Day Two, 1:50 p.m.
âDude, itâs Jocelyn,â I say, looking over my shoulder nervously, just waiting for Courtney to get out of the Burger King. Could this trip be any more fucked up? Seriously. Courtney bursts into tears, something about cheese on her burger (which I know I remembered, because I knew if I didnât, she was going to flip the fuck out). She ran into Burger King crying, and I stood outside the bathroom, yelling in to her and looking like a freak. She kept telling me to go away, so finally I did, and now Iâm waiting in the car for her to come out. The weird thing is, all I can think about is that song by Digital Underground, the one with the lyric âI once got busy in a Burger King bathroom.â I think I have it on a mix CD in here somewhere.
âThis isnât Jocelyn,â B. J. says, sighing. âItâs Jordan. Dude, try to play a better trick than that. You sound nothing like her. Plus your number came up on my caller ID.â
âNo,â I say, feeling like Iâm living in some sort of weird alternate reality. âJocelyn is the one whoâs following you.â
âWhy would Jocelyn be the one whoâs following me?â B. J. asks, sounding thoroughly confused. Again, Iâm struck by his ability to be very insightful and smart about some things and then totally clueless about others. Maybe heâs one of those idiot savants.
âBecause she wants to know where youâre going, obviously,â I say. I crane my neck to get a look at the Burger King. Still no sign of Courtney. Iâm giving her five more minutes, and then Iâm going back in there. What is it with me and the womenâs bathroom?
âWhy would she want to know where Iâm going?â B. J. asks, sounding even more confused. âWait, how do you even know this?â
âBecause Courtney was asking all these questions about who was following you, and about how I should try to convince you not to call the police because it was probably nothing.â
âSo?â
âSo obviously she was saying that because itâs Jocelyn, and they donât want you calling the police and getting her in trouble, and/or finding out itâs her.â
âDid you just say âand/orâ?â
I donât respond.
âWhy would Jocelyn be following me, though?â B. J. asks again. âShe knows where Iâm going. I tell her every second where Iâm going to be. I check in.â
âMaybe she doesnât believe you,â I say. âMaybe sheâs following you because she wants to make sure you really are where you say you are.â
âThatâs ridiculous,â B. J. says. âWhy would I lie about where Iâm going?â
âShe doesnât trust you,â I tell him. âI have to go.â
âWhy wouldnât she trust me?â he demands. âIâm totally trustworthy.â
I try not to point out that not only does B. J. tend to get caught doing things and then lie about them, he also has an extremely impulsive personality, which makes him do things spur of the moment. Like dress up as a midget. Or cheat on his girlfriend. Not that B. J. has ever cheated on Jocelyn. Not that I know of, anyway.
âListen,â I say, âI gotta go. But itâs definitely Jocelyn. You should talk to her.â
âHmm,â B. J. says, sounding unsure. I want to be a good friend, but I really canât deal with this right now. I slap my phone shut and head inside to rescue Courtney from a womenâs bathroom for the second time in twenty-four hours.