JENNIE

Five minutes ago I was lonely.

Five minutes ago I walked alone.

Five minutes later I told you the deepest secrets of my soul

And when you turned away I whispered, 'Please don't go.'

~ Romeo's Quest


The show continued on, and I couldn't take my eyes off Lisa for the remainder of the night. I could tell she loved what she did, and just the idea of that made me happy for her. When the final song finished, I stood with the rest and applauded in complete awe. She was brilliant. The whole band was ecstatic. Irene would've loved them.

When Lisa looked down to me, I smiled and mouthed the words, "Thank you," and she narrowed her eyes with a look of confusion, which I chose to ignore. I headed outside, knowing I'd stayed out longer than Nayeon had thought I would, and she was probably having a panic attack, thinking that I'd stolen her car.

The warm air bustled through my hair. Digging into my pocket, I pulled out Nayeon's keys, ready to return to the place I had yet to call home.

"No name!" was shouted behind me, and I turned to see an exhausted-looking lead singer running my way. "What was that? Connect and run? You're bailing without a goodbye?"

I opened my mouth and shrugged. "I said thank you."

She slid her hands into her jeans. I could tell that the small breeze probably felt good against her bare arms after having stood under the hot lights in the bar. She stepped closer to me, and my body tensed up.

"I thought…" She paused and laughed. I thought she was laughing at herself. It was clear that I hadn't done anything funny. "Never mind. It was nice meeting you." She held her left hand out toward me and I shook it.

"Nice meeting you, too. Get inside and have a celebratory drink. You did amazing up there." I chuckled.

She wasn't smiling with her lips, but her eyes sparkled with care. "Was it your sister? Who you lost?"

I straightened up, taken aback by her words. "How did you know?"

Our hands still connected, she stepped one inch closer. "When you told the story about your golden, you spoke about her in past tense."

"Oh." That was all I could say. I didn't know what else could be said, and just thinking about Irene standing on that sidewalk was sending my waves of tears back.

"Still a new hurt?"

"Still fresh and ugly."

"My mom passed a year ago. And last Friday I lost my dad to liver failure." She stepped another inch closer.

My mouth dropped opened. "You just lost your father and you're performing in a bar?"

"I'm pretty fucked up," she whispered, tapping her finger against her head. I knew the feeling all too well. "He was an English teacher. The band was his idea, actually—a Shakespeare-themed band. Only Dad could've come up with that." She paused. "People tell you over time it's suppose to get easier but—"

"It just gets harder," I said, understanding completely and stepping closer to her.

"And it gets old to everyone around you. People get tired of you bringing it up. People get burdened by your sadness. So you act like it doesn't hurt anymore. Just so you can stop people from worrying about you. Just so you won't annoy anyone with your grief."

"You want to know something that sounds crazy?" I felt a bit insane for talking to a complete stranger about losing a family member, but the truth was that she was the first person who seemed to understand where I was coming from. "When I drove over here, I could have sworn my twin sister was sitting next to me in the car."

I watched as her eyes filled with such a look of despair. The words 'twin sister' had probably run through her mind, giving her that pained expression. I felt bad that I'd made her feel bad. A person like her should always feel good.

"It's fine," I whispered, "I'm okay."

She shifted her feet around. "Sometimes I swear I can smell my dad's favorite cigar smoke floating around me."

We silenced our thoughts for a moment and both glanced down to our hands, which were still attached from our 'goodnight' handshake. Then a nervous laugh happened. I wasn't sure if it was her nervous laughter or mine.

I broke the stillness and stepped backwards. Looking up into her brown eyes, I blinked once, hoping to not miss too much of her stare. "Jennie," I said, offering her my name.

She stumbled back a few steps with a wide, toothy smile. "Jennie," she sang. "Just when I thought you couldn't get any more stunning, you pull out a name like that."

I slipped my hands into my pockets and stared up at the night sky. It all seemed so simple. A bar with music that touched my soul. A girl who knew what it was like to lose a part of her joy. A light breeze that refreshed my entire being. "If there were a God, which I'm not certain that there is, do you think this night would be a form of apology for him taking away the things we loved?"

She released a breath and rubbed her hand across her mouth. "I don't know. But I think it's a good start."

We were silent again. I'd never known that a silence could feel so much like home. She couldn't stop smiling, yet neither could I. They were intense, cheesy grins that felt nothing but natural.

She broke the stillness and stepped backwards. "Well this has been a really fucking weird night."

"I can second that."

"All right then. I will stop bothering you and let you get going."

"Yeah, of course. It's just…" My words faded off, and she looked at me with narrowed eyes, waiting for me to finish. "I'm not ready to go yet. Because I know once I leave, all of this will be over. All of the magic of tonight that turned off my mind for a few hours will be gone and I'll be sad Jennie again."

"Are you asking me to make believe with you for a little while longer? she asked.

I nodded with hopeful eyes, praying she wouldn't think I was a total nut job.

She lifted my hand into her and nudged me in my shoulder. "Let's take a walk," she offered.

We took lap after lap around the block. I didn't know why, but we started exchanging stories back and forth about our lives. On lap three, Lisa told me about her father, how they hadn't been close until her mom died. Then they'd grown really close, and she regretted the years she'd lost due to being distant. She paused on the corner of Humboldt Street and James Avenue and took a deep inhale. Staring out into the night, she laced her fingers behind her neck and closed her eyes. I didn't say anything because the regret in her body language was saying all that needed to be said.

I learned that she had a brother, but when I asked about him, Lisa's body tensed up. "We don't talk." The words came out colder than anything I'd heard her say before. I didn't ask more about it.

On lap four, we laughed about how overly tired we both were and how we hadn't been able to truly sleep. On lap six, I cried. It started out with a few fallen tears but morphed into full-on waterworks, and Lisa didn't ask me to explain. She wrapped her arms around me and pulled me into her chest, soothing tones leaving her lips.

I tried to choke out the words to tell her that I would be all right, but she warned me against them. She said that it was okay to not be okay. She explained that it was fine to be broken for a while, to not feel anything but hurt. We stayed on lap six the longest, her whispering against my hair that someday, somehow, the hurt would be overshadowed by the joy.

Later, I told her about the bucket list Irene had crafted for me, and she asked to read it. Reaching into my purse, I pulled out the folded piece of paper and handed it to her. She held it with such care, unfolding it slowly. I watched her eyes travel from left to right as she moved her way down the list.

"Hula-hoop in a department store?" she questioned, arching an eyebrow my way.

I chuckled, nodding.

"Sing a Michael Jackson song at a karaoke bar, including dance moves?"

"I know, right? That one was more Irene than it was me," I replied.

She smiled at the list before folding it back up and handing it to me. She asked me how many I have checked off so far, making me sigh.

"None yet. I was supposed to dance on the bar tonight…but as you witnessed, I had a minor mental breakdown."

"So you haven't read a letter from your sister yet?"

"Not yet. I kind of want to just rip them all open but…"

She laughed as she started to walk around the block again. "But you don't want to be that girl."

"That girl?" I questioned, standing in place, staring in her direction.

"You know. The girl who deliberately disobeys her dead twin sister."

I smiled. I knew it was twisted, and some would call it wrong what she said, but I smiled because heck…it was funny. I really missed funny moments in my life. "You're right. I wouldn't dare be that girl."

"Besides…" She turned around toward me and bit into her bottom lip. She walked closer to me and playfully nudged me in the shoulder. "You're about to complete one of the tasks." When she said this, my nose wiggled and my eyebrows arched.

She laughed at my somewhat dumbfounded stance. When her face grew closer to mine, I let the air release from my mouth, brushing against her lips. It felt like forever that our mouths were millimeters apart, yet it was only truly a few seconds.

Her lips didn't only look soft and kissable—they looked talented as well. Like they could kiss someone even if they were on the other side of the world and make that person melt. It wasn't long before I realized just how talented those lips were.

Our lips connected in a way I'd never been kissed. There needed to be a new word for this type of kissing. Therapeutic. Poignant. Apologetic. Blissful. All of those beautifully diverse feelings—all at once. The overwhelming amount of emotions running through my body electrified the energy that traveled from me to her.

I knew I would never want to kiss another person from the way I kissed her. I never knew that kissing could be so simple yet so complex. She did all of the work with just her lips discovering mine.

She pulled me to the side of the bar and my back found the stone wall, but it wasn't the wall that was holding me up as much as it was her touch. She leaned in closer to me and I felt her tongue part my lips, finding my tongue ready to become well aquatinted with her.

When her arms wrapped tighter around me, my leg reached up to find its final placement around her hips. A small gasp fell from me as her strong hands clasped around my bottom and lifted me up even higher, making my selfish want to wrap my legs around her become a desperate need in order to fight gravity.

Like a wandering star, my body fell into the depths of desire, and I began to beg the heavens that this wasn't some depression-drenched fantasy—yet if it were, I hoped to never find reality again.

She moved her mouth away from mine, leaving me with my eyes closed and my heart open. I could feel her heart pounding against her t-shirt, and she placed her hand over my heart. Words were not needed because everything was felt from within, spilling out into each other's fingertips.

One last time, her lips crossed mine, almost not touching, as a closing ceremony. When I opened my eyes, I found her stare, and she smiled toward me as she began to explain in more depth. "Number twenty-three."

She slowly lowered me back to the ground. I looked down to the list still resting in my hands and quickly darted my eyes to number twenty-three.

#23. Kiss a stranger.

Well I'll be damned. I kissed a stranger.

My eyes looked up from the list to find Lisa smiling at me. She took three large strides backwards and took a bow. "You're welcome," she joked.

I couldn't contain my glee, and it was useless to try. Spinning around in a circle with my arms flung out, I let the night air wash across my body. I get to open a letter! I felt like crying, but I knew it would only be happy tears.

My feet started to break out into a run in Lisa's direction, and she was probably thrown off guard when I tossed myself into her arms for a tight, tight hug. She didn't falter at all—she lifted me into the air and swung me around a few times, hugging me back without question.

"You don't know what this means to me," I whispered, secretly wanting to kiss her again and again.

She pulled back a little and stared at me, smiling. "Let's get you home so you can do a little reading."

She placed me down, and the two of us walked to the front of the bar. Lisa rubbed her arms up and down my shoulders for a moment. Her lips moved in closer to mine, and when they connected to the corner of my mouth, I felt a wave of heat skyrocket through my system.

"Goodnight, Jennie," she said, lightly touching my fingertips before she stepped back, forcing another smile from me.

"Goodnight, Lisa Manoban." My heart was getting lost in a world of yearning, and I allowed it to travel to the unknown territory. I reached into my purse and pulled out her CD. "Oh, and just so you know…I'm taking you to bed tonight."

"Well, damn. I'm one lucky bastard." She winked at me, and I felt my world being rocked. Running her hands through her hair, she smiled big. "I think this is when we exchange numbers." She reached her phone out toward me and I gave her mine. After typing in my number, we switched back.

"I probably won't call you first because I don't want to look desperate." I grinned.

"And I won't call you first because I want you to explore the idea that there might be other girls I'm talking to."

Ohh how she makes me feel. I hadn't felt this way in so long. "Well obviously there aren't other girls. Have you seen yourself? You're pretty hideous."

"Oh?"

"Yeah. Girls don't like charming smiles, muscular arms, or delicious four-pack—" She quickly took my hands and ran them across her stomach. I sighed lightly, feeling my thighs ache from the touch of her physique. "Six-pack abs." My cheeks blushed over, but I hoped she didn't notice.

"So what is it that girls like?" She crossed her arms.

"Ya know, the normal things. A little hair under the nostrils. Some extra chins to kiss. An extra nipple or three. Just the normal things."

She laughed, and I wanted to snuggle against her to feel the laughter ripple through her body. "I'll work on those things. I don't want to be... What word did you use?"

"Hideous."

"Right. I would hate to be hideous in your eyes." There was one last round of smiles before she turned away and I began to walk in the other direction.

"Hey, Jennie!" she shouted, making me twirl back around in her direction. I waited for her comment, sending her a wondering gaze. "Would you want to have another really weird fucking night with me again sometime? Like, maybe even, Tuesday night?"

Yes! Yes! For all things righteous, YES! "You know what? I think I can pencil you in."

"You know the library on Harts Road?"

Nope. I didn't. But I'd be searching the internet right when I returned home to find out where it was. "I'll figure it out."

"Good. Figure it out around, say, six p.m."

"It's a date." I realized my words and paused, slamming my hand against my side. My cheeks heated up and my hands curled around my waist. "I mean, it's a… It's… I'll be there. I'll see you then."

She laughed and turned away. "Okay, sounds good. It's a date, date."

She used a double.

And I was officially smitten.

I entered my bedroom to find Nayeon stretched out on the floor, lying on top of her yoga mat. There was music playing that sounded like the rainforest bouncing from her speaker system.

She was inhaling deeply and exhaling through her slightly parted mouth. Just seeing her weirdness brought a small grin to my mouth.

"Uh, Nayeon?" I muttered, closing the door behind me.

"Shh," she hummed, patting the spare yoga mat that was lying right beside hers.

I took it as a weird invite and accepted. Taking off my heels and tossing my coat and purse onto my bed, I lay down on the yoga mat.

"Close your eyes," Nayeon instructed, her eyes already shut. I cocked a brow and looked at her as if she were a nut job and the corner of her mouth turned up. "Don't give me that you're-batshit-crazy look. Just close your freaking eyes."

I closed them and took in a deep breath. There was a cold breeze in the room and my arms instantly received goose bumps. I peeked toward Nayeon and watched her still inhaling deeply and exhaling with relief.

"Do you feel the difference from just a few seconds of lying down and connecting back to the world? All of that negative energy exiting through your fingertips and toes?" Nayeon asked before going back to her humming.

"Um, no?" I said with confusion in my sounds. I just felt like I was lying on a yoga mat in a dark room, listening to thunder and the jungle from a CD player.

Nayeon's humming paused and she sat up on her elbows. "Hmph. Me either. I'm telling you, I've been giving this meditation thing a try for the longest time, but I just don't get it."

I giggled and sat up on the mat, crossing my legs. "Then why do you bother?"

"Jungkook…" She reminded me of her boyfriend before she laid back down, tossing her hands under her head. "How was your time out?"

My lips turned up. Nayeon noticed.

"You met someone!" she squealed in a whisper.

I turned her way, shocked. "How…?"

"Jennie, you left the house pissed off and you came back smiling and blushing. You definitely met someone."

I lay back down on the yoga mat, staring at the painted clouds on the ceiling, listening to the chirping birds and monkeys from the CD player. "I had a very good time out."

We talked for a while longer before my new roommate grew sleepier and sleepier. After a while of lying on the mat, I listened as Nayeon began to lightly snore. Standing up, I grabbed a blanket and laid it over her body.

Around two a.m., my phone lit up. A grin ran across me at seeing Lisa's name.

Lisa: He's British. He's addicted to waving his long stick around. He has a superb sweater collection.

Me: Is this some kind of late-night book trivia?

Heart putters and butterflies were back in full force.

Lisa: Duh.

Me: Well, you have to do better than that. Harry Potter. My turn. He ran away from home to miss out on a curse. He gets married. He has mom issues. There may be a small chance that his baby mama is also…his mama.

Lisa: Did you just Oedipus Rex me? Clue: She has a rodent problem. Her infatuation with the three days festival is awkward. Her stepsisters cut off their heels.

Me: Cinderella—Grimm brother style. You're making this too easy. I thought you weren't going to call me first?

Lisa: I thought the three days festival was clever. Most people don't know that. This isn't calling you. This is texting. My girlfriend is sleeping right next to me. She might wonder if she hears me talking. You're beautiful.

She made me laugh and swoon at the same time. A true talent.

Me: On a scale of 1 to 10, the festival clue was a 1.5. Yawn. Don't pretend that Ms. Hideous has a girlfriend. Don't flatter me with compliments—your clues still stink.

Lisa: You're beautiful.

Me: You're dramatic.

Lisa: You're beautiful, Jennie. I don't just mean your looks. I mean your smarts, your tears, your brokenness. I think that's beautiful.

Each time she replied, I felt my face flush. She wasn't playing games; she wasn't trying to act like she had better things to do at two in the morning. She replied right away, with each text holding so much warmth to her simple words.

Me: Stop it…

Lisa: You're so ugly it's painful. You remind me of the scum on the bottom of my shoes. If I could, I would kick you with dirt. Why are you so repulsive?

Me: Romancing—you're doing it right.

Lisa: Goodnight, Jen.

I sighed as I placed my phone down against my chest.

Goodnight, Lisa Manoban.

I moved to my wooden box and used the light from my cell phone to dig through the envelopes until I found number twenty-three. Sitting back on my mat, I slowly opened the letter.

#23. Kiss a Stranger

Jen,

Oh my gosh. My sister's a slut! Really? You kissed a STRANGER?! Can I say that I'm secretly proud of you? And if this happened to be one of the first few letters that you opened, that means you're probably acting out because you miss me sooo much. That's my girl! So tell me, was it a bad kiss? Did that person have donkey breath? Use tongue? Oh gosh, there's so much I want to know. Did you like it? Did that person make your insides feel like Jell-o? As long as you're not kissing Billy, I'm happy. I guess this number on your bucket list was mainly to show you that you should take chances. Kiss the wrong guy at the right time. Kiss the right guy at the wrong time. Just live each day as if there are no restraints. There's so much I wish I would have done, but I would always overthink things too much. Like, I should have worn polka dots with plaid one day. Or tried sushi. Or lost my virginity at the beach party with Suho last year when I really wanted to.

Keep diving in.

You're doing great, kid.

-Irene