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Chapter no 33

If Only I Had Told Her

After five weeks of school, I go back to Ferguson. Itโ€™s the weekend before Finnโ€™s birthday, and it just feels right to be there.

When I get to town, I go out of my way to drive past his house. It looks like the grass hasnโ€™t been mowed since Finn died. Thereโ€™s been a drought, so it could be worse, but someone needs to do it before thereโ€™s a citation or something. Itโ€™s obvious that doing Finnโ€™s chore is more than anyone in his family can handle right now.

But I can handle it. Iโ€™ll do it for Finn, not instead of him.

My parents are even happier to see me than I expected and nicer to each other than theyโ€™ve been in years. Perhaps time alone is good for them, or perhaps worrying about me brought them together.

โ€œWe should go to the art museum tomorrow,โ€ Mom suggests. Dad mumbles something about putting gas in the car first, which means he would be going too.

โ€œIโ€™m going to go by Finnโ€™s momโ€™s house in the morning,โ€ I say. โ€œSomebody needs to mow their grass.โ€ Thereโ€™s a pause, and I think they might protest, but my parents beam.

โ€œThat would be very kind of you,โ€ Mom says. Dad says something about watching the game afterward, and Mom says sheโ€™ll make us a late lunch.

Under the table, I text my brothers that someone has kidnapped our parents and replaced them with actors who donโ€™t know that theyโ€™re supposed to hate each other. As usual, only the younger three think this is funny.

 

I didnโ€™t call Angelina first. I simply loaded Dadโ€™s mower into the trunk of my car and drove over.

Iโ€™ve been better the past couple of weeks. I still cry in the shower sometimes, but not as much. It helps to have a roommate who I can talk to if I want and gets it when I donโ€™t.

I guess Brett is my friend, though I donโ€™t think heโ€™ll ever be a friend like Finn was to me.

Outside Finnโ€™s house, I unload the mower and start the engine. The familiar hum is a nice white noise. It is still hot but not unbearable. Down the street, a tulip tree is turning yellow.

I used to make fun of Finn for pointing out particularly colorful trees. Little did I know that because of him, appreciating seasonal foliage would become a lifelong habit of mine.

As I push the mower, I think about how the leaves above my head would soon be changing color and falling, and he wonโ€™t see it. He wonโ€™t see the new leaves in the spring.

I think about how Finn will never vote in an election, local or presidential. Iโ€™d never cared about politics, but Finn had been looking forward to voting for a president for the first time. It doesnโ€™t seem like such a bad thing to start caring about.

I think about a lot that morning. I go over promises Iโ€™ve made to myself and to Finn and then make a few more.

When Iโ€™m almost finished, I pause to wipe sweat from my face with my forearm. Thatโ€™s when I see her at the screen door.

I wave, but Autumn takes a step back.

I didnโ€™t see her on the porch, but thereโ€™s a glass of ice water on the railing.

Iโ€™m almost finished with the front yard, so I wrap up the last bit, then make my way over. I drink until the ice clinks empty at the bottom. I knock on the doorframe and call her name softly. When thereโ€™s no answer, I ring the bell.

โ€œWhat?โ€ she says when she finally answers.

Iโ€™m so surprised by her anger that I take a step back. โ€œHi. Thanks?โ€ I say, holding out the glass.

Autumn looks terrible, skeletal. She breathes deeply before answering, as if there is a massive weight strapped to her chest.

โ€œI was pretending it was Finny mowing,โ€ she says, as if this should have been obvious to me. โ€œAnd now youโ€™ve ruined it.โ€

โ€œOh,โ€ I say, because there is nothing else to say.

She snatches the glass from my hand. โ€œItโ€™s fine.โ€ She laughs a laugh that is not a laugh. โ€œIt only helped a little bit.โ€ She closes the door behind her.

I think about knocking again, trying to have more of a conversation, or seeing if Angelina is home and telling her that I donโ€™t think Autumn is okay. But I donโ€™t. Even though I know Finn would have been worried about her.

I walk off the porch, pack up the mower, and go home. I watch the game with Dad, and Mom sticks around to eat tacos with us.

When Autumn crosses my mind again, I push away the thought the way I push away fantasies of Finn being alive. I donโ€™t have room in my head for her grief and my own.

I drive back to school the next day.

I donโ€™t do what Finn would have wanted me to do.

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