“Is that what you’ve been trying to tell me, Finley? All summer?”
Grandma clasps her hands tightly together and looks at me, waiting.
Everything around me—the whole world, my whole life—narrows down to this moment:
Grandma, in her peach-colored blouse, her pearls, her makeup not even smudged, even after everything that happened.
The clock, crashing away.
The soft light of the kitchen, the sky getting brighter outside, the hot chocolate steaming in front of me.
If I am a puzzle, this is the moment in which I find the first corner piece.
There is still a lot of work to do; I still have a thousand pieces of myself to fit into place. But everyone knows you’re supposed to find the corners first. They are the beginning.
My family has found theirs, and I have just found mine.
All it took was someone else asking a question, making me search for an answer I think I already knew.
Maybe we should not be talking about this. After everything I have learned in the past couple of days, don’t more important things need discussing?
What will happen to us, if Grandma decides to tell the world the truth?
“Finley?” Grandma folds her soft, warm hand around mine. “Are you all right?”
“Really? Like, honestly?”
“Yes.”
Then again, I have heard people say—Mom, when she’s stressed about work; Rhonda, when she’s trying to sound mature—that it is important to take life one day at a time, one moment at a time, one item on the great big list of life to-dos at a time.
This can be my moment—right now, between me and Grandma. One moment out of a billion ones yet to come.
It is okay for me to have that.
I take a deep breath.
(How many people have I told about this? Ever?)
(No one. Not a single living soul.)
(Only my notebook. The Everwood, of course, already knew. We are connected, me and those trees.)
Everything about this summer comes back to me like I am seeing it for the first time.
“I don’t think I’m okay.” I stare at the table. “I’m not very happy.”
A single knot inside me untangles.
Grandma waits, her hand on mine.
“I’m sad, a lot,” I say. “And I get afraid a lot. Really afraid. Like, panicky for no reason. And I don’t know why.”