Filed to story: If He Had Been With Me Book PDF Free
“Hi, sweetie,” my mom says. She is smiling and holding hands with my father. He stands up and hugs me.
“Had a good day, Autumn?” he asks. I nod. He steps back and looks at me quizzically. “Your hair?” he says.
“I dyed it brown again,” I say. “Yesterday.”
“Yesterday?” he says.
“Yeah,” I say. We smile at each other. We are both pleased that he noticed the subtle difference so quickly.
“Finny told me you made friends with a goat,” Aunt Angelina says.
“Yeah. I want a goat, Mom,” I say, then I look at Aunt Angelina. “Finny was talking about me?” I say.
“He gave a detailed description of you rocking and crooning to a little goat,” she says. Her eyes focus over my shoulder “There he is,” she says. I turn around.
Finny is walking toward us, holding hands with Sylvie.
“Hey, everybody,” he says. Sylvie grins and waves with her fingers. My father stands up.
“And who is this?” he says.
“Uncle Tom, this is Sylvie,” Finny says. “Sylvie, Uncle Tom.”
“Hi,” she says and grins again.
“Nice to meet you,” Dad says. “Here,” he adds, stepping to the side, “I’ll move so you girls can sit together.”
It seems my father cannot tell the not-so-subtle difference between Sylvie and me.
I am now sitting between my father and Sylvie. Finny is on the other side of her, and The Mothers are talking together on the other side of Dad.
I stare straight ahead at the patch of sky where the fireworks will be. Finny and Sylvie are holding hands next to me. I have a choice. I can either continue to sit with them in silence, or I can try to be friendly and have one of the shallow conversations Finny and I sometimes have when we are together.
“How much longer do you think it will be?” she asks. Finny looks at his watch.
“Ten minutes,” he says. She sighs.
“Have you ever noticed that time goes slower while you’re waiting for fireworks?” she says.
“Well, time always goes slower whenever you’re waiting for something,” he says.
“I think it’s even slower when you’re waiting for fireworks,” she says. Finny opens his mouth.
“I agree,” I say. Sylvie looks at me in surprise. “I think it’s because when we’re not looking at our watches, we’re looking at the light fading in the sky. The anticipation never escapes our perception.”
“Huh,” Finny says.
“I guess so,” Sylvie says. She looks like she thinks that there will be a catch to agreeing with me. We’ve never spoken before outside of necessary pleasantries at school or the bus stop:
Excuse me. Thank you. Hey, you dropped this.
“So, by your logic, if we look at the lake instead of the sky, time will go faster,” Finny says.
“Well, only as fast as when we’re waiting for something else,” I say.
“Okay, well, let’s look at the lake,” he says. I look at the lake. Once, in that time I call Before, my father decided to take Finny and I fishing. I was bored and climbed a tree overhanging the water. Finny thought that it was thrilling and sat all afternoon, telling me not to shake the branches of the tree because it was scaring the fish. I tried to be still for him. He caught one small fish. Aunt Angelina had no idea how to clean it, so she put it in the freezer where, after she had forgotten it, it froze completely solid. Sometimes Finny and I would take it out and examine it. We ran our fingers over the stiff scales and poked its frozen bubble eye, and talked about what it must be like to die. Months later, when his mother finally remembered to throw it out, we were sad for the loss.
“I went fishing in this lake once,” Finny says to Sylvie.
“Really?” she says.
“I was just thinking about that,” I say and laugh.
“Our frozen fish?” he says.
“Yeah,” I say.
“I don’t think time is going any faster,” Sylvie says, but just then the fireworks begin.
I’m quiet for the next hour, and let them whisper to each other. Sylvie leans her head on his shoulder. I think about Jamie somewhere in the park watching these fireworks without me. I imagine leaning against him, feeling him breathe next to me, and I ache as if I had not seen him for weeks.
The fireworks leave smoky patches in the sky, and the smell of sulfur drifts down on us. Next to me, Sylvie giggles. I am wishing she were not here. It is not fair; it was supposed to be just us, family.
I want to either be alone with Jamie or be alone with Finny.
The thought startles me, and I glance over at Finny’s handsome face, momentarily lit up by the lights in the sky. I never let myself think about what it is that makes me imagine us together sometimes or if it means anything. I love Jamie.
I look back at the sky.
Jamie and I are holding each other and listening to the rain. My wet hair is splattered across his bare chest and his hand is tucked inside my bikini top. The air is cool on my bare skin.
I’m glad now that it started raining.
I sigh and nuzzle his shoulder. His smell is so familiar to me, so comforting, that my muscles relax even more with every breath I take.
“You sleeping?” he mumbles.
“Not yet,” I say. I’m trying to make my breath rise and fall with his. I’m feeling satisfied, which does not always happen when he and I are together. I’ve never told him this though; since I’m always silent when he kisses me, all I have to do is say nothing when he stops moving against me and he assumes I’ve finished too.
Today though, my toes curled and my fingers dug into his back. Nearly skin-to-skin, it felt so real that I couldn’t think of anything but the moment I was in, with him.
“I love you,” Jamie says. He moves his hand over my breast as he says it.
“Do you really?” I ask.
“You know I do,” he says. I think about our future together, how perfect it will be. We’ll buy a house and have a family and be happy together. Jamie is perfect and his life will be perfect, so if I am a part of his life, then I will be perfect too. I trace my fingers down his chest and he flinches away. “Don’t,” he says. “That tickles.”
“Sorry,” I say. I lay my hand back on his shoulder. There is another silence. My eyes start to drift closed.
“I want you,” Jamie says. I feel my eyelashes graze his skin as I open my eyes.
“I want you too,” I say. “Just not yet.” I feel him sigh beneath me.
“Why?” he says, even though I’ve already told him.
“I want it to be special,” I say.
“It would be,” he says.