Read Love and Leftovers Online
Authors: Sarah Tregay
Love dub
|
love dub
Love dub
|
love dub
Linus stops
by my locker.
I notice that he doesn’t
kiss, touch, or hug me.
I hope he hasn’t
changed his mind.
“I’ve got to tell Emily,” Linus says.
“Before this hits the fan.”
And I realize he’s doing
what I should have done
the day J.D. kissed me:
tell the truth
before it grew stale.
I am so happy giddy giddy
I smile at the blue blue sky
and practically skip.
I wish Katie was here
so I could kiss and tell,
gossip about love and fairy tales.
I tell the trees, the squirrels,
the fence posts, the mailbox,
“I’m in love. He loves me.”
“I can’t quite believe it!
We skipped school to fall in love.
I kissed Linus and he kissed me.”
“He’s telling Emily
he’d rather just be friends.
He’s in love. He loves me.”
And she’ll admit she liked him
and how he respected her, but
that wasn’t love and she understood.
Or maybe she’ll say she loved him
and wanted to hold him tight, but
forgot how to do it. Could he show her?
Maybe he’ll wrap his arms around her,
feel her curves under her sweater,
and ask, “Can I spend forever here?”
I skid to a stop.
What? Huh?
This is
my
daydream
my
Cinderella story
my
first time falling in love.
He can’t possibly go running off
with the prettiest girl in school
instead of me!
Can he?
I try to do my math homework
but end up writing proofs as if they were poetry.
I try to analyze
King Lear
but end up writing my paper in poems.
I try to work on my biology project
but I end up with poems in my PowerPoint presentation.
Danny asks me, “What’s wrong?”
and I tell him that Linus and I skipped school.
“And you’re worried about what your dad will think?”
“No. I’m worried
that Linus might not love me
after all—
that maybe I was just a quick fix.
A hug and a kiss to tide him over
until cardboard cutout Emily
gets wet in the rain
and decides to bend.”
Danny just looks at me
like I don’t make any sense
and wonders out loud
if “maybe this is stuff for your notebook?”
I take my notebook
from my bag.
Smooth my fingers
over pages,
as if the bubbles
made by long-ago tears
were messages
written in Braille.
I start to read
what I had written,
but stop
midsentence
when the
doorbell
rings.
Linus has his backpack on,
like he hasn’t been home
since before we got off the bus.
“I talked to Emily,
and she admitted
that she isn’t ready
for a relationship.”
He takes a deep breath.
“And she’d rather
we be friends like before,
except she’d like to
keep her babysitting job.”
I can’t wait another second.
I grab his backpack straps.
Pull him to me.
Kiss his mouth.
Kiss away any doubt.
I stop kissing Linus
and try to regain my balance,
my composure.
Dad puts down his briefcase,
takes off his coat.
Linus ignores him,
looks in my eyes,
and asks me
if I’d be his girlfriend,
again.
“Yes,” I say.
“Exclusively.”
(Just in time
for Valentine’s Day.)
Dad thinks we should celebrate
so he treats us to pizza
at Flying Pie on State Street,
where they play eighties rock
and pinball
instead of watching the Wildcats
play football.
And I like it better.
Even though Linus and Daddy
both beat me at pinball.
Dad turns down Linus’s street
and parks the Mustang in the Thomases’ driveway—
his not-so-subtle way of saying I have homework to do.
I flop the front seat forward and wiggle out.
Linus unfolds his long legs and stands up beside me.
He takes my hand, leans down, and kisses my cheek.
“See you at the bus stop.”
My heart
love-dub
s in my chest,
not wanting to say good night.
So I shut the car door,
hold up one finger in a promise
that I’ll be back in a minute.
Or five.
Linus’s hand still in mine,
we walk to his door,
where no one has bothered to turn on a light.
My heart
love-dub
s in my chest.
I think I say, “Kiss me.”
But Linus
may have
read my mind.
feels like riding
a Tilt-A-Whirl.
When I open my eyes,
it takes me a minute
to regain my balance.
“Linus . . .”
I take a deep breath
and say out loud
exactly what my heart
wants my lips to say:
“I love you.”
“I love you, too,” he says.
Long after
Dad’s heart-to-heart
about the importance
of school attendance,
I open
my precious
blue spiral notebook
to what
I thought
was a blank page
only to find it
written on!
Some things are inexcusable.
And I just did one of those things.
I read your notebook.
Go ahead and hate me.
But I had to do it.
You were the first girl I ever loved
and I had to know where I went wrong.
Yes, I dumped you because you cheated on me.
But after reading your diary,
I realize that I had misunderstood.
I thought you had sex with him.
And that hurt. A lot.
And, I know you thought I was gay
because I never touched your breasts.
Believe me, I wanted to.
But part of me wasn’t ready to take your clothes off
because I’ve seen
Maxim
,
Playboy
, and
Hustler
(that’s what happens when you have older brothers)
and I know that shit ain’t real.
I didn’t want
my smart, talented, adorable, emotional girlfriend
to turn into a three-dimensional magazine centerfold
when I peeled off her T-shirt.
I know you’re laughing.
But I swear that’s what happened to Roland
and Bug’s mom.
They were best friends until they started
sleeping together
instead of talking to each other.
And I swore I’d never let that happen to me.
I guess that’s what I wanted to tell you.
And if, someday, you get over hating me for reading this
and want to be friends again
I’d really like that.
Love, Linus
I Jump Out of Bed and Call Linus
“You wrote me a poem!” | “Not a very good one.” |
He laughs. | |
| |
“It’s sweet.” | “It’s embarrassing.” |
| |
“But now I know for | |
sure.” | “For sure what?” |
| |
“That I’m dating the | |
sweetest guy on earth.” | “Dorkiest, maybe.” |
| |
“Linus!” I complain. | In the background, |
Roland agrees. | |
There’s a dull thud, | |
like someone got hit. | |
| |
When I’m sure Linus | |
is back, I say, | |
“I didn’t know you thought | |
I had sex with J.D.” | “I didn’t know what to think.” |
“I guess I didn’t tell you | |
that I didn’t sleep with him.” | “I think you did, |
I just couldn’t hear you.” | |
| |
“We weren’t exactly | |
talking.” | “Next time, I promise |
to tell you stuff on the bus. | |
So the whole city’ll know.” | |
| |
“Or in the cafeteria—” | “Gotta make sure |
the whole school can hear.” | |
| |
“Or in the auditorium—” | “Into the mike. |
Loud and clear, | |
in case they missed it.” | |
| |
“Or maybe I’ll just | |
write you a poem— | |
a totally embarrassing | |
mushy one.” | “And I’ll write you a |
love song— a sticky sweet one | |
about kissing you.” | |
| |
“I’d like that.” | “Me too.” |
On the Last Page of My Notebook
As my mixed-up,
gay-dad-crazy-mom world
returns to its previously scheduled orbit
and the tropical storm that was my life
dwindles to scattered showers,
I close my eyes
and listen to my heartbeat.
Love dub
|
love dub
It sounds like a two-tone metronome,
sending me a message in Morse code.
Love dub
|
love dub
I get it now.
My heart says it’s in love.
But it didn’t feel like
that jolt before falling asleep
or like springtime on the moon.
It felt like my heart
had something to say,
and all I had to do
was listen.
I’d like to thank my agent, Danielle Chiotti, for believing in my manuscript; my editor, Sarah Shumway, for making it shine; and Laurel Symonds, Kathryn Hinds, and Maggie Herold for polishing it. My gratitude goes out to my crit group at The Cabin, who read the first draft; to Athena Birckbichler, who worked behind the scenes; and to Laura Gray, who reassures me that I’m only as old as I act. Thanks to Sonya Sones for the inspiration and to the Violent Femmes and Son of Dork for the tunes. Many thanks to my parents for their support and encouragement, to my family for the camp and my New Hampshire roots, and to Jason for everything else.
Sarah Tregay
is a graphic designer. When she isn’t jotting down poems at stoplights, Sarah can be found hanging out with her “little sister” from Big Brothers Big Sisters. She lives in Eagle, Idaho, with her husband, two Boston terriers, and an Appaloosa named Mr. Pots. You can find her online at www.sarahtregay.com.
Visit
www.AuthorTracker.com
for exclusive information on your favorite HarperCollins authors.
Jacket photo © 2012 by Allegra Villella
Love and Leftovers
Copyright © 2012 by Sarah Tregay
All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions. By payment of the required fees, you have been granted the nonexclusive, nontransferable right to access and read the text of this e-book on-screen. No part of this text may be reproduced, transmitted, downloaded, decompiled, reverse-engineered, or stored in or introduced into any information storage and retrieval system, in any form or by any means, whether electronic or mechanical, now known or hereinafter invented, without the express written permission of HarperCollins e-books.
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Tregay, Sarah.
Love and leftovers : a novel in verse / by Sarah Tregay. — 1st ed.
p. cm.
Summary: When her father starts dating a man, fifteen-year-old Marcie’s depressed mother takes her to New Hampshire but just as Marcie starts falling for a great guy her father brings her back to Idaho, where all of her relationships have become strained.
ISBN 978-0-06-202358-2 (trade bdg.)
EPub Edition © NOVEMBER 2011 ISBN: 9780062099358
[1. Novels in verse. 2. Interpersonal relations—Fiction. 3. Family problems—Fiction. 4. Moving, Household—Fiction. 5. Bisexuality—Fiction. 6. New Hampshire—Fiction. 7. Idaho—Fiction.] I. Title.