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Crossing the Line

Page 3

by Katie McGarry

Page 3

 

  “What?” Her eyes scrunch together.

  “You called me a jerk when you opened the door. ”

  “Not you. Stephen was. Is. ” She closes her eyes, then reopens them. “I take that back. You are a jerk. ”

  My head snaps to the side. Stephen? Her ex-boyfriend? The kid will not give up and, when it comes to Lila, he has a proven track record of winning. This is the third time they’ve broken up. He groveled twice and both times she took him back. When we first started writing, it didn’t bother me. Lila and I were friends. But then I fell for her and Stephen became a sharp rock wedged in my side.

  I trash all the questions I have about Stephen and his appearance at her house and focus on what’s important: Lila. “I’m sorry. ”

  “You. Lied. ”

  “I know. ” I run my hand through my damp hair. It’s ninety degrees with the sun setting, though it could be her microscopic stare making me sweat. “I can explain. ”

  Her head falls back. “God, Lincoln. If you had come here two days ago or last week or last month, I would have been ecstatic. But now? I thought I knew you. ”

  I step forward as my heart surges out of my chest. “You do. ” She does. Better than anyone else. “Yes, I lied. But everything else is true. ”

  The way she sucks in her lower lip as her head shakes no tells me that the odds are against me.

  “I don’t believe you,” she says. “For all I know you’re the serial killer the Post-it note warned me about. ”

  “What?” Never mind. It doesn’t matter. “Lila, you are the one person who knows me. I swear it. I lied to you about one thing. One minor thing. ”

  “Minor!” Her eyes redefine the term frigid.

  I retreat a step. Bad choice in words. “Minor could be an understatement. ”

  “Understatement!” she shrieks. “You didn’t graduate from high school, Lincoln, and you had the balls to lie to me about it. ” Lila bursts forward and stabs my chest with her long pink fingernail. Each poke a piercing reminder of my mistake. “I. . . was. . . depending. . . on. . . you. ”

  “You still can. I’m going to fix this. ”

  “Go to hell. ”

  A gust of air hits my cheeks as she slams the front door in my face. My arm drops and the leaves rustle together as the roses slap the side of my thigh. A few petals float down to the wooden porch. With a heavy sigh, I sit on the steps. Not that I ever wanted to know, but this is what being set on fire must feel like—everything shrouded in agony.

  If I feel this way, how must Lila feel?

  I glance to the left, then to the right. Disoriented. Lost. Not knowing which way is home. But that’s been the problem since the beginning. The root of all my evils.

  Lila

  So the guidance counselor asked me what I wanted to do with my life. I answered—rock climbing. He said it wasn’t a profession and to get serious. That if I wanted to get into a decent college I needed to apply myself now.

  I told him I was serious. That I loved rock climbing. He said that was a hobby and that I needed to become realistic about my “goals. ”

  I told him it wasn’t my damn fault he pissed away his life to make thirty grand a year and to drink cheap coffee. And then I asked him to kindly stop dumping on my dreams. He gave me two days’ detention. Did I mention the guy’s an asshole?

  Do you know the last time I had detention? Never. I’m no saint, but I keep my mouth shut and head down. Rules suck. Society sucks.

  Josh followed the rules and now he’s dead. He liked riding horses. Maybe if he had looked that damn counselor in the eye and said, “I want to ride horses for the rest of my life,” then my brother would still be alive today.

  ~ Lincoln

  Sitting cross-legged in the middle of my bed, I turn over Lincoln’s letter. My fingers slide over the deep indentations of words obviously written in agitation. Words written so quickly, I wouldn’t have been able to decipher most of them if I wasn’t already familiar with his handwriting.

  He sent this one to me in the fall, a week after he started his senior year. Lincoln hated his guidance counselor. He was the one who convinced Lincoln’s brother to join the Marines out of high school. It’s because of that fateful decision that I met Lincoln.

  “Lila,” says Echo, her voice a bit disjointed from the speaker. “You still there?”

  “Yeah,” I say and glance at my phone lying on the bed next to me. My best friend is in freaking Iowa with the freaking love of her life on their way to freaking Colorado. Right now, I despise happy people. “How’s Iowa?”

  “Kansas,” she corrects.

  “Whatever, it’s flat and they have tornadoes. ” I pick up one of the many stacks of letters from Lincoln cluttering my bed and easily find the one I’m searching for. The one that promised he’d come with me to Florida.

  Cluttering isn’t the right word. Nothing about me is cluttered. Each stack represents the month the letter was sent, and each letter is arranged by the date on the postmark. My favorite letters have a pink highlight marking the side.

  My entire life is systemized like this. My books alphabetized by author on my cherry bookcase. Within the matching glass hutch, my Precious Moments figurines are organized by date received. My scrapbooking materials are boxed in color-coordinated Tupperware. I like plans and organization and not boys who promise to attend the University of Florida with me and then screw it all up by not graduating from high school.

  “Lila?” says Echo. She pauses for way too long. “Did you give him a chance to explain?”

  The envelope crunches in my hand. “He didn’t graduate from high school, Echo, and he didn’t tell me about it. Do you have any idea how I felt when I had to find out on my own that he lied?”

  I found out only by accident, when I searched online at his local newspaper to print out the list of graduates to complete the scrapbook page I made for Lincoln’s present. His name was not listed among the one hundred and fifty graduates. I should know. I checked—three times.

  She sighs through the phone. “Maybe you should talk to him. ”

  “You’re biased,” I snap. “You’re on Lincoln’s side because of Aires. ” Lincoln’s older brother, Josh, and Echo’s older brother, Aires, were part of the same military unit. No one knows the whole story, but they died two and a half years ago in Afghanistan, in a roadside bombing. I met Lincoln at Aires’s funeral.

  “If I remember correctly,” Echo says with an attitude that has very rarely emerged over the past two years, “I’m the one who said you shouldn’t be writing a stranger and I’m the one who said you needed to stop writing him because you were falling for him. ”

  And I’m overwhelmed with the urge to punch something—hard, because. . . “I know. Sorry. That wasn’t fair. ”

  “No, it wasn’t. ”

  We’re silent for a few moments. I crossed a line with her by throwing Aires into a fight. I pick at my thumbnail. We’ve been best friends since birth and we never stay mad for long, but I don’t want to get off the phone with her angry at me. At least not tonight.

  “Hotel, motel or tent?” I slur the last word as a curse. More silence, then a rustle of sheets. Please, please, please play along, Echo. I need my best friend.

  “Motel. We slept in the tent for the past few nights,” she says in a light tone that causes me to smile. Yeah, I hate happy people, but Echo deserves happy. “Noah’s in the shower. ”

  “So. . . ” I draw out the word. “Have you had sex?”

  “No. ” She chokes. Hand to God, she chokes. I giggle as she coughs.

  “Well, if you do,” I say when she recovers from her hacking fit, “don’t let your first time be in a tent. That would be awful. ”

  “I think a tent could be romantic. ”

  “Traitor,” I say. Echo used to be in the only-if-there-is-room-service camp, like me, but then she permitted the hot and mysterious Noah to sway her to the dark side. “Dirt and bugs and snake
s, Echo. Just saying. ”

  In the background, I hear Hot and Mysterious’s deep voice. Echo fumbles with the phone while she answers him. I check out the clock on my nightstand. Midnight. My mouth dries out as I smooth back my hair. Another night by myself.

  No moon tonight so the entire world beyond my window is pitch-black. I don’t want Echo to let me go because then I’ll be alone again in this big, empty house.

  Part of me hates Noah. If it wasn’t for him, she wouldn’t be in Iowa or Kansas or where the hell ever and would instead be staying the night with me. She wouldn’t be spending all of her time with him and his friends: that scary guy with all the tattoos and Biker Chick Beth. Tattoo Boy and Biker Chick Beth also live with Noah’s foster parents, and they were a year behind me and Echo at school. Echo says they aren’t a couple, but I’d bet the new heels I received for graduation they are.

  If it wasn’t for Noah, she would need me more. . . she would still be insecure, she would still be obsessing over the scars on her arms. She possibly wouldn’t have recovered her memory of the night she got them. If it wasn’t for him, she wouldn’t be moving on with her life. Damn him for being a great guy.

  “Guess I should let you go. ” Yep, I said it in a way that indicated that is so not what I want to do.

  “I’ll stay on,” she says. “We could keep our phones on all night. Just like we did in elementary school. ” Only then it was landlines. She would, because that’s what best friends do.

  I swear I hear Noah groan in agony. Guess he doesn’t like BFF breaking in on make-out time.

  “No. I’ll be fine. ” It’s a lie. I stare at the scrapbook page that I lugged back to my room earlier and wonder where Lincoln’s sleeping tonight. I should think I could sleep tonight, but the exhaustion only increases my terror. . . and deepens my sadness over Lincoln. I should have heard him out. Why didn’t I listen?

  “I think you should talk to Lincoln,” Echo says, reading my mind like always. “Maybe wait until you’ll know he’s back home, like tomorrow evening, and DM him again. ”

  My thumbnail clicks as I mess with it. “I thought you wanted me to stay away from him. ”

  “Yeah, well, you already fell for him. Now I don’t want you to have regrets. ”

  Regrets. The moment I slammed the door on him, I sort of regretted it, and then I fully regretted it when I heard his engine accelerate down the road.

  I hate that he won’t be in Florida in the fall. I hate that I’ll be alone at a strange college, in a strange state, and not know a soul. I’ll be a complete and utter outsider. But what I really hate is that I’ll never get to figure out if Lincoln and I would ever have been more than just friends.

  Even with the lie, what I don’t hate is Lincoln.

  Echo remains on the phone with me as I lock every single window and every single door. It’s only when I reach the front door and peek out onto the porch that I finally let her go.

  My heart does this funny little tumble. Lincoln left the roses and an envelope.

 

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