Filed to story: If He Had Been With Me Book PDF Free
When I come back from the shower, Autumn’s confidence in our future is gone. She’s sitting on the center of my bed, curled up tight in her rumpled clothes and finger-combed hair. She looks wild and elven—and scared.
“It’s going to be okay.” I wish her brain could accept the truth that mine has; we’ve made it back together.
“Can’t you wait until tomorrow?”
“I want it to be over.” I can’t explain how hard it is going to be to break up with Sylvie. It wouldn’t help Autumn’s confidence. But the certainty of our future together drives me, and when I get back to her, she’ll understand. I’ll show her every day, for as long as she wants me. “I want it to be just us.”
I fidget, but the fact of the matter is the time has come for me to go. I’ll be back in a few hours. It’s fine. She’s nervous because she’s the one having to wait for me, but there’s nothing to be worried about. I look at her, still sitting with her knees under her chin.
“Walk me out?” I’m trying to sound casual, but all the dread about seeing Sylvie, how I’m going to hurt her is coming back.
I have to tell Sylvie.
Autumn holds my hand and walks beside me, down the stairs and out of the house. The sky is gray with thick clouds, and the wind has picked up.
The sinking feeling inside me will be there until I get back to her, but she needs to see my resolve. I’m doing this for us, and somehow, amazingly, she still doesn’t understand the depth and breadth of my passion for her.
At my car, I say to her, “I promise you, I’ll come back as soon as I can. It may take a while though.”
“Please don’t go,” she says.
Oh, beloved.
I take her in my arms and hold her close to me.
“I have to do this,” I tell her. “You know that, Autumn.”
She’s quiet, but she leans into me.
“Here’s what we’ll do,” I say with my chin resting on her hair. “When The Mothers get home, you go to bed early, and when I get back, I’ll sneak in your back door and come to your room, and then I’ll hold you all night.” Or do more than that if she wants. When she’s ready again, I’ll be ready with condoms.
She pulls away enough to look at me. “Okay,” Autumn says, like we’re making a sacred vow. I wish we were.
I can’t help kissing her quickly, but when she moves in to kiss me again, I lose myself in wonder. Autumn wants me. Autumn loves me.
As Autumn leans back against the car, she pulls me with her, and I press into her, once more seduced into more than I had planned. I want her again, right now, caution and ethics be damned. Autumn kisses me desperately, and I am breathless with love. If I’m not back inside, skin to skin with her in another minute, I will lose my mind.
I feel her tense before my brain registers the sound of the car door slamming. She peers over the car roof behind her, and I look over her head. The Mothers are home early. Aunt Claire has a quiet smile. Mom seems to be trying to hide her face.
“Do you think they saw?” Autumn asks.
“Definitely.” We aren’t even ten yards away, but they are pretending to be completely unaware of their children, who they have not seen for two days, making out in the driveway.
“Oh God,” Autumn says.
I can tell she’s in misery over the coming tide of discrete smiles and little comments. The thing is, when we were babies, The Mothers daydreamed about us getting married so they could be grandmothers together. But really, The Mothers will be happy for me. It’s been impossible to hide how much I wanted this.
“I think my mother has a special bottle of champagne hidden away for just this occasion,” I say. I’m only partially joking. Mom has labeled some of her alcohol, like for when George W. Bush leaves office and stuff. One expensive one said, “Finny-Autumn
Day or NYE 2010.” At the time, I was glad she’d made alternative plans for it.
“Oh God,” Autumn says again. She buries her head in my chest. Finny-Autumn Day has come after all.
I look down at Autumn, my beloved. I will make that name a habit. It suits her.
“I’ll be back to help you fend them off.”
“Okay,” Autumn says, and it’s time.
With space between our bodies, I lean down and kiss her before I go, because I can, because it’s not the last time.
I open the car door. The sinking feeling in my stomach is increasing with every moment, but I’m buoyed by the knowledge that I’m going to come back to Autumn and hold her and kiss her and lie beside her as she fights dragon-faerie wars in her sleep. I smile at her. She looks so somber.
“After this, things are going to be the way they were always supposed to be,” I tell her. I can’t put it off anymore. I sit down and close the door between us. “It will all be over soon,” I mumble as I start the car. I don’t let myself look at her again until she’s in my rearview mirror. I turn onto the street and drive down the hill as the rain starts.
fifteen
I only look at my phone because I know it’s Mom calling. I haven’t even turned off our block yet. Autumn must have already made her excuses and bolted.
“Technically, Mom,” I say instead of hello, “it’s raining and I’m driving, so I shouldn’t have answered.”
“My advice worked, kiddo!” Mom says. “I get one minute to gloat. And it’s barely raining.”
I’d forgotten what she said before leaving for the weekend: “Talk to her.” She’d had a better view on the situation than I did.
Neither mother has ever said anything about us dating in all these years, not directly. That’s the thing about being raised by women: you learn about layers of communication from an early age. Without ever saying it, The Mothers have told me many times that they wished, for my sake, Autumn loved me back. It never occurred to me that maybe they were trying to tell me that she did love me back.
“This was not the outcome I was expecting,” I admit to Mom, trying to share enough to get out of the conversation while saying as little as possible.
“It’s been quite a summer,” she says, and I can’t help but laugh.
“Yeah.”
“Claire and I are at our place having some champagne,” Mom says, and I have to stifle another laugh. “Autumn has escaped to her room, and we’ll leave her alone for now. I promise.” Mom pauses. “Should I nudge Claire toward staying late or at our place tonight?”
“Uh, yeah. Sounds good,” I say, blushing. I’d thank my mother for intuiting my clandestine plans and assisting them, but it’s too much for me.
“Okay then,” she says, relieving me. “I’ll let you do what you need to. I love you. I’m proud of you.”
“You always say you’re proud of me for the weirdest things, Mom,” I tell her. “I love you too. Bye.”
I’m going to get two errands done at once by going to that gas station: buying the whole stock of Autumn’s favorite candies and some condoms. I figure the creep’s shift won’t have started yet.
I’m wrong though. I park in the same space as the night before, and I can see him through the window. Does he live here? It’s truly raining now. I’d planned to call Jack on my way to Sylvie’s, but I don’t like to drive and talk on my phone when it’s raining. I pull out my phone and scroll for Jack’s name.
“Hey?” He sounds confused, probably because he told me to call him after I broke up with Sylvie, and he knows it’s too early for that.
“Hi,” I say. “I’ll be at Sylvie’s soon. I was calling to tell you that you were right.”
“Of course I was right,” Jack says. “About what?”
“Autumn and I are the two stupidest people on earth.”
“Wait,” he says. “Huh?”
“She loves me.” I’m so giddy, my voice sounds ridiculous even to my own ears. “We talked about so many things last night, and she had no idea. She never knew. She apologized for middle school, but it wasn’t all her fault. It was mine too—and we’re together now.” I stop short.
There’s silence on the other end. I almost think the call dropped when Jack says, “Are you sure?”