Fall For You: A Four Seasons Novel
Page 5
I reread the paper. It sounded like a date to me.
"I'm not complaining," Liam said, his mouth splitting into a grin.
"Thank you for the validation, Mr. McAvoy."
Liam gave him a very masculine-code-of-conduct nod. Boys.
"The purpose of this assignment is to teach you to consider the various needs of your partner..."
"I like this assignment," Liam whispered to me.
"You would."
Meanwhile Markson continued his explanation, although he shot us a warning glance to stop talking. "We all act within certain societal constructs, so the roles we engage in are based on our experiences. If you will, a person who grew up with a lot of money, for instance, might act differently on a date than someone who grew up poor."
"I thought you said this wasn't a date," someone said from the back row.
"It was an example." Markson held up his hands as if to say don't shoot the messenger.
"I'm in favor of calling it a date," Liam said.
From across the classroom someone hummed a few bars of Matchmaker, Matchmaker.
"As much as I'd love to see you all get married, have babies, and name them for your venerable professor, I'm fairly certain most of you aren't interested in dating each other, save for Mr. McAvoy."
There were a few cat calls and Liam gave a half bow from his seat.
"All this project asks you to do is spend an afternoon or evening with your partner, trying to engage in the behavior you anticipate they would normally assume if you spent recreational time together. Ideally, you will base this on the information you've garnered from getting to know them in class, but you can also fall back on more stereotypical models. Girls, hold open the doors and pay the tabs. Boys, ask her to pick you up."
"That's not really how it works. Guys don't hold open doors and I don't expect people to pick me up" I complained. Markson was way too young to have such a ‘50s attitude toward dating.
"Chivalry is dead," a girl said in agreement.
"Cause feminism killed it," her partner said.
"Because we never needed it in the first place," I shot back.
"We still have chivalry in Scotland," Liam said to me. "Let me show you sometime."
"Once again, examples! You can choose whatever takes you out of your comfort zone and forces you to consider how to meet the expectations of your partner while communicating your own. It's called walking a mile in someone else's shoes."
I glanced around the classroom. Two guys shifted uncomfortably in their seats, looking at each other. What I wouldn't give to see what they would come up with. For a brief second, I imagined the two of them getting pedicures at Tough as Nails down the street. Not that I was going to do it myself. Markson couldn't force me to go out with Liam. If it wasn't completely crazy, I might have asked if Liam had put him up to it.
"And for those of you who are thinking, he can't make me do this," Markson said as if he was reading my thoughts. "You are right. However, please note this is your mid-term assignment. I'm giving you ample time to complete this, and it's worth 40% of your final grade."
I groaned, checking my sheet to see that I had to complete the assignment by mid-term, which was only two weeks away. I cursed the unusually short semesters that ran all of three and a half months at Olympic State.
"You each need to write up a 5-7 page paper on the experience, which will be turned in separately from your partner."
This time everyone in the class groaned along with me. Why did every professor at the college think they were the only class we were taking? There was nothing like getting hit with an unexpected paper two weeks before mid-terms exams, especially when it required such uncomfortable research.
"Please write your paper independently from your partner. I want your insight into the experiment, not what your partner wants you to say." I wasn't dreaming that he looked right at me as he added the last part of the assignment.
So all I had to do was go on a not-a-date with Liam, who thought it was a date, and then pretend to be him, and write a paper about the experience.
"And to show you that I am not heartless, you are free to go for the day once you've worked out the details of your project with your partner," Markson said to a smattering of applause. He beamed at us, but I wanted to wipe the smug grin from his face. I should have dropped this class when I had the chance for a tuition refund. Jess hasn't mentioned any of these torturous assignments when she took this class. Had she been going out on not-a-dates last semester without me realizing it? Of course, with the number of study groups she attended each week, it wasn't unthinkable.
"So—" Liam turned to me—"what works for your schedule?"
"Whatever. Maybe next week. We have two weeks to get it in," I said with a shrug of my shoulders. I was simultaneously eager to get it over with while wanting to put it off forever. Liam had that effect on me.
"If it's okay, I have a lot of big tests coming up the week this is due. I'd rather get it over with."
Get it over with? How his tune had changed in a matter of minutes.
"Fine," I agreed. It would be like a bandaid, much easier to rip off immediately rather than take too much time thinking about it. Waiting nearly two more weeks, would only result in a slow, painful reminder of my impending doom.
"Tonight?"
I hesitated. "I have plans with my friend Jess."
"Sorry, I'm being rash." He reached over and grabbed my notebook, scribbling a number across a sheet. "I'm guessing you deleted my number."
I hadn't but I wasn't about to admit it to him. Besides there was something so delightfully old-school about the move that I reconsidered. "I'll be done by eight. How about I call you?"
Liam raised an eyebrow.
"I'm adopting a traditional male role for this one," I told him.
"Will I feel like I'm on an episode of Mad Men?" he asked me.
"Yes, I plan to speak down to you, and I expect you to bring me cocktails at the door," I said in a flat voice. "I'm taking the initiative here. That's what guys are supposed to do, right?"
"I'm not complaining," Liam said. "But, and I hate to break it to you, in my experience, you usually take the initiative."
I flushed scarlet as his words, unable to ignore the thought of his skin on my skin. Even the memory sizzled.
"Then maybe I should be the one who waits around for you? That's definitely not like me." It was a challenge.
Liam shook his head. "How about we use the things we learned from that first assignment? Forget the Mad Men remake."
I tried to remember all the items Liam had listed about me, or the things I had learned about him. "Okay."
"You don't sound sure."
"I'm not, but since you're always so sure, I guess I'm trying that on for size."
"I like the way you think." Liam dropped his pen into his bag and stood. "See you tonight, Jillian."
I tried to tell myself that the brief thrill that shivered through me was all part of the experience. I was clearly channeling Liam's enthusiasm for this project, because racing hearts and date nights so weren't my scene.
Chapter 8
I was ten minutes late to meet Jess at Garrett’s for pizza night, which was nothing new. Save for the weird incident in Markson's class a few weeks ago, I hadn’t been on time since I’d gotten out from under Tara’s roof. It was probably some form of subconscious rebellion at the near-military precision with which she ran the family schedule. But being late meant that Jess was probably buried under a mountain of books, and when I found her in the side booth, she was pouring over anatomy notes.
“Sorry,” I said breathlessly.
Jess waved off my apology but didn’t bother to look up. This was why I needed to be on time when I met up with her. Cassie had texted to say she couldn’t make it, which meant it was my lone responsibility to get Jess to think about something besides blood types and autoimmune diseases for the next hour. It wasn’t going to be easy.
“Did you order
?” I asked her, and she shook her head.
Waving at Frank who was wiping down the bar, I held up two fingers. “The usual!”
I folded my arms on the table and rested my chin on them, so I could stare her down. “Can you tell me what a penis is?”
Jess barely cracked a smile. This was an old game and she’d built up a little bit of an immunity to my shenanigans in the last year. I racked my head for any number of the ridiculous questions Jess had shared from her anatomy class. Since most students thought anatomy was simple memorization, pre-med types like Jess were always getting stuck in there with slackers who wanted to avoid Biology.
“Do girls have testicles?” I asked her. That was my favorite one. I still didn’t know if a boy or a girl had asked the question. I didn’t have the heart to ask.
“You better have a big old set if you keep interrupting me,” Jess said, but she was definitely grinning.
“How do girls pee when they're on their periods?”
Jess slammed the book shut and laughed. “You win. I’ll stop.”
“That was only three questions,” I said, puffing my chest out. “I think that’s a record.”
“I need a break from studying. I’m actually dreaming that I’m reading my textbooks. With my luck, I’m going to answer one of my midterms with something from one of them.”
“In your dreams, do girls have balls?” I asked her. Frank slapped two beers down on our table.
“I’m not going to ask you girls what you’re talking about,” he said, throwing a bar towel over his shoulder and shaking his head as he left.
“No, but the other day. I woke up convinced that I’d dissected a deer.”
I gagged on my beer and scowled at her. “Why the hell would you do that?”
“It was a dream,” she reminded me. “I didn’t actually do it, but the dream was so real that I thought I did. My professor was there and my labmate. When I woke up I was almost sick over it.”
“You do know what you’ll have to do when you’re a doctor, right?” Dead bodies were pretty par for the course in her field.
“Of course, I know that.” Despite our conversation, Jess grabbed for a slice of pizza as soon as Frank slid the tray onto the table.
“Hot!” he warned.
“Jess has an unnatural ability to withstand heat,” I assured him.
“I don’t have time to wait for things to cool down.” That was the understatement of the century. Jess could pack away more food in five minutes than most teenage boys I’d met in my lifetime.
“It’s like you were biologically programmed to be a doctor,” I said as I watched her down half of a steaming slice. I couldn’t even pick a piece up without burning my fingers.
“Thanks!”
“So you won’t believe what Markson is making me do.” I told her about the project he assigned to us today.
“I did that one,” Jess said. “Of course, I was partnered with a girl and I hadn’t slept with her.”
“Exactly! And it’s painfully obvious that we’ve done it,” I said to her. “Liam has spilled enough in front of Markson, that he has to know.”
“Roman won’t care.” Jess reached for another piece.
“Roman?” I asked with a raised eyebrow.
“Professor Markson.” She almost managed to hide her blush but not quite.
“Now I see why you liked the class.”
“That’s not it,” she said, but her words were defensive.
“What did you do on your date...um, your project?” I asked her. After her shenanigans with Liam she didn’t deserve a free pass over Markson, but I gave her one anyway.
“I can’t remember exactly, although she planned most of it because, you know, I’m a control freak.”
I nodded, and Jess kicked me under the table.
“Hey! I was just being supportive,” I said, leaning down to rub the affected area. “Shit, Jess, are you wearing steel-toe boots?”
“I think we went to a football game, actually. Sara and I had a lot in common, so it was kinda hard for us.”
“That’s what I’m worried about. I need enough material to warrant 40% of my grade.” I screwed my face up. I didn’t relish the idea of analyzing Liam for two hours. It felt too much like a real date. Although I would be trying to figure out how to meet his interpersonal needs instead of wondering if he liked me. I wasn't sure what the difference was exactly.
“It’ll be fun. You can always make stuff up,” Jess suggested.
“Is that what you do? Do humans now have opposable toes?” I made a grab for her textbook like I was going to check.
“Get it done early in case you need to meet up later and come up with more stuff for the paper.”
“I think we’re meeting tonight,” I said in a soft voice. I wasn’t sure I wanted Jess to hear where I was going after this.
“Oh really. You two kids be safe.” She winked at me as she wiped pizza sauce off her fingers.
“Not a date! There will be no funny business,” I said.
“You forget that I’ve seen Liam. If you can keep your hands off him than you’re a better person than I am.” Jess stood and gathered her books while I finished my last few bites. Our dinners always ended like this with me shoveling food in my mouth because she had to be somewhere. Just once I wanted to be the one with somewhere to rush off to. Maybe if I picked out a major that would happen.
“Isn’t this whole project a chance to get out of my comfort zone? I would be much more comfortable taking him to bed than going out in public with him.”
“I’m sure that’s what every guy wants to hear,” Jess said.
We both paused and then met each other’s eyes. I was the one who said it, “Actually, it probably is. Yet another reason, I’m not going to bed with him.”
“It’s cool.” Jess checked her phone screen. “It’s too early anyway.”
“What do you mean?” I asked her and then it dawned on me in horrifying clarity. “Do you have bets on when I’ll go to bed with him again?”
“No!” Jess answered too quickly, and I grabbed for her phone. “Okay! Maybe!”
“You disgust me,” I said, trying hard to sound serious.
“If you can hold out another week, I’ll split the pot with you.”
“What do I win?” I asked her.
“A latte at Coffee & Cream.”
“Wow. Big money.” Still winning was winning. “Deal. If I go back to bed with him I’ll hold out.”
“Excellent,” Jess chirped. “A week! Don’t forget!”
“Got it,” I promised absent-mindedly, too caught up in texting Liam that I was ready. All the while thinking that this was one bet both of them were going to lose.
Chapter 9
Liam had a plan of action by the time I reached him, which was excellent since I didn’t have any ideas. I was to pick him up at his host family’s house and he would take it over from there. It wasn’t exactly a ground-breaking reversal of gender roles but it felt like a nice give and take. His host family’s house sat on the edge of campus in an old neighborhood that was an eclectic blend of bungalows, stone tudors, and small mansions. Nearly all the houses were occupied by professors, except one lonely street that boasted Greek housing.
Stars peppered the night sky and a thumbnail moon peeked from the clouds when I got to the address he provided. The perfectly restored Queen Anne wasn’t the biggest house on the block, but it was close. I hesitated for a moment, tugging at my sweater, before I finally found the courage to ring the doorbell.
A petite redhead threw open the door and grabbed my hands. The hair around her temples was graying, which, other than a few light lines around her eyes, was the only indication of her age. “You must be Jillian. Liam is expecting you.”
“Vivian!” Liam’s voice called from somewhere in the depths of the house.
“He’s worried I’ll embarrass him.” Vivian draped an arm around my shoulder and walked me down the hall. The house was tastefully de
corated with expensive antiques and Persian rugs, and I felt more out of place than ever as I treaded on them in my worn-out TOMS. “But I’ve promised to stay out of your hair. I’m just thrilled he’s brought a girl over. He’s quite the catch, don’t you think?”
I managed not to grimace at the thought. “Liam and I are class partners.”
“Oh, I know. He told me, but I’ve heard a lot about you, too.”
I suddenly wished a large sinkhole would open in the floor and suck me through it. How much had Liam told this woman about our relationship? I wasn’t sure I wanted to know, but it was clear that she viewed me as a romantic possibility.
“You two sound...close,” I said, choosing my words carefully. “Are you related?”
“Heavens no! My husband helped to arrange Liam’s year in the States. He’s a biology professor at Olympic State. Dr. Kemp?” She waited as if expecting me to know the name.
“I haven’t taken many science classes,” I admitted.
“Neither did I,” Vivian whispered as though we were part of some conspiracy. “I’m more artsy.” She pointed to a large canvas hanging on the wall. I recognized the sweeping expanse of Olympic Bay carefully captured in soft brushstrokes.
“It’s lovely,” I said as she steered me out of the hall and into the kitchen. Liam was busily stirring a pot over the stove, but he looked up and shot me a grin.
“What’s this?” I asked.
“I am making you dinner,” he said.
“Why?” I couldn’t contain the question even though it came out more rudely than I had intended.
Vivian perhaps sensing the tension in the air between Liam and I, clutched my hand one last time, disappearing into the hallway with a “it was so nice to meet you” before I could respond.
“As as I see it, cooking dinner for a woman upends gender expectations. But cooking dinner for you is the perfect way to tend to your needs,” he said, holding up a spoon.
I slurped the sauce off it cautiously, nodding my approval, even though I didn’t see how this met my needs at all. I needed to write a paper not go on a date, and cooking dinner for me felt very much like a date. “I’m not sure I follow your logic.”