because I was so busy chasing what I thought mattered more. How I thought I could create my future, how I believed I could shape all of it.

I know better now, and Caleb matters to me. He matters to me in a way that’s new. That no one else has and it’s because he’s seen everything, he has seen that I am made up of grief and fury and fear and held a hand out to me. Not to save me, but to just be there.

“He’s nice,” I say to Dan, who says, “I’m glad, because Anthony—having to listen to him talk when you were doing that debate thing last year—Emma, that boy is an ass.”

“He really is,” I say, and then we are both laughing but it’s a little too loud, a little too hard. A little too brittle.

We have forgotten how to do this normally. We are doing this without Mom and it’s weird and we both know it.

But still, we try, and when we get back to the house Dan says, “We’re going to be okay.”

I look at him, and I can’t nod. I can’t say yes. But I can say, “I hope so,” because it’s the truth. Because I can feel myself hoping, and it’s scary but it’s nice too.

The phone rings and Dan answers it. I head up to my room. I leave the door open.

I sit on my bed and open my hand. I’ve kept it closed all the way home and my heart is pounding as I look at the piece of paper inside. It’s just a note, but it matters.

Caleb matters.

I’ve never seen his handwriting before. It’s cramped, the letters printed, no loops or curls of cursive.

Want to see you, stuck down in recovery handing out magazines. Do you want to come see me tonight? I’m at home if you do.

I fold the note back up and put it in my pocket, walk downstairs and realize I’m tracing over it with one hand, like I can feel Caleb’s words through my jeans.

Dan’s in the living room, still on the phone. “Remember the Florida thing?” he says to me and then “Hang on,” into the phone.

I nod. I remember how he was going to go and talk about what’s been done to Mom.

This morning and even the car ride back here suddenly seem very far away and I think again about how Dan never asked me about Mom. I was just her daughter. I just spent my entire life with her. I just love her.

“I’ve been thinking,” Dan says, and I look at him. “I’m not going to go down there.”

“You’re not?” Does he get it? Does he really finally get it?

“I can’t,” he says. “You’ve heard what’s going on, and I can’t leave the baby now. I can’t leave your mother now. So I’m going to do some teleconference thing with the lawyers. It might be a while, so I was thinking that for dinner—”

He doesn’t get it.

“I’m going out,” I say.

“Emma, we’ve talked about this. You know how I feel, and—”

“Yeah, I know, and there’s the money for doing it, right?”

“This isn’t about the money. At least...we do need it, but I truly believe that if there’s a chance another baby can make it and her mother wanted it, then—”

“This mom said that before she died?”

Dan looks away from me. “Her husband knows what she wanted, and I think that a father’s wishes count—”

“For everything.”

“No, but he should have a say,” he says, and I see the moment he gets it, that he remembers what I said to him this morning.

“Emma, I’m sorry. I was in so much pain, and I just wanted to do what your mother wanted, I just wanted to make sure that the baby—”

“I know,” I say for what feels like the millionth time, and I am so tired of talking to Dan, of hearing his attempts to make what he’s done okay. I’m tired of him pretending he never saw what Mom was really afraid of, that she clutched her belly and kept silent about the baby because she was scared.

I’m tired of him pretending like I got any say in what happened. I’m tired of how he just left me and chose what he wanted. Once that happened, we weren’t a family because families talk and he didn’t ask me what I wanted. If he had, I—I don’t know. I just know I never got to say anything. My voice didn’t matter.

Mom knew I was going to get chicken pox before I ever got my first spot. She knew Dan was special as soon as she met him. She knew she loved my dad on their first date. She knew I’d get over Anthony.

I wish I’d spent that last night with her, that I’d put away my books before it was too late and sat with her. That I hadn’t been so sure about making the future what I wanted that I forgot the present. That I had a memory of her right before she died besides being at the hospital and hearing she was dead. Before I stood there, alone, and realized I would never see her again.

Before I was told I could see her. That I ended up in this place, this here.

Dan says something as I leave but I don’t stop to listen. I have heard it all before and I don’t need to hear it again. I don’t want this morning and the talk we had poisoned.

I’m afraid it is, though.

I walk and reach into my pocket. I feel the note, Caleb’s words, and my heart flutters. Maybe it shouldn’t do that, and maybe I shouldn’t want it to.

But it does, and I do.

45

Caleb’s house looks enormous in the dark, and I shiver a little, not from cold, but from memory of the place, as I head toward it.

He comes down to meet me.

“Hey,” I say. “How did you know it was me?”

“I saw you coming,” he says. “Not that I was looking for—never mind. I was, you know. Hoping.”

I walk over to him. “Have you ever had a day that was good and then bad and then good and then bad and then good again?”

“Your mom?”

“I—” I say and then I’m spilling it all out, how I was happy this morning and then talked to Dan and then things seemed like they would be different but okay, and then we talked again and things were different but not okay. “It felt just like it has since Mom died,” I said. “And I—”

“Hoped,” Caleb says. “You hoped. I’ve done that.”

“Does it always suck?”

“With my parents it does. But not with everything.”

“You’re right,” I say softly and he is. Hope doesn’t always suck because I felt it when I got his note. I felt it walking over here, at the idea of seeing him. I feel it now, when I am with him.

Hope is so simple and so hard to have but it’s here, and we have it and it’s about each other.

“You wanna come up?” he says, and I nod because I do.

And then, just in case he didn’t see, I reach out and take his hand. I’ve felt it before but now it’s not about fear of his house or trying to provide some sort of comfort. It’s not a quick brush of fingers, the passing of a note.

I take his hand just to hold it.

His fingers twine with mine and we head up to his room. It’s as bare as I remember but smells, strangely enough, like sugar.

“Are you cooking or—?” I say and then break off as I see what’s sitting on his counter.

I see a tiny cotton candy machine, like people buy for kids, blue with little animals on it, and beside it are two cones of pink sugar, propped up in a coffee cup.

“Oh,” I say because it is all I can say. He did this, he went out and bought a cotton candy machine and made cotton candy, real cotton candy, and it is the sweetest, most amazing thing.

“It’s probably cold,” he says. “It’s not as easy as you’d think to make it and I burned some sugar and it probably smells in here and I’m sorry about that and also, I made three cones but I ate one of them and—”

“Caleb,” I say and he stops talking. He stops talking and he looks at me and then he is right there, he is right next to me, in front of me, all around me, and he smells like sugar and I thought I understood want when I was with Anthony that night in the lab but I didn’t, it takes you over, your blood, your breath. It is you, it is the world, it is everything, and when his lips touch mine there is nothing but that. But us.

He tastes like sugar, he tastes like Caleb and I want more, I want him. I wrap my arms around him and that’s where thought stops. I am all sensation; his breath, the taste of his mouth, his tongue against mine, his lips on my throat, his hair twining around my fingers, his hands on my waist, my hips, and he pulls back, breathing hard, and looks at me like I am—

He looks at me like I am beautiful, and when he does, I am.

“Emma,” he says, and he is shaking and I did that to him and I am shaking too and maybe I should be scared but I’m not, I
feel,
and for once it’s not anger or sadness or worry it’s just want and happiness and I didn’t know it could be like this.

Even before, I didn’t know.

I pick up one of the cones of cotton candy. He made this for me. I look at him and he is still looking at me as if I’m the only person in the world, as if I’m everything, and as I pick off a piece of cotton candy and eat it, I feel him watching me, I feel him watching my mouth and I hold out the cone, watch him blink at it, watch him sway a little and then grin, take it from my hand.

I watch him eat a piece and I know I am looking at him but I don’t care, I want to look at him, at this guy I never saw, who I would have written off and would have never known, and I can’t bear the thought of that, of this not happening, and I say, “Caleb,” and I hear what is in my voice, all the wonder. All the joy.

He smiles and he is all I can see.

So I kiss him, and the world is just us again and I hope it stays that way forever and ever and ever.

But of course it doesn’t.

46

His parents come home. It’s hard not to notice, even when you are in the middle of an incredible kiss, because his room shakes and I hear the car.

So does he and we pull apart and look at each other. His lips are redder than usual and his hair is tousled and I did that, I had my hands in his hair.

I was touching him and it’s enough to make me forget about the car.

But then another one comes in and the hot light in Caleb’s eyes dims and he looks down at the floor as if he can see through it to the garage. To who is in the cars.

“Caleb,” I hear, and it’s a woman’s voice, nice-sounding, sweet-sounding even, and it must be his mother. She doesn’t sound like I thought she would, but then I see Caleb’s face and remember the house and before I know it I have reached out and taken his hand again.

“I have to go see them,” he says. “You don’t need to—you shouldn’t have to deal with them.”

I squeeze his hand gently and say, “I want to.”

“I can’t,” he says, and pulls his hand away. “I can’t.”

“Oh.”

“It’s not you,” he says. “I know how that sounds, but it’s not like that.” He looks frantic, frightened.

“So you want me to go?”

He looks at me but doesn’t nod. Doesn’t say yes. He just stands there.

“Caleb?” I say and his mouth works but nothing comes out. It’s like he can’t get the words out, like they are too hard, and then he rubs a hand down his face and I see there are tears in his eyes.

“They’ll make you hate me,” he says. “And if they make you hate me, I don’t know what—”

“They can’t make me hate you.”

“I hate myself when I’m with them,” he says, his voice breaking. “So how will you be able to not hate me?”

“Because I know you.”

He shakes his head, like it can’t be that simple, and says, “No, I—you don’t get it.”

I step on his foot. Hard. Mom used to do it to Dan when she wanted his attention and he was busy cooking or daydreaming about some database thing. It seemed to work for her.

“Ouch,” he says, and looks at me. Sees me looking at him.

I guess it works for me too.

“I know you,” I say again. “And you know me. So trust me.”

“Emma,” Caleb starts, and I lift my foot up again, lift it up very high. He sees that, and I watch the shadows in his eyes fall back a bit. See the tiniest bit of a smile, fast and fleeting but there, on his face.

“Do you trust me?” he says, low-voiced, and his hands are shaking.

I wonder if he has ever asked anyone else this, and I think he probably has. I think he asked the people who are supposed to love him and I think they said
No.
I think they saw he was breaking and didn’t care. I think they let him become broken.

And still he pulled the pieces of who he is together. He is who he is because of who he is and nothing more and that makes him so special.

“I trust you,” I say, and look at him. I let what is in my heart out, I let it into my eyes.

I see him look at me. I see him hear what I’ve said. I see him look into my eyes.

“Emma,” he says, and it’s too soon to say it, way too soon, but what’s in my heart is in his too and he touches my face, cupping the side of my jaw and my name is a prayer in his voice, four letters of joy.

And then we head downstairs. We walk through the garage, which is dark again but warm and filled with the sounds of engines cooling, and then he opens a door to the house.

We walk through it.

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