JOSH
I left her asleep in my bed this morning. She didnโt even stir when my alarm went off at five. I was so tempted to stay with her. But Iโm not quite off the coachโs shit list yet, so I canโt afford to be late to a single practice or workout if I have any hope of playing this season.
The first month of the semester has flown by. Between my practice schedule and Eden working, plus our course loads, it seems like we have less and less time for each other every day.
ChatGPT said:
I get through morning training from six to eight, followed by a team meeting before my first class at nine. I send her a quick “good morning” text on my way, but sheโs usually too rushed to reply until after her first class ends at ten thirty. With only an hour between morning classes, itโs straight back to prep for practice.
I hate that we have so little time to relax together. If we werenโt in the same building, I donโt know how weโd manage to see each other at all. She picked up a second job at the cafรฉ across from our apartment, but the manager is already being difficult about her availability. I donโt know what he expects; itโs a college town, and everyoneโs schedules are all over the place. I sometimes go in to study while sheโs working on weekends. I tell her itโs just to spend more time with her, which is mostly true, but I also donโt trust that guy. He seems to have it out for her, constantly criticizing her and demanding she come in early or stay late.
I witnessed one incident when she accidentally dropped a mug and it shattered on the floor.
For a moment, she laughed, embarrassedโit was charming and everyone else smiled sympathetically. But as she knelt to clean it up, the manager stormed over, red-faced, and tossed a rag next to her, muttering, โItโs not funny. Pay attention. If you canโt be more careful, you canโt work here.โ
The way he said it was over the top, way too angry for a broken mug. I saw her flinch, fear flashing in her eyes for just a second. It made me stand up and walk over, not even knowing what I was going to do, but I felt this intense urge to confront him, to grab his stupid apron and shove him against the wall. It wasnโt a familiar feeling for me, and I didnโt like how quickly it surged up.
โLook, I distracted her,โ I told him. โIโll pay for the mug.โ
He didnโt even speak to me; he just glared at us both and walked away.
I squatted next to her and said quietly, โYou absolutely do not need to put up with that shit.โ
โPlease,โ she scoffed. โIโve dealt with bigger douchebags than him. But you should probably go. You didnโt make me drop the mug, but your faceย isย very distracting. Plus, all these girls keep checking you out. Iโm getting jealous.โ
I looked around. No one was checking me out. But someone was checkingย herย out. A guy in the kitchen was watching her through the window where the servers pick up the food, his eyes lingering for just a little too long. I stared him down until he walked away.
I really want her to quit the second job. Not only because I hate her boss and her creepy male coworkers, but weโre not even one full month into the semester and sheโs already running herself ragged. The only nice part of being so busy is that it makes the time we do have feel more special.
Her classes are all on the opposite side of campus. Most days we can at least walk home together, though. Sometimes we can sneak a lunch in. Today I stop by the student union for sandwiches and then have to jog to the library if I want to make it in time to see her at all before I have to head back to the athletic center to get changed for afternoon practice.
I smuggle the paper bag of food in my backpack and head up to the fourth floor of the Arts and Sciences Library. I find her toward the end of one of the aisles, near our spot in the back corner, where we can usually get a few minutes of privacy. I stand there and watch her for a minute. She has a cart of returned books sheโs supposed to be shelving, but sheโs standing on top of one of those little plastic stepstools, flipping through the pages of a book, before she reaches up to place it in its designated spot on the shelf.
Then she takes down the book next to it and starts skimming the pages instead. I glance at the titles as I walk toward her. Biographies, looks like. Sheโs so absorbed, she doesnโt even notice Iโm standing right next to her.
โExcuse me, miss?โ I whisper.
โGod!โ she yelps, and the book she was holding clatters to the floor. โShh,โ I tell her, bending down to pick it up. โThis is a library.โ
As she takes the book from me, she smiles and says, โWhen are you going to stop sneaking up on me?โ
โI wasnโt trying toโyouโre just very focused.โ
She looks both ways before reaching out to pull me closer and leans down to kiss me. โSo this is what it feels like to be tall,โ she muses, still standing on the stool and a full two inches taller than me. โItโs a whole different world up here.โ
โWant me to start carrying around a stool for you everywhere we go?โ I ask.
โWhy do I think youโre not entirely joking?โ
โHey, if you really wanted that, you know I would do it.โ I hold her hands as she steps down and pull her in for a hug. โHungry?โ I ask.
She nods and checks again to be sure no one will see us, as we go to the end of the aisle and make our way to our corner table, which is hidden from view. As I unpack our sandwiches, she leans her head on my shoulder and groans, โI wish we could go home and lie in bed all day.โ
โSo do I,โ I sigh. โYou were out cold this morning. How late did you stay up last night?โ
โI donโt know,โ she says, rubbing her eyes. โI had a lot of reading to catch up on.โ
I touch her face; she has these dark circles under her eyes. โBaby, you look so tired.โ
โItโs okay, I can sleep in tomorrow; I donโt have to be at the cafรฉ until the afternoon. Still on for date night tonight, right?โ she asks.
โDefinitely,โ I tell her. โPractice ends at six, but if I hurry I can probably be home by like six forty-five-ish.โ
โYou donโt have to rush,โ she says, covering her mouth as she takes a bite of her sandwich. โOur reservation isnโt until eight.โ
โReservation? Fancy.โ I wait a beat, try to judge her mood a little better. โAre you proposing?โ
She coughs and widens her eyes at me. โItโs notย thatย fancy.โ
I laugh. But if she were, Iโd totally say yes.
โYouโre insane, you know that?โ she says with a grin.
โMe? Youโre the one proposing after one month,โ I joke. โLetโs at least get it straight; itโs more like three years.โ โSo, youย areย proposing?โ
She shakes her head, trying not to laugh. โOh my God, youโre ridiculous.โ
I nudge her shoulder with mine. โYou love it.โ She nods. โMm-hmm. Youโre right, I do.โ
Weโre kissing when someone clears their throat. โOh,โ Eden says. โHey.โ
โUh, sorry.โ A boy who looks too young to be in college is standing there
โI can see he has the same work-study ID badge Eden has. โWe need some help downstairs at the circulation desk.โ
โSure, yeah. Sorry. I was just taking a quick break.โ He shrugs and shuffles back down the aisle.
She stands and takes one more bite before wrapping up the second half of her sandwich, trying to stuff it in the pocket of her hoodie. โObvious?โ she asks.
โNo,โ I lie. โJust make sure you finish that at some point.โ
โI will.โ She squeezes my hand before walking away, turning around to whisper-shout, โIโm picking you up at seven forty-fiveโ donโt forget.โ
I finish my lunch and check my phone. I forgot my dad texted when I was in line at the sandwich shop.
Your mom and I are looking forward to seeing you for your bday next week. The big 21! Tuesday still good? Canโt wait
to meet Eden.
Except I havenโt exactly told Eden that my parents will be here or that they want to take us out for dinner, get to know her. I havenโt wanted to stress her out or put any extra pressure on her. But Iโm going to have to. Tonight. Iโll tell her tonight.
EDEN
I sit in the back of the lecture hall so I can slip out a few minutes early without drawing too much attention. Iโve come early to each of my classes this week to explain why, so soon in the semester, Iโd have to be out next week. I got the time off cleared with the library and sort of cleared with Captain Douchebag at the cafรฉ. I traded shifts with someone, but he said he still needed to approve it.
At this point, let him fire me. There are at least five more coffee places in a ten-minute radius of campus. Iโm sure at least one of them is hiring.
I walk to my next class, fast, on a mission. This is the last formal explanation Iโd need to give.ย Iโm a witness in a court case in my hometown; I have to appear at a hearing next week, so Iโll need to miss class. That was the statement it took me and my therapist the better part of my last fifty- minute phone session to figure out. And that was what I told every one of my professors. Each time, it went over pretty well. No real follow-up questions or concerns. No emotional outpourings on my part.
I have my lines memorized.
I make my way down the steps to the lecture hall floor, where my professorโs standing at the podium trying to connect her laptop to the projector, muttering, โGoddamn thing!โ And thereโs something so human about her, all frustrated, that reminds me of my mom.
โUm, hiโsorry,โ I say as I approach.
She looks up at me and brings her glasses down from the top of her head, puts them on before speaking. โHello, what can I do for you?โ
โMy nameโs Eden McCrorey. Iโm in your World History section this afternoon.โ
She nods and glances back down at her laptop, not quite paying attention. โOkay . . . and?โ she mumbles, distracted. Again reminding me of my mom.
I take a deep breath. โItโs just that Iโm going to have to miss class next week.โ
She removes her glasses now and stares at me, as if to say,ย Oh, really?
I open my mouth to continue, but I realize Iโve already messed up the order of my lines.
โI mean,โ I try to start over, โI have to appear as a witness in a trial in my hometown. Or, not a trial.โ I stumble and fall over the words. โYet, anyway. Itโs actually just a hearing.โ But then I have my therapistโs voice in my head, saying,ย Donโt minimize, donโt apologize. โWell, not that itโsย justย a hearing,โ I add.
She takes a step toward me and turns her head slightly, like sheโs having trouble understanding me. Iโm not explaining this right. This wasnโt what I was supposed to say.
โItโitโs just a preliminary hearing,โ I stutter. โTo see if thereโs going to even be a trial.โ
I take a breath and pinch the bridge of my nose. Hard. Trying to drive back the tears Iโm feeling working their way through my skull. โUm . . . sorry, I justโโ
My lungs are suddenly out of air, and Iโm having a hard time refilling them.
โOh,โ she coos. โItโs Eden, right?โ
I nod, unable to answer her for some reason. And then sheโs taking a step toward me, her arms outstretched. I donโt understand. Sheโs hugging me before I even realize Iโve started crying.
โOh, sorry,โ I sniffle through her poofy hair in my face.
โItโs okay,โ she says, and sort of rocks me back and forth. I feel my cheek collapse into her shoulder, I let my weight fall against her. โItโs okay,โ she repeats.
Out of nowhere, Iโm sobbing like a child in this total strangerโs armsโ sheโs smaller than me, and I can actually feel my body shaking hers as I clutch the sharp bones of her shoulders. But I canโt stop myself. โOh my God, Iโm really sorry,โ I blather, pulling away from her. I pull my sleeves down over my hands and wipe my eyes. But itโs ugly crying, all snotty and gross.
She turns around and goes to her briefcase, rummaging around for a moment before pulling out a tiny rectangular package of tissues. โHere,โ she says, pulling one out and handing it to me.
โIโm really sorry,โ I repeat. โThis is just the fifth time Iโve had to explain this. First time Iโve cried though, lucky you.โ I try to laugh.
โItโs quite all right, Eden.โ She gives me a frowning smile, a head tilt, and one final pat on the back. โItโs no problem. Why donโt you come to my office hours after you return, and weโll figure out some way to make up the time?โ
โThat would be great,โ I gasp, my breathing erratic. โThank you.โย Thank you, I silently tell her,ย for not asking why Iโm crying or if Iโm okay.
She hands me the whole package of tissues now. โIf you need to miss todayโs lecture, I can have Lauren, my teaching assistant, send you the presentation.โ
โNo, itโs fine. Iโm fine, really,โ I say by default.
โSelf-care is more important than sitting here listening to me bang on for two hours about the politics of ancient Rome. Really,โ she says. โPlease.โ
Say yes, I plead with myself.ย Just say yes.
โActuallyโโgasp, gasp, gaspโโI think that might be helpful if youโre sure you donโt mind. Itโs been a really long week.โ My therapist would be so proud of me for accepting this small offer of grace.
But now itโs three oโclock in the afternoon and I have nothing Iโm supposed to be doing. Itโs a strange, unsettling feeling, after months of rushing and endless things needing to be done, to have time. I get a coffee and decide to stop at the store on my way home, thinking maybe I need to stock up on some travel packs of tissues if Iโm going to be spontaneously ugly crying in public.
I pass the customer service desk at the front of the store and eye the racks of cigarettes tucked safely behind the counter. I could buy a pack. Just have one, throw the rest away, and feel so much more capable of handling everything right now. I get in line, behind the older woman holding her stack of scratch-off lotto tickets. But I wonโt have just one, I know this. And Josh would smell the smoke on my hair, taste it on my tongue. Then heโd worry. I watch as the lady in front of me hands over her winning tickets and the twentysomething cashier scans them, reciting how much each ticket should be worth.
I step out of line. Tell myself I donโt need the cigarettes. I tell myself maybe itโs only hormonesโI started on the pill just a couple of weeks ago. Iโve never been on birth control before, and Mara warned me it could mess
with my emotions. I donโt exactly need any more interference on that front, but with the amount of sex Josh and I have been having, I couldnโt risk anything happening. I tell myself itโs this and not that Iโm slowly unraveling as the hearing gets closer.
Iโm walking up and down the aisles, not even sure what Iโm doing. I smell a package of strawberries and set it back down. I pick up a pear and squeeze it gently. I sample a cube of cheddar speared with a toothpick.
I select a bag of organic coffee that is way too expensive and carry it like a baby as I continue down the aisle. And then I see cake and brownie and muffin mixes. I exchange the bag of coffee for a chocolate cake mix.
Iโm surprising Josh with a fun dinner at this hibachi place he told me his parents took him to for his birthday last year. Iโm trying to do something special to preemptively make up for missing his birthday next week. Of course, I havenโt told him Iโll be gone, because I havenโt told him about the hearing yet. Iโve been telling myself for weeks,ย Tomorrow. Iโll tell him tomorrow. But then tomorrow never comes.
I take my phone out. It barely rings before my mom picks up.
โHello?โ she answers, sounding alarmed. I canโt remember the last time I called her instead of texting. โEden, you there?โ
โHi. Yeah. Are you busy?โ
โNo, not at all,โ she says, though I can hear phones ringing in the background at her work. โWhatโs going on?โ
โNothing, I just had the afternoon off and Iโm in the grocery store.โ โOkay . . .โ
โIโm trying to get stuff to make a cake. For Joshโs birthday,โ I add. โAnd I thought maybe youโd have some ideas. I want to do sort of like a peanut butter chocolate flavor.โ
โThat sounds nice,โ she says. โSo, things are going well with him? With Josh,โ she inserts, making a point to say his name.
โYeah,โ I tell her. โItโs good. Things are good.โ โGood.โ
Thereโs a painfully awkward pause.
โUm, so I have this chocolate cake mix, but I donโt see any kind of peanut butter type frosting. I donโt know, I just remember you always made different flavored frostings for our birthday cakes when we were kids.โ
She laughs. โWatermelon vanilla. That was your ninth birthday,โ she says.
โRight. I remember. That was a good one.โ
โLet me see.โ I can hear her typing on her work computer. And as I wait, listening to her breathing into the phone, sort of humming to herself as she scrolls, I wish she were with me right now. โOh, here we go. I think I found something. Yes, this is an easy frosting recipe. All you need is peanut butter, whipped topping, chocolate syrup, and mini peanut butter cupsโall of which you should really have stocked in your kitchen anyway, as a college student.โ
It takes me a second to realize she actually made a joke. โOh.โ I laugh. โI thought you were serious for a minute there.โ
โI am serious! You should have lots of junk food around for all your late- night studying.โ
โOkay, Iโll get right on that.โ
โIโll email you the recipe,โ she says, and I can hear the smile in her voice. โOr, I could try to text it.โ
โEmailโs fine. I can get it on my phone either way.โ โSending now.โ I hear her typing again.
โThanks, Iโll let you know how it turns out.โ โWell, let me know if you need help.โ โOkay.โ
โSee you next week. And, Eden?โ she adds. โYouโve got this.โ
Iโm not sure if sheโs talking about the cake or the hearing, and I donโt know that I agree with either, but I tell her, โThanks, Mom.โ
A minute after I hang up, I get a notification from my bank that my mom has sent me thirty dollars with the note:ย For the birthday cake fund!
Since Iโve been away, sheโs been surprising me with these small gestures that tell me she really does care that Iโm doing all right here.
I decided to buy everythingโmixing bowls, a baking pan, a whisk, a spatula, measuring cupsโbecause I correctly assumed we didnโt have any of those things at the apartment.
It feels good to not have to be thinking about anything but whisking the eggs and water and oil into the powdery chocolate mix. To be doing something for someone else.
Parker gets home just as Iโm putting the cake in the oven.
โWhoa, whatโs happening in here?โ she asks, stopping at the kitchen island to run her finger along the inside of the bowl. โI honestly didnโt even
know if that thing worked.โ โWhat, the oven?โ
She nods and licks the cake batter off her finger, murmuring, โYum.โ โIโm making a birthday cake for Josh.โ
โAww, roomie.โ She gives me these big doe eyes. โThatโs really freaking sweet.โ
โYouโre still coming tonight, right?โ I ask her for the twentieth time.
She hesitates. โActually, I was thinking about staying in because this week has kicked my ass, but okay. You convinced me with this damn cake. What time should I be there?โ
โEight. Sharp. No, seven forty-five. You and Dominic are bringing the balloons with you so he doesnโt suspect anything.โ
โSo, what youโre saying is I really never had a choice in the matter, did I?โ
I smile, shake my head. โNope.โ
โFine, you master manipulator you,โ she says, and drags her bag behind her as she heads to her bedroom. โGrabbing a nap. Wake me at seven fifteen.โ
โOkay,โ I call after her.
Iโve never had a friend like Parker. But then, I havenโt really had many different kinds of friends at all. I like her, though. Sheโs not very touchy- feely with emotions or overly polite or warm, but somehow it feels good. She doesnโt seem to mind that Josh is here all the time or that I spend half my time there. Sheโs comfortable with who she is, and for some reason that makes me feel comfortable too. Like, neither of us has to pretend to be anything other than who we are. Although we have created an alter ego for takeout by combining our names โKim McCroreyโ and โEden Parker.โ We laughed way too hard about it the other night when a delivery guy buzzed up to our apartment and said that he had an order for a Kimberly.
I go to pull up the recipe for the frosting and see that I have a text from my mom:
Hi Eden, Mom here. Remember that you need to let the cake cool for at least
two hours before frosting it. Let it sit out
at room temperature for 30 mins and then you can put it in the fridge for the rest of the time. Love, Mom
If this wasnโt so new for us, maybe Iโd poke at her, say something like,
you donโt have to use formal salutations in your texts. But I just write back:
OK, I will. Thx
I follow the directions, step by step, measuring out and mixing in the peanut butter, whipped topping, chocolate syrup, and mini peanut butter cups. I set it in the fridge to chill and sit down on the faded red couch while I wait for the cake to finish baking.
Twenty-three minutes still left on the oven timer. Twenty-three minutes to just sit and do nothing.
My brain jumps on the opportunity to terrorize me with doubts and questions I donโt have answers to. I pull up the emails from Lane that Iโve been avoiding looking at over the past month. Sheโd offered to hop on the phone with me multiple times to talk through the hearing process. And itโs only right now, at five thirty on the last Friday before everything begins Monday morning, when sheโs sure to be out of the office, that I finally feel the urgent need to talk to her. Todayโs email from Lane:
Happy Friday, Eden:
Just a reminder that weโre touring the courthouse/courtroom at 8AM Monday. Try to spend some time this weekend reviewing the police report and the statement you gave Det. Dodgson so itโs all fresh in your mind. I know DA Silverman sent over a hard copy, but attached youโll find a pdf for your convenience.
Make sure you dress in something comfy and natural (modest, for lack of a better word). Think business casual. Let me know if you have any questions.
See you soon, Lane
I wonder if she sent Mandy and Gennifer the same thing. There have been so many times Iโve wondered if the lawyers would really know if we talked, wondered if we could get around the rules. Because on some very deep level, I wanted to know what he did to them, and I wanted them to know what he did to me. Not the details, but more theย howย of it. Iโm not sure whyโI guess because Iโm still not sure even, all these years later, how it happened to me.
But I resist.
Instead, I search the term business casual and see a lot of blazers over brightly colored tops. Iโm thinking anything bright is not the way to go. And I do not own a single blazer.
I finally text Amanda back now. I think about apologizing for taking so long. Trying to come up with an excuse for why itโs taken me a month to get back to her, but she probably doesnโt care about that; she just wants my answer, so I give it to her.
Yes. Iโll be coming back.
I immediately see the three dots beside her name, dancing like excited atoms. I wait for a response. It doesnโt come.
The oven timer goes off. I toss my phone on the couch and run over, opening the oven door and reaching in, forgetting the brand-new set of oven mitts Iโd lain out on the counter.
โShit!โ I hiss. โFuck fuck fuck fuck fuck,โ I whisper as I turn the faucet on and run my hand under the cold water. I look back at the cake sitting there, the oven door wide open like a mouth, and then I watch as two red lines bloom across the palm of my left hand, a bite mark from some kind of rabid animal.
JOSH
She knocks on my door at exactly seven forty-five. I open it, ready, but not prepared for how she looks. โOh wow.โ
She laughs. โOh wow to you too.โ
โSorry, but you look . . .โ She glances down at herself. Sheโs wearing a dressโthe only time Iโd ever seen her in a dress before was the first time she ever came to my house. It was supposed to be our first date, except she didnโt want to go anywhere. โYou look really . . .โ
โReally?โ
โReally amazing.โ
โYouย look really amazing,โ she says, and pulls me close to her for a kiss. โYou ready?โ
She leads the way down the stairs and to her car. โWeโre driving?โ
โItโs not too far, but . . .โ She lifts her heel in this adorable way that makes her look like sheโs about to dance. โNot in these shoes.โ
โAre you sure this isnโt fancy?โ
โOh my God, Iโm not proposing, Josh!โ She laughs as she unlocks the doors.
I get in and buckle up. โI feel underdressed.โ โYouโre not, Iโm just overdressed.โ
โHmm, well . . . to me, youโre always overdressed.โ
โWhat do you mean?โ She side-eyes me as she pulls away from the curb. โI never dress up.โ
โNo,โ I tell her, reaching over to touch her bare knee. โI mean, overdressed as in youโre always wearing too much.โ
She gasps, pretending to be scandalized. โWell, I never!โ She lets her hand float to her heart, and I notice itโs wrapped in a bandage. โGet your
mind out of the gutter, Miller.โ She laughs. โOr at least have the decency to wait until Iโve proposed.โ
โOkay, mind officially out of the gutter.โ I take her hand and try to see around the bandage. โWhat the hell happened to your hand?โ
โOh, nothing,โ she says, shaking her head. โJust had a little kitchen accident.โ
โDid you cut yourself?โ
โNo, itโs like a tiny burn. Itโs fine.โ
โAre you sure? That doesnโt look tiny.โ
โYes, Iโm sure. Iโm tough, you know. I can take a little burn.โ
โI know youโre tough.โ I bring her hand to my lips and kiss the outside of the bandage, kind of shocked at how upset I feel to know she got hurt in any way. โBut still.โ
She takes her hand back and touches my face as she glances over at me. โYou worry too much.โ
โGet used to it,โ I tell her. โThatโs my whole shtick.โ
She smiles but doesnโt say anything. And Iโm watching her so closely, I donโt even realize the car has stopped until she turns to look at me and says, โWeโre here.โ
โHere?โ I look out my window. โWait, weโre going here? The Flaming Bowl. I love this place.โ
โI know,โ she says with a tiny giggle. โThatโs why I brought you.โ
We walk in a few minutes before eight. Eden gives the host her name, and weโre directed to the bar area to wait until our tableโs ready. I reach for Edenโs hand, but she tenses up and gently pulls away. โShit, sorry. I forgot.โ โItโs okay,โ she says softly, and moves to the other side of me, offering
her right hand instead. โIโm not going to break.โ
I see Eden look behind me and grin, but before I can ask why, I hear two distinct voices, one in each ear, say in a whisper, โSurprise!โ
I jump and spin around. Dominic and Parker are yelping and shouting, โOh my God, your face!โ
โDid you see it?โ Parker exclaims, pulling Eden in for a hug as she hands off a bunch of balloons, strings tied together, floating over our heads.
โWhat . . . what is this?โ I ask.
โItโs your surprise birthday party!โ Eden shouts, throwing her arms around me.
โMy birthday isnโt until next week.โ
โI know, thatโs the surprise,โ she says, laughing. โAre you really surprised?โ
โYes!โ I am definitely surprised.
โThank God youโre finally here. Someone already stopped me to ask where the bathroom was,โ Parker says, taking a sip from her tiny ceramic cup of sake.
โWhy would someone ask you where the bathroom was?โ Eden asks. โWell, because Iโm Asian I must work here.โ
โOh my God, what did you say?โ
Dominic starts laughing, and so do I. โWhat am I missing?โ Eden asks.
โThis happens a lot, youโll see. So my go-to response is to tell them in Koreanย I donโt fucking work here, asshole. They walk away real fast.โ
โThatโs brilliant!โ Eden claps and laughs with her whole body.
I look up at Dominic, smiling as heโs watching me watching Eden. โWhat?โ I ask him, moving closer to stand next to him.
He shakes his head and passes me a Coke with lime, which heโs already ordered for me from the bar. โItโs just good to see you happy, thatโs all.โ He raises his glass. โHappy birthday, man.โ
โThanks.โ
All through dinner, we talk and laugh and Eden makes sure she keeps telling everyone itโs my birthday. And the chef keeps calling me โthe birthday boyโ even while heโs performing all the theatrics of the meal, balancing and chopping and tossing ingredients and setting the whole grill on fire. I would normally feel weird about the special attentionโI never used to let my parents tell restaurants it was my birthday when I was younger for fear theyโd have the whole staff come out and sing โHappy Birthday.โ And thatโs exactly what happens. Parker takes a video. I would be embarrassed, with the whole restaurant clapping for me, but I can tell itโs making Eden so happy. And then she kisses me right there in front of everyoneโ really kisses meโand they all erupt in raucous cheers.
I lean in close and say, โI love you.โ
She rests her head on my shoulder for just a moment and says quickly, quietly, โYou too.โ
After the performance art that is hibachi, weโre left to finish eating. Eden says, โSave room for dessert, everybody.โ
Parker sets her chopsticks down and says, โOh yeah. I got a little sneak peek, and weโre definitely gonna want to save room.โ
We all pile into Edenโs car, with our to-go containers and the balloons filling the back seat.
โThank you,โ I tell them again. โThis was a really fun birthday surprise.โ Dominic says, โIt was all your girlfriend.โ
My girlfriend, I repeat in my head, I love the way that sounds. โAnd . . . ,โ Eden adds. โThereโs still one more thing.โ
โMore?โ I ask.
โYes, youโre not the only one who can plan multipart dates.โ
As we arrive home, Eden instructs Dominic and Parker to escort me to the roof. โIโll be up in a minute,โ she says.
While we wait up on the roof, Parker clears her throat and announces, โSo, weโve been conferring tonight, and we just want you to know that we think you really found a good one.โ
โI know I had my share of doubts earlier,โ Dominic admits, โbut you clearly make each other deliriously happy, so thereโs no arguing with that.โ
โNot that you need our blessing or anything,โ Parker adds. โJust thought weโd give you a little unsolicited feedback.โ
Before I can say anything, Eden is backing through the door of the roof, and as she turns around and lets the door fall closed behind her, I see sheโs carrying a cake with candles lit all over it. They start singing to me for the second time tonight, and as she sets the cake down on the wicker table, I see that there are tiny peanut butter cups mixed into the frosting.
โOh my God, you didnโt,โ I say. โPeanut butter cups?โ
โMake a wish,โ she answers, squeezing in next to me on the love seat, draping her arm around my shoulder.
I look over at her and think,ย I have nothing left to wish for. But I donโt say that. I lean forward and blow out the candles anyway. She kisses me on the cheek, then stands up to get a bag from the corner and pulls out plates and utensilsโnot paperโthat she mustโve brought up here earlier.
โYou really planned this all out, didnโt you?โ I ask her.
She shrugs, but she canโt hide her smile as she plucks the candles out of the cake and sets them on a napkin. โOkay, since itโs your birthday, you have to make the first cut, and then whoeverโs birthday comes next has to take the knife out.โ
โIโve never heard of that,โ Dominic says.
Parker shakes her head. โMe neither.โ
โReally?โ Eden asks. โWe always did that in my family.โ
โI like that tradition,โ I tell her. I try to position the knife to make a decent-size slice.
โBigger,โ Parker shouts. โOkay, howโs this?โ
โPerfect,โ Eden says. โSo, whoโs birthday is next?โ Dominic raises his hand and says, โJuly.โ
โApril,โ Parker adds.
โGuess itโs me, then. November,โ Eden explains, placing her hand over mine on the handle of the knife.
She passes around the plates of cake and distributes the forks, and I canโt help thinking that this is the best birthday Iโve ever had. She watches me as I take a bite. โDo you like it?โ she asks.
โItโs delicious.โ I take another bite, and now she does too. โBut I thought you were anti peanut butter and chocolate?โ
โYou might have converted me.โ
โJosh,โ Parker says, โyou know Eden made this cake, right?โ โWait,ย youย made this?โ
โWell, not from scratch, but yeah.โ
โOh my God, it tastes like itโs from a real bakery.โ
She takes another bite. โOkay, it is pretty good. For chocolate peanut butter.โ
When we get inside my room, Eden sets her purse on my dresser and slides her shoes off, peels her sweater down her arms and hangs it on the back of my chair. I love that she seems comfortable here. If it werenโt so soon, Iโd ask her to move in with me.
โThank you for tonight.โ I wrap my arms around her waist from behind. โYouโre so thoughtful, you know that?โ I kiss her hair, her neck. โSo sweet.โ
โReally?โ She spins around to face me. โThoughtfulย andย sweet? No oneโs said that to me in a very long time.โ
โWell, you are.โ
โNo, you are,โ she says, touching the side of my face with her non- bandaged hand.
โYouโre physically incapable of taking a compliment, arenโt you?โ
She looks up and smiles in this way that makes me feel almost lightheaded as she brings her arms up around my shoulders. My hands find her hips automatically, and we sort of clumsily sway from side to side a little as we pull each other closer.
โWhat, are we dancing or something?โ she asks. โWhy not?โ I ask back, rocking her more intentionally. โThereโs no music,โ she points out.
โWell, thereโs music playing in my head,โ I joke, committing to this cheesy giddiness welling up inside my chest.
She throws her head back in laughter. โOh my God, did you really just say that?โ She giggles, her whole face lighting up as she moves in to kiss me. โYou giant nerd.โ
I take her hand from the spot where itโs resting on my neck, raise it in the air, and awkwardly twirl her in a slow circle. As I pull her back in, she pushes up against me, standing on her toes to kiss me again, not laughing this time.
โLook at me,โ she says, holding my chin. โI love everything about you.โ
I like to think Iโm so level all the time, but she can come out of nowhere sometimes, like right now, and say something so wonderful and dizzying it makes me come undone completely. She pulls my shirt off over my head, her mouth on my skin, and I move my hands all over her dress, testing from the top and bottom, trying to figure out which way it comes off. โHow do youโI donโt see . . . ?โ
โZipper.โ She laughs and turns around so I can unzip her dress. โBut wait, thereโs a little hook at the top that you have to undo first.โ
โI see it.โ Carefully, I unlatch the delicate little eye hook and slowly unzip the dress. I trace the curve of her back as the two sides separate. She reaches up to pull her hair out of its clip, and as she runs her fingers through it to shake it out, I can smell her shampoo or whatever it is that never fails to make me want her even more than I always already do.
She moves on top of me as we climb into bed together, her hair falling over my bare skin as she kisses my chest, my arms, my stomach. I donโt know how she can both relax me and turn me on at the same timeโ something I never knew I was missing out on before her. I can feel her breath as she plants tiny kisses up the center of my body, feel her mouth smiling when she reaches my lips. Then she leans on her elbow, shifting to
the side of me, her hands so warm on my waist as she looks down. โYou know I really love you, right?โ
โI know,โ I tell her, letting my finger trace the shape of her lips. โI really love you too.โ
She lays her head against my chest and inhales deeply, arranging herself in my arms. โCan we just lie here for a minute?โ she whispers.
โWe can just lie here all night.โ
She raises her head. โYeah?โ she asks.
โIโm actually really tired,โ I admit. โI mean, donโt get me wrong, I could definitely rally.โ
She releases a short burst of air against my neck, a silent laugh, as she lays her head back down. โI could too,โ she says, as she stretches out alongside my body, draping her leg over mine. โBut this feels nice,โ she whispers.
โIt does,โ I agree, my arm finding a perfect resting spot along the small of her back.
This would be the time to tell her about my parents coming to visit. I set my other hand on top of hers on my chest, feeling the gauzy bandage underneath. โYou burned your hand making my cake, didnโt you?โ
โAmateur mistake,โ she says. โForgot the oven mitts.โ
I kiss the palm of her hand. โDid you put something on it, like aloe or something?โ
She nods. โYes, donโt worry.โ
I wake up to a strange rattling sound I canโt place. I open my eyes and roll over in bed. It takes me a second to remember weโre in my room and not hers. Sheโs not in bed. I squint as I look across the room.
Itโs too dark to see much more than Edenโs silhouette from the moonlight coming in from the window. Iโm about to tell her how beautiful she looks, standing there with her back to me.
But then I realize what the noise was.
Pills. I hear the plastic scrape of the lid being twisted back onto the bottle. And I see her arm reach down to stick it back in her purse. She brings her cupped hand to her mouth and picks up an old water bottle on my dresser, tips it to her lips.
When she turns around, I close my eyes. The bed creaks as she climbs in next to me again. Her body feels cold now as she backs up against me and
pulls my arm around her stomach. I feel her inhale deeply and then sigh. โHey. You okay?โ I ask her.
โMm-hmm,โ she hums.
I kiss the back of her neck and pull her closer. โI know itโs not my business, but . . . ,โ I start, and she twists around to face me. โWhat are you taking?โ I whisper.
โOh,โ she breathes. โItโs nothing.โ
โWell, Iโve seen you do that a few times now, when you think Iโm sleeping.โ I push her hair back behind her ear, try to be gentle. โI know itโs none of my business,โ I repeat. โBut are you okay?โ
โItโs just to help me sleep.โ
โYouโre having trouble sleeping again?โ โNot again,โ she corrects me. โStill.โ
How did I not know that?ย โOh. Iโm sorry,โ I whisper. โWhat can I do?โ She curls up to me and says, โThis.โ
I tighten my arms around her and decide not to mention the other pills I saw in her room.
โItโs not โnone of your business,โ Josh,โ she says. โI was going to tell you; I just didnโt want you to worry.โ
โThanks for telling me now. It actually makes me worry a little less just knowing.โ
โReally?โ she asks, her voice sounding small in the silence of the night. I nod.
โThereโs something else I need to tell you.โ
โAll right?โ I answer, trying to prepare myself to act surprised about the other pills.
โOne of the reasons I wanted to have your birthday early,โ she begins, โis because I have to be away next week.โ
And now sheโs surprised me for a second time tonight. โWait, where?
Why?โ
โThereโs a hearing. Iโll have to be back home for a couple of days at least. The DA said I should plan for the whole week, just in case.โ
โWhat?โ I say too loudly. โBut they canโt just expect you to drop everything at the last minute.โ
โYeah,โ she whispers, looking down as she runs her fingers along my collarbone, neck, jaw. โIโve known about it for a few months.โ
I donโt know what to say. I donโt know why she wouldnโt have told me. Thatโs not the important thing right now, though, so I try to push that out of my head. โIโm coming with you, obviously.โ
โNo.โ She stops touching my face and finally meets my eyes. โItโs really not a huge deal.โ
โItย isย a huge deal.โ I sit up now. โCan I just ask, why didnโt you tell me before now?โ
She sits up too and pulls the sheet close to her body. โDonโt be madโโ โNo, Iโm not mad,โ I interrupt. โIโm not mad at you at all; Iโm just . . .โ I
stop myself from saying โworriedโ and settle on โconfused.โ
โThings have been so wonderful,โ she says, rubbing her head like it hurts.
โYeah,โ I agree. โThey have. They are.โ
โWell, I didnโt want to ruin it by talking about all this fucked-up shit.โ โOkay, but we canโt just ignore it, either.โ
โYou think I donโt know that?โ she snaps at me.
I shake my head. โNo, of course not. Thatโs not what I meant.โ She sighs. โI know, sorry.โ
โItโs okay.โ
โJesus Christ. See?โ she says, her voice shaking. โThis is why. This is exactly why I didnโt want to let this get in.โ She waves her hand through the air, this tiny space between us. โIt ruins everything.โ
โHey, listen to me,โ I tell her, reaching for her hand. โEverythingโs fine, okay?โ
She starts to shake her head.
โWith us, I mean. Everythingโs fine with us. Nothing can ruin this.โ What I donโt say is thatย itย is already in. Itโs always been there. โLet me come with you, though.โ
โNo.โ
โEdenโโ
โI wonโt be able to do it if youโre there, Josh.โ
I canโt imagine what my face is doing right now, but I try my best to wipe it clean of any reaction.
โNo, what I mean is, I donโt want you to hear the details. I honestly donโt want anyone to hear any of this.โ She pauses and looks at me, waiting, debating. โHeโs going to be there. You really want to be in the same room with him?โ she asks, but doesnโt wait for an answer. โI donโt.โ
โSo, youโre just gonna do it alone?โ โYes.โ
โWhat about your mom? Iโm sure sheโd want toโโ
She shakes her head. โSheโs testifying too, so she canโt be there for mine; I canโt be there for hers. And I wouldnโt want her to be there anyway. The only way Iโm going to be able to do this is by myself.โ She stares at me. โWhat? Why are you looking at me like that?โ
โNoโnothing. Iโm just thinking. Just trying to understand.โ Why would she rather do this alone when Iโm offering to be there with her? I have so many questions, I barely know where to start. โBut I thought your mom didnโt know anything about what happened. She didnโt, right?โ I ask, because that would be incredibly fucked up if she did. But what I say is, โWhat is she going to testify about if she didnโt know?โ
โJosh,โ she moans, โpuh-lease, please, I donโt want toโโ
โI just want to help, Eden.โ I touch her face, kiss her forehead before she can back away. โI just want to know whatโs going on.โ
She rolls onto her back and looks up at the ceiling. โMy mom didnโt know. But she saw something. Something that she thought was something else.โ
โWhat does that mean?โ I ask. โWhat did she see?โ
โThe next morning, she saw blood on my nightgown and legs, the sheets.โ
Blood. The word echoes in my head. My heart starts racingโ no, it races, then stops abruptly, stuttering.
Eden clears her throat and continues, quieter. โShe assumed I just got my period. I guess. I mean, why would she think anything else?โ she adds, more to herself. โAnd that morning, I kind of tried to tell herโmy brother tooโbut I didnโt actually tell them. IโI wasnโt clear. I wanted them to guess. I didnโt want to have to say it. I didnโt know how to say it. So, I donโt know. I think they want to know about that morning from my mom and Caelinโs perspectives.โ
These are the details. Nightgown. Legs. Sheets. Blood. This is why she doesnโt want me there.
โSee?โ she asks. โYou donโt feel any better knowing that, do you?โ โThatโs notโthat doesnโt matter, I . . .โ I try to find the right thing to say,
but I canโt.
โIโm getting tired,โ she says, turning to press her back against me, pulling my arm around her again, ending the conversation. She brings my hand to her mouth and kisses my fingertips softly. โThank you for offering, though, really.โ
I try my best to relax, but my whole body is tense now. I hold her while she falls asleep and I try not to think about her blood or nightgown or legs or sheets. Try not to think about her waiting for someone to see, to guess, what had happened. And finally, I try not to imagine what Iโd do if I ever found myself in a room with him again.
EDEN
It takes all my willpower to drag myself out of Joshโs bed the next morning. I pull my dress back on and gather my purse and sweater and shoes. Heโs lying on his stomach with his arms around his pillow. I sit on the edge of his bed, allowing myself this rare moment of quiet to admire him. I run my hand along his back and lean over to kiss his shoulder, but heโs so tired he doesnโt wake up.
Downstairs, Parker is in the kitchen, stretching, with her earbuds still in
โsheโs already been out for a run this morningโ drinking one of her healthy green smoothies, looking all glowy and vibrant, compared to me. Dull and exhausted in yesterdayโs makeup and messy hair, the zipper of my dress inching down my back with every move I make.
She pulls her earbuds out and laughs when she sees me. โHey, roomie,โ she says. โI see youโre embracing that stride of pride this morning.โ
โThe what?โ I mumble, setting my purse down on the counter and letting my shoes clatter to the floor.
โYou know, the trek of triumph, the sultry saunter, the booty-call boun
โโ
โAre you just making these up right now?โ I ask with a laugh.
โYou need to get your nose out of the so-called importantย lit-tra-ture,โ she says, in what I think is supposed to be a British accent. โPick up a magazine every once in a while, woman.โ
โFor your information,โ I tell her as I pour myself some water from the fridge. โWe had a very nice snuggle sesh last night.โ
โSnuggles, sure,โ she says, lunging forward into a stretch. โYou want a smoothie?โ
โUgh, gross. No. Iโll get some coffee at work.โ
โAh, yes. Coffee and no food, the breakfast of champions.โ
I open the cabinet and pull out a granola bar. โHappy?โ
She brings one arm across her chest and then the other, saying, โI guess.โ โDo you need to get in there?โ I ask, gesturing to the bathroom. โI have
to get ready.โ
โAll yours,โ she says as she starts to jog off toward her bedroom. โIโm about to hit the pool anyway.โ
โHey, Parker, um, can I . . . ?โ I start, not really knowing how to finish.
Turning around, hands poised near her head, about to put her earbuds back in, she looks at me. โWhat?โ
โItโs not a big deal or anything, but I wanted to tell you Iโm going to be gone for a few days next week. I just have to go home for something.โ
โOh.โ She lets her hands drop and takes a step toward me. โIs everything okay?โ
โYeah, yeah. Itโs justโโ I could tell her. Right now I could tell her the truth, but something stops me, like always. โEverythingโs fine, Iโm just letting you know.โ
โYou sure?โ
โYes.โ I nod and smile and start pulling back the wrapper of my granola bar. She watches me for a few seconds, until I take a bite and chew and swallow. โReally, thatโs all.โ
โOkay,โ she says slowly, then finally turns to go into her room.
I eat the rest of my granola bar and get into the shower. By the time I get out, Parkerโs gone and Iโve worked myself up into a panic just thinking about whatโs going to happen this week. My heart is racing and Iโm breathing heavy. I walk into the kitchen in a towel, dripping water everywhere, dumping the contents of my entire purse out onto the counter so I can find my pills. I take two. I donโt have time for a fucking anxiety attack right now.
I clock in at 12:02, and Captain Douchebag is standing there at the lockers, waiting to tell me that this is the third time Iโve been late and that I should consider this my verbal warning.
โSorry,โ I mumble.
โDonโt be sorry,โ he snaps at me. โJust get here on time. Itโs not that hard.โ
He walks away, and as Iโm putting my things in my locker, pulling out my apron to tie around my waist, I realize one of the cooks, Perry, has just
caught me rolling my eyes at our manager. But he just nods and laughs silently, thankfully understanding. I sort of shrug and smile in return.
Halfway through my shift, at four oโclock, thereโs a girl in line, a little older than me. Sheโs staring at me. When itโs her turn, she steps up to the counter and smiles in this strange way. Like I should know her, but I donโt.
โHi,โ she says hesitantly, eyes flashing down to read my name tag. โEden.โ
I smile back. โWhat can I get started for you?โ
โOh, um . . .โ She looks all around, confused, as if she suddenly found herself inside a coffeehouse by chance and wasnโt prepared to be asked this question. โCan I just order a . . . ? Oh, I donโt know, whatโs your favorite drink?โ
โMy favorite?โ I repeat. โHuh, nobodyโs ever asked me that. I guess you canโt go wrong with the pumpkin pie latte. Sometimes I add a little vanilla to it, which I love, butโโ
โThat sounds great,โ she says, her eyes fixed on me so intently I have to look away.
โGreat,โ I repeat. โFor here or to go?โ
โHere,โ she says, but then quickly adds, โNo, actually, to go. I think. Yes, to go.โ
โAll right, can I get a name?โ I ask, marker in hand, tip already pressed against the cup.
โItโs Gen,โ she says quietly. โWith a G.โ
My heart struggles to race, weighted down under the double dose of meds still working through my body. I look at her more closely now, the way sheโs been looking at me. Iโd searched for her online months ago. In my mind sheโs been existing as just a static image on the screen. I recognize her now, but itโs different seeing her in person. โYouโre Gennifer?โ I breathe. โGen,โ I correct.
She nods, smiles againโI realize she has a very pretty smile, the kind that can cover up all sorts of terrible things. โYou wouldnโt be able to take a quick break or anything, would you?โ
Perry covers the counter for me while I sit down across from her at a table in the corner.
โSorry,โ she begins. โI was just passing through on my way back for the hearing and I knew you worked here. Your brother mentioned itโI promise
I havenโt been cyber-stalking you or anything.โ She pauses and sort of laughs. โI can definitely see the family resemblance.โ
โOhโ is all I manage to say. I donโt know why I seem to have forgotten that my brother knows herโthey were friends, heโd told me that. They still are, it seems.
โI guess I just didnโt want the first time we met to be in a courthouse. I donโt know, is that weird?โ she asks, taking a sip of her latte. โThis is really good, by the way.โ
โNo, itโs not weird,โ I tell her.
โI know weโre not supposed to talk, but . . .โ She looks through the window, her smile fading. โDo you ever wonder why? Why he would do thisโโ She starts but stops. โLike, thatโs the part Iโm stuck on. I even tried to ask him. The next day. I went home that night and told my roommate what happened, and she took me to the hospital. Got the rape kit done and it was so horrible, but I didnโt want to report it right then because I thought for sure there had to be aย reason. Do you know what I mean?โ
โI . . . Yeah, I think so,โ I tell her, because even though I know we shouldnโt be doing this, talking, I desperately want to hear what she has to say.
She sits up a little straighter. โI wanted to believe that he somehow must not have realized or it was some kind of, like, mental break or . . . but it just turned out that Iโโ She stops abruptly, taking another sip of her latte. โI just didnโt know him. At all.โ
Itโs strange, this realization slithering through my brain, as I listen to her. I donโt think Iโve everย wonderedย why. Because deep down, in that place beyond logical thinking, I thought I knew. He did what he did becauseย Iย had done something to make it happen. I could never quite put my finger on what it was, whether it was just one thing or a combination of things. My head could disagree all day, tell me it wasnโt my fault, but my heart knew, always, it was me.
Until now, maybe.
โI really thought I didโI thought I knew him,โ she repeats. โI genuinely trusted him.โ
โMe too,โ I hear myself say.
She looks at me and tries to smile again, but it doesnโt fool me this time. โSorry Iโm dumping this on you.โ
โItโs okay,โ I tell her. โI mean, I get it.โ
โYeah,โ she says softly. โI thought you might.โ
I can only nod because there are too many things I want to say, but none of them are things Iโm allowed to tell her.
โI know you have to get back to work; I hope I havenโt ruined your whole day or made you feelโโ
โNo, you didnโt. Iโm glad we got to meet. Like this, instead.โ
โI guess I just wanted to tell you face-to-face that Iโm really . . .โ She pauses, tracing a circle around her cup as she finds whatever word it is sheโs looking for. โThankful. To not have to be doing this all by myself.โ
โI am too,โ I tell her. โIf it werenโt for you and Amanda, I couldnโt have .
. .โ I shake my headโI canโt even finish the sentence.
โI have a feeling you could have,โ she tells me, as she reaches across the table, sliding her latte receipt toward me, her number already written on it. โFor when this is all over, if you want?โ
As I watch her leave and get in her car and drive away, I realize there is a version of this where Gen never says anything. She lets it go and just keeps wondering why. Where Amanda stays scared and angry and hurt and continues to blame me for everything. Itโs the version where I lose myself forever and never find my way back. And for the first time, I think I understandโin my headย andย my heartโwhy weโre really doing this.
For us.
Weโre doing this for us. Somehow that makes this all so much more real, more frightening.
JOSH
Iโm sitting in bed reading, when I hear Dominic call from the other room, โYour girlfriendโs here!โ I look at my phone; itโs not even five oโclock.
She walks into my room and closes the door behind her, still wearing her apron.
โWhat, did Captain Douchebag let you leave early?โ I ask.
She shakes her head and drops her bag on the floor like it was too heavy to hold on to for another second. Thereโs this faraway look in her eyes as she slips out of her shoes and walks toward me. I set my textbooks down on the nightstand to make space for her, because sheโs crawling into my lap without a word, curling up against me.
โHey, you okay?โ I can smell the coffee in her hair as I place my arms around herโshe didnโt even stop by her apartment before coming up here. My mind immediately goes to her asshole manager, to that cook whoโs always leering at her. โEden, did something happen?โ
โNo,โ she whispers. โI just missed you.โ โAre you sure?โ
โYeah,โ she mumbles against my neck.
โYou would tell me if one of those guys from the cafรฉ messed with you, right?โ
She finally looks up at me, searches my face, clearly has no idea what Iโm talking about. โWhat do you mean, what guys?โ
โNo, never mind,โ I tell her, shaking my head. โNothing.โ
We spend the rest of the weekend in bed, half the time dozing, the other half exploring each other in the daylight for a change. More sleeping, making love, feeding each other leftover cake. Heaven.
Sunday afternoon turns into Sunday night and I know I have to let her go, but I keep wanting just a few more minutes with her. She lets me redress her burn, and I watch her pack her bag. At the car, I try one more time to convince her to let me come.
โI heard you, okay?โ I say. โI donโt need to be there in the courtroom if that isnโt going to help, but at least let me be there before and after.โ
โYouย areย here with me before.โ She takes my hands. โAnd youโll be here waiting for me after, right?โ
I nod. โIโll be here.โ
โThank you, thatโs what I need from you,โ she says, and I try to believe her.
We kiss goodbye, and my heart aches to think of not seeing her for possibly a whole week. Itโs kind of scary how attached I am after only a month of being together again.
โYouโre allowed to change your mind, okay?โ I tell her as I bend down and lean into the car window. โIf you decide you want me there, Iโm there.โ
She smiles and says, โOkay,โ even though I have a feeling she wonโt change her mind.
I kiss her once more, squeeze her hand, tell her โI love youโ one last time.
And then I stand there on the sidewalk, that same helpless feeling I had before burrowing deeper into my stomach, while I watch as the car shrinks smaller and smaller in the distance.
EDEN
Mom drives me and Caelin to the courthouse in the morning for the walk- through. Lane meets us on the other side of the security checkpoint and escorts us to the courtroom weโll be in. Thereโs less wood than I expected from all the TV courtrooms, less everythingโ the space is utilitarian, with no warmth or character or ornamentation of any kind. I can hear all three of us breathing, no one wanting to talk, so the room swallows our breath.
DA Silverman struts in a few minutes later, in her high heels and impeccable suit, which is decidedly not business casual. Behind her are Amanda and her mom, and Gen, looking younger today, somehow, than she had at the cafรฉ. Thereโs an older man with her who I assume must be her father.
The parents greet one another like theyโre at a funeral, small syllables, all hushed and subtle. Gen steps close to me, and for a second I get scared that sheโs going to hug me or something and possibly give away the fact that weโd met the other day. But thatโs not what she does; she pulls my brother in for a brief hug.
And he sounds like someone else as he says, โHey, Gen, Mandy, Mrs. A.โ But as Amanda and her mom nod and smile politely back at Caelin, I realize itโs that he actually sounds like himselfโhis old self, the one I havenโt seen in months. Itโs strange to see him here, not just my brother but someone who isย somethingย to all these people too.
The three of usโme, Amanda, and Genโexchange our awkward hellos and look at one another like maybe weโre looking into some kind of distorted fun house mirror at ourselves. We take turns smiling at each other, then frowning and looking away.
โSo,โ DA Silverman says, her voice cutting through all this emotion taking up all the air. โWe just want to walk everyone through whatโs going
to happen this week, just to make sure weโre all on the same page, and if anyone has any questions, then we can address them now. We all know testimonies start tomorrow. And as you know, we all must remain separate. We have a private room down the hall where weโll have you wait until itโs your turn.โ
Genniferโs father, whose name I already forgot, says, โSo, thereโs no jury at this point, correct?โ
โThatโs right,โ Lane responds, her voice way too chipper. โA hearing is really not all that different from a trial. Think of this as a pre-trial, without a jury. That part comes later.โ
โBut heโll be here, in the courtroom, while the girls are on the stand?โ he asks.
I see Mrs. Armstrongโs jaw clench. I wonder if Genniferโs dad realizes that sheโs Kevinโs mom too. I wonder what she thinks now, every time she hears her sonโs name. It canโt be good.
โYes,โ DA Silverman says, and leads us up to the witness box, tells us to look out. โSo, Kevin will be sitting there with his attorney.โ She points at one of the tables in front of us. โIโll be over here on this side.โ
โAnd Iโll be sitting out here,โ Lane says, pointing to an area of seating. โOn your side, with the detectives who worked your cases and whoever else youโll have here for you. So, if you need somewhere to look at any time, just look at me.โ
I canโt stop staring at the table where Kevin will be sitting. โYou all right?โ my mom says quietly.
โThatโs really closeโ is all I say. What happened to all those big fancy sprawling TV courtrooms? This is tiny. Claustrofucking-phobic. Stuck in the 1980s. I want to raise my hand. I have a question:ย Why is that table so fucking close to the witness stand?ย I want to scream.ย Who fucking designed this place?
โSo, weโll start the process tomorrow,โ DA Silverman says with a self- assured nod. โJust remember to remain calm and be honest. If you donโt know something youโre asked, itโs okay to say you donโt know. Keep your phones close. If there are any changes to the schedule or order, Iโll let you know via text.โ
Mom takes me and Caelin for breakfast at IHOP afterward, the same one, off the highway, where Josh brought me that day last December, when he
came for me. This was where I told him about Kevin, about me, about all of it.
We pick at our food in mostly silence.
Iโm distracted by the fall decorations everywhereโpumpkins and ghosts and cornucopiasโthinking about the way time passes. It felt like it took so long to get to this point, but now itโs here and I barely feel ready at all. Wasnโt it just summer? Just spring? Just winter before that, when I was here last, in that booth right over there by the window, trusting Josh with my heart, soul, mind, everything.
In the car, Mom looks at both of us and says, โYou know that your father has never been good at talking about his feelings, but he doesnโt blame any of whatโs happening on either of you. You need to know that, both of you. Heโs just so angry still,โ she tries to explain.
โYeah, atย who?โ Caelin asks. โThatโs the real question.โ
โNot you,โ Mom says. And then she twists around to look at me in the back seat. โAnd not you, either.โ
I nod, sort of understandingโthat kind of anger, that kind of silenceโ too well.
I call Mara once we get back home. I was planning on joking with her about business casual.ย Like, what even is that?ย I could hear myself saying. Asking her if she has a blazer I could borrow, but when I hear her voice on the line, something changes.
โHey,โ I say. โYou busy in a few hours?โ
Instead, I ask her to meet me at our playground. The one where we used to play when we were kids and then where we used to hang out drinking and smoking and getting high with randos, all post-Josh and pre-Cameron.
Our giant wooden castleโour private magical realmโstill standing after all this time.
When I pull into the parking lot, sheโs there waiting for me, sitting on a tire swing thatโs shaped like a horse, swaying back and forth, sidesaddle. My headlights shine a spotlight on her. When I get out of the car, she runs and slams into me, full-body hug.
โOh my God, Iโve missed you,โ she whines. โIโm so happy to see you, Edy.โ
โI missed you too,โ I tell her, and I mean it, but things feel different somehow. Itโs only been a month since Iโve seen her, but so much has
changed for me.
We climb up to the highest tower and sit down, crossed-legged, opposite each other. She keeps making this awkward nervous half laugh I donโt know what to make of. โSo, Josh being good to you?โ she asks. โTreating you like a queen, I hope.โ
โHeโs being very good to me,โ I tell her, but I canโt seem to force a smile right now the way she is. โHe really wanted to come with me. Be here for the hearing. But I said no.โ
She finally nods, straight faced, and says, โWhy not?โ I shrug. โI donโt know.โ
Mara looks down at her hands. โEdy, can I ask you something?โ โSure.โ
โWhy didnโt you ever tell me?โ
I open my mouth to answer but change my mind. โYou know, I almost just said โI donโt knowโ again? Because for so long I really didnโt know. I guess saying โI donโt knowโ is easier to say than to try to list all the reasons.โ
โI want to know all the reasons,โ she says. โBecause I wouldโve believed you.โ
โThatโs probably the biggest one. You would have believed me, and if you knew, then I couldnโt pretend anymore and I wouldโve had to do something about it. And I couldnโt. Or at least, I didnโt think I could.โ
She nods but chews on the inside of her cheek like sheโs trying to not say something.
โAnd you were all I had. I didnโt want anything to change.โ โIt wouldnโt have,โ she argues.
โIt has, though. You feel it, donโt you? Things are just different now.โ
She looks down again. โYou never gave me the chance to be a good friend to you. As much as I love you, Iโm mad too, and I know that makes me a total bitch. Iโm mad because I wouldโve been there for you if Iโd known.โ
โI know.โ
โBut I understand, too,โ she adds. โWhoโs to say I wouldnโt have done the same thing?โ
I shrug, nod, say, โI guess.โ
We sit there for a moment, looking out on this small patch that once held so many things from our childhood, our high school indiscretions.
Somewhere in the distance a car horn honks, a muffled reprieve from the bittersweet reverie of this place.
โCan I ask you for a huge favor, Mara?โ โAnything.โ
โWill you come to the hearing?โ โOf course,โ she says, no hesitation. โReally?โ
โYes. What do I have to do?โ
โJust sit there,โ I tell her. โLet me look at you while Iโm testifying. Can you do that?โ
She nods.
โIโll have to go over everything that happened. The details. Like, probably everything that ever happened between me andโโ I cough, clear my throat. โMe and him. Me and Kevin,โ I finally say. โBut especially what happened that night, I guess. Itโs just that, heโs going to be there, and I donโt want to accidentally look at him and then freeze or break down or fly into a rage or something.โ
โWould it help if you told me now?โ she asks. โLike as practice?โ โMaybe.โ
I tell her about the Monopoly game earlier that night, how he flirted with me, even though I didnโt really understand that was what he was doing at the time. I tell her about how I woke up to him in my bedroom at 2:48 in the morningโI looked at my clock because it didnโt make sense, why heโd be in my room. How I thought at first, he must be playing some kind of joke. How he climbed on top of me and covered my mouth, pinned my arms down. How he was crushing me, hurting me, how he told me to shut up. He put his hand around my throat. He wasnโt laughing. He was serious. It wasnโt a joke.
Maraโs squeezing my hands so hard.
โThen what happened?โ
Mara stares at me and nods, her eyes wide, unblinking, from across the room now.
โHe pulled my underwear down my legs and yanked my nightgown up so hard it ripped,โ I say. โAnd then he shoved it into my mouth.โ
โWhy did he do that?โ DA Silverman asks.
Out of the corner of my eye, I see his lawyerโs white-haired head pop up, his hand rising in the air, but I keep my eyes on Mara. โSpeculation,โ he says.
โWhat happened then, with the nightgown in your mouth?โ she asks instead.
โI was trying to scream, but I couldnโt.โ โAnd what do you remember next?โ
โHe was kicking at my legs, trying to separate them. I got one of my arms free and I hit him, but he just held me down harder, tightened his hand around my throat. He kept telling me to stop, to hold still. I didnโt, though, and he was getting more and more angry.โ I clear my throat.
โWas he yelling?โ
โHe was whispering, but directly in my ear. His face was right next to mine, and he said, โfucking do it,โ and I remember that because I didnโt know what he wanted me to do.โ
โCan you tell us again how old you were then, on December twenty- ninth?โ
โI had just turned fourteen in November.โ
โAnd Kevin was a few weeks away from turning twenty years old?โ
I look her in the eye. Was that true? Was he that old then? I donโt know. But I donโt have a chance to answer because his lawyer does that hand-raise thing again, this time laughing. โYour Honor, relevance?โ
โHad you ever had sex before?โ she asks instead. โNo. I had never even kissed anyone.โ
โAgain.โ Hand. โRelevance?โ
She spins on her heel and looks directly at White Hair, practically spits the words โIโm trying to establish why, when theย twenty-year-old man told theย thirteen-year-old girl to โfucking do it,โ she didnโt know what that meant.โ
Now he stands. Takes off his tiny wire-framed glasses and shakes his head, even lets his mouth hang open for a moment as if he has no words to express how deeply he objects. โYour Honor . . .โ is all he says.
โWithdrawn,โ she says, and turns back to me. โAfter he said โfucking do it,โ what happened?โ
I lock eyes with Mara. โHe forced my legs apart. IโI was getting weaker. I couldnโt breathe.โ
โBecause of the nightgown in your mouth?โ
โYes, and because he was squeezing my throat tighter and tighter.โ โWhat do you remember happening next?โ
โHe . . . um . . .โ I close my eyes. I picture the wooden play-ground. Just me and Mara. The softness of the night all around us. Maraโs hand holding mine.
โDo you need a break?โ I open my eyes. โNo.โ
โWhat happened next?โ she repeats.
โHe raped me,โ I finally say, the word sounding too small and simple to convey its own meaning.
โOkay, and did he hurt you?โ โYes.โ
โDid he know he was hurting you?โ
โYour Honor.โ He raises his hand and stands up now. โAgain, speculation.โ
โIโll rephrase. Could you indicate to him in some way that he was hurting you?โ
โI was crying. I mean, I couldnโt speak or yell because he was still choking me, and I couldnโt move because he was holding me down, but I was crying, and I didnโt know until later, but I was bleeding. He knew he was hurting meโhe wanted to hurt me.โ
White Hair raises his hand again, almost bored now, not even bothering to look up from his folder. โMove to strike everything after the first sentence, โI was crying.โ Sheโd already answered the question.โ
I see Maraโs face turning red.
I want to look at the man so badly, want to make him look at me as he deletes my words from the record. But I keep my eyes on Mara, let her be angry for us both. I know for sure Iโve made the right decision now. I couldnโt have had Josh here listening to this. And I couldnโt do it alone, either.
โDo you know how long he was raping you?โ โFive minutes.โ
โHow do you know?โ
โI looked at the clock when I could move again. I remember thinking it felt like hours. I thought the clock had to be wrong.โ
โAnd what happened next?โ she asks. I think hard, trying to put the events in the right order, but my brain keeps skipping ahead to the end.
โWhatโs the next thing you remember?โ she rephrases, somehow reading my mind.
โHe let go of my throat and he ripped the nightgown out of my mouth and I started coughing and he kept telling me to shut up. He was moving my hair out of my eyesโit was stuck to my face because my face was wet from crying. He wanted me to look at him.โ
Hand raise.
โHeย said, โLook at me,โโ I correct myself. I was catching on nowโ emotions are not allowed here, feelings arenโt facts. โHe told me to listen, and he held my face so that I had to look into his eyes.โ
โHe told you to listenโwhat did he say?โ โHe said, โNo one will ever believe you.โโ โThen what? Did he leave?โ
โNo. He sat up but was still kneeling between my legs, staring at meโat my body. I tried to cover myself, but he moved my hands away. He made me promise that I wasnโt going to tell anyone.โ
โAnd did you promise?โ โYes.โ
โWhy?โ
โHe said that if I told anyone, he would kill me. He said, โI swear to God, Iโll fucking kill you,โ and given what had just happened, I believed him.โ
โSo did he leave then?โ
โNo.โ I hear my voice shaking, I feel my throat caving in, just like it had that night.
โWhat happened next?โ
I canโt even look at MaraโIโd left this part out at the wooden playground. I cough, try to clear my throat. โHe, um . . . he kissed me. And then he got up, put his underwear back on, and told me to go back to sleep.โ
โAnd then he left?โ โYes.โ
โThank you. Nothing further.โ
I let myself exhale. I let myself think maybe I was doing okay. But then his lawyer stands up, buttons his jacket, and smiles at me, just like Kevin had smiled at me that night, in between shoving his tongue in my mouth and putting his boxers onโI had forgotten to say that.ย He kissed me, smiled at me, and then he got up. Too late.
โGood afternoon, Eden,โ he begins, pretending to be a human being. โIโll keep this brief; I just have a few questions.
โHow long have you known Kevin?โ
โSince I was like seven or eight. That was when my brother became friends with him.โ
โAnd didnโt you have a crush on him?โ โWhat?โ
โA crush.โ He shrugs. โYou know, a playful infatuation.โ โMaybe when I was younger, but that doesnโt meanโโ โJust yes or no.โ
The thing about a crush is that you have them because, on some level, itโs unattainable, and if youโre being honest with yourself, you wouldnโt really want it anyway even if you could have it. But all thereโs room to say here is โYes.โ
โAnd that night, you said you wanted to play a game with Kevin.
Monopoly, right?โ
I didnโt say I wanted to play a game with himโit was his idea. When had I said that? Did I say that today? I canโt remember. But wait, why is this even important?
โEden, can you answer the question?โ โWe played Monopoly.โ
โThe board game?โ
Of course the fucking board game. I look at the DA, are these serious questions? I thought weโd be sticking to what I said in the police report.
โEden?โ
โYes, the board game Monopoly.โ
โAnd that night when you were playing, didnโt you tell Kevin that you wanted a boyfriend?โ
โI didnโt say that.โ
โBut you did ask if Kevin had a girlfriend, right?โ I shake my head. Where is this coming from?
โI donโtโโ I close my eyes, try to remember. โNo. No, we were talking about my brother having a girlfriend. He was on the phone with her and thatโs why it was just me and Kevin. He was the one who got the game out,โ I add, remembering more clearly now. โMonopoly.โ
โRight, and then you asked if Kevin had a girlfriend.โ โMaybe Iโโ
โYes or no.โ โY-yes.โ
โYou said earlier that you were fourteen at the time?โ โYes.โ
โAnd did you know how old Kevin was at the time?โ
โHe was almost twenty,โ I say, repeating what the DA had said. โSo, he was nineteen, right?โ
โRight.โ
โBut did you know at the time how old he was? At the time?โ
Except now Iโm doubting myself. Did I think he was eighteen, nineteen, twenty? โI mean, I really donโt know if I knew exactly.โ
DA Silverman stands up and sighs. โIs this going anywhere?โ โDid he know how old you were at the time?โ
She sits down and then shoots right back up. โSpeculation, Your Honor.โ โDid you have a conversation about how old you were?โ
โWell, he knew I was in ninth grade.โ
โYes or noโdid you have a conversation about age?โ โNo.โ
And so it continues for what feels like hours. Pointless questions mixed in with important ones, always withย rightย orย didnโt youย tacked on to the end. Dissecting all of my sentences into smaller and smaller fragments until they barely make sense anymore.
โOne last question, Eden. Did you ever say no?โ โSay no?โ
โDid you ever verbally say no at any point that night?โ
โI couldnโt speak. He covered my mouth immediately, and then heโโ โDid you say no?โ
โI fought him, I hit him, I kicked him, Iโโ โBut did you ever say the word no?โ
I look at Mara, then Lane, then the DA. โIโI already said I couldnโt speak.โ
โYour Honor, please instruct the witness to answer the question.โ โPlease answer the question,โ the judge says.
โNo, butโโ
โThank you,โ he says, and smiles again, like Iโd just handed him a fucking cappuccino or something. โI have nothing further.โ
And as he turns around and walks back to the table, I make the mistake of watching himโthis old, frail, white-haired fossilized monsterโand as he sits down, my eyes drift too far until I realize Iโm looking at him. Kevin. And heโs looking at me. He has me pinned like a dead insect mounted on a foam block, with only his eyes, like he had that night.
I hear this sound in my ears like the ocean. I close my eyes. Iโm going. Leaving my body. Disappearing. Gone. The next thing I know Iโm in the bathroom, Lane there, telling me how great I did. โGreatโ is the word she used. It echoes in my head.ย Great great great. And sheโs smiling at me in the mirror.
I look at my handsโIโm washing them at the sink. Iโve torn my bandage up into ribbons, the tape peeling off, the two red welts on my palm, only just starting to scab, now picked over and bleeding in patches. I donโt remember doing that. I donโt remember leaving the courtroom.
โHow does that fucking lawyer sleep at night?โ Mara says. โI want to go,โ I say out loud to no one in particular.
Lane touches my shoulder, and I flinch. โSorry, honey. You did really well, I mean it.โ
โWhatever, I donโt care. Itโs over. I just wanna go.โ
JOSH
Eden called me last night at midnight to tell me happy birthday. She said she thought through what Iโd said to her about doing it alone and sheโd asked Mara to go with her. I stayed on the phone with her until she fell asleep. She didnโt say so, but I could tell she was really nervous. I wished she wouldโve just let me come.
Iโve been distracted all day waiting for word from her. I spaced out during our team meeting this morning, and Coach reamed me out in front of everyone. Even Dominic pulled me aside in the locker room to ask what was going on with me.
โNothing,โ I told him. โIโm just tired.โ Which was true; even after Eden finally fell asleep around two oโclock and I hung up the phone, I couldnโt sleep at all.
I texted her before afternoon practice to check in.
When I get out at six, I still havenโt heard from her. I call and leave a voice mail.
โHey, just me. Thinking of you. Hope everythingโs going okay. Well, call me when you can. I love you. Miss you.โ
On my walk home, Iโm barely paying attention to anythingโ not other people or traffic or street signsโIโm staring at my phone the whole time.
โJosh!โ my momโs voice calls out to me, laughing. โWhat are you doing?โ
I look up. Iโve walked right past my building, past my parents, waiting on the front stoop, each holding coffee cups from Edenโs work.
โHead in the clouds much?โ Dad says as he steps closer and hugs me.
Mom stands now and passes her coffee to Dad. She places her hands on my shoulders and holds me at armโs length, smiling as she studies me for a moment. โHappy birthday, sweetheart.โ
โHappy birthday, Josh,โ Dad echoes.
I honestly donโt know if Iโve ever been happier to see them in my life.
โYou look tired,โ Mom says as we walk up to the apartment. โAre you getting enough sleep?โ
I shrug. โI donโt know.โ
โYou donโt know?โ she repeats, her voice an octave higher than usual.
And as I glance back, I see her looking at my dad, all wide-eyed. โMom,โ I groan. โIโm fine.โ
I unlock the door to my apartment and let them in. โSo, whereโs Dominic?โ Dad asks.
โHe went to get dinner with some of the other guys on the team.โ
Mom says, in her best casual voice, โAnd what about Eden, whereโs she?โ Then looks all around like sheโs searching for evidence of her having been here.
I sit down on the couch in the living room, and they follow. โListen, sheโs not gonna be able to make it tonight.โ
โWhat?โ Mom shouts as she sits down on the couch next to me, then adjusts her volume. โSheโs not going to make it for your birthday?โ
โWe celebrated on Friday. She had to go out of town.โ
โOut of town?โ she repeats, like thatโs the most absurd thing she ever heard. โIn the middle of the semester?โ She shakes her head. โJoshua.โ
โNo, donโt say my name like that.โ โLike what?โ
โLike Iโm naive or getting taken advantage of or being lied to or something. Iโm not. Itโs not like that.โ
โWell, tell me.โ She crosses her arms and looks at my dad like he should be getting upset along with her. โWhatโs it like, then?โ
I glance up at my dad, sitting on the ottoman next to the couch. He gives me a half smile, a nod, sort of squints, drawing his eyebrows together, tilts his head in Momโs direction.
โWhatโs this?โ Mom asks, not missing anything. โWhatโs going on with you two?โ
Dad sighs. โJust tell her, Joshie.โ
โDear God, tell me what?โ she says, clutching the collar of her shirt. โSheโs not pregnant, please tell me sheโs not pregโโ
โNo!โ
โThank you thank you thank you,โ she whispers into her clasped hands.
โWhy is that the first thing you guys jump to? Do you really think Iโm that irresponsible?โ
โNo,โ Mom says. โBut shit happens, Josh. You can be careful ninety-nine percent of the time and all it takes is oneโโ
โOh my God, please,โ I say, raising my voice. โAll the safe sex talks are scarred into my memory for life, I assure you. Can we drop this now?โ
โNot until you tell me whatโs going on,โ Mom insists. โI donโt like this. I have to be honest. I donโt like this girl for you, Josh, I justโโ
โFine,โ I relent. โJust please stop saying that.โ
So I tell them everything. And by the time I finish, theyโre sitting on either side of me on the couch, Momโs arm around me, Dadโs hand resting on my knee. When I look up at Mom, she has tears running down her face.
โSorry,โ she says, wiping her cheeks with the backs of her hands. โThatโs a lot, Josh.โ
โI know,โ I agree, โitโs been a lot for her.โ โWell, for you too,โ Mom says.
โNo, come on.โ I shake my head. โIโm not comparing anything I might be feeling to what sheโs going through.โ
Dad speaks up. โNo oneโs saying you should compare anything, but just acknowledge, all right, this is not an easy thing to be dealing with in any relationship.โ
I nod. I know heโs right. But I donโt know how to explain that when weโre together it doesnโt feel hard. When weโre together it feels like we can handle itโcould handle anything.
We order food and stay in. D and Parker join us. Parker shows my parents the video from the hibachi restaurant of everyone singing โHappy Birthday.โ Eden kissing me at the end, with total abandon. Everyone cheering.
โLet me see that.โ Mom takes the phone and watches the video two more times, smiling by the end of it. โYou look happy, Josh,โ she says quietly.
They leave to go to their motel at eleven. Outside, at the car, Dad says, โCome on, group hug.โ And they both wrap me in a giant hug. A different day I mightโve said something stupid likeย arenโt I getting a little old for this, but not today. Today I just let them and feel grateful.
โYou need more rest.โ Mom jabs her finger into my chest. โHear me?โ โYes.โ
โWe love you,โ Dad says.
โLove you guys too.โ
I watch as they drive away, my dadโs arm darting out from the passenger- side window to wave at me all the way down the road. I walk down to the end of the block and back again, just to burn off some of this anxiety Iโve had building up in me all day. I pull out my phone again, just in case Iโve somehow missed her.
Still nothing.
Upstairs, I try to fall asleep, but I toss and turn.
EDEN
Itโs almost midnight when I wake up on the couch in the living room, in the dark. Josh just texted me a minute ago.
I hope youโre sleeping well right now. Talk tomorrow? I love you
I call him back. He answers right away.
โHey,โ he says, and I want to start weeping at the sound of his voice. โThere you are.โ
โHi,โ I whisper, throat scratchy and worn from all the talking earlier. โIโm sorry. I lay down after I got home, and no one woke me up.โ
โItโs okay. How . . . ?โ He pauses. โHow are you? How did it go?โ
โIt was a fucking shit show.โ I force a bitter laugh only to not start crying again.
โEden, baby . . . ,โ he says so softly, I let his voice wrap around me. โI can be there in the morning if youโโ
โNo, donโt worry about it. Itโs over.โ โWhat do you mean?โ
โNo,ย itโsย not over, but my partโs done. My mom and Caelin go tomorrow. I was thinking of staying one more day and coming back Thursโโ I start coughing and reach for the room-temperature glass of water sitting on the side table next to me.
โYou okay?โ heโs asking as I pull the phone away from my face.
โYeah, sorry,โ I croak, and swallow most of the glass in one gulp my throat is so dry. โThursday,โ I finish. โEarly Thursday.โ
โHey, are you getting sick?โ he asks.
โNo, I donโt think so. My throat just hurts like hell from talking so much. I was talking for hours today. It felt like they asked me a thousand questions.โ
He makes a sound I canโt quite decipher.
โI wonโt keep you, okay? Iโm glad to hear your voice though, even if itโs scratchy.โ
โWait, Josh.โ I try to laugh, but I just end up coughing again. โDonโt hang up. Iโm not trying to get off the phone. Tell me about your day. How was your birthday?โ
โOh,โ he says. โIt was fine. I mean, last weekend was really the main event. With you. Best birthday ever.โ
โMmm.โ
โYou sound exhausted.โ
โI wish I was there with you right now,โ I whisper. โSo do I, you have no idea.โ
โJosh?โ
โYeah?โ
โI know itโs dumb, but could you stay on the phone with me again tonight?โ
โItโs not dumb.โ I hear some shuffling and the creaking of his mattress. I close my eyes and can picture him getting settled in bed. โI just put you on speaker.โ
โI love you,โ I tell him. โI love you too.โ โThank you.โ
โFor what, loving you?โ he asks, a small laugh in his voice. I smileโit hurts my face. โYes.โ
JOSH
I wake in the morning to my five oโclock alarm, as usual. Still dark out, I see a text already sitting there from my mom.
Is this her?
With a link to an article in the local paper. The headline readsย THREE WOMEN TESTIFY AGAINST BASKETBALL MVP INย PEOPLE V. ARMSTRONG.ย I quickly
scan for her name. Not there, thankfully. They havenโt listed any of their names. Thereโs a highlighted pull quote, enlarged in bold: โHarrowing . . . if true.โ
Itโs that ellipsis that gets me.ย Harrowingโdot dot dotโif true. Like someone pushing me from behind.ย Dot dot dot. Harder, harder, harder.
Now Iโm off.
There are other articles, and I find each and every one. One put out by a college paper, titledย HE SAID, SHE SAID, BLAH BLAH BLAH. Another calls the โlack of physical evidence shocking.โ Here I make the mistake of scrolling down to the comments.
Some commentators are restrained enough to write just a word or two, like โLIARS!โ or โpoor guyโ while others write longer comments. โFive minutes, really? Sending a college kid to prison for something that lasted five minutes! Smh, what is this country coming to?โ And then there are the tirades that span multiple paragraphs, some longer than the damn article itself, full of hate and typos.
I feel sick to my stomach.
I only hope she hasnโt seen any of this bullshit.
Thereโs a knock on my door. โHey, you awake?โ Dominic. โLeaving for the gym. You coming?โ
I click the power off on my phone. โYeah,โ I call back.
I work out harder than I have in a while. I canโt tell if itโs anger, sadness, or what thatโs fueling me. All I know is that something has crawled inside me, and itโs making me want to fight it. Coach walks by and gives me a nod of approval.
Part of me wants to stand up and tell him I couldnโt give two shits about this fucking team right now. That theyโre so stupid to think that any of this matters at all. But then I think of my dad, freshly sober, spending hours on the phone trying to save my ass from getting kicked off the team. And I just work harder. Because I donโt know what else to do.
She canโt get back soon enough.
EDEN
Thursday morning, freshly showered, I sit at my kitchen table. In my dining room with my brother, my mother, my father, sipping orange juice from a glass Iโve used a million times before. Bacon, pancakes, coffee.
Mom asks if I want sugar and cream. I do, but I shake my head no.
Dad is asking who wants eggs. I donโt. But when he comes into the dining room holding the skillet in one hand, scooping up a portion of scrambled eggs, smiling at me, I hold my plate out and take them anyway.
Then weโre all sitting here. Chewing. Forks scraping against plates, awkward silence descending over us. I poke at my syrup-soaked pancake. Neither Mom nor Caelin said a word about how it went for them in court yesterday, but I could see their telltale puffy and bloodshot eyes this morning.
โWhat a fuckinโ week, huh?โ I say, just to break the tension.
Caelin laughs, spitting out the sip of juice heโd just taken. โPerfect timing,โ he mumbles into a napkin.
Mom scoffs and says, โEdy, good God.โ
โSo, when you headed back to school?โ Dad asks, pretending the tension isnโt happening at all. โDo we at least get you for the weekend?โ
I take a sip of my plain coffee, let it burn the roof of my mouth. โI think Iโm gonna head out pretty soon, actually. Maybe I can make my last class today, and then I wonโt have to miss tomorrow.โ
He nods but doesnโt say anything.
โI just donโt want to have so much to make up.โ
โAnd Iโm sure you want to get back to Josh, too,โ Mom adds. โYour brother showed me his picture onlineโโ
โMom,โ Caelin interrupts. โI didnโtย showย her,โ he says to me. โShe needed help searching for him on the team websiteโโ
โOh, fine,โ Mom interrupts him back, tossing her napkin in his direction. โI was snooping.โ
โStalking,โ Caelin mutters through a fake cough. Dad actually laughs.
โAnyway, heโs a very cute boy,โ Mom says. โI donโt blame you for wanting to rush back to him.โ
โWell,โ I begin. โI really do have work to make up.โ She grins at me from across the table.
โSo, Eden,โ Dad says. โWhen do we get to meet this very cute boy?โ โMaybe after you all quit calling him a very cute boy.โ
โHey.โ Caelin holds his hand up. โFor the record, all Iโve ever called him is aย decent guy; I never called him a very cute anything.โ
And just like that, weโve had our first semi-normal family interaction in years. I send a silent thank-you across the state to Josh, whoโs probably walking to his first class right now, for being so damn decent and handsome, he let my family salvage our last morning together.
After breakfast I help clean up, start the dishwasher, try not to act like Iโm in a hurry to leave. I pack up a bag of fall clothes, my soft scarf and matching gloves, a heavy coat, and some of my long sleeves and sweaters from the back of my closet. I have to pull out my old clarinet case to get to my boots, and as my fingers fit around the handle, I have this vivid flashback of freshman year, carrying this thing with me everywhere I went. I set it on my bed next to my other bag and open it up.
Like some kind of time capsule from another life, I find the sheet music I was working on when I decided to quit, the booklet still folded open to the exact page. I take each item out and hold them in my hands for a moment: the plastic case for my reeds; polishing cloth, soft against my fingers; the tiny screwdriver everyone always needed to borrow from me because no one else ever had one; the tube of nearly empty cork grease that Mara once mistook for lip balm; the mouthpiece, barrel, bell, upper joint, lower joint . .
. all the pieces of the clarinet disassembled and put away neatly. Exactly as Iโd left them, not knowing that would be the last time I played.
Iโm not sure why, but I take it with me, along with my fuzzy socks and warm clothes.
I say my goodbyes. Caelin hugs me for the first time in months. Dad tells me he just transferred two hundred dollars into my account, for which I am wholeheartedly thankful. Mom walks me out to the car, tells me, โTake care
of yourself. Be safe. And let me know when you hear anything from the DA, okay?โ
โI will.โ
The drive home, back to Josh and my new life, which has nothing to do with this old one, feels so long. Too long. My eyes just want to close. I only make it an hour and a half before I have to pull off at a rest stop. I push my seat all the way back and pull one of my big sweaters from the bag in the passenger seat, wrap myself up in it.
Just as Iโm feeling myself fading to sleep, Iโm back in the courtroom, eyes locked on Kevinโs. Then Iโm back in my old bedroom, that night, with him looking down on me.
My eyes snap open.
The tree Iโm parked beneath is letting the fluttering light filter through the windshield onto my face. It feels so gentle, I allow myself to close my eyes again. The judge is telling me Iโm dismissed. โDismissed.โ That was the word. How appropriate, I thought, even then.
How had I forgotten this part?
But I canโt move. Not until Kevinโs dickhead lawyer whispers something to him, making him break eye contact with me. I see Lane and Mara standing up, waiting. DA Silverman nodding, watching me as I step down from the box.
I stare straight down at my feet, but I still feel his eyes on me the whole time.
When I wake up, Iโm in the shade now, cold and somehow more exhausted than I was to begin with. I pull my seat upright again and put the sweater on all the way, trying to gather some warmth around me. I dump my travel mug of cold plain coffee from my house and go inside the rest stop for something with sugar and caffeine and calories.
It gets me through the rest of the drive. I make it home in the middle of the afternoon while everyoneโs still gone for the day. I trudge up the two flights of stairs with my arms full, unlock the door, make it to my room, and sit down directly on the floor.
Breathe. I need to breathe.
I lie flat on my back, close my eyes, and concentrate on the hard floor under me, find the points where the floor supports my body, like my therapist told me.
I place my hand on my stomach and feel it expand and contract with each breath. In and out, over and over. Iโm nearly asleep when I hear my phone vibrating from my bag, and I realize I never texted to let anyone know that I made it home.
I sit up too quickly and pull my purse down on the floor, digging through it until my hand finds my phone. But the text waiting there isnโt from Josh or my mom; itโs from DA Silverman.
I have news . . .
No.
I wonโt open it. I canโt. Whatever it is, I donโt want to know yet. Either our case is dead or itโs moving forward. And I canโt know either of those things right now. I stand, leaving the phone there on the floor. It lights up again, and I kick it away from me this time. It skids across the floor and under the dresser, out of sight.
I lug my bags onto my bed, start unpacking. Keep my hands busyโthatโs another tip my therapist gave me. I can still hear the vibration of my phone, rattling now, shoved up against the baseboard.
I open my laptop, cue up my moody sad-girl playlist. Florence + the Machine croons out in a darkly lyrical dance. But I can still feel the phone vibratingโinside my chest now, somehow. I turn the volume up.
I put away all my clothes, literally fold every article of clothing, even my bras and underwear. I match up every last sock with its mate and divide half a drawer for all of Joshโs clothes Iโve found lying around. I hang up my sweaters in the closet and line my boots up with my other shoes. Carefully, I slide my clarinet case up on the top shelf of the closet. Next, I organize my desk. Move my hair and makeup stuff over to my dresser. I line up my meds in a row, rounding them out with the packet of birth control pills and the bottle of Tylenol Iโve been popping like candy all week for my never- ending headaches.
I had an in-person with my therapist on Wednesday. She asked how Iโd been feeling with the new meds, and I had to admit that I forget to take them a lot, so I couldnโt be sure if they were really helping much. When she asked me why, I didnโt tell her itโs because I keep them hidden half the time; I just shrugged. The thing is, I know Josh is literally the last person on
the planet who would make me feel weird about any of itโhe understood about the sleeping pills, as I knew he would. Itโs me.
So I decideโforce myselfโto just leave them there, out in the open. My playlist comes to an abrupt end, plunging me into silence.
I look around. Everythingโs in order here. Bed made. Books lined up in neat rows. My life ready for me to dive back in. But I donโt dive. I drag myself over to my bed. I donโt even have the energy to lift the covers. I lay my head on the pillow, curl up inside my sweater, and face the wall, just waiting to feel normal again.
JOSH
After practice, Coach calls us all together for a meeting in the locker room. Thereโs a tightness, a tension in the air. Everyoneโs tired and hungry and ready to go. I just want to get to my phone to see if sheโs texted me back yet.
โAll right, guys,โ Coach begins. โQuick announcement. This is coming down directly from the dean. Weโll be talking to all the teams, so donโt feel special. Okay, Iโm sure some of you have heard about the sexual assault case involving a student athlete over at Eastland U.โ
My heart starts racing.
โObviously, thereโs no tolerance for this kind of thing at Tucker Hill,โ he continues, looking down at his clipboard, reading. โZero tolerance for any form of harassment or so-called โlocker room talkโ on this team or any team on this campus. Got it?โ
I look around. There are heads nodding.
Someone raises a hand. โUh, Coach, has someone complained, or . . . ?โ โNo. Thank God. The dean wanted us to preemptively talk with you all,
as a reminder that this shit wonโt fly here.โ
Okay, so this is just a general PSA. I start to relax.
Coach squints at his clipboard again. โTHU will be issuing a formal statement regarding its commitment to . . .โ He trails off, skipping ahead. โSo, basically, the moral of the story is eyes are on teams like ours right now, and we canโt afford any bad press, gentlemen.โ
Bad press, so thatโs really all that matters here.
โSuch bullshit,โ I hear someone mutter under their breath. When I look up, Jon, one of the bench players, has a stupid shit-eating grin on his face. He leans in to the guy next to him, whispers something, and I see both of
them Jell-O-shaking with silent laughter. Something inside me picks up like a swelling wave, and I can feel my fists tightening at my sides.
Coach dismisses us, and I look aroundโI completely missed the end of the meeting.
I try to shake off this feeling.
Iโm finishing getting dressed at my locker, checking my phoneโstill nothing from herโwhen I hear Jonโs dumbass guffaw over the bank of lockers.
โYou know she wanted it, and then when he didnโt want a relationship, she decided to screw his career.โ That wave returns now, and I can feel my face getting red. โThat is exactly why you donโt dip your dick in crazy.โ
I know I shouldnโt, but that wave is pushing me down, and someone else, this other version of myself is rising up instead. I walk around the corner and see Jon toweling off his hair as he regales two freshmen benchers with his opinions.
โI dunno, man,โ one of them is bold enough to pipe up, โI read there were three girls he did it to. โ
โYeah, well, maybe heโs attracted to psychos,โ Jon says, and shrugs. โBitches probably want a payout! You know how the pussy is. โ
I canโt even hear the rest of his sentence because the wave is pushing at me as I step behind him, too close, it pushes past my chest, into my throat, out of my mouth. โHey, do you ever just shut the fuck up?โ
Jon turns, stupid mean grin still on his face, and behind him, the freshmenโs eyes go wideโI must be looking like something scary to them.
โSorry, my bad, did I upset your delicate sensibilities?โ he says, patting my shoulder in mock comfort, the spot he touches radiating heat, practically vibrating. I know I should leave, but the other Josh has a point to make.
โNo,ย Iโmย sorry, do you have some kind of problem with not sexually harassing women, or what?โ
โFuck off,โ he mutters dismissively. โYou know what my problem is?โ โNo, whatโs that?โ I challenge. โPlease, tell me.โ
โYou.โ Somehow this makes the wave retreat. Me, I can deal with that. โMe?โ I cross my arms. โOkay.โ
โYeah, with you half-assing every practice and wasting a starting spot on the team, and now youโre trying to makeย meย look bad?โ He looks at the crowd, which has suddenly gathered around us, and I canโt tell if theyโre on his side or not.
โYou make yourself look bad all on your own.โ
โAnd you shouldnโt even be here!โ he shouts. โNot after what you pulled last season. Everyone thinks so.โ
Dominic walks up then, interrupts. โHey, speak for yourself, Jonโwhy donโt you just take off, all right?โ
โWhy? Itโs true,โ he argues. โNo, itโs not,โ Dominic says.
โWhatever.โ I grab my bag and close my locker. โI donโt have time for this.โ
โSure, but you have time to push your woke agenda about a bunch of bitches crying rape? Please, youโre soโโ
And that wave is backโa tidal wave nowโno fighting it. It is the buzzing in my head, a tingling in my limbs, this sick rush of adrenaline pulsing through me.
Itโs oddly quiet for a moment.
And then sound erupts all around us, yelling, shouting.
It takes me a second to process why Dominic is standing between us. Why someoneโs holding my arms. Why Jon is on the floor. Why Coach is storming in here, screaming, โBreak it up, you assholes!โ
He drags us both into his office.
โWhat do you wanna do?โ heโs asking Jon. โYou can lodge a complaint if you wantโitโs within your rights.โ
Jon looks at me, sort of smirks, like this is all just an amusement to him. โNah,โ he finally says. โIt was just a shove. Itโs really not a big deal.โ
โFine.โ Coach stands, points to the door. โYou go,โ he tells him.
I start to stand as well, but Coach presses down on my shoulder. โYou,โ he orders, through clenched teeth, โsiddown.โ
He closes the door behind Jon and throws his clipboard against the wall, making me jump.
โWhat the hell is wrong with you?โ he yells. โI swear, itโs one step forward, twenty steps back with you. Every damn time. Tell me something, do you even want to be on this team?โ
I clench my jaw shut so I donโt say it:ย No. โHuh?โ he yells. โWell, do you?โ
โYes,โ I lie.
โThen screw your damn head on right, get your priorities straight!โ he shouts, the veins in his neck throbbing. โYouโre on thin iceโpaper thin.
One more incident, youโre suspended. I donโt care how talented you are. I donโt give a shit whatโs going on in your personal life. When youโre here, you donโtย haveย a personal life!โ he yells. โYou understand me?โ
โYeah, I understand.โ
Itโs dark in Edenโs room, but I can see her lying on her bed. Iโm relieved at first. Sheโs here, sheโs safe. But the way sheโs curled up in the fetal position, lying so still, gives me that full-body rush of adrenaline chill again. I feel unsteady as I walk toward her.
EDEN
I wake up to the click of my lamp being turned on. Itโs dark outside my window. I hear the door latch shut, then his light footsteps behind me. The quiet swish of sneakers being removed. He doesnโt need to say a word for me to know itโs him. The sigh in his breath might as well be a fingerprint.
The bed sinks as he climbs in softly. He moves my hair and touches my waist as he eases in beside me, bending his knees into mine, fitting himself around me like a missing puzzle piece. He slowly moves his arm so that itโs resting on top of mine.
โHey,โ I breathe, pulling his arm around me tighter.
โSorry,โ he whispers, kissing the back of my neck. โI was trying not to wake you.โ
โNo, itโs okay,โ I say, my voice still worn and raspy. โWhat time is it?โ โItโs, like, almost eight.โ
โMm.โ I stretch out a little and clear my throat. โIโve been asleep all afternoon.โ
With his face in my hair, he breathes in and says, โGod, I missed you.โ He grips my sweater in handfuls, pulling me so close. Thereโs something about it, the way heโs holding me like heโs scared Iโm going to float away, that makes me nervous.
โJosh?โ I turn around to face him. โWhatโs wrong?โ
โNothing.โ He touches my face and smiles, but it doesnโt quite reach his eyes. โNothingโs wrong,โ he repeats, this sadness in his voice. โI just really missed you.โ
I kiss him. โI missed you too.โ
He wraps both arms around me, pressing me to his body, kissing my hair, my forehead, my cheeks.
โWait, let me look at you.โ I pull away from him enough to see him more clearly and take his face in my hands. โAw, your beard is back.โ
โStubble,โ he corrects, and finally he gives me a small but real smile. โOkay, fine, stubble,โ I repeat. โI like it.โ
โCollege-era me, right?โ he asks, the slightest laugh in his voice.
โMore like sexy-era you,โ I tease, though Iโm really not joking at all. He buries his face in my neck and laughs.
โI love when you get all shy.โ
โShy?โ he repeats slowly, letting his head rest on my chest, like heโs trying to remember what the word means, whether itโs a good or bad thing.
โItโs very cute.โ
โOkay,โ he says quietly.
โHey, are you really all right?โ I ask him.
โYeah.โ He raises his head to look at me then. โIโm more concerned about how you are.โ
โYou just seem kinda sad.โ
โNo, Iโm fine. I just didnโt sleep much while you were gone and, I donโt know, I was worried when I didnโt hear from you earlier.โ
โOh. Sorry, my phoneโโ I glance over toward my dresser. โItโs under there. I forgot to pick it up. Sorry.โ
โNo, donโt be sorry.โ He takes my rebandaged hand in his and kisses itโ examines my haphazard placement of Band-Aids for a moment but doesnโt comment on it. โIโm glad you were resting.โ
โIโm glad you came,โ I tell him, running my other hand over his face. โSo, how are you feeling?โ he asks.
โOkay.โ I prop myself up so I can kiss him. He nods like he wants more from me. โBetter now that youโre here.โ
He kisses me softly, quickly, like heโs consciously not wanting it to get too steamy.
โYou donโt want to kiss me,โ I say. โWhat, do I have bad breath or something?โ
He scoffs. โNo, come on.โ
He rolls onto his back, and I try to tell myself heโs not moving away from me; heโs making room for me, inviting me in. So I kiss him. I kiss him deeper and deeper. He holds on to me, his hands on my hips, but heโs not giving me much.
I push his shirt up and kiss his stomachโthat spot that always makes him squirm. He at least lets out a little sigh, a deep breath in, a small groan. I move on top of him and sit up, one knee on either side of his hips, and pull my sweater off. The T-shirt I wore underneath starts to come off with it, but he reaches out and pulls it down, his fingers barely grazing my skin as he covers my stomach back up.
He gazes at me and opens his mouth like he wants to say something. โWhat?โ
โNothing.โ He places his hands on my thighs, watches as I take my T- shirt off.
He sits up now, with me in his lap, and kisses me once, lets his forehead rest against the center of my chest. I reach around behind me to unfasten my bra, but his hand catches mine and brings it back around the front, holding it in his.
โEden.โ He breathes my name out slowly. โHold on, donโt you wanna talk?โ
โWhat do you mean?โ
โWell, just to catch up, you know?โ he says so gently. โYouโve been gone.โ
โOh,โ I say. โMy God, am I being like a horny teenage boy right now or something?โ
He cracks a smile and shakes his head. โI mean . . . I wouldnโt say it like that.โ
โIโm sorry, okay,โ I tell him, scooting so Iโm sitting a bit farther back on his thighs instead of right up against him. โYeah, please. Talk to me.โ
โNo, I meant I wantย youย to talk to me.โ โWhat about?โ
He turns his head, sort of tips his hands open toward the ceiling. โEverything. What happened while you were gone, with the hearing and all? How it was being home. I mean, do you know what happens next? You havenโt really told me anything.โ
I climb off him now. โEden, donโtโโ
โDonโt what?โ
โDonโt shut me out,โ he says, reaching for me.
โI feel like youโre the one shutting me out right now,โ I tell him. He squints at me. โHow amย Iย shutting you out?โ
โYou, like, clearly arenโt interested in having sex with me,โ I mumble as I pull my sweater back on over my head and shove my arms through the sleeves. โWhat, am I too sad and pathetic?โ
โNo, who said anything like that?โ
โToo damaged? Too messed up?โ I continue, gaining steam. โWhat, tainted?โ
โHey!โ he says, his voice stern. โYou know thatโs not what I think.โ He pauses, his chest moving in and out as he breathes heavier. โDonโt put words into my mouthโthatโs not what weโwe donโt do that.โ
โWell, I feel like youโre rejecting me or something.โ
I climb over him to get out of the bed. I walk to my dresser, have the urge to take one of my pills. Then I have the greater urge to open up the top drawer and sweep them all inside, close it up tight.
โIโm not rejecting you; Iโm just not going to have sex with you when I have no idea where your headโs at right now. Iโm worried about you, okay?โ I look over at him, sitting there, so in control of his emotions, so perfectly rational all the time, always doing the right thing. I sit down in my desk chair, try to slow my racing thoughts, try to calm myself, try to feel the
chair under me, feel my feet on the floor. โI know, Iโm sorry.โ
โDonโt be sorry,โ he says, moving to the edge of the bed, reaching for my hands. โI just feel like Iโm in the dark here.โ
โI donโt want to talk about the hearing.โ
โOkay.โ He reaches for the arms of the chair now and pulls me toward him so weโre facing each other. โThatโs fine, just tell me how youโre feeling, then?โ
โI feel . . . ,โ I begin, closing my eyes, letting him take my hands again. โI feel like . . .โ I search my brain for anything, a concrete thought, a fleeting image. โA pumpkin,โ I tell him.ย Thatโs stupid.
โA pumpkin?โ he asks. He draws his eyebrows together like heโs not sure if Iโm being serious or joking. I donโt really know at this point either.
โNo, not a pumpkin, but like a jack-oโ-lantern. You know?โ โOkay,โ he says, nodding.
โLike someone drew a face on me and carved it into my skin. Scooped out my insides. Just hollowed out, everything scraped clean. And then lit a fire in me and left me out in the cold. And I just . . .โ I stop because Iโm hearing myself and I feel my mouth twitching, like I could either start
bawling or laughing, and I donโt know which. Because I donโt know if Iโm being ridiculous or if this is actually the perfect sloppy metaphor for the way I feel right now.
โAnd you what?โ he asks, giving my good hand a tiny squeeze.
โAnd I just, I donโt know, want to feel human again,โ I finish. โAs soon as possible.โ
His eyes get really deep as he watches me. And then his beautiful mouth just sort of collapses at the corners. He stands and pulls me up out of the chair too. Holds me close, pressing my face against his chest, kissing my hair.
JOSH
As we stand in the middle of her room, I can sense itโthat hollowed-out feelingโcoming out of her and crawling into me.
โIโm so sorry,โ I whisper because I donโt know what else to say.
โYou didnโt do anything,โ she mumbles into my shirt, hugging me back like somehow she knows I might need her arms around me right now just as much as she needs mine.
โIโm still sorry.โ
โDonโt feel sorry for me, Josh.โ She looks up at me, her eyes so full and open. โPlease.โ
โNo, itโs not that I feel sorryย forย you. I just feel sorry that youโre having to go through all this. Itโs not fair. And I wish I could do something toโto help or to make it easier.โ
โYou do help, though.โ She sets her head against me again. โYou do make it easier.โ
โWhat do you want to do tonight?โ I ask her. โAre you hungry at all, or do you want to go back to bed . . . watch a movie? Itโs whatever you want.โ
โCould we lie back down?โ
As we get undressed, she starts taking her pants off and looks up at me with this small, mischievous grin. โI promise Iโm not trying to have sex with you again; Iโm just getting into pajamas.โ
โStop,โ I groan, folding my jeans over the back of her chair. โYou know why I said that.โ
โIโm just messing with you.โ She takes her sweater off again and hangs it on the doorknob of her closet, walks over to her dresser in a mismatched bra and underwear, looking so beautiful I almost wish she would try to have sex with me because I need to feel human again now too. She pulls out one
of my T-shirts I hadnโt even realized Iโd left here. โCan I wear this?โ she asks.
โSure,โ I answer, trying not to sound too enthusiastic about seeing her in my clothes. But as I watch her take her bra off and slide on my old beat-up gray T-shirt with a hole in the collar, my feet wonโt let me not go to her. โBy the way, I pretty much want to have sex with you constantly.โ
โOh,ย constantly?โ she repeats, laughing as she gently pushes me away. โIโm not kidding. I think about it way more than I should.โ I follow her to
the bed. โTruly, youโd be offended if you knew.โ
Sheโs smiling as she pulls back the covers and climbs in first, but then she looks up at me with her eyes narrowed, like sheโs confused about why Iโm saying this.
โSo, I would never reject you,โ I tell her as I climb in beside her. โOh,โ she murmurs.
I kiss her the way she was kissing me earlierโdeep, serious. โNever,โ I repeat. โOkay?โ
โOkay,โ she whispers.
As we lie here, she curls up around me, her head on my chest, her arm and leg draped across me. I start to feel more like myself than I have all week. We breathe in and out together, and I can feel her drifting to sleep when her phone vibrates from somewhere in the room, muffled. I look around and notice that sheโs cleaned, rearranged things.
The phone keeps going off. She sighs loudly. โDo you need to check that?โ I ask her.
โI donโt want to,โ she whines. โIt might be important.โ
โI know itโs important, thatโs why I donโt want to get it.โ She rolls off me and says quietly, โItโs under the dresser.โ
I donโt ask why itโs under there; I just get out of bed and tell her, โIโll get it.โ But as I walk up to her dresser, my eyes go directly to the pills lined up on top of it. I glance back at her. She sees me seeing them.
โMy full pharmacy,โ she explains. โInsomnia, depression, anxiety.โ
I nod. โOkay,โ I say because I donโt know if thereโs anything else I should say. Iโm happy sheโs not hiding them anymore, but I canโt say that without letting her know that I knew about them already. I kneel down and press my face to the floor, see the phone all the way against the wall, glowing. I reach for it and pull it out, trying not to look at the screen.
I walk back over to her and hand her the phone, but sheโs just staring at me. โDoes that bother you?โ
โWhat?โ
โThose,โ she says, gesturing to the dresser, the pills. โNo, they donโt bother me. Why would they bother me?โ โBecause of your dad.โ
โYou need them, Eden. Itโs totally different.โ
โYeah,โ she whispers sadly, holding her phone facedown against her chest. โI do.โ
She curls up to me again and breathes deeply, finally raises the phone.
I glance down. Thereโs a whole screen full of notifications sheโs missed. Texts from me, her brother, Mara, someone named Lane, two missed calls from her mom. And a text from โDA Silverman.โ This is the one she opens. โSorry.โ I kiss her head, close my eyes. โIโm not looking, okay?โ I tell
her.
โYou can.โ She tilts the screen toward me. โItโs happening.โ
I have news and wanted to make sure
youโre the first to know: weโre going to trial. Congratulations, you girls did it! Iโll be in touch when I know more, but plan for sometime in December, possibly January. Talk soon.
โEden, this is really good,โ I start, but she clicks the phone off, reaches over me and tosses it onto her desk. She shakes her head and pulls herself against me tighter, tucking her head down so I canโt see her face.
โEden?โ I try to get her to look at me. โBaby?โ
Sheโs clutching my shirt, breathing heavy, sniffling. And then I feel her body start shaking. Sheโs crying. โI canโt,โ she gasps, finally looking up at me, tears streaming down her face. โI canโt do it again.โ
I kiss her forehead, try to wipe her tears away. โYes, you can.โ โNo,โ she breathes. โI canโt. I really canโt.โ
โItโs okay,โ I tell her, even though I donโt know that for sure. I donโt know if itโs okay or if sheโs okay or if it will be okay. But I say it anyway.
She keeps repeating it:ย I canโt. She says it over and over until it doesnโt even sound like words anymore, just breathing. And then, after what feels like forever, she finally stills, falls silent. I think sheโs asleep, but then she says, her voice clear, calm now. โHis lawyer asked me if I ever said no.โ
I raise my head. โWhat do you mean?โ
โLike he assumed I was given a choice. Like I could choose to say yes or no. And I couldnโt explain that there was nothing to say yes or no toโthere wasnโt a chance to say itโbut he just kept interrupting me.โ
โFuck,โ I say.
โBut just because I couldnโt say no doesnโt mean I said yes, either.โ โI know that.โ
She kisses me, then touches my face, just looks at me.
โI love you,โ I tell her, and I start to worry Iโm saying it so much sheโs going to stop believing that I mean it.
She smiles and closes her eyes for a moment. โI donโt know what I would do without you, Josh.โ
โYeah,โ I agree. โBack atcha.โ
โItโs sort of scary,โ she whispers, like itโs a secret, โhow much I need you.โ
โDonโt be scared,โ I tell her, even though it scares me, too, how much I need her. โYou wonโt ever have to be without me. I mean, unless you wanted that.โ
She looks me in the eye now, holding my face steady in her hands. โI would never want that.โ
I wake up to her moaning in her sleep. Sheโs thrashing. Having a nightmare. โEden?โ I whisper.
โNo,โ she moans, kicking my leg under the blanket. โNo.โ โHey, hey, hey, Eden?โ I try. โEden, wake up.โ
I touch her face, but she turns away from me. โStop,โ she says, her hand flopping lifelessly against my stomach. โPlease,โ she whimpers, crying with her whole body.
I touch her arm now, try to rub it gently. โEden,โ I repeat, louder this time.
She starts coughing, gasping, and then her hand goes to her throat, all the veins and tendons in her neck visible like she really canโt breathe. Iโve got to get her to wake up somehow. โEden!โ I shake her shoulder.
Her eyes fly open, and she bolts up, swinging at me. She scratches my neck with one hand, my chest with the other. I grab her arms. โEden, stop.โ
She screams, โLet go of me, let go of me!โ
I do, but she hits me over and over. Sheโs breathing so heavily, gasping for air. I back up against the wall, but then sheโs backing up too, about to fall right out of bed, so I lunge forward to grab her again. Sheโs kicking me with both her feet. This time she cries just one word: โMom.โ
โEden, wake up!โ I shout, but she doesnโt hear me.
She yells, โStop.โ I donโt know what to doโsheโs going to hurt herself. But I let go of her arms, and I can do nothing but watch her fall. The sound is terribleโshe hits the desk and her lamp crashes down, part of the glass shade breaking, but itโs still on, lighting her at this severe angle that makes her look haunted. She looks up at me like I pushed her or something, like it hurts her to look at me.
โEden?โ I scramble to get down on the floor with her, but she flinches away when I reach for her. She looks around the room: at the lamp, me, her skinned knees bleeding, the palms of her hands scraped. โEden,โ I repeat. I kneel next to her and she holds her arms out, but I canโt tell if sheโs reaching for me or trying to keep me away. โHey, itโs just me. Itโs just me. Youโre okay.โ
โWhat?โ her voice squeaks. โWhat happened?โ
โYou were having a nightmare. Youโyou fell out of bed,โ I stutter, trying to give her the gentlest version of the truth.
Parkerโs pounding on the door now, which makes her jump. โEden?โ Parker calls. โEden, are you okay?โ
Eden looks at me like sheโs not sure how to answer, but I donโt think I should answer for her because I donโt know either.
โEden!โ She knocks some more. โIโm coming in.โ
She opens the door, and her eyes go to the broken lamp, then to Eden, huddling against the wall, arms around her knees, then to me, crouching next to her. โWhatโs happening in here?โ she says to me, then to Eden, โAre you okay?โ
โYeah, IโIโm okay,โ Eden tells her.
Parker narrows her eyes at me. โDid you fucking hit her?โ
โNO!โ we both shout at the same time.
โOh my God, Parker, no,โ Eden says, seeming to snap out of it, the focus coming back into her eyes. โItโs okay, really. I was having a bad dream. I fell.โ
โYou were screaming,โ Parker says.
Eden shakes her head. โI donโtโI donโt know. I donโt remember that.โ โIโm gonna go get something for these cuts, okay?โ I tell her. โIโll be
right back.โ
Parker follows me into the bathroom. โWhat the fuck, Josh?โ she mutters under her breath.
โItโs like she said, she had a really bad nightmare. I was trying to wake her up, and I freaked her out even more. Thatโs all.โ I open the medicine cabinet, where Iโd found the bandages for her hand last week. I get Band- Aids and a tube of ointment. โI swear to you I would never hit her.โ
โDid she hit you, though?โ she asks. โNo!โ
โJosh, look at yourself,โ she says.
I close the cabinet and look in the mirror. Iโm bleeding. Scratches on my neck, my chest. The red welts of early bruises on my arms and chest and stomach. I look down at my legs. Marks on my thighs and shins. โIโm fine. She didnโt even know what was happening.โ I turn away from her to wet a washcloth in the sink. My hands are shaking.
โJosh,โ Parker says. โAre you okay?โ
โI donโt want to leave her by herself,โ I tell her instead of answering, because the answer isย No, Iโm not fucking okay. โItโs gonna be fine.โ
โOkay,โ she says, not convinced.
Back in Edenโs room, she hasnโt moved; sheโs just staring at the floor. I reach for her lamp and set it back on her desk because it hurts to look at her like this too. I set the Band-Aids and ointment and washcloth on her desk and reach my hands down to help her up, but she doesnโt even look at me.
โEden?โ I sit next to her on the floor. โCan you hear me?โ โWhat happened?โ she asks again, finally looking at me. โYou were just dreaming, okay?โ
โNo, I wasnโtโthis was different.โ
โLetโs get you up. Hold on to me, all right? Arms around my neck.โ
She lets me help her up off the floor and set her on the bed. โIโm just gonna clean these real quick,โ I tell her, reaching for the washcloth and
pressing it against her knee.
โOh my God, Josh.โ She touches my neck, presses her hand against my chest. โI scratched you. Iโm so sorry.โ
โItโs okay,โ I tell her as I apply a row of Band-Aids to one knee. โThat was fucking stupid of me to try to wake you up like that. Itโs my fault, Iโm sorry.โ
โI thought you were himโI didnโt know.โ
โNo, I know.โ I bring the washcloth to her other knee, and she draws in a sharp breath. โDoes that hurt?โ I ask her.
She takes the washcloth from me, folds it over to the clean side, and brings it to my neck, dabbing at it gently, her hands shaking so badly. โIโm so sorry.โ
โIโm fine,โ I tell her as I finish putting Band-Aids on her other knee. โI promise.โ
I get up and put my shirt on. Sheโs already freaked out about the scratches; she doesnโt need to see the bruises, too. โDo you want to keep the light on still?โ
She shakes her head and gets back into bed.
I turn the lamp off, avoiding the broken glass.
Lying back down next to her, I feel uneasy. Afraid. Not of her, exactly, but of the things haunting her. She lays her head down in the spot she always lays her head down in and drapes her arm across me the way she always does. But everything feels different.
โI love you,โ she says. โJosh?โ โYeah?โ
โI love you,โ she repeats. โI love you too.โ
โAre you mad?โ
โOf course not,โ I tell her. Iโm a lot of things right now, but madโat her, anywayโisnโt one of them. โEden, does that happen a lot? Having nightmares like that, I mean.โ
โSometimes,โ she answers. โIt hasnโt been this bad in a long time, though. I know I scared you. Iโm sorry.โ
โWill you stop apologizing?โ But then I worry I might sound too harsh. โReally, you donโt have anything to be sorry about.โ
โOkay, Iโll stop,โ she whispers. She touches my chest in the spot where she scratched me and kisses my shirtโit stings as the fabric rubs against
my open skin.
โEden, can I ask you something else?โ โMm-hmm,โ she mumbles.
โAre you getting help for all this? More than the meds. Like counseling or something?โ
โYes.โ
โReally?โ
โYeah, I have a therapist back home. We talk once a week.โ โIs it helping?โ
โMostly, I think.โ โGood, Iโm glad.โ
She gets so quiet for so long, I think sheโs fallen asleep. But then she raises her head to look at me and says, โWhat about you?โ
โWhat? Sorry, what about me?โ
โHave you ever seen anyoneโI mean, for the stuff with your dad? Or just in general?โ
โOh.โ I think back to the Alateen meetings my mom brought me to when I was in middle school. โWhen I was younger, I went to a few group meetings but . . .โ
โBut what?โ she asks me.
I shrug. โThey just werenโt for me, I guess.โ But as we lie here, I remember more clearly. Thatโs not what happened. The meetings conflicted with basketball and I stopped going.
โHey, you should really try to sleep, okay?โ I tell her. โIโll be here the whole time.โ
EDEN
His alarm goes off at five, like every other morning. Except he doesnโt wake up to it. And heโs not holding me like he was when we fell asleep. Heโs facing away. I reach across him for his phone and snooze the alarm.
I whisper his name and touch his shoulder, run my hand along the side of his face. Nothing. โJosh?โ I repeat, slightly louder.
He flinches awake. โOh, what, whatโs wrong?โ โNothing, nothing. Your alarm went off.โ
He takes a deep breath in and rolls onto his back, at least a little closer to me. โHow is it morning already?โ he groans.
โI know.โ I prop myself up next to him and look down at his face. My eyes travel to the cuts on his neckโthey look even worse. I lean in and kiss the red lines as softly as I can.
He reaches up and touches my face, my hair. โItโs okay,โ he whispers, reading my mind.
I lie against him, and he kind of tenses up before he puts his arm around me.
โI technically still have the day off,โ I tell him. โSo Iโm gonna try to get a call with my therapist today.โ
โOkay, that sounds good.โ
โWould youโno, never mind.โ
โNo, what?โ he asks. The alarm goes off again. โDammit,โ he says, reaching to turn it off. โWould I what?โ
โWould you . . . ?โ I was going to ask if heโd be on the call, to tell her what happened, to tellย meย what happened too, but I feel like itโs not fair to ask him to relive it. โWould you just hold me for a few more minutes before you go?โ I ask instead.
โYeah, come here,โ he saysโof course he does. He rolls onto his side and wraps me up in his arms.
โTighter,โ I say.
He pulls me closer, kisses my hair, and whispers, โI love you.โ And for nine blissful minutes, things feel okay.
But then the alarm blares again. He sighs. โI gotta get up, baby.โ
I watch him as he gets out of bed and turns my lamp on. He reaches into his bag for clothes, and even as he takes his shirt off, I notice heโs keeping his back to me. โJosh?โ
โYeah?โ he answers, still turned away.
I get out of bed and step around to the front of him. He quickly picks up a pair of joggers and sort of holds them in front of his body like heโs trying to cover himself.
โWhat are you doing?โ I ask, reaching for the pants. โEden, donโtโโ he says, but then lets go of them.
And then I see what heโs hiding.
โOh my God,โ I mumble, my hand over my mouth. โDid Iโโ I swallow hard. I feel the tears already swelling up under my eyes as they take in the dark purple bruises all over his arms, chest, stomach, even his legs. โDid I do this to you?โ
โCome here come here come here,โ he says, pulling me in and holding me tight. โShh, itโs not your fault, okay? Iโm fine.โ
โNo,โ I say, shaking my head back and forth. Because this looks too familiar, the bruises up and down his body, just like my own bruises the next morning. I reach for my chair and have to sit down because my legs feel weak.
โPlease look at me.โ He kneels on the floor in front of me. โYou had no idea what was happening, okay? You werenโt here; you were there.โ
I slide down to the floor too, touch the bruises. โWhat did I do?โ
โYou were just trying to get away from meโfrom him, I mean,โ he explains, but I still canโt believe it.
โHow could I have done all this?โ I say out loud. But the other part of the sentence that I donโt say out loud is: How could I have done all this to him, my love, the one person I feel safe with, when I couldnโt do anything to defend myself against Kevin that night? And then I realize the difference, as
he watches me with those soft, dark eyes. Josh wasnโt fighting me off. He was just taking it.
โI grabbed you. I was trying to help, but I didnโt know what to do, Eden. So, I grabbed you because I . . .โ He let his hands float down my arms, to these reddish-purple rings around the forearm on my right side and my wrist on the left. โEden, I swear I didnโt mean to hurt you. You were falling, and I was afraid you were gonna hurt yourself, and I know I made it worse.โ He looks at me, his eyes filling with tears now. โIโm so sorry,โ he belts out quickly as he hunches forward and covers his face with his hands.
โNo, Iโm sorry, Josh. Iโm so sorry. Iโm sorry,โ I tell him over and over. I pull him toward me, and I know I will never forgive myself for this. We collapse onto the floor in each otherโs arms, both of us crying now. โIโm trying, I swear,โ I tell him.
โI know,โ he says. โI am too.โ
JOSH
It was just a week ago we were in my room dancing to no music, celebrating, and now Iโm here on the floor, afraid that Iโm losing her all over again.
We stay like this, tangled up in each other, for so long the sun comes up. โJosh?โ she finally says, repositioning herself so sheโs sitting with her
back against the side of the bed.
I sit up straighter too, and she starts touching my face so gently, the only thing I want to do is crawl back into bed with her and sleep this all off.
โI want you to know,โ she begins. โIโm going to tell Parker about the trial and everything. I canโt stand her thinking even for one second that you would do something to hurt me. Iโll explain it all to her, okay?โ
โYou donโt have to do that,โ I tell her. โNot on my account. Really.โ
โNo, Iโve wanted to tell her for a while, anyway. I just couldnโt find the right timeโbut this is the right time, I know.โ
โOnly if itโs what you want to do.โ โIt is.โ
I take a few breaths, practice the words a couple times in my head first. โYou might get upset,โ I start, โbut you should know I told my parents about the assaultโthe trial and everything. I know Iโm not supposed to be talking about it, butโโ
โNo, itโs okay,โ she says so quietly I canโt tell if thereโs any uneasiness behind the words. โItโs okay.โ
โIs it, though?โ I ask. โIs it okay?โ
She nods. โI mean, I trust your judgmentโGod, I trust your judgment more than mine. I know youโre not going to be telling people you donโt trust, who donโtย needย to know, right?โ
โRight. No, of course,โ I assure her. โIt was just getting hard to keep it a secret.โ
โI get it. Itโs been a secret for too long. Itโs just . . .โ I wait, but she doesnโt finish.
โHey, I know youโre probably worrying about getting to practice,โ she says. โGo, really, you should go.โ
โOkay,โ I tell her even though practice is the farthest thing from my mind right now, but Iโll go if thatโs what she wants. โAre you sure youโre gonna be all right here, alone?โ
โOf course, yeah,โ she says. She even smiles. โI promise. I think Iโll probably just go back to sleep for a bit.โ
Iโm shaky as I get to my feet. Almost weak, brittle feeling, as I take her hand and help her up off the floor. Dizzy as I get dressed and lean down to kiss her. Scared as I say โI love you.โ Unsteady as I leave her room and close the door behind me.
I make it to morning practice almost forty-five minutes late. Jon shakes his head when I walk into the gym. โSeriously?โ he says out loud, looking around.
I donโt even have the strength to get mad at him or try to defend myself, so I say nothing.
Dominic calls me over to the bench press. โYo, Miller. Spot me.โ When I get over there, he says, under his breath, โAre you crazy showing up late after yesterday?โ I barely have the energy to put two words together, though, to explain.
โI knowโ is all I can manage.
โI told Coach you had a last-minute problem with an assignment.โ โThanks,โ I tell him.
I grip the bar with both handsโthankful Iโm not so shaky anymore, my blood pumping back through my body againโand help him with the lift- off.
โGot it,โ he says.
We take turns spotting each other, and I feel grateful that somehow he knows I shouldnโt be alone right now. I keep catching him watching me too closely, but thankfully, he waits until after practice to ask me, when weโre alone in the locker room.
โParker called me in the middle of the night, you know. She was really scared. By the time I got down there, I guess it was over, whatever happened, but . . .โ He gestures to the scratches on my neck; I pull my collar up. โBe real with me, whatโs going on with you? First you start a fight with Jon. Now whatever this is with Eden?โ
โI didnโt start thatโโ
โNo,โ he interrupts, holding up his hands. โHe was being a total prick, I know, but you laid hands on him first. Thatโs not you.โ
โI know,โ I sigh. โItโs all just a long, complicated thing, I donโt know . .
.โ
โI got time.โ
So, we skip our first classes and get breakfast instead. I tell him
everything thatโs been going on. With me, with Eden. The trial. Last night. Everything.
โDamn, thatโs some heavy shit.โ He shakes his head. โI had no idea.โ
โYeah, well, I didnโt exactly want you to, but I just feel like Iโm in over my head. Like, Iโve honestly never been so scared in my life. I donโt know what to do. If this happens again, what do I do?โ
โThis is only a question, Iโm not trying to be a dick,โ he says, prefacing something Iโm sure Iโm not going to like. โBut is she worth all this to you?โ
โOf course,โ I answer right awayโthereโs no question about it.
โNo, I mean really, because this is a lot. A lot for anyone, even you.โ โDominic. Stop. Sheโs worth it.โ But I feel myself getting all emotional
againโangry, sad, itโs becoming harder to even know the difference anymore. โYou know, this is all happening because literally everyone in her life has treated her like sheโs not worth it for so long.โ
โI get it,โ he says. โI do. I really do.โ He pauses. โIf youโre in this for the long haul, maybe you need to talk to someone too. Because you know I got your back, but I have no clue what to tell you in this situation.โ
โI donโt know. Maybe.โ
โYou know I love you man, but as your friend, can I be honest?โ โYeah, okay.โ
โYouโre starting to spiral again,โ he says. โLike before.โ