Two Truths and a Lie(82)
Every time she put up a new video, Cam posted a salient, adorable comment; it was as if he was competing with jt76 for the award given to the nicest channel subscriber.
The minivan sailed over the bridge from Newburyport to Salisbury, and Alexa cracked the window to let the ocean smell move in. They had crested the hill of summer and were heading down, down, down.
They’d also spent a lot of time talking, Cam and Alexa, in a way that she hadn’t talked with another person in a long time—maybe ever. They talked about Alexa’s former friends, and they talked about Tyler, and Shelby McIntrye, and they talked about Cam’s favorite philosopher (some guy named Blaise Pascal), and they talked about Peter and Morgan. They talked about how Alexa tried to pay her mother back the five-hundred-dollar deposit to Colby that she’d put down in April, but her mother refused, because, even though Alexa had the money, it wasn’t about the money. They talked about what it was about: her mother’s disappointment that Alexa didn’t want what she’d wanted, and her fear that Alexa would move far away and never come back.
Now they took the turn off Route 1 and toward the beach, passing the dingy motels with their cracked pools, the newer condos, the defunct ice cream stand where Alexa used to love to go as a kid. Foote’s. Funny name for an eating establishment, but there you were.
Every now and then, but not very often, in hushed voices, they talked about Sherri and Katie, and Alexa learned that it was possible to be scared and happy at the exact same time.
They had kissed, a lot, and more than that too—though not yet everything. This was starting to make Alexa wonder: come September, would she be the only eighteen-year-old virgin on the North Shore? (Cam was such a gentleman. But was he too much of a gentleman?)
“Where are we going, anyway?” she asked Cam now.
“The reservation. I thought we could have a picnic. I picked up a couple of things after work today.” She looked behind her at the center row of the minivan: sure enough, there was a Market Basket cooler bag there.
Even the drive toward the parking lot, with the marshes on the right, and the ocean air suspended around them, was sort of breathtaking, especially at this time of day, when twilight was turning the sky a purplish-mauve.
Most of the beachgoers were headed out as they were heading in, so it was easy enough to find parking—and the lot was vast. They walked together up the long boardwalk with the beach grasses waving at them from either side. They passed the pavilion with benches where a runner was stretching and tapping on the screen of a cell phone. They passed the sign that tells you what to do when caught in a rip current. When they got to the sand, they both kicked off their shoes and left them where they landed. Cam carried the Market Basket bag slung over one shoulder, and he handed her another bag with a blanket in it.
They stood for a moment, deciding which way to go. To the left you walked past the beach houses and toward the Blue Ocean Music Hall and the downtown strip, where people bought squares of beach pizza and ice cream and played in the arcades and listened to live music in the Bands on the Beach series. To the right was more solitude, a jetty, and, eventually, the part of the beach attached to the campground, where people let their dogs run around off the leash.
“Let’s go to the right,” said Alexa. “More privacy.” It was low tide and the beach was flat and gigantic. There were hard, feet-massaging ripples in the sand closer to the water. They walked for a while in silence and then Cam said, “Alexa. I leave for school in nine days.”
Alexa felt a drop in her stomach, and her voice sounded strange as she croaked out, “Nine days?” Had summer really gone by so quickly? It seemed like just yesterday she woke up in Cam’s guest bedroom. Just yesterday, he was an affable stranger in St. Michael’s spirit wear. “That’s it? That can’t be right.”
“Yeah,” said Cam. He stopped and looked out at the water, frowning, so Alexa stopped too, turning to face the waves. “I have to get back early for the team. We really ramp up practice before the semester starts. We have a few big tournaments right away in the fall. It gets pretty intense.” There was a time Alexa might have smirked at the idea of intense golf training, but that time was in the past, and she understood and even admired how seriously Cam took his sport.
She scanned the beach. There were a few people left: the evening picnickers, the kids who’d begged their parents to stay just a little bit longer, the dog owners brash enough to flaunt the rules even away from the campground. Alexa looked out, and out, and out, all the way to the horizon. Full sunset was still an hour or so off, but the sky was changing by the second, going from pink-stripey to dark purple to navy blue. She felt a twist in her heart, a nostalgia for something that hadn’t yet passed.
“And I guess I’ll be leaving soon too,” she said.
“Do you really want to leave so badly?” Cam took hold of her hand and they began to walk along the beach. It was stupidly romantic, with the waves beating against the sand, and the ocean—blue closer to shore, but along the horizon, black and infinite—laid out before them. Cam’s hand was much bigger than hers, and warm, and comforting. “I mean, look where you live,” he said. “It’s so beautiful here.” As if on cue, the setting sun turned the waves periwinkle. “Don’t you ever feel lucky to live here, instead of wishing you could be somewhere else, all the way across the country?”