Read Something Borrowed Online
Authors: Emily Giffin
Tags: #Romance, #Contemporary, #Fiction, #General, #Single Women, #Female Friendship, #Psychological, #Contemporary Women, #Triangles (Interpersonal Relations), #People & Places, #Juvenile Nonfiction, #Risk-Taking (Psychology)
have. I close my eyes and picture the wedding scenes that Hillary
painted for me. I then add my own honeymoon reel Darcy clad in
her new lingerie, posing seductively on their bed. I can see it all so
perfectly.
And suddenly, all at once, it is clear to me why I won't force Dex's
hand. Why I said nothing over July Fourth, nothing in the time
since, nothing last night. It all comes down to expectations. In my
heart, I don't actually believe that Dex is going to call off the
wedding and be with me, no matter what I do or say. I believe that
those Dex and Darcy wedding and honeymoon scenes will unfold
while I am left on the sidelines, alone. I can already feel my grief,
can envision my final time with Dex, if it hasn't happened already.
Sure, I have occasionally scripted a different ending, one in which
Dex and I are together, but those images are always short-lived,
never escaping the realm of "what if." In short, I have no real faith
in my own happiness. And then there is Darcy. She is a woman
who believes that things should fall into her lap, and consequently, they do. They always have. She wins because she
expects to win. I do not expect to get what I want, so I don't. And I
don't even try.
It is Saturday afternoon, and we're in the Hamptons. I took the
train out this morning, and now our whole group is reunited in
the backyard. The togetherness is a recipe for disaster.
Julian and
Hillary are playing badminton. They ask if anyone wants to
challenge them in a doubles match. Dex says sure, he will. Hillary
glares at him. "Who do you want to be your partner, Dexter?"
Until this point, Dexter did not know that I told Hillary anything
about us. I had two reasons for keeping him in the dark on this: I
didn't want him to feel uncomfortable around her, and I didn't
want him to have free license to tell a friend.
But Hillary makes her snide remark in a way that you simply
cannot miss if you are aware of the situation. Which apparently
Julian is, because he gives her a look of warning. It has become
clear that he will be the steadying force in their duo.
She does not stop there. "Well, Dex, who is it going to be?" She
rests her hand on her hip and points at him with her racquet.
Dex stares back at Hillary. His jaw clenches. He is pissed.
"What if two people both want to be your partner, then what?"
Hillary's voice is dripping with innuendo.
Darcy seems oblivious to the tension. So do Marcus and Claire.
Perhaps everyone is used to Hillary's occasional confrontational
tone. Maybe they just chalk it up to the lawyer in her.
Dex turns around and looks at us. "Any of you guys wanna play?"
Marcus waves his hand dismissively. "Naw, man. No, thanks.
That's a girly game."
Darcy giggles. "Yeah, Dex. You're a girly man."
Claire says no, she hates sports.
"Badminton is hardly a sport," Marcus says, opening a can of Budweiser.
"It's like calling tic-tac-toe a sport."
"Looks like it's between Darcy and Rachel. Doesn't it?"
Hillary
says. "You want in, Rach?"
I am frozen at my post at the picnic table, flanked by Darcy and
Claire.
"No, thanks," I say softly.
"You want me to be your partner, honey?" Darcy asks.
She looks
across the yard at Dex as she shades her eyes with her hand.
"Sure," he says. "C'mon then."
Hillary snorts as Darcy hops up from the table with a warning that
she sucks at badminton.
Dex looks down at the grass, waiting for Darcy to take the fourth
racquet and join him in the plot of grass outlined by various flipflops
and sneakers.
"We play to ten," Hillary says, tossing the bird up for her first
serve.
"Why do you get to serve first?" Dex asks.
"Here," she says, tossing the bird over the net. "By all means."
Dex catches the bird and glares at her.
The game is cutthroat, at least every time Hillary and Dex have
control. The bird is their ammunition and they smack it with full
force, aiming at one another. Marcus does the color in a Howard
Cosell voice. "And the mood is tense here in East Hampton as
both sides strive for the championship." Claire is cheering for
everyone. I say nothing.
The score is 9-8, Hillary and Julian lead. Julian serves underhand.
Darcy squeals and swats with her eyes closed and through sheer
luck happens to make contact with the bird. She sends it back
across the net to Hillary. Hillary lines up her shot and hits a
vicious forearm that conjures Venus Williams. The bird sails
through the air, whizzing just over the net toward Darcy. Darcy
cowers, preparing to swat at the bird, as
Dex yells, "It's out! It's out!" His face is red and covered with
beads of sweat.
The bird lands squarely beside Claire's flip-flop.
"Out!" Dexter yells, wiping his forehead with the back of his arm.
"Bullshit. The line is good!" Hillary shouts back.
"That's match!"
Marcus offers good-naturedly that he doesn't think a badminton
game should be called a match. Claire is up off the bench, trotting
over to the bird to examine its alignment with her shoe.
Hillary
and Julian join her from their side of the net. There are five pairs
of eyes peering down at the bird. Julian says that it is a tough call.
Hillary glares at him before she and Dex resume their shouting of
"out" and "in," like a couple of playground enemies.
Claire announces a "do-over" in her best "let's make peace" voice.
But clearly she was not an outdoor girl growing up because
declaring a do-over is one of the biggest causes of dissension in
the neighborhood. Hillary proves this to be the case.
"Bullshit,"
she says. "No do-over. The line has been in all day."
"All day? We've been playing for twenty minutes," Dex says
snidely.
"I don't think it's landed on the line yet," Darcy offers.
But not as
if she cares. As competitive as she is in real-life matters, sports
and games do not concern her. She bought properties in Monopoly based on color; she thought the little houses were so
much cuter than the "big, nasty Red Roof Inns."
"Fine. If you want to cheat your way through life,"
Hillary says to
Dex, disguising her true intent with a friendly smile, as though
simply engaging in playful banter. Her eyes are wide, innocent.
I think I might faint.
"Okay, you win," Dex says to Hillary, as if he could not care less.
Let Hillary win her stupid game.
Hillary doesn't want it this way. She looks disoriented, unsure
whether to reargue the point or savor her victory. I am afraid of
what she will say next.
Dex tosses his racquet in the grass under a tree. "I'm gonna take a
shower," he says, heading for the house.
"He's pissed," Darcy says, offering us a blinding glimpse of the
obvious. Of course, she thinks it's about the game.
"Dex hates to
lose."
"Yeah, well he can be a big baby," Hillary says with disgust.
I note (with satisfaction? hope? superiority?) that Darcy does not
defend Dex. If he were mine, I'd say something. Of course, if he
were mine, Hillary would not have been so merciless in the first
place.
I give her a measured glance, as if to say, enough.
She shrugs, plops down in the grass, and scratches a mosquito
bite on her ankle until it bleeds. She swipes at the blood with a
blade of grass, then looks up at me again.
"Well?" she says defiantly.
That night, Dex is so quiet at dinner that he borders on surly. But
I cannot tell if he is mad at Hillary, or at me for telling her. He
ignores both of us. Hillary ignores him right back, except for an
occasional barb, while I make feeble attempts to talk to him.
"What are you ordering?" I ask him as he scans his menu.
He refuses to look up. "I'm not sure."
"Go figure," Hillary mumbles. "Why don't you order two meals?"
Julian squeezes her shoulder and shoots me an apologetic look.
Dex turns in his chair toward Marcus and manages to avoid all
conversation and eye contact with me and Hillary for the rest of
our dinner. I am seized by worry. Are you mad? Are you mad? Are
you mad? I think as I struggle to eat my swordfish.
Please don't be
mad. I am desperate, frantic to talk to Dex and clear the air for
our remaining time together. I don't want to end on such a sour
note.
Later at the Talkhouse, Dex and I are finally alone. I am ready to
apologize for Hillary when he turns on me, his green eyes flashing.
"Why the hell did you tell her?" he hisses.
I am not well trained in conflict and feel startled by his hostility. I
give him a blank look, pretending to be confused.
Should I
apologize? Offer an explanation? I know we had an unspoken vow
of secrecy, but I had to tell someone.
"Hillary. You told her," he says, brushing a piece of hair off his
forehead. I note that he is even hotter when he's angry his jaw
somehow more square.
I push this observation aside as something snaps inside me. How
dare he be angry with me! I have done nothing to him!
Why am I
the one feeling frantic, desperate to be forgiven?
"I can tell anyone I want," I say, surprised by the hardness in my
voice.
"Tell her to stay outta this," he says.
"Stay out of what, Dex? Our fucked-up relationship?"
He looks startled. And then hurt. Good.
"It's not fucked up," he says. "The situation is, but our relationship
is not."
"You're engaged, Dexter." My indignation boils into fury. "You
can't separate that from our relationship."
"I know. I'm still engaged but you hooked up with Marcus."
"What?"I ask, incredulous.
"You kissed him at Aubette."
I can't believe what I'm hearing he is engaged and is finding fault
with a nothing little kiss! I fleetingly wonder how long he has
known and why he hasn't said anything before now. I fight back
the instinct to be contrite.
"Yeah, I kissed Marcus. Big deal."
"It's a big deal to me." His face is so close to mine that I can smell
the alcohol on his breath. "I hate it. Don't do it again."
"Don't tell me what to do," I whisper fiercely back.
Angry tears
sting my eyes. "I don't tell you what to do You know what?
Maybe I should tell you what to do How about this one: marry
Darcy. I don't care."
I walk away from Dex, almost believing it. It is my first free
moment of the summer. Perhaps the freest moment of my life. I
am the one in control. I am the one deciding. I find a space on the
back patio, alone in a massive crowd, my heart pounding. Minutes
later, Dex finds me, grips my elbow.
"You don't mean what you said about not caring." Now it is his
turn to be anxious. It never ceases to amaze me how foolproof the
rule is: the person who cares the least (or pretends to) holds the
power. I have proven it true once more. I shake his hand off my
arm and just look at him coldly. He moves closer to me, takes my
arm again.
"I'm sorry, Rachel," he whispers, bending down toward my face.
I do not soften. I will not. "I'm tired of the warring emotions, Dex.
The endless cycle of hope and guilt and resentment. I'm tired of
wondering what will happen with us. I'm tired of waiting for you."
"I know. I'm sorry," he says. "I love you, Rachel."
I feel myself weakening. Despite my tough-girl facade I am
buzzing from being this near him, from his words. I look into his
eyes. All of my instincts and desires everything tells me to make
peace, to tell him that I love him too. But I fight against them like
a drowning person in a riptide. I know what I have to say. I think
of Hillary's advice, how she has been telling me to say something
all along. But I am not doing this for her. This is for me. I
formulate the sentences, words that have been ringing in my head
all summer.
"I want to be with you, Dex," I say steadily. "Cancel the wedding.
Be with me."
There it is. After two months of waiting, a lifetime of passivity,
everything is on the line. I feel relieved and liberated and changed.
I am a woman who expects happiness. I deserve happiness. Surely
he will make me happy.
Dex inhales, on the verge of responding.
"Don't," I say, shaking my head. "Please don't talk to me again
unless it's to tell me that the wedding is off. We have nothing
more to discuss until then."
Our eyes lock. Neither of us blinks for a minute or more. And
then, for the first time, I beat Dex in a staring contest.
It is two days after I delivered my ultimatum and one month
before the wedding. I am still invigorated by my stand and filled
with a soaring, positive feeling, stronger than hope. I have faith in
Dex, faith in us. He will cancel. We will live happily ever after. Or
something close to that.
Of course I worry about Darcy. I even worry that she might do
something crazy when faced with her first dose of rejection. I have