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Image by KAVOWO from Pixabay |
Colin didn’t like to be kept waiting, but that’s exactly what he had been doing for almost a half hour in Emmalee’s hotel lobby. He was considering that she might not come. Perhaps he had overestimated her anxiety. But just before he could begin to consider himself disappointed, she strolled into the lobby, fully dressed.
So, he hadn’t overestimated her. He had simply underestimated her femininity.
“I suppose I should have told you we’re just going for a drive.” He told her.
“I suppose there are many things you should have told me.”
“Are you regretting your scene earlier today? Because that wasn’t my fault.”
She stayed silent, and Colin began walking toward the door. Thankfully, she followed. He had worried she would cause another scene, and he really wasn’t in the mood to play any games right now. He had only prepared for a brief drive around the block, enough time to give her just enough information to keep her interested.
Colin had a car waiting for them at the curb when they stepped outside. The driver was another associate of Harlem’s, and had the car door opened for them already. Colin gestured for Emma to get in first, but she hesitated.
“I don’t trust you.” She said.
“Understood.” Colin nodded. “Get in.”
“I’m not getting in a car with a stranger. I don’t even know your name.” She shook her head and took a step back. “I don’t trust you. I’m not getting in.”
Colin sighed and rolled his eyes.
“Trust goes both ways.” He said. “I’m trusting that you’ll get in this car and hear what I have to tell you in confidence, and you’re trusting I won’t kill you and will give you the information you seek.” He waved his hand toward the car again. “So get in.”
Emma hesitated, clasping her hands tightly in front of her waist. She met Colin’s gaze, and held it for a while. Then, she sighed and immediately climbed into the car, as if another second of hesitation would have her running back up to her hotel room.
Colin got in after her and the driver shut the door before getting into the driver’s seat. The driver was already informed of the route, so he began driving immediately while Colin and Emma sat in silence for a moment. Colin was staring at Emma, taking in the anxious expression on her face, the way she clasped her hands tightly in her lap, the smooth curve of her neck as she looked out the window, intentionally avoiding Colin’s gaze. Finally, she looked at him, her green eyes staring into his forcefully.
“Well?” She said.
“Madame Delveaux was reported missing four days before her - or really your - appearance in New York,” Colin said, “by her mother. Which wouldn’t have been suspicious if her mother hadn’t been dead for three months already. Care to explain?”
“Perhaps she wanted attention. Daddy issues.”
“Is that so?”
Emma shrugged, and looked back out the window.
“I don’t see how my story has anything to do with yours, and that’s the only reason I’m here. Who are you? What do you want with me?” She asked.
“That’s pretty straightforward for somebody who likes to play games.”
“That doesn’t answer my questions. Who are you?”
“A friend.”
“I don’t have friends.”
“Well, then. Why should I help you?”
Emma sighed.
“What’s your name?” She asked. “Can you at least answer that?”
“I don’t know. Does it matter? If we’re not friends?”
She clenched her fists, and glared at him.
“I don’t understand what you want from me.” She said through clenched teeth.
“You’re not supposed to.” He grinned. “Not yet.”
“I don’t even know what that’s supposed to mean!” She took a deep breath, and looked at him. “Did Sergei send you? Is that what this is about?”
Colin was caught off guard. There was nothing about a Sergei in her file.
“Sergei?” He asked.
She looked out the window again.
“Nevermind.” She said.
There was silence as Colin tried to recall any mention of Sergei. Her file had only contained her various identities and how she had stolen them. There had been nothing about Sergei, though. Colin was sure of it. He’d memorized every detail of the file. Who was this Sergei? What did he have to do with Emmalee? Or perhaps the better question was why she was so afraid of him? Is that why she was on the run? Constantly changing identities? Perhaps it was more than just boredom fueling her escape into different lives.
Colin was so lost trying to figure everything out that he didn’t realize Emma had been slowly shifting towards the car door. By the time he snapped back to the present long enough to gauge her next move, she already had the door open and was prepared to jump. He quickly grabbed a hold of the green dress she was wearing, but she was already gone. He watched her tumble onto the street, gripping nothing but a ripped piece of green cloth.
“Stop the car!” He yelled to the driver, and the driver slammed on his brakes.
Colin hopped out of the car, and dashed toward Emma.
But she had already disappeared.
A fictional interpretation of a song by Passion Pit.
Frenemy: a person with whom one is friendly despite a fundamental dislike or rivalry.
Amanda Tilsdy became equal parts my best friend and my greatest enemy the day her boyfriend, Chad, kissed me in the middle of Times Square. Hundreds of people around, but in that moment it was just us. And after the kiss he leaned close to my ear and whispered “Our little secret.”
It was the first secret I had ever kept from Amanda.
And after that, I spent every moment with Amanda, every sleepover, every nightly phone call, every lunch period at our special table in the cafeteria, imagining that kiss with Chad, hoping he would break her heart, leave her, come to me. Amanda was my best friend, but with just one moment, she also became my biggest rival, and therefore my enemy.
“What’s the matter with you?” Amanda asks. “Hello?” She waves a freshly manicured hand in front of my face. “Are you there?”
“Yes, of course.” I say.
“Well? What do you think?”
She’s standing in front of the dressing room mirror in a frilly, pink dress, her prom dress. She knows how much I hate pink, and shopping, and especially pink clothes shopping, but she dragged me along anyway, and all I can think is how much I hate her. I hate her for wearing pink. I hate her for shopping. And I especially hate her for sinking her pink-painted nails into Chad, and refusing to let go.
“Perfect.” I say. “Very pink.”
She grins. “You’re right. It’s definitely The One.”
She spins around and around in a fluffy, pink blur and I’m thinking, Chad is The One for me, and I want to tell her because I’ve never kept secrets from Amanda, but I know I can’t. It’s our little secret.
***
It began on the summer field trip to New York. Amanda couldn’t go because she was spending the summer in Bora Bora with her father and his new girlfriend half his age. Not that Amanda minded. The new girlfriend was willing to do just about anything Amanda asked her to in order to get on her good side, and Amanda’s father was paying for Amanda to stay in the suite of her choice.
I was bummed at first, of course. Amanda and I had been looking forward to the summer trip to New York since we were freshman. It was the single most exciting monument of our upcoming seniorship, and we were supposed to take New York by storm together. We had plans to ditch the school crowd and travel around the city on our own. We had plans for an epic adventure, tossed aside as soon as the offer of Bora Bora was presented to Amanda.
But Chad was there. Amanda and Chad had been dating for about three months by that point, but they hadn’t seen each other all summer. Chad worked at the local crab shack, and had barely been able to manage to get the two weeks off for the senior summer field trip. Amanda was allergic to seafood so she never visited him while he was working, and on weekends, she preferred to spend all her time shopping with her father’s unlimited credit card.
Chad and Amanda came from different worlds. I never understood what they saw in each other. Amanda complained about Chad incessantly, and during the trip, Chad didn’t speak of Amanda at all. I thought they had broken up.
So I let him kiss me.
And then, when school started two weeks later, I found out why Chad asked me to keep the kiss a secret.
***
Should I be mad at Chad for lying to me? I realized that I couldn’t because he hadn’t lied to me. Not really. I had assumed that he and Amanda had broken up. But they hadn’t. He gave me no reason to assume otherwise.
“Why didn’t you tell me you were still with Amanda?” I asked Chad.
I stormed into his work demanding answers after the first day of school after spending the whole day watching Amanda kiss the same lips I had kissed in Times Square only a week earlier.
“I thought you knew, I swear.” Chad said. “I’m sorry.”
“Don’t ever speak to me again.” I said, and then I left.
But he did. He came over to my house that night after work, still dressed in his uniform, and told me everything. How much he loved me, how much I mattered to him, how much he wanted to break up with Amanda and be with me, but was too afraid.
“I don’t want her to hate you.” He said. “She’s your best friend. I can’t ruin that.”
So it became our little secret. My nightly phone calls with Amanda were replaced by nightly phone calls with Chad, and our slumber parties were cut short so I could spend the night with Chad instead. I started noticing all the ways Amanda wasn’t right for Chad, started hoping, started praying, their relationship would end.
I got carried away from Amanda with each passing day.
***
In high school, it’s all too easy to take everything that matters for granted. In a way, we all revert back to our childhood years when we believed becoming a princess or a superhero is a realistic option. All the boys want to drive fast cars, and speed away with a pretty girl. And all the girls want shiny hair and a boy to grant her every wish. Perhaps because we like the drama it brings. Or perhaps because we realize high school is our last chance to be children. After graduation, we realize, our life begins. And that’s a scary thought.
But whatever the reason, I fell into the delusion, and lost sight of what mattered to me.
I got carried away with dreams that weren’t reality and wishes that would never come true. By the time reality sunk in, I had lost my best friend. And Chad? He was long gone too.
The truth is, getting carried away is easy while facing reality is hard. But if we never face reality, we’ll get smacked with it in the worst possible way. I know this now. And next time, I’ll make sure I don’t get carried away.
How dare he!
Emma had never had a request turned down, and she had certainly never been the one to leave without answers. Whoever this prick was, he couldn't be good for her. She needed to find a way to disappear immediately.
But what if he followed her? Hadn't he said he wouldn't be so easy to shake? Of course, he could have been lying to scare her from trying to leave. However, he seemed to know so much about her, was it worth the risk to leave without getting answers from him first? She needed to know everything he had on her, and she needed to know why. She'd never be able to live comfortably again until she had everything figured out.
For the first time in years, Emma felt the heavy weight of being utterly alone. She had nobody she could call, nobody to talk to, nobody to give her any consolation.
She only had herself, and right now, she wasn't doing such a good job of calming herself down and working out a plan of action. She began pacing, walking briskly from one side of the hotel room to the other.
What was she going to do? How was she going to do it?
She remembered a woman who had tried to befriend her in Brazil. Emma had taken on the identity of Rosa-Marie de la Garza, the fiercely wealthy drug smuggler. It was an exciting life to take over, but since it was also a dangerous one, Emma had been particularly wary of making new friends. She couldn't remember the woman's name. Just the look on her face seconds before Emma boarded a plane to take her to her next life, her next identity. At the time, Emma had thought it looked pathetic.
"Please," the woman had said, "I just have a job opportunity for you. I know who you are, Emmalee. I know everything. I'm a recruiter for..."
Emma hadn't let her finish. She had boarded the plane, and made a note never to return to Brazil. She never saw or heard from the woman again, and had since put the woman and the last message out of her mind.
But now another person had shown up in her life who seemed to know her story or at least her real name and tendency to escape into different identities. Had she left a trail behind somewhere? Where were these people coming from? How did they know so much about her?
Her thoughts were making circles, not progress. She couldn't figure out the answers on her own. But she was all she had at the moment. She doubted the stranger who had showed up at the gallery tonight and refused to give her answers would be any help to her. After all, she had already given him the chance to explain himself, and now she was the one humiliated and forced to return to her hotel room defeated. She wasn't going to give him another chance to put her in this position again.
Eventually, she accepted that she wasn't going to be able to figure anything out that night, and she stopped pacing. She turned out the bedside lamp and got into bed.
That's when the hotel phone in her room began to ring.
This was odd because she knew nobody knew she was staying here, or at least nobody who would be calling her at this hour. Still, she picked up the phone.
"This is your wake-up call." She recognized the voice. It was the man she couldn't figure out. "Meet me in the lobby in ten minutes. Your answers await."
Then, he hung up.
Emma had never had a request turned down, and she had certainly never been the one to leave without answers. Whoever this prick was, he couldn't be good for her. She needed to find a way to disappear immediately.
But what if he followed her? Hadn't he said he wouldn't be so easy to shake? Of course, he could have been lying to scare her from trying to leave. However, he seemed to know so much about her, was it worth the risk to leave without getting answers from him first? She needed to know everything he had on her, and she needed to know why. She'd never be able to live comfortably again until she had everything figured out.
For the first time in years, Emma felt the heavy weight of being utterly alone. She had nobody she could call, nobody to talk to, nobody to give her any consolation.
She only had herself, and right now, she wasn't doing such a good job of calming herself down and working out a plan of action. She began pacing, walking briskly from one side of the hotel room to the other.
What was she going to do? How was she going to do it?
She remembered a woman who had tried to befriend her in Brazil. Emma had taken on the identity of Rosa-Marie de la Garza, the fiercely wealthy drug smuggler. It was an exciting life to take over, but since it was also a dangerous one, Emma had been particularly wary of making new friends. She couldn't remember the woman's name. Just the look on her face seconds before Emma boarded a plane to take her to her next life, her next identity. At the time, Emma had thought it looked pathetic.
"Please," the woman had said, "I just have a job opportunity for you. I know who you are, Emmalee. I know everything. I'm a recruiter for..."
Emma hadn't let her finish. She had boarded the plane, and made a note never to return to Brazil. She never saw or heard from the woman again, and had since put the woman and the last message out of her mind.
But now another person had shown up in her life who seemed to know her story or at least her real name and tendency to escape into different identities. Had she left a trail behind somewhere? Where were these people coming from? How did they know so much about her?
Her thoughts were making circles, not progress. She couldn't figure out the answers on her own. But she was all she had at the moment. She doubted the stranger who had showed up at the gallery tonight and refused to give her answers would be any help to her. After all, she had already given him the chance to explain himself, and now she was the one humiliated and forced to return to her hotel room defeated. She wasn't going to give him another chance to put her in this position again.
Eventually, she accepted that she wasn't going to be able to figure anything out that night, and she stopped pacing. She turned out the bedside lamp and got into bed.
That's when the hotel phone in her room began to ring.
This was odd because she knew nobody knew she was staying here, or at least nobody who would be calling her at this hour. Still, she picked up the phone.
"This is your wake-up call." She recognized the voice. It was the man she couldn't figure out. "Meet me in the lobby in ten minutes. Your answers await."
Then, he hung up.
A fictional interpretation of a song by Fall Out Boy
All children grow up.
Never Never Land doesn’t exist. Except in the minds of those who refuse to grow up.
He had spent his entire life being the grownup, the shoulder to cry on, the person to run to when everything went wrong. But he reached a certain age, around the time he got his first place to himself, when he decided it was time to get his childhood back. He was much too old to be a child, but who was going to stop him? The people who took his childhood away? What room did they have to speak?
His childhood began when he moved in with a stranger. They liked the same comic book. Of course they should be roommates! Why would it matter if you just met if you can already agree on the favoritism of the most importing thing?
Then, he began picking fights in barrooms. He would have picked fights in the schoolyard, but he had graduated from school long ago. Barrooms were the schoolyard of his current peers.
It’s where he met her.
It was comic night and she was dressed like Wonderwoman. At least that’s how he interpreted her full, black hair and red dress.
“What’s your name?” He asked.
“Rebecca.” She answered, smiling.
He went home with her that night.
***
One night turned into two turned into a whole week, and before he knew what was happening a whole month had passed and they were living together. She moved in to become his mother.
She cooked and cleaned and then she left for work. When she returned, she would nag him for being in exactly the same place as when she left: in front of the television screen, playing his latest video game obsession. Then, she would go back to cooking and cleaning until she climbed into bed and fell asleep.
This went on for months, but eventually she would tell him she had enough playing house.
“You need to grow up.” She said. “You’re thirty years old. You’re too old to be acting like such a child.”
“Actually, I’m only as old as I feel. Age is just a number. And I don’t feel thirty.”
She sighed and rolled her eyes.
“Then I can’t stay with you.” She said.
She was gone before he could think of a reason for her to stay.
***
It was time to grow up.
Though he still longed for a childhood he would never have, he could no longer pretend this was the life he wanted. Children grow up when an adult is needed, and Rebecca was no longer around to play the part.
So he took over.
***
He met her at the barroom as an adult. It was too noisy to talk, so they stepped outside for a walk.
“I wasn’t fair to you.” He said. “I turned you into the mother I wished I had.”
She nodded.
“I know.” She said. “I let you. I thought that way I could save you.”
“Save me?”
“You needed to grow up.”
“And I did. After you left.”
“I can see that.”
She smiled.
“So am I forgiven?” He asked.
“Of course.”
“So you’ll come back?”
“Maybe.” She said. “It can’t be the same as it was before.”
“It won’t be.”
It wasn’t.
***All names have been changed to protect those involved.***
My first time was a natural disaster.
Of course, at sixteen, pretty much everything seems like a natural disaster–from finding the perfect back-to-school outfit to getting a driver’s license. High school, in itself, is the epicenter for all natural disasters–even for someone like me.
By most standards, I was a good kid. I had enough common sense to stay out of trouble. I didn’t do drugs, drink underage, party or even stay out past my eleven o’clock curfew. My idea of a good time was sitting in a quiet corner by a window and reading. I didn’t need much else to be content.
I hadn’t even really dated before. I’d had schoolgirl crushes, of course, and flirtationships with guys that never went anywhere, but a traumatic experience when I was a kid pretty much scared me away from romantic interactions with the opposite sex. I had a strict NO-PHYSICAL-TOUCH policy that most guys couldn’t be bothered with. Testosterone is not the hormone of patience, especially in horny, adolescent boys.
Of course, at sixteen, I wasn’t able to see anything other than the constant rejection and, like most teenage girls, I stereotypically began to worry something was wrong with me.
The year before, I became infatuated with a guy not unlike the perpetrator of my traumatic experience. His name was Hailstorm. He wore the same oversized-hoodie-and-baggy-pants combo everyday, talked as if he had never - not once in his life - read a book, and had serious mommy-issues that he liked to take out on the entire female population. I was terrified of him. But I was also sickeningly desperate for his approval. I wanted him to be my boyfriend. Perhaps because of some subconscious need to rewrite the traumatic experience of my past or perhaps because I have a thing for bad boys I think I can fix. Whatever the reason, Hailstorm was able to string me along for my entire first year of high school. I was the cat, desperately trying to sink my claws into the string of yarn that was always punishingly out of reach.
“Do you want to be my girlfriend?” he’d sometimes ask during our nightly phone calls.
“Duh!” I’d say, thinking I’d finally be able to catch that yarn after all.
To which he would respond with a fit of laughter and “You didn’t think I’d ever seriously go out with you, did you? I was just kidding. I can’t believe you actually fell for it!”
You’d think I would have caught on to this oh-so-hilarious trick at some point, but he was eerily good at making the request for a relationship seem real every time.
And so, Hailstorm attacked my emotional well-being every single day of my freshman year of high school, but he never physically laid a hand on me. It was the worst kind of battle. I was being attacked and I didn’t even know it.
My defeat came sometime around May when Hailstorm entered an actual relationship with someone else. This was followed shortly by my escape to the rival school, where the only person I knew (besides my dad, who was a teacher and coach there) was Hailstorm’s sympathetic best friend. It was the farthest I could manage to distance myself from the events of the year before.
It was here that I started dating the then-closeted, Jet. I met Jet in my journalism class, and we instantly bonded over our mutual love for Taylor Swift, Twilight, and Hello Kitty. Jet was full of romantic gestures. For our one month anniversary, he stole my digital camera and returned it to me filled with pictures in a slideshow sequence that perfectly captured all the things he loved about me. We got matching Twilight rings, and held hands between classes. Sometimes, we even kissed goodbye, but not like parting lovers as much as like European siblings.
Jet was safe. Everything about our relationship was about safety. With him, I felt safe from harm. With me, Jet was safely in the closet, able to hide from his overbearing, masculine father.
However, eventually I realized that protecting myself with a relationship was like wearing a lifejacket in a kiddie pool. I needed to learn how to keep my head above the water on my own. Besides, it wasn’t helping my self-esteem dating a guy who was more interested in my clothes than what was underneath them. And yes, I really was that shallow and emotionally damaged to base my self-esteem on my sexual desirability.
I wanted to be wanted. I wanted - needed - someone to want all of me. I needed to know it was possible.
It didn’t help that my best friend, Electricity, had lost her virginity in middle school, and enthused regularly about the majestic greatness of The Orgasm, which apparently she had a lot of.
I knew what she was talking about too. I wasn’t so much of a prude that I had never explored my sexual curiosity. But my experiments in curiosity, I just knew, would not compare to real, flesh-on-flesh S-E-X.
So yes, while I could never be swayed to drink, experiment with drugs, or prefer a house full of people to a house full of books, I could consider the prospect of bringing a romantic scene from one of my novels to life. All I needed was to find the right person.
So I broke up with Jet and shortly after, I met Rain.
He was the best friend and sidekick to the current guy Electricity was dating. He officiated their mock-wedding the night we met, and in return Electricity did the same for us. The mock-wedding was supposed to be a joke, but Rain was as much of a romantic as I was and he took it seriously. He got my number at the end of the night, and texted me immediately to tell me how much he loved me, his perfect “wife.”
I lost my virginity a month later.
Like most virgins, I cared about the details. I wanted the right guy, the right circumstances, the right mood, the right settings. All the little things mattered. I didn’t yet know that it’s not the details that matter or even the sex itself but rather the reasons for having it.
So we mapped out the day perfectly. It was going to happen at his house while his father was at work and his mother took his sisters shopping. He had already bought a whole box of condoms, a brand recommended and highly researched by our sexually active best friends. I told my parents I was going to spend the day at Barnes & Noble, and then I left for his house instead.
He tried his hardest to make it special, but in the end, despite his best efforts, it was just awkward. And painful. Both emotionally as well as physically. After the traumatic experience when I was a kid (an experience I don’t think I ever told him about), I was left with some pretty intense scars that the act opened up. I’m pretty sure I cried during the act, and afterwards I curled into a little ball on top of his tiny bed and refused to move until his parents came home and asked me to leave.
It was quite the mess. A disaster, really.
And it wouldn’t be my last.
But the great thing about natural disasters is that they are just temporary storms. They shatter the ground you walk on, and might even destroy the entire path, but then they’re over and you have clear skies again. And you can choose to stay rooted in the destruction and wait for the next one or you can walk through the rubble, take what you need, keep moving forward, and greet the next natural disaster when it comes.
Because it will come.
But it will also pass.
Such is the beauty of natural disasters.
A fictional interpretation of a song by Carrie Underwood.
The cancer took his father when he was only three.
Three years later, it took his mother too.
For the first six years of his life, sickness and death were all he knew. But now he was getting a second chance. The foster care system had found him a new mom and dad - cancer free.
“You’re being awfully quiet today.” His foster mom says to the little boy.
His foster parents had been hoping for someone more playful. Damaged and tortured children had lived with them before, and it never lasted long. They always seemed to get themselves into trouble. They had hoped this little boy would be different. His story was tragic, but it wasn’t the parent’s fault. They thought this meant he was luckier than most.
The boy doesn’t say anything. He just hugs his stuffed elephant close to his chest. It was gift from his mother, the only thing he had left.
“Are you scared?” His foster mom asks him, noticing the protective way he held his toy.
“No.” The boy says, matter-of-factly.
“Are you sure? It’s pretty scary being in a new home.”
“This isn’t my new home. This is just my temporary home.”
“What do you mean? Of course it’s your new home!”
“No, it isn’t. It’s not where I belong.”
“Of course you do. Where else would you belong?”
“With my parents.”
How could she argue?
***
Across town, a young mother is struggling to find work. Her parents kicked her out when she found out she was pregnant. They didn’t want to be responsible for their daughter anymore.
At first, she was able to stay with friends. But once she gave birth to a daughter of her own, she became too much of a responsibility to be a guest to her friends.
Now, she stays nights at a halfway house, and searches for work during the day. Without someone to care for her child, though, work is hard to find.
But she hasn’t given up hope. As she lies in the bed at the halfway house, she holds her daughter close and kisses her baby-fat cheek.
“I’m going to find us a home.” She promises. “A real home. This is just our temporary home. We’ll get out of here. You’ll see.”
In the morning, she finally finds work.
***
In the wealthier part of town, in a hospital room on the twelfth floor, a family has given up hope.
“The cancer has spread to his brain.” The doctor tells them. “He doesn’t have much longer. I’d prepare your goodbyes.”
The old man on the bed, so full of life, no longer has much life left to live. But he’s not afraid.
“This was my temporary home.” He tells his family. “My time is up here, but that’s okay. I’m going home.”
“But Grandfather…” His granddaughter says, but he interrupts her.
“I can see His face.” He says, trance-like.
He closes his eyes and smiles.
He’s home.
A fictional interpretation of a song by Lea Michele
This is the part when the rain starts to fall.
Inside a dimly lit cafe, he tells me that it’s time for him to let me go. My lipstick stains the rim of the coffee cup while his is perfectly clean, and I think of how unfair it is. We spend our whole lives chasing ourselves, hoping against all odds that we will find the life we’re supposed to live and who we’re supposed to be. I thought I had found myself with him.
But I guess that wasn’t really me.
***
This isn’t the part where I lose myself.
Most people would be sad. I spent my whole life searching for something I thought I had found, and then had it taken from me, just when I thought it was secure. But I wasn’t sad. I was angry.
“What happened to forever?” I ask him. “You promised.”
He looks at me like I’m a stray puppy begging for food, and he has nothing left on his plate to give me.
“Things change.” He tells me.
As if it’s that simple.
I get up and walk away.
***
This is the part where I take a walk in the rain.
I wasn’t expecting rain, so I didn’t bring an umbrella, and home is a few blocks away. But a little rain didn’t hurt anyone.
I keep walking even when the rain pours so heavily I can’t see the street in front of me, even as I turn into a dripping, soaking, pitifully wet mess. Through the rain, nobody can see my tears, and by the time I’m safe and warm and dry in my home, there’s no tears left to cry.
The truth is, we could have been something. I saw a future with him that I didn’t see with anyone else. But the future is full of possibilities.
And even when it rains, I’ll be fine.