âDone,â I say, and he smiles despite the fact that his mouth is swollen as well. Why am I always cleaning up wounds?
âThank you.â He smiles again as I rinse off the bloodstained towel.
âIâll send you a bill,â I tease.
âAre you sure youâre okay, though? You hit the ground pretty hard.â
âYeah, Iâm a little sore, but Iâm fine.â The events from tonight took a drastic turn for the worse when Hardin followed me outside. I had a feeling he wasnât too hurt by me leaving him, but I thought he would be more affected than he was. He said he was busy and thatâs why he hadnât called me. Even though I thought he wouldnât care as much as I did, I thought he loved me enough to care a little. Instead, he acted as if nothing had even happened, as if we were friends having a casual conversation. That is, until he saw Zed and lost it. If anything, I thought seeing Trevor would anger him and he would try to start a fight in front of everyone, but he couldnât have cared less. Which is kind of strange.
Regardless of how brokenhearted I am, I know Hardin wouldnât hurt me purposely, but this is the second time something like this has happened. The first time I was quick to excuse his behavior. I was the one who convinced him to go to his fatherâs for Christmas, and he just couldnât handle it. Tonight was his faultâhe shouldnât even have been there.
âAre you hungry?â Zed asks me as we leave his small bathroom for the living room.
âNo, I already ate at the party,â I say; my voice is still hoarse from my excessive, embarrassing sobbing on the way to Zedâs apartment.
âOkay, we donât have much anyway, but I could order you something if you want, so just let me know if you change your mind.â
âThank you.â Zed is always so incredibly sweet to me.
âMy roommate will be here in a little while, but he wonât bother us. Heâll probably crash as soon as he gets in.â
âI really am sorry that this keeps happening, Zed.â
âDonât apologize. Like I said, Iâm just glad I was there for you. Hardin seemed pretty angry when I got there.â
âWe were already fighting.â I roll my eyes and take a seat on the couch, wincing from the soreness. âGo figure.â
All of my bruises and cuts from my automobile accident just healed, and now Iâm going to have another, from Hardin. The back of my dress is dirty and ruined, and my shoes are scuffed down the sides. Hardin really does ruin everything that he comes in contact with.
âDo you need some clothes to sleep in?â Zed asks, handing me the old blanket I slept with a few nights ago.
Iâm slightly apprehensive about borrowing Zedâs clothes. Thatâs something I share with Hardin, and Iâve never worn anyone elseâs clothing.
âI think Molly has some stuff here . . . in my roommateâs room. I know thatâs probably awkward . . .â He half smiles. âBut Iâm sure theyâre better than sleeping in that dress.â
Molly is much thinner than me, and I almost laugh. âI canât fit in her clothes, but thank you for thinking I could.â
Zed seems to be confused by my answer; his cluelessness is adorable. âWell, I have some clothes you can wear,â he offers, and I nod before I allow myself to overthink it. I can wear whoeverâs stuff I want, Hardin doesnât own meâhe didnât even care enough to try to explain himself to me.
Zed disappears into his bedroom and returns moments later with his hands full of clothing. âI grabbed a few different things, I donât know what you like.â Thereâs something behind his tone that makes me think heâd really like to get to that stage with me. The one where you know what the other likes. The stage Iâm at with Hardin. Was at. Whatever.
I grab a blue T-shirt and a pair of plaid pajama bottoms. âIâm not picky.â I give him a thankful smile before I go into the bathroom to change.
To my horror, the plaid thing that I thought was pants is in fact a pair of boxers. Zedâs boxers. Oh God. I unzip my dress and pull the large T-shirt over my head before considering what to do about the boxers.
The shirt is smaller than Hardinâs shirts are; it barely hits the top of my thigh and it doesnât smell like Hardin. Of course it doesnât, itâs not Hardinâs. It smells like laundry soap with the smallest hint of cigarette smoke. The smell is nice somehow, though not as nice as the familiar scent of the boy that I miss.
I pull the boxers up my legs and look down. They arenât too short. In fact, theyâre sort of baggy, tighter than Hardinâs would be, but not too tight. Iâll just walk to the couch and cover myself with the blanket as fast as I can.
Iâm incredibly embarrassed to be wearing them, but it would be even more embarrassing to make a big deal out of it after everything Zed has been through tonight because of me. His poor face holds the proof of Hardinâs anger, a big bloody reminder of why Hardin and I would never work. Hardin only cares for himself, and the only reason he lost it when he saw Zed is his pride. He doesnât want me, but he doesnât want me to be with anyone else either.
I leave my dress folded on the bathroom floor; itâs already dirty and ruined anyway. Iâll try the dry cleaners, but Iâm not sure if it can be saved. I really loved that dress, too, and it cost me a decent amount of moneyâmoney that I sorely need once I find my own apartment.
I walk as fast as I can, but when I reach the living room, Zed is standing next to the television. His eyes go wide as they rake up and down my body. âI . . . uh, I was putting something . . . I was putting, trying to find a movie . . . to watch. Or something for you to watch, I mean,â he stammers, and I sit on the couch and pull the blanket over me.