The Emporium sign is faded, and the whole building looks as though it could collapse in on itself at any moment. Majestic is basically a ghost town. Most of the businesses have shut down, and FOR SALE or FOR RENT signs hang in the windows. There’s some new construction, though, like Carly’s house. Builders’ trailers all around.
Dad’s always complaining about urban sprawl—when he’s not specifically hating on the homos who are moving into Virginia Beach. There’s this older neighborhood near our house that’s being renovated, and one of the shops has a rainbow flag flying off the balcony. Even though it’s on our way to school, Dad makes Paulie and me walk five extra blocks to steer clear of it.
My dad’s the biggest homophobe in the world, which is why I knew I could never come out to him. Tanith led me to believe that staying with Carly was temporary, but now I wonder if I’ll ever have a home to go back to.
I loathe the thought of having inherited any of my father’s traits, but Carly’s right. I do love to read.
The front door to the Emporium is propped open with a cowboy boot full of sand. At noon it’s scorching outside. A giant fan whirs in the bookstore, where an old geezer is hunched over a rippling newspaper.
The job isn’t posted on any window or bulletin board that I can see. I walk up to the checkout desk and stand there, shifting my weight from one blister to another. A woman’s on the phone. She finally notices me and sticks up an index finger.
This has to be the dustiest hole in the West. I run my finger along the counter, and it comes away caked. Every surface has this thick yellow pollen from the pine trees. I hear the woman say, “I think I just got a set in, Dutch. Hang on.”
She sets the phone aside and rises to her feet. She’s, like, six-two. Her eyes widen. “You’re Carly’s girl.”
Scream. “I came to apply for the job?”
She fans her freckled face. “Whoo, I wish this heat would let up. It’s the altitude, you know. Makes it feel hotter.” She’s examining me like I’m Carly.
It’s not fair. I’ve experienced enough hatred and discrimination already in my life to fill a cesspool of bigotry.
“Supposedly you have a job opening?”
Timber Toes breaks off her stare and bends down, disappearing from view. I hear books slide aside on a shelf under the counter. She pops back up and says, “I’m sorry. The position’s been filled.” She totes a set of tattered paperbacks to the phone.
Sure it has. No one’s going to hire me, and the irony is, it’s not even because I’m gay.
A rolling cart clattering out from between the stacks snags my attention, and my jaw drops. It’s Finn.
I stomp over. “What are you doing here?” She picks up a book from the cart, reads the spine, and saunters down the aisle.
I follow behind. “Why did you tell Arlo not to give me the job? I really needed that job.”
“You don’t want to work there. I did you a favor.”
“Oh, I’m so grateful.”
She turns her head slightly to glance at me.
She has olive skin and oval eyes, like she’s part Asian. No, not Asian. Native American?
“When did you get this job?” I ask her.
“Yesterday.” She peers at the books on the top shelf, her neck stretching taut. Her braid sluices down her back.
“So if you quit the Egg Drop-In,” I think aloud, “Arlo needs a waitress in a hurry.” I should get over there before someone else applies.
“I didn’t quit,” she says.
It takes me a minute to process. “You have two jobs?”
“Three.” She reaches up and separates two books, then crams the book she’s shelving into the slot.
“You can’t have three jobs. There aren’t that many jobs in this hick town. Plus, you suck at this one.” I remove the book and put it in the right spot, between Mc and Ma.
Her eyes meet mine. She has opaque pupils and infinite irises. The darkest eyes I’ve ever seen.
“Finn, would you mind helping with this donation?” Timber Toes casts a long shadow down the aisle. To me she goes, “What did you say your name was again?”
“Alyssa,” I tell her. Not Carly, okay?
“Alyssa. Alyssa,” she repeats, wandering off.
Finn hands me a book off the cart and says, “Maybe you could have these done by the time I get back. Alyssa.” She doesn’t smile, but there’s a glint of amusement in her eyes.
I hate her, but she’s kind of hot.
No, she’s not. She’s not.
I throw down the book and race out of there.
By the time I get back to Carly’s, I’m barely holding back the tears. It’s so hot and my feet hurt; my lips are dry and chapped, and I’m chewing grit. I peel off my sweaty tee and jump in the shower. The water is soothing, streaming down my sunburned face. My room has its own shower and whirlpool. I wonder how many guests Carly entertains here. I don’t really want to know. I don’t want to believe she’s a prosti—call girl. Call it what you want.
Over the course of a week, how many times did Tanith have to beg her? What would’ve happened if Carly had said no?
The cordless phone is ringing when I open the door. It rings constantly. To drown it out, along with my feeling of total rejection, I go downstairs and turn on the TV. One of my soaps is on—The Young and the Restless. Tanith watches it too, along with General Hospital and One Life to Live. She fills me in on anything I missed, or at least she used to.
Dad would get so disgusted at how addicted we were to such drivel, and it was true. The story lines were absurd. Tanith and I would laugh—in private.
I never thought I’d miss Tanith.
I stare at the TV and blank out. Curl into myself. A jagged saw in my stomach rips up my insides.
Damn you, Sarah. Why did you hook up with me in the first place? Did you ever love me? Because I loved you with all my being, Sarah. I risked everything for you. I always thought it was about us, that nothing or no one could tear us apart.
November
Sarah found a place, she said, where the two of you could do it. You’d been putting her off because you knew what a big step it was. You never told Sarah you were a virgin. You let her believe… she just assumed… you were older, more experienced. You were scared. You didn’t know how.
A nor’easter was blowing in off the Atlantic that day, and it was freezing. Sarah’s teeth were chattering when she asked, “When are you getting your driver’s license?”
“I don’t know. Never.” You squeezed Sarah’s hand in your coat pocket and snugged her closer as she hurried to wherever she was taking you.
“Why?” She had to raise her voice over the roaring wind. “I can’t wait to drive.”
You’d gone out over the summer with Dad to the school’s parking lot to practice driving. Dad laughed at you because you drove like his mother, he said. “You can give it a little more gas,” he said. You stepped on the brake by accident and whiplashed both of you. Then you overcompensated by jamming your foot on the gas. Tires squealed, and Dad bellowed, “Slow down! Hit the brake. Turn. Turn, dammit!” He yanked the wheel, and you covered your ears, but the squealing tires mashed with the crunch of the fender against the building.
Dad said, “Geez, are you trying to kill us?”
You almost burst into tears.
He leaned across you and opened the driver’s-side door. “I think that’s enough for today.”
It was enough for forever.
Tanith asked, “How’d it go?” and Dad grumbled, “Don’t ask.” Later he apologized for losing it, but he’d already made you feel like crap.
“How much farther?” you shouted at Sarah.
“Almost there.” The wind whipped up her loose hair. She began to jog, tugging you along by your pocket. You ended up at Gracie Field.
“What are we doing here?”
“You’ll see.”
She was a plotter. A schemer. You didn’t know that then.
Sarah pulled up short at the baseball dugout. Next to it was a structure enclosed in aluminum sheeting. It was locked. Sarah held up a key.
“Where’d you get that?”
“My dad coaches Little League.” The key unlocked the door and Sarah pulled it open. The interior was dark and arctic cold. It was the equipment shed. “We can’t do it in the dirt,” you said. Sarah pointed to a corner, where a couple of blankets had been tossed. She crouched down on the ground and took out of her backpack a handful of heat packs, the kind you put in your gloves or socks. She upended the sack, and an avalanche of heat packs poured out. “The dollar store was having a sale.”
You laughed. She had had this all planned out.
She talked too much. “Alyssa, I want you so bad. I’ve never done this with anyone, so you have to tell me what I’m doing right and wrong.”
Like you knew. Instinct kicked in.
“Oh, yeah. That feels good,” she said. “How’d you do that? Oh my God. Do you want me to do that to you?”
You clamped a hand over her mouth and said, “Just shut up, Sarah.”
Her voice sounds in my head, and I cover my ears. Shut up shut up shut up.
There are three e-mails from Paulie in my in-box. None from Dad. Or any of my friends. My relationship with Sarah cost me all my friends.
I open Paulie’s first message:
yo morron. its borring w/o u here. its weerd. whydd u go and leav me?
“I didn’t leave you,” I say aloud. “You were there, Paulie. You know why.”
ur laptop, old iPod, cd player and entir dvd set ar now in my posseshun.
“You think,” I reply. His spelling’s pretty good for being dyslexic. But he’s becoming a smart-ass. Who’d he learn that from?
I open his next e-mail.
she cam over. she askt wher u’d gon and i tol her i dint no. she siad i was lying. i tol her to go to h-e-dubble-l.
My heart pounds. She came over?
She siad to tell u
The e-mail ends.
I close it and open the third message.
Paul is not allowed to contact you.
I flinch. Who was that? Dad? Tanith never gets on the computer. She calls herself a confirmed Luddite.
Sarah came over. A little too late to talk, isn’t it? Why didn’t we talk more? Maybe that was the problem. Maybe if I’d communicated better, or she felt she could talk to me about whatever was bothering her.
How did I make it hard for her to tell me? We were always open, weren’t we?
I turn off the computer and resume lying on the sofa, listening to the dark and my breathing in and out. I used to lie in the shed with my ear on Sarah’s chest to listen to the steady beating of her heart. I knew—I believed—we were forever. Now I know that forever is relative and that Sarah’s definition was different from mine. My loneliness has a sound—the whooshing waves in a conch when I hold it to my ear and imagine an eternity of emptiness.