It isnโt until I get Alexisโs text sayingย we need to talkย that it occurs to me we havenโt broken up yet. Somehow, the fact that we never officially got back together doesnโt change the fact that we need to officially un-together ourselves. So I agree to meet her at the coffee shop in Ferguson.
I didnโt put much thought into it, but apparently Alexis did.
As soon as I see her waiting for me at a table in the center of the room, I can tell something is off. For one thing, Alexis is always late. Something about the way her collar is buttoned up and her legs are crossed under the table gives off Sylvie vibes, and not in a good way.
โHey,โ I say as I slump in the seat across from her. I used to think that I was in love with her.
โGlad you could make it,โ Alexis says, and it feels like sheโs cosplaying as Sylvie, or rather the worst sides of Sylvie. The Sylvie that looked down on you for being okay with getting a C on a quiz.
โYeah.โ Even though I know itโs hopeless, I try to steer the conversation to more casual tones. โThanks for inviting me. Good to clear the air before school, you know?โ
โNo, Jack, I donโt know,โ Alexis says.
โOh.โ We stare at each other, and then I glance at her coffee cup. Hoping for a reprieve from whatever interrogation this is, I ask, โCan I get you a
refill while I get my mug?โ
โSure,โ Alexis says. What she doesnโt say is, โThatโs the least you can do,โ but she somehow manages to convey it.
I pay for my own bottomless mug and fill it up. I canโt help, as I head over to the self-serve carafes, but think about all the times weโd come here with Finn and Sylvie to study. Not much studying was ever done, and that always bothered Sylvie but not the rest of us.
On a whim, I fill her cup up with an extra-dark roast like Sylvie drinks. I add sugar and cream before bringing it to her, but Alexis still grimaces at the first sip. She doesnโt complain though. She pushes the mug to the side of the table and looks back at me.
โWell,โ she says. โYeah?โ
โYou have been a really shitty boyfriend this summer,โ Alexis says to me.
โHow is that possible? When Iโm not your boyfriend?โ
โWeโve been sleeping together all summer.โ She says it slowly and sadly, like she regrets expecting better from me.
โYouโre the one who said, โThis isnโt a thing. Weโre just convenient to each other,โ remember?โ
She waves my wordsโor rather her wordsโaway with one hand. โWhether we were technically together or not, it doesnโt matter,โ Alexis
says. โYou havenโt been treating me right, so Iโm here to say, once and for all, that Iโm through with you. Weโre over.โ
From the pout on her face, sheโs already decided on her reply, and it doesnโt matter what I say next. So I answer, โYeah, I know. Because we broke up last March, and we havenโt spoken in three weeks.โ
โAnd why is that, Jack?โ Alexis asks. โWhy havenโt we spoken?โ
โAre you serious?โ I had been blowing on my coffee to cool it, but I freeze with the mug held under my mouth as I gape at her.
โYes, Iโm serious.โ She raises her chin.
โBecause Finn died, Lexy.โ Iโm so confused. I set my mug down with a clink. Some hot coffee spills onto my fingers, but I donโt react.
โExactly.โ She throws up her hands like Iโve proven her point. โI donโt understand. Iโve been grieving, Lexy.โ
โAnd you left me to grieve alone!โ
Iโm not sure if the coffee shop falls silent at her outburst or if Iโve momentarily gone deaf. Either way, thereโs a ringing in my ears that prevents me from hearing myself when I say, โHow dare you.โ
Alexis must have a ringing in her ears too, because she cups her hand around her ear as she says, โHuh? Speak up.โ
โHow dare you say that to me,โ I say as this strangely serene feeling fills me. Itโs suddenly all so clear.
So many times, I told myself that Iโd finally seen the โrealโ Alexis, that Iโd never fall for her antics again, but I always did. I understand now. Iโd seen aspects of the real Alexis, but Iโve never seen them together as a whole. Now all those pieces have come together, and I can finally see the whole Alexis.
Itโs actually a very simple picture. Sheโs a really insecure girl who defines herself entirely by the people she surrounds herself with. Her friends are a collection, a planetary system she has built to rotate around her.
โHow dare I? Jack, youโโ
โNo, no,โ I say. โIf I wanted to, I could have called you here and said, โHey, we were sleeping together all summer, and then my best friend died, andย youย didnโt even check onย me.โ I could do that. You donโt get to do that.โ I try not to have my tone sound like Iโm talking to a child, but itโs hard.
โHe was my friend too,โ Alexis says. โWhy canโt you or Sylvie see that?โ
And it happens again. Whatโs unfolding is so clear that I laugh.
Sheโs surprised enough to lose her focus, and in the pause, I share my humorous revelation.
โThis isnโt about us, is it, Lex? Sylvie broke up with you.โ
I try not to laugh again, because now it feels a little mean, but itโs all so silly and obvious. Sylvie hurt her, so sheโs trying to reenact that with me instead of looking at herself and wondering why Sylvie made that choice.
Alexis is sputtering.
โSylvie and I didnโt break up! We both have a lot going on, and Iโm going off to school, and she needs to find a new shrinkโpoor thing!โand we both needed to take a step back from our friendship.โ
Alexis, who I used to think I was in love with, glares at me.
โUh-huh.โ I take a gulp of coffee, which hasnโt quite cooled and burns down my throat. โSo my guess is thatโs what Sylv said to you, and then you pushed back, because of course you did, and thatโs when she said what you said to me, huh?โ
โSaid what to who?โ Alexis sips the highland grog that I know she hates and tries to hide her grimace.
โYou left her to grieve alone, Lexy. Damn.โ
Once again, I feel like all the pieces have come together and I can finally see what should have been obvious.
โThe day after the accident, why were people coming to your house instead of you going to Sylvieโs?โ I ask.
โI went to the hospital when her parents called me. I was tired and wanted to go home! And our friends needed a place to grieve together, Jack. Sylvie isnโt my only friend.โ
โThereโs a basement in every damn house in this city and you know it,โ I say. โSylvie needed you. Damn, I wouldnโt have mindedโโ My serenity and my voice crack at this point, but it canโt be helped. โIt would have been nice if you had said something to acknowledge that he was my best friend,
Lex. Maybe my only real friend, I donโt know. But the fact that you compare your grief to mine? Or Sylvieโs?โ
I shake my head. The whole conversation is a moot point.
I push back from the table to stand. I donโt think Alexis believes that I will leave without her permission, because she makes a scoffing sound at me.
I look at her one last time. She has a pretty face. For now.
โSylvie said that you had a lot of growing up to do, but honestly, Lex? If youโre this far behind at eighteen, I donโt know if youโre ever going to catch up. I hope you do, butโฆโ I shrug. I give up and stand up.
โJack, you are not seriouslyโโ
I am, and thereโs nothing she can do about it.