26 Gabriel
26
Gabriel
Eighteen Years Old
I loved her.
A lot transpired before that fact and a lot happened afterward, but in that very moment I was in love with Kierra. And she didn’t even known it.
“Remember this very moment, will you?” she whispered, her lips turning up into a big smile that matched her mom’s. Kierra’s straight black hair was pulled into a high ponytail as she swung around in a circle in the tree house, showing off the gown she’d made herself. The gown had been so loved by a neighbor that they requested her to make them their own Kierra original. Also known as her first-ever official sale as an up-and-coming fashion designer.
Watching her dreams come true was something I was lucky to witness. Her goofy grin and squirrelly body movements made me want to hop up from the floor and pull her against my chest and kiss her. I hadn’t stopped thinking about giving her her first kiss all those months back. I wanted to give her her second kiss, too. And third, and fourth…
I knew that was a terrible idea because kissing your best friend was always a bad idea, but I couldn’t help it because I loved her.
Stupid love.
It showed up even when I told it to piss off.
“I’ll never forget it,” I told her, smiling at her joy.
“She’s going to pay me, Gabriel. Can you believe that? With real money. Unlike the Monopoly money you used to pay me with when we were kids.”
“That was my good, hard-earned money, Kierra.”
“You stole it from my board game,” she argued.
“Borrowed,” I countered.
“You can’t borrow fake money and give it back to buy something from me.”
“I can and I did.” I hopped up from my seat and brushed my thumb against my nose. “And I still use that blanket you made me every night, thank you very much.”
She frowned and her bushy brows knit. “It was supposed to be a sweater, but I didn’t know how to crochet anything but a straight line back then.”
“In a few years, I could sell it for a million bucks. A Kierra original.”
“Only a million? I’m offended. You should at least go for three mil—”
“I love you,” I cut in.
Her eyes fluttered with confusion as her movements came to a halt. She tilted her head and she smiled shyly. “I love you, too, Gabriel.”
“No,” I said, shaking my head. “I love you.”
“I heard you.”
“No,” I disagreed. I walked over to her and placed my hands on her shoulders. I swallowed hard, feeling as if my heart was going to tear straight out of my chest as my mouth opened. “I am in love with you, Kierra. Not the kind of friendship love. Not the we’ve-known-each-other-forever kind of love. But the kind of love where I want to kiss you more than anything else in the world. The kind of love where I dream about you and then wake up in my bed mad that you’re not there. The kind of love where I want to spend every day to come with you in my arms for the rest of forever.”
“Oh,” she whispered, her voice timid and low. “That kind of love.”
“Yeah. That kind of love.”
“Well.” She sighed. “What took you so long, dork?”
I arched a brow. “Wait, wha—”
Before I could reply, she kissed me. Her arms wrapped around my neck and she pulled me in, kissing me as if she’d been waiting for that day to come. It took a few moments for me to realize what was going on, but the moment I did, I kissed her with the same intensity, if not more. My hands fell against her lower back, and I pulled her closer to me, holding her as long as I could.
When our mouths parted slightly, she brushed her lips against mine and whispered, “Gabriel?”
“Yeah?”
“I love you, too. The rest-of-forever kind of love.”
“Oh. Well. Good .”