“Well, you were thinking awfully loud.” The hollow feeling in my stomach that I’d been holding at bay threatened again, and I deliberately pushed it away.
“Ouch!” Michael stopped suddenly, looking down at his foot. “Stepped on something. Maybe a broken shell or…” He leaned over and picked up something white that was sticking out of the sand. “Huh. Look at this.”
He held something white in his hand, studying it. When he turned it over, I saw that it was half of a sand dollar.
“Pretty,” I commented.
“And kind of unusual. I’ve found lots of pieces of sand dollars here, but never a half like this one.”
We walked on, slowly. I scanned the sand carefully, looking for shells. I had found some exquisite ones this summer, and I had planned to add to my collection today. Michael’s find had jogged my memory.
“But you know, we could.” It took me a moment to realize that Michael was continuing his earlier train of thought. “I can drive home from school on a Friday, after my last class, then we could come down here on Saturday.”
“That’s a lot of driving for you,” I observed. “And I don’t care about the beach. I mean, I’ve enjoyed it this summer, obviously, but as long as I can be with you, it doesn’t matter where we are.”
I was unprepared for Michael’s sudden stop. He used the hand he was holding to tug me back to him and pull me flush against his chest.
“We’re going to make it work,” he whispered. “I promise you we will. We were made to be together, and this next year is just a little detour. We’re going to be fine.” He covered my lips again, but this time, there was more desperation lying beneath the intensity.
The water rushed over our feet, and I felt something hard against my ankle. Breaking away from Michael, I looked down at our feet and sucked in my breath.
“Look at this!” Stooping, I picked up the flat white shell. It was another half sand dollar. I turned it over in my hands. “I can’t believe we found another one. You didn’t drop yours, did you?”
“Nope.” Michael held out his hand, with his half still visible. I took it from him and joined it with the piece I’d just found, and we both stared. The pieces fit together perfectly.
“See, it’s a sign,” Michael murmured. “Just like us. Two pieces of the same whole.”
“What are the chances that the two of us would find these two halves, and not even in the same section of beach?” I marveled.
About the same as the chances that the one girl in the world who is the other half of my soul would stroll into my school one day.
Michael smiled at me and closed his hand over mine, which still held the sand dollar.
“Keep this. It’ll remind you that it was more than chance that brought us together, that keeps us together.”
“No, I have a better idea. You keep the half you found, and I’ll hold onto my piece. That way we’ll both have a reminder.” I smiled up at him, hoping the tears weren’t visible behind my sunglasses.
“Good idea.”
We turned then to look out over the Gulf. In the distance, dolphins were playing in the rolls of surf. The sun’s reflection glittered over the blue water. It was a perfect scene in a perfect day.
But perfection isn’t meant to last.
A nursery is not the coolest place to spend an August afternoon in central Florida, but it was the only place I wanted to be. Sawood Nursery, located on many acres in the country outside of the small town of King, Florida, was not only my home away from home, it was also my place of employment. I’d been working for the Sawyers part-time since last autumn, and once school ended in May, I began picking up even more hours. I still wasn’t a horticulturist by any means, but I loved spending time with both of Michael’s parents, Marly and Luke, and I liked the customers we served.
The other benefit of working at Sawood this summer had been the opportunity to become better friends with Michael’s older sister, Lela. The nursery gift shop was her baby and always had been, even when she was away at college in Virginia. Working there had been a natural fit for me during the school year, but I hadn’t been certain that Lela would feel comfortable having me there when she came home for summer break.
To my delight, Lela had actually asked me to stay, and it turned out that we worked well together. The only drawback was that like her brother and parents, Lela was someone whose thoughts I heard particularly well, and I knew that she was still not completely comfortable with my talent. So I spent a good deal of time and concentration focusing on
not
hearing anything I shouldn’t from her mind.
Seldom was there a day that I didn’t look forward to going to the nursery, whether it was to work or just to hang out with Michael and his family. But today was different. I had been dreading this day for so long that it seemed it had been looming over me all my life rather than just for months.
Michael was leaving this morning.
We had talked for a long time about how to handle our parting. Marly and Luke had invited me to ride with them up to the college, where they would stay for a few days to help Michael get settled, but I knew that prolonging the goodbyes would be agony for me. A single day would be hard enough; stretching it out over several days might possibly kill me.
To my surprise, Lela had offered to stay home from the trip, too. She wasn’t scheduled to return to college until later in the month, but I had expected her to go with her parents to see Michael’s school. Instead she announced that she was staying home.
“Lela, really, you don’t have to do that. I’ll be fine,” I had protested.
“Who said anything about you?” she retorted. “I’m looking forward to having the house to myself and running this place.” But I could feel the empathy and compassion flowing from her, and I knew what she wasn’t saying.
On our last full day together, Michael and I had both worked hard to be desperately cheerful. We packed a picnic lunch and took it out to Lancer Park, where not quite a year earlier we had shared our first kiss during an intense afternoon together. We talked about everything except our impending separation, although I could hear that Michael’s thoughts never strayed far from that subject.
We stopped at my house after leaving the park so that my parents could tell Michael goodbye. I knew my mother was holding back tears herself as we sat out on the back deck, making small talk. It was hard to believe that these were the same two people who had been so skeptical of Michael and our relationship not so long ago.
I sat there fidgeting, knowing that we were only delaying the inevitable. When we finally rose to leave, my father gruffly shook Michael’s hand and wished him luck. My mother hugged him warmly and told him she would see him at Thanksgiving.
As we turned to go, she caught my arm. “Are you all right?” she asked me in a low voice.
I glanced ahead at Michael and my dad, who were examining a shrub in the front yard.
“I’m doing okay,” I answered my mom. And then, as her face puckered in concern, I rushed to add, “I’ll be fine, Mom. Really. Don’t worry about me.”
The drive out to the nursery was unusually quiet. The top was down on the Mustang, and I leaned my head back against the seat and let the wind rush over my face and through my hair. Michael’s thoughts were quiet murmurs of dread and worry, and I pushed them away, not wanting to hear.
“So, you’ll remember to check the tires regularly. And keep an eye on the mileage, so you can bring her out to the nursery for an oil change when she needs it.”
I ran my hand over the dashboard. “I still can’t believe you’re leaving her with me. Actually, I still can’t believe I really learned to drive stick shift. Are you sure…?”
Michael interrupted me. “We’ve gone over this a hundred times. Making the trip to the college wouldn’t be in her best interest. I’ve been saving up for a cheap used car to drive while I’m up there. I always knew I’d leave her here when I went away to school.”
“Yes, we have that in common,” I sighed.
“Hey.” Michael reached over to squeeze my hand. “We’ve talked about this. I could have stayed here, gone to school closer… you’re the one who pushed me to go.”
“I know. And I know it’s the right thing. Or maybe I’ll know that tomorrow, or next week. But today, everything in me is screaming that I was insane to tell you to go.”
Michael sighed in frustration and ran his hand through his hair. “But it’s too late to make any changes now. Maybe at the end of this semester…”
“No.” I was firm, even though I didn’t want to be. “You need to do this. You need to go to school, experience college. Perriman is a perfect fit, and with the scholarship they’re giving you… and if you didn’t go away, you’d resent me, eventually, for holding you back.”
“I could never resent you.”
“You wouldn’t tell me if you did, but I’d know. And wouldn’t it…” I struggled to articulate what was in my heart. “Wouldn’t it make what we have… I don’t know, somehow
less
than it is, if we couldn’t trust ourselves to do this? To trust that we can make it through?”
“We’ll make it.” There was as much determination as there was assurance in his voice. “I know we will.”
Marly had made a special dinner that night, reminding us that the fact that she was cooking at all was a big deal, since the kitchen wasn’t her favorite place to be. I think the only person who really ate and enjoyed the meal was Lela. The rest of us struggled to talk about anything other than the next day.
After dinner, Marly insisted that we were both excused from kitchen detail. Usually I would have resisted, but tonight I was coveting every moment I could possibly spend alone with Michael.
We walked out in the fields through the starry night to our special spot, a secluded section of grass between the fields of fragrant evergreen and citrus trees. Michael spread the blanket, and we both sat down. I felt more stiff and awkward than I ever had in his presence. I wrapped my arms around my folded legs, curling up as tightly as I could. My heart was aching, and my throat was tight.
“It’s a beautiful night,” he observed, looking up at the black sky.
“This is Florida. It’s always beautiful,” I answered, in a lame attempt to recall one of our early conversations. Even to my own ears, my voice sounded woebegone and hollow.
“Tas, it’s going to be okay. Please…” Michael’s words caught, and he drew in a deep breath.
It was all I could take. I dropped my face onto my folded arms and tried to muffle my sobs. I had promised myself that I wouldn’t cry until after he had left.
“No. Don’t, please. Don’t hide from me.”
Can’t you feel that this is tearing me up, too? Can’t you tell I’m second-guessing all of it? Why did I let you talk me into going away… I could be staying closer, going to community college, seeing you every day…
Kneeling next me, Michael placed his hands on either side of my face and forced me to look up at him. I could see and feel the distress, guilt and anguish he was struggling to hide.
“Please,” he said again. “We need to face this together. Don’t pull away from me. Remember, I can’t hear what’s going on in your head.”
In answer, I released my arms from around my legs and instead wrapped them around his neck, pulling him closer to me. His lips covered mine, first with the gentle touch I knew so well, and then with an increasing urgency that matched my own.
I fell back on the blanket, keeping a grip on Michael’s shoulders and bringing him down with me. He propped himself over me, leaning on his elbows to keep his weight from my body and holding my face tenderly with his two hands. His lips never left mine, and his thoughts were pounding with the same passion I felt rolling all around us.
There was a recklessness within me that was completely new and unfamiliar as I knotted my hands in his hair. My thinking wasn’t clear, but my body knew what it wanted. And Michael’s mind was heading in the same direction, although nothing was quite complete or coherent.
And then abruptly, he ripped himself away from me and landed back on the blanket. Cool air rushed over my face and I gasped, feeling bereft.
“What? Did I…” I swallowed convulsively, trying to slow my heart. “Are you okay? Is something wrong?” I focused on his mind, wanting to discern exactly what he was thinking.