The Way I used to Be



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The Way I Used to Be by Amber Smith

SITTING IN THE GRASS
next to the tennis courts, I pick those fuzzy white
dandelions, absently blowing the little seeds off into the wind. Almost
October, this is probably one of the last truly nice days of the year. There’s a
chill, but the sun feels so warm, it makes the actual coldness of the air
inconsequential. I want to breathe it in. Hold it there in my lungs forever.
Mara’s staying after with Cameron to work on something for their art
class. I guess I could go home, but I really don’t want to be there, either. So I
wait for her instead, whether she wants me to or not.
“I hope you’re making wishes when you do that,” I hear someone call out
behind me. I turn around, shielding my eyes from the sun. It’s the silhouette
of a boy, and a blazing pink and orange sky behind him. A tall boy in a T-
shirt, gym shorts, and a knee brace, toting a duffel bag and a water bottle. He’s
wearing this old, beat-up black cap that makes it hard to see his face, but as he
steps closer, his features gradually come into focus. “Otherwise you’re just
making more weeds,” he finishes.
I clear my throat, try to sound casual. “You’re always sneaking up on me,
aren’t you?”
“Not 
always
—just twice.” He smiles.
It had been almost two weeks since I’d seen him at the library. I’m shocked
he’s even talking to me. I figured I’d pretty much blown it.
“So, what are you wishing for?” he asks, taking off his hat as he drops
down on the ground next to me, uninvited. His face is flushed, hair damp.
And his eyes are slightly glazed, like he’s really tired. I remember my brother
always having that look when he came home from practice.
I think about my answer for a second while I watch him settle in next to
me.
“I don’t wish,” I decide. Not for things that can be taken care of by delicate
white pixies surfing aimlessly on haphazard currents of air, anyway. He looks
disappointed—I’m not playing right. I’m supposed to make up some cute


thing I want more than anything in the world. And then he’s supposed to spin
me a web of bullshit about all the ways he could make that thing happen. Of
course, he couldn’t. And I wouldn’t. So, we’re left to our own devices.
“Everyone wishes,” he insists.
“Not me.” I would look so much tougher if I had a cigarette hanging out of
my mouth. I’m not to be messed with, that’s the impression I want to give
him. I’m not naive or stupid. In fact, I’m not even nice.
Now he looks more than disappointed. He looks like he wants to wish on a
weed that he hadn’t just sat down next to me. He doesn’t say anything as he
looks out at the nothing, at all the people who are not here, and thus will not
rescue him.
“Well, okay—” I start. Out of the corner of my eye I can see that he’s
stopped sweeping the deck for a life jacket and faces me now. “Even if I did
wish for something—and I’m not saying that that’s what I was doing—I still
wouldn’t tell you what it is.” I steal a glance. He’s grinning. He’s cute, and he
knows it too. The sun filters through his irises, pulling out all these
kaleidoscopic caramel and mahogany colors that had been hiding behind
chocolate. I have to force myself to stop looking. He inches closer. I feel my
heart accelerate.
“Because then it won’t come true, right?” he asks.
I nod. “Exactly.”
“Yeah, but do they ever really come true anyway, even when you don’t
tell?” Interesting tactic—playing to my cynicism. He’s good.
“You have a point,” I admit. I can see his mind working as he looks at me,
deciding which move, which play to make in order to win, to beat me.
“You know, I did a project once on the life cycle of dandelions,” he tells
me, nodding toward the now empty stem in my hand. “Second grade or
something like that.”
I don’t think this is in the script. I rack my brain. No, I don’t have anything
to say to that. He reaches somewhere behind us and picks something out of
the ground; I hear the flimsy stem snap. I just silently tap my shoe against the
yellow weed at my foot.


“Well, you know how they’re yellow at first? And then after the petals fall
off you get that white, fluffy stuff so the seeds can float away?” he asks,
examining the one he just plucked from the ground.
I nod.
“See, this one . . . is sort of in between.” He holds it close to my face so I
can get a better look. “The yellow petals are gone, and the white’s starting to
come through, but they’re not really light enough to start flying away yet.” He
blows at it, but nothing happens.
We are so close, I can feel his breath on my skin, feel the warmth radiating
from his body. He looks directly into my eyes as he waits for some kind of
response on my part. But his breath and warmth and eyes undermine my
ability to think or speak or understand anything other than his breath and
warmth and eyes. I finally force myself to just look away.
“Well,” he continues, after I don’t respond. “They’re pretty hard to find—I
had to track down a dandelion at every stage of growth for that project. And
you’d be surprised how rare these ones are.”
I dare myself to look him in the eye again, but I can’t hold it for long, so I
refocus on the dandelion.
“I guess that’s not very interesting, is it?” He rests his elbows on his knees
and lets the weed dangle between his fingers.
I smile. I did actually think it was a little interesting, but I’m not about to
tell him that.
“Nice out,” he says, looking up at the sky.
“Yeah,” I agree.
“Yeah.” He sighs.
I feel bad for him; he is probably really good at making small talk with
girls. This isn’t his fault.
“So, what are you still doing here?” he asks, the silence rapidly becoming
unbearable.
“Just waiting for my friend. You?”
“I’m waiting for my ride—I just got out of practice.”
“Did you, like, get hurt or something?” I gesture to the bandage around his
knee.


“No, it just acts up sometimes. It’s fine, though.” He smiles slowly as he
stares at me.
“Oh.” I nod, looking away, careful not to appear too concerned about him
—or anything for that matter.
“So,” he says, nervously twirling the dandelion between his thumb and
index finger. “You have me in suspense, you know that, right?”
“Oh,” I say again. “Sorry.”
“So, should I just take that as a no?” he asks, still smiling. “It’s okay. I just
don’t wanna keep feeling like such an idiot.” He laughs.
And I want to laugh at the fact that he’s the one feeling like an idiot here. I
wish I could somehow make him understand that I want to say no as much as
I want to say yes. “No, that’s not it. I just—” But I can’t finish because I don’t
even fully understand it myself.
“Well, what is it?”
“I don’t know,” I mumble.
The shape of his mouth looks a little confused, uncertain if it should smile
or frown. “Are you doing this on purpose? I really can’t tell.”
“Doing what?”
“Screwing with me—not giving me a straight answer.”
“No, I’m really not. I swear.”
His eyebrows pull together, a vertical line forming in the center of his
forehead. He looks at me appraisingly. “Forget it,” he finally says. “I just can’t
seem to get you right, I guess.” With this sad, awkward smile and a wave of
his hand. “Forget it, really.”
“Yes,” I hear myself say. Because maybe this is my chance—a second
chance—to be initiated into all this boy-girl stuff.
“Wait, yes?” He looks at me closely, his eyes lighting up. “So you’re
actually 
saying
yes?”
I take a deep breath and repeat it: “Yes.”
“Finally!” he yells, raising his arms to the sky, laughing. “Tomorrow night,
are you free?”
“Yeah, I guess.”


Just as he’s about to say something else, a car pulls in at the far end of the
lot—a navy blue hearse-looking vehicle, most definitely a parent’s car.
“Shit, that’s my ride. Here.” He takes my hand.
“Wait.” I pull away. “What are you doing?”
“Hold on,” he says with a laugh. “It’s okay, it won’t kill you. Just relax,” he
says in this soothing, dreamy way that probably makes other girls melt. He
unclenches my fingers and puts something there in my palm.
I look down. It’s the dandelion, the in-between one.
He stands and shoulders his bag. “So, let’s just meet here after school
tomorrow?”
I nod.
“Cool.” He smiles. “Okay.”
He gets into the hearse car with a woman who I assume must be his
mother in the driver’s seat. She waves her hand in my direction. I turn around
to look behind me. But she’s waving at me, I realize, as he sits in the passenger
seat looking embarrassed. I raise my arm and wave back. “Does she need a
ride?” I hear her ask through the unrolled window. He says either “No” or
“Go.” I can’t tell which.
After the car drives off, I pull out my planner and open it to this week.
Then I carefully set the soft white weed in the binding and close it gently
between the pages.
I hear shuffling on the tennis courts. I glance behind me and do a double
take. It’s Amanda. Standing there with her fingers wrapped through the
chain-link fence, staring at me.
“Hey!” I call over to her. But she turns and starts walking. “Hey!” I stand
up and run over to the gate that leads inside the court. “What are you doing
just standing there?” I yell, catching up with her quickly. “Spying on me?”
“No. And I can stand wherever I want.” She crosses her arms and looks me
up and down, her face changing slowly, her upper lip curling into this snarl of
disgust.
“Why don’t you just mind your own business, Mandy!” I start to shove
past her, but I swing back around, my heart tugging on my courage. “Wait,
what is your problem exactly?”


“I don’t 
have
a problem,” she answers.
“Seems like it to me.” I cross my arms as well, trying to calm down, trying
to look as formidable as she somehow does. She steps in close to me, like that
day on the front steps. And if I didn’t know her better, I would think she was
actually about to hit me.
“My name is not Mandy,” she growls.
She stalks off the tennis courts without another word.



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