Beautiful Chaos

 

Lena wasn’t in her bedroom at Ravenwood. I sat down on her bed to wait, staring up at the ceiling. I thought of something and picked up her pillow, rubbing it against my face. I remembered smelling my mom’s pillowcases after she was gone. It was magic to me, a piece of her that still existed in my world. I wanted Lena to at least have that.

 

I thought about Lena’s bed, the time we broke it, the time the roof caved in on it, the time we broke up and the plaster had rained down on everything. I looked at the walls, thinking about the words that wrote themselves there the first time Lena told me how she felt.

 

You’re not the only one falling.

 

Lena’s walls weren’t glass anymore. Her room was the same as it was the day we first met. Maybe that was how she was trying to keep things. The way it was at the beginning, when things were still full of possibility.

 

I couldn’t think about it.

 

There were bits of words everywhere, I guess because that’s how Lena felt things.

 

 

 

WHO CAN JUDGE THE JUDGE?

 

 

 

 

 

It didn’t work like that. You couldn’t reset the clock. Not for anyone. Not even for us.

 

 

 

NOT WITH A BANG BUT A WHIMPER

 

 

 

 

 

What was done was done.

 

I think she must have known, because she left a message for me, written across the walls of her room in black Sharpie. Like the old days.

 

 

 

DEMON MATH

 

what is JUST in a world

 

you’ve ripped in two

 

as if there could be

 

a half for me

 

a half for you

 

what is FAIR when

 

there is nothing

 

left to share

 

what is YOURS when

 

your pain is mine to bear

 

this sad math is mine

 

this mad path is mine

 

subtract they say

 

don’t cry

 

back to the desk

 

try

 

forget addition

 

multiply

 

and i reply

 

this is why

 

remainders

 

hate

 

division

 

 

 

 

 

I rested my head against the wall next to the words.

 

Lena.

 

She didn’t respond.

 

L. You’re not a remainder. You’re a survivor.

 

Her thoughts came slowly, in a jagged rhythm.

 

I won’t be able to survive this. You can’t ask me to.

 

I knew she was crying. I imagined her lying in the dry grass at Greenbrier. I would look for her there next.

 

You shouldn’t be alone. Wait for me. I’m coming.

 

There was so much to say that I stopped trying to say it. Instead, I wiped my eyes with my sleeve, and opened my backpack. I pulled out the spare Sharpie Lena kept there, the way people have a spare tire in the back of their car.

 

For the first time, I uncapped it and stood on the girly chair in front of her old white dresser. It groaned under my weight, but it held. And I didn’t have long, anyway. My eyes were stinging, and it was hard to see.

 

I wrote on her ceiling, where the plaster had cracked, where so many times other words, better words, more hopeful words had appeared above our heads.

 

I wasn’t much of a poet, but I had the truth, and that was enough.

 

 

 

I will always love you.

 

Ethan

 

 

 

 

 

I found Lena lying in the charred grass at Greenbrier, the same place I had found her the day she shattered the windows in our English class. Her arms were flung over her head, the same way they were that day, too. She stared up at the thin stretch of blue.

 

I lay down next to her.

 

She didn’t try to stop the tears. “It’s different, you know that? The sky looks different now.” She was talking, not Kelting. Suddenly talking was special. All the regular things were.

 

“It does?”

 

She took an uneven breath. “When I first met you, that’s what I remember. I looked up at the sky and thought, I’m going to love this person because even the sky looks different.” I couldn’t say anything. My breath was caught in my throat.

 

But she wasn’t finished. “I remember the exact moment I saw you. I was in my car. You were playing basketball outside with your friends. And the ball rolled off the court and you went to get it. You looked at me.”

 

“I remember that. I didn’t know you saw me.”

 

She smiled. “See you? I almost crashed the hearse.”

 

I looked back up at the sky. “Do you believe in love before first sight, L?”

 

Do you believe in love after last sight, Ethan?

 

After death—that’s what she meant.

 

It wasn’t fair. We should have been complaining about our curfews. Trying to find a place besides the Dar-ee Keen where we could get summer jobs together. Worrying about whether or not we would get into the same college. Not this.

 

She rolled away from me, sobbing and pulling at the grass with her hands. I wrapped my arms around her, holding her close. I brushed her hair aside carefully and whispered in her ear. “Yes.”

 

What?

 

I believe in love after death.

 

She took a ragged breath.

 

Maybe that’s how I’ll remember, L. Maybe remembering you is life after death for me.

 

She turned to look at me. “You mean, the way your mom remembers you?”

 

I nodded. “I don’t know exactly what I believe in. But because of you and my mom, I know I believe.”