Read The Truth About You & Me Online

Authors: Amanda Grace

Tags: #teen, #teen fiction, #teen novel, #teenlit, #ya, #ya fiction, #ya novel, #ya book, #young adult, #young adult novel, #young adult fiction, #young adult book

The Truth About You & Me (4 page)

BOOK: The Truth About You & Me
12.45Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

“The '80s, thank you very much. What about you?”

“What about me?” I asked, staring at the trail again, realizing too late I'd opened a door I should have left alone. Why had I asked you how old you were when clearly that only shone a light on my own age?

“What song was popular when you were born?”

If I'd told you it was a song by Diddy, before he was P. Diddy, back when he was Puff Daddy, would you have known? Would you have known I was just a kid, that I wasn't worth your words and your smiles and your laughter?

So I waved my hand in the air and said, “I'm not sure exactly. But it has
got
to be better than ‘La Bamba.'”

“Hey, some great music came out of the '80s,” you said, your voice both playful and indignant.

“So did Pee Wee Herman.” I shuddered in an exaggerated way.

“Oh please, like the '90s were better,” you said, bumping your shoulder with mine. You knew I was born in the 1990s—knew I was younger than you—but I'm sure you were thinking of the other half of that decade, the early part.

I grinned at you and bumped back. “We
are
responsible for Nirvana,” I said.

I looked it up when I got home that day. Kurt Cobain died before I was born, you know. Three
years
before I was born. I don't know why I brought up Nirvana at all. I don't even like them. But when people think of the 1990s and Seattle—Enumclaw being a suburb of Seattle—they can't not think of Nirvana.

So maybe in that moment, on that quiet mountain trail, I unknowingly planted the idea that I was older, that I was around when Nirvana was still together. If that was true, I'd be at least nineteen, and that would make everything that happened okay.

“And how can I possibly argue with that?” you said.

We were nearing the top by then, a place where the trail plateaus. Voldemort ran ahead, chasing a squirrel into the brush, and you let him go, turning to see the vista before us.

I'd been wrong about the fog. By the time we reached the top, it was little more than wisps hanging low over a few distant fields, clinging to the edges of the big red barns.

“This view never gets old,” you said, your breathing still labored as we stared out at the sprawling dairy farms and green foothills. “I could see it every day and never get tired of it.”

Did you know you can see my high school from the top of that mountain? I didn't point it out that day, for reasons that must be obvious now, but if you ever go hiking there again, look to the west. You'll see its tan buildings stretched out in the distance, where the green farmland meets the infinite blue sky.

“Yeah, it's gorgeous. I just wish we could see the mountain,” I said. By “the mountain” I meant Mt. Rainier, of course.

You turned around and glanced back, but the higher elevations were still shrouded in gray clouds. On a clear day it's breathtaking, all craggy rock and snow-covered peaks, the kind of thing that sells on postcards all over Seattle. In Enumclaw, it's up close and personal. Zoomed-in.

Voldemort jogged out of the tree line then, and I reached down to scratch him behind the ears. He sat down, leaning into my leg, and this time I didn't cringe at the slobber and mud that was sure to adhere to my clothes, because if he was yours, how could I not adore him?

“He likes you,” you said.

I smiled up at you, still patting the dog. “Golden retrievers like everyone,” I said.

“Ahh, but he is no ordinary dog,” you said, your blue eyes bright, alive in a way they weren't inside your classroom.

“Oh?”

“He's Lord Voldemort!”

I laughed and we headed back down the trail, which was much more leisurely then the strained hike up.

We fit together, me and you, like two pieces snapping into place.

Ten years isn't so much, you know. If I'd been twenty and you'd been thirty, would anyone have even cared? It seems cruel that four little years were so important, so life-changing.

It was only two that mattered, really. The difference between sixteen and eighteen.

The difference between love that can span a lifetime, and love that can never happen at all.

That afternoon, I
sat curled up on my bed, leaning against the wall, my fingers on the keyboard, typing your name into a little white box.

I liked the name “Bennett” the instant you said it. It suited you. It was aristocratic, and sophisticated, and it fit my image of you sipping tea or ale or some such drink in a foreign country.

I don't know why I was so immediately fascinated by you, but I was. I'm sure I'm not the only person in the history of the universe who has read so much between the lines, to believe something is growing and building even if it hasn't been acknowledged.

Like that website, Missed Connections, that's just filled with stories of guys and girls meeting and going separate ways and never forgetting each other, even if they'd never actually spoken. It's a beautiful sentiment, don't you think? That some lonely guy living in a big city thinks he met his soul mate even though he never spoke to her, and then she slipped through his fingers, so now he wants a second chance?

It would be nice to know if you believed in things like soul mates. Maybe if you do, we'll find our way back together again.

In any case, I wasn't on that site then. I was on Facebook, and I'd just found your page, and my heart went whoosh when your picture came up. It must have sounded like a baby's sonogram heartbeat, moving so fast like that.

“Bennett Cartwright” isn't such a common name, I guess, because it was so easy to find your page. You were wearing a T-shirt that hugged your muscled frame and your brown hair was shorter in the picture, not quite falling into your eyes like it does now.

You didn't look that much older than the seniors who'd just graduated last spring, when I was a sophomore. Like maybe life didn't span so far between us.

Your last status update?

New quarter has started. Let the shenanigans begin.

Does that strike you as a funny update, looking back? You were twenty-five. I know that now. Twenty-five and three-quarters when we met, because we celebrated your twenty-sixth birthday together. That seems young for a college professor.

I didn't know it then, but that year was to be your first as a full-time, full-year professor. The year prior, you'd done only a few classes, not a full load.

That day, when I stared at your Facebook page, I wanted to know what kind of shenanigans you thought would be in store. I wanted to be a part of them. By that point in my life, I'd never been a part of anything that could be described as a shenanigan. No pranks, no detention, not even so much as a week of being grounded.

I was So Very Perfect.

I scanned your page. It wasn't private, and I was able to see all kinds of pictures. I shouldn't tell you this, but I saved a few of them on my computer.

I guess it doesn't matter if I tell you that.
Mom
took my computer away a few days ago, which is why I have to handwrite all this. I'm sorry for my handwriting, by the way. I hate it. This letter looks like it was written as part of a first grader's alphabet handbook: upright and rounded where it's supposed to be, angled just right elsewhere.

Sterile.

But I'm pretty much on lockdown right now, without a phone or a computer or anything, so you're stuck with it.

That day, as I scanned your page, I found something I didn't even know I was looking for. I smiled and sank back into my bed, that one word ringing over and over in my head.

Single.

You were single.

You should know, Bennett, that I was happy. It wasn't because I thought we'd get together. I knew that couldn't happen. I didn't even expect you to want a girl like me, not like that anyway.

But I wanted you to be single the same way a little girl wants her pop star, boy-band idol to be single. It's not because she thinks she's going to marry him. It's because she can't stand to picture the boy she loves—even from afar—with another girl, loving on her in real life when all she has is her imagination.

I wanted you to be single because I thought it would just about ruin those two hours of class every day to think of you married. To think of you going home to a pretty, womanly wife, maybe your high school sweetheart, and knowing I was still
in
high school.

All I wanted was to talk with you, maybe build up some sweeping
Pride and Prejudice
love story for us.

All in my head, of course, but what else was there for me to do? In this house with all that homework and expectations and pressure? My parents loved me—I don't know if that's true anymore, after all this—but I wanted a different kind of love.

And so knowing you were single made it okay for me to fantasize about you asking me to stay after class. Made it okay to imagine kissing you.

I know you'll think that's a stupid thing to say. Because your marital status was never the important piece of information.

No, Bennett. The most important thing, according to you, according to
them
, is that I'm sixteen years old.

I wished all
weekend that your class was more than Tuesday-Wednesday-Thursday. I wished with all my heart it was five days a week.

When I walked into your classroom on Tuesday—five minutes early, of course—and you saw what I was wearing, your eyes dipped lower, like they did on that first day, but it was for a different reason.

You were looking at my chest because of the T-shirt I was wearing. Because I'd prowled the malls all day Sunday, after our little hike, and I was wearing a black shirt with
NIRVANA
splashed across it.

You grinned at me in that unabashed way of yours, in the way of a man who knows who he is, what he wants. “Well played,” you said.

I smiled. “I was going to wear my Hammer pants, but they were in the wash.”

You shook your head, fighting a smile and losing miserably.

You were back in your sweater-and-button-down-with-slacks ensemble, and I have to admit I really liked that. I liked it because the Bennett I'd met on the mountain, with the long-sleeved T-shirt and Nike warm-ups, was meant only for me. Katie and all of your other students only got Mr. Cartwright, the professor.

We had something no one knew about.

It wasn't that we were trying to keep secrets, it was just that they came naturally to us. We shared that hike and we came back that Tuesday and we both knew something had shifted, but neither of us spoke of it.

I hadn't told my mom about you when I returned home after the hike.

I didn't tell Katie about it while we sat together in class that day.

But I thought of it, over and over.

I felt like an adult with you, Bennett. Not like a lost girl with a pretty, perfect shell, but like an adult in control of her life, going after the things she wanted. I felt like I'd finally stepped into the cockpit and decided to chart my own course.

Do you see me differently, now that you know the truth? Do you think I'm just a kid … and a stupid one at that? Or do you still see the girl I was all along? The smart one who aced all your tests and made you laugh?

That day, you paced leisurely back and forth as you lectured, and on occasion you caught my eye. Only for a moment, but that moment, it mattered to me.

It mattered more than you knew.

BOOK: The Truth About You & Me
12.45Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

One Last Night by Melanie Milburne
Garrett by Sawyer Bennett
Unforgettable Embrace by Clancy, Joanne
Sobre la libertad by John Stuart Mill
Phoenix Without Ashes by Edward Bryant, Harlan Ellison
Dragon's Desire by Delilah Devlin
Uncorked by Rebecca Rohman
A Tale of Two Cities by John Silvester