I hate thinking about theย way it ended, but sometimes I think about the way it began: with me walking through the door of someone elseโs house without knocking.
This has always been a typical move of mine, wandering latchkey kid that I was in my early years. But in every other way, the beginning was an atypical day.
When I let myself go there, I watch it in my head like a movie. I let it feel like itโs happening now instead of thirteen years ago, where the real moment belongs, where fifteen-year-old me is turning the doorknob on a house Iโve burst into hundreds of times before. I find no resistance, because by my sophomore year of high schoolโwhen this memory takes placeโ my open invitation into the Cooper-Kimsโ home is implied.
My best friend, Adam Kim, is somewhere in here, probably still sweaty and gross from cross-country practice. At least I went home and showered.
I greet Adamโs three rescue dogs, Gravy, Pop-Tart, and Dave, my ears perking at the dulcet tones of a video game played at full volume, two voices rumbling below it. The dogs trail me as I make my way to the den, the tags on their collars jingling. Itโs a sound as familiar as my own heartbeat.
Adamโs house is warm and sun-filled, often noisy, with a lingering, faint citrus scent. The first time I walked in, something unraveled in my chest; it felt likeย home, not a place where two people lived with sometimes intertwining lives. My house is quiet and often empty, just as it was all the years between when my mom left when I was three years old and now.
The times my dad and I do sync up are great; he asks tons of questions and tells me what a great kid I am, how easy Iโve been, how proud he is of my grades and the extracurriculars that keep me busy. He listens to every story I can get out of my mouth, his phone facedown on the dining room
table while it buzzes and buzzes and buzzes. Eventually the phone wins, and Iโm left craving more time.
Itโs why Iโve made a habit of making other peopleโs houses my home, and why I love the Cooper-Kimsโ house best.
In this memory, Iโm nearly to the den, wondering who Adam has over. I sincerely hope it isnโt Jared; I keep telling Adam what a dick he is.
With the power of hindsight, I know whatโs going to happen seconds before it does, so I always hold my breath hereโ
Right when I turn the corner and run face-first into a broad chest. It has so little padding it makes my teeth rattle.
โWhoa,โ a voice breathes above me, stirring the hairs at my temple.
Warm, strong hands grip my arms to keep me upright.
I look upโฆand up, into a face fifteen-year-old me has never seen before. Whoever this is, heโs beautiful. Heโs tall (obviously) and broad- shouldered, with limbs he hasnโt grown into. In this moment, I donโt know that heโll fill out in a painfully attractive wayโhis chest will broaden to become the perfect pillow for my head. His thighs will grow just shy of thick, mouth-wateringly curved with muscle, the perfect perch for me when
I sit in his lap.
But the eyes Iโm looking into wonโt change. Theyโll stay that hypnotic mix of caramel and gold, rimmed in deep coffee brown and framed by sooty lashes and inky eyebrows that match the hair on his head. Theyโll continue to catch mine the way they are in this movie momentโlike a latch hooking me, then locking us into place.
โOh. Hello,โ I say brilliantly.
His mouth pulls up, which is wide and meant for the toothy smiles Iโll discover he doesnโt give away easily. Heโs prone to quiet ones, or shy, curling ones, like heโs giving me now. โHey.โ
I step back, my heart flipping from our crash and the warmth his hands have left behind on my skin. โSorry, I didnโt know Adam had someone over.โ
โNever stopped you before, Woodward,โ Adam calls distractedly, his eyes glued to the TV screen.
I roll mine, turning back to this stranger. โIโm that doofusโs best friend, Georgia.โ
โLike the peach,โ he says, his voice lifting at the end. Itโs not a question, but a tentative tease. In my life, Iโve heard that joke a million times and hate it, but here, I like the way he says it, as if he knows how ridiculous it is and is in on the joke.
I grin. When Iโm watching this, I think about how open my expression is, how hopeful and full of sunshine. โGood one. No oneโs ever said that to me before.โ
His eyes narrow, like heโs trying to figure me out. I make note of how quickly he does, a tendril of belonging curling around me when he laughs. โYouโre joking.โ
โYes,โ I laugh back.
He pretends to look disappointed. โSo Iโmย notย the first?โ
โMore like lucky number ninety-nine,โ I shoot back, and he grins. A toothy one. โShould I call you by the number or do you have a name, too?โ
โThatโs Eliโmotherfucker,โ Adam shouts.
My gaze slips from the strangerโEli Joseph Mora, Iโll find outโto Adam, whose tongue is sticking out while he furiously pounds on a game controller. A second one lies next to him, a decimated bag of Doritos next to that.
When I direct my attention back to Eli, our eyes click. I hear it in my head, feel it in my chest, both in the memory and for real. Whenever I let myself think about the beginning, I want to get out of this moment as much as I want to wallow in it.
Fifteen-year-old me smiles up at fifteen-year-old him. โHey, Eli. I hope
youโreย not the motherfucker.โ
โNot that Iโm aware of,โ he says. His eyes spark with amusement and other things, and the spark transfers to me, burrowing somewhere deep. Itโll wait there for years while we go from strangers to friends to best friends. It wonโt catch fire until our junior year of college, when he joins me at Cal Poly after two years at community college.
โWho are you, then? Other than a stranger untilโโI look down at my watch, a Fossil one I bought with the Christmas cash my dad gave me because he didnโt want to get the wrong oneโโthree minutes ago.โ
โThe new guy, I guess?โ I notice his nose is sunburned along the bridge when he scrunches it. โI just moved from Denver, started at Glenlake two days ago.โ
He doesnโt tell me now, but later heโll divulge that his parents moved him and his two younger sisters to Glenlake, a city in Marin County just north of San Francisco, to live with his aunt. His dad lost his job as a mortgage broker when the economy crashed, starting a relentless financial slide until they lost their house. At fifteen, Eliโs sleeping on a pull-out in his auntโs rec room; later, when we buy our first bed together, I talk him into splurging for a king.
I always notice the way his shoulders pull up toward his ears, maybe wondering if Iโm going to ask questions. He doesnโt trust me with his heavy stuff yet, but eventually heโll trust me with a lot of it, before we both start hiding ourselves away.
โAdamโs already got you in his clutches?โ I raise my voice. โYou work fast, Kim.โ
Adam grins, but doesnโt spare us a glance.
Eli looks over his shoulder at his new friend, then back at me, rubbing the back of his neck. โYeah, I think he kind of adopted me.โ
โHe does that,โ I say, remembering that fateful day in sixth grade when Adam and I met, a month after my best friends of three years, Heather Russo and Mya Brogan, unceremoniously dropped me. Halfway into our inaugural year of middle school, the friends I thought were forever suddenly decided I was too needy, that my desire to hang out at their houses all the time was burdensome, and my occasional emotional moments were supremely irritating.
In the end, Adam saved me from my loneliness. It makes sense that heโd save Eli, too, though I donโt know yet that heโs also lonely, or that Adamโs house will become his home as much as it is mine.
โAll right, Eli,โ I say, looking him up and down. Heโs wearing scuffed Nikes, gym shorts, and a T-shirt with a tear near the neck. I can see a sliver of collarbone pressing sharply against his golden skin, the glint of a fragile gold chain. โI guess Iโm kind of adopting you, too.โ
His eyes move over my face. โProbably a good idea, since Iโve already got a nickname picked out for you and everything.โ
โDoes Adam have one?โ
โSlim Kim,โ Eli says automatically, and I laugh as Adam scoffs. Heโs all elbows and knees at fifteen. โStill workshopping it, though.โ
Itโll morph over the yearsโSlim Kimmy, SK, Kiz, or Kizzy. Iโll watch him test versions of nicknames with other friends, but mine will only ever be Peach. When I eventually ask him why, heโll tell me itโs because he knew exactly who I was to him from the start.
I glance at Adam. โI canโt believe Iโm saying this, but I think I won the nickname portion of this adoption process.โ
My chest warms at the way Eliโs grin widens. Itโs an addicting feeling, knowing Iโm in the middle of meeting a person Iโll get to hang on to.
Adam looks at me over Eliโs shoulder, his mouth pulling up, and I know he feels it, too: the three of us are going to be friends. Something special.
Years later Eli will tell me that he fell in love with me right then, and in this movie-like memory I always see itโhow we canโt quite break eye contact, the flush along the shell of his ear when I sit next to him on the couch minutes later, the way his eyes linger on me when Adam and I bicker over control of the TV, the steady bounce of his knee. The beautiful, shy smile he gives me over the pizza we have for dinner later.
Heโll hold on to it for years, but eventually that spark will become a wildfire.
And then weโll burn it all down.