Rocco-s | Pov 17

Then she’d pulled away and said, “You’re shaking.”

He smiled—a small, crooked thing—and started walking toward the point. rocco-s pov 17

“Roo? Meatloaf’s in an hour.”

Rocco pressed his forehead to his knees. He thought about Lena. Lena with the crooked smile and the book of Rilke poems she carried like a bible. Last month, at a party, she’d pulled him into a closet just to show him a glow-in-the-dark sticker of a jellyfish on the inside of the door. “See?” she’d said. “Even in the dark, there are things that make their own light.” Then she’d pulled away and said, “You’re shaking

He hadn’t known how to explain that the shaking was relief. That he’d been holding his breath since the day his dad left, and her lips had made him exhale. So he’d laughed, said something stupid like “It’s cold in here,” and left the closet. He’d walked home alone in the rain, hating himself for running away from the one person who might actually see him. He thought about Lena

Rocco stared at the screen. The point. A gravel beach down by the old quarry where kids went to drink warm beer and pretend they weren’t terrified of Monday morning. Last week, he’d watched a girl named Mia throw a bottle into the lake so hard it skipped six times. She’d laughed, but her eyes had been dead. He recognized that look. It was the same one he saw in the mirror after his father’s monthly phone call—the one where the old man promised to come to a baseball game and then found a reason to cancel by the second sentence.

He thought about Lena. She’d be there. She’d be wearing that denim jacket with the frayed cuffs, probably sitting on the hood of someone’s car, her feet dangling. She’d look up when he arrived, and she wouldn’t say Where have you been? She’d just tilt her head, like she already knew.