When itâs Kenâs name that flashes on my phone screen, I cringe but I answer this time. I suppose I should reward his persistence.
âYeah?â I say, turning onto the highway. I tuck my phone between my cheek and shoulder. The only problem with my beautiful 1970 Ford Capri is that it doesnât connect to Bluetooth.
âUm, Hardin, hey,â he stutters.
Heâs confused by me answering. He calls me sometimes, and Iâm convinced that he sees it as a good deed on his part. He calls to âcheck in on meâ because he knows I wonât answer, and it makes him look good to make an effort with his insubordinate son. His new girlfriend probably praises him, hugging him tightly as she reassures him. âHeâll come around one day,â she probably promises him. âHeâs just angry right now.â
She would be angry if she had him for an excuse of a dad, too.
âHey.â I press the speaker button and rest my phone in the cup holder.
âHow are you, son?â he asks, immediately pressing on my nerves.
âFine.â
He clears his throat. âThatâs good to hear. I wanted to invite you over to dinner tomorrow night. Karenâs making a chicken, and we would really love to have you over.â
He wants me to come over for dinner? Why on earth would he think I would come to his house to eat chicken with his new family and talk about how much we all just love each otherâs company. No fucking thanks.
âI have plans tomorrow,â I tell him. Iâm not lying this time.
âOh. Well, you could come by after your plans. Karenâs making dessert, too.â
âMy commitment is for all night,â I tell him. I wonder what the weather will be like tomorrow. The clouds are gray, as always in this shitty state. The sun must hate it so much hereâthatâs why itâs always raining and dreary.
âIs it supposed to rain tomorrow?â I ask Ken. Itâs easier than looking up the weather forecast myself.
âNo, itâs supposed to warm up overnight and the rainâs gone until next week,â he says.
If I had a normal relationship with the man who helped create me, I could ask him for suggestions about what to do on my date. I donât, though. I canât.
All I know to ask this man about are what forms the university needs filled out when. We have nothing in common and are as far as can be from a place where I would ever ask him for dating advice.
Maybe Vance has some ideas? Iâd rather ask him than anyone else, I guess.
âI have to go,â I say into the phone, then hang up on Ken and look up Vance in my phone.
He answers after one ring. âHardin, whatâs up?â
âDo you have any recommendations on where to take someone?â I ask him. My voice sounds odd as I rush the words.
âAs in a dead body?â He laughs into the phone. I smile. Heâs a jackass.
âNo, not this time.â I reach for a way to ask for his help without mentioning Tessa. âLike to hang out with someone.â
âA date, then?â he assumes.
âNo, not exactly. But something like that.â
I donât know what to call this meeting with Tessa. Itâs not a date. Weâre friends.
Friends until I fuck her, I remind myself.
Sheâs just so prudish. She wears ill-fitting clothing and barely curses. Where could I take her to get her to lighten up? I try to think of my favorite memory since I moved to Washington.
The stream off of Highway 75 is fun. If the weatherâs nice, this could work. The water is pretty shallow, and you can see the rocks under the water. Would Tessa swim in semi-clean stream water? Probably not, but I can try.
âWell, Iâve always found nature walks a surefire bet,â Vance says.
And just like that, Iâm reminded of the Bet for the first time in a few hours.
fourteen
The first time he was alone with her, he knew something was stirring inside of him. He thought he could fight it, that maybe he was softening a little, and not only for her, but everyone in his life . . . he was sure. He had spent his whole life alone, and he had mastered the craft of avoiding any form of intimacy beyond sex. He didnât need friends, and he didnât have a functional family to teach him how to interact with people. He liked that hard part of himselfâit kept his life simple. He felt suffocated during his first encounter with her, but as time passed and he began to feel something more, something that could change everything, he vowed to keep the status quo.
He was used to structured solitude, and she was wreaking havoc on that.
The morning is here, and I barely fucking slept last night. It wasnât even the shitty nightmares that kept me awake; it was Tessa.
She was there when I closed my eyes, and not in the way Iâd have liked her to be. Instead of being naked, making soft noises as I thrust into her, she was furious and bored during the trip to the stream Iâve decided weâre taking. In one creepy movielike scene that my sleepless, stalkerish mind made up, she stubbed her toe and complained the entire afternoon. In another, she was bored out of her mind and wanted her lame boyfriend to drive all the way to campus to get her. When he arrived, it was like he was all cardigan. A giant cardigan monster that was both scary and lame.
Itâs frustrating the amount of time Iâve wasted thinking about this girl. None of this is going to matter in a month or so. If this âdateâ goes well, Iâm hoping to win the Bet in less than two weeks . . . Hell, if I can charm her enough, maybe at the stream . . .
My phone alarm rings from across the room, and I climb out of bed to shut it off.
Todayâs the day. My head is already throbbing, and Iâm annoyed by the pressure I feel to make the time I spend with her work in my favor. I should probably take a shower. As Iâm getting dressed, I briefly wonder what sheâs doing right now . . . is she as stressed as I am? I can imagine so; sheâs so uptight all the time, and sheâs probably had me literally penciled into her planner-binder since the moment I offered to attempt this friendship thing.
After my shower, I rummage through my drawer to find a clean black T-shirt. The one I find is wrinkly, but itâll do. Outside, as I start my car, I hear a crush beneath my foot and find an empty water bottle under my gas pedal. In my half-sleep state, the sound is so irritating that I get back out and find a place to throw it away.