I feel like someone injected a rainbow up my butt. I canât remember the last time Iâve felt so happy, so hopeful, and so excited for each new day to start. Iâve started going to the park again, because now I can think about Blue, and I can visit our memories without falling apart. I can smile at the ghosts of our past that still linger under the old bridge, and not run away from them.
Four weeks of talking on the phone for hours every night coupled with pages of heartfelt emails has changed us. Weâve rebuilt our friendship, and are creeping toward more. I wonât jinx it by putting a label on what we are.
We video chat on the weekends, and he plays guitar and sings for meâall shirtless and sexy and swoony and I feel like the luckiest girl on the planet. One night after Lyric went to bed I put Acorn in front of the web cam so Blue could see him, and he started to cry. When Acorn heard his voice, he ran around in excited circles with his penguin in his mouth.
Weâve talked about spending a weekend together, and weâre figuring out what would be betterâme flying to him, or him coming to see me. The best part, the most shocking part, is his new willingness to meet Lyric if things go well between us after a few months. Ifâand only ifâhe remains clean. The plan to meet Lyric was entirely his idea, which is huge. Huge!
Iâm going to be very cautious with Lyric, though. Meeting her father will be confusing for her, and life changing. Itâs a big commitment on Blueâs part that will require a lot of patience and Iâm not sure heâs ready for all of that yet. In the meantime, Iâve slowly made Lyric aware that Iâve been talking to a âfriendâ every night, to ease her into the idea of me having a man in my life other than Josh.
Tonight I make spaghetti and meatballs for dinner, and we eat togetherâJosh, Lyric, and I, which we try to do a few nights a week. Growing up, my parents always insisted we eat dinner together as a family every night. Now that Iâm older I can look back and see how important that wasâto have that stability with loved ones every day. I want to give Lyric the same.
After dinner Josh leaves for a date, Lyric works on a Lego castle sheâs been building for the last week, and I do forty-five minutes of aerobics in front of the television. Before heading upstairs to shower, I check my email and see I have one from Blue.
Piper,
I feel like shit tonight. Itâs just a headache but Iâm gonna hit the sack early.
I hope you had a good day, beautiful.
Iâll call you tomorrow night.
Love,
Blue
I reply:
Blue,
Iâm so sorry, I hope you feel better! Call me if you canât sleep, I donât mind if you wake me.
I miss you bunches and love you always.
Kisses,
me
âI missed you last night. Do you feel better today?â
âMy head is still fuckinâ rocking. I missed you, too, babe.â
âI wish you didnât still get these headaches.â
âMe too. Theyâre gettinâ old. Tomorrow Iâm going to look into flights, if youâre still okay with coming here? You can meet the guys, see where I live. Weâll go out to eat, look at the local sheds. All that happy stuff.â
I laugh at his shed joke. âIâm totally fine with that. Except the shed part.â
Iâm looking forward to seeing Blueâs condo and be in his world. Iâve often wondered what kind of decor heâs into, what color bedspread he has, if he has any photos on the wall. Theyâre such simple details, but will mean so much to actually see.
âAnd Iâll let you decide if you want to stay at a hotel or stay here with me. Or I can stay at the hotel with you. Whateverâll make you happy, Iâm down with. Iâm paying for it, so donât even try to argue about it.â
âIf you insist. Let me think about the hotel thing. Once we figure out dates, Iâll let HR know. Iâm sure my mom will love having Lyric for a weekend, and Josh wonât mind taking care of the pets for me. Heâs home most of the time.â
I hear the click of his piercing against his teeth. âWhoâs Josh?â
âMy roommate? Iâve mentioned him a hundred times.â
âYou never said it was a guy.â
My brain cells spin around like the Windows hourglass. Iâm positive I told him about Josh quite a few times over the years. âUm, I kept saying Josh. Thatâs a guyâs name.â
âYou never told me that.â His voice is flat, almost cold now, and completely different from a few moments ago.
âIâm sorry, I just thought you knew.â
âSo where does Josh sleep?â
âIn his room. Blue, thereâs nothing going on if thatâs what youâre thinking. Weâve been friends since high school. And heâs gay. Well, bi. Whatever. But weâre strictly friends. Weâve been living here with him in his house since Lyric was three years old. I donât know what I wouldâve done without him, to be honest.â
âItâs his house?â
âYes. Itâs huge. We all have our own bedrooms and bathrooms and thereâs a big fenced-in yard and a swing set. Itâs perfect for Lyric and Acorn.â
âSo you guys are all living together like a family in his big house?â
His voice rises with each set of questions, and I can picture him running his hand through his hair and pacing around the room. Iâm clueless as to why heâs suddenly getting angry about my living arrangement. I know Iâve mentioned it to him many times and I canât understand how he could have forgotten.
âWell, yeah, I guess if you want to put it like that, then yes. Josh has been great helping me take care of Lyric over the years. He takes her to school sometimes, he spends a lot of time playing with her. She thinks of him as an uncle. Heâs a good guy, and sheâs crazy about him.â
Thereâs a long silence on the other end, and I wait patiently, hoping thatâs the end of this conversation and we can go back to planning our weekend together. Unfortunately, the silence continues, reaching into awkward proportions, until I have to put an end to it.
âIs something wrong? You sound like youâre getting mad and I donât understand why.â
âI donât know. Iâm not sure how I feel about all this. With this guy.â
âThereâs nothing to feel. Heâs just a friend who offered me an amazing place to live. My apartment was way too small for myself, a toddler, a cat, and a dog. I was having a hard time finding something bigger that was also in a nice neighborhood, close to my family, and close to my office. I was doing my best. I wasnât expecting to have a dog and a baby, remember?â
I probably shouldnât have added that last part, but heâs starting to upset me with his mild insinuation that Iâm doing something wrong.
âOh. So some other fucking guy just gets to have my chick, my kid, and my dog? And Iâm not supposed to be pissed about that?â
âNobody has your anything, Blue. You left, remember? I was alone and doing the best I could to give Lyric and your dog a nice home. Excuse me for not getting your permission, but I had no damn idea who or where you even were!â
Iâve never seen him act like thisâtossing out accusations and walking the line of jealousy over another man being in mine, Lyricâs, and Acornâs life. Has it taken all these years for him to regret his decisions?
âWhy havenât you moved out? You must make enough money now to get your own nicer place. Especially with the money I send you every month.â
âBecause this is our home. I have no reason to leave. And please donât throw money in my face. You donât send it every month for one thing, and when you do, I put all of it into an account for Lyric for when sheâs older.â
The telltale spark of the lighter is heard, then an angry inhale. âI donât like you living with some fucking guy who I donât even know. And how do I know what else youâre keeping from me or what else is going on?â
âDonât you dare!â I seethe, fed up with all of this craziness. âIâm not keeping anything from you, and there shouldnât be any issue over Josh at all. If it werenât for him, I never wouldâve seen you that night in Boston. Heâs the one who got me the tickets.â
He scoffs. âYou want me to thank him, Piper? Pay him back for the tickets? Iâm sure you regret that whole night, anyway.â
My blood starts to boil and now Iâm the one pacing my bedroom, from the door to the window and back again.
âWhat is wrong with you tonight?â I ask. âWhy are you acting like this? Josh is a friend and thatâs it. And no, I donât regret that night, even though it turned into a total disaster.â
He says nothing. I want to cry and throw something across the room.
âIâm gonna go,â he mumbles.
My stomach drops. âYouâre just going to leave things like this?â I ask tearfully.
âI donât want to talk about this anymore. I need to go do things.â
âWhat?â My voice catches in my throat and it takes me a few seconds to recover. âWhat things?â
âI just need this to stop. I have to go for a jog. Thereâs a lake I like to jog to and I want to go before it rains. I should do about ten miles.â
I pull the phone away and stare at it, then put it back to my ear. âWhat are you talking about? Itâs late.â Heâs three hours behind me, making it ten p.m. there, which is late to go for a ten-mile jog around a lake.
Isnât it?
âIt doesnât matter what time it is, Piper. I just want to jog.â
I let out a massive sigh of mental exhaustion and close my eyes for a full five seconds. His erratic mood swing is confusing me, and I donât want to fight with him, especially when things have been so perfect. I need this to stop, too. Iâm not going to go for a jog, but Iâm definitely going to go to bed and hope for a better tomorrow.
âOkay,â I say. âDo what you need to do, then. Itâs late and I have to work in the morning.â
Questions sit at the tip of my tongue, but I suck them back. I wonât ask him if heâs started doing drugs again. I wonât make him feel like Iâm doubting him.
âIâll call you tomorrow.â
Click.
Did he just hang up?
Without saying goodbye or I love you?
He did.
Crying, I sit on the edge of my bed and cover my face with my hands. Iâm tempted to pick up the phone and call him back and somehow undo what just happened and go back to happiness and normalcy. Past experience has taught me that if I force him to talk, he will just put walls up, though, and thatâs the last thing I want to do. Heâll end up walking fifty miles tonight and end up God-knows-where.
A scratching sound breaks through the sound of my own sobs. Acorn is pawing at the bed.
Smiling weakly, I pat the bed next to me. âCome on up, pupper. Weâll go to sleep.â
He whimpers and rests his chin on the mattress, lifting one paw up.
âCome on,â I say softly. âLetâs go to bed.â
He whimpers again, lifts one front paw, then puts it back on the floor, then lifts the other paw, only to put it back down. His big brown eyes stare up at me and I realize he canât jump up. Frowning, I bend down and gently lift him onto the bed, and I curl up next to him, my face close to his, nose to nose. I stroke the soft fur of his forehead and watch his eyes close as he falls asleep. So many times this dog has comforted me, kept me warm when I shivered in the shed, kept me company on my loneliest days. People should be more like dogsâwith unwavering and unconditional love no matter what. Always happy to see us, always grateful to be with us, never hurting us.
Tomorrow Iâll ask Josh to build a ramp next to the bed for Acorn, and Blue can screw himself if he doesnât like it.