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Chapter no 45

If He Had Been with Me

I think I have read every book at the library. Every novel, that is. Every novel that I want to read. Or might be willing to give a try. If someone had told me that this was possible ten years ago, I wouldnโ€™t have believed it. Books are unlimited.

I spin the rack with the sign โ€œNew Acquisitionsโ€ in bold letters. The air conditioning is too cool and I have goose bumps. My mother is home again. My father is at work. The Fourth of July is tomorrow.

The rack is not new; it creaks as it spins. In two days, we are going to visit a university, all of usโ€”Mother, Aunt Angelina, Finny, and I. I have to find something to read or I will go crazy sitting next to him for four hours with his scent and his profile looking out the window. Perhaps I already am crazy. Jamie says so all the time, and he only knows half of it.

I reach out and take a book that Iโ€™ve already looked at twice. Maybe there is something here, something that I can hold on to, that can take me away for a little while.

I had another appointment with Dr. Singh yesterday. He nodded at everything I said and refilled my prescription. I think of my fantasy home where the furnitureโ€”tables, chairs, and bed framesโ€”are all piles of books. I wonder if he would nod thoughtfully at that too. Perhaps he would ask me what books mean to me. I would tell him that it means living another life; that I am in love with both my lost best friend and my boyfriend and I need to believe in another life. He would write something down after that.

On the ride back from his office, I asked my mother if she ever thought I would need to go to the hospital, and she started crying. She didnโ€™t pull over

or even slow down. She just stared down the road and cried. โ€œSorry,โ€ I said.

โ€œIโ€™m sorry,โ€ she said. She wasnโ€™t apologizing for crying, but for something bigger, something she had given to me, done to me, withheld from me.

โ€œItโ€™s okay,โ€ I said. It wasnโ€™t her fault.

At the bottom of the rack is a small collection of Japanese haiku. Poetry collections might be good. Poems can be read over again and studied.

Jamie comes up behind me. His chest brushes my back. โ€œAre you done yet?โ€ he asks.

โ€œNo,โ€ I say.

โ€œOkay,โ€ he says, and I can feel my love for him, a small warm place wedged between my stomach and lungs; it flutters and settles again.

โ€œSoon though,โ€ I say. I havenโ€™t turned to look at him yet.

โ€œWe have time,โ€ he says. Weโ€™re going to a movie. Weโ€™ll eat hamburgers in the mallโ€™s food court and Jamie will make fun of me for the way I eat my fries.

Jamie is going to apply to different schools from me. He isnโ€™t even considering the school weโ€™re going to the day after tomorrow. This school is the only one I can afford that has a creative writing program. Jamie has faith that it doesnโ€™t matter at all; heโ€™ll marry me as soon as college is over. Weโ€™ve picked out a house a few blocks from mine. It has a yellow front door; thatโ€™s why I like it. He likes it because I like it.

I pick upย The Bell Jar. Iโ€™ve been too afraid to read it, and partly too annoyed by the clichรฉ to overcome that fear.

โ€œIโ€™m done,โ€ I say.

โ€œCool,โ€ Jamie says. I turn around. Heโ€™s smiling at me. His dark hair is hanging in his blue eyes. I remember seeing him on the steps the first time, how I stared at him as if I couldnโ€™t believe that his face could exist.

โ€œWhat?โ€ I say.

โ€œYouโ€™re pretty today,โ€ he says.

โ€œI wish you would consider going to Springfield,โ€ I say.

โ€œWeโ€™ll make it,โ€ Jamie says. โ€œIโ€™ll call you every night before I go to sleep.โ€

โ€œIโ€™ll miss you,โ€ I say.

โ€œGood, then you wonโ€™t leave me for a poet.โ€

Outside, the hot air surrounds us like a membrane, so thick it seems palpable. My goose bumps vanish.

โ€œAnd you know, you donโ€™t have to go there,โ€ Jamie says.

โ€œNo, I have to,โ€ I say. Jamie still wants me to teach. He wants me to at least get a minor in education. He does not say anything. The car is stifling inside, and Jamie rolls down the windows before starting the engine. Jamie canโ€™t understand my need to major in writing. Or even my need to write. Acceptance is what he has given me, and I know Iโ€™m lucky to have that. And I think thatโ€™s enough.

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