Thereâs a small chance Iâve completely lost my mind. Just a tiny one. Because who storms out of a doctorâs appointment like I did this morning? Who can be so blatantly disrespectful?
Ugh. I groan as I scrub the pot until my elbow screams in agony. This stupid grease isnât coming off, and Iâm two seconds away from bursting into tears.
So much for staying optimistic, I know. In my defense, Iâve had a terrible morning, so I think Iâm allowed to cut myself some slack.
A meaty hand comes around my shoulders and takes the pot away. âYouâre gonna dislocate your shoulder at this rate, kid,â Matt, our cook, teases me as he also grabs my sponge and finishes the job for me.
I let out a deep breath and reposition myself on the stool Monica gave me earlier. My back is killing me, but Iâm not complaining. My paycheck will be enough to pay for groceries, and even if Iâll still have to ask Sammy for rent money, at least Iâll contribute in some way. For now, this is all I can do.
Itâs not enough, and you know it.
Nope. No. Everything is fine. Iâm at work, and Iâm all right.
âHere you go.â Matt gives me a gentle smile as he passes me the sponge and the clean pot that is ready for use again. âWhatâs eatinâ at you tonight? You look like youâll bite my arm off any second.â
I give him a sheepish smile. Matt has been the cook here for ten years, and heâs an adorable man. Although one wouldnât necessarily use that word to describe him at first, seeing how heâs as big as a brick wall with a mean scowl that rivals Dr. Grouchyâs. We use his intimidating looks to our advantage when the drunk men around here need to get kicked out.
âThis week has beenâ¦a week.â And itâs only Tuesday, so go figure.
He knows about my missed audition, so I understand the meaning behind the sad look he gives me. âYou might be a small thing, but youâre stronger than all of us combined, kid. I have no doubts your future will be bright.â
With one pat on my shoulder, he goes back to making burgers and sandwiches, but his encouraging words stay with me, making me feel better about todayâs fiasco.
I donât want to recall how immature I was this morning, but itâs difficult not to when Iâve embarrassed myself in front of Dr. Simmons more times than I can count. Thereâs only so much my poor ego can take.
The dating app still haunts me, and then thereâs the mandala too. I still canât decipher whether he appreciated it or thought it was weird, but I make sure to think about it nonstop for the next hour. Because of course I do.
I can choose to be happy and look at life in an optimistic way as much as I want, but deep down, I know thatâs not me. Thatâs not what I deserve to feel.
âMaddie?â
I look up, meeting Monicaâs eyes. âYes?â
Can she tell Iâm on the verge of yet another mental breakdown? Probably. If she notices anything, though, she doesnât say.
She glances behind her shoulder, her eyes full of suspicion, and my heart rate picks up.
âWhatâs going on?â
She comes inside the kitchen, shutting the door behind her. âA gentleman came in asking for you,â she says, and I freeze.
âWho?â I try to get a glimpse of said gentleman through the small window separating the kitchen from the bar, but I donât see any familiar faces. âDid he give you a name?â
âHe said his name was James.â
James? Whoâ
Oh.
Oh, no.
No way.
My boss arches a suspicious eyebrow. âDo you know a James?â
âUm, yes.â I grab a nearby cloth and dry my hands with it. âCould Iâ¦?â
âGo speak to him.â She looks back at the bar, and when her eyes find me again, thereâs something in them I donât like one bitâamusement. âJeez, girl. Thatâs a fine man if Iâve ever seen one. If you donât want him, maybe tell him Iâm available?â she jokes, which makes Matt grunt.
He and Monica can hide it as much as they like, but itâs painfully obvious theyâve beenâ¦ah, involved for a while. Honestly, Iâd rather not know.
âItâs not like that,â I mutter as I grab my crutches, my heart beating so damn fast I can barely concentrate.
âSure.â She gives me a look like she doesnât believe me, throwing me a wink before leaving the way she came.
Somehow, I manage to block all my thoughts as I make my way to the bar. Neither the bachelorette party that canât stop squealing as they take shots nor the music around me distract meâheâs impossible to miss.
The first thing I notice is that heâs trimmed his beard. Itâs not completely gone, but itâs shorter than it was this morning. Then, my eyes land on those bulging biceps not even his black sweater can hide, and my pulse rises to my throat.
I tell myself I donât need to look at the massive hand wrapped around the can of root beer, but then I do exactly that.
He studies me as I approach, like Iâm prey he canât wait to sink his teeth into.
I must be coming down with a fever.
Once Iâm standing next to his booth, which he isnât sharing with anybody else tonight, I swallow and gather all the courage I didnât even know I had. âWhat are you doing here?â
The question is simple enough, but it takes him a while to answer. He takes a sip of his drink, and this time I succeed at not zeroing in on his plump lips. Because I can have self-control. Sometimes.
He doesnât say anything. Instead, he takes something out of the back pocket of his jeans and places it on the table.
Itâs a piece of paper Iâm way too familiar with.
The mandala, the one I drew for him, the one I thought had made him uncomfortable, stares back at me. And itâs colored.
He worked on it. At home. Or at the clinic. I donât know. Does it matter?
âYou colored it?â Itâs beautiful, in dark tones of blue and purple. He did a meticulous job, I notice, which I find endearing for some reason.
âI did.â When I muster the courage to look at him, his eyes are already on me. âIt was too beautiful not to.â
Wow. Okay. Wow.
âTh-Thank you. For saying that.â I feel my cheeks heating up by the second. âI love how it turned out.â
I really do. Weâre not friends, and Iâm not exactly sure why heâs showing me this, but Iâll take it. Because, as a sudden warmth spreads inside my chest, I come to the realization that I feel appreciated.
How can such a small gesture make me feel something soâ¦complicated?
But I suppose he isnât here only to show me the mandala.
He confirms my suspicions when he asks me to sit down across from him, and I only do it because I donât want him to be worried about my ankle.
âMiss Stevens,â he starts again, but I cut him right off.
âItâs Maddie.â Iâm surprised by the firmness of my tone. âWeâre not at the clinic.â
Turns out he doesnât drop the grouchy act when heâs off the clock. âIâm aware.â
He leans over the table, his fingers laced together, and speaks in such a low voice, it makes my legs feel a bit like goo. Youâre so dumb.
âI might be breaking a rule or two by seeking out a patient outside the clinic, so this conversation never happened.â
I nod. âYou were never here.â
âGood girl.â
Oh, hell.
I know Iâm probably overreacting and itâs just the way he talks. He means nothing by it, and it shouldnât mean anything to me that heâs praising me like that. Iâm not that desperate to be told Iâm a âgood girlâ or whatever.
So even if it does feel good, shame forces me to bury the feeling deep down, under thick layers of denial.
The man in front of me slides me a look I couldnât have missed even if I tried. Under the dim lights of the bar, he looks dangerous, forbidden, and I feel like a deer caught in headlights.
He locks those icy eyes on my face and says in that husky voice I hate and love so much, âI donât make a habit of speaking to my patients outside of work.â
For a moment, I wonder if it was his presence I felt the other day in the park, but then I remember he had another patient to see to after I left, so it couldnât have been him. Plus, the way I felt at the park⦠This isnât the same.
When Dr. Simmons looks at me, my stomach turns a little and my legs feel weaker, but I never feel threatened or endangered.
It wasnât him that day at the park, and it only manages to make me even more anxious. Iâve learned to always trust my gut with these kinds of weird feelings, so if he didnât follow me to the park that day, who did?
âYet here you are.â I give him a smile that is probably too tight, but Iâm too nervous to do better. âWhy?â
He doesnât say a word for a moment, but I watch his jaw twitching with tension and his shoulders squaring up as if he were about to enter a fighting ring. In his mind, maybe he is. âI wanted a drink, and I remembered you worked here.â
My arched eyebrow tells him I donât believe any of that. âYou know I canât wait tables right now, so you came here for what? So I can wash your glass once youâre done?â
I can tell my sarcastic tone riles him up, and it makes my smile a little more real. Who knew poking the bear could be so fun?
Iâm not dumb. I know he didnât come here because he wanted a drink, and Iâm not going to let him think heâs fooled me.
âYouâre already here, and Iâm not going to report you,â I tell him, pushing him to talk. âSo you might as well be honest.â
âHonesty.â He pronounces the word as if he were making fun of it. âFine, letâs all be honest. Why did you storm out of the clinic this morning?â
My back doesnât tense up at his question, of course not. âI didnât storm out. I had to leave.â
He doesnât buy it. âRight after I told you about the not-so-good news of your progress? You didnât seem to be in a rush before then.â
Just be honest, Maddie. For once in your life, donât hide behind lame excuses nobody believes anyway.
I lean back and wipe the sweat off my hands on my leggings. âTrust me, Doc. You donât want to hear about it.â
âWhy am I here, then?â
I shrug. âTo have a drinkâyou said so yourself.â
I know Iâm being difficult, but what is the alternative? To open up about years of insecurities and trauma to an almost-stranger who also happens to be my physical therapist? Is it even ethical to do such a thing?
His fingers tap along the wooden surface of the table, and he lets out a frustrated sigh that is barely audible. âYou told me you had plans to join a ballet company in the near future, and now youâre upset because you think you wonât be able to do it anymore. Correct me if Iâm wrong.â
Heâs going there.
I shift on the cushioned seat and stare past his shoulder, watching our regulars stroll in and out of the bar. I could get out of here right now if I wanted to. The choice is mine. I donât have to talk about this. He wonât force me to stay, and if he did, it wouldnât last long with Matt and Monica around.
But I donât want to flee. For years Iâve tried to keep this down, to not bother anyone with my intrusive and not-so-intrusive thoughts. God knows the last time I opened up to someone, it didnât end well. Not at all.
For one, Dr. Simmons⦠Well, heâs asking. I doubt he knows what heâs getting himself into, but if he gets the full Maddie nervous breakdown, itâll be his fault.
Aside from being my physical therapist, heâs nothing to me. No one. And he could transfer me to someone else if he didnât want to treat me anymore, so itâs not like Iâd be left stranded without him.
I have quite literally nothing to lose. A bit of time, maybe, but Iâm used to that.
So I swallow, but the lump in my throat doesnât go anywhere. âYouâre not wrong.â
âOkay,â he says slowly, kind of softly. âI understand how youâre feeling. Do you have a plan B?â
He understands? Why? How? One look at the discomfort on his face is enough to bury my curiosity, though. Nowâs not the time. Maybe it never will be, and thatâs okay too.
Since weâre already talking about thisââthisâ being my worst nightmare come to lifeâI give myself the freedom to massage my temples and look a little more on the brink of a mental breakdown than before.
âNo. I have no alternative. I meanâI do. I have a few, but none that I truly feel passionate about. None that I feelâ¦called to pursue, if you will. At least not right now.â
âThere are no other options for you in the ballet industry?â
âOh, no, there are. Itâs just thatâ¦â I might as well just let it all out, right? I mean, he asked. âIâve worked really hard to join this one ballet company for years. Itâs very prestigious, and sometimes it felt more like a dream than a real possibility, but a few weeks ago, they invited me for an audition. I injured myself while rehearsing for that audition, and nowâ¦now it feels like I have no future. I-Itâs fine. Iâm just overreacting.â
All right. I did it. I told him without shedding a single tear. Thatâs a win in my book.
He asks the question of the century. âWhy do you say you have no future?â
I shrug. âIâve worked all my life toward this one goal, and now itâs gone forever. If there is a future, it doesnât look too bright to me.â
âYou canât audition again?â
âNo. Auditions are exclusive and only accessible through an invite. They barely hand out any in the first place, just a few a year. I missed my chance.â
Saying it out loud still feels surreal.
He leans over the table a little more and pins me down with one of his hardest stares yet. I swallow down the urge to squirm under it. âYour future isnât gone. Thatâs bullshit. How old are you?â
I have a feeling he knows, but I tell him anyway. âTwenty-one.â
âTwenty-one,â he repeats, a strange shadow passing over his eyes. âDo you really think your future is gone at twenty-one?â
âIn ballet, yes.â And thatâs the problem. Thatâs why I was in such a rush to make it. âBallerinas join companies at my age or even younger because they tend to retire in their mid-thirties. Itâs not a long career, and Iâm already wasting half of it.â
âYouâre not wasting anything. Youâre recovering from an injury so you can return to ballet safely in a few months. Youâre not the first professional ballerina to get an injury like this, and you wonât be the last. Iâve seen athletes fully recover from worse.â
âThank you,â I tell him honestly. âI appreciate what youâre trying to do. Itâs just that Iâ¦â I shake my head. âItâs fine. Forget it.â
âTell me.â
Shaking my head, I rub my eyes and say, âIâm just tired of life being so damn difficult, I guess. Welcome to adulthood and all that.â
I really donât want to get into it. Opening this can of worms now, plus the other oneâ¦Â Boundaries, Maddie. Remember those.
He doesnât smile at my poor attempt at lightening the mood. Oh, no, his scowl stays very much in place.
âLife is hard sometimes, but it doesnât mean you have to live it miserably.â
âThatâs easy for you to say,â I mutter under my breath before I realize what has just come out of my mouth. My eyes widen in horror as I trip over my words. âI donât know why Iâve just said that. Iâm sorry. God, Iâm being such an asshole. You are just trying to help, and Iââ
âStop apologizing,â he demands in that deep, cutting voice of his. âI donât want to hear another apology come from your mouth. I donât need them.â
âBut I saidââ
âYouâre having a bad day. I get that,â he assures me calmly, so calmly I want to start crying.
âWhy are you being so nice to me?â I canât help but ask, my voice not much louder than a whisper.
I need to understand why this grouchy man is going out of his way to make me feel better. Why he came here to ask me whatâs wrong.
But if I expected a long and heartfelt explanation, I donât get one. He simply leans back and says, âBecause Iâve been in your shoes.â
Thatâs it. No further elaboration, and I donât ask for one either. Heâs done enough for me today.
I swallow. âDoes it get better?â
His gaze travels lazily from my eyes to my mouth and then back up. Why that triggers an erratic response from the stupid organ in my chest, I donât want to know.
âSome days are better than others.â I canât help but notice he didnât say yes. I guess I should appreciate his honesty. âEverything happens for a reason. Focus on that.â
I almost snort. Unless the universeâs reason is to kick me in the ass, I understand nothing.
âYou have options,â he insists.
My only response is a long sigh.
âI know you donât see them now, but you will. Donât punish yourself for something you canât change. You are talented, and you are determined. I have no doubts youâll find your calling.â
He thinks Iâm talented and determined? And he just told me to my face?
Iâm not used to this version of Dr. Simmons. To this slightly less grumpy, almost kind of sweet version. But I like it. I like it a lot.
âThank you.â I give him a smile he doesnât return. âFor everything. I haveâ¦a lot to think about.â
âJust doing my job.â
Yeah. Right. âI doubt giving words of encouragement to your patients is in your job description.â
Something that resembles a grunt escapes him. âI guess it isnât.â Silence stretches between us for no more than two seconds, but it feels like a lifetime. And then he says, âIâd better get going.â
Heâs not subtle at dismissals, Iâve noticed. It almost makes me smile.
âSure. Iâll see you at the clinic.â I grab my crutches and stand up, but he doesnât. I think he may be waiting for a second or third confirmation, so I look down at him and say, âThis conversation never happened. No need to worry.â
He keeps his face neutral, as unreadable and cold as always. âIâm not worried about that.â
But heâs worried about something? I donât feel like I have the right to ask, so I keep my mouth shut. When he stands up and towers over me by at least a whole foot, I tell myself he doesnât smell good at all.
I press my lips together as he reaches for a bunch of bills to cover his tab, way more than what that root beer is worth. He slides me a look that reveals nothing and says, âTake care of that ankle, Miss Stevens.â
Heâs retreating, drawing that line once more. I donât feel embarrassed for having vented to him, but only because he asked. Heâs not my therapist, and we shouldnât turn this into a habit. Not that Iâm tempted to anyway, and Iâm sure he feels the same.
As I watch him leave the bar without a goodbye or a glance over his shoulder, I canât help but ask myself what the hell is my life turning into.