Forever & Always: The Ever Trilogy (Book 1) (22 page)

BOOK: Forever & Always: The Ever Trilogy (Book 1)
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And then he was gone, and I was alone, and his final words were clanging in my head.
 

The knowledge of his cheating and lying couldn’t make me cry. But those words, the truth in them…
that
made me cry.

When I got into my car, I connected my iPhone via USB cord and turned on Pandora. The first song to play? “Delicate” by Damien Rice. Wonderful.

once more unto the breach, dear friends

Caden

Alex passed me the joint, and I held it low as he made the turn onto Beaubien. Took a hit as we cruised past empty buildings and burned-out warehouses and graffiti-tagged storefronts, clusters of people on street corners. I was waiting for Alex to start talking. He’d been moody lately, going from manic to mopey, frantic and frenetic to dark and depressed.
 

Throughout my first year at CCS, Alex had remained my only friend. I had classmates and teachers. Lab partners and assignment groups and critique partners. But no friends except Alex. He didn’t ask questions, just accepted me. Showed me his favorite diners and restaurants. Bought me beer since he was twenty-two, let me smoke his pot and didn’t question when I didn’t want to. I smoked because he did. I did like the high, but only when the loneliness got too much. Alex could only take so much of a place in my life. He was a buddy, someone to hang with. We’d sketch in silence, me at the kitchen counter, him on the couch, classic punk music playing from his iPod dock. I didn’t really love punk, but it was Alex’s thing, and it grew on me. Sort of.
 

So now, with Alex in a depressed phase that was lasting for more than a week, I was worried. And I didn’t know how to handle it except to let him talk when he was ready.

He had to pull into an alley to roll another joint before he was ready to talk. I didn’t smoke that one. It was all his, clamped in his lips as he circled through Detroit, cruising the midnight streets, going places we had no business going. And then he found a particularly dark street, most of the houses boarded up, drove down it at barely fifteen miles per hour, his headlights off, head craned out the window, counting houses. He found the one he was looking for, I assumed, when he pulled to a stop in front of it.
 

“Wait here.” He got out of the car and closed the door behind him.

I felt anxiety rise in my gut. This was not the place for a white kid from Wyoming. “No, Alex, I’m not—I’m not staying here. It’s not—it’s not safe.”

“Don’t be a pussy. If anyone bugs you, tell ’em you’re waiting for me. They know me here. Don’t get out, just hang. I’ll be right back.”

“What are you going to do?”

He shot me a disgusted look through the open window. “What the fuck you think I’m doing? Having tea with the queen? Buying drugs, you hick.” He smacked the door with his palm. “Just chill, bro. You’ll be fine.”

And so I sat, in a beat-up old Monte Carlo, pot smoke curling up around me from the smoldering roach in the ashtray, on a side street in Detroit at one-thirty in the morning. The streetlights either didn’t work or flickered, lending an eerie stop-motion effect to the night. A red two-door classic Buick, long as a battleship and throbbing with bass, rolled past me. The windows were down, two shadowed faces peering at me with curious eyes. They slowed as they passed me, not even two feet away. My heart thudded in my chest, my pulse pounding and my stomach flopping. My eyes met those of the driver, and I held his gaze steadily. I didn’t nod and I didn’t look away. After an eternity, he lifted his chin at me and gunned the engine, vanishing around the corner.

I heard a gunshot somewhere in the distance. Sirens. Laughter from the house where Alex was buying drugs. Hard drugs, I realized. This was not the kind of house one went to with the intent of buying a bag of weed.

Another car passed, and this one didn’t stop or slow down, and they didn’t look at me. Fifteen minutes passed, and they felt like an hour. Eventually Alex came out, sidling slowly, a lazy grin on his face. He slid into the driver’s seat, fumbling at the keys, and then leaned his head back.

“You drive,” he said. “I’m blazed.”

“All right. Not sure where I’m going, though.” I got out and circled around while Alex slid over.
 

“No problem. I know where we are. I’m just too strung out to drive.”

“What kind of drugs?” The question slipped out. I couldn’t help it, and I was glad it had emerged.

“Does it matter? I ain’t offerin’ you any, that’s for fucking sure. You’re too nice for this shit.”

“It matters. What are you on?”

He snorted. “Dude, what planet you live on? What kind of drugs do you think I would buy from a house like that, in that neighborhood? Don’t you ever watch
Cops
?”
 

“Crack?”

“Yes…sir.” He blew out a long breath. “You mad, bro?” He flopped his head to one side, grinning at me.

“Not mad. Worried, though.”

“Don’t be. It’s just a little, to take off the edge.”

“Edge of what?” I knew very little about Alex. Just that he had deep, dark waters inside him, and he did drugs to ease some pain I would never know, quiet voices I would never hear. For all that he was given to rambling and sharing awkward personal details, usually of his exploits with Amy, there were certain things he never discussed.
 

“Life, man. Just life.” He stared out of his window, watching the dark, dilapidated houses pass. Every once in a while he’d direct me to turn one way or another. “I grew up in this city, man. Never left, never will. Mom was born here, Dad was born here.”

“Yeah?” I sensed a confession coming.
 

“Yeah, man. I know her. Detroit, I mean. Her dark secrets. Things you can’t imagine. You don’t belong here. I do.” He peered sideways at me. “Just finish your schooling, man, and get out. Don’t get sucked into my world. Don’t smoke my pot. Don’t drink my beer. Don’t listen to my secrets. They’ll eat you up, man. They’ll pull you in.”

“Give me more credit than that, bro.” I recognized a street and turned onto it, cruising slowly. “What’s bugging you, man?”

Alex didn’t answer for almost half a mile. “I’m falling for Amy, dude. Remember the agreement I made with her? I can’t tell her. I don’t know how. I thought it was just fuckin’, but it’s more. I can’t tell her, because she don’t want that. She’s so goddamn cute, Cade. For real. You ain’t met her, but she is. The thing about writing a book? That shit drives me crazy, but I love it. I love teasing her about it. I want her to write it. I want her to be this amazing writer. And she will be. But if I tell her I accidentally fuckin’ fell in love with her, she’ll call it all off, and I’ll lose her. She don’t wanna be with no crackhead.” His words were slurred, sounding unlike himself, thick with the urban Detroit accent. “She knows exactly what I am, and she won’t want no part of it.”

“How do you know?”

“’Cause I asked her. If she ever thought there was more for her, for me. She laughed and said no. I was good in bed and fun to smoke down with, but she couldn’t be with me for real. It wouldn’t work, she said. She just smokes for fun. When she graduates, she’ll give it up and get a real job, a real life. It’s just a college phase for her, she said. It ain’t that for me, and she knows it. It’s life for me. This is all I’ll ever be.”

“It doesn’t have to be, Alex.” I turned again, bringing us around toward our apartment. “You’re a talented artist and damn good bass player. You could get bigger gigs if you tried. Find a better band.”

He flopped his head in a sloppy negative. “Nah. I’d lose my shit on the road. I’d be dead of an OD in a fuckin’ week. The groupies would be nice, though. I’ve always wanted to bang two chicks at once. Amy ain’t into that, though. I asked.”

“Dude, don’t scare me.” My heart was falling away, out of the bottom of my chest.

“I’m in deep, dude. I want her bad. I’d go clean for her, if I thought that would make a difference. I’d try, at least. But she has ambitions. Teach, write. She wants to be a professor of literature. Write for fun. Ambitions like that don’t include a crackhead bass player.”

“You’re not really a crackhead, right? It’s just a little, you said.”

Alex laughed, leaning his head out the open window. “Dude. Get a clue. All addicts say shit like that. It’s how you know an addict.”

“Then why are you at CCS?”

“A desperate attempt to legitimize myself, I guess. Got a scholarship. Loans for being dirt-ass poor.” He leaned forward, peering at the ashtray. “Where’s that roach? I know I had a roach.”

“Haven’t you gotten high enough for now?” I couldn’t help asking.

He shot me a look, one that spoke of depths of desperation I’d never realized existed within him. “Don’t. Do
not
get in between me and my buzz, bro. You’re my roommate. Not my friend. You don’t know jack shit about me.”

That hurt. I drove in silence. “So tell me,” I said finally.

Alex found the roach, shut his window, cupped the butt-end of the joint between his lips, tilted his head to the side, and lit it, inhaling deeply. “Sorry, Cade. That was shitty. You know you’re my bro.” He blew out, opened the window again. “Not much to tell. Mom was an addict. Raised me and my little sister alone. Teen mom, no education. Same old story you hear all the time. Never knew my dad, had a parade of Mom’s boyfriends in and out of my house. Some nice, some…not. A few hit her, one hospitalized her. One raped my sister. That was during my gangbanger years, and he…well, let’s just say he regretted it not too long afterward. Pot, booze, crack, it was just life. The streets, gangs. Whatever. I graduated high school, barely, because Mom was unfortunate in her life and her choices, but she wasn’t stupid. Neither am I. Just…dumb. ’S a difference, I think. Mom raised us best she could with what she had. But…she was trapped, you know? ’Cause of me and Annie. So I learned to use art to deal. I think you know about that. I got out of gangs when I was sixteen. Turned to art, graduated. Eventually got a scholarship to CCS. Found music, and that helps. But there’s a part of me that’s just…dug down deep into the roots of what this city means to people like me. It’s a prison world, sometimes. Like in fuckin’, what was that movie? The Riddick movie. Shit, that’s what it was called.
Riddick
. A prison world. There’s beauty here. Life. Love. But for some of us, it’s all we’ll ever know.”
 

He took a long drag, held it until I thought he would pass out, and then let it trickle from his nose. “You’re here, and you don’t belong.”

I had no response for any of that. I parked in the lot outside our apartment, and Alex lurched out of the car, inside, into his room, closed the door.
 

I thought about writing Ever, but I didn’t. I hadn’t gotten a letter from her in weeks. Maybe that was done.
 

And then, the next morning, there was a letter from her in the mail. Addressed from Cranbrook Academy of Art.
 

Caden,

It’s been a really long time. On both sides. Why? Are we not doing this anymore? Did I say something to upset you? Are you okay?
 

I broke up with Will. He was cheating on me. Living with someone else and fucking me on the side. Which is weird, because I thought it was the other way around, you know? That if he was getting some on the side, I was the main girl in his life, and the other girl was the one on the side. But…no. It didn’t work that way.
 

I miss your letters.

I miss you.
 

Draw me something? Please?
 

Yours, (am I, though? Am I anyone’s?)

Ever

I sat at the kitchen counter, staring at the letter, at the address. At the deep-seated pain between the lines of her letter, of her words, haunted sadness in the spaces of her words.
 

Yours, (Am I, though? Am I anyone’s?)
 

What a sad interjection. Tragic. And I understood it completely. The cry, the petition hidden in the soul, unscreamed, unuttered. The cold within and the numbness, going through the motions and using art to feel anything. I knew all this was true for her, even though she’d said none of it.
 

I drew. It was her style, abstract. Lines on paper, arcs and whorls and slicing and cutting and no design. Until…until the end, when I set the pencil down, the abstract lines on paper formed two words, buried within tangled barbed wires and thorny vines: NOT ALONE.

I sprayed it to set it, put it in my room, and went to class, thought about her through art history and theory and calculus. I went home—still no Alex, no smoke, no music—and sat down to write.

Ever,

You are someone’s: Your own. Don’t belong to anyone but yourself. It’s the only way. Those are wise words from a fool who can’t use his own advice. I’m sorry about Will. I’m sorry he hurt you. He didn’t deserve you.
 

I’m trying to write, but my words have dried up. Sorry. Just…sorry. Paint. Paint me something.
 

Always yours,
 

Cade
 

And I sent it. Despite the contradiction. With the drawing, I sent it, and I went back to evening class and spent hours in the studio, trying my hand at acrylics, letting my head and my heart empty onto white space, knowing it would never fill the space in my soul where my mother and my father belonged, knowing somehow, along the way, I’d been broken so I could never find peace or true friendship or love.

A week later, I found him.
 

~ ~ ~ ~

Ever

I was more fucked up about Billy than I’d thought I’d be. Days at Eden’s turned into a month, and then I jerked myself out of it and had Dad sell my apartment. I moved out and got myself assigned to a double dorm room on campus. My roommate was as erratic in her hours as I was, so I never saw her.
 

I painted, and I refused to cry, refused to believe I was that hurt, that lonely. I threw myself into painting. Hours with the brush and canvas, until instructors and janitors had to kick me out. Until Eden had to remind me to eat. To sleep.
 

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