and re-attended the first class of my abroad semester. The
professor gave us our first blank
postcards and the famous
first-sentence writing prompts. I honestly don’t remember the
last time I sat down to write something that wasn’t gastro-
related. It felt like being back in that living room. Setting the
needle down on a record full of music that lights you up from
the inside.
We have two nights before we fly out to Rome. I’m sitting
at the kitchen table, staring at the start of my first study abroad
blog post. I’m not sure what to do with it. Rewrite what I
wrote the first time around? I close out of the blog and open
the file with the outline I have all prepped for my
great
American novel
. Scrolling through it sparks excitement in my
chest. I open a blank page and start typing, because honestly,
why not?
I have three thousand words down on the page when Pilot
strides into the room with a sandwich.
“Hey.” He pulls out the chair
across from me and sets
down his food. “You writing?” He raises an eyebrow.
I bite back a smile and yank out my headphones. “As a
matter of fact, I am.”
He grins to himself, settling into the seat.
“This is so weird … going to class again.” He shakes his
head and peels the cling wrap from his food.
“Agreed, but I kind of had fun.” I shrug.
“I probably should have cut mine, but Sahra’s in the class
so it felt”—he looks up, searching for the right word
—“suspicious? Skipping.”
I chuckle. “Yeah, I have this uncontrollable need to be
good in school, so I didn’t even think about cutting.” Maybe I
would have considered it if someone had brought up the idea
before I got there, but not anymore.
I forgot how much I
actually enjoyed going to this class.
He takes a bite of sandwich, focusing somewhere on the
wall behind me. “You remember what we did today the first
time around?”
I close my laptop and give him my full attention. “Of
course. Do you?”
He meets my gaze. “The Beatles store.”
“Got those gorgeous playing cards.”
“They were a great find.”
“That they were.” I bob my head nostalgically. “Remember
the Russian Beatles nesting dolls?”
He snorts. “Those were fantastic.”
“I love that they’re a thing.” I bite my lip a moment,
hesitant to push this any further. “You want to go?”
Pilot sucks in a breath and leans his head forward. He runs
his now interlocked hands up from the base of his neck over
his hair and back down to the
table in front of him before
looking at me again.
“Uh … I don’t think so, you know … We should probably
keep our distance for now, ride out these last few days, find
the button, get out of here.”
I nod, absently. “Oh, yeah, okay, um, I’m gonna go find
something for dinner.”
I carefully stand up out of my chair with one hand locked
on the back so it can’t possibly fall over. I pull my book bag
off the floor, snatch my laptop from the table, and head onto
the streets of London to clear my head. Instead of taking my
usual right toward Gloucester Road, I hang a left toward Hyde
Park, hiking my way toward the main street near the Odeon
and Orange cell phone place.
Twenty
minutes later, I’ve picked up some new makeup
that past Shane didn’t know she was missing, and I’m crossing
the street to TK Maxx. I find myself a black backpack with