The Upside of Falling
Download 0.71 Mb. Pdf ko'rish
|
This is fake, I reminded myself. And it was safer like that.
“What was that for?” Brett asked. “For show,” I said, all cool and casual. Then he was smiling again. We were back on track. The couple sitting in front of us stood up and disappeared into the trees. Brett nudged me, wiggled his eyebrows, and made these very weird noises. It was dumb. I laughed anyway. Then I realized that, aside from his football games, this was kind of my first time doing something normal. Like, high school normal. I hadn’t gone to a party before. And it was all because of Brett. It was like he was slowly showing me that there was actually more to school than sitting in a class and taking notes. Which used to be all I wanted. But now, I was kind of wondering, had I been missing out all these years? Brett stood up suddenly, said, “C’mon. We should get out before the rumor reaches Tallani or Ryan,” and bent over again. I jumped onto his back and we were off, moving through the sloshy grass. People were watching us tonight, and it was the first time I really felt like we were a couple. I mean, holding hands in the hall was one thing. But tonight it actually felt like we were dating. And even if it was fake, it was still fun. I was thinking that Brett must have been here before because his feet knew exactly where to go when he stopped in front of the lake. I sucked in a breath. Wow. It was beautiful. It almost made up for the gross walk over. From here, you could see where the two lakes met in the middle. There was still a sliver of land between them, like two halves of a heart that couldn’t meet quite yet. And the moon was directly over the lake, making a small patch of water turn silver. I went to jump off Brett’s back, but his grip on my legs tightened. “Brett?” I was whispering, like if I spoke too loud then it would ruin the peacefulness. “Yeah?” “What are you thinking about?” “Jelly bells,” he said. I smacked my foot against his thigh. “Be serious.” “I am. Doesn’t the moon kind of look like one?” Then I was laughing really hard because he was right, it totally did. Brett’s hands loosened around my knees, and I hopped off his back. The ground was solid around this side of the lake. You could barely hear the people back at the party. Their voices were just a slight murmur. “I get the appeal now,” I said. “This is so pretty.” “Makes you want to sneak off into the trees, huh?” I snorted. “Not that pretty.” Brett bumped his shoulder against mine. I bumped his back. “Sometimes,” he said, “I forget places like this exist in Crestmont. Like I’m so focused on wanting to leave after high school that I forget there are reasons to stay.” “What do you want to do after we graduate?” I asked, realizing I didn’t know. Brett was staring intently at the water. “I don’t know. Play football? I’m waiting to see what colleges are interested. I’m hoping to move somewhere big, like Atlanta. I want to be in a town that has more than a few thousand people.” “What about your family?” “I think my parents want that future for me more than I do.” Right. His dad’s football dream. “What do you want to do?” He turned away from the lake now, watching me instead. I shifted from foot to foot, not knowing what to say. “College is hard. I don’t think my mom has the money to pay for it.” “You’re smart,” Brett said, “you can get a good scholarship.” “Maybe. Maybe not. I might have to stay here, help out at the bakery for a while and save up some money. College can wait.” “Yeah. Sometimes I wish the future could too.” We were quiet then. There were crickets chirping and the sound of water lapping against the shore. It was so much better here than back in the clearing. Then a weird noise came from the trees, a rustle, and I latched onto Brett’s arm. “Did you hear that?” I whispered. Brett took out his phone, turned on the flashlight, and pointed it in the direction the sound came from. “Hello?” he called. The noise came again. This time it wasn’t a rustle. It was more of a— Moan. The light exposed a couple hiding in the trees. The girl yelled, reaching up to cover her chest. I looked away, feeling the secondhand embarrassment. Brett fumbled with the flashlight, pointing it in my face while trying to shut it off. “Sorry!” he called out, walking backward. “We’ll leave now. Uh, carry on.” We ran back through the forest, laughing so hard we had to stop to catch our breath. My curfew was in an hour, but Brett had no intention of allowing the night to end with us catching two people going at it in the woods. So we hopped in his car and drove two towns over, which sounds far, but it barely took fifteen minutes. Why two towns? Brett wanted fast food. Apparently the only “respectable” burger, shake, and fries in all of Georgia were at Paul’s Diner. There was no Paul’s Diner in Crestmont. When our order was ready, we sat in Brett’s car with the windows down, munching away on junk food at midnight. In five minutes I watched him inhale a burger, chocolate milk shake, and a large fry. It was equally impressive and gross. Now he was stealing my fries and dipping them into my strawberry shake and I was kind of annoyed but not really. The night was going well, so I was rolling with it. “How do you know about this place?” I asked, slurping my shake. I was learning so much about Georgia tonight. And a little more about Brett. He pointed down the road. “There’s a park a few miles down. This huge stretch of grass with soccer fields and stuff. My dad and I used to come here when I was a kid on the weekends. This was before his promotion, back when he was home more often. We’d throw a football around for a few hours, then drive here for lunch. It was this tradition we had.” “My dad used to take me for ice cream after class,” I said. “That was our thing.” Brett dipped his fry in my shake, held it out for me. “Is this our thing, then?” he asked. “Eating fast food at midnight in my car?” I opened my mouth. He stuck the fry in. “I am totally okay with that.” “Me too.” “Why does your dad travel so much?” I knew his family had money, but I had no idea why. “Have you seen that new hotel being built off the interstate?” I had. It was right when you drove into Crestmont, a few miles after the welcome sign. It was supposed to have its grand opening at the end of the month. “There’s a bunch of them throughout the country, but this is the first one being built here. My dad works for them. He’s the chief financial officer, does all that money stuff. So he flies around the country and checks in on different locations. Makes sure everything’s running smoothly, I guess.” “What about your mom?” “She doesn’t work.” I wondered what that was like, to have enough money to feel secure. Not having to worry about the price of tuition, student loans, or how much textbooks were going to cost. Having the ability to go to whatever school you wanted to. “My mom always worked. She used to be a nurse,” I said. “When she first opened the bakery, she was worried. It wasn’t doing that well. Only a few customers per day. She invested so much money into it and I don’t know what we would have done if it failed. A few months later, it started to take off. People were talking about it in town and we started getting huge orders. That’s when I began helping out there. I don’t think my mom expected the bakery to become so popular; she only hired, like, three people.” “I’m happy her business took off,” Brett said. “I don’t know what I’d do without jelly bells.” I smiled at him. “Me either.” “You know what would make this moment even better?” “Jelly bells?” “That too, yeah, but I was gonna say another burger. I’ll be right back.” How was he still hungry? And how did he stay in such good shape? There must have been some secret gym routine he was on, plus the intense football training. I was watching Brett outside the car; he was rummaging through his pockets, probably looking for his wallet, when a car pulled into the spot in front of us. I was expecting more teenagers craving something greasy like us. Instead it was an older couple holding hands, and wow, that car looked expensive. Like, way too expensive for this town. Brett must’ve noticed them too because he was hovering outside, watching. I thought he was admiring their ride because he was standing there, frozen. One of his hands was still on the door handle. Did all guys have a thing for nice cars? But then I really looked at his face. His mouth was wide open and he looked like he’d just been punched in the gut. He jumped back inside, mumbled something about having to leave, and sped out of the parking lot. I barely had time to put my seat belt on and went flying into the door when he turned onto the road. “Slow down!” I yelled, placing the cup between my thighs so it wouldn’t spill. “Brett!” He was driving so fast. I looked at him and it was like he was in a different world. His eyes were locked on the road; his hands had a death grip on the wheel. His lips were moving. Was he talking to himself? He looked like he was either going to cry or hit something. “Brett, you’re scaring me. Slow down.” He was mumbling so low I turned the radio off to hear him. “What?” “I have to get out of here,” he said. “Brett.” I reached out, placed my hand on his arm. “Pull over.” “He’s not supposed to be here.” “Who? What are you talking about?” I watched the needle on the speedometer go higher. Higher. Higher. Until it was nearly at one hundred. We were going to crash and die and my body would be covered in a strawberry milk shake when the police found us. “Brett.” I leaned across the middle, placed my hand directly over his on the wheel. “You need to slow down.” Brett blinked, shook his head, then glanced down at my hand on his. He looked at me, must’ve seen the terrified look on my face, and swore under his breath. Then we were slowing down. Finally, Brett pulled over, shut the engine off, and buried his head in his hands. I was speechless. I breathed in. Out. In. Out. Did a mental count of my body parts. Wiggled my toes. Wiggled my fingers. Ten each. I told myself we were both okay. When I was sure I could speak, I said, “What was that?” No response. “Brett?” Nothing. “You’re freaking me out. Did you know those people?” It was too dark for me to see their faces clearly, but they didn’t look like anyone I knew. And Crestmont was pretty small, so I’d probably recognize them at least. Then I remembered that no, we weren’t in Crestmont anymore. So how did Brett know them? He lifted his head off the wheel and rested it back against the seat. His eyes were closed, his chest moving in and out too quickly. Was he having a panic attack? Should I call an ambulance? When I took my phone out, he placed his hand on top of mine. “I’m fine,” he said, sounding anything but. “What was that?” “I don’t know.” “Who was that?” I tried instead. “I don’t want to know.” This was making less and less sense by the second. Then my heart dropped, plummeted right into my stomach, because Brett said, “I think that was my dad. And that woman wasn’t my mom.” Oh. Oh. “But I— You said your dad was in Ohio.” As soon as I said it, I realized how dumb it was. And then everything sort of clicked into place, a puzzle neither of us wanted to solve. “I thought he was,” Brett whispered. I reached for him—his hand, his arm, anything. I latched on. Tight. I knew what it felt like to drown without water. It was worse when no one was there to bring you back to shore. I held his hand. Squeezed it really tight. “Are you sure that was him?” I asked because it was dark out and I was desperate for this look to leave Brett’s face. Brett didn’t say anything. We sat there, parked on the side of the road while cars rushed by. I didn’t know what to say. Hell, I’d been through this too. Well, a different version, but it was still the same. And if that really was his dad, I knew there were no words to help. No “sorry” could fix this wound. “Do you have a book?” Brett asked. What? “Um. Yeah. Somewhere in here.” I pulled my bag onto my lap, rummaged through it. “I need a distraction.” Right. That made sense. Mom’s baking. My reading. They were both distractions. “Do you have it?” he asked again, sounding panicked. I pulled out the book. Brett sighed, undid his seat belt, and reclined his chair back. He wrapped his arms around himself and closed his eyes. He looked so different than he had earlier. Smaller. Sadder. “Are you okay?” I whispered, wanting to reach out and hold him. “Read to me” was all he said. “I don’t think you’ll like this book.” It was romantic. Like, embarrassingly so. “Please, Becca.” I flipped open to the page I had bookmarked and began to read. My voice sounded weird at first, more high-pitched, but then it evened out and I started to sound like me again. Reading out loud was weird. I was so used to occupying this fictional world alone that having Brett there with me felt different. Not a bad different. Just different. I wasn’t sure if he was even listening. He kind of looked like he was sleeping. I kept pausing after each paragraph, sneaking a peek at him. After I finished the first chapter, our eyes met. He said, “Keep going.” So I kept reading. That was the first time I missed curfew. Brett HE WASN’T IN OHIO. That was his car. His suit. Those were his hands holding someone else’s. That was my dad. But it wasn’t my mom. It didn’t make any sense, because my dad would never . . . I couldn’t even think the word. It all felt wrong. A never-ending nightmare. He was supposed to be on a business trip. In Ohio. At a hotel. He was supposed to be in meetings and talking to staff and dealing with financial stuff. He wasn’t supposed to be at diners in the middle of the night with a woman I’d never seen before. And he was not supposed to be holding her hand like that. Like Becca had said, it was dark. And even though I knew it was my dad, there was this voice in my head that kept saying but what if it wasn’t? I clung to that voice because it was easier to be confused than to be angry. With confusion there were still possibilities; it wasn’t black and white just yet. And there was a shred of hope somewhere in the gray that I needed right now. It was better than the opposite: convincing myself it really was my dad. What would that mean? Were all those business trips a lie? They couldn’t be. He brought back souvenirs from each state. But what else was he doing while he was away? What was he doing when he wasn’t working? Then I remembered when he came home from New York last weekend and didn’t bring me anything. Was he even in New York? Probably not. He was here the whole time. Wasn’t he? Download 0.71 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
Ma'lumotlar bazasi mualliflik huquqi bilan himoyalangan ©fayllar.org 2024
ma'muriyatiga murojaat qiling
ma'muriyatiga murojaat qiling