CHAPTER TEN
By the time I enter Seaside Cemetery that
Friday, I’m more confused than ever.
I thought I had everything under control this year.
My entire plan rested solely on one thing: solitude. If no one is
close to me, no one gets hurt, not even me. If I don’t get wrapped
up in other people’s lives, no one is in danger.
And, yeah, maybe part of it is about punishing
myself. I killed a boy who didn’t deserve it, and I will pay for
it. Forever. I just have to make it through high school. Then I can
move on to college, leave this town, and go somewhere where people
don’t know me, don’t look at me with accusation in their eyes. I
won’t make friends with anyone. I’ll forever be alone, but that’s
what I deserve.
I sigh as reality hits me. There are so many holes
in my plan—it’s as if I wrote it all down on Swiss cheese. I can’t
leave my grandmother, not with her health failing. I can’t afford
to pay for classes. I can’t move away from my hidden lake. I can’t,
I can’t, I can’t. But the mirage in the distance—the idea of a
world where my troubles disappear—is all that I cling to these
days, because reality is getting harder and harder to handle.
I walk the familiar path to Steven’s grave. I stick
to the walkways, because if I stepped on the grass, there would be
a groove worn into it by now. The turf would give away what the
cement doesn’t, namely the hundreds of times I’ve visited
Steven.
I shove my hands into my pockets as a breeze picks
up. The salty air reminds me of the ocean, which, in turn, reminds
me that I need to be in the water in under an hour. I drop to my
knees in the grass. Steven’s headstone is surrounded by flowers,
left behind by people on the anniversary of his death. There are
mounds of them. It’s like a visual representation of how many
people I hurt.
“Hey, Steven.” I rock back on my heels, settling in
for the next ten or so minutes I’ll spend with him, my only
confidant.
The Hot Wheels Chevelle is gone. I wonder who took
it. Probably the landscapers. They have a lot of picky rules about
what you can leave at the graves, because it makes the maintenance
harder. It doesn’t matter. I still have mine, sitting on the
windowsill in my room. I stare at it sometimes, when I’m sitting at
my desk, trying to do homework.
I take in a slow breath and close my eyes. I don’t
know where to start. “I’ve been talking to Sienna lately. Not a lot
. . . but more than before. I don’t deserve her friendship, but I
still miss her, you know? We were so close before. I guess I’m glad
she hates me so much. If she didn’t, it would be so tempting to try
and get what we had back.”
I reach down and pick up a blade of grass, twisting
it around in my fingers. “It’s really hard to be around her
sometimes. I can’t even look at her without thinking of you.”
“She misses you, you know. She’d never admit it
because she doesn’t like to show weakness, but I know her too well
to fall for the charade.”
I heave a long sigh. I don’t want to talk about
Sienna right now. “Cole is the only one who doesn’t hate me.” I
feel a little pang, saying his name to Steven.
I look up at the sky. The dark clouds that have
been rolling in all afternoon thicken, hanging closer and closer to
land. “He’s different than he was when you were around. I didn’t
even notice at first. He used to be more like you, you know?
Laughing and joking and chasing girls. He’s quieter now, kind of
intense.”
“He keeps trying to get me to talk to him, and it’s
so hard to resist. I mean he looks at me, and it’s like, I could
tell him everything. Everything, Steven. What am I supposed
to do with that?”
I look down at the grass again, grass that makes it
look as if he’s not there at all. It erases him, turns him into
another piece of earth.
The landscapers must have mowed today because I can
smell the grass every time the breeze picks up.
“I probably shouldn’t tell you this, huh? It’s not
really fair. You told me your secrets, and I never had the chance
to tell you mine; and now I want to tell them to him when it
was supposed to be you. It was always you.”
Steven’s sandy hair—and light, playful eyes—are
burned into my memory, where they never leave me alone. He was the
sort of life of the party that everyone notices when it’s gone.
Everything’s been quieter without him.
My eyes lose focus, and I let the blades of grass
blur into one green blob. “What do I do? Should I trust Cole? Or
should I just . . . I don’t know, find a way to make him hate me,
like everyone else? Besides, it’s not fair to you if I let him in.”
I look up and touch the granite. “I wish you could tell me if it’s
okay to move on.”
I hear a dull thud behind me, so unexpected that I
whirl around and end up falling backward, onto my butt, almost
knocking my head into the granite.
Sienna’s standing there in dark blue jeans and a
buttoned-up black peacoat, and the contrast between her dark
clothes and pale skin is startling. She’s positively ashen as she
stares at me, her jaw unhinged, her eyes wide and unblinking. Her
platinum hair billows out around her in the breeze.
The thud must have been her dropping a bouquet of
crimson roses, because they’re sitting there by her feet. Why
didn’t she come on the anniversary of his death, like everyone
else?
She clenches her hands at her side. “You . . . you
. . .”
She can’t seem to speak, and I’m so thrown off I
can’t get my limbs to move. We just sit there, frozen, the moment
stretching on for all eternity. I finally blink and scramble to my
feet.
“I’m sorry. I’ll go.” I rush past her, and that’s
when she finds her voice.
“Wait.”
The bite in her voice makes me stop, but I don’t
turn around. I just stare at the willow tree beyond the path and
watch as the breeze picks up the leaves. They float away from us,
silently landing among the granite headstones.
“How long have you . . .” Her voice cracks. She
sounds nothing like her usual self. “How often do you come
here?”
I swallow. Maybe I should have just kept
walking.
“Look at me,” she says.
I close my eyes and seconds pass. I can’t decide
how to respond, so I do as she says and turn around. I see a
hundred things in her eyes, but the most frightening of all is the
one thing missing: hostility.
“Tell me.”
I purse my lips and swallow. I could lie. I
should lie. But the words slip out, so quietly I’m only half
sure she’ll hear them. “Every day.”
Her eyes tear away from me, and she looks down at
her black flats. Her chest is sort of heaving, as if she ran three
miles to get here. She balls her hands into fists and then stares
up at the dark, cloudfilled sky and lets loose with an animalistic
scream. I’m so shocked she would let go of her precious control
that I actually recoil.
For once, the pain is written all over her face.
Pain she’s hidden so well for the last two years. And I know how
much of it I caused.
When she finally looks up at me again, her eyes
glisten and her perfect facade is gone. Suddenly, she’s the same
girl I knew, the girl I left behind that day I slipped out the
backdoor during my party. The only difference is that now she’s a
little more broken.
My lungs climb into my throat, and my heart lands
at my feet.
The first tear rolls down her cheek as her bottom
lip trembles. “All this time I thought you were some cold, distant
bitch. I thought you didn’t even care that he was gone. I
blamed you because you were there when he died and you didn’t even
seem to care. But you were just—” Her voice cuts off, and she looks
back at his grave. “Did you love him?”
I don’t even know I’m crying until the first tear
lands on my hand.
I nod.
“Damn it, Lexi! Why didn’t you tell me?” She’s
screaming. Her air of control has completely disappeared.
“I’m sorry, okay! I thought it was easier if you
just hated me!” I throw my hands up, struggling not to just scream
the words like she did.
She steps closer to me, shaking her head. Every so
often she opens her mouth to speak, but then she snaps it shut.
Eventually, she musters up the words. “I would have
understood.”
I shiver.
The silence between us stretches on for so long
that the clouds open up. At last, she speaks, so quietly I can
hardly hear her over the pitter patter of the rain. “Can we talk
about this? Get out of here and get some coffee?”
Her voice is so hopeful I want to say yes. The girl
standing in front of me right now is the girl who was my best
friend, the one who knew all my secrets—except one.
But that one secret is enough to keep us apart
forever.
I shake my head. “I have to go. I’m sorry. For
everything, I mean.” I whirl around and hurry down the path, my
ears straining to hear if she’s following me.
But there’s only the wind and the pounding of my
heart.