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Only Love Can Break Your Heart by Katherine Webber (10)

CHAPTER 13

When we get to my house, I see Seth taking it all in. Despite hanging out so much, this is the first time he’s been to my house, and he is so taken aback by it all that he barely says a word, just stares and stares till I think his eyes might pop out. It makes me see my house, my life, through new eyes too. Through his eyes.

My house both blends in with the desert and stands out. It’s two stories, but it’s still long and low. Low enough to snuggle up against the mountains.

We have a front lawn and one in the backyard. It’s expensive to keep the grass green, but my mother insists and my father shrugs and says he doesn’t mind paying. Because he likes to make her happy. Because if she is happy, so is he, and then that happiness will trickle down and fill our home and we will all be happy. Or something. Happiness is something that used to come easily to my family, but now it is something we work hard at. And while I’m sure my parents know that money can’t buy happiness, they’re trying their best.

We have a pool too, but almost everyone I know has a pool. Except for Seth − and that’s because he lives out in a trailer with nothing but rocks for company, where even the sand is scarce.

But by the time we get inside, he is managing to keep his eyes in his head and has finally started to relax. A little bit.

“Whoa,” he says, slightly under his breath.

“What?” I say, nudging him with my shoulder. And then he lets out a low, appreciative whistle. “It’s just … really nice.”

“It’s all right,” I say with a shrug. It’s all I’ve ever known. But I remember when I first saw his trailer, how it felt unreal. And suddenly I get that this is the inverse moment of that − that my house, my life, everything about me, might not feel real to him.

“Reiko, it’s more than all right. I’ve never even seen a house this nice.” He gives me a sheepish grin. “Sorry, I sound like some sort of hick from the sticks.” And something about his sheepish smile makes me smile too, like a reflex, like the corners of our mouths are connected by an invisible string.

Thinking about having a mouth connected to Seth’s makes me flinch. It’s not that I’ve never thought about it. Because I have. In a casual, curious way. The same way I think about kissing lots of people I know I would never kiss. Like Tony at the deli or my Art History teacher Mr. Flynn − just a curious thought, a wonder about what their lips are like, nothing I’d ever act upon.

But for some reason, my mind keeps returning to Seth’s mouth. His too-wide mouth with thin, chapped lips. It shouldn’t be appealing, and yet … I can’t stop thinking about it.

“You all right?” Seth asks. “You’re looking at me funny.”

“Sand on your cheek,” I lie, as I reach out and brush the imaginary particles away, the tips of my fingers feather-light on his skin.

Seth freezes under my touch − he stops breathing, and I wonder if even his heart has stopped beating.

“Got it,” I say, relieved because I felt nothing more than I would feel if I touched Dre or my brother, Koji. That’s good, that’s normal. As much as we’ve been hanging out, I shouldn’t be thinking about kissing Seth Rogers.

“Come on,” I call over my shoulder. “I’ll show you the rest of the house.” We head into the kitchen, which opens up to the living room. My brother is sprawled on the couch in front of the television, playing a video game.

“Where are Mom and Dad?” I ask.

“Out,” he says without looking up. Koji used to be so cute. When he was tiny, Mika and I loved playing with him. He’d even let us dress him up. But since she died, it seems like the gap has grown between us. I spend more time with Mika as she is now than I do with Koji. He’s always playing video games or practicing his guitar, anyway.

“I gathered they’re not here. But where are they?” He doesn’t respond, so I go and stand in front of the screen, meaning he can’t see what he is blowing up or shooting at or whatever it is he is doing with the controller.

“Hey!” he says.

“Mom and Dad?”

“Hendersens’, I think. Barbecue? Dinner party? Luncheon? Something. I don’t know. I wasn’t listening. Text Mom. And move, please.”

I flop next to him on the couch and wave Seth over. He’s standing in the kitchen, behind a marble island, still looking a bit stunned by it all. “Koji, this is…” I pause. Not sure what to call Seth. I guess we’re friends? But “Friends” simultaneously seems both too intimate and too distant to describe us. So I just say, “This is Seth. Seth, this is my brother, Koji. Koj, can Seth borrow a pair of your swim trunks?” It is a slight dig at Seth, that he can fit in my little brother’s swim trunks.

“Sure,” Koji says, still staring at the screen in front of him. “They are in the bottom drawer in the dresser next to my bed.”

“Do you want to come swimming with us?” Seth says, coming to sit on the arm of the couch.

“Um, you know my sister doesn’t actually swim, right?” says Koji.

I flinch, wondering what he’s going to say. I haven’t been swimming since Mika died. I can be in the pool on a raft, but I can’t bear to be submerged in water. I don’t want Seth to know this. I don’t want him to ask why I don’t swim.

“She just lounges,” says Koji, and I relax. He glances away from the screen for a second to scrutinize Seth. “Who are you again?”

“I’m Seth,” he says.

“And you know Reiko how?” Koji sounds strangely protective of me, and I find it a little bit adorable. He looks back and forth between us, his video game forgotten for the moment, trying to piece it together. Trying to piece us together.

If even my brother can’t figure out how Seth and I fit, can’t see why we hang out, there is no way my friends are going to. I want to run out of the house, pulling Seth with me. We can only exist in the desert. Not in my house. And definitely not at school.

“From around,” Seth says.

Then Koji shrugs and picks up his controller again. “Cool,” he says.

I let out a breath. I’m starting to realize that Seth and I only make sense when it is just the two of us. Even just chatting with my little brother is adding a layer of unease, making our interactions heavy in a way they weren’t before. We float when it’s just us. Any added pressure is going to make us sink.

“All right, man, good luck getting to that next level,” says Seth. Then he shakes his head. “But there’s always another level, isn’t there?” He’s not looking at my brother, or even the television screen. He’s looking at me. It makes me feel weird. I don’t understand what he’s getting at, but then he smiles, and he’s Seth again, and it’s all right.

He follows me up the stairs.

“My brother’s room is at the end of the hall,” I say. “Just grab any pair of swim trunks from the bottom drawer in his dresser.”

“Got it,” he says. But then he moves toward a door that isn’t to Koji’s room; it’s the door to my sister Mika’s room.

I lunge at him and swat his hand away from the doorknob. “No!”

Seth jerks back like he’s been burnt.

“That’s not … not Koji’s room,” I say. “His is there, at the end of the hall.” I point in the correct direction.

“What is it?” Seth’s hand is straying toward the door again like he might open it. And I notice his eyes flicker to the framed picture on the wall of me, Mika, and Koji.

I step in front of it. “It’s nothing,” I say. “Storage. Just go get changed.”

I stand in the hall until he goes into my brother’s room. And even then I wait a moment, just to make sure he’s not going to come back out and open this door.

Open Mika’s door.

I wonder, if he knows. If he’s figured it out from looking at the photo. Or maybe someone at school has already told him. But I don’t want that.

I don’t want him asking questions about Mika. So even though I’m perfectly capable of tying my own bikini top, I wait for Seth in the hall with only the straps around my neck tied, holding the bikini to my chest, my back bare, the straps dangling at my side. The bikini is new and maraschino-cherry red. I know it looks good on me.

Seth’s eyes go wide when he sees me. I’m glad. I want him to think about me, just me, and nothing else.

“Help me tie this?” I say, turning around.

I can feel his fingers trembling as he fumbles with the straps.

“Double or single knot?” he says, his voice barely a whisper.

“Single is fine,” I say. And then, voice pitched feather-soft, “Just don’t tug on it or it’ll come off.”

He makes some sort of noise that might be a laugh or a groan.

“Come on,” I say, slipping away from him and back down the stairs.

And, with that, Mika’s closed door is banished from both of our minds.

* * *

I sit on the steps of the swimming pool, only my legs submerged in the water, like a mermaid sunning herself. I flinch at the thought of mermaids. It was a game Mika and I always played in the ocean together when we were little: diving under, like our dad taught us, and popping up again. I shake the memory away, then tilt my head back, and close my eyes. I can feel Seth watching me. I keep my eyes closed so he can keep watching.

The seconds move slow, lazy in the sun. When I open my eyes, Seth is on the other side of the pool, floating on his back.

Maybe he wasn’t watching me after all.

Maybe it is all in my imagination.