Authors: Tracey Ward
More party sounds, more Laney pleading sweetly.
“Are you drunk?... Dammit. Take a cab home… No, I can’t, I… Laney, let it go. It’s not a good time… You’re not scared, you’re drunk… Alright… Yes, I said alright. I’ll be there. Text me the address, I’ll come get you… Yeah, I am. I’m mad… Because you know what you’re doing right now… Whatever, I said I’d bring you home and I will. Send me the address… Yeah, bye… No, I’m not going to say it back. Goodbye.”
Kellen angrily shoved his phone in his pocket. He looked around the room at the floor, not meeting my eyes.
“She’s drunk at a party. She says she wants to talk but I—I’m going to go pick her up and bring her back here. She said she’s scared but it’s bullshit.”
“She just wanted you to come get her,” I said softly.
I knew my sister well. And so did Kellen. We both knew that him going to get her right now… We both knew where this would end up.
“Yeah. She’s kind of manipulative like that.”
I smiled sadly. “But you’ll still go back to her.”
He looked up sharply, his face unreadable. “No, Jenna, I—“
“It’s okay. I get it,” I interrupted. I nodded toward the door as I began to back out of the room heading for the stairs. “I’m going to go get her room ready. Put a bucket by the bed, a glass of water on the nightstand. Do you want to take my car? She can get a little wild on your motorcycle even when she’s sober. It doesn’t seem safe to have her on it when she’s been drinking.”
“I can manage. It’s not the first time. Thanks.”
“No problem. Drive careful, okay?” I started up the stairs but I paused halfway there. I didn’t turn to look at him, though I could feel his eyes on my back. “You should stay the night in the pool house. It’s really late, too late to drive back to your apartment, and she’ll want to talk to you in the morning. It’ll save you a drive back down.”
“I will. Goodnight, Jenna.”
“Goodbye, Kellen.”
My brilliant solution to my close encounter with Kellen Coulter was to sleep with Devon. He and Trisha were no longer a thing at that point, not that I really cared. I was looking for something, or looking to get rid of something and Devon gladly took it. I lost my virginity to him on his bed in his dorm while his roommate was at his afternoon Econ class. It wasn't special and it wasn't pretty. In fact, it was fairly messy, awkward and all around forgettable, but at least it was something. At least I felt like I was in control again. That I was enough. Are those good reasons to have sex with a guy? Oh hell no! They're some of the worst. But it was how I felt and I didn't know how sex changed everything. I thought it was a solution that day, but it was a patch on a bigger problem. One that would take years to heal.
It was almost laughable to me that Kellen praised me for being so mature and wise, then crippled me with his rejection. I know that's not exactly what happened. I know he had his reasons and they were solid because deep down they were my reasons too. I knew what he was capable of and what he wasn’t capable of, and even if I didn't understand yet the impact sex could have on two people, he did. He knew better and thank God for it. I would have lost him. 100%, all the way, he'd be gone from me.
And Laney! What a nightmare that would be. She'd never forgive me. She'd accuse me of stealing him even though that wasn't what happened either. At the end of the day, I was pretty sure I knew up and down, inside and out what hadn't happened but I was surprisingly fuzzy on what
had
happened. There’d been a moment where a barrier had been breached, but couldn't we rebuild it? I had hope that we could and it seemed that Kellen did too because just a few days after, he and Laney were back together.
The morning after it happened he and Laney went to breakfast before I got up. I got a text from her saying thanks for leaving her water and a bucket. She'd needed it. Apparently what she didn't think she needed was to clean it out before she left. That was fun for me. I got her text telling me she was at breakfast talking with Kellen just as I was dumping the cold contents into the toilet. I was so annoyed, frustrated, angry and down to the bone jealous that I almost tossed my phone in after it.
Instead, I'd called Devon. We hung out that night. Just a movie, nothing physical. It was nice. Fun. Then Laney told me she and Kellen were a couple again and I wasn't sure how to feel about it. Of course I was hurt, but I was also relieved. I felt like it was a resetting of the clock. That Kellen was turning back the hands and maybe we could all go back to the way it was before. Or maybe that was as dumb as sleeping with Devon.
"You gonna tell me what happened?" Sam asked.
I shook my head as I bit into my sandwich. We were sitting in the courtyard at school eating lunch in the last of the sunshine before winter hit. Of course Sam could tell something had happened but I refused to tell her what. I’d told her I had sex with Devon but she knew that wasn't what was bugging me. That was a symptom. She wanted to diagnose the disease.
"I think I'm failing Chemistry," I lied.
"Hmm," Sam replied, not believing me. "Maybe you should get another tutor."
"No way. No more tutors."
"So it is about Kellen."
"What's about Kellen?" I asked wearily.
"This," she said, gesturing to my face. "This attitude and this frown you've got going on. What happened?"
"Nothing."
"Liar."
"Can't we talk about something else? How's Mark?"
"Mark and I haven't dated in months. I'm with Eric now."
"Cool. How's Eric?"
"Eric is stupid, I miss Mark. I don't want to talk about it."
"And I respect that."
"Thank you. I still want to know what happened with Kellen."
"No."
"You're not saying 'nothing' anymore, meaning something did happen but you don't want to talk about it."
"Oh my God, Nancy Drew, leave me alone!" I cried, exasperated.
"Never. How's the job?"
I grinned, happy to talk about something solid. Something I was sure about.
"It's great. I love it."
"That Bryce guy is hot."
I laughed. "He's thirty-two and married."
"He's still hot. Besides, you have a thing for older men. Like Devon."
"That's over."
"It never started. And it's because you have a thing for Kellen."
"Ugh!" I groaned in annoyance. "Can we not?"
"I wish I could, but as your friend I have to make you talk about this."
"You really don't."
"Because I love you, I do. What happened?"
I sighed then mumbled, "We kissed."
"Yes!"
I looked at her in surprise. "What the hell?"
"Well it's about time. You're into him and he's been into you for years."
"What are you talking about? We've been friends since I was a kid. We're not like that."
"Clearly you are."
"It was just a kiss. Just one."
"Only one?" she asked skeptically.
I rolled my eyes. "Okay more than one and some groping, but it stopped when he told me I was too young."
"That's it? You're too young? That'll be fixed in a few months."
"Well I'm sure everything will work itself out then."
"Come on, Jen. If that’s the only problem, then why is he back with Laney and not waiting for you? He can't keep it in his pants that long?" she asked doubtfully.
I sighed. "It's because he doesn't do relationships. He said I deserve better than what he could give me. And yes, I know he's in a relationship with Laney and has been for years, but how healthy does it seem?"
"Not at all. I think they're in lust and they're calling it love."
I chewed on another bite of my sandwich. "Do you think so?"
Sam snorted. "Please. They break up all the time and when they get back together they're all over each other like rabbits. It's all physical. He's a cold guy, Jen. A good guy, a really super nice one if he's not dating you, but if he is, he's a cold one. I've never seen him get mushy with Laney. I've never heard you say he did anything sweet for her birthday or Christmas. Do they celebrate anniversaries?"
"They break up so often I don't think they even have one."
"See?” she said proudly. Then her tone softened as she touched my arm. “Hey, at least he was honest with you. You don't want what he has with her. In fact, I bet there are a lot of girls out there that would be jealous of what you have with him."
"What I had," I corrected glumly.
Sam frowned. "Are you guys not talking?"
"I haven't heard from him in weeks."
"Have you called him?"
"No."
"Then what the hell?"
"What do you mean?"
"Why are you giving him the silent treatment?"
"I'm not, he's the one— Oh shit."
"Works both ways, idiot."
"Shut up," I told her as I fished out my phone. "What do I say?"
"What would you normally say?"
I thought about it for a minute before sending a quick message.
So a donkey walks into a bar...
My heart was racing in my throat as I waited. And waited. And waited some fucking more. It killed me when lunch ended and I hadn’t heard back from him yet. I got to my English class feeling morose and my gray cloud of suck stayed with me the entire time. When I was mercifully released and I knew I was done for the day, I sulked to my car. Sam called me Eeyore and I worried the superpowers I’d dreamed of had finally kicked in because as I headed out to Bakersfield to work, it started to rain. I was starting to feel angry at Sam for making me hope. I was angry at myself for not saying something meaningful like 'I'm sorry' or 'Or we ever going to be friends again', but I knew better and that simply wasn’t me. It wasn’t us. So I tried to let it go and as the rain pelted my windshield and the miles passed under me, wet and shining on the black asphalt, I reined it in and told myself it wasn’t the end of the world. Just the end of something wonderful.
Suddenly my phone beeped. I didn’t take my eyes off the road to look at it and I didn’t get my hopes up. But as I pushed the button to have my phone read the message to me, I worried.
"Message from Kellen," my automated buddy told me robotically. My heart rate spiked. My palms were sweating. "And the bartender asks, 'Why the long face?' You’re a dork. Thanks for the smile, Nonpareil."
I smiled the rest of the way to work.
***
It was almost a month later before I saw Kellen again. He came to a cocktail party at my parent’s house with Laney. She looked like a pastel carbon copy of my mother and Kellen looked annoyed and uncomfortable in a suit. I was unsympathetic, thinking that if he was going to be a lawyer he better get used to them. I was trapped in a black dress with a black cardigan covering every inch of my arms, chest and shoulders. Mom was hiding my tattoos from dad’s colleagues and her society friends. I didn’t even care. I was too bored to be mad.
“You must be Jenna,” a voice said beside me.
I glanced over to find a guy just barely my height and a good six years older than me coming to stand beside me. He was good looking. Clean cut. Collegiate. Professional. Rigid.
“I guess I must be,” I replied.
He grinned. “Your sister tells me you’re an artist. What medium do you use?"
“Skin.”
His grin faltered. “Skin?”
"I'm not allowed to talk about it."
“Whoa, no way. You can’t drop a bomb like that then give a mafia follow up."
"My mom is Tony Soprano. It’s not a safe topic for either of us."
"Is it porn?"
"Excuse me?" I asked sharply.
"Skin industry. I can't imagine why she'd make you keep quiet about it unless it's porn. Even then, I'm not gonna lie, I'm still a fan of the art form."
"It's not porn."
He whipped out his phone. "You're telling me that if I Google your name right now, I won't find at least a dozen videos of you?"
I glared at him. "I'd never use my real name."
"Okay, so hypothetically, if you were a porn star," he said giving me an exaggerated wink, "what would your name be?"
"Is this how you talk to women?”
"Not all of them, but you seemed like you could take the joke. How far off am I? Kick in the balls or drink in the face?"
I showed my empty hands. "I don't have a drink."
"I better guard my balls then."
"You're saying 'balls' and 'porn' a lot for a stuffy cocktail party."
"I've gotta make my fun somehow, right?"
I grinned. "Tattoos."
"Right, okay, what about them? Oh, that's what you do! You're a tattoo artist."