I was crying when Trevor came into my room in the middle of the night. He was groggy and squinting. âWhatâs wrong, Emi?â
I closed the book and pushed it to the side. âIâm just confused about some things.â
He flipped off the light and got into my bed. I scooted under the covers and let him spoon me.
âTalk to me,â he said gently. His voice was soothing next to my ear.
I buried my face in his arm. âOn my thirteenth birthday, I found my neighbor dead, floating in the river behind my house.â Jeff was his real name and he was magical. In what felt like a single breath he was gone. His death affected Jase deeply, as well as myself.
Trevor paused for a moment, absorbing my words. âOh Jesus, Emi. Iâm so sorry. That must have been horrible for you. Is that why you never want to celebrate your birthday?â
I nodded in the darkness and told him the whole story. He just listened and held me tighter, his silence a comfort after all the fighting weâd been doing. It wasnât long before I fell asleep in his arms.
Telling Trevor what happened didnât heal me, but reliving that day did in some way. Jasonâs insights in the book and his view of me, and what I was going through in that moment, gave me a sense of closure. His brotherâs death had to have been much more traumatic for him, but he was still aware that I was experiencing the horror along with him. He was always so perceptive and compassionate.
Too bad I was so pissed off at him.
WHEN I WOKE up the next morning, Trevor was gone, but the memory of the night before lingered. I turned to his pillow to see he had left me a note. I had finally shared something from my past with him, something heâd been asking me to do for years. I wondered if the moment had meant as much to him as it did to me.
The note simply said heâd had to go to PT. Nothing else but an âxo, Tâ at the end.
I felt hollow, but that empty feeling was too much to confront. So I went back to the book.
From All the Roads Between For a few years, I was the tallest kid in school, but by the summer going into ninth grade, everyone was catching up and passing me by, including Jax. His voice was changing, and he was getting hair on his face. He still acted like a five-year-old every now and then, but despite the fact that he was living with a junkie, had lost his brother a couple of years before, and had no father, Jax somehow managed to keep getting sweeter and sweeter.
I knew he was dealing with a lot, but he held it together and focused on his schoolwork. When Leila wasnât working, she was comatose on the couch. When sheâd clean up her act a little and go to work, thereâd be an endless stream of sleazy men hanging around the house for days.
Jax and I spent more and more time in the shed. We both found things we could steal to make the place more habitable, like it was our own house.
âWhat have you been writing in that journal?â I asked. Jax was lying on the cot in the corner and scribbling notes in a black leather-bound notebook.
âIâm just outlining my novel.â
I was sitting in one of the wooden chairs with my arms wrapped around my legs, staring out the window at the swaying trees.
âThe one about the ant family?â
âNo, I ditched that. Iâm writing about a boy and girl who become superheroes and save the world.â
âThe Adventures of Jax and Em?â
âSomething like that.â
âYou want to go swim in the creek?â The water in the creek had settled down for the season, and one of Leilaâs short-lived boyfriends had built a deck and rope swing for us. We had carved our names, along with Brianâs, in the wood. It was our memorial to him. Jackson would go down there alone a lot; I knew he was talking to his brother.
âIâm kind of busy,â he said. I got up and yanked the journal out of his hands. âNo, Em. Iâm serious, give it back.â
âI want to read it,â I whined.
âPlease donât.â His voice cracked, and his face was red. He wasnât playing around.
âWhy wonât you let me? You let me read the ant story.â
âBecause this is different. Itâs not done yet. You can read it when itâs done.â
I handed the journal back. âIâm bored. I just want to find something to do.â
âFine, letâs go swimming.â
I went home and got my swimsuit. It was a purple, tattered one-piece that I had bought at the Goodwill for two dollars, but it did the job. By then we were on welfare and food stamps, so it felt like I was living the life. We had cereal and cheese and milk and juice all the time. My father would give me twenty dollars every month to buy the things he had too much fucking pride to buy, like tampons and dish soap.
No wonder my sad excuse for a mom had left, but why couldnât she have taken me with her? Besides the fact that my dad was a bigot and a belligerent alcoholic, I was especially saddened when I realized I was being raised by a misogynist. Jax had taught me that word. He basically called every man Leila brought home a misogynistic creep.
âWhere are you going in that?â My father spoke from the hallway as I stood facing the bathroom mirror. I didnât make eye contact with him as I wrapped my hair in a ponytail.
âIâm going swimming with Jax.â
âLook at me when Iâm talking to you.â
I turned and faced him. His beard and hair had grown thick, and there was always a yellowish tint clouding his eyes. Was it terrible that I wished his liver would finally call it quits once and for all?
âPut a shirt over that.â
âItâs a one-piece, Dad. It doesnât show that much.â
Smack! He slammed his hand on the wall. âAre you talking back to me?â
âNo, sir,â I said, stiffening.
âI said put a shirt on. I donât want you slutting yourself around with that boy. Why donât you have any girlfriends? Why are you always with Jackson?â
âI donât know.â My father knew exactly why, but he liked to make me feel bad about my life anyway. I would never bring anyone to my house, even if I did have other friends. I would never subject some poor kid to the kind of crap that went on here at the end of the dirt road. But besides that, I liked Jax more than anyone else. Our friendship was easy and we cared about each other. Even though we didnât have the words back then, he was the only person I trusted.
âOut of the bathroom. I need to shave,â he said, finally dismissing me. But I lingered in the hall, confused. âWhy are you shaving your beard off?â
âYour dad got a job, kid.â
âReally?â
âYou didnât think we were gonna live on food stamps forever, did you? Weâre better than that.â He lathered up from an old can of shaving cream and pressed the razor to his face. Honestly, I had thought weâd be on food stamps forever, and I was kind of okay with it, but I had noticed that my dad was trying to pull things together lately. He was still a mean drunk, but it wasnât as bad as it was right after my mom left, and heâd mellowed some with time. âWhereâd you get a job?â
âDoing maintenance at the motel.â
âDid Susan get you that job?â
âNo, I got me the job.â
Iâd wounded his ego, so I had to flee. âOkay, Iâll be home later. Iâll put a shirt on.â As I walked away I said, âIâm glad you got a job, Dad.â
I got to the shed before Jax. When I lay down on the cot, I felt a lump under the blanket. I pulled it out from under me and saw that it was his journal. My stomach did a little flip. Just a little peek wouldnât hurt anyone.
She sat there holding her smooth legs to her chest, staring out the window, popping her gum, bored, and saying inconsequential things. But still . . . she was the center of the universe. She could make the whole world go around without even breaking a sweat.
The wooden door swung open. I closed the journal and looked up to see Jax in the doorway, scowling at me.
âWhat the hell is the matter with you? Have you no respect for my privacy?â He marched up to me and tore the journal out of my hands.
âI didnât read any of it.â
âLiar. I can tell you read it. Your face is beet red.â
âI only read one line.â
âItâs not about you.â
Itâs totally about me, I thought.
He turned and headed back out the door.
âWhoâs it about then?â I called after him.
âNot you. Iâm going home.â
I ran after him and yanked his shoulder back and spun him around in the field of weeds. âTalk to me, Jax.â
âItâs about Desiree Banks. Sheâs my girlfriend. Go home, Emerson, and mind your own business.â
âWeâre not little kids anymore, Jackson,â I said to his back.
âYeah, exactly! I donât have time for your kid games.â
My kid games? âYou can tell me how you feel about me. Iâm here. Iâm listening.â
He said nothing, so I followed him until he went inside of his house and slammed the door. I turned around and dragged my feet home, regretting what I had done. My dad had already left to go to his new job, so I was alone, left to think about the passage Jax had written.
IN THE MORNING, I waited fifteen minutes for him to come outside, but he didnât, so I had to run all the way down the road to catch the bus. The white Converse I had bought with my own money from my new weekend job were covered in dirt. I was pissed. When I got to the mailboxes, Jax was already there, waiting for Ms. Beels.
âWhy didnât you wait for me?â
He looked up from his book and then looked back down and said, âI donât have to do everything with you.â
âThese shoes were five Saturdays at Carterâs, and now theyâre all dirty.â Jax and I had been doing odd jobs around Carterâs egg ranch on Saturdays for three dollars an hour. We were grossly underpaid, and we had to walk two miles to get there, but at least it was a job.
âThatâs what you get for spending all your money on shoes.â
I stomped my foot. âUgh! Youâre not being fair.â
Still staring at his book, he said, âIâm not doing anything to you.â
âI said I was sorry. You left your dumb journal in our fort, almost like you wanted me to find it.â
âIâm not fighting with you because I donât care, Em. I told you ten minutes earlier not to read it. You canât even apologize the right way.â
âSorry Iâm not perfect like you.â
âOh, and by the way, itâs not a journal, itâs a novel, and itâs going to kick ass when Iâm done with it. And the fort is mine, Emerson, not ours. Itâs on my property.â
I turned my back to him and stared down the road, fuming silently. When the bus pulled up, I took our normal seat at the front. Jax passed me and went all the way to the back.
âReal mature, Fisher,â I called out. We were acting like our ten-year-old selves, but we werenât ten anymore.
The freshmen at Neeble High had their own hall, so it would be impossible for Jax to avoid me all day. And avoid me, he didnât. Coming out of English class, I saw that he was standing in the spot he always stood to walk with me to math, except he wasnât alone. He was leaning against a row of old lockers no one used anymore with his arm around Desiree Banks.
STUPID BOY.
âGrow up,â I muttered as I passed him. Desiree shot me her best stink eye, which made her look constipated.
Jackson could get any girl he wanted, and he knew it. He was the only boy at that age with perfect skin, strong arms, and the beginnings of a six-pack. And he was tall. He had grown fast. Heâd outgrown all the goofiness of his preteen years by the beginning of our ninth-grade yearâor maybe I just didnât see it anymore. I had developed early too. Not that I had nice breastsâthey were barely there, but by the end of ninth grade, I was done growing in every direction. Unfortunately, the same could be said for Desiree, who had grown in certain ways that I never would.
I sat in the library at lunch and talked to Ms. Lilly, the librarian.
âWhereâs Jax today?â she asked. Even the teachers knew we were inseparable.
âI donât know. He has a girlfriend now.â
The small gray-haired woman in her sixties looked surprised. âA girlfriend? I thought you were his girlfriend.â
âWhen we were kids people used to say that. It was just dumb kid stuff.â
âOh.â
I held up a copy of Sheâs Come Undone. âThanks for getting this for me.â
âItâs not exactly on the reading list, Emerson. Keep it hush-hush.â
âAlways, Ms. Lilly. Thank you.â I went to a table to read, but I was distracted. I wondered why, in all of the time that Jax and I had spent together, he hadnât tried to kiss me. He never even brought it up. I wasnât the prettiest girl in schoolâno butt, no boobs, just a beanpole with a mop of dark hairâbut I had nice skin and heâd told me once that I had pretty eyes. Actually, heâd said they were weird and so big, he felt like he could dive in and swim around in them. So maybe âprettyâ wasnât the right word . . .
Maybe he really was writing about Desiree. Maybe I was just his buddy from childhood that he used to play in the mud with.
On the bus on the way home, he was sitting in the front seat. âHey, Em!â
He looked far too chipper for Jackson. As I took the seat beside him, I peered closer at his neck. âWhat in godâs name . . . Is that a . . . oh, gross.â It was a big, purplish-brown hickey. âI didnât take you for a boob guy, Jack-son.â
âWhatever do you mean, Emer-son?â
I held my hands up to mimic big boobs. âDesiree, you idiot.â
He smirked in that shit-eating kind of way. âOh. Yeah, hmm. I hadnât really noticed.â
I huffed and then scurried to the back of the bus, thinking two could play this game. I ran home and threw my backpack down in the entryway. Racing past the kitchen, I glanced in and saw my father sitting at the table, reading the paper and drinking coffee. I stopped abruptly and backed up to the doorway. He looked up and smiled. âHow was your day, honey?â
Honey? His eyes looked clearer than I had ever seen them. My day was horrible. âGood. How was yours?â
âGood. I made a meat loaf for you to heat up after I leave for work.â
Who is this man? âThank you, Dad.â
He stood from the table. âWell, I better go get ready for work.â When he left the room I walked to his coffee mug and sniffed it. There was a very detectable amount of whiskey in his coffee, but the fact that he wasnât sitting on the couch in his underwear, drinking it straight from the bottle and cursing at the TV, was an improvement.
Before he left, he peeked into my room, where I was lying on the bed, staring at the ceiling, thinking about Jacksonâs stupid hickey. âIf you want to take the meat loaf over to the Fishersâ, thatâs fine by me. You donât have to eat alone.â
âThatâs okay.â I was used to it. âJax and I arenât really hanging out much. He has a girlfriend.â
He looked moderately relieved. I wouldâve loved to think it was because he didnât want anyone hurting his daughter, but I had been told so many times before not to get knocked up that it had to be more for that reason. âOkay. Iâll be home in the morning,â he said, and he was gone.
AT SCHOOL THE next day, I found Hunter âThe Hooverâ Stevens, who was known far and wide as the make-out king of our school. I think I was the only girl he hadnât defiled behind the bleachers of the football field. I knew he was an easy target because he had been dropping me sly hints over the last few months. Like, âHey, Emerson. You want to go study for the math test under the bleachers?â
Up until that point, I had ignored his pathetic attempts, but Hunter, Jackson, and I all had math together, so I took the opportunity to exact my revenge. I sauntered past Jax and leaned against Hunterâs desk. âI donât really get this algebra stuff. I heard youâre, like, a pro.â
His eyes shot open and then dropped to my boobs. âYou heard right.â
âHow âbout at lunch?â I said.
âOkay, meet me behind the bleachers on the football field.â
âIâll be there.â I looked to the seat behind Hunter, where Jackson sat. He was slouching in his chair with his long legs spread out in front of him, in the cool-guy pose, pretending not to pay attention.
At lunch, I went into the bathroom and stared at myself in the mirror. I ate a breath mint and put on some lip gloss and thought about being kissed for the first time. All the other girls were way ahead of me in that department. Ruthie Brennerman came in and tapped me on the shoulder. âSo, you and Hunter, huh?â She rolled her eyes. âEveryone thought you and Jax were together.â
âNope, weâre just friends.â
âOh.â
She put lipstick on and made kissy lips in the mirror. âHave fun with Hunter.â
I thought about how everyone used to call her âToothy Ruthieâ until she got braces. We were all growing up. I felt sad. I looked in the mirror again and saw my younger self with the wild hair and bushy eyebrows, and then I saw Jacksonâs younger face, his sweet smile, and his kind eyes. I started to cry. I wanted him to be my first kiss. I wanted to be his.
I ran out of the bathroom and smack into Jaxâs chest. âGet out of my way.â
âEm, are you crying?â
âDonât call me that,â I yelled as I ran away.
I met Hunter by the football field. His hands were bracing my neck before I was able to even get a word out. He pressed his lips to mine and then his tongue was in my mouth. It was weird, warm, slobbery, and gross, but I kissed him back anyway. Hunter was short with buzzed hair and no real standout features, but he wasnât terrible-looking either. He just wasnât Jax.
The whole time I thought, Why am I doing this? Hunter was pressing himself against me with enthusiasm. It wasnât exactly romantic. I could feel that he was turned on. Not surprising for a fifteen-year-old boy. About a month before, Jax and I had been lying on the cot, reading to each other, and Iâd noticed something growing in his pants. Iâd laughed and heâd gotten embarrassed and then left the shed, cursing at me. I wished I hadnât laughed. I wished I would have pretended not to see it. Thatâs what he would have done.
Hunter tried to put his hand up my shirt as we made out against the chain-link fence that ran behind the bleachers. Thatâs when I heard someone say, âEm?â
I broke away from the kiss to see Jax standing a safe distance away, near the bleacher post. He had his black hoodie on, and it shadowed his face so I couldnât see his expression. His hands were shoved deep into the pockets of his jeans. He looked different . . . dejected. No more Tough Jax.
âYeah, whatâs up, Jackson?â
âYou okay?â His voice was low, timid.
I looked back at Hunter. âYou know what, Iâm . . .â
âWhat does he want?â Hunter asked.
âI have to go,â I said.
âBut weâre kissing,â Hunter said. He really was a bright one.
âI know. I have to go, Iâm sorry.â But I wasnât. The only thing I was sorry for was kissing him.
As I approached Jax, he looked up from his shoes. His eyes were bloodshot. We stood there facing each other in silence.
The corners of his mouth turned up, but it wasnât a cocky smile. His eyes were downcast. It was a sad smile.
âAre you into him?â
âNo. Not really.â
âWhat does that mean? Were you just trying to get back at me?â
âListen . . . I . . .â
âIt was about you . . . what I wrote. It was all about you.â His bottom lip began to quiver.
âI know,â I said, my voice shaky. I started to cry then. There was no holding back. âI loved it, every word. It was so beautiful.â
He reached his thumb out and wiped tears from my cheek. âEm, can we please go back to the way things were?â
âYes . . . definitely.â
He pulled me into his chest. âI mean, Hunter Stevens? Really? That guyâs such a slimeball.â
I wiped my tears and laughed into his shirt. âCome on, Desiree Banks? Sheâs a slut and everyone knows it . . . and those boobs, my god.â
âFor the record, Iâm not really a boob guy. Well, I mean . . .â
âI get it, dork! I canât believe she was your first kiss.â
He pushed my shoulders back to look at me. âDesiree wasnât my first kiss.â
âShe wasnât?â
âNo. I kissed Katy Brown in the seventh grade. We made out in the reading room in the back of the library.â He scratched his chin. âAnd then there was Chastity Williams, and then Lizzy Peters, and . . .â
âOkay, okay, geez, I guess Desireeâs not the slut here.â
âWas that your first kiss, Em? With Hunter?â
I was beginning to feel like a total fool. âYeah, kinda.â I said it so quietly I could barely hear myself.
His piteous smile was back.
âDonât look at me like that, Jax. So what? Who cares?â
âNo, itâs not a big deal. I just figured . . . You always seemed so, I donât know, I just figured . . .â
âYou figured what? What Jackson? That my first kiss would be with you?â
He shrugged. âMaybe.â
âThatâs not an answer.â
He sighed. âYouâre special.â
âOh, Iâm special? That makes me sound retarded.â
âI hate that word, Emerson.â
âWell, what do you mean?â My voice was getting higher and my cheeks were getting pinker.
âI mean, I wanted to practice for you. I wanted our first kiss with each other to be perfect.â
âReally?â I leaned up on my toes, trying to physically absorb his words.
âI swear. Iâve always wanted to kiss you. You have to have known that.â
I blinked a couple of times before reaching up and craning my neck toward him. Hmm, that clean Jackson smell. Around eighth grade, he started remembering to put on deodorant, thank god. âI guess I kind of knew.â
I leaned in closer.
âWell, Iâm not gonna kiss you now, with Hunterâs slobber all over you. We have to disinfect you big-time. Soap in the mouth and everything.â
âOh, shut it, you.â I punched him in the chest.
He grabbed my hand and pulled me along. âCome on, weâre late for biology.â