Day Two, 1:31 p.m.
âDid you not hear me?â I hiss into the phone. âHeâs starting to talk law enforcement.â
âI donât understand how this could have happened!â Jocelynâs annoyed. âIâve been so careful.â
âWell, apparently you havenât, because he told Jordan someoneâs been following him since yesterday, and that he was going to call the police.â Iâm sitting in Jordanâs TrailBlazer at a Burger King right off our route. Jordanâs inside using the bathroom and getting us food. I told him I wanted to wait in the car since itâs raining, but really I wanted to call Jocelyn and warn her about B. J.âs revelation.
âYou have to stop,â I say. I look out the back window to see if Jordan is coming out of the restaurant yet, but I donât see him. âStop right now.â
âI canât stop yet!â Jocelyn says. âItâs too early. Maybe I could borrow my sisterâs carâ¦Did he say how he figured out someone was following him? Maybe I just have to change my technique.â
âI donât know how he figured it out.â
âCan you ask him?â
âAsk who?â
âJordan!â
âNo, I canât ask him! What would I say? âCan you tell me how B. J. found out he was being followed, because it was Jocelyn and she wants to know if she needs to switch cars or just change her stalking technique?ââ Oh, my God. Jocelyn is delusional. This is exactly why hooking up with people is not a good idea. Once youâve crossed that line it just makes you insane. You start doing things normal people would never, ever do. Where the hell is Jordan with the food? Iâm hungry again. Which is weird. Is it possible that since I was throwing up all day yesterday, Iâm trying to eat enough food for two days? Hmm.
âMaybe thereâs nothing going on,â I say. âMaybe B. J. really is just going to the places he says he is.â
âCourtney!â Jocelyn gasps. âPlease tell me you are not that deluded! Guys are never doing exactly what they say theyâre doing.â
âWhy not?â I say. âMaybe some are doing exactly what they say theyâre doing.â
She snorts. âListen, do what you can,â she says. âAnd let me know if B. J. calls back.â
I hang up the phone and lean my head against the headrest. Weâre about two hours away from Middleton and Lloyd, which is making me nervous. Iâm trying to play it off to Jordan like Iâm wicked excited, while inside I feel like Iâm going to explode. I have no idea how this is going to go down.
The driverâs-side door opens and Jordan gets into the car, juggling a drink carrier and two bags of food. I take one of the bags out of his hand.
âThanks,â he says. He sets the other bag down carefully between us, pulls my soda out of the carrier, and hands it to me.
âYou needed two bags?â I ask incredulously. I peek inside and inhale the scent of the food. It smells good. And greasy. I love grease. Grease makes me happy. I am only going to eat half of my food, though. Just half. So that my stomach doesnât get all sketched out.
âNo, but there was a mix-up and somehow I got someone elseâs order, too.â
He shrugs and pulls out a container of fries.
âDid you tell them?â I ask without thinking.
âOf course I told them,â he says, rolling his eyes. âThey let me keep it.â Right. Iâll bet Mercedes or whatever the hell her name is doesnât question Jordanâs morals when it comes to fast food thatâs been given to him.
âCool,â I say nonchalantly, shrugging my shoulders. Jordanâs cell phone starts playing âBaby Got Backâ again, and he ignores it.
âGoing to answer that?â I ask.
âNope,â he says cheerfully. He opens a container of chicken tenders and pulls open the packet of honey mustard that comes with them. I hate honey mustard. It seems like such a bad idea. Honey and mustard together. Who could like that?
âYou donât have to feel weird about answering it,â I say. âI told you.â
âI donât,â he says. He takes a chicken tender and dunks it into the honey mustard. Something about that makes me sad. Because all the little things about him, like the way he loves honey mustard and the way he always forgets the cheese on my burger, arenât mine anymore. Itâs weird that everything can be the same, that he can go on liking honey mustard, and yet everything is different.
âSo, uh, the whole B. J. thing,â I say, trying to distract myself from my impending condiment sadness. Honey mustard is so not a good reason to be upset. Orphans in Africa, drunk drivers killing innocent people, even not getting into your safety school (for me it was Florida State) are all good reasons to get upset. Chicken tenders sauces are definitely not. I try not to think about it, and instead focus on the fact that Jocelyn is insane.
âWhat B. J. thing?â He reaches into the bag and pulls out a napkin. He wipes his hand with it and sets it on his lap.
âWith him calling the police or whatever. Do you think heâs really going to do that?â
âI dunno.â His phone starts going off again, and my sadness over the honey mustard is suddenly annoyance that he wonât answer the call. Why wonât he answer it? Itâs either because heâs trying to look cool by not or heâs trying to protect my feelings. Does he really think Iâm that upset by the whole breakup? I mean, I am, but Iâve given him no reason to think I would be. Have I? I wrack my brain, trying to determine if thereâs any way he could know how upset I am.
âWould you answer your phone?â I snap.
He reaches in his pocket, pulls it out, and makes a big show of turning it off.
I roll my eyes. âWhatever. Listen, we need to talk about the schedule.â Our schedule is now completely screwed up. We were supposed to be in North Carolina by now.
âWhat about it?â
âItâs all screwed up. We need to reevaluate it.â
âItâs not that screwed up.â He shrugs. âWeâll be at Middleton by tonight, and weâll leave tomorrow. Obviously we wonât be able to visit for that long, but we wonât be that far off the schedule.â
Suddenly, Iâm struck with a brilliant idea. Maybe I can convince Jordan that we canât stop at Middleton, because IT WILL MAKE US LATE FOR ORIENTATION. That would be perfect. I could call Lloyd, tell him that we canât make it because weâre way behind schedule, and then I wouldnât have to deal with the whole thing.
âWell,â I say slowly, pretending that Iâm thinking about it. âMaybe we shouldnât stop.â
âWhat?â Jordan asks, frowning. He takes another tender and dips it in the honey mustard. I resist the urge to reach over and take it out of his hands and throw it out the window. Honey mustard is obviously not good for my mental state.
âI just mean with the schedule the way it is and everything, it might be better if we just drove straight through.â
âBut itâs not going to throw us off that much. If we donât stop, weâll actually be ahead of schedule.â
God, why is he being such an ass? And since when is he such an expert on the schedule? He didnât even read the damn thing. Does he really need to contradict everything I say?
âBesides,â he goes on, âI thought youâd be happy to see Lloyd.â
Right. âI am,â I say. âBut we need to stick to the schedule, too.â This should be a perfectly reasonable explanation. I mean, he knows Iâm totally anal retentive.
My phone rings before I can come up with a better response, and I check the caller ID. Lloyd. Lovely.
âArenât you going to answer that?â Jordan asks, grinning.
âOf course,â I say, rolling my eyes.
âHey,â I say into the phone. âWhatâs up?â I think âWhatâs up?â is a very good, neutral phrase to be saying to Lloyd under the circumstances. Like, I could totally see myself saying it to a boyfriend, so Jordan will be convinced that something really is going on with Lloyd, but at the same time, itâs also something you can say to a friend, so Lloyd wonât be all, âOh, wow, Courtney must be in love with me.â
âHey,â Lloyd says. âIâve been trying to call you for a while.â
âReally?â I say, trying to sound innocent. I know heâs been calling. I just turned my phone off.
âYeah,â he says. âIt kept going right to voice mail.â
âI donât know why,â I say, still trying to sound innocent. âItâs raining here, soâ¦â
âItâs raining where?â he says, sounding confused.
âWhere we are,â I say, trying to sound deliberately vague.
âWhat does that have to do with anything?â
âIt may have been messing with my cell reception.â
âI donât think that has anything to do with it, Courtney,â he says. Well, duh. Why would rain be messing up my cell reception?
âI donât know,â I say again. Jordan shifts on the seat next to me and takes a loud sip of his soda.
âYou donât sound right,â Lloyd says. âIs Jordan giving you a hard time?â
âUh, no,â I say, âHeâs not.â
Jordan stops with a fry halfway to his mouth. âIâm not what?â he asks, frowning.
I shake my head at him and hold up my hand, trying to act like itâs not important. Which, true to whatâs been going on, makes him just want to know more. âWhat did he say?â Jordan demands. He reaches over and turns off the radio.
âNothing,â I mouth at him, and turn it back on. He turns it off. I turn it on. âQuit it,â I say.
âWhatâs going on?â Lloyd asks again through my phone.
âNothing,â I say to Lloyd. âWeâre just having a little problem with the radio. You know, because of the storm.â
âYou guys are listening to the radio?â
âWell, not right now,â I say, which is true. Jordanâs turned it off again, and now heâs maneuvering his body, trying to get closer to me so that he can hear what Lloyd is saying.
âNot right now what?â Lloyd asks.
âWeâre not listening to the radio right now,â I say. âBecause weâre having problems with it because of the storm. Jordan has satellite.â
âFigures.â Lloyd snorts. Lloyd hates the fact that Jordan is kind of spoiled. Which really makes no sense, because Lloyd himself is quite spoiled. In fact, his parents just bought him a brand-new Mustang for graduation. Which he canât even use, since he canât have a car at school. So now his brand-new car is just sitting in the garage, probably getting used by no one. I wonder if Lloyd would let Jocelyn drive his car. Thereâs no way B. J. would recognize it.
âAnyway,â I say. âIâm going to let you go now, but Iâll call you when we get close.â
Jordan, seeing that the conversation is about to end anyway, reaches over and moves the volume up to almost full blast. Rap music comes blaring out of the speakers.
I reach over and very calmly turn off the radio. âJordan,â I say, âwould you please refrain from turning up the music like that when Iâm on the phone? Iâd really appreciate it.â
âHELLO?â Lloyd says much too loudly, now that the radio is off.
âYeah,â I say. âSorry about that.â
âI donât understand why you guys are listening to music,â Lloyd says.
âWhat do you mean?â
âI thought you were dreading this trip,â he says.
âI was,â I say. What does that have to do with listening to music?
âWas as in past tense?â Lloyd asks, sounding quite like a jealous boyfriend. Iâm not stupid. I know Lloyd isnât jealous about me, per se, but more about the fact that Iâm with Jordan.
âNo,â I say. âI am not having a fun time on this trip.â I am still dreading it, although that really makes no sense, because thereâs nothing to dread anymore, since Iâm in the middle of actually taking part in it.
âYouâre not having a good time?â Jordan asks, sounding surprised.
âWhy does he sound surprised?â Lloyd asks.
âI am having a horrible time on this trip,â I say to Lloyd. Which isnât exactly a lie. I mean, Iâve spend a good part of it with food poisoning, listening to Jordan talk to his new girlfriend, dealing with the fact that Jocelyn is possibly going to get a restraining order taken out against her, and listening to rap music. Itâs been bad. âNow I will call you when I get close.â
âI canât wait to see you, Court,â Lloyd says, his voice softening.
âIâm excited to see you, too,â I say, a twinge of guilt rising up in me as I realize this might not exactly be the truth. But I donât know if itâs exactly a lie, either. After all, even if this whole hooking-up thing doesnât work out, Lloyd has always been my friend. So it will be nice to see him and hang out. I click off my phone.
âYouâre having a horrible time?â Jordan asks, looking hurt.
âCan we not talk?â I say. I open the bag my food is in and pull out a french fry.
âWhy not?â he asks, sounding hurt again. âNow we canât even talk?â
âNo.â I take a bite of my fry, which is now cold. Surprisingly, for some reason this makes it taste better. I love fast food. I take a sip of my diet Coke and eat another fry.
âWe canât talk, ever, for the rest of this trip?â
âYes, we can talk for the rest of this trip, Iâm not stupid. I know it would be impossible to not talk for the rest of this trip.â
âSo what youâre saying is we can talk, but we canât?â
âLook, itâs not that hard to figure out,â I say. âWe can talk about normal things, like the route weâre taking, the schedule, toll money, etc. But no, like, chatting.â These fries are so good. I take out a packet of ketchup and look for somewhere to squeeze it. I hate ketchup directly on my fries. Iâm definitely more of a dipper. Jordan hands me his empty chicken tender container wordlessly, and I squeeze the packet of ketchup into it.
âThanks,â I say.
âSo thanking me is allowed?â he asks.
âJordan, stop. You know what I mean.â
âOh, Iâm sorry,â he says. He sounds pissed. Why is he pissed?
âWhy are you pissed?â I ask.
âIâm not pissed.â
âWell, you look pissed. And you sound pissed.â
âWell, Iâm not.â
âOkay,â I say, knowing that he is. Jordan can never admit when heâs pissed. I donât know why. Itâs like this thing, where if he admits to you that heâs angry, heâs lost or something. Although I think heâs just that way with me. Or maybe with girls. I wonder if heâs like that with his new girlfriend.
âI just donât think you should be listening to every little thing Lloyd tells you to do,â he says.
âIâm not,â I say.
âOkay,â he says, not sounding like he means it.
âSeriously, Iâm not. I just think it would be better if we donât talk much.â I shrug.
âBecause of Lloyd.â
âCan you get off the Lloyd thing?â
âWhy?â
âBecause I already told you, it has nothing to do with Lloyd.â
âWell, itâs a little weird that you were fine until you talked to Lloyd, and now all of a sudden you donât want to talk to me.â
I snort. Does he really think we were fine this whole time? Has he not noticed the fact that there is this very weird tension between us, due to the fact that he dumped me two weeks ago for some other girl?
âWhat?â he demands.
âNothing,â I say. âI think itâs just kind of funny that you think weâre fine.â
âI donât see why we canât be,â he says. âPeople break up and stay friends, Court.â
âTrue,â I say. âBut I donât really want to be your friend.â Itâs true. I donât want to be his friend. I want to be his girlfriend or nothing. I feel a lump rising in my throat and I take a sip of my soda in an effort to push it back down. I can feel Jordan watching me, so I open up the fast food bag and take out my Whopper. I peel off the paper and take a bite of the burger. He remembered the cheese this time. I look at the burger and promptly burst into tears.