Charmed Thirds (19 page)

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Authors: Megan McCafferty

Tags: #Romance, #Contemporary, #Adult, #Young Adult, #Chick-Lit, #Humor

BOOK: Charmed Thirds
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Like this morning, when I was brooding over coffee and the
New York Times
crossword puzzle. I wasn’t
really
doing it. I was just filling in spaces with titles of songs by The Smiths and Morrissey as a solo artist. I wasn’t even checking to see if I had the right number of letters. When
7 DOWN
came up short, I just added three exclamation points to
SUEDEHEAD
. When
13 ACROSS
proved too long, I let
THE
LAST
OF
THE
INTERNATIONAL
PLAYBOYS
dangle off the edge of the puzzle like a suicidal jumper.

My mom breezed in with a handful of swatches in a variety of plaids.

“Do you know when your father plans to take down the Christmas tree?”

And I said, “Uh, no.”

16 ACROSS:
GIRLFRIEND
IN A
COMA

And she said, “Well, he needs to take it down today if he wants to put it out on the curb for recycling tomorrow.”

And I said, “Okay.”

And she said, “He’s going to come back and track mud all over the floor.”

And I said, “Probably.”

And she left, leaving a mist of Chanel No. 5 in her wake.

5 DOWN:
OUR
FRANK

Not two minutes later, my father came in, still wearing his bike helmet, smearing muddy footprints all over the floor.

“Have you seen your mother?”

“Yeah,” I said. “She wants you to put out the Christmas tree.”

“It doesn’t need to go out until tomorrow,” he said. “Did she buy my deodorant?”

“I don’t know,” I said. “But she did say something about how you track mud all over the floor, so you should probably clean it up.”

He shot a derisive look at the floor before grabbing a paper towel and rubbing the dirt into the ceramic tile.

“If you see her, tell her I need my deodorant. She never remembers to buy my deodorant.”

And then he went into his office and shut the door.

41 ACROSS:
HOW
SOON
IS NOW?

Later, in two separate incidents, my mother congratulated herself for knowing that my father would muddy up the floor, and my father congratulated himself for knowing that my mother would forget to buy his deodorant. This is what thirty-two years of marriage gets you: the utter satisfaction of predicting
precisely
how your life mate will annoy the hell out of you.

I can’t imagine that they were
always
this way with each other, bickering about recycled Christmas trees and Right Guard—and through a proxy, no less. They should be arguing about more important things, like how it was completely certifiable of my mother to design a bedroom for the dead baby boy she never got to see grow up, or how it was almost equally certifiable that my dad
didn’t even know she had done it
until I showed it to him, because he’s off riding his bikes for hours and then holes himself up in his office “working” whenever he’s home.

I’m sure that in their youth they felt as passionate toward each other as Marcus and I do. (Did? What tense are we in?)

So my point is this: Whether on the way to the altar or after, all relationships are doomed.

And yet . . .

3 ACROSS:
PANIC

46 DOWN:
GIRL
AFRAID

10 ACROSS:
WILL
NEVER
MARRY

40 ACROSS:
WHAT
DIFFERENCE
DOES
IT MAKE?

17 DOWN:
LAST
NIGHT
I
DREAMT
THAT
SOMEBODY
LOVED
ME

47 ACROSS:
NOW
MY
HEART
IS
FULL

34 ACROSS:
THERE
IS A
LIGHT
THAT
NEVER
GOES
OUT

8 DOWN:
THE
MORE
YOU
IGNORE
ME,
THE
CLOSER
I
GET

12 DOWN:
THIS
CHARMING
MAN

2 ACROSS:
THE
BOY
WITH
THE
THORN
IN
HIS
SIDE

6 ACROSS:
FOUND
,
FOUND
,
FOUND

22 ACROSS:
DISAPPOINTED

9 DOWN:
HEAVEN
KNOWS
I’M
MISERABLE
NOW

1 DOWN:
PLEASE
,
PLEASE
,
PLEASE
(
LET
ME
GET
WHAT
I
WANT
)

the fifteenth

A Final Conversation

Me:
I wasn’t sure if I’d see you before I left.

Marcus:
I wouldn’t let you go without saying good-bye.

Me:
When I didn’t hear from you, I thought the worst.

Marcus:
I needed time away to think.

Me:
I’m so sorry, Marcus. You have no idea . . .

Marcus:
You did what you wanted to do.

Me:
But I didn’t really . . .

Marcus:
Part of you must have, or you wouldn’t have done it.

Me:
But . . .

Marcus:
I didn’t come here to make you feel bad about what happened.

Me:
You’re breaking up with me.

Marcus:
I’m not breaking up with you.

Me:
You’re not?

Marcus:
No.

Me:
But . . .

Marcus:
Please.

Me:
Okay.

Marcus:
We didn’t talk much last semester. And now that I know it was because you thought you were pregnant, and were worried that it would change our relationship, as it ineluctably would, I don’t blame you for your distance.

Me:
But . . .

Marcus:
The Buddhists believe that desiring begets suffering. That every pleasure itself consists as a continual striving that ends as soon as it’s reached. I’ve spent my whole life craving something. Attention. The next high. Girls in general. Then one girl in particular.

Me:
Me?

Marcus:
Yes, you. But none of it has helped me feel truly at peace. Not even my love for you, which is as pure and real and true as anything I’ve ever known.

Me:
But what does this have to do with . . . ?

Marcus:
I was at unrest because I knew, deep down, that love, though a beautiful beginning, isn’t enough. It’s the practice of honoring and caring for another that’s noble, not the emotion of love itself. The emotion is the easy part.

Me:
. . .

Marcus:
But how could I honor the responsibilities that come with being in a genuine love relationship? The sort of responsibilities your pregnancy scare brought to the fore for you. How could I try to understand your needs if I’m still a mystery to myself?

Me:
. . .

Marcus:
Throughout the period when I wasn’t talking to you, I found that I could go days without talking to anyone. And I realized that when I didn’t talk, I became a much better listener, both when it came to other people and myself.

Me:
. . .

Marcus:
And so I’ve decided to embark on a silent meditation.

Me:
A silent meditation? Marcus? What?

Marcus:
It’s not that complicated, Jessica. I’m just going to shut up for a while.

Me:
Are you not talking to me or not talking to everyone?

Marcus:
Everyone. Including you.

Me:
Starting when? For how long?

Marcus:
Tonight. After we say good-bye.

Me:
For how long?

Marcus:
I don’t know yet. I don’t want to put a limit on it before I even begin.

Me:
Do you have an idea?

Marcus:
At least a month. Or two. Maybe more.

Me:
Is this because of what I told you the other night?

Marcus:
Maybe. Yes. No. Neither. Both.

Me:
Well, that certainly clears things up.

Marcus:
See what I mean? Words make a mess of things.

Me:
So do actions . . .

Marcus:
Yes, they do, too.

Me:
I really didn’t mean to hurt you . . .

Marcus:
There’s something else. I’ve volunteered for Gakkai’s World Without Web project. The concept is quite simple, really: to disconnect with the Internet and reconnect with real life. I’ll be offline once classes start on January 20.

Me:
So I can’t talk to you or e-mail you.

Marcus:
We can write letters . . .

Me:
I don’t want to write letters! I’m already tired of writing letters to Hope. Now I have to write to you, too?

Marcus:
Then don’t.

Me:
Why don’t you just break up with me?

Marcus:
Because breaking up with you sounds so permanent.

Me:
How can you
be
with someone when you don’t see or hear from that person for months at a time? How is that a relationship?

Marcus:
Our relationship is what we let it be.

Me:
I am so sick of your Buddhist wisdom! It’s bumper-sticker wisdom! T-shirt wisdom!
My thoughts create my world.
I’m so tired of being scrutinized though your goddamn third eye.

Marcus:
I’m sorry you feel that way.

Me:
You’ve
changed.

Marcus:
Maybe I have. I don’t expect you to understand why this is so important to me. Just the idea of it helps me feel more centered and focused. For the first time in my life, I see a future where I won’t need anything—T-shirts, getting high, having sex—to define who I am.

Me:
You won’t need me, either.

[Pause.]

Marcus:
I still love you, Jessica.

Me:
I . . .

Marcus:
. . . ?

Me:
Nothing. I . . . nothing. It’s my turn to shut my mouth.

[I take off the middle-finger ring and thrust it at Marcus. He takes it and puts it in his pocket. We go our separate, silent ways.]

The End

Sophomore Summer june 2004

June 1st

Dear Hope,

You haven’t been the only one to point out how my impatience with the human race might get in the way of my job as a shrink. I have to learn how to be a better listener. I’m usually too busy planning what I’ll say next to focus on the person I’m supposed to be listening to. I would argue that this is because most people are boring, but my faculty adviser says that’s a pretty narcissistic point of view.

So that’s why I’m working for Columbia’s Storytelling Project this summer. It’s an interdisciplinary study of historical narratives. Basically, I’m being paid to sit in the park all summer with a sign that says
TELL
ME A
STORY
. When a freak takes the bait, I videotape him/her telling me whatever he/she wants to tell me. Among other things, the Psychology Department will review the tapes to analyze the storytellers’ gestures and facial expressions to see if there is a “universal unspoken language.” I’m just psyched that my fellowship covers my room and board for the summer and I didn’t have to move in with Bethany again. Or go home. I don’t know which would be worse.

Of course, none of this is as exciting as a summer in France studying at l’École des Beaux-Arts de Saint-Étienne.
Les voyages forment la jeunesse, non?
The way I see it, this experience will not only improve your own global outlook, but it might even boost our entire nation’s approval ratings abroad. I mean, if there’s anyone who can improve the Gallic opinion of Americans, it’s you. Maybe you’ll realize that the French have every right to believe that we are a nation of idiotic imperialist pigs, chuck your U.S. passport, and become an expatriate.

Speaking of ugly Americans, when you consider how much I dislike most people and how I cringe at small talk, you can see why this will be the hardest six dollars an hour I am ever likely to earn.

Empathetically yours,
 J.

the second

I was rereading the postcard that I received in the mailbox today, the second of its kind. I’ve pinned these messages to the wall of my otherwise unadorned dorm room. I haven’t had time to unpack my stuff for the summer, yet I’ve had ample opportunity to obsess over his minimalist missives. It’s a matter of priorities, you see.

This is somewhat healthier than my other hobby: Google stalking. This is something everyone does but no one owns up to because it’s just so pathetic. And yet, I can’t stop. Every night before I go to sleep, I plug “Marcus Flutie” into the browser and pray that a new result will pop up. Unlike “Jessica Darling,” “Marcus Flutie” is alone in the Googleverse, and is therefore easy to track down, or would be, that is, if there were anything to track. (Note to anyone who wants to Google stalk me: Use the advanced option, and remove the word
anal
from your search.) He’s got five listings, and three of them refer to his participation on Gakkai’s Frisbee Golf Intramurals Squad. Another is from the Gakkai College’s campus newspaper, the
Mahayana Weekly,
in a story about some baby fowl that were ducknapped from a petting zoo. (“All unhappiness stems from desire,” says Marcus Flutie, twenty, a first-year student. “These thieves must be miserable.”) And finally, the last listing, the most telling and most frustrating, the one I often fixate on for hours at a time, is from a mercifully short-lived blog called freetobeme.com written by none other than Butterfly the Nuddhist. A simple caption (“The infamous Marcus Flutie.
ZZZZZZZ
. 2-18-03.”) beneath a blurry, too-close photo of Marcus’s face, unself-consciously crumpled up in a deep, deep slumber. Such a little thing, this photo, this caption, and yet it alone has inspired so many sleepless nights of tortured inquiry. (Why is he “the infamous” Marcus Flutie? I know why he’s notorious around Pineville, but what had he done at Gakkai to earn such a distinction? Or was Butterfly being glib? And why was Butterfly there while he was sleeping? Had she just woken up herself? Had they been sleeping on that couch together . . . ? Etc., etc., etc.) I’m lucky that there are so few paths to search, otherwise I could find myself in an endless labyrinth of links, all yielding more questions than answers. As it is, I find myself poring over these same five listings, over and over and over again until I feel dirty and ashamed, as if I’d spent the whole night jacking off to porn, which, in a way, this has become for me. And yet I can’t stop doing it. I compulsively type his name, hoping for a new connection to something, anything related to “Marcus Flutie” because even the most inane tidbit of information would be more than I already have.

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