Held: A New Adult Romance (22 page)

 “Shoes,” she says, admiring her Louboutins. “I’m afraid I can’t resist them.” She stretches an ankle for a moment then snaps her feet back together with almost military precision. Back to business. “How are you today, Amber?”

 I hesitate. I know what I need to say to her, but now I have to I can't. Deep down what her answer will be.

 "Madame Bovary," she says, breaking the silence. The book is sitting on top of my purse.

 "Yeah. I read it in college. Didn't really get it then, but I figured I might have better luck second time around."

 She sits there with that perfect, blank-yet-friendly expression. Waiting. I'm going to have to talk about last night. So I deflect. "Have you...read it?" I ask.

 "Yes," she says. "A long time ago."

 She doesn't elaborate. It's not her job to do so, after all. She's here to draw things out of me. "I thought the ending sucked," I say, sounding bratty to my own ears. But really – it’s one of those ‘broccoli’ books - the ones that are supposed to be so good for you that when you don't read them they leave you feeling like a snotty little kid who won't eat her vegetables.

 "It's a sad ending," says Dr. Stahl. "But inevitable, I think. Why didn't you like it?"

 "I don't know. Why couldn't she have gone off with Leon instead? Instead of sitting around being unhappy forever?" 

 "You think she would have been happy with Leon?" she asks. Oh, she's good. She knows how to get to the heart of the matter.

 "I don't know," I say. "All I know is I wouldn't eat poison if it didn't work out. Sometimes you've just got to...I don't know...carry on. Keep breathing."

 She says nothing. Her silence is a blank page, waiting for me to scrawl my dysfunction all over it. It's now or never, I guess.

 "I talked to Jaime last night," I say.

 "Okay," she says, folding her hands.

 "I told him. About what happened."

 "And you hadn't talked about this before?"

 "No. I mean - we'd talked about Justin. But not about...you know. That." I did it. Everyone knows I did it. Why just I can't say it? "It's not much of an ice-breaker, is it? 'Hey, I just met you and this is crazy, but I killed my last boyfriend.'"

 Dr. Stahl inclines her head slightly. "And how did that make you feel?"

 "Not as bad as it should. Is it wrong that I'm sick of him?"

 "Jaime?"

 "No. God, no. Justin."

 "Okay."

 Oh God. She's giving me nothing. She sits there quietly waiting for me to blow - I know it's what she's supposed to do, but sometimes I hate it. I know it's for my own good but it's still another form of manipulation, and I don't respond well to having my buttons pushed. For obvious reasons. 

 "I hate him." It comes out like a reflex, like a sneeze. "I fucking hate him. I hate that he's still in my head. I hate that he's under my fucking skin - literally. This skin graft? Drives me nuts. Sometimes it itches and burns like Voldemort just walked into the goddamn room or something. He came into my life and he poisoned it, and now he's fucking dead and he's still poisoning me. He's still got a hold over me. I am never going to be the person I could have been - because of him, because he put me through hell - and please, please don't give me the talk about being a stronger person because of it, because fuck strength. Fuck scars. I don't want them. I just want to be free."

 The tears come, hot and angry. "Last night was so hard. I wanted to talk. I wanted him to know everything, but it was like I had to keep holding myself back. I could have just...jumped him. Like before. I guess you figured out I slept with him, right?"

 "I had, yes."

 Her expression is infuriatingly bland. "You think I'm a slut?"

 "No," she says. "I think you were in a position where sex was one of the few cards you still held. It was a negotiating technique - a distraction. It was the one power over Justin that he allowed you to have." 

 "Which I lost," I say, and it's hard. So hard. "When he raped me."

 My face is streaming. She nods towards the Kleenex box and I grab the little paper tongue and pull. "Are you okay?" she asks.

 I blow my nose and nod.

 "You've never used that word before," she says.

 I swallow. My eyes burn. "No," I say. "I know. But it was, wasn't it? I didn't consent to what he did, and he must have done it, because there was no-one else."

 "Sex without informed consent is the legal definition of rape, yes. But when we've talked about this in the past you've always resisted that definition. And you resisted it at the time, as I recall."

 I nod again. The air between us is calm, but strangely charged. Receptive.

 "What do you think changed, Amber?" she asks.

 "I don't know," I say, quietly. "I guess I didn't want to be a...victim. And don't give me that bullshit about 'survivors'. So they rebranded it - whatever. It's still rape, right? They can't soften that word."

 "No. They can't."

 "It was like Everglade used to say," I explain. "That I minimized the things he did. I made excuses for him. Apologized. The alternative was...well...the alternative was getting mad at him."

 "You didn't feel you could handle your anger?"

 "That much anger? God, no. If I'd got mad...I don't know what would have happened." I wave my hand around the room. "I think this whole conversation would be taking place someplace else. With me in an orange jumpsuit."

 “Anger can be a constructive thing – if channelled properly.”

 I don’t think that’s true. I feel like lightning; the rage in me is that big, that electric. It’s not some little current you can run through a wire. I sit biting my lip to keep from yelling at her. When I find my voice it’s soft, vaguely-psychiatric – all California. “I don’t think I’m there yet.”

 “And where do you feel you are?”

 I think. I feel. I’m so used to these verbs that I’ve forgotten how to do anything else but think and feel. They’re such simple things you don’t even pay them any mind, until you can no longer do them without pain. Like anything, I guess.

 Somewhere along the line I forgot how to have a life. Probably sometime around when Justin appeared. He ate my life once. The trick is not letting him do it again.

 “I don’t know,” I say. “Probably nowhere near where I need to be.”

 “For what?”

 I swallow hard. I felt it this morning, saying goodbye. I think he feels it too – he was drawing away from me on purpose. A sad ending, but inevitable. “For him,” I say.

 “Jaime?”

 “Yeah.”

 “You like him.”

 My eyes have started to burn again. “Yeah. I do. I think I...more than like him.” I blink rapidly but the tears fall anyway. “And that’s exactly why I’m not ready – right?”

 She says nothing. She doesn’t have to. I’ve come up with the correct answer, after all. I can’t be with him. I’m in no shape to be with anyone.

 Chapter Twenty-One

 

Jaime

 

Nobody ever said that doing the right thing was easy.

 Then again, nobody ever warned me it was going to be this hard.

 I know what she needs. And I know what she wants. If I give her what she wants, doesn't that make me as bad as him? - the one who exploited her every weakness and anxiety until she had to fight to remember who she was and what it meant to be alive?

 I call John Gillespie.

 Once upon a time I'd have been star struck to have his number in my phone, but now he's just...John, I guess. Amber’s dad, the father of the woman I...yeah. Let's not torture ourselves here.

 He picks up on the third ring. "Jimmy? Everything all right?"

 I hesitate. "No," I say, eventually. "Everything's fucked." I sound like a sulky kid to my own ears, but it just pops out. Hearing his voice makes it real, makes her real. I know what I have to do and it hurts - and the fact that it hurts so much is exactly the reason I have to do it.

 "Is Amber okay?" I can hear the panic in his voice - he thinks something terrible has happened.

 "She's fine," I say, quickly. "Totally fine. I just left her apartment."

 "Good." He exhales. "Good. Is she safe? Do you know if she's been to the doctor?"

 "No. I don't know that. Sorry."

 "Right. How did she seem?"

 "She..." I take a deep breath. "John, she told me everything."

 There's a hush over the line for a moment and then he says, "Everything?"

 "Yes."

 "Oh God."

 "Yeah." My throat aches just thinking about it. I stayed last night because I had to, but every time I touched her I felt like I should apologize, check I wasn't touching her somewhere that might trigger some bad memory. "I can't keep tabs on her for you," I say. "I won't. I'm sorry."

 I hear him sigh. "Then what am I supposed to do?"

 "I don't know. Call her. Tell her you worry about her."

 "And you think she'll listen to me? I'm her dad - she's more or less contractually obliged to ignore me."

 "I know that. But I can't do what you want. I'm sorry - I tried, but I can't do it."

 "Come up to the house," he says.

 "Mr. Gillespie...John...I'm not gonna change my mind."

 He sighs again. "I know that. It's not about that. I just...I think we should talk, don't you?"

 I owe him that much; she's going to need him, when I'm done.

 It was always a weird feeling, driving my old hoopty up into the Hills. Some people up here have Porsches they don't even drive, then there's me with the balding tires and grouchy suspension of my old, rusting Subaru. Weirder still to sweep through the main gatehouse and up the front drive, gawked at once more by Cory, who probably can't even believe I'm still allowed on the property.

 A pretty, dark-haired secretary leads me through the house. I notice the gun hasn't been replaced on the wall. John Gillespie is in the next room, reading something on an iPad. He's wearing thin-framed glasses and for the first time looks so much like somebody's dad that I'm startled. Always weird when you remember these people were once like us. And still are.

 "Glad you could make it," he says. "You all right?"

 "Yes, I think so."

 "Has Amber called you?" he asks.

 I take the offered seat and shake my head. "I said I'd see her tonight."

 “She’s still not talking to me.”

 “I’m sorry to hear that.”

 He sighs. “Yeah, well. Always the way, I suppose. The last time I interfered with her love life I just drove her further into the arms of that creep.”

 My face turns hot. “I’m not a creep, Mr. Gillespie.”

 His eyes are like chips of flint, but he looks tired and worried. “I know you’re not,” he says. “And I understand why you don’t want to do this...”

 “Do you?” It just pops out before I can stop myself. I’m aware of how defensive I sound, and how young. A kid, who thinks he knows it all, thinks that simple love brings complex wisdom. Full-on Romeo and Juliet stuff.

 “I...care for Amber,” I say. It’s fudging the truth but it’s close enough. “I won’t spy on her for you. After everything she’s been through...I just...I don’t know. I can’t be around her unless I can be honest with her, like she’s been honest with me.”

 He folds his arms. He has the same freckles as she does, except his upper arms are maybe three times the thickness of hers. “So she told you,” he says. “The whole gory story?”

 “Yes.”

 John nods. “And you think she’s ready for another relationship?”

 I can feel the backs of my eyes burn. “No,” I say, swallowing hard.

 He’s taken aback, I can tell. Maybe he was expecting me to argue my case, plead true love or some such bullshit. But it’s the truth. It’s the only thing I can give her. I don’t have a house in Big Sur and a swimming pool. My car is falling to pieces and my bank balance is an embarrassment, but I can love her enough to face the truth; she’s not ready for this.

 “I’m going to see her this evening,” I say. “Lay it on the line.”

 “Don’t,” he says, surprising me.

 “I have to.”

 “You’re just going to dump her?” he says. “After she spills her fucking guts to you?” He shakes his head. “Nice. Angel Clare’s got nothing on you, Jimmy-boy.”

 “I know my timing sucks...”

 “...just a little. What happens then? You wander off with a clear conscience and she ends up locking herself away again? Think about it – there’s nobody to look after her, nobody to make sure she goes to her appointments. You’re going to fuck off feeling virtuous and she’s just going to get
worse
.”

 “She’s not going to get worse. She’s getting better. She’s started going out, she got an apartment...”

 “...yes, because she wants what she can’t have. Always has done. Do you think she would have done any of those things if you weren’t involved...” He slows, trails off. He’s dug himself into a hole and he knows it.

 “You see?” I say. “She can’t rebuild her life around me. Or any man.”

 He leans back in his chair and sighs. “Yeah. All right.”

 “You understand?”

 “Yep.”

 “I’ll let her down as gently as possible, I promise.”

 He sighs again. “I’m coming with you.”

 “What?”

 “I’m coming with you. I’ll wait outside. You persuade her to see me and I’ll go in after you. I’m not leaving her alone.”

 I nod. “Okay. Thank you.” I feel a strange, nervous urge to giggle. The situation is so weird as to be comical; after all, it’s not often that you get to discuss dumping your girlfriend with her dad. I wonder what he said to him – the other one – in Vegas? It was probably a very different conversation.

 Afterwards I wonder if I should buy her flowers, or is that too much of an obvious consolation prize? I think of the empty space in her apartment and realize she’s lacking more than cut flowers – I don’t think she even owns a vase yet. I find a store and wander into the glassware section. Cut glass, blown glass, shelf after shelf on either side of me. They make me anxious – that kind of weird, OCD worry that you’re going to have some kind of involuntary muscle spasm (even though you’ve never had anything of the sort before) and end up bringing a whole shelf crashing down on the floor.

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