I donât lose. He should know this about me. I donât lose games like this.
The screen on my phone is blank. Stubbornly, insolently blank. No text messages, no missed calls. Every time I look at it, it feels like Iâve been slapped, and I get angrier and angrier. What happened to me in that hotel room? What was I thinking? That we made a connection, that there was something real between us? He has no intention of going anywhere with me. But I believed him for a secondâmore than a secondâand thatâs what really pisses me off. I was ridiculous, credulous. He was laughing at me all along.
If he thinks Iâm going to sit around crying over him, heâs got another think coming. I can live without him, I can do without him just fineâbut I donât like to lose. Itâs not like me. None of this is like me. I donât get rejected. Iâm the one who walks away.
Iâm driving myself insane, I canât help it. I canât stop going back to that afternoon at the hotel and going over and over what he said, the way he made me feel.
Bastard.
If he thinks I will just disappear, go quietly, heâs mistaken. If he doesnât pick up soon, Iâm going to stop calling his mobile and call him at home. Iâm not just going to be ignored.
At breakfast, Scott asks me to cancel my therapy session. I donât say anything. I pretend I havenât heard him.
âDaveâs asked us round to dinner,â he says. âWe havenât been over there for ages. Can you rearrange your session?â
His tone is light, as though this is a casual request, but I can feel him watching me, his eyes on my face. Weâre on the edge of an argument, and I have to be careful.
âI canât, Scott, itâs too late,â I say. âWhy donât you ask Dave and Karen to come here on Saturday instead?â Just the thought of entertaining Dave and Karen at the weekend is wearing, but Iâm going to have to compromise.
âItâs not too late,â he says, putting his coffee cup down on the table in front of me. He rests his hand on my shoulder for just a moment, says, âCancel it, OK?â and walks out of the room.
The second the front door closes, I pick up the coffee cup and hurl it against the wall.
I could tell myself that itâs not really a rejection. I could try to persuade myself that heâs just trying to do the right thing, morally and professionally. But I know that isnât true. Or at least, itâs not the whole truth, because if you want someone badly enough, morals (and certainly professionalism) donât come into it. Youâll do anything to have them. He just doesnât want me badly enough.
I ignored Scottâs calls all afternoon, I turned up to my session late and walked straight into his office without a word to the receptionist. He was sitting at his desk, writing something. He glanced up at me when I walked in, didnât smile, then looked back down at his papers. I stood in front of his desk, waiting for him to look at me. It felt like forever before he did.
âAre you OK?â he asked eventually. He smiled at me then. âYouâre late.â
The breath was catching in my throat, I couldnât speak. I walked around the desk and leaned against it, my leg brushing against his thigh. He drew back a little.
âMegan,â he said, âare you all right?â
I shook my head. I put my hand out to him, and he took it.
âMegan,â he said again, shaking his head.
I didnât say anything.
âYou canât . . . You should sit down,â he said. âLetâs talk.â
I shook my head.
âMegan.â
Every time he said my name he made it worse.
He got to his feet and circled the desk, walking away from me. He stood in the middle of the room.
âCome on,â he said, his voice businesslikeâbrusque, even. âSit down.â
I followed him into the middle of the room, put one hand on his waist, the other against his chest. He held me by my wrists and moved away from me.
âDonât, Megan. You canât . . . we canât . . .â He turned away.
âKamal,â I said, my voice catching. I hated the sound of it. âPlease.â
âThis . . . here. Itâs not appropriate. Itâs normal, believe me, but . . .â
I told him then that I wanted to be with him.
âItâs transference, Megan,â he said. âIt happens from time to time. It happens to me, too. I really should have introduced this topic last time. Iâm sorry.â
I wanted to scream then. He made it sound so banal, so bloodless, so common.
âAre you telling me you feel nothing?â I asked him. âYouâre saying Iâm imagining all this?â
He shook his head. âYou have to understand, Megan, I shouldnât have let things get this far.â
I moved closer to him, put my hands on his hips and turned him around. He took hold of my arms again, his long fingers locked around my wrists. âI could lose my job,â he said, and then I really lost my temper.
I pulled away angrily, violently. He tried to hold me, but he couldnât. I was yelling at him, telling him I didnât give a shit about his . He was trying to quieten meâworried, I assume, about what the receptionist thought, what the other patients thought. He grabbed hold of my shoulders, his thumbs digging into the flesh at the tops of my arms, and told me to calm down, to stop behaving like a child. He shook me, hard; I thought for a moment he was going to slap my face.
I kissed him on the mouth, I bit his lower lip as hard as I could; I could taste his blood in my mouth. He pushed me away.
I plotted revenge on my way home. I was thinking of all the things I could do to him. I could get him fired, or worse. I wonât, though, because I like him too much. I donât want to hurt him. Iâm not even that upset about the rejection anymore. What bothers me most is that I havenât got to the end of my story, and I canât start over with someone else, itâs too hard.
I donât want to go home now, because I donât know how Iâm going to be able to explain the bruises on my arms.