Read One Foot in the Grave Page 23


  I close my mouth, run my tongue over my fuzzy-feeling teeth, trying to quietly suck them clean.

  Glancing down, away from his eyes, I rock back and forth on my heels, my Donald Ducks’ bills rocking with me. Should I run back to my room? But how pathetic will I look then? And if I do, he’ll leave. Lifting my gaze, I realize I’m not sure I want him to go. I kinda like looking at him.

  “Hey,” he says.

  “Hey,” I mimic and realize I’m hiding the backpack behind my leg. I give my bright red tank top a tug down to cover the tube that extends from the backpack and pokes into me under my left ribcage. A hole that kinda looks like a second belly button. Yup, I’m hiding the very thing that’s keeping me alive.

  “Ms. Strong couldn’t make it,” he says as if reading my mood and realizing he needs to justify his being here. “She asked me to sub.”

  “For how many extra credit points?” I wait for him to tell me he did it just out of kindness. And, if true, it would mean he did it out of pity. I’m not sure I’d enjoy looking at him anymore. I’d rather be someone’s means to a better grade. Brandy told me that everyone in school knows about my dead heart.

  “Fifteen. I got lazy and didn’t turn in some homework. You’ll pump me up to a B.”

  “You should have held out for twenty.”

  He smiles again. “I don’t think it was negotiable.”

  Moving in, I try to guess which twin he is. I try to figure out how to ask, but everything I think of sounds lame. Let him be Matt.

  I had a thing for Matt since seventh grade. It might have been wishful thinking, but in tenth grade I thought he liked me too. Not that it ever went anywhere. He was football, I was book club. He was popular, I was . . . not. Then I started dating Trent. A guy in book club. A guy I let off the hook as soon as I found out my heart was dying.

  “Your books?” he asks.

  I don’t understand the question, until I see he’s pointing to my backpack.

  Crap! I freak a little. I have several pat answers in my head that I came up with when Mom, afraid I was turning into an agoraphobe, insisted I get out of the house. But I can’t remember them. The silence reeks of awkwardness.

  So I go with the truth. “No. It’s my . . . heart.”

  “Shit.” He spills my favorite word.

  I laugh.

  His eyes meet mine and he smiles again. Yup, it’s kinda crooked. My mind’s not working. And I’m melting.

  “Oh, you’re joking,” he says. “Right?”

  I nod yes then shake my head no as if I don’t know the answer.

  His smile fades like a light on a dimmer switch. “Seriously?”

  “Seriously.” I move to the desk in the corner. One-handed, I pull my math book from a drawer and drop down in the chair across from him. My heart lands in the chair beside me, so he can’t see my tube.

  When I glance up, he’s doing exactly what I expect. Looking at the books so he doesn’t have to look at me. People have a hard time facing me, facing my death, maybe even facing their own mortality. I understand, but it still bothers me.

  He turns a page. The silence is so loud, I can almost hear the page float down to find its place. “Ms. Strong said we should start on chapter six.”

  “Yeah.” Disappointed, I flip my book open and consider letting him off the hook, telling him I’ve got this, assuring him I won’t mention it to Ms. Strong. But I look up, and I’m suddenly feeling selfish.

  Hey, he’s getting extra credit.

  He glances up, and before I can look away, our eyes meet and lock. And hold. Longer than they should, because it feels . . . too. Too much. Too intimate. As if we’ve passed some invisible barrier. Like when a stranger stands too close to you in line.

  We both look away.

  He smacks the book closed. He flinches.

  “What happened?” He whispers the question. His tone sad, sweet, and somehow still sexy.

  I admire that he asked. Most people don’t.

  “A virus. It killed my heart.” I hate the haunted look I see in his eyes. The sexiness vanishes. “It’s highly contagious.”

  The oh-poor-you look on his face flips right to fear. Joking with him feels right.

  I lose it. A laugh bubbles out of me and I feel instantly lighter.

  “Real funny.” He chuckles.

  A crazy thought hits, one that says there’s something almost . . . rusty about his laugh. And bam, I remember. I feel like the heartless bitch I swear I’m not for forgetting.

  Not quite a year ago, his dad, a soldier, was killed. I’d been in the hospital, right after my condition had been diagnosed. His dad had been on the news, where they showed the pictures of soldiers and asked for a moment of silence.

  I feel my smile slip from my eyes, my lips, and fall completely off my face. I know the look he sees in my eyes is probably the same pity-filled expression I saw in his seconds ago.

  “I’m sorry,” I say. “About your dad. I just remembered.”

  Ah, hell. Now I made his smile fall off his face. I should’ve kept my mouth shut.

  “Yeah.” He looks back at the book. “It sucks.”

  “Sort of like this.” I motion to my backpack.

  He glances again at the chair holding my heart. “Was it really a virus?”

  “Yeah. The virus caused Myocarditis.”

  His gaze sticks to my backpack. “How does it work?”

  It’s a question no one has ever asked. “Just like a heart. It’s a pump. Sends my blood through my veins and throughout my body.” I summarize the surgery to connect the pump that’s in my backpack and the batteries I have to carry.

  He makes a face, even rubs his chest as if feeling empathetic pain. “So you have a tube going inside you?”

  I touch my shirt, right under my left rib, where the tube goes in. “Gross, huh?”

  “Yeah, but it’s keeping you alive, so . . . not really.”

  I agree. The hesitant footsteps easing down the hall pulls my gaze from his.

  Mom stops at the door. “Do you guys need something to drink or eat?”

  She’s rubbing her palms on her jeans again. Her pinched maternal concern locks on me. She’s worried I’m mad about his being here. It’s odd that I’m not.

  The only person from my old life I’ve allowed to be close to “Dying Leah” is Brandy. And the only reason I allowed it was because she wouldn’t go away. Both Mom and Dad have been pushing me to get out some. Socialize. There was even mention of my going back to school. I nixed that idea really fast. I want to graduate, but facing my peers while carrying my heart . . . Unh, uhh. Not doing it.

  I have good reasons too. In seventh grade, Shelly Black had leukemia. She came to school bald, wearing a scarf. Everyone tried not to show her how difficult it was to see her that way. She wasn’t even my close friend. But my heart hurt for her. I’d rather be alone than put people through that. Then I look at the dark-haired hottie sitting across from me and wonder if that’s what he feels now.

  Then again, he chose to come here. He’s asking me questions and seems interested in my answers. And it feels good talking to him. Like I’m a normal high school kid talking to a friend. An extremely hot friend.

  I’m still not going back to school, but why not take advantage of this?

  “I have sodas and chips.” Mom’s voice drags me back to reality.

  I wait for him to answer. He declines with a thank-you.

  Mom leaves, and we dive into algebra. We spend the next twenty minutes reading examples; then I do problems for him to check and see if I understand. It’s not really awkward, but it’s tougher than it is with Ms. Strong. I can’t concentrate on math, because I’m concentrating on him. About which twin he is. Matt? Eric? Eric? Matt?

  I recheck my answers before I push him the notebook. While he’s reviewing my problems, I’m studying him. The shape of his lips. The cut of his jaw. The slight five o’clock shadow that tells me he’s shaving.

  I rub my index fingers against m
y thumbs and peer up at him through my lashes.

  “You got it.” Pride sounds in his voice. His smile reflects the same emotion. He pushes the notebook back. “You want to do some more?”

  I want to say no, but I’m afraid he’ll leave. And I’m feeling greedier than ever. I want my forty-five minutes. “Sure.”

  Then without thinking, I blurt out, “Instead, can I just ask you something?”

  We stare across at each other again. “If I can ask you something,” he counters.

  “Okay.” I rub the soles of my slippers on the wood floor under the table. “Me first.” How to ask it? “I . . . I used to be able to tell you and your brother apart. But now . . .”

  He grins, but almost looks disappointed. “Now you can’t? You don’t know who I am?”

  “Guilty.” Frowning, I flatten my palms, now slick from nerves, on the table. “So which one are you?”

  He shoulders back in the chair. His posture’s crooked. One shoulder is higher than the other. Didn’t Matt used to sit like that? “How did you tell us apart before?”

  “You mean physically or your personality?” Now I’m thinking I should have kept my mouth shut.

  “Both.” Anticipation brightens his eyes.

  It’s as if my answer matters. As if I need to be careful what I say.

  “Uh, Eric wore his hair a little longer. Matt’s hair was a little curlier.” Unable to stop myself, I look at his hair, remembering sitting behind Matt in English, studying how it would curl up, and wondering if it was as soft as it looked. A lot of girls, bolder than I, would play with his curls. I always wished I had the guts to do it. But I was gutless. The bravest thing I ever did in school was start a book club.

  My gaze shifts away from his hair. “And one of you is a little broader in the shoulders.”

  “Which one?” He sits straighter, his chest lifts, his shoulders stretch out.

  I’m scared to answer, but that would be awkward.

  “Eric?” I try to read his expression, but he seems to purposely keep it blank. “Not that both of you aren’t . . . buff,” I say for a lack of another word and feel myself blushing, because buff sounds . . . sexy or something.

  He grins. “And?”

  “Personality wise, Matt’s quieter, more of a thinker. Eric’s more outspoken.”

  He picks up his pencil and rolls it between his two palms leaving me to think he’s rolling my answers around in his head.

  The pencil slows down. I swear my heart speeds up like my old one would have.

  “So which one am I? Buff and outspoken or thin and quiet.”

  “I didn’t say thin or quiet. I said less buff and quieter.” The desire to say I preferred Matt over Eric tap dances on my tongue, but if he’s Eric?

  He laughs and that sound is like magic, less rusty, more melting.

  I’m sure he’s Matt. Eric didn’t have the same effect on me. Maybe I imagined it, but I could swear that Matt actually . . . noticed me. I don’t think I hit Eric’s radar. He had too many cheerleaders falling all over him. Not that Matt didn’t have the girls flashing him smiles and playing with his curls. He just didn’t seem like it went to his head as much. Sometimes, it even looked like it embarrassed him.

  My backpack beeps, shattering that comfortable silence that we’d finally found. The dreaded chirp lets me know that I have less than thirty minutes of battery life left. Panic flashes in Matt’s eyes. Or is he Eric?

  “It’s normal,” I say, but because of that noise, of that damn tube, of my own dead heart, I feel anything but normal.

  “So is this like forever?” he asks.

  I shake my head. “No, it’s supposed to be until I get a transplant.”

  “Supposed to be?” His gaze sweeps over me.

  I look toward the hall to make sure Mom isn’t around. So far, the truth has worked with him, and I decide not to waver from my approach. “I have a kind of rare blood type. AB. The odds aren’t great.”

  “AB?” His brow wrinkles. “It’s not that rare. I have it. If it was a kidney, I’d give you one.”

  I laugh, but this one’s forced. I hate thinking about a transplant. Not just because I don’t think it’ll happen, but because someone having to die to give me life is all kinds of wrong. And that’s what my parents and even Brandy are doing. Sitting around hoping someone will die.

  That’s even worse than wishing warts on someone.

  “But . . .” The pause seems to mean something. “You . . . you just stay on this until a heart’s available.”

  Okay. The truth didn’t work. “Yeah,” I say what he wants to hear. What everyone wants to hear. Never mind I’ve had two infections due to the artificial heart and each one nearly killed me. Never mind that no one has lived more than four years with an artificial heart. Never mind that hundreds of AB-blood-type people are waiting for a new heart, a new life, a miracle.

  He frowns. “The way you say it sounds as if you don’t believe . . .”

  I need to work on that. “I’m sure it’ll happen,” I lie, and then suddenly I don’t want to. I don’t have to. Not with him. I sit up taller. “Look, it takes a lot more energy to hope than to accept. I’d rather spend my energy enjoying what I’ve got now.”

  “That really sucks.” His frown deepens.

  “Yeah, it does. But I’m okay with it.” And for the most part, I really am. At first I kept telling myself that I had to hope, that a heart would come. But the more I read about statistics, the more I came to realize that the odds of getting a heart were slim to none. And rather than fooling myself or sitting around being miserable, I decided to make the most of the time I have left. Hence the bucket list. And I’m happier now. Really.

  He looks up at the clock. “I guess I should be going.”

  I want to tell him he doesn’t have to rush off. How sad is it that this is the most fun and the most alive I’ve felt all year?

  He stands up. I do the same, then slip on the backpack, always hiding the tube.

  He moves down the hall. I follow. I’m staring at his hair, the way it flips up. Again hoping he’s Matt. I’m so into his hair, I don’t notice him swing around.

  We run smack-dab into each other.

  “Shit.” He grabs me by my shoulders and pulls me against him. “Are you okay?”

  His hands are on my upper arms. My breasts are against his chest.

  Then bam! I feel something I haven’t felt in a long time. Excitement. My very own I’m-a-girl-and-you’re-a-boy excitement. Not the borrowed thrill I get from reading romances.

  I can smell him. Like men’s soap, or deodorant; a little spicy, a lot masculine. The desire to lean in and bury my nose in his shoulder is so strong I have to fist my hands.

  “I’m fine,” I say. Don’t pull away. Don’t pull away. Please don’t pull away.

  He doesn’t pull away. He gazes down at me. This close I can see he has gold and green flecks in his brown eyes. A voice inside of me says I should step back, but you couldn’t pay me to move. I’m dying. Is it wrong of me to want this?

  “I . . . I forgot my books.” The words fall from his lips in an uncertain tone. The pads of his thumbs rub the insides of my arm. Just the tiniest, softest friction that feels so damn good.

  I run my tongue over my bottom lip. “Oh, I . . . I thought you were going to kiss me.” I hear my own words and wonder where I got the balls to say that.

  His eyes widen. Not in an oh-crap way, but in a surprised kind of way. “Do you want me to kiss you?”

  I grin. “If you’re Matt, I’ve wanted you to kiss me since seventh grade.”

  His gaze slides lower to my mouth and lingers. “Is your heart strong enough?”

  I burst out laughing. “Are you that good of a kisser?”

  “Maybe.” A smile crinkles the corners of his eyes. He leans down. His lips are against mine, soft and sweet. I slip into sensory overload. I lean in and open my mouth and ease my tongue between his lips. Yeah, it’s bold, but it’s not like I’ll live long e
nough to regret it.

  His tongue brushes against mine. One hand moves to my waist, the other slides back behind my neck. He gently angles my face to deepen the kiss. I feel it, every contact that is his skin against mine. I feel awesome. So freaking alive.

  I get even ballsier and reach up and run my fingers through his hair. It’s even softer than I thought it’d be.

  When he pulls back, we’re breathing hard, and we stare at each other. The dazed look in his eyes tells me that this wasn’t a pity kiss. We start inching closer. His lips are almost on mine again when the sound of the front door opening shatters the moment.

  We jerk apart and walk back down the hall to the dining room. He picks up his books.

  My dad calls out to my mom.

  I ignore it.

  All of my attention is on the guy standing in front of me, his lips still wet from our kiss. I grab a pen off the table, scribble my number on a notebook paper, rip it out, and hand it to him.

  “If you ever want to talk. About everything that sucks,” I add. Then I worry that sounded stupid.

  He takes the paper. Our fingers meet and I feel that magic spark and I don’t care if it sounded stupid. I vow not to regret this. If he calls. If he doesn’t. This was too good to ever regret.

  We stare at each other again. I want to kiss him again so badly, I’m shaking. The sound of my parents talking in the kitchen echoes and invades this magical moment. I wish we were somewhere different. I wish . . . I wish . . . But before I stumble down that dangerous path of wishing for the impossible, I push it away.

  He starts down the hall and I follow him to the door. He reaches for the knob then turns. We don’t say anything, but we exchange smiles. In his eyes, I see a whisper of embarrassment, a touch of uncertainty, and a hint of something raw. I hope desire. He glances over my shoulder, as if making sure we’re alone, then brushes a finger over my lips. Soft. Slow. Sensual.

  I tell myself to memorize how it feels. This is the good stuff.

  He turns and leaves, way before I’m ready for him to go.

  I bolt to the side window, not too close in case he looks back, but close enough so I can watch him walking down my sidewalk. I watch him get in his car. I watch him drive off. I watch his car disappear down the road.