SUNDAY, MAY 19TH
90 DAYS UNTIL I CAN LEAVE
I TRY TOย gather myself, to catch my breath and clear my throat, so I wonโt have to answer in a dehydrated croak.
Of course, I donโtย haveย to answer.
But this is the first time Iโve heard from Peter in weeks, and the thought ofย notย hearing what he has to sayโof simply wondering, foreverโmakes me feel sick.
Just kidding, Gillโs shots are doing that just fine.
The name Gill just occurred to me out of thin air, the image of his braided gray beard flashing across my mind.
I clamp my phone against my ear and beeline toward the window for fresh air. Itโs cool out, more spring than summer today.
โHello!โ I say, too loud, too forceful, and too cheery. A rare trifecta. โDaphne?โ Peterโs soft voice fills my head like helium.
โYes?โ I say.
Thereโs a pause. โYou sound different.โ
โI feel different,โ I reply. No idea why thatโs what comes out. โOh.โ Thereโs a silence on the other end.
โSo,โ I say.
Another pause. โSo, I got your RSVP?โ
I dig the heel of my hand into my forehead and press, hard, against the throbbing there. โYeah.โ
โAnd I guess I just . . .โ He takes a breath. โI wanted to make sure everything was okay.โ
โOkay?โ
I feel like Iโm back in high school calculus, random bits of equations and numbers drifting around me nonsensically: thereโs some kind of meaning there, but I doย notย have the right brain to interpret it.
โYeah, I mean . . .โ A soft breath. โYou donโtย haveย to come, you know.โ My laugh sounds more like a cough.
โI mean, of course weโd love to have you,โ he hurries on.
The sound ofย weย alone is enough to make the contents of my stomach flip around like I chugged clam chowder, then hopped on a roller coaster.ย Weย used to be theย weย he talked about.
โI just wanted to make sure you knew there was no pressure on our end,โ he says.
Our. We.
Letโs get all the most painful words out on the table and make sure each one positively drips with condescension.
The worst part is, even after all this, Iโm notย positiveย I donโt love him. I mean, notย thisย version of him, but the part that remembered every important date, who brought home flowers just because he happened to be walking past a cart selling them, the Peter who had my favorite soup delivered to me every time I got sick.
The parts reserved for her now.
โWe know how hard this must be for you,โ heโs saying, and just like that, he snaps back into the other Peter. The one I hate. โAnd I just . . . I hate to think of you there, on your own . . .โ
As if this whole thing isnโt humiliating enough, heโs called me to make sure I know he feelsย badย for me. Iโm seeing red.
โI wonโt be alone,โ I say.
โI mean, without a date,โ he clarifies, completely unnecessarily. โI know,โ I say. โIโm bringing my boyfriend.โ
Even as Iโm saying it, thereโs a voice screeching in my brain, WHAT ARE YOU DOING?
I face the window and pantomime a scream, one hand dragging down the side of my face. I wonder if this exact scenario inspired Edvard Munchโsย The Scream.
โYourย boyfriend?โ Peterโs voice emanates sheer disbelief.
No, my brain says.
โYes,โ my mouth says.
โBut . . . you didnโt RSVP for a plus-one.โ
Iโm not usually a liar. In fact, I still sometimes lie awake thinking about a time in the sixth grade when Iโd just switched schools and a girl struck up a conversation with me about my horse necklace, and in my desperation to make friends, some foul demon possessed me to tell the girl I loved horses and grew up going to horse-riding camp every summer.
Iโd been horseback riding twice. I fell off the second time, if that matters.
After that conversation, Iโd avoided that girl out of guilt. Lucky for me, we moved again six months later.
But apparently the demon has finally tracked me down again, because without thinking, without planning, a lie emerges from my mouth, fully formed: โI didnโt need a plus-one. He got his own invitation.โ
The weighty silence tells me Peter is doing invisible calculus now. Only heโs got the brain for it. โYou canโt mean . . .โ His voice slides past disbelief straight into incredulity. โYouโre withย Miles?โ
No, no, no, the voice in my head screams. โYep!โ my mouth chirps.
I am instantly back to silent Munch-screaming out the window.
The next silence extends too long. Iโm incapable of breaking it, because the only thing Iย canย think to say is,ย I donโt know why I said thatโitโs an outright lie, but I also cannot. Cannotย tell him that.
Peter clears his throat. โWell, the weddingโs not for a few months.โ โI know,โ I say. โLabor Day.โ
โA lot could change before then,โ he says.
My jaw drops. Is he really insinuating that my fake relationship wonโt survive three months to his wedding . . . whenย hisย relationship started just
over a month ago?
โWeโll be there,โ I say.ย NO, my brain screams. โOkay,โ Peter says.
I need to get off the phone before I involuntarily spring a fictional pregnancy on him. โIโve got to go, Peter. Take care.โ
โYeah,โ he says. โYou tโโ I hang up.
I pace in front of the window for about five seconds, then go straight to Milesโs door, a sinner on her way to confession.
I knock. No answer.
I pound. โMiles? Are you up?โ
I rattle the knob. Or I expect to, but itโs unlocked. So instead, I basically just fall into his room, catching myself against his dresser. The TV atop it wobbles, and as I steady it, a voice says from behind me, โAre you stealing my TV?โ
I turn, expecting to find Miles sprawled out in his bed. Instead, heโs standing in the doorway, fully dressed with a grease-mottled paper bag in hand.
I release the TV. โI almost knocked it over,โ I explain. โWhy?โ he asks.
โI told Peter we were dating,โ I say.
He stares at me for three seconds, then laughs. โWhat does that have to do with the TV?โ
โNothing,โ I say.
He laughs again and turns back to the hallway. โWhere are you going?โ I call.
โTo get sriracha,โ he says.
โWhy,โ I say, trailing him to the kitchen.
โFor my breakfast sandwich.โ He drops the bag on the counter on his way to the fridge.
โDid you hear what I said?โ I ask.
โYou told Peter we were dating,โ he confirms, rifling around the fridge for the hot sauce.
โArenโt you mad?โ I say.
He spins back with the sriracha bottle and an unmarked jar of something dark and goopy. โWhy would I be mad?โ
โBecause we arenโt dating,โ I say.
โIโm aware.โ He dumps the bag out onto the counter, and two yellow- paper-wrapped sandwiches fall out. He slides one toward me, then turns to the already full coffeepot.
โHow long have you been up?โ
โI donโt know.โ He shrugs. โHour or two.โ He carries two steaming mugs back to the counter. He gives me a mug with Garfield the cat wearing a cowboy hat on it. โCream? Sugar?โ
I shake my head. Iโm not much of a coffee drinker. Iโll just sip enough to take the edge off of this hangover.
Miles opens the jar and spoons a little probably-maple-syrup into his coffee. โIs that good?โ I ask, leaning forward to watch.
โI donโt know,โ he says. โSeems like it would be, though. Did you drunk-dial?โ
โWhat?โ I say.
โDid you call Peter drunk?โ he says, unwrapping his sandwich, flipping it open, and absolutely slathering the egg and avocado inside with sriracha.
โNo, he called me.โ
He pauses with the sandwich halfway to his mouth. He lets out another laugh and lowers the sandwich. โWait. Did we RSVP to their wedding last night?โ
Hearing it said aloud, again, sends a full-body shudder through me.
Groaning, I drop my face against my forearms on the counter.
โWait, wait.โ Miles presses his palm into my forehead and tips my face up so he can meet my eyes. โThatโs why he called? Because he got the RSVP?โ
I nod. โHe called to tell me I donโt have to come. That he knows how hard it will be for me to be there,ย all by my lonesome, so utterly shattered
and alone and lonely and unloved.โ Miles snorts. โSmug little prick.โ โHeโs six four,โ I say.
โSmug giant douche,โ he amends. Then, after a minute, โOr, I donโt know, maybe he genuinely thought he was being nice?โ
โNo, you were right the first time.โ
Miles unwraps my breakfast sandwich partway and shoves it toward my face. I take a bite, and then he sets it down in front of my chin.
โWait!โ He braces his hands against the counter, face brightening. โSo he called to try to make you feel so pathetic you wouldnโt come ruin his special day, and you told him we were dating?โ
โIโm sorry,โ I say again.
โThat fucking rules,โ he says. โHowโd he take it?โ
โSome silence, some scoffs of disbelief,โ I say. โA gentle reminder that the weddingโs not for three months, and thereโs no way you and I will still be dating by then. Pretty perceptive of him, given that weโre not dating now.โ I drop my face, groaning anew at the fresh round of hammering inside my brain.
โEat something,โ Miles says. โIt will help.โ
I pitch myself onto one of the mismatched wooden stools at the counter and slide the sandwich toward me, taking a forceful bite.
โMaybe weย shouldย date,โ Miles says.
I choke. He watches me coughing, an impish grin forming on his impish mouth. โYes,โ I finally manage. โA shared cuckolding is the most fertile ground from which love could ever spring.โ
โYeah, that,โ he says, โand it would piss them off.โ
โAs you pointed out,โ I say. โThey donโt care. Theyโre getting married, Miles.โ
โAnd six weeks ago,ย youย were getting married,โ he says.
โHey, if youโre willing to keep reminding me of that daily, I can go ahead and rename my morning alarm something other than WAKE UP, YOUโVE BEEN JILTED, BITCH.โ
โNo, I mean, a few weeks ago, you and Peter were engaged. And yet, he was jealous ofย me, andย youย were jealous of Petra.โ
โExcuse you,โ I say.
โIโm quoting you,โ he says. โFromย when?โ I say.
โHalfway through the third time you put on โWitchy Womanโ last night.โ I narrow my gaze.
โYou donโt remember anything that happened, do you?โ He seems tickled at the thought.
โI remember Glenn,โ I say. โGill,โ he says.
โRight.โ
โMy point is, just because theyโre engaged, it doesnโt mean theyโre above jealousy.โ He takes another sip of coffee. I reach feebly toward the maple syrup jar, and he nudges it closer to me.
I spoon some into my mug and take a sip. โWhat do you think?โ he asks, leaning forward. โPretty good,โ I say. โWhereโd it come from?โ
โOh, just one of my countless odd jobs,โ he says. My cheeks heat.
He laughs into another huge bite of his sandwich, which reminds me to eat mine. โWeโre not going to their wedding as a fake couple,โ I say.
He shrugs. โOkay.โ
โYouโre not going to convince me.โ โFine,โ he says.
โIโm serious,โ I say.
โDoes he still follow you on social media or did you block him?โ he asks.
I squirm on the stool and busy myself with another sip. โI unfollowed him, but I didnโt block him.โ Some very pathetic part of me didnโt want to close the door entirely. I wanted him to miss me, even a tiny fraction of the amount I missed him. I wanted him to regret losing me.
I have not made a single post since we broke up.
I go on: โI donโt know if he still follows me or not.โ โYes, you do,โ Miles says.
โOkay, fine, as of yesterday, he did.โ โCan I see your phone?โ Miles asks. โI donโtย wantย to block him,โ I say. โIโm not going to,โ he promises.
I hand my phone over, and he sets down his sandwich, chewing as he taps around on the screen. Then he rounds the counter to stand behind me, holding the phone out in front of us, the selfie camera on. He hunches over, hooking his free arm around my collarbones and flashing a dimpled grin.
โWhat are you doing?โ I ask, turning toward him, my nose grazing his cheekbone.
โGot it,โ he says, straightening up and pushing my phone back into my hand.
The picture he took is still onscreen. Iโm midword, my lips practically on his face, and heโs smiling, a slew of his disjointed sailor-style forearm tattoos draped across my chest in an easy yet vaguely suggestive way.
We look very much like a couple, if you ignore the fact that we also look like two people whoโd have exactly nothing in common. Then again, I guess thatโs how straitlaced Peter and free-spirited Petra look side by side.
Itโs just that Petra wears the aesthetic like an edgy pop starlet, and Miles looks kind of like the guy from high school who intentionally failed his senior year to stick around for a while, then started selling bootleg cologne out of the trunk of his car in the mall parking lot.
Not that I look much better. Thereโs a smear of avocado on my chin. โWhat am I supposed to do with this,โ I say.
โWhatever you want.โ Miles crumples the paper sandwich sheath and tosses it into the trash.
โMeaning?โ
โDaphne.โ He slumps forward on his elbows, raking a hand up through his hair. It stays put, defying gravity. His beard is likewise sticking out in dark tufts like heโs a bedraggled and hungover young Wolverine. โYou know what Iโm getting at.โ
โYou want me to post this so heโll think weโre dating,โ I say.
โNo,โ he says, bemused. โI personally want you to post it so Petra thinks weโre dating.โ
โWhy canโtย youย post it,โ I say.
โBecause I donโt have any social media,โ he says.
โRight.โ I remember Peter telling me this. Iโd been scrolling through Petraโsโfrankly, professional-grade influencerโfeed and not only was Miles notย taggedย in any pictures, but his face wasnโt even in any. When I asked Peter about it, he rolled his eyes and said something cranky about Miles beingย too good for social media.
Just the thought of it now is enough to tip me over the edge. I donโt write a caption. I just post the picture.
Miles grins and high-fives me.
โAre we evil or just immature?โ he says.
โI think maybe just bitter,โ I reply. โHey, thanks for the breakfast sandwich, by the way.โ
โThanks for the pep talk last night,โ he says. โWhen did that happen?โ I ask.
โHalfway through theย fourthย time we played โWitchy Woman,โ โ he says. A fuzzy memory surfaces, just for a second, before submerging into the wine-and-liquor haze again: standing on a sticky floor, in the glow of a neon sign, holding on to either side of Milesโs face as I enunciated as clearly as I could manage:ย Itโs going to get easier. This time next year, you
wonโt even remember her name.
If we keep drinking like this, he replied,ย Iโm not sure Iโll even remember
myย name.
Miles grabs the sriracha, and twists the lid back onto the syrup jar. โIโve got stuff to do, but if you hear from your ex, tell him I said . . .โ He holds up his middle finger.
โIf you hear from yours, tell herย thanks for the new boyfriend.โ โGladly,โ he says, and turns to go.