Second Chance (59 page)

Read Second Chance Online

Authors: Katie Kacvinsky

Tags: #General Fiction

BOOK: Second Chance
9.8Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

“There are
other
ways to have
sex, you know,” I point out
.

Dylan smirks and takes a gulp from her water bottle
.

“Can I go down on you?” I ask.

She
chokes on the water and it drips down her chin
.
She wipes it up with her hand and stares at me to see if I’m joking.


Right now
?
” she asks
.

You’re a freak.

 

I nod at the compliment
,
turn my baseball cap backwards
and
pull Dylan into the back of the car without
any more
persuasion
.

 

DYLAN

I
throw
my
leg
lazily
over the
edge
of the train car and lean against the side of the door
.
A long, content
ed
sigh
escape
s
from my chest
.
I’m so relaxed I could slide right off the train and melt all over the ground
.
The moving air awakens all my senses and the only sound I can hear is the grinding metal wheels of the train meeting the iron tracks
.
I
n the back of the car,
Gray is
still picking straw
off
his clothes
.

“You’re missing the scenery,” I say a
s
Gray scoots next to me
.


No I’m not
,”
he
says and
kisses
my neck,
sliding
his arms around my waist
.
He dangles his legs next to mine and we both look out to investigate our new surroundings
.
Far outside of
Albuquerque
,
we have a
view
of a wide
desert, the ground muted in dull tans and browns
.
C
liffs rise in the distance
,
their
deep
crevices
shaded from the sun
and making them look rippled
.
We pass desolate farmyards
and
a herd of cattle graz
ing
close to the tracks
.
Small trickles of flowers
and plants
dot the landscape
.
I ask Gray what they are and he points out the
green
sagebrush
and
the creosote bushes
.
He tells
me the plants with
long,
scrawny
stalk
s
and
spiny leaves
are agaves
.
He
points out another plant, called a
yucca, that
looks like a miniature
palm tree
.

We share a picnic of fruit punch, crackers,
nectarines
and trail mix
.
We lay our small
lunch
out and slowly savor the food
and the sun and the rickety motion of the train while a
sleepy
horizon passes by
.
I have everything I need right here, in this moment
.

I
set the food aside and
rest
my head
o
n Gray’s lap
.
He’s
sitting
against the s
ide of the door, eating a nectarine
.
I wipe so
me
juice off
his chin with my finger before it
drips
and he catches my hand in his and licks the
juice off my finger
.
He runs his warm hand over
my forehead and through my hair. H
is touch makes it hard to keep my legs still
.
He brushes hair out of my eyes as the wind picks it up around me
.


This was a good idea,
” he
says
.

He hands me the
nectarine
.
I take
the last
couple
bite
s
and
nod
.


I’m glad we both appreciate
white trash dates,” I say.

Gray laughs and gr
abs the
red pit
out my hand an
d throws it
out
on the desert ground
.
I sit up and
lean my head against
his shoulder
.

“I love you,” I say
.

“Why is that, exactly?”
he asks
.
He
gives me this patient look, as if I’ll need time to answer this
.
But I automatically know.

“There are three things I look for in a person
.
And you’re the only person I’ve met in th
e
world that
has all of
them.

Gray
waits for me to continue
.


First,
you’re always
i
n the moment
.
You’re
not t
rying to be ten places at once
.
You
don’t have to be glued to
your cell phone
and texting
your
friends every two seconds
.
It seems like people only feel important when
every second of their life is packed
.
They’re always t
rying to plan for tomorro
w
and they miss out on things happening in front of them
.

“That’s a good one,” he says
.


Second
, y
ou’re real
.
You don’t try to candy
-
coat life
.
You don’t try and fix everything
.
You don’t try
to pretend life’s
perfect
.
Even if it means letting yourself be miserable or angry or upset. 
That’
s so stressful to me, to try an
d
act
my
way through life instead of just relaxing and being
myself
.
” 

He nods
.
I look out at
a
row of scrubby bushes
with
pink flowers
blooming
in the sun
.
 


Third, y
ou let me stop and take pictures.”

Gray creases his eyebrows together
.
“That’s your third thing?”


A
nd most important.

I say
.
“You let me be who I am
.
So many people
ask
me why I need to take picture
s all the time
.
Why I’m staring at something
they can’t see
.
It’s like
I have to
apologiz
e
for having eyes
.
But you’ve never rushed me
.
I’m at my best
around you
.
Y
ou’re m
y nova
.
You light me up.
” 

 

 

GRAY

T
he train slows down as it passes a
railroad
crossing,
almost four hours later,
and
we
take
our
exit opportunity
.
We jump down to
the dusty ground and watch our red, wobbly car
disappear
down the track
.
The air is so still around us it feels like
the earth has stopped moving
.

Other books

Riptide by Adair, Cherry
Island Home by Liliana Hart
Loose Ends by Reid, Terri
Misty by V.C. Andrews
The Mandate of Heaven by Murgatroyd, Tim
It's Alive by S.L. Carpenter
A Geography of Blood by Candace Savage
Open Heart by A.B. Yehoshua