Read The Infinite Moment of Us Online
Authors: Lauren Myracle
When Starrla registered his response, she rolled her
eyes. “For fuck’s sake. Was I supposed to go all mushy?
Walk
into your pain, Charlie. I’ll be right here, holding your hand.
Is that what you wanted me to say?”
She was mocking their guidance counselor.
Charlie felt numb.
“Go on, then. Walk into your fucking sob story.” She
shoved his shoulder. “Will there be a unicorn on the other
side and nothing bad will
ever
happen
ever
again? Because, oh boy, I want to go to that land!”
Charlie moved to stand up. Starrla sighed and pulled
him back. She seemed so angry, and yet she reached over,
grabbed his hand, and shoved it under her shirt. “There. Is
that better? Jesus, Charlie.”
She scooched closer. Her skin was warm, and she held
his hand against her. In a low, tight voice, she said, “I won’t tell anyone about any of that. The garage, and your mom.
All right?”
After that, but only when she was drunk, Starrla whis-
pered stories to Charlie. Her stories were about men who
were violent, men like the ones on Dave’s DVDs, and they
made Charlie want to punch walls. But Charlie couldn’t
save her. No one could. So Starrla moved on to other warm
bodies.
She always came back to Charlie, but as eighth grade
turned into ninth, and ninth into tenth, he began to wish
she wouldn’t. He tried to put distance between them.
She wiggled her way back in, like the time she showed
up at Dev’s Science Olympiad competition in a too-tight
shirt, cheering loudly and making Dev blush with eleven-
year-old pride. Starrla made Dev look good in front of his
buddies—because Starrla was pretty despite the clothes
and makeup she hid behind—and so what if she was actu-
ally there for Charlie and not Dev? Charlie would never say
anything, and Starrla knew it.
Or Starrla would compliment Chris on the beveled legs
of a chair he was working on (“That looks so hard, Mr.
DeLucco. You’re so talented!”). Or she’d bring Pamela a
Toffee Nut Iced Latte (Pamela’s favorite) from Starbucks
and comment on how tiring it must be for Pamela to run
her at-home day care business while at the same time raising two boys.
“She’s a sweet girl,” Pamela said to Charlie after one
such coffee delivery.
“Uh-huh,” Charlie replied. He didn’t say, “Sure, Pamela,
only, after she gave you your coffee, she gave me a blow
job behind the workshop. And, afterward, she said, ‘Oh,
Charlie, just think how disappointed Pamela would be if
she knew. Should we confess? What do you think?’”
Charlie shifted on the plastic chair. The graduation cer-
emony went on and on, full of words like
hope
and
promise
, and Charlie felt ashamed. His relationship with Starrla
hadn’t held either of those, and finally, last year, he called it off for real.
She laughed. “You’re breaking up with me?” she said
after his stilted, overly rehearsed speech. She reached to
stroke his hair. He grabbed her wrist to stop her, and she
laughed again, because she’d made him do that. Grab her.
“Charlie,” she said, regarding him as if he were a child
who would never, ever grow up. “You can’t break up with
me. We were never together.”
Exactly, Charlie thought.
She tilted her head and touched her lower lip. “There’s
another reason you can’t break up with me. You want to
know why? Because I will always be here for you.
Always
.
Do you hear me, Charlie?”
Charlie felt uneasy. That was an alarmingly intimate
thing for Starrla to say, never mind that it was in direct
contradiction to her earlier proclamation. Still, he held his
ground and took nothing back.
“Hmm,” she said. Then she made two kissy sounds,
winked at him, and sashayed off. Her parting words were
bright and cruel. “Just remember—we’re the same, you
and me!”
They weren’t, though. Charlie was not like Starrla. He
tugged at his shirt collar beneath his graduation gown and
glanced at his watch. The ceremony had to be almost over,
didn’t it?
As the speaker droned on, Charlie told himself not to
look at Wren—don’t, don’t, don’t, not with Starrla still
on your mind—but his eyes sought her out of their own
accord, and the sight of her made him feel calmer. She was
in a white gown like the other girls—the boys wore black;
the girls wore white—and her hair spilled in waves over
her shoulders. She looked beautiful. And, unlike the girl
next to her, who was yawning but trying to hide it, she
looked . . . hopeful.
No. That wasn’t it. Well,
yes
, hopeful, but . . .
Alive.
Except that wasn’t it, either. Of course she looked alive.
How else would she look?
Her lips were slightly parted. Her chin was raised. Earlier he couldn’t read her expression, but now it seemed she
was interested in what the speaker was saying, which made
Charlie wonder if maybe the speaker was saying something
interesting after all. Not as interesting as Wren, but surely
more interesting than the endless loop of crap playing in
his own mind.
He would go with Ammon to the graduation party, he
decided. He’d go to the party at P.G.’s house, and if Wren
was there, he would approach her. Talk to her. Something.
He swore to himself that he would.
He had a past with Starrla. He regretted it, but the past
was the past.
Imagining a future with Wren, on the other hand . . .
No. Stop, he told himself firmly.
But he could spend time with Wren, maybe. Was there
any reason he couldn’t stand next to her at P.G.’s party?
Share a laugh, offer to get her a drink? His pulse grew
stronger.
There was rustling, and excited energy wafted off his
classmates as they stood and formed a line. It was time
to receive their diplomas, or rather their fake diplomas.
They’d get their real ones after the ceremony, pressed flat
in commemorative leather folders that cost twenty dollars
apiece.
Charlie joined his classmates, but as he walked across
the makeshift stage, he didn’t think about the end of high
school, or graduating, or diplomas, genuine or fake. His
thoughts were occupied by the one real thing he knew:
Wren.
c h a p t e r f i v e
Wren’s graduation luncheon was a chaotic swirl of
photos with family, photos with friends, and hugs and
hugs—so many hugs. Wren’s parents bragged about Wren
to other parents, and it made Wren uncomfortable, but at
least it took the burden of conversation off her. She still
hadn’t broken the news about Project Unity. She needed
to, and she would, but not yet. Not with so many people
around.
Wren’s father put his arm around her as he talked with
Bob Hammond, her friend Delaney’s dad, about colleges
and financial-aid packages. Two feet away, her mom listened
patiently as another mom went on and on about thank-you
notes and where to buy the best-quality embossed enve-
lopes. She glanced over, and Wren saw her share a private
smile with Wren’s dad.
Wren’s parents weren’t perfect, but she told herself that
no one’s were. Anyway, she loved them, and she wouldn’t
be here without them, and one thing she was proud of was
how solid they were. She thought it sweet how they always
checked in with each other at events like this, whether
through a quick glance or a light brushing together of their
fingertips.
A few years back, a slew of her parents’ friends had
split up—four or five divorces, all in a row—and Wren’s
parents had talked with her about how much work rela-
tionships required.
“Oh, Wren, just wait till you’re in your thirties before
you even consider getting married, will you?” her mom
had said.
“Forget marriage,” her dad added. “How about you wait
till you’re thirty before you have a boyfriend.”
“
Dad
,” Wren said. She was fourteen at the time, a freshman, and thirty seemed impossibly far away. Being a senior
seemed impossibly far away.
“I mean it,” her dad said. “If you wait to have a boyfriend
until after high school, we’ll get you a car when you grad-
uate. How does that sound?”
Wren wanted to think he was joking, but she wasn’t
sure. Just by saying something, just by throwing out an
expectation, her father and her mother both had an amazing
ability to make Wren shift around her own expectations.
Later, her mom came to her room and said, “Honey, just
so you know, we’re not trying to
bribe
you. We just hope you’ll show good judgment.”
So Wren had focused on her schoolwork instead of
boys. Her parents’ approval felt so very good—and not
only good, but necessary. As a child, Wren had felt vaguely
like a toy that was paraded out in front of her parents’
friends, there to be shown off. At the graduation luncheon,
standing beneath the weight of her father’s arm, she won-
dered how far she’d come. She felt young all of a sudden,
and lonely.
Her dad squeezed her shoulders. “Isn’t that right,
Wren?” he said.
Both he and Bob Hammond gazed at her expectantly.
Past them, the entire Cherokee Club ballroom, where
Wren and her set of friends were celebrating, was filled
with boys in suits and girls in white dresses. Her mom held
up her slender hand, waving a “no thanks” at the platter of
bacon-wrapped dates a caterer offered.
“Yes?” Wren said. She had no idea what she was agree-
ing to, but certain habits were deeply ingrained.
Bob Hammond laughed and gestured at the caterer.
“Well, that’s fine,” he said, “and I’ll take one of those.” He put three on a cocktail napkin. “John? Wren? They’re good.
Want one?”
“Yes,” Wren said more firmly. “I mean, please. Yes,
please.”
She filled her mouth so she could go back to not talking.
You’re no longer the same innocent fourteen-year-old
you once were, she told herself.
How sad it would be if she were.
How sad it was that she wasn’t.
After the luncheon, Wren and her parents headed home.
When they were within a few blocks of their house, her
parents told Wren to close her eyes.
“And keep them closed until we say so,” her mom said.
Oh dear, Wren thought. What now?
The car slowed. There was a small bump, and Wren
knew her dad had pulled into their driveway. He cut the
motor. Her mom helped Wren out of the car, and, for good
measure, she placed her own hand over Wren’s eyes.
She guided Wren a few feet forward.
“Is it time?” her mom said, presumably to her dad.
“I think so,” her dad replied.
She moved her hand, and Wren opened her eyes. Before
her was a white Toyota Prius.
“Well?” her mom exclaimed, practically humming with
delight. “Go see. Don’t you want to go see?”
Oh shit, Wren thought. The car. For good grades and
no boys. They really meant it, and oh shit, oh shit, oh shit.
She walked to the Prius. She placed her palm on its side,
which was warm from the sun. She looked back at her
parents.
“It has a moon roof,” her dad said.
“And we picked white because white cars are the least
likely to be involved in accidents,” her mom said. “White
and silver.”
“Safe drivers are even less likely to be involved in acci-
dents,” her dad said in a dad-tone.
“Wren is already a very safe driver,” her mom said.
“Of course she is,” her dad replied.
Wren’s throat tightened. She felt insanely guilty. Her
parents were giving her a car when she was about to disap-
point them more than she ever had. She also felt confused.
Her parents had actual y given her a car as a reward for
good behavior. It felt icky for some reason.
“I—I love it,” she told them.
“How about that moonroof?” her dad said.
“I love the moonroof. Thank you so much.”
“Check the glove compartment,” her dad said.
“The glove compartment?” Wren said. She didn’t want
to check the glove compartment. “Why?”
“You’ll see.”
Wren went to the driver’s side door, opened it, and slid
into the seat. She peeked at her parents, who stood with
their arms around each other. Then she leaned over the
console and opened the glove compartment. An envelope
lay on top of a thick booklet that was probably the owner’s
manual. Her fingers hovered over it.
“There should be a letter,” her dad called. “Read it.”
It was a notice, printed on Emory University letter-
head, stating that Wren had been granted the privilege of
having a car on campus. A parking permit would arrive
with her orientation materials, and the Provost’s Office as
well as the College of Liberal Arts would happily address
any questions or concerns Wren might have. They looked
forward to Wren becoming part of the Emory family.
Her mom and dad came up to the car door.
“We’ll still drive you to your dorm and help you