The Love That Split the World

We stay like that for the rest of our time together, and that’s how I know: We’ve both given up.

When I stand to go, she grabs my elbow. “You’ll be here Thursday.” It’s somewhere between question and statement.

“Probably,” I manage.



For the rest of the day and most of Wednesday I call Beau at thirty-minute intervals, but still I can’t get through to his burner phone. I spend my time pacing in Megan’s room, hiking listlessly through the woods, stumbling through painful small talk over the dinner table with Mrs. Phillips, and driving out to Beau’s house to sit in the room that should be his.

Around midnight, I’m lying in bed when my phone starts to vibrate beside my ear. “Hello?” I answer, immediately alert.

“Natalie.” Beau breathes my name out like a sigh of relief.

“Thank Grandmother,” I say.

“I missed you,” he says. “I thought maybe . . .”

He trails off, but I know what he was going to say. “No, not yet.”

We haven’t seen each other for the last time yet.

“Can I come there?” he asks.

“To Megan’s?”

“I can’t be at home right now.”

I debate it in my mind for a minute. I don’t want to be disrespectful to Megan’s family, but so much more than that, I don’t want to lose any time with Beau. “Park down on the street and come to the back door.”

“I’ll be right there.”

“Can we stay on the phone?” I ask. “Just in case.”

“Yeah,” he says. “We can do that.”

I don’t hang up until he’s standing in front of me on the other side of the glass door, his phone to his ear and that heavy smile across his face as he raises one hand. I toss the phone into the chair and slide the door open, pulling him against me. He nestles his nose into the side of my face.

“You’re here.”

He turns me around so my back presses against the half-open door and his fingers rest on the waistline of my shorts. “I’m here.” He stares at me hard through the dark, and everywhere his eyes touch me, I feel heat.

“Do you think if we had more time, it’d stop feeling like this?”

“That depends,” he murmurs.

“On?”

“On how this feels.”

Before I can reply, the lamp beside the bed winks out, and the empty layers of sheets surge upward around a body that wasn’t there before. “Oh my God,” I gasp, then clap my hand over my own mouth.

Beau glances over his shoulder toward the softly snoring person in the bed: the Other Megan. “Come on,” he mouths, pulling me outside and sliding the door shut.

We move off down the patio to the wooden lounge chairs and little table where Megan and I used to sit on Saturday mornings, drinking coffee and eating sugary cereal to stifle mild hangovers. “What am I supposed to do?” I ask Beau. “Even if she disappears, I could go back in there, fall asleep, and wake up spooning a version of her who’s only met me for, like, five minutes.”

Beau rubs the pinched spot between his eyebrows. “This is getting a little crazy.”

“No kidding. We really can’t go to your house?”

He stares at the ground and runs his teeth over his bottom lip. “It’s not good there.”

I touch the side of his face, his skin warm and sleek with sweat. “Okay.”

We sit down in the dewy lounge chairs, heads leaned against the side of the house. “I wish we could find out,” Beau says.

“Huh?”

“How it would feel later,” he says, “if we had more time.”

I sigh and pull his arm around my shoulder. “Probably you’d get sick of me shouting out what I think’s going to happen in every movie, and I’d get sick of you drinking and leaving your clothes wherever you took them off. I’d hate how messy you keep your room, and it’d drive you crazy how I can’t do anything without planning every detail first.”

Beau laughs.

“What, you think I’m wrong?”

He looks over at me. “I think that’s a lie and you know it.”

“Okay, fine. You tell me what would happen.”

“We’d get married,” he says.

“Oh? In my world or yours?”

“Both,” he says. “Then someday, ten or fifteen years from now, you’d have a baby.”

“What would we name him?” I say, playing along.

“Her,” he says.

“What would we name her?” I say softly.

“I don’t know. Maybe Natalie Junior,” he says. “She’d look just like you.”

“But she’d throw like you.”

“And she’d be smart like you. You two would talk about all the things I don’t get, and that way you’d never get bored with me.”

I laugh into his neck. “And you’d coach football so you wouldn’t get bored with me.” His face lights up. It makes me want to say the sentence over and over again. “Beau Junior will be on the team, obviously.”

“We can’t name our kid Beau Junior. He’d get called BJ. You want our son’s nickname to be Blow Job, Natalie?”

“Oof, good point. So what would we name him?”

“I don’t know.” He smooths my hair and kisses my head. “Probably just name him Natalie, too.”

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