âAre you sure about this?â
He nods, but everything else about his demeanor says heâs not.
Half an hour ago, we were making out on the beach. Five minutes into our kiss, he sat straight up and announced he wanted a tattoo. â
he said.
So here we are. Heâs sitting in the chair, waiting on the tattoo artist, and Iâm leaning against the wall, waiting for him to chicken out.
He wonât tell me what the tattoo means. Heâs getting the word across his left wrist, written inside a music staff. I donât know why he wonât tell me the meaning behind it, but at least itâs not my name. I mean, I like the guy. A lot. But permanently inking a girlâs name into your skin is a pretty alpha-male thing to do this early on in a relationship. Especially on the wrist. And why did I just refer to this as a relationship?
I clear my throat to get his attention. âUm. I hate to say this Ben, but a wrist tattoo of the word isnât very alpha-male. Itâs quite the opposite, actually. You sure you donât want to go with a skull? Some barbed wire? Something bloody, maybe?â
His lip curls up into a crooked grin. âDonât worry, Fallon. Iâm not doing this to impress girls.â
I donât know why I love that answer as much as I do. The tattoo artist walks back into the room and points at Benâs wrist where he drew the outline of the tattoo a few minutes earlier. âIf you like the placement, weâll get started.â
The tattoo is sketched in ink from one side of his wrist to the other. He nods and tells the guy heâs ready. Ben motions to me. âCan she sit in my lap and distract me?â
The guy shrugs, pulling Benâs arm in front of him, but he says nothing. As soon as the thought begins to cross my mind that this guy is probably wondering what Ben is doing with someone who looks like I do, Ben interrupts my bout of insecurity. âCome here,â he says, patting his leg. âDistract me.â
I do what he says, but the only way I can sit on his lap is if I straddle him. At least Iâm in jeans, but I still feel awkward that Iâm sitting like this in the middle of a tattoo parlor. Benâs hand comes to rest on my waist and he squeezes. I can hear the buzz of the needle and the slight difference in the sound once it presses into his skin. He doesnât even make a face other than giving me a tiny smile. I do what I can to distract him, so I continue the small talk we shared on the beach.
âWhatâs your favorite color?â
âMalachite green.â
I make a face. âThatâs a very specific green, but okay.â
âItâs what color your eyes are. Also happens to be my favorite mineral.â
âYou have a favorite ?â
âDo now.â
I look down to avoid him seeing my embarrassed smile straight on. I feel his hand squeeze my waist again. Iâm guessing the needle is distracting him more than I am, so I throw out another question.
âWhatâs your favorite food?â
âPad Thai,â he says. âYours?â
âSushi. Theyâre almost the same thing.â
âNot even close,â he says.
âTheyâre both Asian food. Whatâs your favorite movie?â
âThese questions are boring. Try harder.â
I drop my head back and look up at the ceiling while I think. âOkay, who was your first girlfriend?â I ask, bringing my eyes back to him.
âBrynn Fellows. I was thirteen.â
âI thought you said her name was Abitha.â
He grins. âYou have a good memory.â
I raise a serious brow. âItâs not that I have a good memory, Ben. Iâm just insanely jealous and unstable when it comes to your past loves.â
He laughs. âAbitha was the first girl I kissed. Not my first girlfriend. I was fifteen, dated her for a year.â
âWhyâd you break up?â
âWe were sixteen.â He says that like itâs a valid reason. He can see the question in my expression so he says, âThatâs what you do when youâre dating at sixteen. You break up. What about you? Who was your first boyfriend?â
âReal or fake?â
âEither,â he says.
âYou.â I watch his eyes closely to see if thereâs pity in them, but it looks more like pride. âHow many people have you slept with?â
He tightens his mouth. âNot answering that.â
âMore than ten?â
âNope.â
âLess than one?â
âNope.â
âMore than five?â
âI donât kiss and tell.â
I laugh. âYes you do. In five years, youâll be telling the whole world about us in your book.â
âFour years,â he clarifies.
âWhenâs your birthday?â I ask him.
âWhenâs ?â
âI asked you first.â
âBut what if youâre older than me? Isnât that a turnoff for girls? Dating guys younger than them?â
âIsnât it a turnoff for guys to date girls with scars on over half their face?â
His hand squeezes my waist and he eyes me hard. âFallon.â He says my name like itâs an entire lecture in itself.
âI was trying to be funny,â I say.
He doesnât smile. âI donât think self-deprecation is very funny.â
âThatâs only because you arenât the self whoâs doing the deprecating.â
The corner of his mouth twitches as he tries to hold back his smile. âJuly Fourth,â he says. âThe whole country celebrates my birthday every year. Itâs quite epic.â
âJuly 25th, which means you are officially older than me. I can safely pursue you now and not be considered a cougar.â
He runs his hand up my waist a couple of inches, and then his thumb moves side to side, slowly. âYou canât pursue the willing, Fallon.â
. He deserves a kiss for that comment, but thereâs a guy with a tattoo gun two feet away and Iâm not the type of girl who would make out with a guy in public. Apparently I draw the line at straddling them.
âThereâs something I need to know about you,â he says with a poignant stare. âAnd when I ask you this question, I want you to think very long and hard about the answer, because it might make or break this connection we have.â
I swallow hard. âOkay. What do you need to know?â
He winces, just a little, and Iâm not sure if itâs from the tattoo gun or because heâs nervous to ask the question. âOkay,â he says. âIf you could only listen to one band for the rest of your life, which band would you choose, and why?â
I instantly relax. This is easy. I thought he was about to dig a whole lot deeper than my favorite band.
âX Ambassadors.â
âNever heard of them,â he says.
âIâve seen them twice,â the guy with the tattoo gun says. Ben and I both look at him, but heâs focused on his work.
I look back at Ben and arch my eyebrow. âWhy would my favorite band make or break us?â
âA lot can be said about a person through their taste in music. Pretty sure I read that in one of the books you gave me. If you would have picked a band I hated, it would have been a major turnoff.â
âWell, you might still hate them once you listen to them, so we arenât in the clear yet.â
âIn that case, Iâll never listen to them,â he says confidently.
âNot if I have anything to do with it.â
âWhatâs your favorite lyric by them?â he asks.
âIt changes depending on my mood.â
âWell then, whatâs your favorite lyric right now?â
I close my eyes briefly and hum one of the songs in my head until I get to the lyric that fits this moment. I open my eyes and smile. âYouâre so gorgeous, âcause you make me feel gorgeous.â
A faint smile works its way across his mouth. âI like that,â he says, brushing his thumb across the skin of my waist. We stare at each other for a while. I can see the rise of his chest becoming more prominent, and knowing heâs getting worked up despite having a needle piercing his skin makes me feel a little triumphant.
I think about maybe just leaning forward and giving him a small peck on the mouth, but before I can, the tattoo artist says, âDone!â
I slide off his lap and we look at the finished product before itâs bandaged up. It turned out great, but I still donât know what prompted it or why he needed it tonight, but Iâm glad I got to be here with him while he had it done.
He stands up and pulls his wallet out of his pocket to tip the guy. When he takes my hand in his to walk me to his car, every step I take grows heavier and heavier, because I know with each step, weâre closer to another goodbye.
On our drive to the airport, Iâm on edge the entire way. I keep asking myself if this new urge to not want to get on that plane to go back to New York is a result of my feelings for Ben or for New York.
I know I told him at the beach that Iâm happy in New York, but Iâm still almost as unhappy there as I was here. I just donât want him to know that. Iâm hoping my involvement in the community theater will help me make a few more friends. After all, itâs only been one year. But itâs been a tough year. And as much as I tried to stick with the homework he gave me, going on audition after audition is exhausting when all I get are rejections. It makes me wonder if my father is right. I might be dreaming too big. And despite Ben having given me a lot of my confidence back, it doesnât make an industry built on looks any less shallow.
And Broadway is so far out of my reach itâs laughable. The amount of people who show up for auditions makes me feel like a small ant in a massive colony. The only chance I probably have of standing out is if the role requires someone who actually has facial scars. And so far, I havenât gotten that lucky.
âDo you need another dramatic airport scene?â he asks as we approach the terminal.
I laugh and tell him absolutely not, so he parks in the parking garage this time. Before we walk inside the airport, he pulls me to him. I can see sadness in his eyes and I know without a doubt he can see in my expression how much I donât want to say goodbye. He trails the backs of his fingers down my cheek and I shiver.
âIâll come to New York next year. Where do you want to meet?â
âIn Brooklyn,â I tell him. âThatâs where I live. I want to show you around my neighborhood and thereâs this really great tapas restaurant you have to try.â I type the address to one of my favorite restaurants into his phone. I also type in the date and time, not that itâs easily forgotten. I hand it back to him.
He slides the phone in his back pocket and pulls me in for another hug. We hold the hug for at least two solid minutes, neither of us wanting to let go. His hand is cradled around the back of my head and I try to memorize how his hand feels there. I try to memorize how he smells just like the beach where we spent over three hours together tonight. I try to memorize how my mouth rests right at the height of his neck, as though his shoulders were made for me to rest my head on them.
I lean into him and kiss his neck. A soft peck and nothing more. He lifts my head off his shoulder, tilting my face up to his, scrolling over my features. âI thought I was tougher than a word,â he says. âBut I just discovered that having to say goodbye to you is one of the hardest things Iâve ever had to do.â
I want to say, â
,â but his mouth is on mine, and heâs kissing me, hard. Heâs saying goodbye with the way his lips move over mine, the way his hands caress my cheeks, the way his mouth moves to my forehead and presses one single, gentle kiss right in the center of it before he releases me. He practically pushes away from me, as if putting distance between us will make this any easier. He walks backward until heâs at the edge of the curb, and all my words are lodged in my throat, so I press my lips tightly together and try not to let them loose. We stare at each other for several seconds, the pain in this goodbye evident in the air between us. And then he turns and jogs back toward the parking garage.
And I try not to cry, because that would be silly.
Right?
⢠⢠â¢
Iâve never liked window seats, so when I hear the woman in the aisle seat say something to the affect of hating aisle seats, I offer her mine.
Iâm not scared of flying unless Iâm looking out the window. And if Iâm in a window seat, I feel Iâm taking it for granted if I look out the window. And then I spend the entire flight staring at the world below us and it makes me panic more than if I just donât put myself in that position.
I set my purse beneath the seat in front of me and try to get comfortable. Iâm relieved Ben is coming to New York next year because the flight from L.A. to New York is one of my least favorite things.
I close my eyes and hope I can get a few hours of sleep. I wonât have time to sleep before rehearsals tomorrow, and I would just sleep in, but tomorrow is opening day and I have to be there for the last rehearsal.
âHey.â
I hear Benâs voice and smile, because that means Iâm definitely going to sleep just fine if Iâm already confusing reality with dreams.
âFallon.â
My eyes flick open. I look up to see Ben standing next to me.
I look at his hand and heâs holding a plane ticket.
I sit up straight. âWhat are you doing?â
Someone is trying to squeeze past him, so he moves to where heâs standing as close to me as he can get. When the man passes, Ben kneels down. âI forgot to give you homework for this year.â He hands me a folded sheet of paper. âI had to buy a plane ticket in order to get it to you before you took off, so that means you have to follow through with it or Iâm out a lot of money for naught. And who actually says naught? Anyway. Thatâs all. Totally not an alpha-move, but whatever.â
I look at the paper in my hands and then back up at him.
âYouâre insane.â
He grins, but then has to stand again to let someone else pass. A flight attendant tells him he needs to clear the aisle and take his seat. He winks at me. âI better go before I get stuck on the plane.â He leans down and gives me a small peck on the lips.
I try to hide the flicker of sadness I know is evident in my eyes. I force a smile just before he turns and makes his way toward the exit. A flight attendant intercepts him and asks why heâs not in his seat. He mutters something about a family emergency, so she allows him to pass, but right before heâs out of my line of sight, he turns around and winks.
And then heâs gone.
I look down at the paper in my hands and Iâm nervous to even open it, wondering what homework assignment could possibly be worth the purchase of a plane ticket.
I read the note through again before folding it. Iâm happy heâs no longer on the plane, because the smile on my face is embarrassing.
I canât believe he just did that. And I canât believe Iâm going to suck it up and call my father tomorrow simply because Ben asked me to.
But even more than that, Iâm in shock he spent that much money on a plane ticket just to give me this letter. That seems like more of a grand gesture than an inconsequential moment. And I love it just as much, if not more than the inconsequential things he does.
Maybe I donât know the first thing about falling in love, because Iâve been telling myself Iâm not falling for him yet. That itâs too soon.
But itâs not. Whatâs happening inside my heart right now is way too consequential to deny. I think Iâve been misjudging the whole concept of insta-love. Now if I can just figure out how we can finish these next few years with a happy ending.