Authors: Deb Caletti
Tags: #Juvenile Fiction, #Social Issues, #General, #Adolescence, #Suicide, #Dating & Sex
potatoes with the back of your spoon, and the way lumberyards
Stay
smelled, and goofy dogs, but that I didn’t know what I wanted to do
when I “grew up.” Something with words like my father, I said to
him in my head, because words were hills and valleys you traveled,
so lovely sometimes that they hurt your eyes. I told him I felt sure
there was a true and right place for me I hadn’t found yet.
I imagined him telling me other things. His first memory.
Who had hurt him and who had loved him best. His dreams. It
was stupid, and I’m not that kind of person, but I even imagined
us living somewhere together. I imagined us traveling to the
place he had come from. We would visit museums with paint-
ings in heavy gold frames or watch the northern lights with wool
mittens on our hands.
I had decided what to wear three days before3*, but once
I had on those jeans and that shirt I decided it looked like I
was trying too hard because I
was
trying too hard, and that
ignited one of those clothes crises that can get a person seri-
ously panicked, where you feel the slick, precarious slope
between having it all together and being completely out of
control. Clothes piled up and I knew I was going to be late, and
finally I put on something I wore all the time—my old jeans
and a soft green shirt, my hair taken from its barrette and worn
straight. Right away I felt better—feeling confident at a time
like that was hard enough without having to get to know some
new outfit, too.
I borrowed Dad’s car, listened to my favorite girl power CD
for a little musical rejection-proofing. I checked my reflection in
3 Okay, I had actually bought something new.
* 15 *
Deb Caletti
the rearview mirror at the stoplights. My stomach felt giddy and
tumbling. All this, and he probably wouldn’t even be there.
The parking lot was packed. I think we were in some sort of
basketball playoffs—I could never quite follow all of the specif-
ics when Shakti told me. It was dark already and there was that
parking lot excitement of a big event, headlights and shouts and
loud laughter, people crossing into the paths of idling cars and
running to the curb. Shakti met me out front by the bike rack, our
usual place. Her eyes were bright in the streetlights.
“This is it,” she said, and gave a little squeal. Shakti wasn’t the
squealing type, and neither was I. She was smart and thoughtful
and dinners at her house were careful and quiet, though the huge
plates of food served by her mother were steaming and delicious
and somehow passionate. Shakti had dreams of medical school
and would no doubt get there, unlike Luke’s friend, Sean Pollard,
who talked about going to Harvard Law School, but who thought
a tort was one of those fancy desserts.
“Is Luke nervous?” I asked.
“Oh, God, Clara, he looked ready to puke. There’s a million
people in there.”
“Poor guy,” I said. But I didn’t
feel
“poor guy.” What I felt was
my own disappointment. A million people. The chances of me
seeing him again in a crowd like that were next to zero.
We squeezed our way through the mob. Our band was
playing a pounding, rousing something, and your ears just
thrummed with
noise.
The blare of contemporary tribal warfare.
Shakti had her place she liked to stand, right near the team
benches, where she could keep an eye on Luke and on the assis-
* 16 *
Stay
tant coach, our old history teacher, Mr. Dutton. Mr. Dutton’s
face showed every emotion, and Shakti was sure she could read
his game plan for Luke in his expressions. This was fine by me.
We’d made an agreement in my head, the boy-from-somewhere-
else and me—we’d meet again in the same spot. It was the only
likely way we’d run in to each other again. I’d walk over to him,
just as I had last time. I had it all planned out for us.
The whistle screeched; the game began. There was the
rumble of running and the slams of the ball being dribbled
down the court. Everyone was shouting. But I was in that
strange place of heightened awareness that makes you feel
both more a part of your surroundings and completely lifted
out from them. The scoreboard was flashing and Shakti
shouted things my way and one of our good friends, Nick
Jakes, came over to stand with us, but I felt only that single
presence in the room somewhere, his eyes on me, that sense
of being watched that makes your every move feel acted out
with a charged self-consciousness. He was in the room, I was
in the room, and we both knew it.
I kept scanning the crowd, looking toward the place he’d
stood with the girl last time. He wasn’t there. He wasn’t any-
where. The first quarter was over. We moved toward the end of
the second. I was starting to lose my energy for this game, the
one I alone was playing. Disappointment and the ways I’d been
foolish were starting to sneak in around the edges of all that hope
and build up. I was beginning to rewrite the whole deal. So, we’d
said a few things to each other, so what. So, it meant more to me,
obviously, than it did to him. That happens, right? No big loss. I
* 17 *
Deb Caletti
was glad I hadn’t worn that other outfit. That outfit would have
felt humiliating as I walked back to the car.
Nick bought Shakti and me a Coke, two sloshy drinks in paper
cups. His fingers passed mine as he handed it to me. I hadn’t
realized it before, but I think Nick liked me. We thanked him.
We stood and yelled stupid jokes about the other team’s mascot,
who wore a costume that looked like a gopher on steroids. I said
something that made Nick laugh, and he put his thumbs through
my belt loops and gave my waist a shake. The clock kept ticking. I
was reluctantly letting go of the stupid fantasy I’d had.
And then I felt a tap on my shoulder, two light hits with a
rolled-up program. I turned my head.
“Still wish you were somewhere else?” he shouted.
My heart, which had slunk off somewhere safe, now had
some catching up to do. It zoomed to its rightful place and started
beating madly. Some people can be disappointing when you see
them again after spending time with them in your imagination.
They can look younger and act it too, or have some strange mole
or weird teeth you wish you were generous enough not to care
about. But he was not disappointing. Not at all. That silky, white-
blond hair, those blue eyes. And he smelled good. Good enough
that the warm buzz began again; it started at my knees, worked
its way up.
“Hi,” I said.
“Hi.”
We just looked at each other and grinned as if we’d just
pulled off something great, some great heist or magic trick. Then
he gestured his head toward the door. “Let’s.”
* 18 *
Stay
“I’ll be right back,” I shouted to Shakti and Nick. I still held
that Coke Nick had bought for me. It was now a cup of mixed
emotions with crushed ice. Shakti looked at this stranger and
raised her eyebrows—curious, but also disapproving. We didn’t
know this guy. This wasn’t the kind of thing either of us would
do. Then again, we
had
known Dylan Ricks and look what had
happened there.
I admired him from the back—those broad shoulders, snug
T-shirt, a butt you didn’t mind one bit walking behind. It was
the kind you’d want to put your hands on, let’s just say that. The
gym doors were propped open for air, and outside there was
the sudden freedom of the cold night mingled with the smell
of someone smoking far off. A car engine revved, and a girl
shouted something. Someone laid on their horn, yelled
Fuckers!
and laughed loud.
As we walked toward the track, the pulsing energy and
sounds of the gym fell back. I wasn’t sure who was leading, but it
must have been me. It
was
me. I was leading the whole time, see?
That’s what I’m trying to say. The track bleachers were a good
place to talk. I led him through the dark ticket gate, and we sat
down on a cold metal bleacher seat a few climbs up. He was there
right next to me, after being in my head for weeks. It was hard
to believe. The air smelled like fall—orange leaves piled upon
orange leaves making their own scent that rose up in the October
night. It felt surprising and unreal, one of those times you feel
like you’re in someone else’s body. It wasn’t how I imagined it
going, but it would do just fine. Better.
“You smell really good,” he said. Ah, that voice.
* 19 *
Deb Caletti
“I was thinking the same thing about
you
,” I said. “Clara. We
don’t even know each others’ names. Clara Oates.”
He didn’t ask about my father, as some people did when
I told them who I was. You could tell he hadn’t been here
very long. “Christian Nilsson. Do we shake now?” he teased.
I saw his eyes laughing. I held out my hand to shake, to tease
back, and he took it. Ran a finger down my palm before let-
ting it drop.
It made me shiver. Christian. The name felt surprising.
There was his actual
name
, who he was, a piece of information
that meant there were a thousand other pieces of information
about him I didn’t know yet either. It felt like a door to another
land. “That’s a beautiful name,” I said. My words sounded stupid
to me suddenly, and I felt myself blush. It
was
a beautiful name,
it sounded like a designer scarf, and I was just me, and I hadn’t
come from anywhere special.
“Who was that guy you were with?” he said.
“Nick? Just a friend.”
“Ah,” he said, as if there were likely more to that story, which
there wasn’t. He looked out over the empty track. Dylan Ricks
had been on the lacrosse team. I had sat in that same spot to
watch him play before. “I was hoping you’d be here tonight. I
don’t give a shit about that game.”
He made the word
shit
sound luxuriant and striking, some-
thing you wanted more of, please. If nothing else, you could love
him for that voice.
“I was hoping to see you too,” I said. I was bold. The moon
was big and white. I could hardly believe what was happening.
* 20 *
Stay
Dylan Ricks had been my only boyfriend before this. I’d gone
to the movies with Terrence Hilligan, out for coffee, that kind
of thing, but I hadn’t wanted to kiss him. Harrison Daily for
homecoming. I’d once gone to a movie with Dean Yamaguchi
to be nice. It felt like my life was changing.
“I don’t normally go hunting down girls like this, just so
you know.”
He looked at me expectantly. I knew what I was supposed to
say—that I didn’t do that kind of thing, either. It was the truth,
so it was easy. But I could feel his need to hear it, his need for
my reassurance, and that need made me feel . . . large, maybe. In
a way I hadn’t before. But he didn’t know that. For all he knew,
I was always that large. It felt good. Fun. Unexpectedly large is
sudden, magic levitation—you’re high, an impervious Balloon
of Joy. So instead, I teased. “Well, I don’t go hunting down
girls
,
either. But guys . . .”
“Oh, I see,” he said. “You’re that kind.” He looked at me with
those blue, blue eyes. I kept watching his mouth. You’d want to
bite that bottom lip. I wanted to right then. This was the way I had
never felt about Terrence Hilligan. I don’t think I’d ever felt that
way about Dylan, either.
“Okay, obvious question,” I said. “Where are you from?”
“Texas,” he said. He grinned at me, and I laughed. “No,
Copenhagen. My mother married an American. She was a jour-
nalist. They met here, in California. We moved to the states three
years ago, but my mother hated Los Angeles.”
“Wow,” I said. “I can’t even imagine Copenhagen. But my
father is a writer, too. Novelist. Mysteries, crime . . .”
* 21 *
Deb Caletti
“We don’t read many paperbacks,” he said.
I felt my father’s reputation unfairly plummet, from bestsell-
ing author with countless fans4* to some writer of supermarket
books with gold foil covers, sold used at flea markets for a quarter.
My own defensiveness prickled, and I was about to blow it all by
counting off various honors my father had earned when Christian
took my hand. I could see he didn’t mean anything by his com-
ment. He held my hand in both of his. This wasn’t something boys
here would do either. He held it like something precious.