We fell asleep on his bed again. But I am awake now. The afternoon light from the window is streaming over us. On the floor next to the bed is our empty pizza box from lunch. His video game is paused. My book is on his nightstand.
Last night around three a.m., we got our blood pressure taken at one of those machines you stick your arm in at the grocery store. Finnyโs was perfect and mine was only a little high. We celebrated with a pound of gummy worms and what was left of the whiskey.
Tomorrow Iโm going to have lunch with my dad, so we wonโt be able to stay out too late tonight. I wonder if Finny will stay up late without me or if heโll just go to sleep like me.
I stretch and roll onto my side slowly so that I donโt jostle him. Heโs lying on his back with his hands behind his head. His mouth is a little open but he doesnโt look silly, just relaxed and warm.
We had been watching the shadows of the tree outside his window and talking about my parentโs divorce, and then how we should go the art museum sometime or at least the zoo. Somewhere in there, my memory goes fuzzy and I must have fallen asleep. I wonder if it was before or after him. Perhaps we fell together.
Itโs nice, looking at his face.
This close, I can see that he isnโt exactly perfect. He has a tiny pimple on the side of his nose and a chickenpox scar on his cheek. We had the chickenpox at the same time. We spent a week in bed together, watching movies and eating nachos off the same plate. Finny was better about not
scratching. He got better two days before me, but The Mothers let him stay with me anyway.
The longing to touch that scar is more unbearable than any itch I ever felt.
โIโm sorry,โ I whisper. โWe used to even get sick together and I ruined it all.โ
If he were awake, he would say it was okay, and he would mean it. But itโs not okay. Jack said that it took him forever to get over me, but that still means he got over me.
โI love you,โ I say to him, so quietly that even I cannot hear it. I close my eyes and listen to his breathing. I go back to the story in my head about how it could have been. Iโm at the part where he is teaching me how to drive when I hear him take a deep breath, almost a gasp. I still remember that sound; itโs the sound he makes when he wakes up, as if he is coming up from underwater. I let my eyes stay closed. He rolls over onto his stomach, slowly, the way I rolled onto my side. I expect him to put his hand on my shoulder or say my name, but he doesnโt. I wait a little longer, and finally decide heโs gone back to sleep. I open my eyes.
โHey,โ he says.
โHey,โ I say.
โI guess our late nights are starting to catch up with us,โ he says. โYeah.โ
We donโt say anything else and we donโt move and we donโt look away.
I wish that this meant something. I wish I could hope that he is lying still and looking at me for the same reason I am, that he is thinking the same things I am.
โWhatโs wrong?โ Finny says. โNothing,โ I say.
โAre you sure?โ he says, and then, โAutumnโโ
And then his phone rings. He stiffens and sits up. When he picks up his phone, he looks at it and frowns.
โHi,โ he says. โIsnโt it like four a.m. for you?โ I watch his frown deepen and then he turns away from me. โJust slow down, Sylโno, itโs okay. Take a breath.โ He is quiet for a minute, and then he looks over his shoulder at me. He walks out of the room. โWhat did you have?โ he says, and then he closes the door and I canโt hear him anymore.
I lay my head back down on the bed and close my eyes.
When Finny finally comes back, it is to tell me that The Mothers want us for dinner. He doesnโt look me in the eye. After we eat, I go back home. His window is already dark.