Mistakes Were Made

Cassie couldn’t stop herself; she closed her eyes and said Erin’s name and she was coming, too, pleasure melting into her bones.

They caught their breath together over the phone. Cassie’s whole body felt soft.

“Goddamn,” she said. “You’re the best Valentine I’ve ever had.”

Erin laughed at her. “You’re not so bad yourself.”

“I wish I could have been there for real,” Cassie said, stretching. “When we do this again, we’re doing it with video—I want to see your face. Show you how wet you make me.”

“Christ, Cassie,” Erin chuckled. “Are you trying to get me worked up again?”

“See, that’s another reason,” Cassie said. “If we were together, I could easily make you come more than once. We didn’t have enough time for that much over break. I’d like to see how many orgasms I could give you in twenty-four hours.”

“Cassie.”

Cassie grinned into her pillow. “Fine,” she dragged out the word. “I’ll let you go to sleep.”

“Good night, babe,” Erin said. “Thanks again for the flowers.”

Cassie mm-hmmed and ended the call. She fell asleep with a smile on her face.





Sixteen





ERIN


Erin didn’t wake up until sunlight slipped through the slats of her blinds and fell across her face. She yawned, stretching her whole body, toes reaching for the foot of the bed. She couldn’t remember the last time she’d slept so late. A pleasant ache settled between her legs. She yanked the top sheet up over her head to hide her blush from the empty room.

She felt … good.

So good. That was the best Valentine’s Day she’d had in years. Flowers and an orgasm, from someone who gave them to her because they wanted to, not because they had to. That part felt better than it should. Cassie had wanted to make her smile.

They hadn’t texted since Erin’s birthday, and not since the day Cassie had left New Hampshire before then. But Cassie had been thinking about her. It felt so good to be wanted.

The feeling waned throughout the day. Or, more accurately, it got overshadowed by another feeling.

Because Parker didn’t call.

It shouldn’t be a big deal—it wasn’t a big deal, really, except for how she’d called every Sunday since they’d dropped her off at school.

It was fine.

There was no reason Parker would know she and Cassie had sexted on Friday. It was fine that her number was in Cassie’s phone; Erin gave it to her over winter break. Cassie was smart enough to delete the messages. It was fine.

Parker had probably lost track of time in the studio. Or maybe she was with Sam—Erin hadn’t gotten any juicy details about the girl, but Parker talked about her every call. Sam’s doing this amazing arrangement of “Savage” by Megan Thee Stallion for her a cappella group or Sam’s going to double major in international affairs and political science. She’s, like, so smart.

Erin was halfway through emptying the dishwasher before realizing it was dirty.

It was just—what if Parker did know? What if she knew, and now she was never going to speak to Erin again?

Erin couldn’t even blame her. She had no excuses. She was being selfish and irresponsible and inconsiderate. And she’d do it again.

Erin [9:14 PM]

Hope you had a good weekend!

She texted Parker, then immediately worried it was going to come off passive-aggressive. Parker probably didn’t even realize she hasn’t called. She was allowed to have her own life. She was growing up. She didn’t need to call her mom every week.

God, that felt worse than the possibility of her never talking to Erin again.

Erin had reloaded the dishwasher by this point. She checked her phone three times in a two-minute span, then finally opened another message.

Erin [9:34 PM]

Did you have a good weekend?

Cassie [9:35 PM]

Pretty good. But it was all downhill from Friday night tbh

Erin pressed the heel of her hand into her mouth, like she had to hide her smile even though there was no one around to see it.

Cassie [9:35 PM]

What about you?

Erin [9:36 PM]

Pretty much the same

Cassie asked about Erin’s work week and talked about her classes. It should’ve been weird, not easy. Just like FaceTiming on Friday should’ve been weird. Sexting should’ve been weird. But Cassie was easy to talk to—she seemed to always be listening, like she cared what Erin had to say. That probably shouldn’t have been a high bar to pass, but somehow it was.

By the time Erin fell asleep, she’d forgotten that Parker didn’t call.

But then Parker didn’t call all week. It was probably nothing. The semester was in full swing now; Parker was just busy with schoolwork. Erin tried to not freak out, tried to give her space.

She spent the week texting with Cassie. Not constantly, but steadily. Cassie treated it like Snapchat, basically—which Erin had learned how to use only to monitor Parker’s usage in middle school—she sent random pictures: of her notes as she studied, highlighted in color-coordinated ink; of herself pretending to sleep after her morning class, head down on the desk; of her biceps when she was at the gym. Half her face was visible in that last one, and her smirk was unmistakable. Erin had never particularly liked taking selfies—she still didn’t, really, but she liked sending them to Cassie. Cassie sent back emojis: fire or heart eyes or once the sweating one.

Sometimes Erin wanted to ask Cassie if Parker had been acting strange, but there were unspoken rules. Don’t talk about Parker was one of them. Not that Cassie and Erin were particularly good at following rules when it came to each other.

By her Thursday therapy session, Erin was so ready to talk she didn’t even stumble over early conversation like usual.

“Parker didn’t call on Sunday.”

“Oh?” Carolyn said.

“It’s not a big deal,” Erin said. “I’m sure she’s busy. And we had spoken on Thursday, so it still hasn’t been a full week since we last talked. It just felt…” She sighed. She couldn’t tell Carolyn how it felt. “Bad,” she finished feebly.

“Why did it feel bad?”

“You know why,” Erin said. “Because what if she’s mad at me? What if she stops speaking to me again? What if this is the start of something worse?”

“Why would she be mad at you?”

If Erin were a better actor, she would respond immediately, instead of letting the question hang while she swallowed the real reason.

“I don’t know,” she said eventually. “I’m trying to be better at communicating with her.”

“Have you had a miscommunication recently?”

“I don’t think so. I don’t know. Maybe this counts as a miscommunication. Because probably she was just busy and forgot and yet here I am talking to you about it.”

Carolyn gave her an indulgent smile. “You’re allowed to talk about whatever you want. Talking to me about something doesn’t mean it’s bad.”

“Right. Of course not.”

What was bad was the thing she wasn’t talking to her about.

Like she was reading Erin’s mind, Carolyn asked, “Is there something else bothering you?”

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