isn’t it? There have been lots of naked girls in Dean’s bed and that’s why I’m here.
“You can answer it,” Andrew says. He reaches down to grab his T-shirt and pulls it over his head. The phone is still ringing.
I shake my head.
“It’s fine,” he says. “I’m gonna go.” He turns to the door.
“Wait, this is your room,” I say. He shrugs, and then turns around and shuffles through the door, closing it quietly behind him. I put the phone down on the bed and watch it vibrating, waiting for the ringing to stop. I wrap the comforter tighter around myself.
After a few minutes, I force myself to get up and pull on my clothes. All I want to do is to curl up in my bed and sleep—to be alone in my own room. But I can’t leave things like this between us. I have to go downstairs and talk to him, even though I don’t know what to say. I just want us to be friends again—to put this whole humiliating ordeal behind us. I steel myself and leave the room, padding quietly down the familiar stairs into the kitchen. He’s not there. I peer into the living room and the dining room and see that he’s gone. And then I see that his truck isn’t in the driveway. So I pull on my shoes and coat and start the dark walk home.
TWENTY
I TEXT HIM once I get home.
I’m sorry. Friends?
He takes a while to answer, and when he does, it’s just one word.
Friends
I can’t help but think back to the day after Danielle and Chase hooked up, when she told him they could still be friends. I don’t want to “still be friends” with Andrew after this. Not the fake way Danielle and Chase are.
I’m curious where he disappeared to, but I don’t want to ask. It hits me suddenly he might be with a girl. He might have gone to her to finish what we started. The thought makes my stomach turn, even though I know I have no right to be upset.
I text my parents too, to say I’m not feeling well and decided to come home. I hear their key in the lock later in the night, the hushed whispers that mean they’re trying not to wake me. My mom cracks open the door and I pretend to be asleep.
I spend all of Saturday on the couch, wallowing in my misery. Because my parents think I’m sick, they putter around me, trying to cheer me up with hot mugs of tea and plates of saltine crackers. And I do feel sick. Just not in the way they think.
I’ve been avoiding working on my final history project, so I decide to focus on that, spreading my books out on the coffee table and flipping through pages, but I can’t seem to get anything done. It’s hard to focus on school when I’ve already gotten into college and everything going on in my social life feels so much more immediate and combustible.
I try to read a chapter on the Fertile Crescent, words that sound oddly sexual and relevant to everything going on, and suddenly my mind is wandering over the events of last night, flashes of memory that make me light-headed.
I realize it’s useless and turn on House Hunters instead. There’s something comforting in the pointlessness of it; happy couples whose biggest problems are whether they can afford granite countertops or an extra bedroom for their cat.
I’m almost on hour four when I finally work up the courage to call Andrew. He doesn’t answer.
I set my phone down on the coffee table and turn back to the TV, trying to focus, but I keep looking back at it, willing it to vibrate. And then it does, just a quick burst, indicating a text message. I reach for it eagerly and feel a little deflated when I see that it’s from Dean, which is so completely backward.