He’s the truth.
“Emily got pregnant,” I begin, glancing around to make sure no one else can hear me. The nearest campers are several feet away. Matt’s gaze never leaves mine as I talk. “She decided to get an abortion, which is something I would never ever do and I can’t understand how she could do that. But I agreed to help her anyway because she’s my friend.”
Matt rubs my wrist.
I keep going, “I drove her to the clinic and helped her get an abortion…I even loaned her money…” I sniffle and wipe a tear away. “I can’t stop thinking about the baby. I drove her there. I paid for it. I helped, you know, to end a life…”
Matt tucks my hair behind my ear. “You know what I think?” he mumbles, and fear rushes through me because his eyes move away. “You’re a good friend. I’m glad you were there with her.”
“But I sinned. The baby…”
“You were there for Emily. You did something you didn’t believe in because you’re strong. And you care. God definitely forgives you.”
“Are you just saying that?”
He chuckles lightly. “I wouldn’t lie to the daughter of the killer of Vincent Moose.”
I wipe my nose, sniffling and giggling. We grow quiet again. Past Matt, I watch as Ian and Carlie follow our lead, kneeling together at the altar. Ian catches my eye and smiles.
“Are they official now?” I whisper to Matt, who looks over his shoulder at them.
“They’re getting there, I think…” He squeezes my hand, giving me a mischievous look. “No changing the subject on me. You should call Emily tonight.”
“No cell reception,” I reply.
He gives me a look. “There’s a pay phone.”
“I’m not ready.” I can’t believe I told Matt my biggest secret. My biggest shame. But I don’t feel like I’m standing on the edge of a cliff anymore. I feel like I’m standing on the edge of a cliff with his arms around me.
“Is that what you wrote on your paper?” Matt asks, nodding toward the fire. “The abortion? The baby?”
I nod. “Sort of. What did you write about?”
He glances up at the cross nestled in the trees. “I care about you,” he whispers. “And for the longest time, I didn’t date anybody. I didn’t fool around with anybody—”
“But on our first date, you said hooking up is different from dating and—”
“I haven’t hooked up with anyone,” he mumbles. “I never really got over Sarah. I never got over her until that day I saw you again.”
I exhale, wipe my eye, and then clasp my hands together.
His mouth lifts into a smirk. “Do you believe in the sign? The rumor that God tells someone something every year at camp?”
“I want to believe in it…”
Matt goes on, “I think God gave you to me, and he gave me to you, so we can both move on.”
“Move on to what?”
“To each other.”
“To get over what happened to us?”
He grins a little and takes my hand again. Flames flicker on his face as he looks straight in my eyes. “So we can live. You can forgive yourself and I can trust again.”
I bow my head, praying to Him to tell me this is true.
“This isn’t the time or place for this,” Megan says, appearing behind us, interrupting.
“Megan, give us a minute,” Matt says in a strong voice. “This is important.”
“Quickly, then,” she says, and goes back to her seat on the log bench.
Matt is the rock. He makes me want to stand up for what I think is right. Maybe all that matters is that he’s right for me, and I’m right for him.
“I care about you too,” I whisper.
“I’m sorry about what happened with Emily that day. I shouldn’t have stayed the night.”
“I wanted you there.”
He leans his forehead against mine. “Remember when I told you about how you saved me when we were younger?”
“Yes,” I whisper.
He sighs deeply. “I didn’t tell you the whole truth. Before I met you, I was so sad. I wanted to end it.”
Is he saying what I think he’s saying?
“But then I prayed here at camp. I hoped I would get the sign. And then I met you. And you were so nice, and you liked my music, it gave me a reason to keep on for a while. Then Jenn was born and I felt like I had a reason to exist.”
Tears are flowing down my cheeks now.
“I guess what I mean is,” he says, “I’m here because of you.”
sketch #378
heaven
That night after the kids are asleep, I decide to take a walk out to the big field, to look at the stars. I sit down on the grass and sketch by moonlight, drawing the constellations. My paper looks like a game of Connect the Dots.
Ever since Matt asked where Heaven is, I’ve thought about it when I’m outside at night. Staring at the stars reminds me of how tiny I am, how I’m just one person. Being in the darkness makes me wonder if there really is a God and a Heaven and a Hell. Even though I can feel God inside me, a small part of me still worries that when I die, nothing will be there.
The Earth existed before I was born, and it will exist when I die.
What if all that is me is just gone?
The thought of that makes me feel more alone than ever. I miss Emily. I miss Matt. I can’t imagine spending my time on Earth without them. Because eternity is a long, lonely time.
I connect the dots of the Big Dipper. Then I hear the sound of feet crunching grass.
I look up to find him. I stare and he stares back, and then we’re together.
I’m kissing him so fast and hard I get dizzy. Before I got my first real boyfriend, I thought about the kissing, but I never imagined the details—how his lips would be warm and wet and how his calloused fingers would feel rough yet soft against my skin. His hands settle in my hair, weaving through the strands. I hug him tight to me, trying to ignore the feelings building in my body. We kiss again and I can tell his body is buzzing like mine.