We Are Inevitable Gayle Forman (simple ebook reader TXT) đ
- Author: Gayle Forman
Book online «We Are Inevitable Gayle Forman (simple ebook reader TXT) đ». Author Gayle Forman
Hannah rents a room in a sober house. Itâs a drab, ranch-style place with ugly brown siding, but her room feels like a nest. Itâs small, with a queen bed, a zillion throw pillows, lights strewn along the frame. On the giant bookshelfâwood, Ike would be pleased to knowâbooks compete for space with records, CDs, and cassette tapes.
Mind you, I donât notice any of this until the next morning.
âSee?â Hannah teases me when we wake up and I go straight to the bookcase. âBooks and music can coexist.â
âIâd say last night showed they can do way more than coexist,â I tease, reaching for her again.
She smacks me with a pillow. âNot now. I have to finish a transcription project before noon,â she says. âBut that will only take an hour or two.â
âA what?â
âTranscription. Typing up what people say. Thatâs my job these days. Until I figure out what I want to do when I grow up.â
âYou donât want to make music?â
âI already do make music,â she says. âBut making a living from it . . . I wouldnât bet on it.â
âWhat are your plans after the transcription?â
âI just have to pack for Arizona.â She smiles. âBut other than that Iâm free. What about you? Do you have things you need to do?â
A long list of them. Now that selling to Louâs boss is out, the store is Pennyâs. Iâve got to break the news to Ira. And the Lumberjacks. And Chad. Send the bulk buyers the inventory Chad is working on. Put the records in storage. Figure out where Ira and I are going to live. Iâd planned to go somewhere sunny but now Iâm not so sure I want to be far from Hannah. Or Chad, for that matter.
Hannahâs hair is down, fanning across her shoulders. Her silk kimono keeps slipping, revealing the star-shaped mole on her clavicle that I canât stop kissing.
There is nowhere else Iâd rather be. No one else Iâd rather be with. All my problems will be there tomorrow, but for today, thereâs this.
I pull at the belt of her robe, bringing her close, kissing her again. âNothing that canât wait.â
I text Ira that Iâm going to be away for two days and where he can pick up the car if he needs it, but he tells me not to worry and have fun. And so I turn off my phone and just try to let myself have this.
Because thisâHannah and me cooking omelets side by side in her kitchenâfeels like a miracle.
Because thisâHannah and me reading chapters aloud from her old copy of The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobeâfeels like happiness.
Because thisâHannah and me, togetherâfeels like inevitable.
At the end of the second day, Hannah pulls down a suitcase and starts to pack.
âStay,â I tell her.
âTrust me, I wish I could.â
âThen donât go. Weâll make Thanksgiving dinner and eat in bed.â
She kisses me, casually, because thatâs what Hannah Crew does now. âTempting,â she says. âBut I have to face the music.â
She pads to her shelf and rifles around; the zigzag scar down her hip from the accident that got her addicted to painkillers peeks out of her robe. When I saw it for the first time, and she told me the full story of the accident, I felt such tenderness, and relief. She is not Sandy. Her addiction was not her own choice.
âI have something for you,â she says. âI made it last night when you were sleeping.â She opens a desk drawer and pulls out a tape. âOld school. Seemed more your vibe.â
âWhat is it?â
She hands me the cassette. AARONâS PERFECT SONGS? is written in block letters across the spine of the case.
âItâs from the playlist I made you, plus a few new additions.â She nibbles on her thumbnail. âI told you I wouldnât rest until I found you a perfect song.â
Thereâs a part of me that never wants her to find the perfect song because that way Hannah will have to keep looking. And if she has to keep looking, we wonât end.
But thereâs another part of me that needs to tell herâprove to herâhow meant to be we are.
âYou already found me a perfect song,â I say.
âI did?â She lights up. âWhich one?â
âTalking Heads, âThis Must Be the Place.ââ
âReally?â Her eyebrowâthe one with the scar on it that I now know she got in an ice-skating accident when she was nineâquirks up. âI almost didnât put that one on. Iâm not sure why I did.â
âI am,â I say, pulling her to me. âI knew it from the moment we met.â
âAnd what did you know?â
âThat you and me, we are inevitable.â
The 2010 Rand McNally Road Atlas
Since Iâve never been drunk, Iâve never been hungover, but Chad has explained how it all works. Not just the headaches, or feeling simultaneously ravenously hungry and needing to puke, but the correlation between pleasure and pain.
According to Chad, thereâs a direct link between how much you overindulge and how shitty you feel. âItâs like bricks,â he explained to me. âDrink a brick, get hit with two. Drink a dozen bricks, and itâs like a house fell on you.â
The first brick hits as I drop Hannah off at the airport shuttle bus. I wonât see her for five days. Rationally, I know five days is nothing. Weâve known each other barely a month. Have spent all of five days together in that month. But itâs a brick just the same.
The second brick smashes down when I pass the sign at the edge of our town. In one week, we lose the store. And I havenât told Ira.
The third brick lands when I realize Iâm telling Ira right now. There is no more putting it off.
The fourth brick lands when I pull up to the store and see both Ikeâs and Chadâs trucks parked out front. Itâs Thanksgiving week.
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