A few days later, I take a break from packing my room and see that I have a voicemail.
โHey, Jack,โ Angelina says. โItโs Finnโs mom.โ
I can tell she wasnโt saying that because she thought I wouldnโt recognize her voice or know who she was, but because she wanted to say his name, claim him. I swallow the lump in my throat and try to focus on the point of her call. Sheโs selling Finnโs car, but the garage said there were personal effects that needed to be removed. Would I help?
Iโm surprised. Finn kept his car so clean that it became a joke on the soccer team. I call her back and get the address of the garage where his car was towed after the accident. They say I can come by today if that works for me, and itโs a task I want to get over with, so I head over.
The man leading me out to the lot seems to have no idea that tragedy has struck.
As he unlocks the gate, he turns to me and says, โDamage was minimal.
You sure your mom wants to sell?โ I shrug.
Iโm holding Finnโs key chain, one of the last things he ever touched. I squeeze it and think about time travel again. It would be so easy to save Finnโs life if it werenโt for time and space.
โSo, uh, if youโre sure you donโt want us to fix her up, empty her out, and weโll have you sign something for your mom in our office.โ
I donโt bother correcting him before he walks away. Finnโs little red car.
Like being in his house, I should have expected this flood of memories.
Thereโs the first time I saw this car: Finn, proud but embarrassed to be proud, driving me around the block once before dinner because my mom was only letting me go because she had a soft spot for Finn.
The late nights after a party, the early mornings before soccer practice. Sometimes we bickered. Sometimes we laughed.
Mostly, we listened to music and didnโt realize that we had a limited time together.
Maybe if I had known that it would be this hard, I wouldnโt have come.
But who would?
And then thereโs the hole in the windshield.
Looking at it makes me feel like I saw Sylvie fly through it. How did she live?
I remind myself that one life wasnโt exchanged for another. Had Sylvie died on impact, Finn would still have run to her, would still have been so anxious that he didnโt see the downed power line in the puddle next to Sylvie.
I take a deep breath and do what I came to do.
There isnโt much. I grab his stack of CDs and an umbrella from the front. From the trunk, I retrieve his jumper cables and first aid kit. Thereโre taco and candy wrappers in the back seat, which is a surprise bordering on shock. Itโs only because of those wrappers that I look underneath the front seat.
Then I see the bag.
As I pull it out, even though I know itโs not drugs, the thought still crosses my mind, given it was concealed and wrapped so carefully.
It quickly becomes obvious why he had hidden the bag.
Heโd said that he was running an errand before getting Sylvie. Heโd said he was โall the way sureโ that Autumn loved him.
It also explains why there was trash in Finn Smithโs car.
Suddenly, I hate that girl so much. Autumn was the reason Finn was breaking up with Sylvie and driving in the rain. She was the reason he was distracted that night.
If he hadnโt been cheating on Sylvie the night before, Finn probably would have told her that they needed to go home, that they could talk on the phone the following day. But his guiltโhis guilt over what Autumn had gotten him to doโhad kept him out all night, even though it was getting late, even though it was raining hard and he hated driving in the rain.
If you took Autumn out of the equation, Finn would still be alive.
With a paper sack full of the meager items left in Finnโs little red car, I leave the garage and call Finnโs mom. She asks if I can come by, so I drive to Finnโs house.
She looks thinner and like she hasnโt been sleeping well, but Angelinaโs smile is genuine. She opens the screen door for me, and I go into the foyer. I normally wouldnโt have gone so long without seeing her. I canโt remember the last time that a week went by without me being at Finnโs house. Hugging Angelina feels natural, even though it was something we never did when he was alive.
โThank you,โ she says. โI hope that wasnโt too much to ask.โ
โNo,โ I say. โIโm glad to help. There was an umbrella in the car that had French words printed on it. I thought that was probably Sylvieโs, but I brought the rest of the stuff.โ I hand her the paper sack.
She looks inside it for a moment. โWould you listen to the CDs, Jack?โ
I nod. โThank you.โ
She hands me the stack of CDs and then takes out the first aid kit. She holds it tenderly in her hands. A shadow crosses her face. โIf only,โ she whispers. And I understand.
If only this could have somehow saved him. If only his cautious nature had somehow saved him.
โAt first,โ she says, still looking at it, โI thought I would be the sort of parent who turned their childโs room into a museum, leaving every object exactly as he left it, right down to the jeans on the floor, you know?โ
I donโt know. It never occurred to me that there were enough parents out there with dead kids for there to be different types of them. It seems like a whole secret world of people I never considered. Before I can think on it much, Angelina continues.
โBut I saw someone at a stoplight asking for change the other day, and he was wearing pants that were too short, and I thought,ย He needs pants like Finnyโs, and I knew what he would have wanted me to do. Itโs his stuff, so if thatโs what Finny would have wanted, itโs what I should do.โ She looks up at me, and I nod.
โI could drop off stuff orโฆโ I trail off as Angelina frowns.
โAutumn isnโt ready to let go of a lot of things in Finnyโs room yet. When I told her about wanting to donate Finnโs clothesโฆ Well, she knows that Iโm donating them by Christmas, and sheโs keeping the jeans that were on his floor.โ She shakes her head. โIโm sorry. The point of this was to say that Iโll keep the first aid kit in my car, but do you need a pair of jumper cables?โ
โYeah, actually.โ Finn had mentioned once or twice that I should have some and a first aid kit, but heโd have settled for jumper cables at least.
โIโd like to think of you using them,โ Angelina says. โNot that I wish you car trouble, but like the CDs and his clothes, I want his things out there in the world, being used.โ
โYeah, I get that,โ I say. โI hope Autumn lets you do want you want with his stuff.โ
Another shadow crosses her face.
โAutumn is having a hard time accepting the reality of the situation,โ she says. โItโs not that she wouldnโt let me. Itโs thatโฆโ Her voice trails off again, like sheโs watching a scene play out in her mind. Angelina bites her lip and shakes her head. โIโm sorry, Jack. Autumn will be fine in time. I think I worry even more about her now because I canโt worry about him, you know?โ For the first time since she opened the door, tears come to her eyes.
โSheโs coming to Springfield, right?โ
Angelina shakes her head. โMaybe next year. Autumn needs more time,โ she repeats.
โOh,โ I say.
โIโm so excited for you, Jack.โ Angelinaโs trying to change the tone of our conversation. โCollege will be good for you. Itโs a whole new world.โ
โYeah.โ I try to match her upbeat tone.
โAnd next year, youโll be able to show Autumn the ropes, hmm?โ She tries to smile.
โOf course,โ I say. โUm, tell her I said hi?โ
โI will.โ Angelina reaches out like sheโs going to stroke my hair, then she rests her hand on my shoulder. โThank you for being such a good friend to us all.โ
Perhaps Iโm not as good as she thinks, because I donโt tell her about the plastic bag under the seat that was meant for Autumn.
I donโt take it next door to her. I donโt throw it out either.
I put Finnโs jumper cables in my trunk and leave his gift for Autumn hidden under my driverโs seat, the way it had been hidden in his car. I canโt get rid of it. It tethers him to this world, but itโs also a symbol of how chasing her had killed him in the end.
Autumn will be fine without it. Angelina said so.