I end up on Micahâs doorstep with a Hey-can-we-forget-everything-I-said? gift from the drugstore. Standing on his front porch now, his chalk drawings beneath my feet, I second-guess myself.
I breathe in through my nose.
Good in.
Bad out.
In.
Out.
The monsters quiet slightly. Not gone, but enough to let me knock.
Micah answers the door in sweatpants and his rumpled good vibes only hoodie. His hair is matted against his head on one side, and his cheek bears deep blanket wrinkle lines. No whimsical socks today; heâs stripped of his brightness.
He squints into the angled afternoon light, keeping the door semi-closed, his face expressionless.
âYeah?â
He rakes his fingers through his hair, staring at the ground. I want to grab his face and make him look at me. Make me feel the electricity that lit up the dark of the custodial closet.
âIâI just needed to see you.â
âNo need to waste your time worrying about people like me,â he says, the same edge to his voice. My heart sinks.
âMicah. Iâ¦â I pause. How do I make this better? âIâm sorry. I was a total jerk, and I probably shouldnât be here, but I need to know youâre okay. Are you? Okay?â
âNo.â
âOhâ¦.â
âIs that not that answer you wanted?â
âNo. Maybe. I donât know.â
âWell, do you want the truth, or do you want to ask the question so you can check it off your list?â
I force myself to look at him, even though Iâm embarrassed to be here and horrified at how I treated him and scared by the hurt in his usually bright eyes.
âI want the truth.â
Micah leans against the doorframe, arms folded protectively across his chest.
âWell, the truth is, if I were okay, I wouldnât be asleep at four in the afternoon. I wouldnât have spent the last week in bed, trying to stay unconscious. I wouldnât have to muster every molecule in my brain to be having this conversation right now because looking at you makes meââ
He stops, like the thought of how I treated him hurts. It hurts me, too.
âSo, no, Iâm not okay, and if that makes you uncomfortable, then maybe you shouldnât be here.â
He looks me in the eyes now, intensely, daring me to say something. Daring me to walk away.
âIâI donât know what to say. I donât even know why Iâm here, exactly.â I shush the voice in my head thatâs yelling at me to stop. To turn away. To leave before I screw this up like I do everything. âAll I know is, I wish I could take back what I said, and all Iâve wanted all week is to see you, and I want to tell you some things that I should have told you already, and I know thereâs absolutely no reason for you to trust me, but if itâs all right with you, Iâd like to be with you. Iâd like to stay.â
Micah scratches his head, considering me as he uncrosses his arms. âIâm pretty shitty company right now.â
âPerfect,â I say. âThatâs kind of my entire brand.â
Micahâs gaze lands on my hand. âIâm sorry, but I cannot continue this conversation until I know: Is that a Bob Ross bobblehead?â
âOh, yeah. For you.â I hand him the box. He shakes it, bouncing Bobâs head back and forth.
âThis is the most amazing and strangest gift anyoneâs ever given me.â His eyes are still dull, but the anger has softened somewhat. âPerhaps the perfect metaphor for us.â
My brain rolls the word. Polishes it until it sparkles.
âWell, Iâm nothing if not strange,â I say.
The corners of his mouth lift, only slightly, and he opens the door wider, leaning against it like heâs half-annoyed, half trying not to smile.
âWell,â he says. âYou coming in or what?â