For twenty minutes, I waited at the bus station, and I thought of the time Megan and I had taken Jari for a walk. I remembered the smell of the rain, the autumn color of Jari’s raincoat, the sound of Megan’s laugh.
‘‘Jari, don’t step in the pud—oh, okay . . . Yup. Get your jeans wet. Amanda won’t mind at all.’’
She was wearing a thick blue hoody and Adidas sweatpants, though I hadn’t known Megan to play shorts. ‘’I don’t,’’ she explained when I asked, ‘’I tried volleyball this year, and then I broke my ankle, and now I’m kinda done.’’
I picked Jari up from the puddle and put him on my shoulders; his small fingers knotted themselves in my hair.
‘‘Gentle, Jari,’’ Megan said.
Jari said, ‘‘Kiss!’’ which was his way of saying Cris.
‘‘Really, Jari?’’ I asked, grinning up at the kid. ‘‘You want me to kiss Megan? Are you sure?’’
‘‘Kiss!’’ he squealed.
Megan laughed and said, ‘‘That’s not what he—’’ and I shut her up with a kiss. Somehow, Jari knew what we were up to and he started clapping and shrieking.
Megan’s lips were soft and cool. She tasted like peaches.
I love you.
Now, at the bus station, a silver Greyhound pulled in and the passengers loaded off. I watched for her. I watched for springtime.
The feeling of Megan and Jari seemed like nothing more than the whisper of a memory that I’d only wanted to happen.
YOU ARE READING
Looking At Us
Novela Juvenil❝Looking at us, I see your smile, and I feel your hand, and I wonder, truly, if we are meant to survive this journey.❞ Based on a true story in which a group of teens battle love, life, and sociality.