Burning September

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Burning September Page 30

by Melissa Simonson


  Oh my God, had been all I could say after her soft and sleepy hello. Oh My God.

  God’s not here, but I’d be willing to take a message, babe, she’d said, yawning some of the listlessness from her voice. What’s the matter?

  I told her how I was unpacking boxes, putting away extra socks of Kyle’s, when I found something in the back of his underwear drawer.

  Jesus. I heard her grunt, probably sitting up in bed. How many carats?

  I didn’t know, I wasn’t a jeweler.

  What are you going to say?

  Of course I would say yes.

  Hey, so you think you’ll hyphenate? She laughed too close to the receiver, it came out as static. You happy, babe?

  Yeah, but I was scared too, a scared, nervous kind of happy.

  That’s the best kind, she’d assured me. Hey, pretend to be surprised when he pops the question. You don’t want to steal his thunder.

  I missed her so much, even though she was only ever a phone call away. It was a constant, low-level pain, dull and throbbing, like a toothache. She had asked me to meet her anywhere she happened to be in the world nearly every time we spoke, and it had become harder and harder to turn her down. She was in my marrow, after all.

  What if I get cold feet, screw it up? I’d asked her suddenly, the way people blurted out embarrassing questions as the doctor was on his way out of the exam room. Hey, what does it mean if I’ve got blood in my stool? I could imagine myself walking down that aisle, looking at everything it was leading to—block parties, china patterns, tacking a Mrs. onto my name—and bolting.

  You’ve got a good head on your shoulder, Kitty. You always make the right decisions.

  It had been hard to fight back tears when she said that. I wanted to see her so badly, I hated that she’d left in the first place. Being acquitted, labeled Unjustly Accused Woman, and the newfound fame that came with it had provided loads of new opportunities, and she’d made the most of them, but there were innumerable things she could have done here in the States. She’d claimed she wanted to travel, but I had a feeling there was more to it than that, more in the vein of if you love something, set it free. It was her way of letting me be my own person, not something for her to mold in her image, however unintentionally. She had flaws, so many of them, she’d done terrible things, but no matter how wrong she had been setting that fire, no matter how brutally misguided, she loved me unconditionally, no question. Her remorse and regret had nothing to do with her crimes, and her actions may have damaged me and a lot of what I could have been, but it didn’t negate the fact that she loved me the way a parent loves their child.

  Kyle knew that I missed her. He would have encouraged me to go see her if I’d ever bothered to mention the fact that she’d offered to buy me a ticket anywhere. But I couldn’t go because sometimes I didn’t think I could trust myself to come back. I might fall under her spell again, it being just the two of us like it had been all those years. I loved him, but I loved her too. I’d wait until she came back to the U.S.

  “How’s it feel to be twenty-one?” Kyle asked, turning away from the Cheshire Cat’s grin to look down at me. He ran the pad of his thumb over the streak of paint on my cheek.

  “Pretty good, I guess.”

  “You got any complaints to register?”

  “I could do without the whole ISIS thing.”

  “I’ll see what I can do about that.” He let me go and headed for the staircase. “I have a present for you.”

  I watched him take a few steps upstairs, knowing exactly what he was talking about, but I took Caroline’s advice and played dumb. “Really?”

  “Let me go grab it.”

  I stood there for a moment, one foot planted on the step, looking over my shoulder at the explosion of Wonderland in my new living room, before I followed him upstairs.

  Visit melissasimonsonbooks.com for more information and updates on new releases!

 

 

 


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