I dropped my eyes and let out a breath. What a mess.
“I didn’t really care what the hell my dad did.” He sighed. “But I thought it was pretty shitty of you. You’re my teacher,” he pointed out. “My teacher.”
I nodded right away, looking him in the eyes. “Yes, I am.” I owned up to it. “You have every right to be angry.”
“People are saying that a lot to me these days, as if that makes everything better,” he threw back.
Christian was right. Mistakes can be forgiven but not always forgotten. And it was unfortunate that he was the one to suffer for others’ shortcomings.
“Why aren’t you seeing my dad anymore?” he pressed.
“Because it was wrong,” I told him. “Because life sometimes has too many obstacles. We betrayed your trust, and you’re the most important thing.”
He pinched his eyebrows together, looking like he wasn’t sure what to believe.
“Really?” he asked quietly.
“You’re the most important,” I repeated.
He turned for the door and started to walk away but then hesitated. “The thing is,” he turned back. “I started to like my dad more. He was trying harder.”
Was he insinuating that I had anything to do with that?
“He’s around a lot now,” Christian explained, “helping me with homework…” He nodded to himself. “But now he seems sad,” he mused. “I’m not sure why I care.”
Hearing that Tyler wasn’t happy hurt. I couldn’t lie to myself. I wanted him to miss me, and I wanted him to have given me up for a good reason. Christian was that reason.
Christian peered over at me. “When I go to the AP class, can you date my dad?”
I broke out in a small smile. “But then I wouldn’t be your teacher.”
“But you’d be around my house,” he retorted, perking up.
I relaxed, seeing that he was no longer angry. I didn’t know if he’d told anyone, but I wouldn’t put the burden of a secret on him, either. If he talked, he talked, and I’d have to deal with the consequences.
Unfortunately, though, he thought his father had moved on because of my relationship with his son, when, in truth, it went far deeper than that.
“I’m always here for you,” I assured him. “You always come first. Don’t ever forget that.”
TWENTY-FIVE
TYLER
I
planted my hand on the ornate marble railing and took a sip of my whiskey, gazing out over the bustle of cars, carriages, and lights in the cool evening of the Quarter. Conversation and laughter drifted outside from the Halloween masque through the doors behind me, but I narrowed my eyes, watching the gutter punks in the doorway down on the other side of the street beg for beer money instead.
Their ratty clothes, stringy hair, and “fuck it” attitude were something I had never understood, mostly because I’d barely noticed them before.
I guess, on the rare occasion I’d actually looked, I’d presumed they liked their lot in life. They were smiling as they chatted, after all.
But now I found myself wondering – as I felt my clean, crisp tux against my skin and the fragrant smell of the rich food from the ball going on behind me – where would they sleep tonight?
How long since that dog they were petting had eaten?
Where the hell were their parents?
I’d slowed my life considerably, trying to do a few things well instead of fifteen terribly, like my father wanted, but the more I’d taken the time to notice the little things around me, the emptier I felt.
Maybe they wanted more out of life and were just trying to get through the day. Or maybe they didn’t, because they didn’t know everything the world had to offer.
But I did know they’d be grateful for whatever money they got right now. They’d be grateful for food, drink, and a cigarette – or anything that made them feel good.
I wanted a lot of things, but – I realized, looking down at them – almost nothing I wanted would I treasure. Barely any of it would make me pause to feel grateful.
I’d missed what was truly important. I’d chosen wrong.
My phone vibrated from inside my breast pocket, but I just tilted the glass back up to my lips, ignoring it.
Jay was inside, constantly texting that I needed to get my ass in there and start chatting with people, but the luster was gone. It had slowly dwindled away the longer I went without her.
“Soooo,” I heard a woman’s voice say from behind me, and I looked to see my father and his wife smiling at me.
“When will you officially announce your candidacy?” she asked.
Rachel Marek was my father’s second wife, and while I liked her, I barely knew her. My father didn’t remarry for another ten years after my mother’s death when I was fifteen. I’d long since moved out and started my own life by then.
I looked over, seeing Jay march through the French doors, clearly on a mission to find me and bring me inside himself.