“Ruben…”
“Also, just so we’re clear,” I add. “I’m coming out to everyone, soon. I don’t know how I’m going to do it, but I am.” Even if the thought of doing it alone, without Zach by my side, makes me feel like I’ve stepped into an empty elevator shaft where I expected there to be a floor. If I don’t do this now, they’ll wrap us even tighter in their web. And even though I feel sick at the thought of doing this, knowing that it will turn Chorus against us, and knowing that if Geoff is right and the world turns on us I’ll have ruined this for everyone, permanently. Our team. Jon and Angel. Zach. Even if that makes me feel like the most selfish, disgusting person who ever lived.
Even then.
“And I don’t need Geoff’s permission,” I add, my stomach churning. “Or Jon’s, or Angel’s. So, don’t get it into your head that if you don’t come out, you’ll be holding me back. Whatever you choose, whether you want to stay in the band, or leave it, or you want to come out publicly, or stay private, or even if you want my help with figuring it all out? I’ll be right here, and we will work through it together. But if you can’t give me anything more than ‘I want everyone to get along’? Then I just … I don’t think I can…”
“Okay,” he whispers.
“… do this anymore,” I finish.
He swallows, and we sit in a lengthy silence before he finds the words. “Does this mean we’re over?”
Even hearing the words makes me nauseous. My mind scrambles to catch up. How did we get here? “I hope not,” I say. “Just … let me know when you figure out what you actually want, okay?”
He nods without speaking.
I think I’ve just destroyed us. And I don’t know how to undo it.
Even worse, I’m not sure undoing it is even the right choice. Because even if this argument was fueled by frustration and panic, I’m pretty sure I meant every word.
We end the call and I leave the study, but I don’t know where I’m going. My ears are ringing with the echo of the conversation, and my mind refuses to address what’s just happened.
It’s only Mom and me at home right now; Dad’s at work, and Mom’s studio doesn’t open for class until midafternoon. A puffing sound down the hall tells me where she is, and I follow the sound of her heavy breathing to our in-home gym.
It’s a sun-drenched room with floor-to-ceiling windows, so we can work out inside while imagining we’re out in nature, I guess. Mom’s on the treadmill, with her headphones in, staring at herself intensely in the floor-length mirror in front of her. She catches sight of me in the mirror as I lean against the doorway, and she slows to a stop. “Hey,” she says. Then, after studying my stricken face, “You okay?”
I know if I tell her what happened, she’ll take any side but mine. She’ll lecture me on being selfish, and immature, and I’ll be equal parts furious at her for the implication and terrified that she’s right, so I’ll go on the defensive. And we’ll scream at each other until my sadness turns into rage.
But if I don’t tell her, I can pretend I’m a little kid again, back when my little concerns were worth her comfort instead of her scorn. When I’d scraped a knee, or gotten into an argument on the playground, or knocked over a glass of water, and she’d stop whatever she was doing to wrap me into a hug until everything was okay again.
So, when she holds out her arms to me, I let myself forget that more often than not she’s the one who makes me feel like nothing’s okay. I ignore the fact that she’s mid-workout, and covered in sweat. I just go to her, and she pulls me into an embrace, and whispers, Sweetie, what happened? Talk to me, and for a second I pretend that I can.
But I don’t say a word.
TWENTY-SIX
ZACH
The call ends, and I can’t move.
His words slice me apart. They end me.
“I don’t think I can … do this anymore.”
I know he said other things, but that was by far the loudest. It’s practically screaming in my mind, over and over again.
From his voice, it sounds as if he’s already given up on our relationship, already decided that this isn’t something that I can give him. That means what comes next is just a gradual descent. This means, soon, he’s going to break up with me, all because I don’t know what I want.
I sit still, starting at the blank screen of my computer, my eyes filling with tears.
That really just happened.
After what happened with Dad, I’ve known that if someone opens the door to leave, it’s only a matter of time before they walk out.
So maybe Ruben didn’t say he was going to break up with me over this, at least not now, but he opened the door.
I go into the bathroom, lock myself in, and pull my shirt over my head. Every movement feels slow and laborious, like it’s costing more energy than I have. What I need is a shower. To take a second to myself, to wash everything away and reset.
I turn the taps on and step inside. I bow my head and let the water run down my face, messing up my perfect Zach Knight tousle. Good riddance. I don’t even want my hair to be this long. I never have.
Oh boy, maybe Ruben does have a point.
I thought I was doing the right thing, trying my best to be a team player, but maybe I’ve gone too far. Maybe I’ve lost myself, and now it’s costing me.
Things with Ruben were wonderful, so wonderful. Easily more perfect than I’d ever dared to let myself dream of, especially after what happened between my parents. He’s fiery and brings out the best in me and also has an incredibly caring side and more drive than I’ve ever seen in anyone. He’s inspired me so much, and I never told him. I also never told him having him as a boyfriend makes me feel like the luckiest guy on the planet.
Instead, I let him down.