âI wonât do it again . . . I swear . . . Just please tell me you wonât leave me . . .â he mutters.
Every ounce of anger and entitlement I felt has evaporated. âI wonât leave you, Hardin. I wonât leave you.â And because he looks at me like he needs to hear it, I say it a few more times.
âI love you, Tessa, more than anything,â he says and wipes my tears.
Chapter ninety-one
We havenât moved from our spot in the chair for at least thirty minutes, when finally Hardin lifts his head from my chest and says, âCan I eat now?â
âYes.â I give him a weak smile and start to climb off his lap, but he pulls me back.
âI didnât say for you to move. Just slide my plate over.â He smiles.
I slide his plate over and reach for mine across the small table. I am still reeling from this new information and now I feel a little uneasy about going to the wedding in the morning.
Sensing Hardin doesnât want to discuss his confession further, I take a bite off my plate and say, âYou are a much better cook than I expected. Having shown your hand, I expect youâll cook for me more often.â
âWe will see,â he says with his mouth full and we eat the rest of the meal in a comfortable silence.
Later, when Iâm loading the dishwasher, he walks up behind me and asks, âAre you still mad?â
âNot exactly,â I tell him. âI am still not happy about you being out all night, and I do want to know who you fought, and why.â He opens his mouth to speak, but I stop him. âBut not tonight.â I donât think either of us can handle any more tonight.
âOkay,â he says softly. Worry flashes in his eyes but I choose to let it go.
âOh, and I didnât appreciate you throwing my internship in my face, either. That really hurt my feelings.â
âI know. Thatâs why I said it,â he answers, a little too honestly.
âI know. Thatâs exactly why I donât like it.â
âIâm sorry.â
âDonât do it again, okay?â I tell him and he nods. âIâm exhausted,â I groan in a small attempt to change the subject.
âMe, too; letâs lie down for the rest of the evening. I got the cable turned on.â
âI was supposed to be doing that.â I scowl at him.
He rolls his eyes and sits next to me on the bed. âYou can just give me the money for it . . .â
I stare at the wall. âWhat time are we leaving here tomorrow for the wedding?â
âWhenever we feel like it.â
âIt starts at three, so I think we should be there by two,â I say.
âAn hour early?â he whines and I nod. âI donât know why you insistââ he says but is cut off by my phone ringing.
The look on Hardinâs face as he leans over and grabs it tells me immediately who it is. âWhy is he calling?â he huffs.
âI donât know, Hardin, but I think I should answer.â I grab the phone from his hand.
âNoah?â My voice is soft and shaky as Hardinâs glower burns a hole through the apartment.
âHey, Tessa, Iâm sorry to call you on a Friday night but . . . well . . .â He sounds panicked.
âWhat?â I push, since he always takes longer than necessary to explain stressful situations.
When I look over to Hardin he mouths, âSpeaker.â
I give him an are-you-kidding look, but end up putting Noah on speaker anyway so Hardin can eavesdrop.
âYour mom got a call from the dorm supervisor about your final bill being paid for the room, so she knows you moved out. I told her I have no idea where you live now, which is the truth, but she refused to believe me. And so sheâs coming there.â
âComing here? To campus?â
âYeah, I guess. I donât know, but she said sheâs going to find you, and sheâs being irrational and is really pissed-off. I just wanted to warn you, you know, that sheâs coming.â
âI canât believe her!â I shout into the phone, but then thank Noah before hanging up.
I lie back on the bed. âGreat . . . What an excellent way to spend tonight.â
Hardin leans on one elbow next to me. âShe wonât be able to find you. No one knows where we live,â he assures me and smooths my bangs off my forehead.
âShe may not find me, but she sure will pester Steph and ask every single person she sees in the dorm and make a huge scene.â I cover my face with my hands. âI should just go over there.â
âOr you could call her and give her our address and let her come here. On your territory, so you have the upper hand,â he suggests.
âYouâre okay with that?â My hands move from my face.
âOf course. Sheâs your mother, Tessa.â
I look at him quizzically, given the rift between him and his dad. But when I see heâs serious, Iâm reminded that heâs willing to work on things with his parents, so I should be that brave, too. âIâll call her,â I say.
I look at the phone for a while before taking a deep breath and hitting her number. Sheâs terse on the phone, speaking very quickly. I can tell sheâs saving all her hateful energy for when she sees me in person. I donât give her any details about the apartment or tell her that I live here; I only tell her the address where I am and get off the phone as fast as I can.
Instinctively, I jump out of bed and begin to straighten up our place.
âThe apartment is already clean. We have barely touched anything,â Hardin says.