âYou donât know him; he doesnât give a shit about me. You know how many times Iâve talked to him in the last year? Maybe ten! All he cares about is his big house, his new soon-to-be wife, and his new, perfect son.â I take a drink from the bottle and wipe my lips with the back of my hand. âYou should see the dump that my mum lives in in England. She says she likes it there, but I know she doesnât. Itâs smaller than my dadâs bedroom here! My mum practically forced me to come here for university, to be closer to himâand we see how that worked out!â
âHow old were you when he left?â Tessa asks. I canât tell if sheâs being nosy, pitying me, or just wondering.
I hesitate before answering. âTen. But even before he left, he was never around. He was at a different bar every night. Now heâs Mr. Perfect and he has all this shit . . .â I gesture toward the house. Pots of bright flowers line the ledge of the deck, adding to the scenery.
âIâm sorry that he left you guys, butââ
âNo, I donât need your pity.â I stop her there. Sheâs always making excuse after excuse for everyone around her. Itâs fucking frustrating. She doesnât know my father, she didnât have to put up with his shit until she didnât anymore, but then missed it when he was gone.
âItâs not pity. Iâm just trying to . . .â
Judge me?
âTrying to what?â I push her to respond.
âHelp you. Be here for you.â
It sounds nice when she says it. Too bad she doesnât know anything about me. She doesnât know who sheâs trying to help. She needs to understand that Iâm not fixable and sheâs wasting her time here. She needs to leave and never speak to me again.
âYou are so pathetic. Donât you see that I donât want you here? I donât want you to be here for me. Just because I messed around with you doesnât mean I want anything to do with you. Yet here you are, leaving your nice boyfriendâwho can actually stand to be around youâto come here and try to âhelpâ me. That, Theresa, is the definition of pathetic,â I say, watching her gray eyes turn to stone.
âYou donât mean that.â She doesnât know me, though she can read me well.
I deliver the final blow. âI do, though. Go home.â I lift the bottle in victory and open my mouth. Suddenly the bottle is snatched from my grip and tossed across the yard.
âWhat the hell?â I shout at her. Is she mad? Tossing a valuable bottle of scotch across a lawn like that? I look back and forth between her figure striding to the patio door and the bottle, then follow her after grabbing the bottle and leaving it on the side of the deck, near the table. I have to catch my balance, but I manage to step in front of her.
âWhere are you going?â I look down at her, stopping her from entering the house. The porch light catches her eyelashes in a way that makes it look like theyâre brushing her cheekbones. I stare at her as she stares at her feet.
âIâm going to help Landon clean up the mess you made, and then Iâm going home.â Her voice is full of conviction and leaves no room for arguing. Except that Iâm a master of the art of finding a small space, a crevice, no matter how tiny, to argue my way into.
âWhy would you help him?â He betrayed me by calling her in the first place, and now sheâs leaving me to help him?
âBecause he, unlike youââher voice is low, steady, and strongââdeserves someone to help him,â she says.
I feel the impact of her words sinking into my chest as she stares into my eyes, challenging me.
Sheâs right. Heâs the guy everyone wants to be around. He doesnât break shit and throw a fit when he gets bad news. He deserves her time and attention, just like he deserves to walk into that big house and be welcomed warmly and go into his own room. He deserves a home-cooked meal; he shouldnât have to eat takeout in an empty room inside a house full of strangers who all secretly hate him.
Sheâs right about that, and thatâs why I let her walk past me and back into the house without another word.
The way she looked at me as she walked by is burning through my mind, playing on repeat over and over. I pull out my phone and scroll through a few pictures Iâve taken of her. One while walking to the stream . . . her hair was so blond under the sun and her skin was glowing. She was quietânervous, maybeâbut she looks peaceful in the photo. She really is beautiful. Why would she want to help me? What all did Landon tell her about my drinking?
I pull my beanie back on, and after a few minutes I canât help but go inside. My eyes are burning and my head is pounding as I open the door.
âTessa, can I talk to you, please?â I immediately ask. Landon is crouched over, dropping broken pieces of china into a plastic bin. Tessa nods, and I stare at her face. Then my eyes move farther down her body, stopping at her bloody finger, which sheâs holding under the sink faucet.
I cross the kitchen in only a few steps. âAre you okay? What happened?â
âItâs nothing, just a little glass,â she says. The cut looks small, but I canât get a good look at it. I reach for her hand and pull it from the water. The cut is about half an inch long and a quarter inch deep. Sheâll be okay; she just needs a bandage. Her hand feels so light in mine, so warm, and I feel my breathing slow as I hold her. I drop her hand and she lets out a deep breath.
âWhere are the Band-Aids?â I ask Landon.
âBathroom.â Heâs annoyed with me. I can tell by his tone. I find the small box of bandages easily in the cabinet. I grab the antibacterial cream from the bottom shelf and return to the kitchen.
I take Tessaâs hand in mine for the second time and squeeze the cream onto the tip of her finger. Sheâs watching me carefully . . . unsure what to think, maybe? Band-Aids remind me of my mum and that fucked-up night a long time ago, and I blink away the memory as I wrap the bandage around Tessaâs finger.
âCan I talk to you, please?â I ask Tessa for the second time. She nods, and I wrap my fingers around her wrist, leading her to the back patio again. We have more privacy there; Landon wonât be listening in.
When we reach the table, I let go of Tessaâs wrist and pull the chair out for her. Itâs the least I can do, I suppose. My hand feels cold, and the blood is no longer pumping behind my ears. I feel calm and cool.