âIâll come up with you,â Landon offers.
âNo, Iâm okay, really. I had an early morning, we all did, and itâs getting late,â I assure him, and he nods even though I can tell he isnât buying it.
As I reach the stairs I hear him say, âHeâs a damn idiot.â
Yes, Landon. Yes, he is.
I CLOSE THE BALCONY DOORS before walking over to the dresser to change into my pajamas. With my mind racing, Iâm finding it difficult to focus on clothing. Nothing appeals as a substitute for Hardinâs worn clothing, and I refuse to wear the white T-shirt resting on the arm of the chair. I need to be able to sleep in my own damn clothes. I give up after rummaging through the drawer and decide to settle for the shorts and sweatshirt that I have on, and lie down on the bed.
Who is this mystery girl that Hardinâs with? Ironically, Iâm more upset about my apartment in Seattle than I am about her. If he wants to jeopardize our relationship by cheating, thatâs his choice. Yes, it would tear whatâs left of me into pieces, and I donât think I would ever recover, but Iâm not going to focus on it.
For the life of me I canât picture it. I canât picture him actually cheating on me. Despite all of the things heâs done in the past, I just donât see it. Not after his letter, not after his pleading for my forgiveness. Yes, heâs controlling, too controlling, and he doesnât know when to stop interfering with my life, but the intentions behind his actions are more about keeping me near him than trying to escape, like cheating would be.
Even after Iâve spent an hour staring at the ceiling and counting the beams of stained wood lining the sloped surface, the throb of resentment toward Hardin hasnât let up.
I donât know if Iâm ready to talk to him just yet, but I know I wonât be able to sleep until I hear him return. The longer heâs gone, the stronger the twist of jealousy grows in my chest. I canât help but notice the double standard here. If I was out with a guy, Hardin would lose it and probably try to burn down the woods surrounding the place. I want to laugh at the ridiculous thought, but I just donât have it in me. Instead I close my eyes again, begging sleep to come.
Chapter thirty-three
HARDIN
Do you want a drink?â Lillian asks.
âSure.â I shrug and glance at the clock.
She gets up and goes over to a silver bar cart. Looking at the bottles it contains, she selects one and shows it to me quickly, like sheâs Vanna White or something. Pulling the top off of a bottle of brandy that Iâm sure cost more than the massive television hanging on the wall, she looks back at me with mock sympathy. âYou canât be a coward forever, you know.â
âShut up.â
âYouâre so much like her.â She giggles.
âLike Tessa? No, Iâm not. And how would you know?â
âNo, not Tessa. Riley.â
âHowâs that?â
Lillian pours the dark liquor into a curved glass and places it in my hand before sitting back down on the couch.
âWhereâs your drink?â I ask.
She gives a regal shake of the head. âI donât drink.â
Of course she doesnât. I really shouldnât be drinking, but the slightly sweet, intense aroma of the brandy pushes the nagging reminder away.
âAre you going to tell me how Iâm like her or not?â I look at her expectantly.
âYou just are; she has that brooding, angry-at-the-world thing going on, too.â She makes an exaggerated emo face and crosses her legs under her.
âWell, maybe she has something to be angry about,â I say, defending her girlfriend without even knowing her, then gulp down half the glass of liquor. Itâs strong, aged to perfection, and I can feel the burn down to the soles of my boots.
Lillian doesnât reply. Instead she purses her lips and stares at the wall behind me, deep in thought.
âIâm not into this whole Dr. Phil, you-talk-I-talk, âKumbayaâ shit,â I tell her, and she nods.
âIâm not expecting âKumbaya,â but I think you should at least come up with a plan to apologize to Tamara.â
âHer name is Tessa,â I snap, annoyed suddenly by her small mistake.
She smiles and pulls her brown hair to one shoulder. âTessa, sorry. I have a cousin named Tamara, and it was in my head, I guess.â
âWhat makes you assume Iâll be apologizing, anyway?â I click my tongue against the roof of my mouth while waiting for her response.
âYouâre kidding, right? You owe her an apology!â she says loudly. âYou need to at least tell her youâll go to Seattle with her.â
I groan. âIâm not going to Seattle, for fuckâs sake.â What is it with Tessa and fucking Tessa Number Two and pestering me over Seattle?
âWell, then I hope she goes without you,â she says curtly.
I look at her, this girl who I thought might understand. âWhat did you say?â I put the brandy glass down on the table quickly, sloshing brown liquid onto its white surface.
Lillian arches one brow. âI said I hope she does go, because you tried to mess up her apartment deal and still arenât willing to move with her.â
âGood thing I donât give a fuck what you think.â I stand to leave. I know sheâs right, but Iâm over this bullshit.
âYes, you do, you just wonât admit it. I have come to learn that the people who pretend to care the least actually care the most.â
I pick the glass back up and finish it off before heading toward the door. âYou donât know shit about me,â I say through my teeth.