A Million Miles Away(52)
“Nothing is simple,” she whispered to him. “But for now, we have to pretend it is.”
CHAPTER TWENTY-NINE
Anyone who happened to be driving east on I-70 that evening might have witnessed quite a sight: a Subaru hatchback with four windows down, a seventeen-year-old girl with her head and arm hanging out the driver’s side, wind blowing, hands banging the metal door to the beat. Next to her, a young man in army fatigues, his canvas bag in his lap, mirroring her out the passenger side.
It wasn’t so much the pairing of the two that they would have noticed, but the rage and sadness with which they sang the songs. Though they were young, they sang them as if they would be the last songs they sang, loud enough to reach a pair of ears miles away.
Kelsey had volunteered to drive Peter to the airport as his father and sister spent the evening with Cathy. She couldn’t stand the thought of not having as much time with him as she possibly could.
The two of them spent the four-hour drive drowning out their sorrows with Michelle’s playlists.
Kelsey turned the volume all the way up until they couldn’t hear their own voices.
They screamed along to the White Stripes’ “Seven Nation Army.”
They rapped along to Kanye West’s “Jesus Walks.”
They crooned along to the Cicadas’ “Baby,” probably out of tune, first the English version and then the one in Portuguese, holding hands across the seats while they remembered the night they danced in Paris.
The airport was two exits away.
“Stop the car,” Peter said.
Kelsey scanned the horizon, frantic. “Where?”
“Anywhere,” Peter said. She looked at him. “Please.”
They found an emergency pull-off between exits, and while traffic surged around them, Peter unbuckled his seat belt. He took Kelsey’s face in his hands and brought her close to him, kissing her on the lips, on the cheeks, on the nose, on the chin, wherever he could find.
“It feels like I’ve only seen you for three seconds,” he said between kisses. “This is not fair.”
She steadied him, found his lips. “It will be over before you know it,” she said, and wished she did not mean it in any other way.
“Seeing you does that to me,” Peter said, moving his hand down her hair, to her shoulders, to her arm, and back up again, lining her, memorizing her. “I forget how time works. I forget we weren’t always together and won’t always be together.”
A passing semi rocked them slightly, but neither noticed. Kelsey took his hand and kissed his fingers.
“Tell me we will, one more time.” His eyes moved up and down her face, his lashes wet.
“We will…” Kelsey began, and paused. All she could say was what she knew, but she knew enough. Something with wings had spread behind her ribs, pushing against them, too big for her chest. “We are permanent. No matter what happens, everything we have will be there forever.”
“We are permanent,” he said, and sat back in his seat, his hand in hers. Headlights grazed the side of Peter’s face. He was so beautiful. She kissed his smooth cheek.
“I love you, permanently,” she said with as much force as she could put behind it, and looked forward, put the car in drive.
“I love you, permanently,” he repeated, setting his jaw, and squeezed until her hand hurt.
It was said, and remained said: Time was different when it was just the two of them. But he would be gone again. Permanent doesn’t always mean forward. Permanent doesn’t always mean with you. Permanent like the Flint Hills, to be thought of, to be passed through. To be seen, but not carried.
When they reached the drop-off area, Kelsey put the car in park. Peter would have to run to his gate. Sobs were starting in her chest and she had to swallow them.
“I wish I had some sort of trinket to give you, some token or something,” she said as he strapped on his bag.
Peter gave her a pained smile. “Like a kerchief from the Civil War?”
“Like a lock of my hair?” Kelsey said.
“That’s disgusting!” Peter cried, and they both made a sound that was almost a laugh.
He stopped, seeming unable to close the passenger-side door.
“I love you,” Kelsey said.
“I love you, too,” Peter said.
“Wait!” Kelsey searched her pockets, and glanced frantically around for something, anything, she could give him, but all she had was an old pack of cinnamon gum.
“Here, from me,” she laughed, and shoved a stick of gum in his hand.
They kissed their last kiss for a long time, with a tenderness and a torment.
He waved, then he had to run. When he was out of sight, something snapped back into Kelsey like a broken rubber band, rocking her.
She got lost in the maze of exits, forgetting where she had come. On a quiet intersection next to the rental car lots, she turned, and parked again. She wondered if all of it had really just happened.
She couldn’t stay in the car, which still smelled like him, like canvas and soap. She folded onto the curb, leaning back against the front tire of the Subaru, and wept.
She could see Peter’s face before he turned to go, and the yank of terror in seeing him be taken at any moment. If a truck he rode took the wrong turn. If he was two inches too far to the right in a bullet’s path.