The breath is knocked out of me when he does. His eyes are bloodshot and his cheeks are soaked with tears. I try to take his hands in mine, but he jerks away. âJust go, Tessa,â he says.
Iâve heard him say that too many times. âNo,â I say and kneel down between his opened legs.
He wipes his eyes with the back of his hands. âThis was a bad idea. Iâm going to tell my mum in the morning.â
âYou donât have to.â Iâve seen him let out a few tears before, but never full-on, body-shaking, tears-streaming-down-his-face crying.
âYeah, I do. This is torture for me to have you so close but so far. Itâs the worst possible punishment. Not that I donât deserve it, because I know I do, but itâs too much,â he sobs. âEven for me.â He draws in a deep, desperate breath. âWhen you agreed to stay . . . I thought that maybe . . . maybe you still cared for me the way I do for you. But I see it, Tess, I see the way you look at me now. I see the pain Iâve caused. I see the change in you because of me. I know that I did this, but it still kills me to have you slip through my fingers.â The tears come much faster now, falling against his black T-shirt.
I want to say somethingâanythingâto make this stop. To make his pain go away.
But where was he when I was crying myself to sleep night after night?
âYou want me to go?â I ask, and he nods.
His rejection hurts, even now. I know I shouldnât be here, we shouldnât be doing this, but I need more. I need more time with him. Even dangerous, painful time is better than no time. I wish I didnât love him, that I had never met him.
But I did. And I do love him.
âOkay.â I swallow and stand up.
His hand grips my wrist to stop me. âIâm sorry. For everything, for hurting you, for everything,â he says, goodbye thick in his tone.
As much as I resist this, I know deep down that Iâm not ready for him to give up on me. On the other hand, Iâm not ready to easily forgive him either. Iâve been in a constant state of confusion for days, but today takes the cake.
âI . . .â I stop myself.
âWhat?â
âI donât want to go,â I say so low that Iâm not sure he even heard me.
âWhat?â he asks again.
âI donât want to go. I know I should, but I donât want to. Not tonight at least.â I swear I can see the pieces of the broken man in front of me slowly come back together, one by one. Itâs a beautiful sight, but terrifying deep in my soul, too.
âWhat does this mean?â
âI donât know what it means, but Iâm not ready to find out either,â I say, hoping to be able to get at this feeling by talking about it.
Hardin looks at me blankly, his earlier sobs nowhere to be find. Robotically, he wipes his face with his shirt and says, âOkay. You can sleep on the bed, Iâll take the floor.â
As he grabs two pillows and the throw blanket from the bed, my mind canât help but entertain the thought that maybe, just maybe, all those tears were for show. Still, somehow I know that they couldnât have been.
Chapter twenty-five
TESSA
Tucked like I am under our comforter, the thought that keeps going through my mind is that I never, ever would have thought Iâd witness anything like that from Hardin. He was so raw, so vulnerable, as his body shook with tears. I feel like the dynamic between Hardin and me is constantly shifting, so that one of us is always gaining an upper hand over the other. Right now, I would be the one in control.
But I donât want to be. And I donât like this dynamic. Love shouldnât be such a battle. Besides, I donât trust myself to be in control of what happens between us. Up until a few hours ago I had it all figured out, but now, after seeing him so shaken up, my mind is muddled and my thoughts clouded.
Even in the darkness, I can feel Hardinâs eyes on me. When I let out the breath I realized I was holding, he quickly asks, âDo you want me to turn the television on?â
âNo. If you want to, you can, but Iâm okay,â I answer.
I wish that I had grabbed my e-reader so I could read until I fell asleep. Maybe observing the ruination of Catherine and Heathcliffâs lives would make mine seem easier, less traumatic. Catherine spent her whole life trying to fight her love for that man, on and off until the day she begged for his forgiveness and claimed she could not live without himâonly to die hours later. I could live without Hardin, couldnât I? I wonât spend my entire life fighting this. This is only temporary . . . Right? We wonât bring ourselves and others misery because of our stubbornness and hard heads, right? Iâm bothered by the uncertainty of this parallel, especially since it means I start comparing Trevor to Edgar. I donât know how to feel about this. Itâs awkward.
âTess?â my very own Heathcliff calls, wresting me away from my thoughts.
âYeah?â I croak.
âI didnât fuck . . . sleep with Molly,â he says, as if correcting his foul language makes the statement any less shocking.
I stay silent, partly stunned by him talking about this, partly because I want to believe him. But I canât allow myself to forget that heâs a master of deception.
âI swear it,â he adds.
Oh, well, if he âswearsâ it . . . âWhy did you say that, then?â I ask harshly.
âTo hurt you. I was just so mad because you said you kissed someone, so I just said the thing that I knew would hurt you the most.â
I canât see Hardin, but somehow I know that heâs lying on his back, his arms crossed, hands under his head, staring at the ceiling. âDid you really kiss someone?â he asks before I can respond.