âWell, maybe you should stop messing around with her,â I suggest and roll onto my back so he canât see my face.
âIs there a reason I shouldnât mess around with her?â
âNo. I mean, if you think she is annoying, then why keep doing it?â I know I donât want the answer to this, but canât help it.
âTo keep me occupied, I guess.â
I close my eyes and take a deep breath. Talking about Hardin messing around with Molly hurts me worse than it should.
His smooth voice interrupts my jealous thoughts. âCome lie with me.â
âNo.â
âCome on, just lie with me. I sleep better when youâre near me,â he says like itâs a confession.
I sit up and look at him. âWhat?â I canât hide my surprise at his words. Whether he means them or not, they make my insides melt.
âI sleep better when youâre with me.â He breaks eye contact and looks down. âLast weekend I slept better than I have in a while.â
âIt was probably the scotch, not me.â I try to make light of his confession. I donât know what else to do or say.
âNo, it was you.â
âGood night, Hardin.â I turn over. If he keeps saying these things and I keep listening, I will be putty in his hands yet again.
âWhy donât you believe me?â he almost whispers.
âBecause you always do this: you say a few nice things and then you flip the switch and I end up crying.â
âI make you cry?â
How doesnât he know that? He has seen me cry more than anyone else I know.
âYeah, often,â I say, gripping Stephâs blanket tight.
I hear his bed squeak lightly and I close my eyes, out of fear, out of something else, too. Hardinâs fingers graze my arm as he sits on the edge of Stephâs bed, and I tell myself itâs too lateâwell, earlyâfor this at 4 a.m.
âI donât mean to make you cry.â
I open my eyes and look up at him. âYes. Yes, you do. Thatâs your exact intention every time you say hurtful things to me. And when you forced me to tell Noah about us. And when you humiliated me in your bed last week because I couldnât say exactly what you wanted me to. Tonight you tell me you sleep better when I am around, but if I was to lie with you, the second we woke up you would just tell me I am ugly, or that you canât stand me. After we went to the stream, I thought that . . . never mind. There are only so many times I can have this talk with you.â I take in a couple of deep breaths, panicked at my unloading on him.
âIâm listening this time.â His eyes are unreadable, but they make me want to continue.
âI just donât know why you love this cat-and-mouse game you play with me so much. Youâre nice, then mean. You tell Steph youâll âruinâ me if I come around you, then you want to drive me home. You are just all over the place.â
âI didnât mean that. That I would ruin you, I just . . . I donât know. I just say things sometimes,â he says, running his hands through his hair.
âWhy did you drop Literature?â I finally ask.
âBecause you want me to stay away from you, and I need to stay away from you.â
âSo why donât you, then?â I am slightly aware of the shift in energy around us. Somehow we have moved closer, our bodies only inches apart.
âI donât know,â he huffs. He rubs his hands together, then rests them on his knees.
I want to say somethingâanythingâbut I canât without telling Hardin that I donât want him to stay away, that I think about him every second of every day.
Finally, he breaks the silence. âCan I ask you something and you will be completely honest?â
I nod.
âDid you . . . did you miss me this week?â
That was the last thing I expected him to ask me. I blink a few times to clear my frantic mind. I told him I would answer truthfully, but Iâm afraid to.
âWell?â
âYeah,â I mumble and hide my face in my hands, only to have him pull them away, his touch on my wrists setting fire to my skin.
âYeah, what?â His voice is strained, like he is desperate for my answer.
âI missed you,â I gulp, expecting the worst.
What I did not expect is his sigh of relief, and the smile that stretches across his beautiful face. I want to ask him if he missed me, but he begins to speak before I get the chance.
âReally?â he asks, almost like he doesnât believe me.
I nod in reply and he gives me a shy smile. Hardin shy? More likely heâs pleased by my admittance because it tells him he has me wrapped around his finger.
âNow can I go back to sleep?â I whine. I know he isnât going to reciprocate my confession with one of his own, and it is really late.
âOnly if you sleep with me. As in, in the same bed, of course.â He smiles.
I sigh and mumble, âOh, Hardin, can we just go to sleep?â as I roll over, careful not to touch him. But a sudden yank on my legs makes me yelp in surprise, and I quickly find Hardin lifting me off the bed and throwing me over his shoulder. He ignores my kicking and pleas to put me down until he reaches my bed, rests one knee on it, and lays me down gently on the side against the wall before lying down next to me. I glare at him silently, afraid that if I fight him too hard heâll leave, which I know I donât want.
He reaches down and picks up the pillow that I tossed at him earlier and places it between us as a barrier with a smirk on his face. âThere, now you can sleep, safe and secure.â