Authors: Deb Caletti
Tags: #Juvenile Fiction, #Social Issues, #General, #Adolescence, #Suicide, #Dating & Sex
left him a lot when he was young, I guess. But she always seemed
to be trying hard. It felt complicated there.
October turned to November. We did everything together.
We’d bundle up and walk to the Rose Garden at the zoo, make
out in the gazebo. I’d go with him to Mr. Hooper’s house; we
would sit in the room with the French doors and the fireplace as
Christian read from novels he’d bring from the Seattle library.
Mr. Hooper wore his jogging suit and his scuffers. He didn’t care
if the plot was slow or if the book took place in the 1700s or now
or if there was romance or war. I think he just liked the sound of
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Christian’s voice, which I understood. Christian would make Mr.
Hooper grilled cheese and tea.
I went to Sandy and Elliot’s cabin east of the mountains with
all of them once, rode in the back with Christian like we were
little kids, eating red licorice and playing I Spy. We made a fort
in the snow, tucked ourselves inside and tried to kiss, but our
lips were too cold to work very well. He told me about winter in
Copenhagen when he was a boy, how he and his parents would
rent skates at the outdoor rink in the center of the city, set pic-
turesquely in front of the snowy Royal Danish Theatre. In early
December, a guy in Christian’s class, Jason Patricks, jumped
from the ledge of Snoqualmie Falls, and we went to his funeral
together, joining all the others, our hands tight together. The
casket was set in the front of the church, and even though I had
not known Jason, he was alive and now not and inside that box.
I didn’t remember my mother’s funeral, and I could feel it then,
the grief and the loss and the thorny mess that life was, sitting
there in front of us in the shine of that wood and the waxy smell
of flowers, and I felt so close to Christian there beside me, then.
It felt like we had gone through something together, or at least
stood witness together to something huge that now bound us.
We’d known each other for a few months when he told me he
loved me. We had talked around the idea, we had used all the not-
quite-there expressions of love, the appetizers and the desserts
and the salad, but not the main meal.
I think I’m falling in love
.
I
love that about you.
You’re a person I could seriously love.
Still, it was
the direct three words that you wanted; those were the ones that
meant something. He had picked me up after school. We were
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Deb Caletti
in his car. We were parked near the gym where we had met. That
basketball game seemed like a long time ago. He’d become such
a daily presence in my life, it seemed weird that there had been a
time when he wasn’t in it. Shakti complained she never saw me
anymore. All my friends did. I tried to make sure I wasn’t one of
those girls who dropped all their friends when a guy came into
her life, but I guess I was, and I’m telling the truth here, so the
truth was that I didn’t mind.
“I’ve said this to you a million times already in my head,”
Christian had said.
I was quiet. An old-fashioned word comes to mind:
coy
. It was
like he was on bended knee with a velvet box, with me waiting
primly in some Victorian outfit. And the truth again—I wasn’t going
to be the one to say it first. What’s that about? Love must be more
about power than we think, if even in its most intimate moment of
expression we think about not being the one who risks the most.
“I love you,” he said. He was glad to have it out, I guess,
because he said it two more times, relieved, and then he rolled
down his window and shouted it out, which was so unlike him
that I laughed and grabbed his arm.
“Christian!” I said. Two senior girls were looking at us like we
were the star performers in the idiot circus. “Roll that up!” I was
laughing, and I was so happy. He put the window up. I held his
hands. His eyes were bright. “I love you, too,” I said.
And I did. That was the thing you should understand. Bad
things happened. It was like seeing something great on the
beach, something you ran toward because it looked special and
different, and when you got close, you saw it was something that
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made you look away, a syringe, a condom, a dead seagull buzzing
with flies. But I did love him. Very much.
We’d gotten so close by then. It embarrasses me now, but
we used those words:
soul mates
. Hard to admit that. Hard to
admit, too, that I felt some future was actually possible. At least,
I couldn’t imagine life without him in it. We couldn’t keep our
hands off each other, either. There were
I want yous
and more
I
want yous
but that’s as far as it went . He took those things seri-
ously. For someone who spent years of his childhood in a city
where women went topless in the parks on summer afternoons,
he was surprisingly, staunchly prudish. He judged people who
had sex too soon. They were loose and stupid and had no morals,
and I said I agreed but didn’t know how I really felt. It could be
complicated, I thought. Okay, truth
again
. He had used the word
slut
. About girls who had sex.
That night we had gone out with his friends—Jake and his girl-
friend Olivia and Zach. We went to Neumo’s. A band I can’t remem-
ber. We were dancing. I wondered if Zach had had a few beers or
something beforehand. He was loose and kept making dumb jokes.
It was the first time we’d gone out with Christian’s friends. I’d met
them. Hung out a little. But we’d never gone somewhere.
After the concert everyone was laughing and having the kind
of good feeling that comes after dancing to loud music in a small
place. You felt happy. Or you did usually. But things were weird.
I’d tried to hold Christian’s hand in there, but he kept snatching
it away. He was barely talking. But when we got back into our
own car, he snapped on the engine. His face had a tight look. He
almost looked like someone else.
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Deb Caletti
I didn’t say anything. I just held my purse. I wanted a mint,
but I didn’t want to unzip it and get one out. I wanted things to
be in that still place
before
a fight, not in that other, upsetting one
after a fight starts.
“
You
had fun,” he said finally.
I thought that was the idea, you know, to have fun. I won-
dered what his problem was. I didn’t know. I made my best
guess. Christian didn’t drink. He was straight that way, too, actu-
ally. I was guessing he was pissed at Zach and pissed at me for
joking with him. He had no right to accuse me of anything, but I
couldn’t stand the thought of us arguing. We never argued. The
thought made me remember that time we’d gone to the movies.
That terrible, anxious feeling that I might lose him.
“Zach seemed drunk,” I said. “He was acting like an asshole.”
I didn’t really think so.
Christian was silent. The muscle in his jaw just kept working.
I concentrated on the view outside. Streetlights, a McDonald’s,
a bus stop where an old lady sat holding her purse like I was.
She was up very late for someone so old. I felt worried for her. I
watched a guy walking his dog past an empty bank parking lot.
We wound around by Lake Union. Sailboats, lively restaurants.
The Space Needle already decorated for Christmas with the tree
at the top.
“I saw you looking at that guy,” he said.
I had no idea what he was talking about.
“What guy?”
“Come on, Clara. You were looking at him the whole night.”
“Who?”
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“By the stage? Long hair? Oh come on.” A car tried to pass
into our lane, but Christian wouldn’t let him in. It looked rejected,
driving so slowly there beside us with its blinker on.
“I have no idea what you’re talking about. I didn’t even see
the guy by the stage. Christian, for God’s sake, I was there with
you. You were the only one I was looking at. Christian, pull over.
Just, stop, and let’s talk.”
He did. He swerved right there onto Fairview, which was
the street directly next to the lake. He pulled over, parked on
a gravel strip in front of a boatyard. I felt panicky. I wanted to
make this right. It was ridiculous. The strange thing was, if he’d
complained about Zach, I might have understood. But I didn’t
even see the person he meant. I tried to think. Guy by the stage?
There were a million guys by the stage. I was looking at the
stage
,
probably. The
musicians.
I wasn’t mad, though, about being accused. More, I felt bad.
Did he really not know how much I cared? It was only him I
wanted to look at. He was more than enough for my eyes. I told
him so. I was pleading. Part of me was pleading, and another
part of me was wondering why in the hell I was pleading. I was
wondering why I was sitting in front of a boatyard convincing
someone I hadn’t looked at a guy I hadn’t looked at.
He softened. “I’m sorry,” he said. “I don’t want to lose you.”
It was funny, but he could be insecure. I’d noticed that. He would
make these comments about his looks or his abilities, but he had
no reason to be insecure, none. He was this gorgeous blond,
blue-eyed Dane and he was smart and nice and girls were crazy
for his accent, but the person he was and the person he thought
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Deb Caletti
he was didn’t know each other and could never even be friends.
It made me sad. I thought it was part of my girlfriend job to set
him straight about how great he was. The insecurity—it seemed
like a small thing. Ridiculous enough that it could easily be fixed
with my reassurance.
“Why would you lose me?” I said.
We started to kiss. After a while, I had said
I want everything
with you.
And so we had everything. For the first time. After that
fight. In the car, a cliché.
But the important thing at this part of the story, another
part I’ve never told, is that he whispered something to me
then.
You’re sure you’ve never done this?
It was something he’d
asked me before. I shook my head into his bare shoulder, but
it was a lie. I didn’t tell him about that one time with Dylan,
that one fast, strange time. I didn’t tell him the truth then, or
whenever we’d talked about this. He’d never been with a girl
before. I knew this would matter to him. But what I knew even
more than that was that he was the
jealous type
. That’s how I
thought of it. As if the words were small print, equal to other
qualities a person might have—the athletic type. The creative
type. The type to get easily lost, or be late, or didn’t like food
that was too different. It meant you made accommodations,
you got directions beforehand or told him the concert was ear-
lier or picked a place to eat that had hamburgers or didn’t say
things that would hurt him. You didn’t even tell him the truth
about who you were or what you had done. You protected him,
kept things from him he couldn’t handle. Or else protected
yourself from what he couldn’t handle. You managed it all, like
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someone who works in an office and who types and answers
the phone at the same time.
Why would you lose me?
I had asked. And you can see, can’t
you, better than I could, that the answer to that question was right
there in the car with us as my knee rested against the gear shift
and my elbow against glass? The answer was not a small human
quality, a minor trait or a quiet one, but a loud twisting force mov-
ing between and around and through, gathering, the way a cloud
gathers darkness, the way the clouds did right then over that car
and the single streetlight and the sign that read lake union Boat
repair. Value and satisfaction. we care
.
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I returned that book to the Bishop Rock Library the
next morning. I had a few more days to fill before I started work
at Pigeon Head Point. I wandered around in the stacks of fic-
tion. I tipped out the spines, read the covers and first pages. I
did what I could to make sure I had a few books right enough
to devote myself to.
Afterward I went to the docks. The wind was whipping pretty
good, and the sailboats were clanging, and the dock was groaning
and squeaking. The boats bobbed and sloshed, and it all seemed
happy, if a little deranged.
Obsession
was gone from her spot. I sat
on the end of a nearby dock, took my sandals off, dangled my feet