I am fucking furious with you,â Marc tells me.
In the firelight, his eyes are silver, as cutting as a blade. They remind me of the way his face hardened four months ago, after I told him all those horrible, false things, after I walked away from him and the shore.
But then his expression shifts to something different. Something wistful. âIâm just not furious for the reasons you think.â
âYeah?â I ask. I glance briefly at the raging storm, but the tequila makes looking anywhere but at him very difficult. âI was a bitch to you. The things I said were unnecessarily cruel. That has to be the reason.â
âJamie . . .â He sighs. His anger looks a lot like sadness. âYouâre not as unreadable as you think.â I have no clue what he means. Before I can decode it, he asks, âWhy are you so sure that it wouldnât work out between us?â
âIs this your next question?â
âSure.â
I blink at my empty glass. âIâll need a refill, then.â
âToo bad. Youâre done for tonight.â In a single, firm sweep he moves the bottle out of reach. âAnd fuck this stupid game. Just tell me why.â
âYouâre the one who wanted to playââ
âJust answer my question, Jamie. And Iâll tell you what it is that makes me so angry.â
I shouldnât. Tell him the innermost workings of my mind, that is. He could use them to hurt you, a voice warns. Does it matter, though, when Iâm already so good at hurting myself? âYou have no idea how messy the inside of my head really is. In fact, Iâm probably like my dad. Impossible to be with. Somehow, sooner or later, everyone I really care about leaves. And I wouldnât be able toâ Youâd get bored. Iâm not interesting or exciting. I mean, the week after our fight, you were literally dating a modelââ
He scoffs.
I am suddenly, irrationally angry. âWell, itâs true. Your sister sent me that picture of you withââ
âRyan, right?â
I lower my eyes.
âShe and I do hang out a lot. Sheâs great. A fantastic person.â
âIâm glad,â I mutter, and then stand, meaning to . . . go lock myself in the bathroom to escape this conversation. Itâs a mistake, because Iâm much less steady than I thought Iâd be. It gives Marc ample time to rise to his feet.
âSheâs really intelligent, too. Ryan, I mean. Went to college for computer science, and is a bit of a cybersecurity genius. And funny.â He stands in front of me, making it impossible for me to look away from his face. âAnd you know what else she is?â
Jealousy burns against the roof of my mouth. I grit my teeth and shake my head.
âShe is not you, Jamie.â Marc enunciates the words slowly, like he wishes he could drill them into my skull. âShe and I are working on a coding curriculum for girls, thatâs it. She wants to use her platform to get more women interested in comp sci. Although she did ask me out, a little after your birthday. And you know what I told her?â
Another shake of my head.
âI told her that it wouldnât be fair for me to accept, because any relationship between the two of us would be dead on arrival. I told her that there was someone else. I told her so much about you, she could probably pick you out in a lineup and buy you a Christmas present youâd really enjoy. And when she asked me why you and I werenât together, I told her that it was because you had rejected me. But I also explained that your attempts at pushing me away were so fucking clumsy, a toddler could have seen through them. âSheâs afraid,â I told her. âShe has lost so much in her life, she canât imagine a scenario in which a romantic relationship works out. But sheâs smart, too. And brave. And once she realizes that sheâs lying to herself, sheâs going to come back to me.â I was so sure that you would, Jamie. But you never did. And Ryan noticed. So she asked me out again, but she still wasnât you.â His voice is getting louder. Or maybe itâs my brain amplifying every word. âAnd the whole time, I was fucking furious. Want to know why?â
A small nod.
âBecause I knew how much the bullshit you were pulling was hurting you, Jamie. I knew that you lied. I knew that you wanted to be with me as much as I wanted you. There will never be anyone but you for me, and I swear, I want you so much, I want to give you so much, I cannot imagine anyone capable of making you happier than I mean to make you. And what drives me out of my mind is that you know it, too. But youâre too much of a coward to admit it even to yourself, andââ
âI did!â
A pause. His breathing is labored. âWhat?â
âI did admit it,â I nearly yell in his face. âYou are the one who never replied.â
Marcâs frown deepens. âNever replied to what?â
âI called you, Marc. I apologized. The day after my birthdayâI left a voicemail.â
He physically recoils, as though I just punched him in the stomach. âYou left a voicemail.â
âOn your phone.â
He blinks. âWho the fuck leaves voicemails?â
âPlenty of people. Doctorsâ offices. Me.â
âShit, Jamie. I havenât listened to my messages in decades.â
âWhat?â Itâs my turn to blink. But . . . thereâs simply no way. âDonât you have a very important job that requires you to know very important things?â
âI do. And I have a very important phone number associated with that very important job. Itâs notâand this will shock youâthe same number I used when I was sixteen and made seven dollars an hour delivering for Giuseppeâs Pizza Place. Which is, incidentally, the number you use.â
âOh.â
âYes. Oh.â He pulls his phone from his pocket and taps at it a few times.
âI . . . It doesnât matter, Marc. I can just tell you what I . . .â
Iâm interrupted by a metallic voice.
You have one new message. Press one to listen.
âJamie.â He exhales loudly. Iâve never heard, or seen him, this upset. âWhat the fuck?â
âYou . . . donât listen to it. Itâs been months, andââ
His eyes never leave mine as he presses 1. And I want to die on the spot.
Marc, about yesterday. I . . . I fucked up. I donât really think youâre immature. And itâs not true that Iâll never be . . . Is it an excuse if I tell you I had a shitty week at work? It made me feel really bad about myself. And then you said all those nice things about me, and I was sure that Iâd disappoint you, and I panicked, and . . . The thing is, I think youâre right. Iâm really scared. Constantly. To end up like my dad. That the more people know me, the more theyâll want to leave. Itâs why I spent years with Shane, because I knew I could handle him leaving me. But you . . . I like you. So, so much. Always have. You and I have always worked, and if we start something and it ends up not working out, it will destroy me. But Iâm starting to realize that pretending that I donât have feelings for you will also destroy me, so . . . If youâd like to go on a date or even . . . even hang out as friends, if thatâs all you can accept from me after the things Iâve said, it would really make me . . .
In the background, my voice blabbers on, saying more things about love, and fear, and hope. But I have stopped listening. Because Marcâs phone is now hitting the floor, and heâs pressing me against the wall, hands around my face, tongue in my mouth, body covering mine.
And thatâs when the lights come back on.