Read Something About Love: A YA contemporary romance in verse Online

Authors: Elana Johnson

Tags: #young adult contemporary romance, #young adult, #Contemporary, #poetry, #Romance, #young adult contemporary, #novel-in-verse, #young adult romance, #contemporary romance

Something About Love: A YA contemporary romance in verse (6 page)

BOOK: Something About Love: A YA contemporary romance in verse
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Door locked,

Music loud.

“What did he do?” she asks, and

I give her the break-up in blow-by-blow fashion,

Torn between relief and sadness,

Much the same way I felt last night when Trevor finally said,

“Well, we should get some sleep.”

Walking away from Harris’s retreating car and

Venomous words made my steps heavy,

The same as last night.

I’d lingered on the front porch,

Like I’d hesitated outside my bedroom door.

In both cases, I’d entered kissless.

In both cases, it was for the best.

“Disastrous,” I murmur again,

Thinking of Trevor this time.

“HEY.”

Trevor meets me in the student parking lot on Monday morning.

I can hear the jazz band music from down the hall, and

Streams of students flow around me.

What is he doing?

Standing there with that nervous smile,

Murky eyes,

Too-long hair?

His feet shuffle;

He clears his throat.

What is he thinking?

He won’t try to hold my hand in public, will he?

I haven’t told anyone but Jacey about my break-up with Harris, but

That doesn’t mean Trevor doesn’t know.

“Hey,” I say, and

Make to step past him.

“You can’t go to your locker,” he blurts,

The panic and concern evident in his tone.

I turn around,

Doing my best to ignore the icy fingers reaching into my stomach,

Eliminating the slow burn that Trevor ignites.

“Why not?”

“There’s…”

He seems to lose the oxygen he needs to speak.

“Did you break up with Harris?”

“Yes,” I say,

Still trying to figure out what my locker has to do with Harris.

“I’m gonna kill him,” Trevor says,

The worry suddenly replaced by fury.

My camera could catch his mood swings,

Even though they happen in milliseconds.

“Come on.”

He grips my hand and enters the river of students cascading down the hall.

“Trevor, tell me what’s going on.”

My backpack swings wildly as Trevor cuts left and then right.

I feel my cell phone buzz in my pocket.

Trevor doesn’t answer until we reach B-Hall,

Where my locker is.

“I thought you said I couldn’t go

To my locker.”

“I was wrong,

You need to see this.”

He pauses at the corner,

His chest heaving,

His eyes bright.

I wish I had my camera so I could capture the urgency in them,

The emotion I can’t quite name in real time, but

Could if I had enough time to analyze the shot.

It’s something hot, and

Pulsing, and

Alive.

Something I haven’t felt since breaking up with Trevor eighteen months ago,

Something that if I understood what it meant,

I’d call it…love?

“I’ve already told the office, and the janitor,”

He explains, “But it’s still there, and

Well, everyone’s staring.

But you need to know what kind of guy

Your boyfriend is.”

My ex-boyfriend.

I suddenly realize how quiet B-Hall is.

I wonder if the absence of noise can consume a person, because

This silence feels predatory.

“How bad?” I whisper

With no movement in my lips.

I picture Harris from yesterday:

Broken, confused, and

So, so angry.

But he’d said he loved me;

He wouldn’t do anything to hurt me.

“Bad,” Trevor whispers back, and

He squeezes my hand for strength.

“BAD,”

Doesn’t begin to describe it.

The first locker on the corner has writing on it.

Red spray paint, if I had to guess,

There’s no need though, because

The empty can is lying on the floor.

All the other seniors are on the opposite side of the hall, and

Vice Principal Archibald marches up and down the line,

Barking questions.

When he sees me and Trevor, he makes a beeline toward us.

“Miss Winging,” he says crisply,

“Come with me.”

I can’t move.

Every locker from mine to the corner is defaced.

Various notes have been scrawled on the locker in black Sharpie, and

The red spray paint makes up a larger message.

SLUT.

WHORE.

BITCH.

Above those bright,

Bold,

Red words,

Sits my name.

First and last.

OLIVIA WINGING.

SLUT.

WHORE.

BITCH.

“OH…”

My breath leaks from my body,

Leaves me cold,

Comes out in a low moan.

Someone next to me whispers, but

I don’t hear what they’re saying.

A buzz moves along the crowd,

Down the line,

Through the rumor mill.

If everyone hadn’t been staring at me before,

They all are now.

It’s then I realize that Trevor and I are still holding hands.

“OLIVIA WINGING IS A CHEATER.”

One of the smaller black Sharpie messages declares.

Could be true.

“I TOLD HER I LOVE HER, AND SHE DIDN’T CARE,”

Says another.

Totally not true.

“OLIVIA IS A TEASE,”

I read.

I didn’t mean to be.

I thought I was doing exactly the opposite.

“She’ll kiss you, but

Don’t expect anything more,”

The note continues.

I don’t know what Harris means to accomplish by that.

If anything, that makes me less of a slut, right?

Or does it make me a bad girlfriend?

Maybe a loser who doesn’t want to put out for her hot boyfriend?

I have no idea, because

The rules of high school relationships have suddenly shifted.

“COME WITH ME,”

Vice Principal Archibald insists, and

I rip my tear-filled eyes from the red spray paint and follow him.

But I’ll never get those words out of my head.

I’ve seen them, and

I can’t unsee them

Just like I’ve kissed Trevor, and

I can’t unkiss him,

Can’t unwant him,

Can’t unlove him.

IS THIS HOW HARRIS FEELS?

I wonder as I navigate the clearing halls.

The warning bell rang a minute ago, and

Everyone’s ducking into classrooms

As VP Archibald, Trevor, and

I pass.

Does Harris feel like the earth beneath his feet will suddenly vanish?

Without me, is the surface too perilous to hold his weight?

Does Harris feel as though the sky will fall?

Does he welcome it, because then the crushing hole in his chest will shrink?

Without me, does the atmosphere surrounding Harris change?

He said he loved me.

Maybe his message stems from the pain he feels

At not being able to unlove me.

I understand this pain as I have shouldered it for eighteen months.

It’s hard to describe to someone who has never truly longed for something,

Who has never truly experienced the endurance needed to inhale one more time

Without this thing.

This thing they need.

Humans need oxygen;

Fish need water;

Harris needs me, and

I need Trevor.

I suck at the air, and

Find him at my side.

Suddenly I can breathe.

“I DON’T KNOW,”

I say for what feels like the millionth time.

Along with,

“Yes, we broke up.”

And, “Yesterday.”

And, “He seemed fine.”

And, “Okay, yeah, mad. Hurt, probably.”

And, “Still. I can’t believe he would do something like this.”

And, “No, I don’t want to call my parents.”

And, “No, he hasn’t contacted me.”

And, “No, I don’t want to see him.

No! I don’t want to press charges.”

And, “Please, let Trevor stay.”

“CALL ME LATER, WINGS.”

Trevor finally relinquishes my hand as my father pulls up to the curb.

Vice Principal Archibald hurries around to the driver’s side window, and

Begins talking earnestly.

I get in the front seat,

Feeling the tears pooling.

I stare straight ahead, because

I do not want Trevor to see me cry.

“YOU OKAY, LIVVY?”

Dad asks when we get home.

He hasn’t spoken since bidding VP Archibald good-bye in the pick-up lane.

I’d let my tears overflow as soon as we were on the street, but

I did not sob.

I am not a sobber.

I do not let things devastate me.

I compartmentalize them until I can deal with them from behind

Locked doors, with

Loud music.

I shake my head as my tears fall.

Dad scoops me into a tight hug, and

Holds on.

He strokes my hair, and says,

“It’s okay, Livvy. It’s going to be okay.”

He held me like this after Mom left too.

He said the same words, but

Back then I didn’t know if he was saying them for me, or

For him.

Now, I just grip him with the fierceness of someone who’s drowning, and

Cry.

“LIV?”

Rose peeks her head through the crack in the door

Only minutes after she gets home from school.

“Dad said you weren’t feeling well.

Can I come in?”

I’ve refused phone calls,

Ignored texts,

Eaten nothing, and

Said little.

But I can’t refuse Rose.

“CLIMB IN, BUDDY.”

I hold the blankets aside so Rose can snuggle in close.

She’s always warm.

I call her my little furnace.

I can’t seem to get warm no matter how hard I try.

Voices murmur outside my closed door, and

Though she hasn’t lived here for over a year,

I recognize my mom’s tone.

She sounds worried.

If anything, the chasm inside me widens,

A fissure deeper than it is broad

That fills with a longing that only a mother can soothe.

“Livvy, Mom’s here.”

Rose’s voice shakes with emotion, and

I realize my cheeks are wet again.

“I know,” I whisper.

“She says you won’t let her in.”

“Yeah,” I say.

She’d tried to come in, but

I didn’t want to see her,

Didn’t want to talk about anything,

Not with her.

“Why are you crying?

What’s wrong?”

Rose’s voice pitches into hysteria, and

I stroke her hair,

Unable to answer.

“WEATHER AND TRAFFIC ON THE NINES.”

I fumble for the snooze button,

Find it,

Hit it, and

Roll over in bed.

After the third time,

I’m really late and expect Dad to come in,

Telling me in his warning voice that I’ll be late for school.

He doesn’t.

I lay there, listening to the sound of my heart beating,

The shifting of the house, and

The rumble of the garage door as it opens and then closes.

Twenty minutes later, the garage opens again.

Only a few seconds pass before a soft knock lands on my door.

“Olivia?” Dad asks. “I’m working from home today.

I’ll be in my office.”

I roll over and look at him so he knows I’ve heard him.

I find him watching me while his hands twist around each other,

While he assesses me to see if I’m okay.

My skin hides everything my eyes can’t.

Dad doesn’t have a camera, and

He’s not a photographer, but

He sees.

“I called the school and excused you.”

A quick wisp of a smile comes and goes.

“When you want breakfast, let me know.”

He backs out of the room and closes the door behind him.

I press my eyes closed, and see red paint on the backs of my eyelids.

I blink—blink—blink—

Until the crimson splashes fade from my sight,

Replaced by the kindness and understanding I saw in my father’s eyes.

He loves me, I know.

He’s letting me get away with a lot, I know.

I have a very, very good dad, I know.

For the first time,

The thought of love doesn’t raise more questions than answers.

“I CAN DO THIS,”

I coach myself as I turn down

Copper Hills Drive toward the school.

Dad gave me one day to lie in bed;

I didn’t ask for more, but

This Wednesday feels off,

Like a meteor could hit the earth, or

The Yellowstone volcano could erupt, or

I could see Harris.

I pull into the parking lot.

Kill the engine.

Stare at the streams of students as they move toward the door,

Get swallowed by the school.

My heart flutters;

My stomach flips;

I can’t breathe.

Somehow I force myself out of the car and

Toward the school.

“…Winging,” someone says

To my right.

I ignore them and

Keep going.

With my foot on the first step,

An arm lands across my shoulders.

“Hey, Liv.”

Joey MacNamara leers at me,

His fingers gripping my shoulder

In that possessive gesture

I warned Trevor not to do in his picture.

“Hey.”

I try to shrug away from him, but

He’s too strong.

“Want my number?” he asks as we enter the building.

“Maybe we can catch a movie later.”

BOOK: Something About Love: A YA contemporary romance in verse
11.37Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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