Just Remember to Breathe (Thompson Sisters)

Home > Other > Just Remember to Breathe (Thompson Sisters) > Page 3
Just Remember to Breathe (Thompson Sisters) Page 3

by Sheehan-Miles, Charles


  “No, that was already two questions. My turn.” I thought, then blurted out, “Why do you smell like strawberries?”

  She blushed, a deep red. Oh. My. God. Why did I ask that? Idiot!

  Finally, she spoke, a shy smile on her face. “It’s um, my shampoo. I like strawberries. I wear strawberry lip gloss, too.”

  My turn to freak. Because the thought of her, and strawberry lip gloss, was too much to contemplate. Her lips were perfectly curved, the lower one slightly pouty. And, to be honest, every time I looked at her body it made me want to touch her. Anywhere. Everywhere.

  “My turn,” she said, turning toward me. She had a mischievous look on her face. “Do you have a girlfriend?”

  Alarm bells were screeching in my head. I said, “Um… not exactly. I’ve been seeing a girl, but not sure where it’s headed. If anywhere.”

  She smiled.

  I smiled.

  “What about you?” I asked. “Is there a boyfriend?”

  “Sort of,” she said. “I’m dating a guy named Mike. I don’t know if it’s serious or not, either.”

  I swallowed. She had a Mike back home. I had a Hailey back home. And this trip was only two months anyway. My brain was telling me, Stay the hell away, Dylan! But let’s be honest. I’ve never been that smart anyway.

  Crying: Not. Going. To. Happen. (Alex)

  Okay, look, I’m not exactly an emotional basket case or anything. Not a drama queen. But Dylan had been a big part of my life for a long time. And sitting there next to him in Doctor Forrester’s office was literally torture.

  When the appointment was over we got up, awkwardly. Forrester shook our hands. I turned and left, without a word, while Dylan was still trying to figure out how to get out of his chair and collect himself.

  I went straight to the Financial Aid office.

  The office was packed, of course. Beginning of the school year, and people were trying to sort out their financial aid. Every single person who had a problem just had to choose that moment right then to go to Financial Aid to get it sorted out. So when I asked to see Sandra Barnhart, I was told to take a seat. And I waited. And waited. And waited.

  She finally let me into her office. She was exhausted. Hair frazzled, her desk was stacked high with papers. When I entered the room she was fishing the last pills out of a bottle of Tylenol.

  Not a good sign.

  “Hi, there, what can I do for you.”

  “Hi… I’m Alex Thompson. We spoke on the phone the other day… my work-study assignment was being switched?”

  “Alex, Alex… oh yes, I remember.”

  I shifted in my seat. “Um… I was wondering if it’s too late to switch to something else. Anything else.”

  She frowned. “That might be difficult. Generally, the work-study assignments are made at the beginning of summer. To be honest, you were lucky to get this one. Doctor Forrester’s contract wasn’t confirmed until last week, which was why we had a last minute opening. What’s the problem?”

  Oh, God. I didn’t really have a good reason. At least, not one I could explain. I’ve been assigned next to my ex-boyfriend. Yeah, that would go over well. I tried to think of something, and stupidly I just said, “I’m not sure it’s a good fit.”

  She sighed. “I can tell you for sure, right now, that there aren’t any other openings. You’re actually the fifth student to come in and ask to be reassigned. It might be possible for you to switch with someone; you could always post something on the bulletin board outside. But I can’t promise you anything. Although you can always check back in a couple weeks. We often drop a few students in the first two weeks. Something might come up.”

  I nodded. Disappointed. This was going to make for a very difficult year. I did not want to be stuck working with Dylan for the entire year. It would turn what had been a pretty wonderful college experience into misery.

  “I’m sorry I couldn’t be more helpful,” she said.

  Okay, I can take a hint. I was being dismissed. I thanked her, and got out of the office. I could survive a few weeks, and then I’d come back and get a job washing dishes or something equally entertaining.

  Back on the street, I walked toward the dorm.

  I was not going to cry. I refused.

  Crying: Not. Going. To. Happen.

  I remember being charmed and intrigued by Dylan. I’d never met anyone like him. My life was centered around academics. I worked, and worked damned hard. But I also had all kinds of support, from my parents, who hired tutors and piano teachers; to my sisters, who helped each other in subjects we had trouble with. We’d lived a block from Golden Gate Park in a wonderful old rowhouse ever since my dad retired from the Foreign Service.

  Dylan was… so different. He’d been homeless, for God’s sake. He didn’t talk much about the difficult parts of his life… at least not when we first met. But it was clear we were from different worlds. But he was strong. He had to be, to come back from a drinking and drug problem, go back to school on his own, get the kind of grades he got.

  I fell fast.

  We spent the twelve hours of our flight to Tel Aviv talking while most of the rest of the students were asleep. I remember playing a stupid game of questions, until some of them got uncomfortable (Do you have a girlfriend?) and we changed the subject. To favorite books. Harry Potter. Hunger Games. Both of us hated Twilight, but loved Katniss Everdeen.

  “I love a strong heroine,” he told me with a grin. Oh, my God. How could someone so cute be so perfect?

  But he was also a contradiction. He was passionate about Hemingway, and could get lost talking about his favorite book, The Sun Also Rises. He looked mystified by my attraction to Milan Kundera.

  The exchange students spent the first two nights in Tel Aviv at the Youth Hostel. We attended a bunch of information sessions, then went to a big formal dinner. Dylan looked uncomfortable at the dinner. I don’t think he was used to formal functions like that. Afterward, a bunch of us walked down to the Old City of Jaffa, which we’d seen during an official tour earlier in the day.

  We sat on the pier, looking out at the Mediterranean Sea. He smoked, and we talked. I told him about my sisters (all five of them) and he talked about his friends.

  “We just kind of fell in with each other,” he said. “Bunch of drama geeks, mostly. All the kids who were mostly outcasts in middle school. But… you know how it goes. The wrong person sleeps with the other wrong person, and drama.”

  I laughed. I’d never slept with anyone, but I knew all about high school drama.

  I kept stealing glances at him, and I knew he was doing the same. His blue eyes were incredible, and he had adorably long hair, growing into loose curls. At one point I found myself resisting the urge to run my fingers through them, which would not have been a very cool and collected thing to do. I carefully kept an inch of space between us, because if we’d touched I might have thrown myself on him. Oh, God, it was intense.

  I wonder if that’s why it was so painful when we split up? Because we’d fallen so hard, so fast. I lost myself in him.

  One thing I knew for sure. I would not allow that to happen again.

  When I got back to the room, Kelly was there. She was lying on her bed, staring at the ceiling. Absolutely still, eyes wide open.

  I’m not sure I’ve ever seen Kelly stationary, except possibly while passed out.

  “Kelly!” I asked. “Are you okay?”

  She burst into tears.

  “What’s wrong?” I dropped my bag and rushed to her side.

  “Joel,” she said, then erupted in a new burst of weeping.

  “Oh, honey,” I said, sliding onto the bed next to her.

  “He needs space. He wants to ‘play the field,’ whatever the hell that means.”

  “Son of a bitch,” I said. “What an asshole.”

  She burst into a new round of tears. Was this what it was like living with me last spring? No wonder she got so impatient. I hugged her, not saying a word.

&nb
sp; After a few minutes, she stopped sobbing, then said, “So, um, how was your day?” She giggled, but not a good giggle… more like she was going to go into hysterics.

  “Well,” I said carefully. “It turns out that Dylan Paris is out of the Army and going to Columbia. And we’re assigned to the same work-study job.”

  She sat up suddenly. “Oh, my God, what? You have got to be shitting me.” It’s possible the neighbors three blocks down heard her screech.

  I nodded my head, miserably.

  “It was super awkward. And… hostile.”

  “What did he say?”

  I squeezed my eyes shut, trying to stop myself from crying. “He said he’d hoped we wouldn’t run into each other.”

  She reached out and grabbed my hand. “Oh my God. I didn’t think it was possible to hate him even more, but I do. Let’s go. Right now. And get drunk.”

  I nodded, because right that minute, it seemed like the best possible idea.

  Ground Rules (Dylan)

  “I think we need to set some ground rules,” she said.

  It was the third day of classes, and our first day actually working for Doctor Forrester. Forrester had a gigantic pile of information, books, files and source documents. It was a disorganized mess. Our first assignment was to begin organizing it and cross-referencing it. We divided up the work fairly easily: I set up a database, and she sorted the material and began feeding it to me.

  Unfortunately, it was difficult to work together when we spent most of the time either glaring at each other or ignoring each other.

  “What are you talking about?” I asked.

  “Look… like it or not, we have to work together.”

  I nodded. I’d tried to get reassigned to a different work-study assignment, but there weren’t any openings.

  “So, let’s go get a cup of coffee. And talk. And figure out how we can do this without being at each other’s throats.”

  I felt a lump in my throat. It was one thing to sit here in Forrester’s office with her. It was another thing entirely to go somewhere else with her, and sit, like normal people, and talk about anything. But she was right. If we were going to be doing this every other day, we had to set some ground rules, or we were both going to be miserable.

  “Fine,” I said. “When?”

  “I’m finished with classes for the day. What about right now?”

  I nodded. “All right.”

  I slowly stood. I was in a lot of pain. The day before I’d had my first physical therapy session at the Brooklyn VA hospital. Loads of fun. My physical therapist was a forty-five-year-old former Marine, and he was of the school of thought that pain was good for you. Problem was, it’s hard to argue your point with someone missing a leg. Seriously, what sympathy was he going to give?

  I never liked Marines anyway.

  So I followed her to the coffee shop around the corner from Forrester’s office. It was nice, a small place, with a few outdoor seats. I was incredibly self-conscious as we walked. She’d picked up a New Yorker’s pace during her year in college here. I, on the other hand, moved at something like the pace of a turtle, thanks to the gimp leg and the cane.

  She slowed down to keep pace with me. About halfway there, she finally said something.

  “So… what happened to your leg?”

  I shrugged, gave a terse answer. “Hajis thought I would look better without it, I guess. Roadside bomb.”

  She sighed. “I’m sorry.”

  “It’s not so bad. I got to go to the hospital, and lived. That makes me lucky.” What I didn’t say: unlike Roberts, who left that roadside in a bag.

  At the coffee shop, she said, “You grab a seat. I’ll get us coffee. You still take yours loaded?”

  I nodded, and muttered, “Thank you,” then eased myself into a seat next to the sidewalk.

  While I waited for her, I took out my phone and scanned through my email. Junk. More junk. Email from Mom. I’d answer that one later. She was naturally worried about me. Some things would never change. For the longest time I’d been angry with my mom over kicking me out when I quit school. Nowadays, I was grateful for it. It gave me a chance to get some hard knocks early. It gave me a chance to get my head on straight and figure out my priorities when I was young enough the damage wouldn’t be permanent. Tough love, they call it in the program. She was a believer. I’d have never guessed she’d have five years clean and sober, so something was working there.

  When Alex returned to the table, bearing two gigantic cups of coffee, I put the phone away.

  “Thank you,” I said. I sipped the coffee. Oh, that was good.

  She smiled, met my eyes, then looked away very quickly. The brief eye contact, which remarkably wasn’t a glare, twisted at my stomach and made me look at the ground.

  “Okay,” I said. “Ground rules.”

  “Yes,” she said.

  We were silent. What, did she expect me to come up with them?

  I shook my head, then said, “Okay, you start. It was your idea.”

  “Fair enough.” She looked at me thoughtfully, then said, “All right. The first rule. We never, ever talk about Israel.”

  I closed my eyes, and nodded. Talking about it would hurt way too much. “Agreed,” I muttered.

  She looked relieved, which somehow broke my heart all over again.

  I spoke. “We don’t talk about what happened after, either. Not when I visited you in San Francisco. Or the year between. Or the year after.”

  “Especially not the year after,” she said. Her eyes were glistening as she looked at the table.

  We were silent again. This was just a barrel of laughs. I felt like I was attending a funeral.

  “I don’t know if I can do this,” I said.

  “Why not?” she replied.

  “Because … because, well, sometimes it hurts, Alex. A little. A lot. Jesus Christ.”

  She looked away, and damn if her eyes weren’t beautiful. Her lashes were like a mile long.

  “If we’re going to get through this year, I think we have to move past that,” she said.

  “Yeah.”

  “It’ll be like we’re strangers.”

  I shrugged. “Okay.” Like that could happen.

  “We start over. We just met. You’re some guy who just got out of the Army, and I’m a girl from San Francisco going to college here. We’ve got nothing in common. No connection. Not friends. Certainly not… what we were.”

  Not friends. Of course not. How in hell could we be friends, after what we’d been through?

  I nodded, feeling miserable. Shit, it’s not like I had any friends anyway, not anymore. I’d lost touch with the ones from Atlanta, who couldn’t deal with what I’d become. And the ones in Afghanistan… except for Sherman and Roberts, I’d never gotten close to any of them. Roberts was dead, and Sherman was still out in the boonies.

  “I don’t know what we were, anyway. None of it ever made any sense.”

  She shrugged, and then hugged her arms across her chest, and I felt like crap for what I’d said.

  “I’m sorry,” I said.

  “Why?” she asked, looking away from me, out at the street.

  Her lower lip was trembling, and I wanted to hit myself in the head with a sharp pointy object.

  “It’s true, isn’t it? We never did make any sense?”

  “Oh, God. Let’s not do this. Please.”

  “Okay.”

  Her face was twitching, and it was obvious she was holding back a tear.

  “Look,” I said. “This sucks. But we’ll be okay, all right? It’s only a few hours a week, anyway. What we had… it was another world. We were in a foreign country, being exposed to all kinds of amazing stuff. We weren’t ourselves, our real selves. It was… it was fantasy. A beautiful fantasy, but fiction all the same, okay?”

  She nodded, quickly, then wiped her eye with a fist, smearing her mascara.

  “For what it’s worth, I’m sorry.”

  “We’re already
breaking the rules,” she said.

  “No. We’re not. No more talk about the past. From this point forward, we only talk about now. You’re absolutely right. Any more rules?”

  “I don’t know.”

  I frowned, then said, “Fine. What do you think of Doctor Forrester, anyway?”

  She shook her head. “He’s a giant fake.”

  I raised my eyebrows. “Really?”

  “Well, yeah. Just look at him. Tweed jacket! He wrote one novel fifteen years ago, won a National Book Award, and he’s been coasting on that ever since.”

  I grinned. “That is one hell of a case of … um….”

  Oh shit, not now. I couldn’t think. Sometimes this happens to me now. I forget words, phrases. I closed my eyes, trying to center, let my mind come at it from a different direction. I pictured a typewriter, an old manual one, and it popped in. “Writer’s block.”

  She giggled. Still upset, but the change of subject helped. It was nice to see a little color on her cheeks. “Do you still write?” she asked.

  I nodded. “Of course.”

  “What about?”

  I shrugged. “The war right now. It’s all … stream of consciousness, I guess. Not organized in any way. Just trying to get my thoughts down. My therapist down in Atlanta said it might help.”

  She turned and looked at me, really looked at me, for the first time, I think, since we’d run into each other three days before.

  “Your therapist?”

  I shrugged. “Along with the gimp leg, I’m technically diagnosed with Post Traumatic Stress Disorder. And traumatic brain injury. Got my brainpan rattled when the bomb went off, you know? It’s all labels, anyway.”

  “What do you mean?”

  I frowned. “I’m just… I’m not exactly the guy you knew, Alex. Sometimes things here… they don’t seem as… as real. As it was over there. Maybe I’ve become an adrenaline junkie. Reality just isn’t colorful enough for me.”

  She sighed. “I felt that way for the longest time after we got back from Israel.”

  “You’re breaking your rules again.”

  “Oh, right.”

  She paused, then spoke again. “But I really did. It was so intense, and interesting and colorful. Then all of the sudden things were mundane, and grey, and it was get up and go to school and do homework and none of it seemed to matter as much.”

 

‹ Prev