The clock is ticking down, the last minutes of the year dropping away. Everyone says to live in the now, to savor the moment, but itโs hard when the moment involves a hundred people crammed into a rent-controlled apartment in Bed-Stuy that Robbie is sharing with two other actors. Henry is trapped in a hall corner, where the coatrack meets a closet. He has a beer hanging from one hand and the other tangled in the shirt of the guy kissing him, a guy whoโs definitely out of Henryโs league, or who would be, if Henry still had one.
He thinks the guyโs name is Mark, but it was hard to hear over all the noise. It could be Max, or Malcolm. Henry doesnโt know. And he wants to say this is the first person heโs kissed tonight, even the first guy, but the truth is, he isnโt sure about that either. Isnโt sure how many drinks heโs had, or if the taste melting on his tongue right now is sugar, or something else.
Henry has been drinking too much, too fast, trying to wash away, and there are too many people in the Castle.
The Castle, thatโs what they call Robbieโs place, though Henry canโt remember exactly when they christened it that, or why. He searches for Bea, hasnโt seen her since he waded through the crowd into the kitchen an hour before, saw her perched on the counter, playing bartender and holding court for a group of women andโ
Suddenly the guy is fumbling with Henryโs belt.
โWait,โ he says, but the music is loud enough he has to shout, has to pull Mark/Max/Malcolmโs ear against his mouth, which Mark/Max/Malcolm takes as a sign to keep kissing him.
โWait,โย he shouts, pushing back. โDo you even want this?โ
Which is a stupid question. Or at least, the wrong one.
The pale smoke swirls in the strangerโs eyes. โWhy wouldnโt I?โ he asks, sinking to his knees. But Henry catches his elbow.
โStop. Just stop.โ He pulls him up. โWhat do you see in me?โ
A question he has come to ask of everyone, hoping to hear something like the truth. But the guy looks at him, eyes clouded with frost, and rattles off the words, โYouโre gorgeous. Sexy. Smart.โ
โHow do you know?โ Henry shouts over the music. โWhat?โ the other guy shouts back.
โHow do you know Iโm smart? We barely spoke.โ
But Mark/Max/Malcolm only smiles a sloppy, heavy-lidded grin, his mouth red from kissing, and says, โI just know,โ and itโs not enough anymore, itโs not okay, and Henryโs in the process of untangling himself when Robbie rounds the corner, and sees Mark/Max/Malcolm practically mounting Henry in the hall. Robbie looks at him as if heโs flung a beer in his face.
He turns, and leaves, and Henry groans, and the guy grinding against him seems to think the sound is for him, and itโs too hot in here for Henry to think, to breathe.
The room is starting to spin, and Henry murmurs something about having to pee, but walks straight past the toilet and into Robbieโs room, shutting the door behind him. He goes to the window, shoves up the glass, and is hit full in the face with a blast of icy cold. It bites at his skin as he climbs out onto the fire escape.
He sucks in a breath of cold air, lets it burn his lungs, has to lean on the window to get it shut again, but the moment the glass comes down, the world hushes.
Itโs notย quietโNew York is never quietโand New Yearโs has sent a current rippling through the city, but at least he can breathe, can think, can wash away the nightโthe yearโin relative peace.
He goes to take a swig of beer, but the bottleโs empty. โFuck,โ he mutters to no one but himself.
Heโs freezing, his coat buried somewhere in the pile on Robbieโs bed, but he canโt bring himself to go back inside for a jacket or a drink. Canโt bear the tide of turning heads, the smoke filling their eyes, doesnโt want the weight of their attention. And he can see the irony in that, he really can.
Right now heโd give anything for one of Murielโs little pink umbrellas, but heโs run out, so he sinks down onto the freezing metal steps, tells himself heโs happy, tells himself that this is what he wanted.
He sets the empty bottle beside a pot that used to be home to a plant.
Right now it holds only a small mountain of cigarette stubs.
Sometimes Henry wishes he smoked, just for the excuse to get some air.
He tried once or twice, but he couldnโt get over the taste of tar, the stale smell it left on his clothes. He had this one aunt growing up who smoked until her nails went yellow and her skin cracked like old leather, until every cough sounded like she had loose change rattling in her chest. Every time he took a drag, he thought of her, and felt ill, and he didnโt know if it was the memory or the taste, only knew it wasnโt worth it.
There was pot, of course, but pot was something you were supposed to share with other people, not sneak away to smoke alone, and anyway, it always made him hungry and sad. Or really, sadder. It didnโt iron out any of the wrinkles in his brain, after too many hits just made them into spirals, thoughts turning in and in and in on themselves forever.
He has this vivid memory of getting stoned senior year, he and Bea and Robbie lying in a tangle of limbs on the Columbia quad at three in the morning, high as kites and staring up at the sky. And even though they had to squint to make out any stars, and it might have just been their eyes struggling for purchase on the black expanse, Bea and Robbie went on and on about how big it all was, how wonderful, how calm it made them feel to be so small, and Henry didnโt say anything because he was too busy holding his breath to keep from screaming.
โWhat the hell are you doing out here?โ
Bea is leaning out the window. She swings her leg over the sill, and joins him out on the step, hissing when her leggings meet the cold metal. They sit in silence for a few moments. Henry stares out over the buildings. The clouds are low, the lights of Times Square shining up against them.
โRobbieโs in love with me,โ he says.
โRobbieโs always been in love with you,โ says Bea.
โBut thatโs the thing,โ he says, shaking his head. โHe wasnโt in love with who I was, not really. He was in love with who I could have been. He wanted me to change, and I didnโt, andโโ
โWhy should you change?โ She turns to look at him, the frost swirling across her vision. โYouโre perfect, just the way you are.โ
Henry swallows.
โAnd what is that?โ he asks. โWhat am I?โ
Heโs been afraid to ask, afraid to know the meaning of the shine in her eyes, what she sees when she looks at him. Even now, he wishes he could take it back. But Bea just smiles and says, โYouโre my best friend, Henry.โ
His chest loosens, just a little. Because thatโs real. Itโs true.
But then she keeps going.
โYouโre sweet, and sensitive, and an amazing listener.โ
And that last part makes his stomach drop, because Henryโs never been a good listener. Heโs lost count of the number of fights theyโve gotten in because he wasnโt paying attention.
โYouโre always there when I need you,โ she goes on, and his chest aches, because he knows he hasnโt been, and this isnโt like all the other lies, this isnโt washboard abs, or a chiseled jaw or a deep voice, this isnโt witty charm, or the son youโve always wanted, or the brother you miss, this isnโt any of the thousand things other people see when they look at him, things out of his control.
โI wish you saw yourself the way I see you.โ What Bea sees is a good friend.
And Henry has no excuse for not already being one.
He puts his head in his hands, presses his palms against his eyes until he sees stars, and wonders if he can fix this, just this, if he can become the version of Henry that Bea sees, if it will make the frost in her eyes go away again, if she, at least, will see him clearly.
โIโm sorry,โ he whispers into the space between his knees and chest. He feels her run her fingers through his hair. โFor what?โ
And what is he supposed to say?
Henry lets out a shuddering breath, and looks up. โIf you could have anything,โ he says, โwhat would you ask for?โ
โThat depends,โ she says. โWhatโs the cost?โ โHow do you know thereโs a cost?โ
โThereโs always give and take.โ
โOkay,โ says Henry, โif you sold your soul for one thing, what would it be?โ
Bea chews her lip. โHappiness.โ
โWhat is that?โ he asks. โI mean, is it just feeling happy for no reason? Or is it making other people happy? Is it being happy with your job, or your life, orโโ
Bea laughs. โYou always overthink things, Henry.โ She looks out over the fire escape. โI donโt know, I guess I just mean Iโd want to be happy with myself. Satisfied. What about you?โ
He thinks of lying, doesnโt. โI think Iโd want to be loved.โ
Bea looks at him, then, eyes swirling with frost, and even through the mist, she looks suddenly, immeasurably sad. โYou canโtย makeย people love you, Hen. If itโs not a choice, it isnโt real.โ
Henryโs mouth goes dry.
Sheโs right. Of course sheโs right.
And heโs an idiot, trapped in a world where nothingโs real.
Bea knocks her shoulder against his. โCome back in,โ she says. โFind someone to kiss before midnight. Itโs good luck.โ
She rises, waiting, but Henry canโt bring himself to stand. โItโs okay,โ he says. โYou go.โ
And he knows itโs the deal heโs made, knows itโs what she sees and not what he isโbut heโs still relieved when Bea sits back down, and leans against him, a best friend staying with him in the dark. And soon the music dims, and the voices rise, and Henry can hear the countdown at their back.
Ten, nine, eight.
Oh god.
Seven, six, five. What has he done?ย Four, three, two.
Itโs going too fast.
One.
The air fills with whistles and cheers and wishes and Bea presses her lips against his, a moment of warmth against the cold. Just like that, the year is gone, the clocks reset, a three replaced by a four, and Henry knows that he has made a terrible mistake.
He has asked the wrong god for the wrong thing, and now he is enough because he is nothing. He is perfect, because he isnโt there.
โItโs going to be a good year,โ says Bea. โI can feel it.โ She sighs a plume of fog into the air between them. โFuck, itโs freezing.โ She stands, rubbing her hands. โLetโs go in.โ
โYou go ahead,โ he says, โIโll be there soon.โ
And she believes him, her steps clanking as she crosses the fire escape and slips back through the window, leaving it open for him to follow.
Henry sits there, alone in the dark, until he cannot stand the cold.