She holds up one hand. âStop. Just stop there, because she doesnât need to âlearnâ anything. It seems to me that youâre the one who needs to be learning somethingâwhat did you say to the poor girl?â
âI said what you said to me this morning about there being a difference between not being able to live without someone and loving them,â I tell her.
She shakes her head in confusion. âYou said that to her, as in you canât live without her but donât love her?â
âYesâdid I not just tell you that?â Tessa Number Two needs to just go away, because sheâs getting on my last fucking nerve just like Tessa the Original.
âWow,â she says, and laughs.
Sheâs laughing at me, too? âWhat? Whatâs so funny?â I nearly yell.
âYou are so clueless,â she mocks me. âWhen I said that to you this morning, I wasnât referring to you, I was talking about her. I meant that just because you think she canât live without you doesnât mean that sheâs in love with you.â
âWhat?â
âYou assume that you have her so wrapped around your finger that she wonât leave you because she canât live without you, when in reality it seems like you have her trapped and thatâs why she wonât leave you: not because she loves you, but because youâve made her feel that she canât be without you.â
âNo . . . she loves me.â I know she does, and thatâs why sheâll be following me out here any moment now.
Lillian throws her arms wide. âDoes she? Why would she, when you do things to hurt her on purpose?â
Iâve had enough of this shit. âYouâre in no position to be giving anyone a goddamned lecture.â I throw my hands in the air as wildly as she just did. âYour girlfriend is probably fucking someone else right now while youâre here trying to play couples therapist between Tessa and me,â I growl.
Lillianâs eyes widen, and she takes a step back from me . . . the way Tessa did only minutes ago. Her blue eyes begin to water, shining in the darkness. She shakes her head and starts to walk back toward the restaurant parking lot.
âWhere are you going?â I call to her through the wind.
âBack inside. Tessa may be stupid enough to put up with your crap, but Iâm not.â
For a moment I almost follow this girl who I thought was my . . . friend? I donât know, but I felt like I could trust her despite only knowing her for two days.
Fuck that: Iâm not following anyone. Tessa or Tessa Number Two. They can both go to hellâI donât need either of them.
Chapter forty-one
TESSA
My chest is aching, my throat is dry, and my head is spinning. Hardin basically just told me that he doesnât love me and that he chases me just so he can sleep with me. The worst thing about the things he said to me is that I know he didnât mean them. I know he loves meâhe does. In his own way, he loves me more than anything. Heâs shown me that time and time again in the last six months. But heâs also shown me that heâll stop at nothing to hurt me, to make me feel weak just because his ego is bruised. If he loved me the way he should, he wouldnât purposely hurt me.
He couldnât have meant that he only wants sex from me. He doesnât really see me as a toy, does he? With him, truth and lies slide back and forth as easily as his moods. He couldnât have meant it. But he said it with such conviction; he didnât even blink. I honestly donât know anymore. Through all of the fights, tears, holes in our walls, I have always held on to the small certainty that he loves me.
Without that, we have nothing. And without him, I have nothing. The irrational and flaring tempers we both have, mixed with our young ages, are becoming too much to handle.
Thereâs a difference between not being able to live without someone and loving themâthe words slice through me again.
The air in this place is too stale, too thick and consuming, and the laughter of the customers is growing sinister. I look for an exit. Glass doors leading to a balcony are closed; I open them and welcome the cool air. I sit there, staring out into the darkness, enjoying the quiet of the night and my own slowing mind.
I donât notice the door to the deck opening until Robert is next to me. âBrought you something,â he says and holds up the bottle of wine, waggling it playfully. He dips his shoulder to one side, and a grin spreads across his handsome face.
I surprise myself by smiling, a real smile, despite the fact that on the inside Iâm screaming, huddled in a corner crying.
âPity wine?â I question, holding my hands out for the white-labeled bottle. I recognize it as the same wine Max ordered earlier; it must have cost a fortune.
He grins, placing the wine in my hands. âWhat other type of wine is there?â The bottle is cold, but my hands are nearly numb from the February air.
âGlasses.â He smiles, dipping his hands into the deep pockets of his apron. âI couldnât fit actual wineglasses, so I grabbed these.â He hands me a small Styrofoam cup, and I hold it up while he uncorks the bottle.
âThank you.â The wine fills the cup, and I bring it to my lips the moment he pulls away.
âWe can go inside, you know? There are a few sections that are closed down already, so we can sit there,â Robert says, then takes a sip.
âI donât know.â I sigh, shifting my gaze to the table.
âHe left,â he says, the sympathy obvious in his voice. âSo did she,â he adds. âDo you want to talk about it?â