“You only listed four things. Hit me with the other ninety-six.”
“Regret. Love. Pissed off. Grief. Just trust me, there’s more.”
“I believe you, kiddo.”
I crack my knuckles, one finger at a time, and tug at my sleeve afterward. “You can make me better.”
She shakes her head. “It’s not up to me to sign off on the procedure. But let’s review what happened the past few months. We gave you a glimpse into what your life would look like if you were straight. Your true nature burst through our seams. I can’t elaborate much further than this, but many of our other clients who have undergone similar work remain as we left them. Is being gay really at fault here?”
I know the answer but I stay quiet.
I need the noise in my head to get loud again to drown out all the memories of rejection and heartache. So much has been left behind because of Leteo’s screwup, and she wants me to tell her how happy I was, so she feels better? No. No, I won’t do that. No, I wasn’t happy. I mean, sure, I thought I was, but I found happiness in the wrong person and that doesn’t count. It didn’t count with Collin, it didn’t count with Genevieve, and it doesn’t count with Thomas.
“I won’t survive this,” I say. “You all understood how hard this was for me the first time, but now I’m carrying extra weight. How is that not clicking with anyone?”
“As I said, kiddo, this isn’t up to me. I agree that the memories you’re carrying around are painful, especially for someone your age with your history . . .” Her eyes fall on my smiling scar. “The day we were here together, Hannah scheduled you for an appointment on the twelfth of August. It was for a consultation, but if your mother signs off on your procedure, we’ll take care of you . . .” She goes on about how she couldn’t talk me out of it the first time, but I tune her out.
August 12th. Two days before my birthday.
I’ll try to make it that long.
5
WINDING BACK THE CLOCK
I have to see him.
All my memories are so warped right now. I’m pushing my father’s suicide out of my head as best as possible because it hurts too much with everything else I’m suffering.
I want to turn back the clock, back to the days where being who I am didn’t get me thrown through glass doors; back to the days where he and I ran around laughing; back to the days where there was a chance of happiness despite our circumstances.
It’s against my better instinct, but I reach for my phone and dial his number like I never forgot it. I press call and don’t expect him to pick up.
“You’re okay,” he says.
“I’ve been cooler, Collin.”
6
ONCE MORE
I’m forgetting about Thomas and Genevieve without any help from Leteo.
Talking with Collin has made recovery pretty easy these past three days. There’s been zero reminiscing or any shit like that over the phone. We’re trying to keep everything cool and not gay between us, I guess. We talk about meaningless things like movies we’ve seen—he also hated The Final Chase—and how I need to catch up on The Dark Alternates because the last issue comes out this month and the story line has gotten crazy. The biggest taboo of all is his pregnant girlfriend; he never even hints at her.
I’m finally being released from Leteo today. Evangeline thinks I should stay for another couple of days as they run more tests, but I will hang myself with an IV if I have to spend another hour in this room. (Not really.) I promised to let her know if I have any dizzy spells, cases of vomiting, or the attention span of a goldfish.
The only time I speak to Mom on the way home is to ask if Mohad is firing me for missing work on account of getting my ass beat. But she’s already been in contact with him and he’s not. I have that going for me.
I’m a little on edge when we arrive on our block. Brendan, Skinny-Dave, and Nolan better not come at me again. Mom holds on to my arm, squeezing, and I bet she’s nervous too. I see Baby Freddy and Fat-Dave playing catch by the trash cans, and Baby Freddy drops the ball when he sees me and runs over.
“No!” Mom screams, guarding me with her body. “Stay away from my son, or I swear I will have you all thrown in jail.”
Baby Freddy backs up a little. He looks straight up embarrassed. “I just wanted to see if he’s okay. I’m sorry they did that, Aaron. It was messed up.” He leaves before my mom can threaten him again.
I swallow a deep and sharp breath when we get to our lobby entrance. I used to run through those doors as a kid when we played tag, and manhunt later as a teenager. I would race to hold the doors open for our neighbors, and they would tell my mom she raised such a well-mannered little boy. Now there’s nothing but a door frame and a little girl jumping back and forth over it, like someone wasn’t almost killed here.
Next thing I know, I’m riding up the elevator with Mom.
Once she crashes onto her own bed for the first time in a week, I change into different clothes and sneak out to meet Collin.
I get to Java Jack’s, this run-down diner on 142nd Street, in no time. Without thinking, I settle into the booth by the window Collin and I always opted for whenever we came here together; it’s a prime spot for people watching/mocking. Collin used to hate coffee, but I’m betting now he thinks drinking coffee proves you’re a man or something. It’s pretty dumb, but I know he struggles with this side of himself way more than I ever have in both of my lives, so I won’t call him out on it. I’ll also keep everything about our history airtight so we don’t tip anyone off.
I stop the waiter. “Can I bother you for another coffee?”
“Be back in a moment,” he says.
The door opens and I shoot up. It’s not Collin. It’s just some guy in baggy clothes and long surfer hair. If I had the power to snap my fingers and change him, I’m not convinced I would’ve dressed him in a basketball jersey or made him taller with Collin’s golden curls. Maybe I would’ve transformed him into Thomas, watching his skin turn a shade darker than the weak coffee this place serves, and his regular, boring eyebrows would’ve grown into the thicker eyebrows I had no business touching before I kissed him.
I just don’t know.
Snap, snap.
There’s a hand snapping a few inches from my nose.
“You cool?” Collin sits down across from me like we’ve spent no time apart. “You certainly don’t look it.”
My swollen eye is less swollen, but it’s still pretty much an eyesore everyone can’t help but stare at when I’m just walking down the street. “Yeah. I ran into a lot of wrong fists. How’d you find out?”