Playing With Her Heart (Caught Up In Love #4)

Chapter 20

Davis

She is nowhere to be seen. She’s not waiting in the hallway. She’s not in the Terrace Room, and I don’t see her in the Palm Court. I bump into Shelby as she’s heading back inside.

“Shelby, have you seen Jill?”

“She ran out of here five minutes ago. She said she had a horrible headache and had to go. And she asked me to let you know for some reason,” Shelby says, then shrugs as if she’s not entirely sure why Jill would want to pass that message onto me.

“Thanks for letting me know,” I say, wishing my heart weren’t beating fast with worry. But I already know Jill’s done it. The thing she said she wouldn’t do. Run.

Shelby returns to the Terrace Room, and I’m alone in the hall briefly and I clench my fists then push my hand roughly through my hair.

“F*ck,” I say under my breath, and turn toward the wall, wishing it were a punching bag and I could slam it several times. I should have known better. I should have known it would be too soon for her. That she’d need to take it slow. But hell, I thought she was right there with me. I could have sworn she was feeling the same things. She nearly said as much when we danced. I grab my phone from my pocket, but as I’m about to call her, I spot my sister walking toward me, her head cocked to the side in question. “What happened?”

“Nothing,” I answer gruffly. I don’t want to get it into with her, given how she tried to stage her intervention earlier.

She tilts her head to the side, her eyes demanding an answer.

“She left, okay?” I admit because Michele would pry it out of me soon enough.

“She left?” Her voice wavers.

“Yes. And would you like to tell me why you told her to stay away?”

Now she’s steely again as she places a hand on my arm. “You know why, and I don’t regret it.”

I shrug off her hand, and stare hard into her eyes. “What. Did. You. Tell. Her?”

Her lips are pressed together, her jaw is set. She is the most determined person I’ve ever met. “I told her not to play with your heart,” she says with a fierce protectiveness.

“And what exactly does that mean?” My entire body is tense, bracing for words I’m sure I don’t want to hear. “You need to tell me exactly what you said.”

She sighs heavily, as if this pains her as much as it pains me. “I told her if she wasn’t serious about you that she should leave. That if she was making some kind of career move or using you that she should get out,” she tells me, and it feels as if she reached her hands into my chest and grabbed my heart, and is squeezing it. I can’t breathe. There’s a vise around me.

I drop my face into my hands, shaking my head over and over. “No. That’s not what you said. Please tell me that’s not what you said.”

She wraps her arms around me, and whispers in a soft, caring voice. “I’m so sorry.”

But she’s not sorry for what she said. She’s sorry for me. And she should be, because she was right. She was right when she warned me at our dinner. Because this is Madeline all over again.

I knew better. I f*cking knew how this would end, and I did it anyway, against all my better judgement. I took a chance and chucked all my rules for Jill. And for what? To have her turn out to be like the last actress I fell for. Damn all the f*cking actresses in the world who love playing pretend more than anything. Who put their careers first. Who move onto the next job without even looking behind at the people they discard.

I thought Jill was different, but really that was a stupid hope, because she did exactly what my sister asked her to do.

Leave if she didn’t feel the same.

I hate that I’m standing here in this hotel with my sister hugging me, while the woman who doesn’t love me enough is gone. I hate everything about this and I can’t stand to be here another second.

“I need to go.”

“I’m coming with you,” Michele says.

And that seems fitting. It’s been the two of us for the longest time, and we have to look out for each other. Because no one else will.

I turn off my phone on the way to car. She’s not going to call anyway, so there’s no point in leaving it on. The driver holds open the door and Michele slides in first. I follow, wishing my sister weren’t the woman joining me as the driver pulls out into the late night traffic by the hotel.

I groan and bang my head several times against the back of the seat as I bite off a string of curse words. “This wasn’t how this evening was supposed to go,” I mutter, loosening my bow tie as we drive down Fifth Avenue.

Michele rubs her hand gently along my arm. “I know. But this is for the best. You know that, right?”

I nod. “Yeah.”

“It’s better that it ended now than later,” she continues, and I’m reminded of why she’s good at her job as a shrink, because she knows what to say. She knows what people need.

“I know,” I say with a heavy sigh.

“Why don’t we go somewhere and get a drink?”

“I cannot think of a better thing to do right now. I need a whole f*cking bottle, in fact.”

“Then a bottle it is.” She leans forward and gives the driver the address of a bar a few blocks away. Then to me, “Good thing I know all the best places in Manhattan for drinking and eating. This is the perfect spot to forget about a girl. Want me to call Clay to join us?”

“Let’s make it a party,” I say dryly, and she calls Clay and tells him his presence is required.

Soon we pull up to The Last Stand on Lexington, and the name is apropos. I toss my bow tie and jacket on the seat of the car, unbutton the top two buttons on my shirt and head inside with my sister.

The Last Stand is like a railroad apartment, long, narrow, and all bar. There are no cozy booths for intimate encounters, or low-lit nooks where you’d take someone you’d want to touch under the table. This watering hole has one purpose—to get smashed.

“Glenlivet?” Michele asks.

“F*ck Glenlivet. I’ll take a Macallan tonight.” I don’t need anything to remind me of her.

Clay joins us, and it feels right to be with these two people right now. People I know, people I trust. Soon, I’ve downed my third glass and my head is feeling fuzzy, and the vise around my heart is starting to loosen as we drink and talk about everything except show business.

At two in the morning, the bartender says it’s last call and far be it from me to deny The Last Stand another chance to pour another drink. We finish off a final round, and stumble out into the middle of the night.

“You guys take my car uptown. I’m going to take the subway.”

Michele raises an eyebrow. “In your state?”

“The subway was made for times like this.”

On the train, there’s a woman in a nurse’s uniform dozing off a few seats away, a hipster in a hoodie listening to music on his phone, and a skinny guy weaving down the car who’s probably had more drinks than me. I slump down in my seat, the guy in the tux who spoke at the Plaza, who dedicated a song to an actress.

Who’s heading home well past midnight, in a lonely subway car.

* * *

Jill

It’s better this way. It’s better this way. It’s better this way.

I repeat that all night long as I sleep fitfully. I say it over and over in the morning as I run along the West Side Bike Path. I mutter it under my breath as I head over to Central Park.

This is who I am. I am a girl who runs, and today some of the ladies I coach are running a half-marathon so I am here to cheer them on. I blot out the fact that they didn’t expect to see me at the finish line. That I told them I had an event the night before but would be rooting for them from far away. But this is where I should be because there’s no room in my life for anything more. There’s no room in my heart for Davis, or Patrick, or anyone.

My fate was sealed long ago, and I’m better off this way. When I am alone I can’t hurt someone again. As the first of my gals cross the finish line, I raise an arm in the air and cheer wildly, as loud as I possibly can. I jump up and down to prove how goddamn happy I am. She sees me and smiles broadly.

“You did it!”

She jogs over to me and collapses into my arms, and I hug her.

“I’m so happy for you,” I say, because I am. I am happy, I am happy, I am happy.

This is my life. This is safe. Running.

But after they’ve all crossed the finish line, and celebrated, and had their pictures taken, and high-fived each other, they disperse. Heading home to families. Heading elsewhere. And I am where I’ve always been.

Alone, with this bruised and worn-out heart of mine.

I leave the park, and though I’m tempted to walk past The Plaza, what would be the point? I can’t have him, I can’t have us, and I can’t bear the reminder so I walk down Broadway, thinking that I could get lost in the theater district, that I could buy a ticket, catch a matinee, and let myself believe that the razzle dazzle of Chicago or the underground lake in Phantom could take all my cares away. So I make a go of it. I head for the scene of the crime and buy a nosebleed seat for the matinee of Wicked at the Gershwin Theater and settle in to watch the witch fly across the stage and fall in love with the hot guy, but remain misunderstood even through the end.

For a few hours, I forget about the past. But when the curtain rises and the actors take their bows, I am reminded that I’ve been there, done that, and still have the empty space in my chest to prove that my tricks and techniques don’t always work. I leave and wander downtown.

I check my phone once, but he hasn’t called, and he hasn’t texted. Not that I expected either. He’s not a texter, and I don’t deserve a call.

I don’t deserve him.

There is nothing left to save me from what I did, and maybe tonight, maybe tomorrow I’ll man up and say I’m sorry, but I won’t be able to say anything more than that. Since I can’t have him.

I return to my apartment. It’s early evening now and Kat is curled up on the couch watching You’ve Got Mail, one of her favorite movies ever. One she made me watch a year ago, and I fell in love with too.

“Bryan’s out of town for the weekend,” she says, patting the couch. “Come join me.”

I shake my head. “I’m tired.”

She hits pause on the laptop, and eyes me up and down, taking in my fleece jacket and running pants. It occurs to me that I went to the theater dressed like this. It also occurs to me that I don’t care.

“Have you been running all day long?”

“Something like that.”

“Hey, you don’t seem like yourself. What’s going on?”

“Nothing.”

“I don’t believe you, Jill. Did something happen with Davis at the gala last night?”

I flinch, but then turn stoic. “No. Nothing happened. It was fine. We had a fine time. I’m beat though. I need to go nap.”

I don’t nap. I shower, put on pajama bottoms and a t-shirt, and settle into my room. I read Aaron’s last letter again and again, and I watch a video where the woman my brother loves shares her whole heart on TV. And I wish I could find a way to be like her. But that’s not a choice I have.

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