Read Broken Hearts, Fences and Other Things to Mend Online
Authors: Katie Finn
Tags: #Juvenile Fiction, #Social Issues, #Friendship, #Emotions & Feelings, #Family, #Marriage & Divorce
back at the screen and realized we were now in the fairy- tale
world of the story, Westley and Buttercup at the beginning of
their star- crossed romance. “It’s Hallie’s favorite, though. She
used to watch it all the time.”
“Oh yeah?” I asked. Hallie hadn’t ever mentioned it when I’d
known her, but maybe she’d gotten into it after the summer I
knew her. That year, we’d mostly watched and rewatched
The
Parent Trap
.
“Yeah,” Josh said, but his voice was distracted, and his eyes
were glued to the screen.
I looked there too and soon was lost in the story— love and
princes and pirates and giants. When I’d seen it before, I’d mostly
been focused on the romantic parts, not the revenge aspect of
the story, Inigo Montoya’s burning desire to fi nd and punish the
six- fi ngered man who’d wronged him.
“Here’s what I don’t get,” Josh said when we were about an
hour in. I turned my head toward him and it hit me again just
how close together we were. I could have reached over and touched
his cheek without extending my arm. But this didn’t make me
ner vous or anxious, like my realization in the car after the pool
party had. Maybe it was the result of stomach troubles, or that
fact that it was almost 2 A.M., but mostly I just felt comfortable
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and relaxed, all the while still able to appreciate how good he
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could make a sloth T-shirt look.
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“What don’t you get?” I asked around a yawn.
“Westley and Buttercup,” he said. “Even though he’s going
under another name, shouldn’t she realize who he is? If he’s her
one true love and all?”
I could feel my pulse start to beat a little harder at the base of
my throat, and I took a moment before answering, choosing my
words carefully. “I don’t know,” I said. “I . . . think that sometimes
people have reasons for not telling the truth about who they are.
And does it really matter? When she realizes who he really is,
she’s okay with it.” I crossed my fi ngers under my head, knowing
full well that I was talking more about myself than Westley pre-
tending to be the Dread Pirate Roberts.
“Of course she is,” Josh said, his voice getting slower and
more sleepy. “She loves him. It doesn’t matter what his name is.”
“So,” I started. I suddenly felt much more awake, and was no
longer paying attention to the movie at all, even though we were
almost at the fi re swamp, with the Rodents of Unusual Size,
which had always been my favorite part. “You think that even
though he’s not telling her the truth about who he is, it’s okay?”
“Sure,” Josh said, and I looked over and saw that his eyes were
drifting shut, his long eyelashes casting shadows on his cheek.
“Of course.”
I took a deep breath. I didn’t know if it was the potential de-
hydration making me a little loopy, but I suddenly had a feeling
that Josh would understand. I wanted to tell him, right now, who
I really was, even though it went against everything that I had
been planning. I suddenly wanted him to know the real me.
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“Josh,” I whispered. “Can I tell you something?”
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When he didn’t respond, I sat up a little more and looked over
at him. But his eyes remained closed, and I noticed that his
breathing had turned slow and even. I knew I could have woken
him up to tell him, but as the seconds passed, I lost my nerve. I
turned the volume on the TV down slightly and lay down again,
holding on tight to what Josh had just said. That it didn’t really
matter what you called yourself. So maybe when he found out the
truth, he’d understand that some deception was necessary for a
larger purpose.
I closed my eyes too, and just let the story wash over me—
revenge and deception and true love and misunderstandings,
everyone on their way to an eventual happy ending— until I fell
asleep as well.
O O O
When I woke up, the movie was over and the TV was scroll-
ing through its screensaver images, close- ups of fl owers and
insects and ocean waves. I sat up, stretching out a crick in my
neck, and noticed that it was morning, early pale light stream-
ing through the windows. I looked over at Josh, whose eyes were
still closed. For just a moment— before this turned into creepy
stalkerish sleep- staring—I took in the sight of him on the couch.
His hair was sticking up, he had a crease on one cheek from the
leather pillow, and the too- big sweatpants had slipped down
slightly, revealing a strip of fl at, toned stomach.
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Josh opened his eyes, and I jumped, looking away and picking
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up the remote, pretending to be very interested in how it worked.
“Hey,” he said, stretching and giving me a sleepy smile.
I looked over, like I was surprised to notice him there. “Oh,
hi,” I said, in what I hoped was a casual, I-wasn’t-just- staring- at-
you tone.
“What time is it?” he asked, yawning.
I squinted at the clock on Bruce’s entertainment system.
“Seven thirty.”
Josh sat up and ran a hand over his eyes. “I’d better get going,”
he said. “I’ll just grab my stuff from upstairs.” He headed toward
the staircase, then turned back and glanced at the TV. “I guess I
missed the Rodents of Unusual Size, huh? They were always my
favorite part.”
Josh left before I could respond to that, and I tried to tell my-
self fi rmly that it didn’t mean anything. It was probably lots of
people’s favorite part. I picked up our discarded glasses and put
them in the dishwasher, checked my refl ection in the toaster, and
was glad to see that I looked better than I had last night. This
seemed encouraging, though the truth was, if I’d looked worse, I
think it would have meant I needed to call a doctor, or the morgue.
I met Josh by the front door. He was carry ing his clothes from
the night before and still wearing the sloth shirt and meerkat
pants. “Okay if I wash these and bring them back?” he asked.
“Seriously,” I said, “take them. Nobody will even notice they’re
gone, I promise you.”
“Okay,” he said. He tossed his keys on his palm a few times.
“Well . . . thanks for letting me convalesce here.”
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“Anytime,” I said. I moment later, I reconsidered. “Actually,
no. I hope this never has to happen again. In a good way.”
“I agree,” he said. “Stay away from lobster.”
I laughed at that. “Right back at you.”
“Well,” Josh said. He gave me a smile, and I noticed that the
pillow crease was still on his cheek. He looked a little pale, and I
knew from the toaster that I did too. But I kind of liked it. It was
like proof that we’d been through something, together. “Good
morning.”
I smiled back. “Good morning, Josh.”
He pulled open the door, waving once to me before heading to
his truck, which was still parked haphazardly from when we’d
abandoned it and dashed full- out for the house. I shut the door
behind him and then leaned back against it.
I closed my eyes for a second, turning over the events from
the night (well, the nondisgusting ones) in my head. Somehow,
things seemed different now. Like we’d moved on to something
new from when he’d picked me up, which felt like a lifetime ago.
I tried to tell myself that maybe this was what always happened
when you shared a food- poisoning experience with someone, and
then recuperated together watching an ’80s movie. It just felt
like, in the space of a night, something had shifted. To or from
what, though, I wasn’t sure.
But I didn’t think my still- recovering brain would be able to
come up with an answer that could be trusted. I pushed myself
off of the door and set off in search of some ginger ale.
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Two days later, I stood in the doorway of the sitting room that
had been repurposed as my father’s offi ce for the summer.
My dad was hunched over his laptop, muttering dialogue to him-
self, with the occasional elbow fl ap, which seemed like proof he
was maybe getting a little too into this penguin movie.
I had spent most of the last two days inside, existing on ginger
ale and saltines, working my way back up to plain bagels, though
food in general still wasn’t very appealing. When Bruce, Rosie,
and my dad had returned, Rosie had taken charge and ordered me
back to bed, even though I wasn’t really sick any longer. But it was
nice to be taken care of— even though Rosie’s defi nition of care-
taking included giving me lectures on how eating shellfi sh coated
in mayo, outdoors, had just been asking for trouble.
Josh and I had been texting back and forth, but we hadn’t
made any plans to see each other again, and I was kind of glad.
Reliving the night in the cold light of day, it had all seemed extra
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embarrassing, not to mention a little confusing, and I was glad
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not to see him for a few days, happy to hang around the house,
where I knew all the food was safe.
But it was not lost on me that I seemed to be spending an
awful lot of time this summer getting into humiliating situa-
tions and hiding in my various bedrooms to recover from them.
It did bother me, however, that this was becoming a defi nitive
pattern and it wasn’t even July yet.
Since my dad seemed absorbed in his work, I knocked twice.
I’d found a note from him under my door that morning, asking
me to come and see him when I got up. I had a feeling this meant
that he was late on the script, since when he was running be-
hind, Bruce confi scated his phone, changed the Wi- Fi password,
and refused to tell him what it was, so that he wouldn’t have any
distractions from his work.
My dad started and spun around in his chair, his expression
relaxing when he saw me. “Oh, Gemma,” he said, giving me a
tired smile. “I thought you were Bruce, demanding a progress
report.”
“How’s it going?” I asked, then when my dad winced, added,
“You don’t have to tell me if you don’t want to.”
“You know what, kid?” he asked, taking off his glasses and
rubbing the bridge of his nose. “There are some days where I just
want to toss this whole crazy business and write another novel.”
Since my dad hadn’t even so much as mentioned going back to
books in fi ve years, I wondered just how bad this screenplay was.
But before I could say anything— or fi gure out a noninsulting
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way to ask this— he motioned me inside. “Come in,” he said. “I
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think we need to talk about something.”
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I felt myself freeze. These were never good words to hear from
my parents, but especially from my dad, who never wanted to
talk about anything signifi cant. He’d left most of the heavy lift-
ing, parenting- wise, to my mom. As a result of this, my dad and
I got along great, mostly because we only talked about fun stuff—
movies and trivia and gossip about the famous actors who gave
voices to his sloths and turtles.
The timing of this also seemed particularly ominous. Had
he somehow found out that I’d had a boy stay the night? Even
though we’d just been on parallel couches, I had a feeling my dad
would not be okay with it. I found my eyes darting upward to the
ceiling. Did Bruce have some crazy security system installed or
something?
And then I realized my dad might be talking about another,
much bigger secret. Had he found out, somehow, what I’d been
doing here this summer— pretending to be Sophie and trying to
mend fences with Hallie? Getting involved with the Bridges once
again? I had always planned on confessing to my dad what I’d
done that summer— in theory, anyway— but didn’t want to until
I’d resolved things with Hallie.
I took a few tentative steps into the room. “Um, about what?”
“Two things,” he said, turning in his chair to face me more
fully. He sighed, his expression regretful. “We have to go to L.A.
in a few days,” he said. “We’ll be there for a week or so.”