but less than a lot?â he offers, and stuffs his face with a sandwich to avoid further questioning.
âThe other day we argued about my socks. Remember that?â I say as I turn back to Alice.
âWell, they were on the communal sofa and I thoughtââ
âIt was one sock, Alice. One lonely, little sock, somehow accidentallyââ I stop myself. âSee? See? We almost started arguing about arguing about socks.â
âThe truth is, I went to counseling, Noah,â Alice says. She has a way of stating simple facts that feels like chastisement. âI know it may be hard for you to imagine, but it helps. They teach you strategies to reframe your thinking.â
âAbout dying?â
âAbout living.â She bites her lip. âYou barely even eat. I worry.â
My turn to sigh. âI was working up to it, you know. Arguing, I mean. But you ruined it.â
âI know,â she says.
I love that she knows, so I lean over and give her a brief kiss. For once, my thoughts do not drift to Zach.
Marty cracks open some Pushkin, pretends to read Eugene Onegin . He does an admirable job, even goes as far as to mouth the words.
âMartin, dear?â I say.
Marty looks up, and I say, âIf Pushkin is the best Russianscan do,â I say, âthey ought to stick to chess, balalaika, and scorched earth tactics.â
âNoah,â he says. Shakes his head. âI donât even know where to start.â
âYou can start by dropping that,â I say, nodding at his book.
âHave you even read Pushkin?â
âAs a matter of fact I have. Dr. Seuss can write better limericks, frankly.â
He gives me such a helplessly exasperated look that I feel guilty. Iâm about to apologize when Alice says, âNoah Falls. Youâre such a troll.â
I want to tell them I was perfectly serious; the other week I spent a good hour crying over Oh, the Places Youâll Go!
âItâs okay,â Marty says. âNoah has this thing where he has to annoy me periodically. And get me drunk.â
âAnd look out for you after heâs gotten you drunk,â I say, forcing brightness into my voice.
âAnd look out for me after heâs gotten me drunk.â
Alice smiles wistfully at Marty. âYouâre too good to him, you know?â
Marty blushes, turns a page, but Alice has turned her attention to me. Doubt flickers over her face. She thinks sheâs hurt my feelings, and now sheâs about to apologize. I hate how fragile she thinks I am; she doesnât understand that Iâm the one whoâs hurting her. It strikes me that the only functional relationship Iâve ever had was in Martyâs Peter Pan . Peterâs vision was failing, Wendyâs hair was turning gray, but it was okay, because they were in love, and every night they would escape to Neverland together.
âNoah?â Alice asks, and her voice jolts me from my thoughts.
Marty hunches over Eugene Onegin, adjusts his glasses.
âYouâre right, actually,â I say, and suddenly Iâm standing. Marty and Alice stare up at me from the ground, perplexed.
They are both too good to me.
And no matter how good they are to me, itâs not enough.
Why canât it be enough?
Why do I have to walk around with a nagging emptiness inside me?
âNoah,â Alice says, quiet. âYouâre the best person I know. I believe that.â
âIâmââ Terrible is the next word I have in mind. Briefly Iâm back on the cobblestone path with the autumn-bare branches overhead, the birds flitting above, the teachers approaching, and Zachâs telling me heâs terrible and Iâm thinking of squandered poetry, birds that mate for life.
ââgoing for a walkâ is how I finish. I start down the path that circles the lake, leaving Marty and Alice to stare after me. The Galloway gardens are up ahead, flowers
Rudolph Herzog
Nichola McAuliffe
T. A. Barron
Amanda Scott
Nathan Stratton
Josie Litton
Rita Herron
K.S. Adkins
Kate Wilhelm
Chang-rae Lee