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Always and Forever, Lara Jean

Page 69

   


“Shouldn’t you bring sneakers and work gloves and that kind of thing, just in case?”
“I’ll wear sneakers on the plane, and whatever else I need, I’ll get when I’m there. That’s the whole point of an adventure. Pack light and figure the rest out as you go.”
I thought we’d have more time, me and Chris in my bedroom, sharing secrets late into the night, eating chips in bed. I wanted to cement our friendship before she left: Lara Jean and Chrissy, like the old days.
It’s all ending.
 
 
39

THAT NIGHT BEFORE THE WEDDING, when my cakes are cooling on the kitchen counter and everyone at my house is setting up lawn chairs outside, I drive over to Chris’s to say good-bye. As soon as she lets me in, she says, “I’m not letting you in here if you cry.”
“I can’t help it. I feel like this is going to be the last time I ever see you.” A tear slips down my cheek. There is a finality to this moment. I know it, I just know it. Chris is catapulting on to the next thing. Even if we see each other again, it won’t be like this. She’s a restless spirit. I’m lucky to have had her for as long as I did.
“You’ll probably see me again next week when I fly right back home,” she jokes, and there is the tiniest note of trepidation in her voice. Chris, with all her bluster and bravado, is nervous.
“No way. You’re just getting started. This is it, Chris.” I jump up and hug her. I’m trying not to cry. “It’s all happening now.”
“What is?”
“Life!”
“You’re so corny,” she says, but I could swear I see tears in her eyes.
“I brought you something,” I tell her. I take the present out of my bag and give it to her.
She tears off the wrapping paper and opens the box. It’s a picture of the two of us in a little heart frame, no bigger than a Christmas tree ornament. We are at the beach, in matching bathing suits; we are twelve, maybe thirteen. “Hang this up on your wall wherever you go so people know you have somebody waiting for you back home.”
Her eyes tear up and she brushes them with the back of her hand. “Oh my God, you’re the worst,” she says.
I’ve heard people say you meet your best friends in college, and they’re the ones you’ll know your whole life, but I’m certain that I’ll know Chris my whole life too. I’m a person who saves things. I’ll hold on forever.
* * *
When I get back home, Trina’s at SoulCycle. Daddy is still outside setting up the chairs, Margot is steaming our bridesmaid dresses, and Kitty is cutting paper flags for the bunting that will go over the dessert table. I get to work icing the wedding cake—yellow cake with buttercream frosting, just like I promised Trina. Daddy’s groom’s cake is already done, Thin Mints and all. This is my second try with the wedding cake—I scrapped the first one because I didn’t trim enough off the tops of the layers and when I stacked it, the cake looked hopelessly lopsided. This second one is still a tiny bit uneven, but a thick layer of buttercream covers all manner of sins, or so I keep telling myself.
“You’re putting enough frosting on that cake to give us all diabetes,” Kitty remarks.
I bite my tongue and keep spinning the cake and frosting the top so it’s smooth. “It looks all right, doesn’t it, Margot?”
“It looks professionally done,” she assures me, zooming the steamer along the hem of her dress.
As I sail past Kitty, I can’t resist saying, “P.S., the last three flags you cut are crooked.”
Kitty ignores me and sings to herself, “Sugar shock, whoa baby, that cake’ll give us sugar shock,” to the tune of that oldies song “Sugar Shack.” It’s probably my own fault for playing it whenever I bake.
“This is the last time it’ll be just us,” I say, and Margot looks over at me and smiles.
“I’m glad it won’t be just us anymore,” Kitty says.
“So am I,” Margot says, and I’m fairly certain she means it.
Families shrink and expand. All you can really do is be glad for it, glad for each other, for as long as you have each other.
* * *
I can’t sleep, so I go downstairs to make a cup of Night-Night tea, and as I run the water for my kettle, I look out the window and see the red embers of a cigarette glowing in the darkness. Trina is outside smoking!
I’m debating whether or not to forego my tea ritual and go to bed before she sees me, but as I’m emptying the kettle, she comes back inside, a can of Fresca in her hand.
“Oh!” she says, startled.
“I couldn’t sleep,” I say, just as she says, “Don’t tell Kitty!”
We both laugh.
“I swear it was a good-bye smoke. I haven’t had a cigarette in months!”
“I won’t tell Kitty.”
“I owe you one,” Trina says, exhaling.
“Would you like a cup of Night-Night tea?” I ask her. “My mom used to make it for us. It’s very soothing. It’ll make you feel nice and cozy and ready for bed.”
“That sounds like heaven.”
I fill the kettle and put it on the stove. “Are you nervous about the wedding?”
“No, not nervous . . . just, nerves, I guess? I really want everything to go off—without a hitch.” A giggle escapes her throat. “Pun intended. God, I love a good pun.” Then she straightens up and says, “Tell me what’s going on with you and Peter.”
I busy myself with spooning honey into mugs. “Oh, nothing.” The last thing Trina needs on the night before her wedding is to hear about my problems.
She gives me a look. “Come on, girl. Tell me.”
“I don’t know. I guess we’re broken up?” I shrug my shoulders high so I don’t cry.
“Oh, honey. Bring that tea over here and come sit next to me on the couch.”
I finish making the tea and bring the mugs over to the couch and sit next to Trina, who tucks her legs under her and drapes a blanket over both of us. “Now tell me everything,” she says.
“I guess things started to go sideways when I got into UNC. Our plan was for me to go to William and Mary and then I’d transfer, and we’d be long distance for the first year. But UNC is a lot farther, and when I visited, I knew I wanted to be there. Not with one foot in and one foot out, you know?” I stir my spoon. “I really want to give it a chance.”