Falling into Forever (Falling into You) (20 page)

BOOK: Falling into Forever (Falling into You)
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“The onus was on me, and we both know it.”


No, it wasn’t.”

His only response is a
vehement shake of his head, and I know that he’s not hearing me. I want to make sure that he understands my next words very clearly, so I say them slowly, looking deeply into his face.

“I needed you. I needed to make love with you.
Then and now. So please don’t tell me that you’re sorry. Be sorry if you have to be, but don’t say it to me, because I don’t want to hear it. You can at least do me that very small favor.”

He nods, but I can tell that he’s still torturing himself.
I graze the side of his face with my fingers and take a long, shaky breath.

I
’ve managed to pull myself back together. It seems like a small thing, to pull myself back from the edge of the cliff, but it isn’t, not when I know what it’s like to lose all control over what I say and think and feel, when I’ve had no way to figure out what my reaction to a particular piece of music or picture will be. A large part of regaining that control is due to him.

“Thank you, Chris.”

I don’t think he realizes what I’m thanking him for, because he gives me a remorseful smile.

“You’re leaving, aren’t you?”

“I have to. I need some time to think. Furthermore, if I don’t show at this dinner, Eva will kill me.”

I reach down and s
lide my shirt back over my head before turning to look at him one last time.

“You should go. You really should. You’re right. You need time to think.”

“I meant it. I just need some time. There weren’t any alternative meanings there. I’m not running away. Just taking a moment.”

I take his face in my hands and give him a long kiss that contains everything that I don’t have words fo
r, gratitude and love and pain and lust and heartache.

He gives me a bittersweet smile in response before looking at the door.
“It was grand to be young, wasn’t it? There weren’t so many things that we had to be sorry for.”

That sounds too much like goodbye, and that wasn’t my intention, so I measure my response carefully.

“There weren’t so many things that we were proud of, either.”

“Fair enough.”

“I think I might have to exempt the breakdancing movie from that. What was it called?
Breakdown
? I wouldn’t be too proud of that one, if I were you.”

He throws the pillow at me and I narrowly avoid it with a well-timed duck.

“Chris, I’ll see you at dinner, okay?” When he doesn’t respond, I prod the side of the bed with my hand. “Okay?”

“Sure.”

I don’t entirely believe him, but staying in this room for one moment longer might make me say something that I’ll regret.

So,
I leave, but not without leaving a piece of myself behind.

 

 

Chapter 14

CHRIS

 

I slam my hand into the headboard as I hear the door shut behind her.

The hunger for the head buzz, the loose, easy feeling, the release of obligations in favor of blackness, fills my gut.

I want a drink more than I’ve ever wanted one in my life.

And for an alcoholic, that’s saying something.

She shouldn’t need time to think about me. When had it all started to go wrong? How had I managed to screw this up so royally?

But I know the answer to that question
. Ultimately, London.

But it had begun long before that.

Ecstasy
. New York. The apartment. Chelsea.

 

* * *

5 ½ Years Earlier

New York

 

I turn the key in the lock as one of the girls behind me giggles maniacally. I spin around to face them.

“Shut up!”

“What, is your mom going to be mad?” she says, intentionally raising her voice, which causes even more giggles.

My annoyance level
is reaching monumental proportions.

“My girlfriend. And yes, she will be very mad.”

“You have a girlfriend?”

Adam, my costar from
Ecstasy
, looks totally confused. “You still have a girlfriend, man? The same one? Really?”

“Yes, the same one. Really. And she’s going to be pissed if we wake her up at 5 am.”

My buzz
is starting to wear off, leaving me with nothing but a gigantic headache and what feels like cotton balls in my mouth. Suddenly, bringing Adam and my newfound friends from the club for breakfast on the terrace doesn’t seem like such a good idea after all. The three blond girls in the back are still giggling as we stand in the entryway. The sound of their tinny voices combining is only making the headache that much worse.

“You all seriously need to shut up. Adam, do you think you can remember how to make coffee?”

“You have one of those instant press machines, right?”

I look at Adam and his
friend Charlie, whose eyes are starting to roll back in his head. He’s obviously coming down from some sort of high. Shit. I have to get them out of there before Hallie sees.

“Never mind.
There’s a table on the terrace. Grab the fruit from the fridge and the bagels from the counter and head out there. I’ll put the coffee on,” I say, rubbing my temples.

“This place is a freaking palace,” one of the girls (Ami or Abby or Allie
or something or other) shrieks. “You must be rich! I mean, I know you were in that movie with the prom and everything, but, I mean, you must be, like really, really rich.”

Adam throws
his arm around my shoulders. “This is the next movie star, ladies. I’m talking private jets and meetings with kings and prime ministers and billion-dollar fundraising dinners. Just wait until the end of the summer. James Ross. I’m just planning to ride his coattails all the way to the bank.”

My head
is really starting to throb now. I feel the bile rising in my throat.

“Terrace. Now.”

I run to the bathroom on the lower level of the loft and place my head directly over the toilet and empty the contents of my stomach a dozen times. The vomit reeks of alcohol. I reek of alcohol and vomit. I hate vomit. I hate everything about it—the shaking in your gut, the nasty breath, and the way that you can still taste it even after you brush your teeth. Shit. Why do I keep doing this crap?

I brush
my teeth three or four times, but I finally give up on trying to get the grit out of my mouth. I’ll settle for making the fastest breakfast ever. I dump grinds into the top of the coffeepot and some spill over the sides, but I’ll leave it for now. I’ve been bugging Hallie about getting a maid, anyways. This will just be another good reason on top of all of the other good reasons. I reach for the sunglasses on the counter and place them over my eyes, because even the fluorescent light from the kitchen is making me want to die.

“You’re the prettiest one!”

“No, you are!”

“I think you’re both pretty!”

Their voices are getting progressively louder. By the time I make it to the bottom of the stairs, they’re hollering and screaming and singing funny songs at the top of their lungs.

Great. Hallie really
is going to kill me.

It had
almost taken an act of God to get her here. Our summer plans included a trip, maybe to Nepal, maybe to France, maybe to Costa Rica, maybe to the mountains somewhere, but the
Ecstasy
reshoots and all of the
James
Ross
press had made that a total impossibility. She wanted to stay at Greenview while I took care of my business, but I had begged and pleaded and cajoled to get her to New York instead. The Chelsea apartment, all sharp corners and modern furniture and geometric pieces of art, was supposed to be a love nest that would make her forget about all of the midnight phone calls and drunken rages from the set.

But she hated the apartment
, my new friends, even
Ecstasy
.

I never should have taken that part. The shoot had been utter madness—late nights of
rehearsing scenes again and again until they were absolutely perfect, and long nights of going out and dancing and drinking. There were always clear plastic bottles with pills that never seemed to belong to anyone in particular (and which I couldn’t keep myself from indulging in). Then, I would wake up and repeat the same thing all over again. I couldn’t seem to stop it. I kept going out, and then there were later and later nights, and the cycle kept repeating, over and over. New York has been more of the same.

A
distance is starting to grow between Hallie and me, one that I’m currently trying desperately to ignore.

I glance
down at my shirt, which is clearly wearing the signs of the all-night binge. I tear it off and tiptoe up the stairs. Hallie’s curled up in a tiny little ball at the corner of the enormous bed, making little noises like she’s trying to stay in the middle of a really good dream. I grab a shirt from my closet and put it on. I make the decision to kick these people out of my house with Styrofoam cups of coffee. Maybe she’ll never have to know. But, when I look back and see her twisting and turning in the sheets, I can’t resist moving back to the bed, and planting a quick kiss on her forehead. She stirs slightly, and turns her face to look at me.

“Chris?” she whispers
, stretching her arms. “What are you doing?”

“Shhh. Go back to sleep.”

She’s already sitting up in the bed. “Did you just get home?”

The peals of laughter
from downstairs are impossible for her to ignore, even though she usually needs a good twenty minutes before she’s cognizant of anything other than coffee. Her eyes narrow.

“Are there people with you?”

“Just Adam and a couple of people we ran into at the club. I told them that I would make breakfast, but I’ll get them out of here as soon as I can. I promise.”

“Marcus called a dozen times last night. He said something about talking points for the press junket and requirements fo
r the August premiere,” she says, rubbing her eyes. “You should call him before he has a heart attack.”

She pulls
the covers off, and I see that she’s wearing a pair of my boxers and her favorite t-shirt, a retro Greenview one that Alan had found somewhere and given to her after his daughter, Lily, had decided to go to college and not to join a cult.

The sight of her disheveled h
air and sleep-filled eyes fills me with an unexpected rush of love. I pick her up and kiss her over and over again.

“Chris, you smell like the bar. Gro
ss. Put me down. I love you, but you really, really, really, need a shower right now.”

“After breakfast
. I need to feed these people so they’ll get the hell out of here.”

“Ok
ay.” She glances at the clock. “Chris! It’s 5 am. You were out all night?”

“You know how it is. An hour turns into two, and then you want to leave, but you get stuck in a conversation, and then it’s the morning before you even realize it.”

I don’t tell her about the party favors that changed my perception of time, but the suspicious look in her eyes told me that she probably knows anyway. She opens her mouth but then promptly shuts it again, instead motioning to the stack of books on the bedside table.


I don’t really know what you mean, Chris. But sure. An hour turns into two. Look, I’m going to try to get this reading done. My final for my NYU class is in a couple of days, and I don’t think I have a good grasp of constructivism and positivism.”

I have no idea what she’s
talking about. I vaguely remember her telling me about a class at NYU, but I didn’t realize that the class had already started.

“You know, the class I’ve been in for the past six weeks? I had to stay up for three days straight last week to write that paper?” She
takes a long look at me before shaking her head. “Never mind. You were busy with a hundred other things. Go. Take care of your friends.”

“I’ll make it up to you. I promise. We’ll talk all about constructivism and positivism and whatever other isms that you want to tell me about. We’ll take a trip. Where do you want to go? Paris? Africa?”

“How about Nepal? Remember? You, me, a mountaintop tent? Oh, wait. There aren’t any clubs there.” She covers her mouth and groans. “Sorry. I didn’t mean that. Seriously. Go. Shower.”

I
can’t shake the sense that I’ve broken something, possibly beyond repair, but I’ve suddenly become so hazy that I can hardly form a coherent sentence, let alone a heartfelt apology.

I think I was going to make breakfast but I suddenly need to wrap myself in a curtain of warm water. Maybe it will take some of the sickness in my stomach away.

I stumble into the shower and let the water run over me until I can’t find the edge between where my skin ends and the water begins. I shake my head to clear it, but the blurry line between the sink and shower and water and me grows dimmer and I slam my hand into something sharp and there’s a stickiness and a thickness and my vision is narrowing. Everything is white and gray and somewhere in between.

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