This full sentence, an inquiry to boot, seemed to me on par with Helen Keller finally signing W-A-T-E-R. I mean, really.
“Oh,” he said, pushing up his shirtsleeve. “It’s just this design. You saw it that first day you came out to Delia’s, right?”
I felt myself nodding, but truthfully I was just staring at the black, thick lines of the design, now fully revealed: the heart in the hand. This one was, of course, smaller, and contained within a circle bordered by a tribal pattern, but otherwise it was the same. The flat palm, fingers extended, the red heart in its center.
“Right,” I said. Like the first time I’d seen it, I couldn’t help think that it was familiar, something pricking my subconscious, as weird as that sounded. “Does it mean something?”
“Sort of.” He looked down at his arm. “It’s something my mom used to draw for me when I was a kid.”
“Really.”
“Yeah. She had this whole thing about the hand and the heart, how they were connected.” He ran a finger over the bright red of the heart, then looked at me. “You know, feeling and action are always linked, one can’t exist without the other. It’s sort of a hippie thing. She was into that stuff.”
“I like it,” I said. “I mean, the idea of it. It makes sense.”
He looked down at the tattoo again. “After she died I started tinkering with it, you know, with the welding. This one has the circle, the one on the road has the barbed wire. They’re all different, but with the same basic idea.”
“Like a series,” I said.
“I guess,” he said. “Mostly I’m just trying to get it right, whatever that means.”
I looked across the clearing, catching a sudden glimpse of Kristy as she moved through the crowd, blonde head bobbing.
“It’s hard to do,” I said.
Wes looked at me. “What is?”
I swallowed, not sure why I’d said this out loud. “Get it right.”
He must think I’m so stupid, I thought, vowing to keep my mouth shut from now on. But he just picked up one of the rods he’d carried over, turning it in his hands. “Yeah,” he said, after a second. “It is.”
Kristy was now almost to the keg. I could see her saying something to Monica, her head thrown back as she laughed.
“I’m sorry about your mom,” I said to Wes. I didn’t even think before saying this, the connotation, what it would or wouldn’t convey. It just came out, all on its own.
“I’m sorry about your dad,” he replied. We were both looking straight ahead. “I remember him from coaching the Lakeview Zips, when I was a kid. He was great.”
I felt something catch in my throat, a sudden surge of sadness that caught me unaware, almost taking my breath away. That was the thing. You never got used to it, the idea of someone being gone. Just when you think it’s reconciled, accepted, someone points it out to you and it just hits you all over again, that shocking.
“So,” he said suddenly, “why’d you stop?”
“Stop what?” I said.
“Running.”
I stared down into my empty cup. “I don’t know,” I said, even as that winter day flashed in my mind again. “I just wasn’t into it anymore.”
Across the clearing, I could see Kristy talking to a tall blond guy who was gesturing, telling some kind of elaborate story. She kept having to lean back, dodging his flailing fingers.
“How fast were you?” Wes asked me.
I said, “Not that fast.”
“You mean you couldn’t . . . fly?” he said, smiling at me.
Stupid Rachel, I thought. “No,” I said, a flush creeping up my neck, “I couldn’t fly.”
“What was your best time for the mile?”
“Why?” I said.
“Just wondering,” he said, turning the rod in his hands. “I mean, I run. So I’m curious.”
“I don’t remember,” I said.
“Oh, come on, tell me,” he said, bumping my shoulder with his. I cannot believe this, I thought. “I can take it.”
Kristy was glancing over at us now, even as finger guy was still talking. She raised her eyebrow at me, then turned back to face him.
“Okay, fine,” I said. “My best was five minutes, five seconds.”
He just looked at me. “Oh,” he said finally.
“What? What’s yours?”
He coughed, turning his head. “Never mind.”
“Oh, see,” I said, “that’s not fair.”
“It’s more than five-five,” he told me, leaning back on his hands. “Let’s leave it at that.”
“That was years ago,” I said. “Now I probably couldn’t even do a half a mile in that time.”
“I bet you could.” He held the rod up, squinting at it. “I bet,” he said, “you’d be faster than you think. Though maybe not fast enough to fly.”
I felt myself smile, then bit it back. “You could outrun me easily, I bet.”
“Well,” he said, “maybe someday, we’ll find out.”
Oh, my God, I thought, and I knew I should say something, anything. But now Kristy, Bert, and Monica were walking toward us, and I missed my chance.
“Twenty minutes to curfew,” Bert announced as he got closer, looking at his watch. “We need to go.”
“Oh, my God,” Kristy said, “you might actually have to go over twenty-five to get us home in time.”