“Why did you bring me here?” My question is supposed to be a whisper, but it sounds like a whimper. “I don’t want to see him.”
“I know, sweetie. I know. We weren’t sure what else to do with you. We have to sober you up, and you were too loud for the dorm.”
She leads me to the couch, where Quinn and Krishna are already sitting. When I sit, too, Bridget pulls my head into her lap and detangles my hair with her fingers. The air feels cool against my neck. The movie is stupid, something with cars and guns. Just when my eyes are starting to get heavy, food arrives—three huge containers of nachos from the pizza place. I sink down to the floor, wedging myself between couch and cinder-block coffee table props. I stuff chips and salt and cheese into my mouth.
“This is sooooo good.”
“Don’t forget to chew,” Krishna says. “You know that’s all coming back up later.”
“No way,” Quinn says.
“Are you serious?”
Krishna and Quinn are still arguing amicably over what the odds are that I’m going to puke before morning when the front door flies open. West blinks at us in dull surprise for several long seconds before Krishna says, “Fuck.”
“Nice greeting.” He bends down to take off his snow-covered boots and disappears from view. I’m down by the floor, covered in chip crumbs and probably smeared all over with nacho cheese. He hasn’t seen me. I don’t care.
“Dude, I thought you were asleep in your room,” Krishna says.
“Not asleep.”
“Yeah, so I gather. You been at the bar?”
There’s a dull thud. “Yeah.” Then a few seconds’ silence and a loud crash. “Shit.”
“You’re drunk.”
“No kidding.”
Krishna turns to look at Quinn, eyes wide. She makes this shooing motion with her hands that means, Get him into his bedroom. Krishna stands up, nachos in hand, and it’s the wrong move, because West zeroes in on the container, says, “You guys got food?” and walks toward the couch.
Then he sees me and stops.
“Have to talk to you.”
“I don’t want to talk,” I tell him.
“Yeah. I bet. Listen—” He cuts himself off. Looks at Bridget, Quinn, and Krishna. “You guys should probably fuck off for a while.”
“It’s three in the morning,” Quinn says.
“In winter,” Bridget points out.
Krishna crosses his arms. “We’re responsible for her tonight.”
“I’ll be responsible,” West tells him.
“You’re drunk.”
“So?”
“So you can’t take off your shoes without falling over. I’m not giving you Caroline.”
“Hello? I’m down here? Alive and well? Perfectly capable of making my own decisions?”
“I’m taking her,” West says.
“I’m not leaving her,” Krishna insists.
“Fine. Stay. But we’re going in the bedroom.”
“Maybe I don’t want—”
And then I’m upside down, with West’s shoulder a hard pressure in my gut, and I have to focus, because my eyes are prickling and hot and I’m afraid I’m going to puke on him.
He picked me up. Picked me up off the floor and threw me over his shoulder.
That dick.
When he sets me down, I bump into the wall. He closes the door and locks it.
He’s so dead.
“You Neanderthal. You fucking—fucking—Piltdown Man. How dare you? How dare you?”
He’s over by his desk, pulling his wallet out and setting it in the drawer. Taking off his jacket. Unzipping his hoodie. He opens a drawer and pulls out a string of condoms and puts one in his pocket.
“What’s that for?”
“Don’t worry about it.”
“Don’t worry? How about you stop acting like an entitled caveman who can just kiss me when he wants to, throw me over his shoulder and carry me into his room and get out a condom, like that’s ever going to happen, who can just phone-sex me when he wants to get off and throw me away when he’s all done? How about—”
“Caroline.” He sits down on the bed. His voice is slow and soothing. “We got things to talk about. Could you maybe give it five minutes without the screeching?”
“I’m not screeching!”
But it comes out pretty screechy.
I turn around and face the wall, covering my face with my hands because it hurts too much to look at him.
I need to be angry, because if I stop being angry, all that’s left is disappointment and wanting, and I can’t afford either of them anymore. They cost too much. They’ve been taking too much out of me for too long.
His bedsprings squeak. Even that seems poignant, a sound I remember from being in his bed, his hands on me, his mouth. My eyes flood with tears, and I’m so disappointed with myself.
“Caroline.”
His voice is right behind me now. I’ve heard it like that, my name low and intimate, right before he comes. It’s more than I can bear—the way my heart lifts, my body responds, even as I’m trying to locate my anger and push back the tears. “Don’t.”
But he doesn’t listen. He puts one hand against the wall and the other at the small of my back. He leans in, his mouth by my ear, the heat of his body behind me close enough to feel, close enough to make me yearn, close enough to draw me back in if I let it, if I break, if I’m weak.
“Please,” he says.
There’s a knock on the door. “You okay, Caroline?”
Quinn’s voice. I can imagine her and Krishna and Bridget, lined up out there. Worried about me.
I think about the party tonight, the dancing, the feeling of being surrounded by people who love me.
I’m not weak. I’m a little drunk—getting more sober by the second—but I’m strong.
I draw in a deep breath and find that strength. Wrap it around me.
Then I take my hands away from my face and turn to face West. “I’m fine,” I call, loud enough for them to hear me. “He can have ten minutes.”
“You sure?” Krishna asks.
“Go watch your fucking movie,” West says.
After a moment, the volume on the TV goes up.
Then we’re just looking at each other, West and me. His face so perfectly not-perfect. That wide, smart-ass mouth that can make me feel electric, make me feel like I’m drowning, make me feel like I could live on him and him alone.
His mouth is a lie.
I take him apart, one piece at a time. Chin, cheekbones, nose, eyebrows. Those eyes. His pupils blown, light rims around them, dark circles beneath.
It’s just a face. West’s face.
His breath is just breath, reeking of alcohol.
He’s a man, standing there. Not a problem for me to solve. Not an obligation, not a need, not love. Maybe not even my friend.
I can almost make myself believe it.
“What do you want?” I ask.
His mouth opens. His eyes narrow. He puts his hand to the back of his neck, lowers his head, exhales.
“Yeah,” I say, because it’s easy to see right now. I’m not sure if it’s the false wisdom of all those blow jobs and beers or if it’s because I’ve been so angry, but I feel like all the pretense has been stripped away, all the cozy lies I’ve hidden behind burned off on the dance floor. I feel wise, and there are things I know that I haven’t known before.
Like this—this truth: West doesn’t know what he wants.
“That’s your whole problem, isn’t it?”
He made that speech in my room last month, told me, “I want you, and I don’t know how to stop wanting you. I want to get deep inside you, and then deeper, until I’m so deep I don’t even know what’s me anymore and what’s you.” He said that, but he hasn’t made up his mind about it. He’s afraid. He’s still drawing pencil lines around us.
I could tell him that it’s already too late. It’s been too late for a long time, maybe from the start.
Instead, I tell him, “I’m sick of waiting for you to figure it out.”
His eyes come up. Those little flecks glittering with something, some protest. Some plea.
“I’m sick of you acting like I’m just going to be whatever you want me to be. Maybe I have been so far. I guess I’ve done whatever you said, followed your rules. But I’m finished. This isn’t a game, and you’re not in charge of it. And I think—”
“Caro—”
“No. I’m talking now. You can fucking wait. I have been patient with you, but my patience is gone, West. You don’t get to barge into the line at the rugby thing and kiss me in front of everyone—in front of everyone, when you dumped me, when you’ve refused to admit we have something even to our friends for months now—and then walk away, like you’ve said your piece and that’s that. You don’t get to pick me up and throw me over your shoulder and drag me into your room like I don’t have a say in it. And put a condom in your pocket because, what? What if you feel like fucking me later? Might as well be prepared? No. You don’t get to do that. You want to be friends? We could have been friends. You want to be fuck buddies, you know, I was up for that! Probably I would’ve gotten too attached, gotten my heart broken, if we’re being honest, but so what? I wouldn’t be the first girl in the history of the world to let that happen to her. But you’re the one who said to let you know when I’m ready to see other guys, and you’re the one who dropped me after break like nothing we said or did on the phone mattered, so don’t pretend you have any right at all to play the jealous boyfriend when you’re not my fucking boyfriend.”
I’m poking him in the chest now, and it’s possible that I’m crying, but we’re not going to examine that too closely, because I need to do this. It feels like such a relief to get it out, to accuse him, to beat on him with these words I’ve been holding inside me for far too long.
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