Jorgen seems as though he wants to say something, but he doesn’t, until I turn to go back inside my apartment.
“Hey,” he says, stopping me. “I have this work barbeque tomorrow night. You maybe wanna come with me?”
I rotate around and catch his pleading blue eyes — the same pleading blue eyes that have no idea that at twenty-two, I’ve already lived one life and am now on my second. I feel my heart beating a hard, fast rhythm against my chest, but I think it’s his pleading, clueless blue eyes that make me nod my head yes in spite of my heart.
“Sure,” I say.
He slowly bobs his head up and down a couple times.
“Good,” he says, through what seems like a happy grin. “I’ll pick you up at six.”
I force my lips up and then push through my door and close it behind me. And before I know it, my back, minus any thought, is pressing against the back of the door. I feel my body slide down until I’m kneeling on my heels. And just like that, a familiar, warm liquid pushes past my eyelids and streams down my cheeks. I can’t stop it. I have no reason to stop it — alone and inside my apartment, tucked away from the world. I feel my heart growing heavy as I pull out the photo from my sweatshirt’s pocket and let my eyes search every detail — the little diamond, the two wedding bands, the scar on his middle finger from a run-in with a barbed wire fence when he was eleven. And I let my mind drift away until I feel breakable — like I could shatter into a million, tiny pieces right where I’m kneeling.
We spend so much of our passion on our first love. I’m not convinced that it — passion — is one of those things that you have an endless amount of — like happiness or sadness. I could be happy all day. I could be sad all day. But I’m not so sure I’ll ever love like that again.
I quickly wipe a tear off the photo with my sleeve and then let my head fall into my bended knees.
I think I used all my passion up on the boy who stole my first I love you…
A thunderous bang crashes in the heavens and then rumbles over the earth. We all look up at the sky. Huge, dark clouds are gathering right above us.
“Tut-tut, it looks like rain,” Hannah shouts from the outfield.
Andrew turns the baseball over in his hand and then rests it in his glove.
“Come on. We’ve got at least ten more minutes,” he shouts. “James, you’re up to bat.”
James looks terrified as he stares up at the dark sky and twists the barrel of his wooden bat into the dirt.
“Come on, James. Don’t be a little squirt. Get in the box,” Hannah shouts.
James’s chest rises and then falls before he slowly shuffles to the batter’s box and positions himself in front of me.
“It’s all right, James,” I say to him from behind my catcher’s mask. “Just hit the ball, and then we’ll all go inside.”
James nods his head and then slowly faces Andrew on the pitcher’s mound. Andrew winds up and releases the ball. It comes fast and whizzes right through the strike zone.
James swings, but the ball misses his bat and lands in my mitt instead. I stand up and throw the ball back to Andrew, and at the same time, feel a drop on my hand. I glance up at the sky and then down at James.
“Okay, James, you’ll get this next one,” I say.
I kneel down again and wait for the second pitch.
“I felt a drop,” Hannah yells from the outfield. “I’m outta here. I’m not letting this mess up my beachy waves.”
And just like that, we’re all watching Hannah sprint across the field and toward the house like a crazy person.
I catch Andrew through the bars in my mask a second later. He’s already facing the batter’s box again, paying no attention to his outfielder who just left him. I watch his windup and then, for the second time, he releases the ball. And once again, James swings, but the ball flies unscathed right into my mitt.
“It’s all right, James,” I say. “That’s why we get three tries. Just try to keep your eye on the ball.”
I stand up and throw the ball back to Andrew. Then, all of a sudden, another crash of thunder rumbles through the sky, but this time, it seems to shake the earth around us.
James flashes me a frightened glance, then looks up at the sky. “I’m outta here too!” he yells, throwing the bat to the ground.
He takes off running toward the house. I slide the catcher’s mask off and look up. There’s nothing but big, dark, ominous clouds above us now.
“Play catch with me,” Andrew says, trying to win me over with his puppy-dog-pleading eyes.
I just stare at him. I know it’s about to pour.
“Come on,” he begs.
I let out a sigh, but somehow, there’s a smile attached as I set the mask and the catcher’s mitt onto the ground, slide a glove over my hand and open it toward him.
“Yes,” he exclaims, pumping his fist.
He throws the ball, and it lands hard inside my glove. But before I can even get the ball into my opposite hand, the sky opens up, and a flood of water traps us in its wake.
I can’t help but squeal. The big drops washing over my skin are ice-cold.
Andrew runs over to me and scoops up the mask, the mitt and the bat and throws them into a five-gallon bucket. Then, he slides the glove off my hand and throws it into the bucket as well right before he grabs my hand.
“Come on,” he says, pulling me along.
We run to a little shed next to the dirt field and take shelter under it. Inside, I wipe my eyes and unglue the hair stuck to the sides of my face, then cross my arms around my chest to ward off the goose bumps.
Andrew sets the bucket in the corner, then comes over to me and puts his arms around my shoulders and starts rubbing the parts of my bare skin that aren’t covered by my tee shirt.
I feel a shiver run up my back right before I look up at him. “Thanks,” I say.
For a second, it’s as if his eyes are stuck in mine. Then, slowly, a smile zigzags across his face.
“Jeez, Little Logan, you look like a wet, little kitten. What happened to you?”
I roll my eyes and wrap my arms tighter around my chest. “You happened, Andrew.”
He laughs.
“You know what?”
“What?” I ask.
I grab the bottom of my tee shirt and twist it until water starts to come out.
“I love you.”
I immediately drop my shirt and jerk my head up.
“What did you say?”
“I…I love you.”
I bore two holes straight through his head, but his expression doesn’t waver. “No, you don’t.” I look away and laugh nervously. Then, I decide quickly that battling the rain just might be less awkward than the conversation we’re apparently having right now, and I take a step out into it.
“Wait,” Andrew says, grabbing my arm and pulling me back. “Where are you going?”
“Home,” I say.
He’s somehow successful at getting me back inside the shed.
“Just wait a second. What do you mean I ‘don’t’?”
“I mean, you don’t know what love is. You’re twelve, Andrew.”
“Twelve and half,” he corrects me.
“Fine,” I say. “It still doesn’t matter. I’m twelve and a half too, and I don’t even know what it means.”
I pull my hand back and start out of the shed again.
“Wait,” he says, grabbing my arm and pulling me back yet again.
He looks at me with that little devilish grin he gets sometimes, and for the first time, I notice that the little gap that used to be between his two front teeth is gone.
“What makes you think that just because we’re twelve, we don’t know what love is?”
I try to show him how annoyed I am by forcing my free arm to my hip. “We’re just kids.”