“She’s called? She fucking called you?” Of course she did. She was their drug of choice too. That’s why they’re still able to function and aren’t holed up or on their way across the damn country. She isn’t running from them, she’s running from me.
“Did she read the letter from your dad?” My mind’s reeling. It feels like I’m free falling down a steep cliff and my mind’s desperately searching for the tiniest ledge to grasp onto.
“I don’t know. I think so,” Jenny answers with a shrug. “We were all reading them.”
That last sentence sends me plummeting to the bottom. I burry my face in my comforter and drown out everything else she tries to say.
“Dude, you’ve got to get up.” Jameson sighs as I pull the pillow back over my head. I don’t even know what day it is anymore. I don’t care.
What adds salt to my wounds is the fact that the world keeps turning. People continue waking up and going about their day. The sun rises and sets. I hear kids laugh and play, neighbors greet one another, and birds sing, and all the while I wonder how? How does the entire world appear to be surviving this nightmare of losing her?
Hank comes to visit in June. I still haven’t heard from Ace, and yet I’m still staying at my mom’s. I can’t leave. I can’t go back to that house. I’d moved rooms shortly after she left, and now reside in the guest room on the main floor. It’s better this way. There aren’t any pictures of her in here or random memories, like the one of her sitting on my bean bag chair when I was sick last summer. I also don’t have to face the window that looks out onto hers.
Hank knows that I know mom sent for him, hoping that he’d be able to “help” me. She of all people should know that having Hank around isn’t going to help me. He’s fucking married to the love of his life; he doesn’t have a fucking clue about the shit that I’m going through.
Of all things, Hank wants to go camping. I’m sure he thinks that getting away will help. He doesn’t understand that moving rooms has helped me realize I could go to Antarctica, and things wouldn’t change; the distance isn’t going to make the pain any less.
When we get camp set up, Hank opens a cooler and passes me a beer with a giant, shit-eating grin, like we’ve just overcome a huge hurdle. Deciding that I shouldn’t rain on his little douchebag tea party quite yet, I accept the beer with merely a grimace before taking a long swig. Before long, that single swig becomes a chug, and then a guzzle as I consume more alcohol than what three people probably should.
I sit by the fire and close my eyes. My mind automatically reaches back into that locked and forbidden drawer to pull out the image of Ace, striving to recall the sound of her laugh, the feel of her touch. It brings me back to our camping trip last September, when Jameson announced that was what he wanted to do for his birthday.
N
either of you girls seemed overly thrilled about the prospect of spending the night outdoors when Jameson announced he wanted to go camping for his birthday. Seriously, do you remember how heated some of those discussions between J and Kendall got? It really wasn’t fair—you girls could sell ice to Eskimos. The list of requirements you guys constructed made me think finding a place was going to be impossible for a while.
I know you had suggested that Jameson, Landon, and I just go, and make it a guys’ weekend, but Jameson was set on having Kendall be there to celebrate his big day. By that point, I was pretty done with lying to myself, and knew I didn’t want to spend the weekend without you either. Both of you girls thought we’d give up and agree to do something else, or give in and just make it a guys’ trip. But I hunted and searched and found a place that seemed to accommodate all requests.
I went out and bought camping necessities, like bug repellent, sun screen, extra batteries for flashlights, and camp food. When I got back, you were discussing what came first, the chicken or the egg with Jameson and Landon. Jameson was adamant that God created a chicken first. I remember having to wait forever for him to shut up so I could break the news.
“Alright, babe, Friday after class we’re heading out into the wilderness.”
You turned with a look of surprise across your face that made me smile. I was pretty sure based on warnings from your dad, you girls had never been tent camping.
Friday, we loaded up the Jeep and Landon’s SUV and headed over to pick you girls up.
“Wow, babe, I’m impressed!” I was. You only had a small duffel you were sifting through when I found you.
“Don’t be too impressed.” You bent down and lifted another small bag from behind the bed.
“You always impress me.” You always do. I should have told you that more, especially since it earned me a small grin like you were embarrassed.
We’d picked up sleeping bags from my house a couple of weeks ago, along with a camp stove, flashlights, tents, tarps, and other camping gear that my brothers and I had acquired over the years. Not surprisingly, neither of you girls owned a sleeping bag. Between my two brothers and me, we had somehow accumulated eleven, so we were set.
Do you remember Jameson hauling Kendall’s suitcase down the stairs? I never told you this, but Jameson had made multiple comments about not wanting to ever date a high maintenance chick while we were in Alaska. Although he had to have known your sister was in the higher percentile, I was worried she was going to dig a grave for herself on that trip.
When we walked over to the Jeep and discovered that half of it was already filled, I didn’t care quite as much.
“What in the hell is she thinking?” I quietly growled.
“It’s alright, I can ride with Landon,” you said with a casual shrug. “He’ll probably enjoy the company anyway.” I had almost objected. I wanted to. As ridiculous as it was, I didn’t want to spend the few hours driving there apart, even though I’d have the next three days with you. Seeing the frustration on Jameson’s face stopped me. Reminding myself this was his birthday and that if the tables were turned, he would without a doubt reciprocate the favor, I shut my mouth and breathed a deep sigh before following you over to Landon’s rig.
Only a few other occupied spaces filled the campground as we passed on the way to ours. Kendall sat in the back, looking over a brochure that the park ranger had given us regarding bear safety. Do you remember how freaked out she was all weekend? Seriously, she was about to lose her shit as she started to read it aloud.
“Lie on your stomach with your arms and legs spread wide. This will help prevent bears from flipping you over to reveal your vital organs …” I remember looking up as she paused and catching sight of her in the rearview mirror. Her eyes were alarmingly round and her mouth hung open in shock. “Are they kidding? I’m sleeping in the car.”
“Babe, it’ll be fine. Bears don’t hunt humans. We won’t see any animals except for some birds and shit like that.” Jameson glanced at me to reaffirm the message, but frankly I sort of enjoyed watching her squirm a little.
My eyes moved up in my mirror, and for the hundredth time on that drive, I saw you. You were sitting in the passenger seat with your feet bare, propped up on the dashboard, your head lying against the head rest, laughing at something Landon had said.
“Whoa, whoa! You passed it. One-o-seven is back there.” Kendall motioned to the back window with her thumb. “Distracted much?”
Apparently, that’s what I got for letting her squirm. Snide remarks.
We were in a pretty secluded area and able to look out onto the lake from our camp spot, which was a good hundred feet from us, down a slight incline. It was beautiful and tranquil, and I felt grateful once again to be back home where it was nearly eighty degrees in September.
I remember everything about your expression as you stood beside the passenger door of Landon’s SUV, your attention on the lake. Your lips were slightly parted, forcing me to stare at them for a second longer because seriously, you have the most beautiful lips I’ve ever seen. The sun was starting to turn orange, casting shadows over your face that enunciated your high cheekbones, and the curve of your jaw that I loved to put my lips to. You looked blissful, relaxed, and the fact that I helped create that, made a surge of pride run through me as I approached you. Hearing me, you turned and gave me my smile. I’m sure I returned it, but I don’t remember, I was too busy staring at you to consider my own reactions. Then I slid a hand around the back of your neck, tangling it in your hair and pulling you close so I could kiss you.
The moment lasted about a second. Do you remember why it ended? That’s right. Kendall. She threw that damn soccer ball at us. Thankfully, she has horrible aim and throws like a girl.
“Let’s get these tents set up, lover boy. Then we need to get a fire going and make some noise. The brochure says it’ll deter the bears.”
“You guys gave her the brochure?” I’d already known it had been a mistake to do so, but the knowing look on your face confirmed it. You laughed and then shook your head, turning to grab a bag from the SUV.
Setting up camp is something that still makes me laugh whenever I think back to it. Remember trying to test your skills out on setting up a tent? You were rummaging through one of the bags, emptying the contents. “Where are the directions?”
“Oh it’s easy. Once you’ve put a tent together, it’s like riding a bike. Same basic concept for all of them,” Jameson explained.
You looked slightly bemused as you knelt and began helping him as Landon and I started setting up another one of the tents.
We were nearly done when I heard you laughing and looked over to see Kendall had joined in the efforts. She was arguing about something with Jameson, who looked to be taking it all in good stride.
Landon looked at me and shook his head as we move on to setting up the next tent.
“Kendall wants to sleep in the car tonight anyways, we’ll just designate that tent as theirs.” Landon laughed at my remark as we watched the three of you. Kendall was glancing around looking paranoid, while you explained something, your voice a little louder than normal conveying you were getting frustrated, as Jameson continued constructing things.
“I don’t know what in the hell he’s doing,” Landon said quietly.
Kendall was heckling Jameson about needing training wheels again when Landon and I came to help. She looked relieved to see us. You and Jameson both looked a little annoyed.
You probably don’t want to hear this, even now, a year later, but you guys were both wrong and would never have managed to set that thing up before dark. You have a great many talents, tent construction however, is not one of them.