The Lie

I lay back down on the bed and try and train my thoughts to something worth thinking of. I think about the flat back in London that I had sublet for the summer. I think about going to school, getting up every day without the warm heart and the bubbly stomach and the butterflies, and how fucking boring it’s going to be. I think about the pain I’ll feel when I won’t have Brigs’ face to look at every day, the loss of him in my life. The bitterness that will follow. Bitter always follows the sweet, especially when it comes to love. Especially when it comes to forbidden love.

I don’t know how long I sit in the dark, but eventually I get up, unsteady on my feet, and wobble out to the kitchen to raid the fridge for a half-drunk bottle of wine I know is in there.

I’ve just finished pouring myself a glass of the oaky chardonnay when there’s a knock at my door. It’s faint, as if not to disturb, but that just puts the hairs on the back of my neck up.

I glance at the microwave clock. It’s only a quarter to midnight, so not that late, but still. My roommate has never had guests over this late, and I’ve never had anyone over here except Brigs dropping off books a couple times, or the one time he picked me up when we went to a theatre to see a screening outside of town.

Obviously that thought gives me a jolt of hope as I quickly creep toward the door, peeking through the peephole before the person can knock again.

It’s Brigs. Distorted in that fish-eye way, but still him.

Ah shit.

I take a deep breath and undo the chain, slowly opening the door.

“Hi,” I say softly, taking him all in. He’s standing there in what I saw him in earlier, an olive dress shirt and dark jeans.

I think in the deep recesses of my mind I had hoped he would show up. Isn’t that why I wrote the email? A Hail Mary? A last ditch attempt?

He looks pained, his brow furrowed. “Can I come in?” he asks, voice gruff and low. “Sorry it’s so late. I tried calling you but it went straight to your voicemail.”

“You know I never check my voicemail,” I tell him, opening the door wider.

Now he seems larger than life leaning against the frame.

“I know,” he says. “But I’ve never gotten a drunk email from you before.”

He walks in and I know I need to laugh it off.

“Well, consider yourself flattered,” I tell him, closing the door gently. “Drunk emails are the white unicorn of Natasha Trudeau.”

But as he stands in the narrow entryway and turns around to face me, our bodies too close in the dark, he’s not smiling. He’s staring at me instead, like he’s studying a treasure map he knows he’ll lose later, memorizing every detail.

“I want to talk about it,” he says, and his voice is still on the border between hushed and emphatic.

“The email?” I question, even though it’s futile to pretend now.

Every nerve inside me is dancing, waiting, wishing.

He nods and looks around warily. “Is your roommate asleep?” he asks softly.

I nod. “She is, and she can literally sleep through anything.” I almost go off on a tangent about our techno playing neighbor and how she says she’s never even heard his 90s oonce oonce crap blaring through the walls, but I don’t because the look in Brigs’ eyes is so arresting it makes thoughts fall out of my head.

And I guess because I say that, we don’t move anywhere else. We continue to stand in the darkened foyer, feet apart, just staring at each other.

We don’t speak for a few moments. The longest moments.

I’m trying to stand still and not wobble, trying to appear as sober as possible, wondering if my breath is okay, wondering if I have mascara goop in the corners of my eyes. Wondering all sorts of little things that have nothing to do with the big things.

Meanwhile, Brigs is still studying me. I can’t tell if he’s disappointed in me or not.

“So talk,” I tell him, but instead of sounding all cool and tough like I thought I would, it comes out meek and quiet. Because I’m afraid, so damn afraid, to hear what he’s going to say.

Leave me alone.

Or.

I love you.

One would devastate me. One would make me happy.

But both would ruin me in the end.

“Did you mean it?” he asks gently, eyes searching mine. The hollows of his cheeks look extra sharp in the shadows.

“What part?” I ask. Then I say, “All of it.”

“All of it,” he repeats. “How you don’t want to work for me anymore.”

I look away, finding focus on the tops of his black and grey suede sneakers.

“I…” I start but have no idea how to finish the sentence.

“How you’re a catalyst for change.”

It all seems so silly now. But even so I raise my chin and look at him, immediately absorbed by his presence, by the depth of his eyes.

“I want to be.”

“How so?” And he takes a step toward me.

I inhale sharply, trying to steady myself. Only the door is behind me.

“You saw me today,” he continues. “Why didn’t you say hello?”

I lick my lips, my throat dry, the chardonnay a mistake. “I thought it would be wrong.”

His frown deepens, leaning in closer. “Why?”

“Because,” I tell him. “It felt wrong.”

He looks like he’s about to say something else but his lips come together. He tilts his head, observing me deeper. “Why?” he finally says again.