The Edge Of Always - The Edge of Always Part 32
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The Edge of Always Part 32

"Me, too."

Asher, on the other hand, is with a sweet girl named Lea. And I'm proud to say that they decided one day to spontaneously make the move to Madrid. My little brother has really done well for himself, landing a job as a systems software engineer, which allowed him to relocate. He didn't have to. He could've stayed put in Wyoming, but apparently he's more like me than I knew. Thankfully, Lea shares his interests and determination; otherwise, their relationship would end up more like Aidan and Michelle's than mine and Camryn's. And Lea's income from selling handmade dresses on the Internet is pretty awesome, I hear. Camryn thought about trying something like that out, until she realized she'd have to sew.

With them living in Madrid, it gave us a place to stay while we were there ourselves. Asher insisted that we didn't have to pay rent, but we paid it anyway. Camryn didn't want to be a "moocher," as she put it.

"One dollar," Asher said, just to appease her.

"No," Camryn said. "Six dollars and eighty-four cents a week, and not a penny less."

Asher laughed. "Girl, you are kind of weird. Fine. Six dollars and eighty-four cents a week."

It started out that we were only going to stay with my brother for a couple of weeks, but one night, Camryn and I had a heart-to-heart.

"Andrew, I think maybe we should stay put for a while. Here, in Madrid. Or, maybe we should go back to Raleigh. I don't want to, but..."

I looked at her curiously, yet at the same time it was apparent to me that we have been thinking along the same lines. "I know what's on your mind," I said. "It's not as easy as we wanted it to be, traveling with Lily."

"No, it's not." She looked off in thought, and her expression hardened. "Do you think we did the right thing? By taking her to so many places?"

Finally, she looked at me again. I could tell by the look in her eyes that she hoped I would say that yes, we did the right thing.

"Of course we did," I said, and I meant it. "It was what we wanted to do when we set out on that first day. We have no regrets. Sure, we had to do things differently for her safety, bypass a lot of places we wanted to see, stay put in places longer than we wanted to so we didn't give her whiplash, but we did the right thing."

Camryn smiled softly. "And maybe we instilled a love for travel in her." She blushes. "I don't know..."

"No, I think you're right," I said.

"So what do you think we should do?" she asked.

We stayed with Asher and Lea for three months before we set out again. We had one last stop to make before we were to head back to the United States: Italy. Camryn finally admitted to me the reason behind her persistent desire to go to Italy. Her dad took her there once on a business trip when she was fifteen. It was just the two of them. And that trip with her dad was the last time she felt like his little girl. They spent a lot of time together. He spent more time with her than he did on business.

"Are you sure it's a good idea?" I asked before we left for Rome. "What if you go back there and ruin the memory, like you did that day with the woods behind your childhood house?"

"It's a risk I'm willing to take," she said, packing Lily's clothes into our suitcase. "Besides, I'm not going there to relive those six days with my dad, I'm going to remember those six days with my dad. I can't ruin something I can't fully remember."

When we got there I witnessed Camryn remembering everything. She took Lily and sat down with her on the Spanish Steps, I imagine much in the same way her dad did when he brought her here.

"We love you very much," Camryn said to Lily. "You know that, right?" She squeezed Lily's hand.

Lily smiled and kissed her momma on the cheek. "I love you, Momma."

Then Lily sat between Camryn's legs while Camryn worked her fingers through her blonde hair, twisting it into a new braid and laying it over her shoulder to look just like her own.

I smiled and watched thinking about a day so long ago: "It would be a friendship thing, I guess," she said. "Y'know, two people who happen to be sharing a meal together."

"Oh," I said, grinning faintly. "So now we're friends?"

"Sure," she said, obviously caught off guard by my reaction, "I guess we are sort of friends, at least until Wyoming."

I reached over and offered my hand to her, and reluctantly, she took it.

"Friends until Wyoming it is, then," I said, but I knew I had to have her. Longer than Wyoming. Forever would be sufficient.

It still blows my mind how far we have come.

After nearly three years on the road it was finally time to go home.

We went back to Raleigh and back to our humble little house. Natalie and Blake moved out and got a new place on the other side of town. Lily later started school, and for the next several years we were happy, but there was always a part of us that felt empty. I watched my little girl grow up into a beautiful young woman with dreams and goals and aspirations in life that rivaled mine and Camryn's. I like to think that we-Camryn and I-are to take credit for how Lily turned out. But at the same time, Lily is her own person, and I think she might've turned out the way she did even without our help.

I couldn't be prouder.

It seems like so long ago. And, well, I guess it was. But even today, I look back on the day I met Camryn on that Greyhound bus in Kansas, and it's still so vivid and alive in my mind that I feel like I could reach out and touch it. To think, if the two of us hadn't left like we did, told society and its judgments to piss off, we never would've met. If Camryn would've let fear of the unknown get to her too much, we might never have gotten on that plane to Jamaica. We truly lived our lives the way we wanted to live them, not the way the world expected us to live. We took risks, we chose the unconventional route, we didn't let what anyone thought about our choices get in the way of our dreams, and we refused to settle doing anything for too long that we didn't enjoy. Sure, we did things all the time that we didn't want to do because we had to-worked in a few fast-food restaurants for a while, for instance-but we never let any of it control our lives. We found a way out eventually instead of letting it win. Because we only have one life. We get one shot at making it worth living. We took our shot and ran like hell with it.

And I think we did pretty damn good.

I honestly don't know what else to say. It's not like our life is over now that our story seems to be. Nah. It's definitely far from being over. Camryn and I still have so much left to do, so many places to see, so many of Life's Rules to defy.

Today is the first day of the rest of our lives. It's a special day, for Lily, for us, for everything the three of us stand for. Our story is over, yes, but our journey isn't, because we'll always live on the edge until the day we die.

Epilogue.

Fifteen years later Lily "Lily Parrish!" Mrs. Morrison calls out my name from the stage in the auditorium. I hear my friends and family shouting from the crowd, followed by whistles and clapping.

I reach up and hold my graduation cap on my head as I ascend the wooden steps. It fits oddly. My dad teased me, said it's because I have an oddly-shaped head, and it's my mom's fault because I couldn't have gotten it from him.

As I walk across the stage more whistles and shouting and clapping fills the auditorium. My heart is beating fast against my ribs. I'm so excited. I think I've been smiling this big for the past twenty minutes.

Principal Hanover holds my diploma out to me, and I take it from her hand. The clapping gets louder. I look down at the front row at my parents, standing next to their seats, bright-eyed and animated with excitement. My mom blows me a few kisses. Dad winks at me and claps. They are both so proud of me that it's choking me up. I wouldn't be here if it weren't for them. I couldn't have asked for better parents.

After the graduation ceremony is over, my boyfriend, Gavin, and I make our way through the crowds to find my mom and dad.

Mom engulfs me in her arms and kisses my head. "You did it, Lily!" She squeezes me. "I'm so proud!" I hear the tears in her voice.

"Mom, don't cry. You'll mess up your mascara."

She rubs her finger underneath both eyes.

Dad hugs me next. "Congratulations, babygirl," he says.

I push up on my toes and kiss him on the cheek. "Thank you, Daddy." Then he pulls me around to his side and fits his hand on my waist protectively.

He gives Gavin the evil eye, looking him up and down, the same way he has every time he's seen him in the two years we've been together. But this time, it's all in good fun. For the most part, anyway. It took my dad a year to cut Gavin some slack and trust him enough to let me go out on a date with him without him or Mom going with us. So embarrassing. But the overprotectiveness never managed to run Gavin off, and I think that alone gave my parents more reason to respect him.

He is really a great guy, and deep down I think my parents know that.

"Congratulations, Gavin," my dad says and shakes his hand.

"Thanks." Gavin is still kind of terrified of my dad. I think it's cute.

My parents throw a huge graduation party for me at home and everybody shows up. I mean everybody. There are people here I haven't seen in a few years: Uncle Asher and Aunt Lea came all the way from Spain! Uncle Aidan is here, too, with my cousins Avery and Molly, and his new wife, Alice. My grams, Marna and Nana Nancy (she doesn't ever want to be called anything with a GR in it) are here, too. Nana isn't doing so well. She has multiple sclerosis.

"Oh my God, girl, you're going to leave me!" my best friend, Zoey, says as she comes up to me. We grew up together, just like her mom, Natalie, did with my mom here in Raleigh.

"I know! I hate it, but you know I'll visit!" I hug her tight.

"Yeah," she says, "but I'm going to miss the hell out of you."

"I told you," I say, "you could always move to Boston to be closer."

She rolls her eyes, her dark-colored hair falling about her shoulders as she steps away and hops up onto the kitchen bar stool. "Well, not only will I not be moving to Boston with you, looks like I won't be staying in North Carolina much longer, either."

"What do you mean?" I ask, surprised.

I sit down on the bar stool next to her. My uncle Cole walks into the kitchen with a few empty beer bottles in his hands. He chucks them in the trash.

Zoey sighs, props her elbow on the bar, and starts twirling a few strands of hair between her fingers. "My mom and dad are moving to San Francisco."

"What? Seriously?" I can hardly believe it.

"Yeah."

I can't tell if she's disappointed or just doesn't know how to feel about it yet. "Well that sounds awesome," I say, hoping to encourage her. "You don't want to move?"

Zoey pulls her arm from the bar and crosses her legs. "I don't know what to think, Lil. That's a long way from home. Not like it's just up the street."

"True," I say, "but it's San Francisco! I would love to go there."

She smiles a little.

Uncle Cole, in his tall, brooding glory, takes three more bottles of beer from the fridge and wedges them by the necks between his fingers. He smiles at me as he passes and slips into the living room with the house full of people.

He's awesome. When he arrived, he slipped me a congratulations card with two hundred bucks in it.

"Zoey, I think it's great. And honestly, I can't wait to visit my best friend in California. Yeah. That even sounds good when I say it. California." I gesture both hands dramatically.

She laughs. "I really am going to miss you, Lil."

"Me too."

Her mom comes into the kitchen behind her with her dad, Blake, not far behind. "Did you tell Lily the news?" her mom asks as she reaches inside the fridge.

"Yeah, I told her just now."

"What do you think, Lily?" her mom asks.

Her dad kisses Zoey on the head, takes the beer from her mom, and heads outside, probably to smoke a cigarette.

"I'm excited for her," I answer. "I'm moving to Boston for college. She's moving to California. We may not be together like we have been growing up anymore, but there's something about not staying stationary in the same place forever that makes it all feel right."

"You are definitely the daughter of Andrew and Camryn Parrish, that's for sure," her mom says, grinning.

I smile proudly and hop down from the bar stool to follow her and Zoey back into the living room.

"A toast!" my dad says in the middle of the room, holding up his beer. He looks across the room at me. We have the same green eyes. "To our little girl, Lily. May you show everybody at college how it's done!"

Everybody takes a drink. "To Lily!"

I spend the entire day, all the way until nightfall with my friends and family and, of course, Gavin, whom I love so much. We are so much alike. We met shortly after he moved here from Arizona. His locker was on the same wall as mine, and he ended up in almost all of the same classes as me. Zoey honed in on him first, which isn't a surprise given her flirty personality. I remember her telling me on his first day of school, "That one will be mine. You watch and see." And I never had any intention of interfering, but apparently Zoey was too much for someone like Gavin. I think maybe I can give Zoey the credit for Gavin and me ending up together, though. If it wasn't for her, he might never have had an excuse to force himself to talk to me instead.

Zoey was over him as fast as he made it obvious I was the one he was interested in.

It's really weird, too, because Gavin and I are so eerily alike that it almost feels like fate brought us together. We both had our sights set on the same college. We love the same music and movies and books and television shows. We both love art and history and have, during different points in our lives, thought about what it would be like to travel through Africa. Gavin is interested in archeology. I'm interested in archeological conservation.

Gavin wasn't my first boyfriend, or my first kiss, but he was my first everything else. I can't imagine spending my life with anyone other than him.

I hope we turn out like my parents did. Yeah, I really hope for that.

After graduation, I spent the summer with my parents. And I didn't waste a minute of that time with them because I knew it would be short. In the fall, I moved to college, and Mom and Dad-well, their plans were as big as mine. I think they did an awesome job raising me, but I knew that once I moved out on my own and started a life for myself with school and with Gavin, my parents would be setting off to fulfill a life dream of their own.

I'm so happy for them. I miss them every day, but I'm so happy.

They never forget to mail me letters-not e-mails, but real handwritten letters. I've saved them all, from the ones stamped in Argentina and Brazil and Costa Rica and Paraguay to the ones that came from Scotland, Ireland, Denmark, and places all over Europe. I love it that my parents are the way they are, so free-spirited and driven and in love with the World. I admire them. From the stories they tell me about when they were a little older than me, I realize that their lives, even before they met, started out rocky, but eventually everything fell into place. My mom told me about her past and how she used to be very depressed. She didn't go into too much detail, and I could always tell that she was holding things back. But she wanted me to know that she and my dad would always be there for me, no matter what happens or what decisions I make.

I think she was worried I might make some of the same wrong decisions that she made when she went through some hard times, but honestly, I can't imagine ever being unhappy.

Mom told me about when she met Dad, too. On a Greyhound bus, of all things. I just laughed. But whenever I think about them and about the things they went through together, I can't help but be awed by it.

According to Mom, my dad was a little wild back then. She said the way he used to be is the number one reason why it took him so long to warm up to Gavin. She didn't go into details about that, either, but... dang, my dad must've really been... Yuk! Never mind.

But I learned so much from my parents. They taught me how precious life is and never to take a second of it for granted, because any second could be my last. My dad was big on me being myself, standing up for what I believe in, and speaking my mind rather than someone else's. He told me that people will try to make me just like them, but not to fall for it because before I know it, I will be. My mom, well, she was big on making sure I knew that there is so much more out there in the world than crappy jobs and paying bills and becoming a slave to society. She made sure I understood that no matter what anyone says, I don't have to live in a way that I don't choose. I pick my path. I make my life one to remember and not one that will fade into the background of every other uneventful life around me. Ultimately, it's my choice and only my choice. It will be hard at times, I may have to flip burgers and scrub toilets for a while, I will lose people I love, and every day won't be as bright as the one before it. But as long as I never let the struggles pull me completely under, one day I will be doing exactly what I want to do. And no matter what happens, or who I lose, I won't be sad forever.

But what I think I learned the most from my parents is how to love. They love me unconditionally, of course, but I mean the way they love each other. I know a lot of married couples-most of my friends' parents are still married-but I've never quite known two people more devoted to each other than my mom and dad. They've been inseparable all my life. I can only recall a couple of arguments between them, but I've never heard them fight. Ever. I don't know what it is that makes their marriage so strong, but I sure hope that whatever it is, they passed some of that magic onto me.

Gavin walks into my dorm room, shutting the door behind him. He sits down on the edge of my bed. "Another letter from your folks?"

I nod.

"Where are they now?"