Where It Began(23)



And it feels as if after waiting forever, waiting my whole life sort of bored and ready for something else, I am finally getting my something. It is as if it is Billy’s sunset and he is feeding it to me with a big spoon. The ocean, too, all blue and roiling: mine. My day, my spoonful of sunset, my boyfriend, finally my boyfriend, and my decision.

Why not?

Billy and the Beemer and the ride up the coast. His parents’ beach house by the water near Point Dume with the glass doors open to the dark Pacific and the first stars and the big, white rising moon.

Mine.

We pull into the garage, and Billy turns off the car and gets out and opens my door. He kisses my neck.

“Oh yeah,” I say. “You’re very good at that, Nash.”

“You sure?” he says, pulling away. “Are you sure?”

“Pretty damn sure,” I say, and he does it some more, leaning over the car, leaning into the front seat.

It is getting dark. I am almost sure I could do it in the dark.

“We should celebrate,” Billy says, unlocking the door and taking me into the house with still enough light to see the ocean and the foam where the waves hit the beach. “Would the lady care for champagne?”

Champagne. All right, it’s a total cliché, but I completely don’t care. He looks so good and he tastes so salty. He gets two champagne flutes and he carries them upside down between his fingers and the champagne bottle in the other hand, up to the bedroom with its white bed and its pale-green comforter, silky and sweet-smelling.

There is the bite of the champagne, all those little bubbles, all that sweet liquid, and my camisole over my head. Billy’s body, which is pretty much perfect, and me. Billy is looking down at me, the lamplight shining off his pale, blond hair, his arms reaching for me, his fingers tracing my eyebrows and the edges of my face down the sides of my neck and across my collarbone.

And I reach over toward the lamp, to turn it off, so the bed will be a soft, dark nest for us, but he holds my wrist.

And he says, “Gabby, you’re so beautiful.” He is looking right at me in the yellow lamplight, he is seeing me in the yellow light, he is sliding my jeans down over my hips and I am arching my back and this time, I don’t distract him with some fun alternative. This time, it is both of us, together. This time, I don’t say stop it.

There it is, and I like it. He says yes and I say yes and he says yes and I say yes, and I just go with him, like he is taking care of me. The condom, obviously. I giggle at it and he looks at me and I shut up and go with it some more. And I say, “You are really good at this.”

And he says, “Beautiful. You’re beautiful.”

And that is all it takes.

I had never been beautiful before this moment, but now I am. I am beautiful because Billy says I am beautiful. I am beautiful because Billy gave me that, and I am still beautiful from that, even now, underneath all this makeup, after everything, sort of.

I am beautiful, I am happy. Basically, disgustingly icky as they are, if we could have turned into Andie and Andy right then, I would have signed up for it. Right then, before I get my camisole back on even, before I comb my hair in Billy’s parents’ bathroom.

I feel like a love-crazed puppy, all wagging its tail and its tongue hanging out of its mouth, all love me love me love me. I want to lie around on the green comforter, just kissing him and looking at him and holding his face for days, not going to school, not going home, nothing. To hell with everything but him, just to be with him, on the bed in the beach house. Just clinging to Billy Nash, inventor of my beautiful.

But he doesn’t say, “I love you.”

And in the throes of my decision, when I am drunk and a virgin, I don’t care.

And then, when I am beautiful and drunk and completely in love with Billy Nash, I do.

Maybe I should have said it. Maybe I should have grabbed him and told him: I love you forever. I’ll do anything for you. I swear to God, nothing else matters. Maybe everything else would have turned out differently if I’d just told him and asked him and he’d told me one way or the other.

The thing is, I am not a complete moron. I know what every other halfway normal girl in the U.S.A. who ever watches TV or reads Seventeen knows: Cling to Gorgeous Hot Boy and you’re dead in the water.

Even if you Do It, afterward, if you act like you want him too much or you need him just a little or you think he’s perfect, unless you’re Andie from Cute World with a free pass from God to worship Andy Kaplan right out in the open and Kaps still worships you back and gives you Hello Kitty earrings, the guy will run out the door and he’ll never even look back. Even if you’re beautiful. Even if you love him.

Especially if you love him.

And I say to myself in half-crazed affirmation, Gabby, you are just so secure and mature and wonderful. You don’t need him to tell you what you already (kind of) know. You are just the most secure and mature and wonderful girl since Coke in a glass bottle, so if you want to keep this going, you’d better just back the hell off.

Because: Everybody knows that no matter how much you need to talk to Gorgeous Hot Boy, if you phone him fourteen times between ten and ten thirty p.m., by the time he gets to the third message, he’ll hate you, and by message number fourteen, his mother will have a restraining order taken out against you and you’ll be in court-ordered Stalker Recovery Twelve Step before you even have time to make call number fifteen.

Ann Redisch Stampler's Books