Read The Infinite Moment of Us Online
Authors: Lauren Myracle
like caramels. “Not in a stalker way. I just wanted to tell
you that you’ve always been my role model, kind of.”
“Your role model?” Wren said. “Why?”
Paige’s eyes widened. “Um . . . you know. Because you
have such a sense of purpose. You know yourself.”
“I do?”
“You do, yes.”
And the moon tugs on the earth, and that’s how
tides are formed
, her tone suggested.
The earth circles the sun,
and that’s why we have night and day, and, yes, you know yourself.
Are you playing with me?
Wren didn’t understand. Paige was awkward but smart.
In fifth grade, she and Wren had done an after-school activ-
ity together called Odyssey of the Mind, and for their final
competition, they’d put on a skit. Something about pirates?
Part of the skit had involved remote-controlled boats and
cars, and one of the cars hit a tunnel, but Paige calmly
repositioned it and tried again. Their team won first place.
It was one of Wren’s early tastes of how fun excelling
could be.
“Oh,” Wren said. “Um, thanks.”
Paige pulled her long sleeves over her hands, nodding
as she backed away. “Okay, well, I just wanted to tell you
that. Anyway. Bye!”
Paige darted off, leaving Wren feeling like a phony.
Once upon a time Wren
might have been certain of herself, like maybe back in fifth grade, but now she went one way
and then another when it came to what she wanted to do
with her life. First she was going to go to Emory, then she
decided not to go to Emory. She wanted to please her par-
ents, but she was sick of pleasing her parents. She yearned
to be her own person, not an extension of her mom and
dad, and she longed to do something brave, something that
mattered, something that helped others in an immediate
and tangible way.
Her desire to escape her color-within-the-lines life
was
as strong as the pull of the moon, even if the lines them-
selves were muzzy. Was that what Paige saw as her sense of
purpose?
She stood there, lost in her thoughts, until a boy from
her AP biology class gave her a tentative half wave from
across the parking lot, bringing her back to the here and
now. A breeze batted at her skirt, flipping it high, and her
cheeks grew hot as she clamped it down. Not only because
the boy—his name was Charlie—had no doubt glimpsed
more of Wren than either he or she expected, but because
she realized that in her zoned-out state, she’d been ran-
domly staring at him, possibly for quite a while.
Embarrassment coursed through her. Wren liked Char-
lie, but she didn’t know him that well. He was in a couple
of her honors classes. He had a lean, muscular frame, and
Wren, on occasion, had caught herself enjoying the play
of muscles beneath his shirt. His fingernails were often
rimmed with oil, or maybe paint. He rarely talked, and
some kids thought he was arrogant. But Wren had watched
him interact with his small group of friends, and around
them he seemed looser. More relaxed.
Once, Wren had spotted Charlie helping a freshman
with his locker. The freshman was scrawny, one of those
unfortunate boys who wouldn’t hit his growth spurt for
another year or two, if ever. He’d looked close to tears.
Charlie hadn’t made eye contact with the kid but had
twisted the combination lock with deft, sure movements,
banged the metal door, and nodded with satisfaction when
it sprang open.
Now, yards away in the senior parking lot, Charlie
dropped his hand. Now he was the self-conscious one.
She waved back at him and smiled, and relief rippled
across his features. Immediately he smoothed his expres-
sion, but she’d seen, for a second, what he really felt. She
had the strangest urge to go to him and say,
No. Please. Sometimes the things we hide—aren’t they the parts of us that matter
most?
Tessa called out to her, and Wren blinked. She started
walking, slowly at first, and then faster. She reached Tessa,
who hip-bumped her.
“I saw you wave at Charlie,” Tessa teased. “Were you
two having a moment, nudge-nudge, wink-wink?”
“Yeah, right,” Wren said.
“Sweet!” Tessa said. “Is that a yes?”
Tessa had suggested on several occasions that Charlie
had a thing for Wren, and she wondered if maybe he did.
Her heart beat a little faster.
But no, she was being stupid. Wren was pretty sure
Charlie had a girlfriend, and plus . . . whatever. It was
impossible, and not in the good sort of way.
“Let’s talk about something more interesting,” Wren
said. “Don’t you think you should go steal P.G. from that
freshman—or save that freshman from P.G.?”
That did the trick. Tessa looked where Wren was indi-
cating and scowled at P.G. and the freshman girl. Wren
couldn’t see P.G.’s face, just the back of his pale blue button-down. He leaned closer to the freshman—his cheek almost
brushing hers—and said something that made her turn
bright red.
“Really?” Tessa muttered.
The freshman squeaked out another giggle, and P.G.
eased back. He turned and saw Tessa and Wren, and his
face broke into a grin.
He strode toward them, owning the courtyard. Owning
everything. Reeking of entitlement and cologne, which,
thanks to his Facebook page, Wren knew was called Czar.
“Tessa Haviland,” he said, stretching out her name. “You.
Look. Hot.”
“Why, thank you,” Tessa said. She practically curtsied.
Wren snorted, and P.G. glanced at her. Whoops. He
gave her a much quicker once-over than Tessa and nodded.
“You look good, too. I approve.”
“Oh,” Wren said. “Then I guess I can die in peace?”
Tessa hip-bumped her. “
Wren
.”
“And I’ll leave you to it,” Wren said, stepping back to let Tessa loop her arm through P.G.’s. They led the way
toward the school, bantering easily, and Wren followed.
When they reached the set of double doors at the
building’s entrance, Wren paused to fish a Coke out of her
backpack for Mr. Cameron, a math teacher who’d been
stuck with foot-traffic control all semester. Mr. Cameron
was a big guy, and he sweated profusely even when it was
chilly out, so one day Wren offered him her drink. She’d
planned on having it during her free period, but she could
get another.
“Bless you, you are an angel, you have my permission
to ditch your classes and go to the movies,” Mr. Cameron
had said, and a tradition had been born. Every morning,
instead of skipping school, Wren tossed Mr. Cameron a
Coke, and every morning, Mr. Cameron caught the can
neatly and popped it open.
“Thanks,” he said now. He took a swig. “I assume you’ll
swing by tomorrow and Friday? Keep your old buddy caf-
feinated?”
The underclassmen had to finish up the school week,
but not the seniors. After today, the seniors wouldn’t
return until the graduation ceremony on Saturday.
“Ooh, sorry,” Wren said, hating to disappoint him even
though she knew he was teasing.
He clasped his free hand to his chest. “So this is it? This
is how it ends?”
She winced. “Sorry!”
She was halfway through the doors when he called her
name. She turned back.
“Hey,” he said. “You’re a great kid, Wren Gray. You’re
going to do great things with your life. Understood?”
There were so many people in the world. Some were
jerks, but most were kind. Wren had to clear her throat
before she could speak. “Understood.”
Ahead of her in the crowded hallway, Tessa bounced
from friend to friend. She truly was like a hummingbird,
all bright flashes and quick movements. Wren moved to
join her, then changed her mind and retreated, leaning
against the glass-paned wall of the front office. She closed
her eyes. She focused on breathing.
All kinds of big things waited for her right around
the corner, all kinds of chances and risks and huge, crazy
changes. She was supposed to let the thrill of it all sweep
her away. But she was scared.
What happened with Charlie—what passed between
them when their guards were down—that scared her, too.
The idea of a person’s hidden parts mattering most, when
she was the one keeping a secret.
In AP English, she’d read a myth about the vastness of
the universe. In it, an old woman told her grandson that
the world rested on the back of a giant turtle. “It does?
Well, what does the turtle rest on?” the grandson asked, and Wren had read faster, naïvely hoping she was about to
be given the answer to life.
But no. The old woman laughed and said, “That’s the
best part. It’s turtles all the way down!”
c h a p t e r t w o
Wren Gray was the most beautiful girl Charlie
Parker had ever seen, and the most brilliant. She didn’t
seem to realize she was either, which was crazy. But Char-
lie had eyes. Charlie knew the truth.
When she smiled, Charlie wanted in on the joke. When
she pushed her dark hair behind her ears, Charlie thought,
Yes, that is how you do it. When she walked down the halls
in her collared shirts and knee-length skirts, he saw with
absolute clarity how much classier she was than the other
girls in their tight jeans and peekaboo thongs. Charlie had
had some experience with girls in tight jeans and peeka-
boo thongs, or with one particular girl in tight jeans and a
thong. She hadn’t left a great impression.
But Wren wasn’t like that girl, or any girl, even though
she was clearly and definitely a girl. Once, on the senior
patio during lunch, she’d lifted her arm to call over her
friend Tessa, and her blouse hugged her curves. He drank
her in for as long as he decently could.
On Wednesday, Charlie drifted through the last day of
classes as if he were in a fog. Everyone else was wired at
the prospect of summer, but Charlie didn’t want sum-
mer. He wanted Wren. But unless he manned up and took
action—like exchanging more than half a dozen words
with her—he was doomed. Wren would go her own way
after Saturday’s graduation ceremony, and Charlie might
never see her again.
On Thursday, which was his first official day of no
school, Charlie worked alongside his foster dad at the
woodworking shop his foster dad owned. He clamped
a slab of cream-colored birch onto the workbench and
switched on the router, shaping the wood to fit an oddly
shaped nook in a client’s bathroom. His thoughts stayed on
Wren as he rounded the corner of the plank. Her sweet
smile. Her shiny hair. The way her brown eyes grew pen-
sive when the end of her pen found its way to the corner of
her mouth, suggesting that she was contemplating some-
thing important.
One day in AP biology, Wren had argued with Ms.
Atkinson about free will in the face of cellular determin-
ism. It was at the beginning of the semester, but already
most of the seniors were starting to tune out their teach-
ers’ lectures, and Charlie wondered if that was why Ms.
Atkinson had tossed out the sensationally termed “para-
site gene,” a gene that supposedly triggered a propensity
toward exploitive behavior in those who carried it. She
encouraged the class to consider what the existence of such
a gene might imply—“Is that what drives the president of
a company to embezzle funds, or an addict to steal from a
family member?”—and while Charlie drew into himself,
Wren shook her head in frustration.
“Humans are too complicated to be explained by unrav-
eling their DNA,” Wren said. “Aren’t they? Otherwise
wouldn’t our lives have no meaning?”
“Why do you say that?” Ms. Atkinson said.
“Because, okay, say a kid is born with the
‘parasite gene,’
if there is such a thing. Are you saying he has no choice but
to grow up and mooch off others? He’ll never contribute
anything to society?”
“Nice job of assuming it’s a guy,” Thad Lundeen had said.
Wren had blushed. “Fine. Sorry. But what if a boy or a
girl is born with . . . whatever. A fear-of-flying gene. Does
that mean he or she can’t grow up to be a pilot? No matter
what, end of story?”
Different kids jumped in. The conversation grew loud
and off-track, and Charlie wondered if he was the only one
to hear her last comment.
“And what about souls?” she said, bowing her head and
addressing her desk. “Don’t souls count for anything?”
Her downcast eyes, her pink cheeks—he saw them in
his mind still. He held in his brain an entire store of the
amazing things she’d done and said. He loved the whole
package.
And then, yesterday, when she waved at him outside the
school . . .
Something had passed between them. Something he
couldn’t explain, and it had made him forget that he didn’t
believe in souls. Anyway, who was he kidding? He didn’t
believe in love, either, but this he knew: He loved Wren
Gray. He’d loved her forever, it seemed.