How to Repair a Mechanical Heart - By J. C. Lillis Page 0,80
them.
You can go anytime.
I think it softly, without anger. After a minute, I feel them shuffle off into shadows, like when Dad and I used to catch and release sunfish up the street at Tanner’s Pond. They’d hover in the shallows for a second, stunned to be free, and then they’d struggle away and vanish in the murk.
Not forever, I warn myself. They’ll be back, and soon. But I’ll be ready.
I send a tentative prayer to my vague new idea of the maybe-God: featureless and formless, a light warm and yellow as my kitchen at home. The anti-Xaarg, like Abel said. Help me be ready, I say to him. Or her. If you exist, please help.
If you don’t, I’ll do it on my own.
Bright heat washes over my face. I open my eyes. The sun’s shaken off the clouds again. Two kids with rocket pops are spinning themselves dizzy in the grass and Dreadlocks Girl is still hunched on her concrete smile with her blue guitar, tuning up for another song. The harbor hums with happy busy holiday noise. Alone in the midst of cute families and throngs of friends, I feel empty in the best way, cleaned out and ready to fill up on new thoughts and words.
I rest my cheek on the warm upturn of the smile, and listen.
***
Brandon set the sunflowers on the table. He took another step closer to Abel, who fixed him with a wary gaze that Brandon totally and completely deserved.
I come back to the Dorchester with my brain buzzing and my fingers itching. I call Bec and tell her I need a little more time. I don’t tell her anything else. Not yet. I find a quiet corner in the coffee shop, slide my laptop out of my bag, and type for my life.
“Look, I’m probably going to be pretty screwed up for a while,” Brandon admitted, his voice deep and confident. “There’s a lot I haven’t figured out yet. But we’ve got six weeks left of summer, and I think we owe it to ourselves to be screwed up together.”
Brandon waited for a verdict. He braced himself for Abel’s back turning on him, for the sick rumble of sunflowers in the garbage disposal.
“Is it okay to kiss you?” Abel asked.
Brandon stepped forward first. They met in the middle of the room, and their lips acted out a string of impressive adjectives as they came together.
I hop on the hotel wifi, consult thesaurus.com.
Gingerly, haltingly at first. Then ecstatically, jubilantly, hopefully.
When I’m finished with the whole scene, I don’t go back and change stuff; maybe it’s cheesy, but the words are all true. I address an email to [email protected]. I add a note:
See attached for the last chapter of “How to Repair a Mechanical Heart.”
What do you think?
***
I find Bec sprawled on a blue plastic beach chair by the pool, her sandals kicked off and a gift-shop true-crime novel in front of her face. I sit down, pull her feet up on my lap, and dangle a big white bakery bag from the shop I passed on the walk back.
“What’s this?” she grins.
“Red velvet cupcakes.”
She gasps. “Why?”
“For being a good friend. Putting up with me. Having cute toes.”
“You are an admirable young man.” She tears the bag open. “So this text from you. Explain.”
“It was a mysterious mission.”
She takes a big bite of red velvet. “So you said.”
“You won’t believe it.”
“Okay.”
“I mean, you really won’t.”
“Tell me!”
I pull my phone out of my pocket, call up the Lenny Bray shot. Bec’s mouth drops open.
“Is that—”
“It is.”
“Oh. My God.”
“That was just the beginning.”
She grabs my wrist. “Start talking. Now.”
“I’ll tell you on the road.” I pull her to her feet. “Assuming you’re fine with missing the 2:00 panel on ‘The Ethics of Redemption in Castaway Planet.’”
She grins and tosses me the keys. “Let’s go home, cupcake.”
Home
Chapter Thirty
The annual St. Matt’s Fourth of July Funfair is the year’s third biggest deal, after the Christmas Eve Mass with the kiddie pageant and the May Procession where the Mary statue gets crowned with fake flowers and we pray for a thousand years in the hot church and one kid always passes out. My parents have been all about the Funfair since Nat and I were kids. Dad helps hammer all the game booths together and Mom decorates and arranges the food tables. The center table always holds three giant platters of her famous angel eggs, which are basically deviled eggs with cream cheese whipped into the filling and a