Dear Ana: Chapter 7
Dear Ana: A Novel
I checked my phone for the hundredth time. It was eleven-fifty.
Sheâs not coming.
I lifted my phone to my ear anyway and waited.
âHello?â
At least she answered.
âHey Bayan, where are you?â I said cheerfully. Too cheerful. Synthetic.
âHome.â
One-word responses. Just like her texts.
âOh . . . I thought we were hanging out today. Did I get the day wrong?â
I didnât get the day wrong. I had our hangout marked in my calendar because I was so excited to see her. I was so excited that she texted me backââthree weeks later, but still.
âOh my God, I totally forgot,â she apologized. It sounded genuine. âMy mom has been super extra every time I ask to leave the houseââyou know how she isââand Iâve been really busy lately with . . .â
I listened while she vented about her overly strict parents, and her busy, busy schedule. Regardless, I still drank in every scrap of her life she threw my wayââa dog begging at the foot of the dinner table. I didnât mind. I missed her voice.
â. . . but anyway, rain check?â
âYeah, thatâs fine. What day did you have in mind?â
âIâll text you,â she promised.
She wonât.
âIâll talk to you soon, okay?â
You wonât talk soon.
âBye.â
And just like that, she was gone.
Things werenât always this weird between us. There was a time when our friendship ran deep. There was a time when there wasnât a single second of silence between us because we couldnât stop talking, and laughing . . . until I ruined it by being sad. I mean, I was always sad, but it was background noise. I could tune it out when I was around her because she was a ray of blissful and charismatic sunshine without even trying, and it was contagious. But eventually, my world darkened to a point of no return and everything I was holding back came tumbling out, tainting our friendship forever.
It wasnât like I ever told her anything. I never once vented or cried or dumped all my trauma onto her unwilling shoulders to make myself feel better. I was simply but completely a little sad. My smile was a little smaller. My laugh didnât come from the gut. My height lost a few inches from the new slump in my shoulders. My eyes were a little less bright. And she just . . . never questioned it. She accepted the sudden shift in my personality without acknowledgement, causing our relationship to dwindle into a series of unanswered messages and meaningless hangouts every few months. We would meet up, she would talk, I would listen, and then she would leave.
My phone was still pressed against my ear.
But what about you, Maya, how are you doing?
âNot good,â I whispered into the screen.
Why, what happened?
âMikhailâs moving back in,â I told no one. âHeâs moving back in and Iâm so terrified and mad. Iâm so fucking mad at them for doing this. For being so oblivious and gullible. Itâs not fair. Itâs not fucking fair. He put me through hell and theyâre justâââ my voice broke âââwelcoming him back with open arms.â
Silence.
âI met a boy yesterday,â I continued. âHe seems nice, and heâs kind of cute. Really cute. Exactly my type.â
Let me guessââtall, lanky, dark curly hair?
âYes,â I laughed. âBut then I made it weird. I had this whole bitchy, Shakespeare-level dramatic monologue. It was mortifying.â
Typical Maya. How did he react?
âHe reacted . . .â I paused. âHe didnât react. He just carried on the conversation.â
See? Stop overthinking it.
âHe gave me his number. Should I text him?â
Yes!
âThereâs something else.â
What?
âHe knew her. Ana. He knows I knew her too, and when he asked me how I lied.â
So. Everyone lies.
âBut this is a big lie. What if he finds out?â
That you were about to die in a car accident and needed a heart to survive?
âHer heart,â I corrected.
So what. Youâre just another transplant patient, Maya. It doesnât need to be deeper than that.
âI guess . . . I donât know. Every time he spoke, it was like she was reminding me of her existence in my ear with her thumps.â
Your thumps, Maya. There is no her. Anaâs dead.
âI know. Itâs still my fault, though, kind of. Sort of? And I know heâll agree with me if he finds out.â
Then donât tell him.
âI wonât,â I promised.
Silence.
I swallowed and glanced around the cafeteria, peeling my phone away from my face. I didnât look alone and crazy. I just looked like a girl talking on the phone with her best friend. I grabbed my wallet and pulled out the ripped piece of polystyrene with Noahâs number on it. I didnât know why I kept itââI already had it memorized. But I liked having a piece of that hour. Proof that it really happened.
I smiled as I replayed our odd conversation. The only reason I accepted his offer for coffee was because I knew it would be a one-time thing. I didnât think I would want to see him again . . . but I did. I hated that. I hated how quickly my loneliness clung to people. I hated how quickly I became obsessed.
But this was different. Noah was different. He already knew I was sad, so I couldnât ruin it this time.
He could find out, and that will ruin it.
I added him as a contact anyway . . . and then before I could overthink it I sent him a message.
Hey, itâs me Three dots immediately appeared.
Whoâs me?
Maya, obviously How could that possibly be obvious?
My mouth twitched.
Because youâve been desperately waiting for a text from an unknown number since the moment I left Damn, you caught me Come to the café I smiled.
Iâm busy After youâre done being busy My smile widened.
Iâll see The best two words I heard all day Okay, settle down dude Iâll try my best, chick My alarm rang. Five minutes left for lunch.
I have to go Okay Iâll maybe see you later Iâll maybe see you later, too Maya?
Noah Iâm so glad you texted me Thump, thumpââ
One more time, Ana, I promised, and then Iâll never see him again.
I opened the front door of Espresso & Chill, my gaze immediately searching every inch of the perimeter for him. A set of mismatched eyes locked with mine from behind the front counter, and his face lit up with that beautiful, toothy grin.
âFor you,â he said, handing me a steamy mug before taking a seat across from me.
âAre you sure youâre okay to take a break?â I forced down a sip. âIt looks like itâs getting busy.â
âIâm here if they need me.â
âHow many baristas do you have?â
âI only needed to hire one . . . until this morning when I decided to hire a second one.â
âWhy the impulsivity?â
âI had a feeling I was going to be preoccupied this evening,â he said, giving me a pointed look.
âDonât flatter yourself, Noah. I had to fish your number out of the trash.â
One corner of his mouth tugged upwards. âFishing my number out of the trash is a much bigger compliment than if you had simply added me as a contact right away.â
I looked away, letting my short curls mask my expression. âPermission to withdraw my last statement?â
âPermission denied,â he laughed. âI caught you red-handed. Or, in your case, red-faced.â
âOkay, settle down.â
âIâm settled. You on the other hand . . .â
I shook my head in annoyance but then started laughing despite myself, the spontaneous sound coming from the deepest part of my belly. It felt different. It almost felt nice.
âCan I ask why you felt inclined to get rid of my number in the first place?â
âIâm not usually eager to face people after throwing an emotional bitch fit in their presence.â
âIâm used to thatââit comes with the job description,â he assured me. âI make girls drinks, and in return, they cry and tell me all about their problems.â
âI did not cry, okay,â I scoffed. âAnd youâre describing a bartender, Noah, not a barista.â
He shrugged. âBartender, baristaââsame thing.â
âThey start with the same letter,â I echoed smugly.
He chuckled lightly. âTell me about your day.â
âI had work at six am and I finished about thirty minutes ago,â I told him, forcing down another sip.
âI thought you only worked at night?â
âWell, I do.â What was I trying to hide? âI have two jobs. I work at the hospital from six to three every day except Sunday, and I work at Tysons from five-thirty to ten most nights.â
âWow,â he replied, his eyes widening in surprise. âHow do you juggle both jobs with classes?â
My face immediately flushed with shame. âI differed my enrollment for two years last September. Iâm sorry I didnât tell you that yesterday.â
âThatâs okay, but why did you defer? You seemed excited about it.â
âI canât work two jobs and go to school, so I figured I would just focus on saving up for now.â
It was crazy how the more I told that lie, the more I started to believe it myself.
âHave you tried looking into financial aid?â
âI have financial aid, but six years is a lot to pay back.â I focused my gaze on the mug in my hands, wishing he would just drop the subject but it was too late. His question already triggered one of the prohibited boxes in my mind and it was wide open now. Financial Aid? More like financial debt. I didnât even know what the amount was after all the accumulated interest because I couldnât bring myself to open any of the envelopes or emails they sent me. There was yearsâ worth of unopened letters shoved into the back corner of my closet. I had changed my number countless times to avoid their constant calls but they still ended up figuring out the new one, sending me into a frenzy of panic every time my phone buzzed with an unknown caller screen.
But what could I do? How could I explain that the reason I couldnât pay them back wasnât that I was irresponsible or that I didnât care, but because my money was not my own? They didnât care about my sob story. Every cent I earned went to paying the bills, groceries, and gas. By the time I was done, I could barely treat myself with a simple cup of coffee because the thought of spending my money on myself felt like . . . theft. Or some other outrageous crime against humanity. I didnât even bother trying to make a payment plan because what was the point? My dadâs health was a chronic issue, making it impossible for him to get a job with a livable wage. Mikhail was fucking useless, so the burden fell on me. I was going to have to press the permanent pause button on my dreams and take care of my family for the rest of my life while dodging creditors hiding in every corner.
I blinked against the lights that were suddenly too bright and my hands twitched to cover my ears from the low background music that suddenly wasnât low anymore and my lips were trembling to tell the people chatting casually around me to stop fucking yelling so I could just think of a solution to my never-ending problemsââ
âMaya? What are you thinking about?â
âJust thinking.â
âIs your brain being a menace again?â
âNot again, Noah. Always.â
He hesitated. âI find that fresh air usually helps, but I know how you feel about birds. The outdoors is kind of their territory.â
âItâs Decemberââtheyâre already long gone and wonât migrate back until early spring. The smart ones wouldâve escaped as soon as the temperature started to drop, and any stragglers left in the city will get hit by natural selection soon enoughââexcept for crows, of course.â My mouth kept moving, spouting useless information to distract me from thinking. âDid you know that a group of crows is called a murder? I mean, there has to be a reason for the name. Can you blame me for being terrified? Theyâre basically just mini dinosaurs.â
âFor someone whoâs scared of birds, you sure do know a lot about them.â
âIsnât that always the case? To obsessively memorize and consume all pieces of information pertaining to the thing you fear the most?â
âTo put it eloquently,â he agreed with a chuckle, standing up. âCome on. Iâll protect you from all the mini dinosaurs.â
The wind hit as soon as I opened the door. I quickly took in mouthfuls of air, looking up at the grey clouds. Noah stood beside me, far enough to give me some space but close enough for me to feel his presence and know he was still there.
âPlease tell me youâre finally regretting the choice to ignore my helpful warning.â
âNot quite,â he smiled and started walking down the sidewalk. âWhy are you so desperate to prove your point?â
âIâm not,â I sighed, shaking my head. âThis might shock you, but Iâm not usually like this,â I laughed. âWell, I am, but not at first. I normally like to get to know someone before revealing how emotionally unstable I am.â
âEveryone is emotionally unstable, Maya. Some people are just better at hiding it.â
âIâm good at hiding it,â I insisted. âSeriously, itâs like my only talent. Or was.â
âHiding isnât a talent. Itâs just a delay on something thatâs destined to happen.â
I rolled my eyes. âYou just have all the answers, donât you?â
âNope. Only the lessons I learned the hard way.â
âOh my God, do you hear yourself?â I asked in disbelief. âYou sound like a walking self-help book.â
He laughed.
âIs that what this is? Do you have a book youâre trying to sell? Are you a barista, bartender, bird-lover and author? No, not an authorâââ I paused for dramatic effect âââa book writer.â
âGotta keep it consistent,â he agreed, still laughing. âI do sound like a corny douche, donât I?â
âYou? No. Never,â I replied sarcastically.
âI swear Iâm not some entitled white man,â he promised. âI only speak from experience.â
âYou keep hinting at this secret messy life of yours, Noah. Enlighten me.â
He chuckled. âWell, once upon a time there was a little boy named Noah . . .â
âHere we go,â I groaned.
â. . . who woke up on his tenth birthday and found his mom dead in the kitchen.â
My teasing grin disappeared.
Fuck.
I squeezed my eyes shut. âIâm an asshole, Noah. I am so sorry.â
âYouâre not,â he disagreed softly. âAnd itâs okay, it happened a long time ago.â
I was an asshole. I was so consumed with my own life that I forgot shitty things happened to other people too. Worse things.
âHow did she . . . ?â
âOverdose.â He spoke soberly. Business like.
Overdosing was clean. Simple.
âI thought she was asleep,â he continued. âI didnât realize what happened until she started to smell.â
No one would even know at first.
âYou were so young, of course you wouldnât think she was . . .â
âNot really,â he replied, looking straight ahead. âPhysically I was a kid, but mentally . . .â he sighed, shaking his head. âMy mom struggled with severe addiction for most of my childhood, and it was hard for her to take care of me. Eventually, I had to start taking care of myself and her. Cooking, cleaning, taking money from her purse every night to make sure the bills would get paid on time.â
âAnd your dad?â
He laughed humorlessly. âYeah, that piece of shit took off when I was six and left us to fend for ourselves.â
âBut who . . . you mentioned your parents to me yesterday, didnât you?â
âMy adoptive parents. I was put in the foster care system after my mom overdosed, and a few years later I was adopted. Thatâs how I met Ana.â
Thump, thumpââ
Brother, not boyfriend. It hit me then, how ridiculous it was to immediately assume his relationship with Ana had to have been a romantic one. Sometimes I forgot that brothers loving their sisters was completely normal.
âWe were placed in the same foster family, and we were inseparable ever since. My adoptive parents originally came in wanting a girlââAnaââbut she insisted that she wouldnât leave without me,â he chuckled lightly.
Did I really call her a bitch the other day? She was a fucking saint.
âThat was incredibly nice of her.â
âAnaâs the definition of nice. Or . . . was.â
Thump, thumpââ
Abandoned father, addict mother, foster care and two intimate deaths all in the span of twenty-eight years, and I was the sad one. Pathetic.
âI know we just met, but for what itâs worth, Iâm glad she did that. You deserve a family that loves and takes care of you.â
âMy mom loved me, Maya. I know it sounds terrible, how we were living, but she tried her best. People are so quick to judge, but they just donât understand that addiction is a disease. She wasnât selfish, or neglectful. She was just fighting demonsâ that no one else could see.â
I nodded in understanding. I knew the feeling.
âShe tried her best,â he repeated. âEven though she didnât always show it, I know she loved me.â
âAre you trying to convince me or yourself?â
He didnât respond. Just kept looking straight ahead with his eyebrows scrunched together.
âItâs okay to be mad, Noah,â I told him after a few minutes of silence. âJust because there was a reason for her actions, doesnât make it okay.â
He exhaled deeply before speaking. âI begged her to pick me over using for my entire childhood. But one day I just . . . stopped? And then when she died, it was like . . . my inner child died with her. Now I just have these days where I hate myself for not trying harder to help her.â He paused. âItâs been so long though and it just feels silly to keep thinking about it, you know? Itâs not helping anyone by continuing to fester over it. Whatâs done is done. Iâm over it.â
âWho says?â I asked, irritation creeping into my voice. âWho made it a rule that family can get a free pass to treat you however the fuck they want to and you just have to accept it and move on.â
His gaze immediately cut to mine, startled by my sudden outburst. I didnât say anything more, but the deed was done. I wasnât talking about his mom, and he knew it.
âIt wasnât like that, Maya,â he said slowly.
âI know, I justâââ I took a breath. âYou donât need to be over anything. Even if you convinced yourself you were over it but it hits you all over again. There is no timeline. Itâs not supposed to be easy and clean and shortââitâs supposed to be messy. That doesnât make you weak, or a bad son. It only makes you human.â
He smiled and nudged me with his shoulder gently. âWhoâs the corny douche now?â
I rolled my eyes at his teasing tone, but I still felt guilty for judging him so quickly. I hated how optimistic and buoyant he was and automatically perceived him as some privileged white male. He was privileged, in a sense, but the way he spoke yesterday . . . he wasnât bragging, he was just thankful. He knew how it felt to be on both sides of the coin.
We started heading back to his café, just as the evening rush began. I had no choice but to step closer to him, and our hands bumped against each other.
âSorry,â he murmured after each accidental touch.
I glanced down at our hands with curiosityââone gloved, one bareââand carefully shifted my pinky finger, hooking it with his. I felt his eyes on me, but I continued looking forward. After a moment his finger tightened around mine, securing it with his and our hands started to swing lightly between us. My lips inched up in a tentative smile, and in the corner of my eye, I could see his doing the same.
Thump, thumpââ
My finger slipped out from his and my grin evaporated. I felt his eyes on me again, but I ignored him. A minute passed before he looked away, and put his hand in his pocket.
I only held his finger for a second, but it was enough. A second was all it took to wonder if I could be touched by a man without being in pain. If I could be ignited into flames without being burned to ashes in the process.
âIâm sorry you had to go through that,â I told him sincerely once we reached my car. âBut your optimism and lust for life . . . itâs refreshing.â
He shrugged and smiled brightly. God, he was always smiling.
âHow do you do that?â I asked.
âDo what?â
âStay so . . . positive? And happy? Itâs weird.â
He tipped his head back and laughed.
âIâm being serious,â I insisted. âIs your café just a front to sell special deserts? Are you on cloud nine right now, Noah?â
âIs it really so unbelievable that I could simply choose not to let a few shitty things dictate the rest of my life?â
Yes.
âSo this is how the other half lives?â I muttered. âInteresting.â
His eyes softened. âWhatever youâre going through right now will pass, Maya. Things will go back to normal. The way they used to be.â
I looked at him sadly, and for the first time since I met him, I told him the truth.
âThatâs what Iâm afraid of.â
He waited to see if I would continue, or give more details, but I didnât. I let my cryptic response float uneasily in the air between us until my alarm went off in my pocket.
âI have to go to work,â I said reluctantly.
âWill I see you tomorrow?â
âI donât usually hang out with my acquaintances multiple times in one week.â
âWell, that ship has already sailed. Weâre currently at three.â
âThree?â
âRunning away at the cemetery, antagonizing me at my café, a trauma dumping stroll downtown.â He tallied them off on his fingers. âWeâre basically a married couple.â
I snickered at his word choice. âI donât know if the cemetery counts as a hangout.â
âIâll take what I can get.â
âYes, Noah,â I consented. âYou will see me tomorrow.â
âPromise?â
âPromise.â
âPinky promise?â
I groaned. âIs that going to be a thing?â
âDo you want it to be a thing?â
âNo,â I replied immediately. âThe only thing you can pinky promise me is that youâll never say the words pinky promise again.â
âBye Maya,â he grinned and turned to leave.
âWait!â He looked back. âI hate your coffee.â
âWhat?â
âThe coffee you keep making me? I hate it. Itâs disgusting. The thought of drinking it ever again makes me want to vomit.â
His eyes widened in shock.
âYou told me a secret,â I explained. âI wanted to tell you one too.â
âSo, I gave you deep and heartfelt, and youâre giving me an insult?â
âYes.â
He raised his eyebrows and then realization hit him. âItâs disgusting? But you drank it.â
I shrugged. âYeah, to be nice.â
âYouâre not very good at being nice.â A laugh burst through my lips. He watched me for a minute before cracking a smile. âWhat about the cute little designs I frothed?â
âSuper cute,â I agreed. âBut I donât want to admire my coffee, I kind of just want to drink it.â
âOkay, how do you take it?â
âIced double shot of espresso made with almond milkâââ he cringed âââfour pumps of sugar-free vanilla syrup and a shit ton of stevia.â
âIt should be considered a crime for you to order that at any café,â he said painfully.
âNo one likes a coffee snob, Noah.â
He laughed again and shook his head. âYouâre something else, Maya. Iâll see you tomorrow with that caffeine abomination waiting.â
I waved and got into my car, my phone beeping before Iâd even put my seatbelt on.
I might still be your acquaintance, but you are most definitely my friend -Noah Thump, thump, THUMPââ
âI know, Ana,â I whispered. âIÂ know.â