But A lets me go.
 
 “Thanks for driving all this way,” he says.
 
 Should I tell him he’s welcome? What does that even mean? Welcome to what?
 
 “Will I see you again?” he asks.
 
 I don’t have the heart to say no. Because there’s a part of my heart that wants to stay, and will stay with him until I come to get it back.
 
 I nod.
 
 “I’m going to prove it to you,” he tells me. “I’m going to show you what it really means.”
 
 “What?”
 
 “Love.”
 
 No. I am scared of that.
 
 I am scared of all of this.
 
 But I don’t tell him that. I tell him goodbye instead—the kind of goodbye that’s never, ever final.
 
 Chapter Nine
 
 I remember the way everyone reacted when I got together with Justin, when we became a thing. They didn’t think I was paying attention, but I was.
 
 Rebecca told me I could do better. She told me Justin could never really care about anyone because he didn’t really care about himself. She said I deserved to be with someone who had his shit together. I told her I didn’t know anyone who had their shit together, including her. She told me she was going to pretend I hadn’t said that. She told me I was smarter than I thought I was, but I always liked to prove myself stupid by making bad decisions. I told her I loved him anyway, and my use of the word love surprised us both. I held up; she backed down.
 
 Preston said he was happy for me, and when I asked him why, he told me it was because I had found something meaningful. He didn’t think Justin was unworthy of my love, because he believed everyone was worthy of love. “He needs you, and that’s not a bad thing,” he told me. “We all need somewhere to put our love.” I remember liking this thought—that I had this certain amount of love that I needed to store someplace, and I’d decided to keep some of it in Justin.
 
 Steve said Justin was decent.
 
 Stephanie said she wasn’t sure.
 
 I don’t think any of them—even Preston—expected it to last longer than a month. Any love I stored in Justin would ultimately be given away, lost in a fire, left by the side of the road.
 
 And if this was their reaction to Justin, I couldn’t imagine what they would say if I told them about A.
 
 —
 
 The thought will not leave my head:
 
 If this is possible, what else is possible?
 
 —
 
 I get to school and walk to my locker, and it’s only when I’m at my locker that I realize I haven’t stopped to look for Justin.
 
 And then, even stranger: I don’t go looking for him.
 
 I wait to see how long it’ll take him to come looking for me.
 
 —
 
 Not between first and second periods.
 
 —