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I knew I needed to forget about Matt.

“Why am I friends with you?” Peter asked with a chuckle.

“Because I’m your neighbor.”

He was walking too slowly, so I turned around to walk backwards again. I let go of his sleeve and took hold of his hand instead. “Am I going to have

to drag you the whole way?” I real y wanted to go swimming. I wanted to feel the shock of the icy water on my skin.

“Probably.”

I smiled at him. His hand was warm, and I remember thinking that this was no longer a boy’s hand. He had grown tal over the past year.

There were rough cal uses on his palm. I ran the pad of my thumb over one of them, then felt a strange fluttering in the pit of my bel y.

Immediately, I dropped my gaze and let go of his hand, and he looked in the other direction toward his house. Feeling suddenly uncomfortable, I

turned to walk beside him again.

Neither of us spoke for a moment or two, then Peter nudged me in the arm, knocking me sideways. “I’l race ya,” he said, and the fluttering in my

bel y faded away.

“Not if I race you first.” We ran up the hil .

I was breathing hard when we reached my gate. “See you in a few minutes?”

“Yeah, we’l meet back here.”

I went inside to change into my swimsuit.

A short while later, we met out front and headed for the path at the top of the street, which would take us through the woods to the lake.

We rushed through the forest, running and laughing, leaping over exposed tree roots, ducking under low-hanging branches. It was a different world

in the woods. The sea seemed a great distance away, almost non-existent. There was a quiet stil ness in the air.

Soon we left the cool shade of the pines and emerged onto the sunny beach. I kicked off my sandals, while Peter hopped on one foot, tugging at a

shoe.

“I can’t believe I let you talk me into this,” he said. He dropped his shoe onto the sand, pul ed off the other one, then stripped off his shirt.

Suddenly aware of my heart beating faster as I stared at the muscles on his bare back and shoulders, I stopped unbuttoning my dress. Something

had indeed happened to him over the winter. He’d not only grown talker, but thicker and stronger. He didn’t look like the boy I always knew. He was

different.

The next minute, he was sprinting into the water shouting, “Last one in is a rotten egg!”

But I hesitated. I couldn’t seem to get past the third button of my dress…


Wooh
!” Peter broke the surface and flicked his hair back. Silvery beads of water exploded al around him. He laughed and wiped the wetness from his face, then stood up, shivering. He stared at me for a few seconds, then his smile faded.

“What’s wrong?”

I cleared my throat and looked down. “One of my buttons is caught in a thread.”

“Need some help?”

Suddenly I was shy. I couldn’t even look at him. Al I could do was keep my head down while I careful y unfastened one button at a time. “I got it. I’m fine now.”

But I wasn’t fine. I didn’t feel like myself. Nothing seemed normal lately.

At last I unfastened the final button, shrugged out of the dress and dropped it onto the beach beside Peter’s clothes. I picked my way barefoot to the water’s edge and dipped my toe in.

“It’s freezing!” I shouted with a smile. “Whose idea was this anyway?”

“Yours, and you’re not getting out of it now.” When I stil didn’t make a move, he frowned. “What’s wrong with you? You’ve never been this slow

before.”

It was true. He knew me wel . I was always the first one in – something I was rather proud of, considering I’d grown up with two boys for best friends.

But something was unusual that day, and I didn’t real y understand it. Was it because Matt wasn’t with us, and I was worried about him? Or was it

something else?

“Am I going to have to drag you in?” Peter asked.

“Hold your horses. I’m coming.”

Clenching my fists and tensing my shoulders, I advanced forward, wading into the frigid water. When it reached the tops of my thighs, I sucked in a

breath and dove under.

“It’s like ice!” I shouted as I broke the surface.

Peter splashed me. “It was your idea, knucklehead!”

Then everything returned to normal, and I was relieved to feel like my old self again.

o0o

“Do you ever wonder if heaven real y exists?” I asked Peter, as I lay on my towel next to him, watching the white cottony clouds drift slowly across the sky.

Peter rol ed to his side. “No, I don’t wonder that.”

I shaded my eyes to look at him. “You don’t wonder because you know it exists? Or you know it doesn’t.”

“I know it does.”

I looked up at the sky again and laced my fingers together over my stomach. “How do you know? Have you ever been there?”

He chuckled. “No, but I go to church every Sunday, and I believe in God, so I have to believe in heaven.”

“You
have
to?” I asked. “Someone is forcing you?”

“No. I just never question it, that’s al . And I can’t believe that
you
do. You sing in the church choir.”

I watched a tiny cloud shift and rol toward the sun. “I suppose.”

After a moment, Peter rol ed onto his back again. “Why did you ask that question anyway? Are you worried about dying?”

“We’re al going to die someday,” I said.

“That’s depressing.”

“But it’s true.”

He turned his head to look at me. “Yeah, but it’s a long way off, Cora. We’ve got our whole lives ahead of us, so there’s no sense worrying about it

now.”

“Who says I’m worried?”

“You’re the one who asked the question.”

I leaned up on an elbow. “Would you feel better if I promised to worry about it later? When would be a good time? When I’m fifty? Or maybe sixty?

How about seventy-five.” I smiled.

He shook his head. “I don’t real y think you need to worry about it at al . What’s the point? Because when you’re dead, you’re dead.”

I slanted him a look. “But I thought you believed in heaven.”

He stared at me, considering my point. “You think too much.”

“And you don’t think nearly enough. You’re always so…”

“What?”

I paused, for I was having a difficult time trying to articulate what I felt. “You’re always so at ease with things, just the way they are. Nothing ever makes you crazy or frustrated. You never seem to want to change anything.”

“Why should I? Life is good.”

“Is it?”

“Wel … yeah.” He pondered the notion for a few seconds, then sat up and twirled two fingers through a lock of my long blonde hair. “Especial y

now.”

The strange fluttering in the pit of my bel y returned, and my heart began to beat faster. We looked at each other in the warm sunshine, while I

became more intensely aware of his bare chest and the way his damp hair fel forward around his face. I watched his lips as he wet them with the

tip of his tongue, and realized that I was breathing hard, as if I’d just run a race.

He inched a little closer, then leaned forward.

My eyes fel closed as his lips touched mine. How soft and warm they were, not at al what I’d expected. His hot, moist breath beat against my

cheek, and I could smel the outdoors on his skin.

The kiss lasted only a few seconds – seconds I knew I would never forget – then Peter drew back and gazed at me with a surprised look on his

face.

“You just kissed me,” I pointed out.

“Yeah. Are you mad?”

“No.”

He was breathing hard, too. We continued to stare wide-eyed at each other until I had no idea what to say or do. I swal owed uncomfortably, and

before I realized what was happening, he was leaning forward again and cupping my cheek in his hand.

Then he did it again – he kissed me – only this time he parted his lips and sucked a little on my mouth until my lips parted, too. Our tongues

touched. The sensation made me sigh, and I was surprised at the sound, for it didn’t feel like any noise I’d ever made before. It wasn’t an unhappy

sound. In fact, I quite liked the way his tongue tasted and the way it made me feel al weak and jel y-like inside.

Peter eased me down onto my back and leaned over me, kissing me more deeply, sliding his hand down the side of my bathing suit to rest on the

top of my bare thigh.

I’d never felt anything like that before – such wild, heart pounding excitement. I reached out to wrap my arms around his neck and felt the smooth,

contoured muscles at his shoulders.

He lowered his whole body onto mine. Then something pressed against my thigh. I drew in a breath of shock, and al at once felt pinned to the

ground under the weight of him. Immediately, I slapped my palms to his chest and pushed. “Peter, stop.”

He instantly rol ed off me. “I’m sorry. I didn’t mean to.”

I sat up and hugged my knees to my chest. “It’s okay.”

We both stared straight ahead, across the lake. I listened to the ducks quacking, the fish splashing. I tried to slow my breathing and realized I was trembling.

“That was weird,” Peter said at last.

“Yeah. I’ve never been kissed before.”

“I know.”

Of course he knew. He was my best friend. He knew everything about me.

But something felt very different now. It was awkward and uncomfortable, when it had never been before.

“Don’t tel anyone, okay?” I said.

“You know I won’t.”

I believed him, because he was the most reliable person I knew. I would trust him with my life.

“We should probably go,” he suggested.

He rose to his feet and offered his hand. I let him pul me up, then we dressed in silence. On the way home through the woods, we said very little.

Only the sounds of twigs snapping under our feet and the occasional squirrel chattering from the treetops interrupted the dense quiet.

When we reached my driveway, Peter said, “See ya tomorrow,” and kept walking.

“Yeah, see you at the bus.”

And that was that.

o0o

For the rest of the school year and throughout the summer, neither Peter nor I ever mentioned what happened at the lake that day. In July, we both

turned sixteen, and Peter worked for his father at the pulp and paper plant, while I scooped ice cream part-time at the Lick-a-Split and put in

volunteer hours at the hospital and local animal shelter.

As for Matt, as soon as school let out, he left town without saying goodbye. He went away to Chicago to live with his aunt, but by then our trio had

become a duo. Peter and I had grown accustomed to it. We had given up on Matt.

And so, we carried on, swimming in the afternoons and riding our bikes to the same old places on our days off, going sailing with my parents. Our

friendship continued without awkwardness, as if the kiss at the lake had never occurred. Neither of us ever mentioned it. It was completely forgotten.

Chapter Twenty-eight

The ice and snow was slow to melt that year, but in time, the sun bathed the earth in its warmth. The cold ground grew soft and warm, and the

crocuses and daffodils appeared, smiling with pretty faces in the gardens. The natural world was growing and budding, coming alive with fragrance

and color. Lilacs bloomed on tal , leafy hedges, the grass grew lush and green, and fresh spring rains pattered on the rooftops like a song.

Peter and I worked hard through the final days of school, turning in class projects, studying for exams and anxiously awaiting the first day of

vacation.

“You’re not going to believe what happened in fourth period,” he said to me one day after school, as he joined me on the bench at the bus stop.

I was eating a chocolate chip cookie from my lunch box. Stil chewing, I spoke through tightly closed lips. “What?”

“Susan Nichols asked me to the prom.”

I had some difficulty swal owing. “You’re joking.”

“No. Can you believe that?”

“Does she
like
you?”

He chuckled in disbelief. “I don’t know, I guess so. I didn’t know what to say.”

I dropped the half-eaten cookie back into my lunchbox.

I told myself I was not jealous. Peter and I were just friends. But stil , I didn’t like hearing that.

“You must have said
something
,” I argued. “Did you say you’d go with her?”

“Of course not,” he replied. “I don’t want to go the dance with her.”

I exhaled sharply.

“I told her I was taking
you
,” he continued. “Just as friends.” He paused a moment and regarded me awkwardly. “I’m sorry! It just came out before I could stop it. I had to come up with something.”

Our eyes met and I felt a surprising ripple of pleasure run through me. “So do you real y want to go? For real?”

Neither of us had ever gone to a school dance before.

He shrugged. “I don’t know. Do you?”

I shrugged, too. “People get dressed up.”

“Yeah, and everyone gets talked about.”

The bus pul ed into the parking lot and spit out exhaust in a great hissing fit. We stood and moved slowly to the curb.

“Everyone knows we’re just friends,” he explained.

The folding bus door creaked open. We climbed aboard, said hel o to the driver, and moved to the back. I sat down first. Peter swung in beside me.

“What would our parents say?” I asked.

“Your mom would probably like to buy you a new dress. She’s always trying to talk you into going shopping.”

“Yeah, maybe.” The bus pul ed away from the curb. “Matt would have a heart attack if he found out,” I said.

“He won’t. He’s in Chicago, and who cares anyway?”

I gazed out the window. “Yeah. Who cares.”

Our shoulders bumped occasional y as the bus rocked and swayed. For a long time we said nothing, then we talked of other things the rest of the

way home.

Final y we reached the bus stop at the bottom of our street. “See you kids tomorrow,” Mr. Hanover said, cranking the handle to open the door and

BOOK: The Color of Heaven
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ads

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