Funny story, p.29

Funny Story, page 29

 

Funny Story
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  Again.

  Nine times.

  Finally, on the tenth, my phone vibrates. I nearly throw it in my hurry to get it eye level.

  shit day got away from me sorry but ya all good here u

  I take it to mean, All good here, you?

  Which begs the question, where is here?

  At first, I’m just so relieved he’s alive and well—or else kidnapped by someone who texts exactly like him—that I literally sit down in the middle of my pacing, right on the library’s lawn, and say aloud, “Thank god.”

  But then, slowly, a new feeling simmers through me.

  This is Miles, I remind myself. He’ll have an explanation.

  I’m backsliding toward the pit I’ve found myself in a hundred times before, waiting on someone I know in my gut isn’t coming.

  But in the length of our friendship, Miles has never stood me up.

  The things he said the other night—about the men in my life not wanting to be seen, running as soon as they are—play back, like a siren, a warning I missed.

  It doesn’t make sense. I’m missing something.

  I hammer out another text: I thought you were picking me up.

  Miles types for a second, then stops without sending a message.

  My body goes hot, my skin too tight. Suddenly I need to move. I need to get away. I can’t stay here another second.

  I grab my stuff and walk. Leave the parking lot. The sun has started setting, but I’ll make it back before dark.

  Except the idea of going home nauseates me.

  In a temporary fit of deluded ambition, I pull my phone out to Google CrossFit gyms. Maybe I could burn off this anxiety by throwing tires, or whatever.

  Miles is calling.

  I try to answer, but I’ve just missed the last ring. A car honks, and I realize I’ve stopped in an intersection. I wave an apology and run across, dialing him back.

  Straight to voice mail.

  He must be leaving me a message. As I power walk, I eye the screen every few seconds, waiting for the message to buzz in. Instead I get a text alert: ya sorry something came up im really sorry

  Three sorries deep and no closer to an explanation.

  At this point, I feel stupid and a little angry.

  I take a deep breath.

  Things come up. We don’t owe each other anything, I tell myself. We made no promises.

  But the truth is, Miles made me feel so safe, and now I feel completely discarded.

  This is what you get, a voice taunts in my mind.

  When you make all the same mistakes again and again.

  When you choose the wrong people to trust and let down the right ones.

  When you let someone in who’s told you in every conceivable way not to rely on them.

  Trust people’s actions, not their words.

  Don’t love anyone who isn’t ready to love you back.

  Let go of the people who don’t hold on to you.

  Don’t wait on people who don’t hurry for you.

  Instantly, I feel so tired. Exhausted. As badly as I don’t want to go home, there’s nowhere else for me to go.

  I’ve just started back toward the apartment when my phone rings again.

  My heart soars in anticipation. He’ll have an explanation, something that makes sense of all of this.

  Except it’s not him calling. It’s an unknown number.

  I answer, just in case, trying to sound cool, calm, collected, and overall diametrically opposite how I actually feel. “Hello?”

  “Hi!” a chipper, feminine voice says. “Is this Daphne Vincent?”

  “Um.” I sniff, modulate my voice. “Who’s this?”

  “My name’s Anika. I’m calling from the Ocean City Public Library.”

  It takes three full seconds for me to make sense of what she’s saying.

  “We were really impressed by your résumé,” she goes on, “and we’d love to set up a virtual interview.”

  I press the heel of my hand to my forehead. The world keeps spinning.

  This is what I’ve been waiting for, hoping for.

  “Hello?” she says.

  “Sorry,” I stammer. “Yes, I’m here.”

  “Would you be available for an interview sometime in the next two weeks?” she says. “Assuming you’re still interested.”

  It feels like I’m swallowing a rock.

  “Of course I am,” I force out.

  I’m not even sure which part I’m agreeing with—whether I’m available, whether I’m interested.

  But it’s the only answer that could possibly make sense, right?

  The escape hatch I’ve been waiting for, right when the whole house of cards is falling down, and I should feel happy, or at least relieved, but all I can feel is this whole-chest ache, yet another loss of someone, something, I didn’t even have to begin with.

  “Fantastic!” she says. “Could you just send us your availability and we’ll set something up?”

  I clear my throat. “I’ll check my calendar as soon as I get home.”

  Home. I ignore the ping in my heart at that word.

  It’s just an apartment. It’s never been mine.

  31

  TUESDAY, AUGUST 6TH

  11 DAYS

  Miles doesn’t come home that night.

  I know because I don’t sleep.

  I’m not waiting for him, though. I’m thinking about Ashleigh. Mentally drafting and revising apologies. Wondering how I managed to do to her the exact thing I hate most. I always identified with my mom, but in this situation, I know who I’ve acted like, and it’s not Holly Vincent.

  I want to hide at home, skip work Tuesday, but there’s too much going on, and I can’t leave Ashleigh or Harvey in the lurch.

  So I arrive a full twenty minutes before my shift starts, having ordered full-blown espresso from Fika, which has me moving at warp speed.

  “You buy me a three-piece suit?” Harvey asks as he moseys through the fog to meet me at the locked front doors. He tips his head toward the oversize paper box in my arms.

  “Pastéis de nata,” I explain. “Portuguese custard tarts. For Ashleigh’s birthday.”

  The idea came to me around two a.m. By four, I’d found a bakery that had them, forty minutes south of here. At five, I was on my way.

  Harvey stares at me, concerned. “You do know Ashleigh’s Persian, not Portuguese, right?”

  “What? I know,” I say. “She just told me she fantasized about moving to Portugal, so . . .”

  He rears back. “What’s in Portugal?”

  “Pastéis de nata,” I say. “And beautiful beaches, I think.”

  He shrugs to himself and unlocks the doors. “Well, I’m glad you remembered, because I forgot her doughnuts at home yesterday, and the grandkids ate them.”

  Inside, I set the box on her side of the desk, then busy myself updating displays so I can miss her arrival.

  All day, we manage to dodge each other, the box of pastries gradually emptying as she, Harvey, and a couple of her favorite regulars pick over them.

  When I come back from lunch, she’s sitting at her computer, and flicks a glance my way. “Hi,” I say tentatively.

  “Hello,” she replies.

  I take my seat and try to focus, despite the noxious cloud of awkwardness. Eventually I settle into a rhythm, and then Landon arrives to relieve Ashleigh for the evening shift.

  “Sweet! Goodies!” he says, one earbud already in, the other blasting from around his neck as he slips behind the desk.

  “Daphne brought them,” Ashleigh says, gathering her things, “for my birthday.”

  “A couple people went in on them,” I automatically say.

  “Still can’t lie for shit,” she says, without averting her gaze from her computer.

  “Can I have one?” Landon asks her.

  “Of course,” she says. “I’m leaving them for the night crowd to finish off. Otherwise Mulder will eat all of them and turn into the Mask by bedtime.”

  Landon leans over to pluck a pastel de nata from the center. “The Mask?”

  “Young people.” Ashleigh grabs her green pleather bag and eyes me. “Thanks. For . . . whatever those things are.”

  “Pastéis de nata,” I tell her. “Portugal’s famous breakfast treat.”

  I can’t tell if she’s caught off guard in a good way, or just confused. Maybe she doesn’t even remember our conversation about Portugal.

  “And it’s my pleasure,” I add.

  She nods, an acknowledgment with no visible emotion attached to it, then jogs her bag higher and leaves.

  * * *

  An empty apartment greets me, again.

  All my life, this moment, this feeling has been a constant: doing homework at a kitchen table while Mom was at night class, planning programs on the rug while Peter took a client out for drinks, sitting on the bleachers at school while every other kid’s parent showed up to take them home, Dad already halfway to a sound bath that a Trader Joe’s cashier invited him to.

  Maybe it’s time to just make peace with it. Maybe certain people are destined to be solitary creatures. Maybe no matter how hard I try, I’ll end up back here.

  I drop my bag, kick off my shoes, and shuffle into the dining room. The apartment has been thoroughly cleaned since this morning.

  The breakfast table is cleared of junk mail and water glasses and bags from the pharmacy. Now there’s just a small white box wrapped in gold twine, and beside it, a scrap of paper. In extraordinarily messy handwriting: Sorry I missed you.

  A wave of déjà vu rocks me.

  It was easy to toss Dad’s note in the trash. I knew exactly what to expect. With this, I can’t help hoping for something more.

  I slide the twine off, pop the box open, and start to laugh.

  Fudge.

  A box of fudge. So underwhelming as to border on absurd: Sorry I missed you, here’s some chocolate and condensed milk.

  But the funniest part is, I did the exact same thing to Ashleigh.

  The hysteric laughter is about to tumble into outright crying, when, miracle of all ill-timed miracles, my phone rings with a call from Dad.

  “Is this a joke?” I demand of the universe and/or empty apartment.

  I don’t want to talk to him.

  I don’t want to talk to anyone—I’d even rejected a call from Mom on the walk home, because I hadn’t decided yet whether to tell her about the Maryland job or not. I told myself I didn’t want to get her hopes up, but the truth is, I don’t want to get mine any higher than they already are.

  I just need to get through the interview and the Read-a-thon, and see how everything shakes out.

  I send Dad’s call to voice mail and pull up my Read-a-thon checklist, desperate for a distraction, and scan the list of supplies we still need.

  Then I start dragging the remaining wedding stuff out of the closet, sorting out what I can repurpose for the fundraiser—napkins, plates, flameless tea lights—and what I should just donate. The rest—the dress and everything else sellable—is still at Ashleigh’s, one more problem I can’t think about right now.

  I take a quick break to order dinner, then dive back into sorting and packing until I hear a pounding at the door, the dinner I have no appetite for.

  “You can leave it there!” I shout, jumping up and sprinting down the hallway. I look around for a sweater I can pull on over my sports bra. “I already paid and tipped when I ordered!”

  No answer.

  Then the scrape of a throat being cleared.

  “It’s Peter.”

  I honestly almost blurt out Peter who? while pulling my cardigan off the coat hook and onto my body.

  Then it clicks, like a bullet into a barrel.

  Peter.

  I open the door, half expecting to have my only workable theory disproven. There’s no way Peter Collins is here, on my doorstep.

  Except he is.

  “Hi, Daphne,” he says, with a woeful smile. “Can I come in?”

  “Um . . .”

  “Just for a minute,” he promises, his green eyes glossy and brow furrowed in that contrite-yet-hurt way that used to make my kneecaps melt. Not that he had much occasion to use it.

  Peter had always been reliable. I always knew where he was, when to expect him. Between our synced calendars, our phones’ location sharing, our rigid schedule, our unspoken agreement to send the Leaving the bar now, see you soon and Ran to the store for more milk while you were in the shower text messages, there wasn’t much space for fights.

  I never had to ask, When are you coming home? I never had to worry he wouldn’t.

  Until, of course, he didn’t.

  I’m too shocked to argue. I widen the door and he steps inside, looking around with abject wonder, like I’m leading him into an accursed ancient pyramid and not a small, eclectically decorated apartment inside a renovated meatpacking facility.

  “It looks different,” he says, “from the last time I was here.”

  I shoot him a look over my shoulder. Bold move, mentioning the last time he was here. To see his then-best-friend-now-fiancée.

  I make a noncommittal sound and lead him to the living room.

  The whole time, I’m kind of wishing I’d just started laughing in his face, refused to say a single word, and just kept laughing until he slunk away.

  I gesture toward the less comfortable of our two chairs and he sits, waits for me to do the same. I don’t.

  His eyes wander over the trail of wedding detritus. “You still have so much stuff.”

  “Taking another load to the thrift store tomorrow,” I lie.

  He winces. I stare.

  After several awkward seconds, he says, “You look great, Daph.”

  I do not. “I’m pretty busy, Peter.”

  The corners of his mouth twist. I see a question forming on his lips, but he shakes his head, apparently deciding to let it go.

  Another few awkward seconds pass. His gaze meets mine, holds, smolders.

  I turn to refold a couple of tablecloths. “I’m going to keep packing while you talk.”

  “I’m sorry, Daphne,” he says.

  “Yeah, you told me that,” I say.

  “No, I mean, I’m sorry.”

  The chair scrapes back. I turn to find him marching toward me. I still have an ivory table runner gripped in my hands when he grabs them and holds them between us. “I’m so sorry,” he says. “I was stupid and shortsighted. It was all just about chasing a rush, and honestly . . . I think I was afraid of the commitment. Of marriage.”

  I half laugh. “So you got engaged to someone else?”

  He shakes his head. “We’re not together. We called it off.”

  For a moment, I’m speechless.

  It feels a little like a low-grade earthquake just rumbled through the room.

  “She called it off,” I say.

  He huffs. “It was mutual. We both realized how stupid we’d been. I think I knew within a week, honestly, but I’d already made such a wreck of things, I figured I needed to see it through.”

  Blood rushes through my ears, dimming his voice.

  I feel dizzy. Plenty of physical sensations, but hardly any emotional ones.

  “So you knew it was a mistake,” I say, gathering my wits, “and you were going to . . . what? Just marry her anyway? You ripped up my life and then you were going to destroy hers too? For . . . for fucking pride?”

  His jaw drops, hurt flooding his features. I’ve never talked to him like this. It’s close to things I’ve screamed, in my darkest late-night fantasy speeches, but it doesn’t actually feel good to say.

  It doesn’t feel good to hurt him.

  Because truthfully, I don’t feel hurt by him right now.

  Wronged? Sure. Hurt? No. He’s not capable of that anymore.

  I step back. “I’m sorry. I don’t want to be mean to you.”

  He shakes his head. “I deserve it.”

  “You do,” I say. “But still, I don’t want to treat you like that. I just . . . It’s hard to take any of this seriously. It’s hard to trust what you say now, after all the lying.”

  “Lying?” His brow scrunches. “I told you as soon as anything happened with Petra. I know I acted like scum, but I never lied.”

  “You told me there was nothing between you,” I say. “For years. You insisted she was totally wrong for you—”

  “She was,” he cuts in. “That’s my point.”

  “—and that you could never be with her,” I go on.

  “Daphne, that’s what I’m saying,” he counters. “I couldn’t. I can’t.”

  “And that you’d never seen her like that,” I finish.

  “I hadn’t,” he insists. “Not really. When I said all of that to you, I meant it. Every word. And now I know it’s true. It’s just . . . we were barreling toward our wedding, Daph. And I freaked out. And Petra freaked out too, because she knew the relationship between her and me was probably going to change. We got confused. And I know it makes no sense, because I was ready to marry you, so the time for that kind of confusion should have been way past. You have no idea how sorry I am. I’ll spend my whole life making it up to you. Trying to get back to how perfect we were together.”

  “Peter, stop,” I say. “We weren’t perfect. Obviously. Or this couldn’t have happened.”

  “Fine,” he says. “Maybe we weren’t. But you were. You were perfect for me, and I threw it away. I miss your cute little giggle, and I miss going to visit Cooper and Sadie with you and getting brunch at Hearth, and going to the gym together, and having dinner with my family. God, my family, Daphne. They miss you too.

  “I was so deluded, I thought they’d be on board with the whole Petra thing. And her parents were thrilled, but mine . . . they know me better than all this. They knew it was a mistake right away. You’re part of my family, Daphne. You belong with me.”

 

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