âYou did it, not me.â
âStop being so cold to me. Youâve done a lot of things to me, too,â I snap.
Anger returns to his face, and he storms away from me, yelling over his shoulder, âYou know what? Iâve done a lot of things, but you kissed someone right in front of me!â
âOh, you mean like the night you had Molly on your lap and kissed her in front of me?â
He spins around quickly. âWe werenât together then.â
âMaybe not to you, but I thought we were.â
âDoesnât fucking matter, Tessa.â
âSo youâre saying that you arenât going to let this go, then?â
âI donât know what Iâm saying, but you are getting on my nerves.â
âI think you should go to bed,â I suggest. Despite the glimpses of understanding that have appeared in the last few minutes, itâs clear that he has his mind set on being cruel.
âI think you shouldnât tell me what to do.â
âI know youâre angry and hurt, but you canât talk to me that way. Itâs not right and I wonât put up with it. Drunk or not.â
âI am not hurt.â He glares at me. Hardin and his pride.
âYou just said you were.â
âNo, I didnât, donât tell me what I said.â
âOkay, okay.â I throw my hands up, giving in. Iâm exhausted, and I donât want to pull the pin on the grenade that is Hardin. He walks over to the key rack and takes his key chain off while he stumbles to grab his boots. âWhat are you doing?â I rush over to him.
âLeaving, what does it look like?â
âYou arenât leaving. You have been drinking. A lot.â I reach for his keys, but he slips them into his pocket.
âI donât give a shit, I need more to drink.â
âNo! You donât. You had enoughâand you broke the bottle.â I try to reach for his pocket, but he grabs ahold of my wrist like he has done countless times.
This time is different because heâs so angry, and for a second I begin to worry. âLet go,â I challenge him.
âDonât try to stop me from leaving and Iâll let go.â He doesnât let up, and I try to appear unaffected.
âHardin . . . youâre going to hurt me.â
His eyes meet mine, and he lets go quickly. When he raises a hand, I flinch and slink back away from him, but heâs only running it through his hair, I see.
His eyes flash with panic. âYou thought I was going to hit you?â he nearly whispers, and I back away farther.
âI . . . I donât know, youâre so angry, and youâre scaring me.â I knew he wouldnât hurt me, but this is the easiest way to get him back to reality.
âYou should know I wouldnât hurt you. No matter how drunk I am, I wouldnât fucking touch you.â He glares at me.
âFor someone who hates your father so much, you sure as hell donât have a problem acting like him,â I spit.
âFuck youâIâm nothing like him!â he shouts.
âYes, you are! Youâre drunk, you left me at that party, and you broke half our decorations in the living roomâincluding my favorite lamp! You are acting like him . . . the old him.â
âYeah, well, youâre acting like your mum. A spoiled snobby littleââ he sneers and I gasp.
âWho are you?â I ask and shake my head. I walk away, not wanting to hear any more from him, and I know if we continue to argue while heâs this drunk, it will not end well. Heâs taken his disrespect to a whole new level.
âTessa . . . Iâm . . .â he begins.
âDonât.â I turn and spit before continuing to the bedroom. I can take his rude comments, I can take him yelling at meâbecause, hell, I dish it out right back to himâbut we both need distance before one of us says something even worse.
âI didnât mean that,â he says and follows me.
I close the bedroom door and lock it behind me. I slide my back down its smooth surface until Iâm sitting on the floor, my knees pulled up to my chest. Maybe we canât make this work. Maybe heâs too angry and Iâm too irrational. I push him too far and he does the same to me.
No, that isnât true. We are good for each other because we push each other. Despite all the fights and tension between us, thereâs passion. So much passion that it nearly drowns me, pulling me under. And heâs the only light, the only one to save me regardless of whether heâs the one dooming me.
Hardin taps the wood softly. âTess, open the door.â
âJust go to sleep, please,â I cry.
âDammit, Tessa! Open this door now. Iâm sorry, okay?â he shouts and begins to pound at the door.
Praying that he wonât bust through the door, I force myself up off the floor and pad over to the dresser to dig through my bottom drawer. When I see the white of the paper, relief washes over me, and I go into the closet and close myself in there. As I begin reading Hardinâs note to me, the pounding at the door is drowned out to the point of no longer existing. The ache in my chest dissolves along with my headache. Nothing exists except this letter, these perfect words from my imperfect Hardin.
I read it over and over until my tears stop along with the noise from the hall. I desperately hope that he didnât leave, but Iâm not going out there to find out. My heart and my eyes are too heavy. I need to lie down.
Taking the letter with me, I drag my body to the bed, still wearing my dress. Eventually sleep comes to me, and I am free to dream of the Hardin that scribbled these words on a sheet of paper in a hotel room.