to see the way James and I looked at each other.
“The first time James and I kissed,” I say, “he told me that from then on he’d always have to kiss me. Just me. I felt so special, so loved. I replayed that moment in my head nonstop. But then I started to worry that maybe I’d read too much into the kiss. I was so afraid of losing him, and he wasn’t even mine yet.
“A week later James came by to pick up me and Brady for a day at the river, but my brother backed out at the last minute—said he had a date, but that James and I should go ahead. We’d barely waited for him to leave the room before we took off, but I was nervous. James hadn’t mentioned the kiss, and I hadn’t gotten any more letters.
“James drove us out there, and we didn’t speak on the way. I was wearing my bathing suit under a T-shirt and shorts, even though I didn’t plan to go in the water. It was like we were pretending to still go through the motions of a normal Saturday. When we got there, James laid out a beach blanket for us, dropped a few snacks from his backpack on it, and then stripped to his suit. He went swimming, leaving me there.”
“But why did he act so cold when he’d already kissed you?” Dr. Warren asks.
I meet her eyes. “James . . . as strong as he is, has serious abandonment issues. When he was eight, his mother left him in her car at the train station.” I swallow hard, feeling his pain. “She never came back. Instead someone had heard him crying, called the police. After that, I’m not sure he trusts anyone. Only me and Brady.” I sniffle. “And Brady failed him too.”
Dr. Warren nods as if she understands, but I don’t think she does. No one understands James except me.
“And what happened at the river that day?” she asks softly.
“While James was in the water,” I start again, “I considered hiding his clothes—a little joke to put us in a good mood, something to break the awkward silence. So I grabbed his shorts and stood, ready to run off with them. But then something fell out of his pocket and landed in the grass.”
“What was it?” Dr. Warren asks, looking riveted.
“A ring. A stupid, plastic ring with sparkles. I’d held it in my hands, wondering what he was doing with it. I sat back down on the blanket and examined it, jealous about the girl it must have belonged to. Then I felt a drip of water and saw James standing above me, running a towel over his hair.”
I let the memory unfold as Dr. Warren listens, my words tumbling out without my permission. Inside, I can see it all, I can remember every second.
“What do you have?” James asked. When he saw the ring, he tossed his towel aside. “You going through my pockets, Sloane?”
“No, I . . .” But I stopped, feeling jealous. “Whose ring is this?”
James laughed and then sat down next to me, his thigh pressed against mine as he reached to pluck the ring from my hand. “You shouldn’t snoop,” he murmured.
“You’re not going to answer?”
He looked sideways. “It’s for you, stupid,” he said with a smile. “I got it for you.”
I stared at him, trying to decide if he was telling the truth, but then he took the ring from my hand and slid it onto my finger. James leaned forward, pausing when he got really close to me. “Can we kiss now?” he asked. “Is that okay?”
I close my eyes as I sit across from Dr. Warren, remembering how warm James’s mouth was on mine, how his tongue touched my lips before I opened them, letting him in. Letting him lay me back on the blanket as his mouth found mine, again and again, always gentle, yet urgent.
I’ll never feel that passion from James again. I’ll never be that girl again. Tears start to stream down my cheeks as I cry, missing James. Missing myself. I wish everything could just go back to the way it was, but instead I’m slowly losing everything—I’m witnessing my own death.
Dr. Warren doesn’t say anything, but she hands me the yellow pill. I take it gratefully, wanting to sleep. Wanting to feel better.
But never wanting to forget.
• • •
“Wakey, wakey,” a voice whispers in my ear.
My eyelids feel heavy as I try