Page 73 of This Kiss


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We walked away, Ava holding the bear out in front of her. “At least I don’t think I’ve ever had one.”

“You told me once that your dad mailed you one for your birthday,” I said. “Your mother trashed it, but you rescued it. It disappeared later.”

“She probably erased my memory just so I wouldn’t know about it anymore.” Her tone was bitter. Did she think her mother could do that? I flashed to that final night, her mother calling the cops, locking them in the bathroom.

Yeah. Maybe.

“You were eight when you got that bear. That was probably a lot of memory erases ago.”

She bumped her shoulder into mine. “You really do know everything about me.”

“Everything you ever shared.”

She held my gaze a moment, and I didn’t let it go. She needed to remember who I was to her. Who I wanted to be.

“Okay, Mr. Loser of Whack-a-Mole. Does this big win makemethe master?”

“Seems I’ve met my match.”

Our hands collided, and she accepted mine. My heartsqueezed. For the first time in a year, I got to hold Ava’s hand.

“What’s that?” she asked, using the bear to point ahead.

“It’s a Fun House.”

“That sounds amazing!” She hurried toward it, pulling me along.

Her behavior was a complete turnaround from anything I’d seen since she went away. This was working. She was coming back to me.

I handed over tickets, and we stomped up the metal ramp.

“Ack!” she said when the floor started slanting at a sideways angle. And “Ack!” again when we approached a room full of mirrors, distorting us in every direction.

“This is wild!” she said.

We approached a turning tunnel with spiral walls.

“This is really disorienting,” she said.

I hadn’t even thought of that. The Fun House was a horrible choice and now we were deep into it. I wasn’t photosensitive, so flashing lights didn’t bother me. But she certainly was.

“Close your eyes,” I said. “I’ll lead you.”

She did as I suggested, and I walked her down the tube. We turned a corner.

And it happened.

A strobe light.

My hands moved fast, clapping over her eyes.

“It’s so bright and blinky!” she said. “Let me see!”

“No, Ava, it’s a strobe!”

The strobe turned off, only to activate again when we moved.

“Shit! Somebody shut that off!” I shouted.