upstairs and get cleaned up, then come down for dinner, and weâll get this sorted out.â
I wrap my arms around her in a grateful hug. âIâm sorry, Mom.â
She hugs me back without hesitating. âI know. But youneed to be honest with me, Quinn. If youâre having a hard day, and you need to get away or want to be alone, you need to talk to me. Let me know. Just be honest with me, thatâs all I ask.â
âOkay,â I say into her shoulder, and I make a silent promise to myself that I will.
After my shower and a dinner I push around my plate instead of eat, I am completely honest with her when I say that Iâm drained from the day and just want to go to bed. Itâs too quiet up in my room, and stuffy with the dayâs heat. I open the window all the way and breathe in the cool air and the smell of the hills that drifts in with it. Outside, the crickets break up the silence, and the first few stars twinkle high in the dusky sky.
I cross the room to my dresser, almost afraid to look at my reflection. I avoided facing myself in the bathroom mirror, but here, alone in my room, I canât. I step in front of my dresser mirror, and my eyes go straight to my still-swollen lip, where the tiny black stitches stand out in sharp contrast against my pale skin. Proof that today happened. That I found Colton Thomas and that, despite all the rules Iâve come up with for myself, I met him. Spoke to him. Spent time with him. I bring my fingertips to my three stitches and wonder for a second how many it took to close Trentâs heart into his chest. The thought chokes me up fortoo many reasons to sort out.
My eyes drift over the pictures tucked all along the edge of my mirror, silly group photos from dances, shots of us from trips with the friends we used to share. All the people Iâve pushed away trying to hold on to him. It didnât take long for me to realize that as much as they loved him too, their worlds didnât stop the way mine did when he died. They slowed momentarily, long enough to mourn the loss of their friend, but gradually, they picked up again. Fell back into the rhythms and routines of life. Took new pictures. Planned their futures.
A lump forms in my throat, and my eyes fall on my favorite picture of us. It was taken at one of his swim meets last spring. The sun is shining, lighting up the bright aqua patch of the pool in the background. Trent stands behind me, strong, tan arms wrapped around my shoulders, chin tucked into the crook of my neck, smiling right at the camera. Iâm leaned back into his chest, laughing. I donât remember whyâif it was something he said or did. And now, as hard as I try to hold on to it, Iâve started to forget the feeling of being wrapped up in his arms like that and the way it could make everything else disappear.
I run a finger over the glass of the frame and brush the dried sunflower hanging next to it. The very first thing he gave me, on the very first day we met. I cut the stem and put it in a vase when I got home, and after that first week ofspending every afternoon together, walking back and forth between each otherâs houses so we could keep talking, the petals started to wilt. I hung the flower upside down then, like Iâd seen my mom do, and let it dry out until it was preserved, because I knew that flower was the beginning of us. I kept it there, a reminder that I was right.
The petals are faded now, almost colorless from time and the sun, and so brittle theyâve started to crumble and fall away on their own. Itâs barely recognizable as a flower anymore. But I havenât taken it down because I canâtâIâm afraid of how much Iâll forget if I do.
I turn, go to my bed, and climb in; but I know I wonât sleep. I donât bother to close my eyes. I lie there staring at a familiar knot in the wood of my ceiling instead, wishing I could go back to when he was here