Chapter no 30

Funny Story

MONDAY, AUGUST 5TH

1 2 DAYS UNTIL THE READ- A -THON

IN THE MORNING,ย I donโ€™t wake Miles.

As much as I wouldย likeย to spend the morning making out, we were up late, and Iโ€™ll see him when he picks me up from work anyway. Heโ€™d texted Katya last night to see if she wanted his shift, and sheโ€™d repliedย not at all but I need money so Iโ€™ll take it, and so weโ€™d decided to get dinner and drive up to a dark sky park.

While Iโ€™m dressing, I spot the note from Dad sitting on my dresser. When I was younger, I wouldโ€™ve read it over and over, scouring for proof that he loved me, or clues about what Iโ€™d done to drive him off. Today, I just toss it into the trash on my way out.

I feel like Belle in the beginning ofย Beauty and the Beast, walking around with a shit-eating grin, greeting everyone like itโ€™s the first day of the rest of my life. Iโ€™d beย lessย obvious wearing anย Iโ€™ve Had Great Sexย sandwich board.

I stop at Fika for tea and order Ashleigh a latte too. When Jonah hands it back to me, a realization hits like a gong, reverberating through my bones.

Ashleigh.

I was supposed to paint with Ashleigh.

On my way out the door, I open my calendar and scan for her birthday.

Only, I neverย addedย Ashleighโ€™s birthday to my calendar. Iโ€™ve barely added anything in weeks, just like the whiteboardโ€™s gone to the wayside.

An icy fist presses against the bottom of my stomach. It was this past Saturday, Iโ€™m positive.

She called in sick, I remember then, which triggers another nauseating lurch in my gut. She was sick on her birthday and I didnโ€™t even check in on her.

How could I forget about her? How could I let this happen?

I practically run the rest of the way to work and get there right as Ashleighโ€™s locking her hatchback.

As I jog toward her, something flashes in her eyes, too quickly to read, and my heart turns over painfully as her expression settles back into neutrality.

I come to a stop, choke out, โ€œHey.โ€

When she doesnโ€™t say anything, I hold her coffee out to her. She looks at it, her hand tightening on her purse strap for a second, before grudgingly accepting it.

โ€œIโ€™m so sorry,โ€ I blurt out. โ€œAbout Saturday. I justโ€”my dad was in town, and then he left really abruptly, and I was completely distracted and Miles and Iโ€”god, Iโ€™m really sorry.โ€

She snorts, shakes her head. โ€œYou know,โ€ she says. โ€œIt wasย yourย idea to do something for my birthday. Youย insisted. And weirdly, you even got me excited about it.โ€

โ€œI know,โ€ I say. โ€œYou shouldnโ€™t have been home sick alone on your birthday. I understand why youโ€™re upset with me.โ€

โ€œI wasnโ€™t sick,โ€ she says. โ€œI took the day off.โ€ โ€œYou never take the day off,โ€ I point out.

โ€œWhich is why I did, for my birthday. I stayed home and got ready to paint my bedroom a horrendous shade of pink, just because, and watchย Real Housewivesย with my friend.โ€

My face heats. โ€œIโ€™m so sorry, Ash. Why didnโ€™t you call me?โ€

She scoffs. โ€œWhat, more than thoseย nine times? Call me old-fashioned, but once I hit the double digits, I start to feel a tad desperate.โ€

โ€œOh my god,โ€ I groan. โ€œThe beach! We didnโ€™t have service.โ€ โ€œWe,โ€ she says.

My throat tightens. โ€œI really canโ€™t believe I missed it.โ€ โ€œItโ€™s fine,โ€ she says.

โ€œItโ€™s obviously not,โ€ I say. โ€œItโ€™s unbelievably shitty.โ€

โ€œSeriously, Daphne, donโ€™t worry about it,โ€ she says. โ€œI knew you were aย we-girlย and now youโ€™ve got aย we. As the internet likes to say, when someone tells you who they are, believe them.โ€

โ€œAshleigh!โ€ I cry. โ€œWhat are youย talkingย about?โ€

โ€œMiles,โ€ she says. โ€œThatโ€™s who you blew me off for, right?โ€

My heart feels like thereโ€™s a perforated line forming down its middle, a force tugging at each side. โ€œIโ€™m not aย weย with Miles. Weโ€™re not . . . that.โ€

โ€œMaybe not,โ€ she says. โ€œBut clearly something changed while I was in Sedona, andย whateverย it is that the two of you are doing now, you donโ€™t need me anymore.โ€

Her words knock me back.

Is that what I did? Is that who I am?

A person who treats people like loosely penciled-in backup plans, in case nothing better comes along?

I feel sick.

Worse, Iโ€™m about to cry.

I try to rein it in, but my voice crackles: โ€œYouโ€™re right. I treated you like a fallback, and thatโ€™s shitty. Iโ€™m sorry. Thatโ€™s not what you are to me.โ€

She drops her eyes to the concrete. โ€œLook, Iโ€™m trying to be on time to work, so if you donโ€™t mind, Iโ€™m going to just . . .โ€

โ€œYeah,โ€ I scratch out. โ€œOf course.โ€

She walks away without looking back.

My heart breaks a little, and I have no one to blame but myself.

 

 

AFTER WORK, Iย stagger my departure so that Ashleighโ€”who barely said four words to me all dayโ€”isnโ€™t walking out at the same time as me.

Miles isnโ€™t here yet, so I pace along the curb, trying to burn off the

cortisol flooding my system.

After a while, I go sit on the sun-hot bench and try to read. For once, I canโ€™t seem to escape into a book. My mind keeps going back to Ashleigh.

A part of me just wants the comfort of being wrapped up in Milesโ€™s arms, everything else temporarily obliterated. But then again, thatโ€™s how I got here.

I let myself get absorbed, again.

Still, Iโ€™ll feel better when he gets here. Iโ€™ll figure out a way to make it up to Ashleigh, to prove Iโ€™m not that person. I wonโ€™t let myself be.

I check the time. Twenty minutes late and no word yet. With how often Miles forgets his phone or lets it die, thatโ€™s not a huge surprise.

I pull my laptop out and angle it against the sun. Iโ€™m still connected to the libraryโ€™s Wi-Fi, so I pull up my Read-a-thon checklist and keep working.

The parking lot empties. The streetlights pop on as the sun begins its slow plod toward sunset.

Forty minutes have passed, and a pit opens in my stomach.

I snap my computer shut and call Miles, trying not to picture him unconscious in a ditch on the side of the road, or in any other of a million worst-case scenarios.

The call rings out to voice mail.

I typeย everything okay?ย and hit send, then start pacing again.

Youโ€™re being ridiculous, I tell myself.ย Heโ€™s fine. I check my phone.

Again. Again. Again.

Nine times.

Finally, on the tenth, my phone vibrates. I nearly throw it in my hurry to get it eye level.

shit day got away from me sorry but ya all good here u

I take it to mean,ย All good here, you?

Which begs the question, where isย here?

At first, Iโ€™m just so relieved heโ€™s alive and wellโ€”or else kidnapped by someone who texts exactly like himโ€”that I literally sit down in the middle of my pacing, right on the libraryโ€™s lawn, and say aloud, โ€œThank god.โ€

But then, slowly, a new feeling simmers through me.

This is Miles, I remind myself. Heโ€™ll have an explanation.

Iโ€™m backsliding toward the pit Iโ€™ve found myself in a hundred times before, waiting on someone I know in my gut isnโ€™t coming.

But in the length of our friendship, Miles has never stood me up.

The things he said the other nightโ€”about the men in my life not wanting to be seen, running as soon as they areโ€”play back, like a siren, a warning I missed.

It doesnโ€™t make sense. Iโ€™m missing something.

I hammer out another text:ย I thought you were picking me up.

Miles types for a second, then stops without sending a message.

My body goes hot, my skin too tight. Suddenly I need to move. I need to get away. I canโ€™t stay here another second.

I grab my stuff and walk. Leave the parking lot. The sun has started setting, but Iโ€™ll make it back before dark.

Except the idea of going home nauseates me.

In a temporary fit of deluded ambition, I pull my phone out to Google CrossFit gyms. Maybe I could burn off this anxiety by throwing tires, or whatever.

Miles is calling.

I try to answer, but Iโ€™ve just missed the last ring. A car honks, and I realize Iโ€™ve stopped in an intersection. I wave an apology and run across, dialing him back.

Straight to voice mail.

He must be leaving me a message. As I power walk, I eye the screen every few seconds, waiting for the message to buzz in. Instead I get a text alert:ย ya sorry something came up im really sorry

Three sorries deep and no closer to an explanation.

At this point, I feel stupid and a little angry. I take a deep breath.

Things come up.ย We donโ€™t owe each other anything, I tell myself. We made no promises.

But the truth is, Miles made me feelย soย safe, and now I feel completely discarded.

This is what you get, a voice taunts in my mind.

When you make all the same mistakes again and again.

When you choose the wrong people to trust and let down the right ones.

When you let someone in whoโ€™sย told youย in every conceivable way not to rely on them.

Trust peopleโ€™s actions, not their words.

Donโ€™t love anyone who isnโ€™t ready to love you back. Let go of the people who donโ€™t hold on to you.

Donโ€™t wait on people who donโ€™t hurry for you.

Instantly, I feel soย tired.ย Exhausted. As badly as I donโ€™t want to go home, thereโ€™s nowhere else for me to go.

Iโ€™ve just started back toward the apartment when my phone rings again.

My heart soars in anticipation. Heโ€™ll have an explanation, something that makes sense of all of this.

Except itโ€™s not him calling. Itโ€™s an unknown number.

I answer, just in case, trying to sound cool, calm, collected, and overall diametrically opposite how I actually feel. โ€œHello?โ€

โ€œHi!โ€ a chipper, feminine voice says. โ€œIs this Daphne Vincent?โ€ โ€œUm.โ€ I sniff, modulate my voice. โ€œWhoโ€™s this?โ€

โ€œMy nameโ€™s Anika. Iโ€™m calling from the Ocean City Public Library.โ€ It takes three full seconds for me to make sense of what sheโ€™s saying.

โ€œWe were really impressed by your rรฉsumรฉ,โ€ she goes on, โ€œand weโ€™d love to set up a virtual interview.โ€

I press the heel of my hand to my forehead. The world keeps spinning. This is what Iโ€™ve been waiting for, hoping for.

โ€œHello?โ€ she says.

โ€œSorry,โ€ I stammer. โ€œYes, Iโ€™m here.โ€

โ€œWould you be available for an interview sometime in the next two weeks?โ€ she says. โ€œAssuming youโ€™re still interested.โ€

It feels like Iโ€™m swallowing a rock. โ€œOf course I am,โ€ I force out.

Iโ€™m not even sure which part Iโ€™m agreeing withโ€”whether Iโ€™m available, whether Iโ€™m interested.

But itโ€™s the only answer that could possibly make sense, right?

The escape hatch Iโ€™ve been waiting for, right when the whole house of cards is falling down, and I should feel happy, or at least relieved, but all I can feel is this whole-chest ache, yet another loss of someone, something, I didnโ€™t even have to begin with.

โ€œFantastic!โ€ she says. โ€œCould you just send us your availability and weโ€™ll set something up?โ€

I clear my throat. โ€œIโ€™ll check my calendar as soon as I get home.โ€

Home. I ignore the ping in my heart at that word. Itโ€™s just an apartment. Itโ€™s never been mine.

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