Her arms cross her chest. “I don’t know what all of this is, but it’s not us.”
This is the opening I need, handed to me on a silver platter—one I’m trying to shove right back her way instead of just accepting.
My heart clenches as I read all the messages her eyes are telling me. “What is us, Mariah?”
“I don’t know. You tell me.”
Goddamnit.
Not yet.
I’m not ready.
“Can I ask you a question?” I ask, wrapping my hands around the posts of a chair.
“You just did.”
Cracking a smile, I can’t find it in my heart to fire back at her with some innuendo-filled response. “What do you want?”
“You mean like pizza?” she gulps.
“I know you like pizza.”
“And sushi,” she adds, her bottom lip starting to quiver.
“And tacos, right?”
She nods, sitting at the table with her hands in her lap. I don’t trust myself to move because I know exactly what I’ll do—It’ll end with her in my lap, putting off this conversation.
“I meant more like …” I think about how to phrase it. “What are the most important things you want out of life?”
Pretending I’m just waiting on her reply, I send her a silent plea that tells her to answer in a way I can feel good about. I want her to talk me out of this.
Her features soften, letting go of the fear that had crept into the lines of her face. She pulls her knees to her chest. “Night kisses,” she says just loud enough for me to hear.
I look at the ceiling as her words slice open a wound across my heart I’m certain will never heal.
“I don’t want anything fancy,” she says softly. “Loyalty from those I love. Feeling safe, like I don’t have to compete with anyone for anything.”
“You deserve all of that.”
“I think I do.” She puts her feet back on the floor as I look down at her. “What do you want, Lance?”
I pace a circle around her kitchen, my hands in my hair, tugging at the roots. I wish I could tell her what it is I really want.
Her.
Just her.
“I don’t know what I want,” I lie, unable to even look at her as I say it. My teeth clench, trying not to let the words by.
“I see.”
No, you don’t see!
Panic gathers in my core, melting everything in its path as it spreads through me like a virus. I pivot on my heel and look at my girl.
There’s a steeliness there. It’s cold and guarded and not at all the way she should look. I hate that I put it there. Me. I put that look of distrust on the woman I just want to protect and love and shower with kisses day and night.
I imagine the war that would be waged in those beautiful baby blues when she had to pick between the experience of a lifetime, of carrying a child, and of loving a man who is, by all accounts, unworthy of that love. The truth is, I know she loves me. Maybe even as much as I love her and the fact I’ve let this happen is heartbreaking.
She deserves so much more than me, a broken version of a teenage boy who’s gone to bed after eating everyone’s cookies.
“You know I don’t expect anything from you, right?” she asks.
“Mariah, wait …”
She gets to her feet, pushing in her chair. “Lance, it’s fine. I—”
“You have no idea what you’re talking about.” My chest rises and falls like I’ve ran a marathon, the air rushing out of my body in sharp, painful bursts. “It’s not you, Mariah.”
She smiles, but not at me. It’s directed inwardly, I think, like she predicted this.
I can predict too. I know she’d choose me over children. And my fear is too fucking deep that one day she’d turn forty and realize she’d given up something she could never get back just because I wrecked a car at eighteen and fucked up my life.
It’s unfair for someone’s tragedies to bleed onto another. I won’t do that to her, even if this kills me.
“Look,” I say, fighting the blaze in my ribs, “this isn’t about you.”
“It never is.” She shakes her head, turning away from me. “You’ve been kind and—”
“Mariah, stop it,” I say, barely able to utter the words past the lump in my throat.
“You don’t owe me an explanation. You don’t owe me an excuse.”
“It’s not an excuse.”
She pulls her hair to the top of her head, letting a tendril fall to her right temple. I want to tuck it behind her ear, kiss her just below the lobe, and feel her lean against me. But I can’t. Ever again.
“I think, um …” I say, clearing my throat. “I think things were getting too complicated.”
The stinging in my eyes appears for the first time since my parents funeral as I realize the death of my dreams. I’ve fought so hard never to find her, although I didn’t know she was the one I was trying to run from.
I’ve used dating apps, blown off calls, purposefully ended communication with women, done everything I could to never get to this point in a relationship. And here she sits, at the very apex without me ever having seen it coming. I was head over heels for this crazy girl before I even realized what love felt like. Now I have to break my own heart so that I won’t ever have to break hers.
God, I love you, I want to tell her. I’m so sorry it has to be this way.
“Yeah,” she says, her voice raw. “Complicated. That’s true.”
The air around us twists and turns, seeping through the entangled lies we’re both telling. She steps to the left. I step to the right. She looks at me. I look away. I look at her and she turns to the sink and becomes fascinated with a dishrag.
“I have some things to do …” Her voice trails off and she doesn’t even try to finish the sentence.
Still, I can’t go. “Mariah …”
“Lance.” She clears her throat and turns back around. Her shoulders are back. Her eyes clouded with tears. Her face more beautiful than I’ve ever seen it. “Please go.”
My voice shouts inside me, tries to be heard outside my head. My mouth moves, but I don’t know what I say, only that she nods and looks down as she walks around me.
I find myself following her to the front door and stepping through it as she opens it. I’m on the porch, the cool night air whipping at my skin when I get myself together enough to realize … this is it.
“If you need anything—” I start, but she cuts me off.
“I know where to find you. Goodnight, Lance.”
And the door shuts.
Twenty-Nine
Mariah
“Thank you, Joe,” I say. The maintenance man puts the few tools he needed for this task back in his little metal container. “I’m sure installing a lock on my door at six in the morning wasn’t your idea of an emergency, but I really do appreciate it.”
“It was this or go clean out a toilet in the boys’ bathroom,” he chuckles.
“Glad I could help you.”
He tips a beat-up Dodgers cap, before moseying out of the library. I round my desk and try the lock. It snaps with the crispness of not having been used before.
It breaks my heart.
I just stare at the brass latch, like somehow if I look at it long enough, everything will be different.
I won’t get on the app. I won’t humor Lance when he comes in here every afternoon. I won’t cry.
I lie to myself over and over again, making promises I know I’m going to turn around and break.
The sun hovers at the horizon, rays of orange sunshine spraying up from the tree line across the soccer fields. All night I lay in my bed and wondered how I’d feel when the sun came up. Daylight has a way of making prospects look different. Somehow it didn’t seem like the sun, moon, or stars would make the words Lance spoke last night seem any better.
Tears dot the corners of my eyes as I look at the corner of my desk. The absence of baked goods just drives home the certai
nty that my life isn’t the same. The pang in my chest is a guarantee that I will never rebound. Not fully.
I dated Eric for years. I thought I would marry the guy. He ended up marrying my sister, which was the most painful experience I’ve ever been through and it doesn’t hold a candle to this.
Eric said he loved me and that felt good. It was nice having a companion, someone to build something with. I would tell him I loved him all the time, so much so that it would annoy him. I thought it was a habit back then, but now I think maybe I needed to hear it out loud. I needed to remind myself, which is how I know I didn’t really love him.
I’ve never said out loud that I’m in love with Lance. I never needed to. He’s my first thought when I wake up and what I’m smiling about when my eyes shut at night. He’s who I consider when I’m baking brownies and the person I want to tell when my sister decides to finally call me. It’s Lance I wait for at lunchtime and who I’m reminded of when I hear a song on the radio.
I never knew this definition of love. It’s not a thing, a word, a piece of paper, or a joint bank account. It’s not a last name or a mortgage.
It’s a tingly feeling in the pit of your stomach when you hear their name. It’s a grin stretched so hard across your face when you get a whiff of their cologne. It’s the touch of his hand when you need it most, a silly laugh when you’re ready to cry. It’s standing up for you when you feel weak and letting you fall when you can no longer be strong.
You don’t love because you’re required to, like my mother does with me. You don’t love out of guilt, like Chrissy. You don’t love because it’s the right thing to do and what’s expected of you, like Eric. Love is a choice. It’s a connection with someone else that can’t be explained, a relationship with someone who both helps you feel your best and reciprocates the good you have to give.
I love Lance Gibson and locking him out of my heart will be the hardest thing I’ve ever had to do. There’s a vacancy in my chest, an ache that hurts just as much mentally as it does physically. How he managed to dig his way in my psyche despite my best efforts to keep him out, I’ll never know. Why I was stupid enough to let my guard down—I’ll never know that either.
Taking my seat, I sort through emails from the staff. The list of books they requested is enough to distract me for a few minutes, at least until there’s a knock on the door.
My heart beats me to the doorway and falls as spectacularly as my spirits when it’s Tish who’s looking back at me.
“Don’t look so happy to see me,” she chirps, sauntering in. “Why you here so early?”
“Lots of emails,” I say, nodding towards my computer. “What about you?”
“Science projects.” She makes a face. “I’ve seen every possible experiment in my teaching career. I get that it’s not about me, it’s about the kids, but is it wrong for me to just give them all the solutions and take a field trip instead?”
I try to smile. I really, truly do.
“Did you run over a puppy this morning?” she asks.
“No. Why would you ask me that?”
“Because the look on your face is the one I’d wear if I had.”
“Yeah. About that …”
“What happened? And why are there no browniessss …” Her eyes go wide. “Oh.”
Sighing, I find a spot on the opposite wall. “That about sums it up.”
“Okay, I knew you were all flirty with each other. But was it more than that?”
Yeah. No?
Dragging my gaze to hers, I just shrug.
“Do I need to make his life hell?” she asks. “’Cause I can. I have connections. I can even get him on Homecoming Committee and that’s just about equivalent to ordering him into the pit of Hades.”
“Don’t do that,” I sigh again. “It’s fine. We had a little fling. I guess. I don’t know but it’s over now so let’s try to be as normal as possible.”
She sits where the cupcakes usually go. “Either he’s a terrible lay, which I’m inclined to toss out based on looks alone, or he’s a dick. I feel like that’s probably not true either.”
“Guess you’re as confused as I am.”
“You honestly don’t know what happened?”
I mull this over for the eighty-ninth time. At least it’s a little numb now, a little gift from above that I expect to wane by the time I leave school today. Or, more likely, as soon as I see him.
“I know this,” I offer. “I knew better than to do this with a guy like him. In his defense, he never treated me badly. In mine, he made it way too easy.”
My lashes flutter in a desperate attempt to hide the tears that surge at my lash line. I can’t look at Tish. I can’t look at the computer. I just sit like a bump on a log, saying a quiet prayer that I can manage myself like the grown woman I am.
“Honey, it would be easy for anyone to lose themselves in that man.” She gets situated on my desktop. “And he’s so cute with you. I’ve seen it myself.”
“Yeah, well, it doesn’t feel so cute this morning.”
“I bet not,” she frowns. “I have a meeting with Principal Kelly in ten. I might just suggest Mr. Gibson to help with the floats for the parade.”
“You do that.”
“I will.” She lifts up, the wood creaking as she moves. “I’m here if you need me, Mariah.”
“Thanks.”
I wait for her to leave, until I hear the main library doors shut, before shutting the door to my office and crying my eyes out.
* * *
Lance
My pen hits the desk.
Tap.
Tap.
Tap.
Tap.
It’s been the longest morning of all time, partly because I didn’t even make it to bed last night, let alone sleep. Partly because I know she’s just a floor above me and there’s not a damn thing I can do about it.
Around four o’clock this morning, I was in my car, engine started, a spiel sitting on the tip of my tongue. I sat there for fifteen minutes, trying to talk myself out of going to her house and just spilling my guts.
I brought my lunch in a little brown bag, figuring I could keep myself busy and not be tempted to go to the library. No such luck. I look at the clock, watching each minute click by. With each number that rolls over, my heart gets a little crazier. With each second that ticks, my feet become a little more desperate to move. Not until ten minutes after the normal time I head upstairs do I spy a book that doesn’t belong to me on the table under the window.
Jumping up so fast I crack my knee on the desk, I hold it in my hands like a prize. Stamped on the bottom of the title page is LINTON UNION HIGH SCHOOL. Bingo.
I take the stairs two at a time, berating myself for wasting time by thinking I was capable of not coming up here. We’re still friends. This is what we do. It would be abnormal if I didn’t go check on her today. I’d be a dick not to make sure she’s okay.
The main library doors swing open. I’m across the burgundy carpet in half the time it usually takes.
How I’ll keep my hands off her, how I won’t just break down and end this insanity is beyond me, but it’s a risk I have to take.
Her door is closed as I approach, which isn’t unusual. The little apple cutout that hangs near the window is cockeyed and I make a note to fix it for her when I leave. Grabbing the handle, I push forward and take a step with it … and run right into the wood.
I flick the handle again.
It’s locked.
Glancing over my shoulder, I confirm I’m alone. I test the handle again, peeking in the blinds to see if I can see her. It takes three different angles to confirm: she’s gone.
My back hits the wall, a poster of the new hit young adult novel comes unattached on the top and falls partially to the floor.
This must be what it feels like to have your heart sliced into little pieces and fed to you. The tinge of bitterness in my mouth is enough to make my stomach recoil.
I asked for this. Every
motherfucking day I walked up those stairs in the afternoon to see her, I asked for this. I knew. Deep down, I knew I was getting too close to the edge of not just being acquaintances before I found out she was Nerdy Nurse. Back then, what feels like forever ago, I’d wonder on the weekends what she was doing or if she’d like the book I was reading. We’re friends, I thought, even though I knew where I was headed wasn’t a place you go with a friend.
Allowing my head to fall against the wall, a sense of hopelessness envelops me. This is all too new to process. Do people survive this?
I look at the door, the cool drywall at my back only adding to the frigidity of the moment. There’s nothing warm about this moment, nothing warm about my life.
Everything I used to enjoy all seems lackluster now as I consider going back to the way things were before. I could pull out the app, make some arrangements for the weekend, humor myself until work is over. But … why?
My body trembles with a shiver. It’s not the external cold that’s causing me to move; it’s the thought of never being with Mariah again that makes me feel like I’m freezing.
This can’t be it. This can’t be where our story ends, our jokes stop, our lunches completely halt because I was stupid enough to fall in love.
No. Fuck that.
This can’t be it. There has to be a way around it.
Do I wait? Do I pick the lock and wait inside her office? Do I call the main office and have her paged?
It all seems logical, completely rational, and I’m one step from picking the lock when the library doors open.
My hand goes into the air to tell her not to turn around when I realize it’s Ollie. He sees me and stutter-steps, a puzzled look on his ruddy cheeks.
“You okay, Mr. Gibson?”
“Yeah. Fine. Just wasn’t expecting you, that’s all.”
“I can come back later …” He thumbs over his shoulder toward the doors. “It’s no problem.”
“No, no,” I sigh. “It’s fine, Ollie. What can I do for you?”
His grin could light up the entire city. “I wanted to say thank you to you and Ms. Malarkey. I’m going to pass Family and Consumer Sciences. Ms. Holden was impressed.”
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