Iâm drunk. Not from drinking away my sorrows at home or from club-hopping with my friends, but from last nightâs conversation with James in his car.
Iâm drunk on his presence, his words, his whole damn existenceâand I hate every second of it.
Thereâs nothing, absolutely nothing, that should interest me about him. Not his reasons for becoming a PT, not his skills in the kitchen, and most certainly not his love life.
Heâs still my physical therapist, and he could get in real trouble if we crossed the invisible line that seems to draw us a little closer every time weâre together outside the clinic.
Not that a man like him would ever be interested in little old sad me. Why would he? Heâs a grown adult in his early thirties with his whole life figured out and probably planned to a T, and Iâm twenty-one, lost, and waiting for a deity I donât even believe in to poke me on the side and tell me, âHey, look. This is the direction youâre meant to take.â
We donât belong together.
Plus, what would my brother think if I got involved with a man ten years my senior? Heâd have a stroke, thatâs what would happen.
Luckily, I donât have to worry about that because the most realistic, logical part of me knows once my rehabilitation treatment is over, I wonât see James ever again. Iâll have no reason to.
He seems like a prudent man who wonât jeopardize his job for a twenty-one-year-old mess, and maybe thatâs what gives me the final push to leave all those thoughts behind and focus on what I truly want. What I wouldnât mind.
I want us to be friendly. Maybe not friends friends, the way Kyle and Beth are my friends, but I want us to at least beâ¦cordial. A little more than that, if we could. And I suppose he wouldnât mind it, since heâs already gone out of his way to drive me home after my night shift. He wouldnât have done that if he hated me, right?
Itâs likely that Iâm misreading all the very obvious neon signs telling me he does, in fact, not give a shit about me. But that doesnât stop me from pulling out yet another mandala from my tote bag at the end of our session and handing it to him.
He looks at the piece of paper, then at me, and back at the paper. Hesitantly, he takes it. âAnother one?â He doesnât sound annoyed, not even surprised. Itâs more like incredulity.
âThis one is a crescent moon,â I explain like he doesnât have two working eyes. âItâs a bit smaller than the last one I gave you, but I thought youâd like the design.â
âYou didnât have to give me anything.â He stays silent for a moment. Then he says, âI still canât believe you draw these by hand.â
âItâs not a big deal. Making them relaxes me.â
His attentive eyes are on the paper before they dart back up to me. âHave you tried going back to ballet like I recommended?â
Right. Back to business. Thatâs good. Thatâs what we need to do.
He opens the desk drawer to his right, puts the drawing inside, and closes it, all while holding my stare.
âNo,â I confess. âI donât want to hurt my ankle again.â
âYou need to return to your normal activities progressively,â he simply responds, like he doesnât care for my concerns. âWe talked about this in our last session.â
We did, and then I pretended he didnât say anything. Oops?
âBut what if I make a bad move and have to start all over again?â
I donât think Iâd have the mental strength to do physical therapy for a second timeâIâm barely surviving the firstâbut I donât say that. Iâm pretty sure he can read between the lines, anyway.
âDonât push yourself too hard, and youâll be all right. You can start with some warm-up exercises and a simple routine.â
I look at him for a moment too long before drifting my eyes away, defeated. âOkay. Iâll do that this week.â Or maybe the next.
Iâm hiking my tote bag up my arm when his voice startles me. âWhatâs wrong?â
âNothingâs wrong.â The lie rolls off my tongue so easily I should probably check whatâs up with that.
âMaddie.â
Hearing my name from his lips gives me tingles, and I hate myself for it. What happened to Miss Stevens?
âIâll have another pep talk with you if I need to, but a patient is coming in five minutes, so I would appreciate some straightforwardness.â
Another pep talk. Right. His last motivational speech is forever engraved in my mind. âThat wonât be necessary. I already said Iâm scared of hurting myself again.â
He arches a skeptical eyebrow. âScared. You didnât use that word before.â
âDoes it matter?â
âTo me, it does.â
Stupid heart, stop beating so fast. âWhy?â I dare to ask, as if his answer doesnât hold the power to crush me.
And crush me, it does. âBecause youâre my patient, and I want my patients to go back to the activities I know they still enjoy.â
A wave of unfounded disappointment crashes into me. His patient.
Of course. I never, not for one moment, forgot the real reason we know each other. The real reason we are still seeing each other almost every day. Heâs my physical therapist, and our relationship is and should remain strictly professional.
Who cares if he went out of his way to drive me home after a night shift?
Who cares if we saw each other on a dating app?
Who cares if I draw him mandalas and he colors them?
I donât.
Liar, liar, pants on fucking fire.
Fine. Maybe I expected him to have warmed up to me just like Iâm starting to warm up to him, but itâs okay. One of us has to be the reasonable adult and remind the other that thisâ¦whatever this is, has an expiration date. And the faster it approaches, the better.
All this fog in my head will clear once I donât have to see him ever again.
âYouâre right.â I put on the least fake smile I can muster. âI still enjoy ballet, and I donât want to quit because of my injury.â Thereâs nothing fake about that statement. âI promise Iâll go to the studio either this week or the next.â
He nods, satisfied. âGood. Iâll see you tomorrow, Miss Stevens.â
There it is. Back to normal. Just like it should always be.
â½â½â½
âWeâll go with you!â
âOh my God, Maddie. This is such great news.â
âArenât you excited? I am!â
My smile wavers as I lift my fork and stuff my face with some ricotta and pine nut salad. It tastes like nothing, just like everything else Iâve eaten recently, but I donât care. Eating is the perfect excuse for not talking. For my two best friends to not see the truth in my words now that Iâve finally learned to hide it so well with my eyes.
But I know better than to expect Beth and Kyle to call it quits so easily.
I donât regret having agreed to grab some lunch with them. Now that Iâm safe to leave the house, and my friendsâ busy schedules were miraculously clear for at least an hour, I couldnât say no. Even if I wasnât in the mood when Kyle texted the group chat just a few minutes after I got home from this morningâs session. I wasnâtâand I suppose Iâm still notâin the mood because Iâm a coward whoâs avoiding the inevitable, which is this conversation.
âI feel like I wouldnât know where to start,â Kyle muses as he stabs his chicken breast. âItâs been so long since weâve done an easy routine, you know? I donât even remember what that was like.â
âI can give you some ideas,â Beth offers. âYou could do some of the routines Iâm teaching the girls.â
Going from professional ballet to kid-level dancing due to being stupidly reckless, hurting myself, and losing my dream job? Sounds great.
And this situation is all the more frustrating because ballerinas getting injured isnât unheard of in the dance world. It happens fairly oftenâI just never imagined it would happen to me.
Turns out Iâm not invincible.
âThanks, Beth.â I smile, but it feels forced, even to me.
âNo problem.â She takes a sip of her fizzy water. âYou could rent one of the studios on Glenn Avenue. Itâs less than twenty bucks an hour.â
âI will do that.â I donât bother telling her Iâve already booked one for next Monday, because I need a change of topic more than I need my next breath. âHey, does Polina have a new girlfriend or something? I saw something on social media, but I didnât want to pry.â
And just like that, the conversation shifts to the latest gossip, something that always works as a distraction. I love my friendsâtheyâre my rocksâand I know damn well my recovery process wouldâve been a whole lot more miserable and lonely without their constant check-ins, video calls, gossip updates, and visits. I just canât talk about my futureâor lack thereofâright now. They would understand if I explained it to them, but I donât want to make them feel bad, so deflection it is.
Iâm not winning any friendship awards this year, thatâs for sure.
A little over half an hour later, a loud alarm that startles the whole café blasts through Kyleâs phone, a sign that his break is over. He grabs his bag and rounds the table to give me a hug.
âIâll text you guys later. And Mads, let me know how it goes, all right? I believe in you, girl. I know you can do it.â
I resist the urge to bawl into his chest. âDonât get all sappy on me, Kyle.â I scowl, but I canât hide a smile.
âThat sexy doctor of yours would never advise you to do something thatâll hurt your ankle. If you donât have faith in yourself, at least have some in him.â
Heâs right. James would neverâ
Wait a minute.
I almost choke on my own saliva. âDid you just call him sexy?â
My face must be the picture of pure horror, because both of my friends start laughing. Kyle shakes his head, amused. âIt was just a guess, but with the way your face is flushing right now, Iâd say Iâm spot on.â
This is getting out of hand. I still have time to hit the brakes before we crash.
âHeâs notâ¦â Sexy? I sure know he is. âHeâs not too bad.â
Beth squeals, propping her chin on her hands as she bats her eyelids at me. âThat means heâs hot as sin, Kyle. I have a masterâs degree in reading between the Maddie-lines. Oh, God, you like him.â She points an accusing finger at me.
âWhat? No.â
I donât. I canât.
Iâ¦donât.
âWeâll talk more about this later,â Kyle warns me before planting a quick kiss on my cheek, then on Bethâs, and waving at us as he walks away. âDonât you dare gossip without me, bitches! Or youâll regret it.â
We laugh at his dramatics, but Beth is quick to sober up again. This time, she means business.
âIâm your best friend in the entire world,â she starts, and I know this wonât end well for me. âWhatever you confess to me right now wonât leave this café. Hell, it wonât even leave this table. So, what is it? Do you have the hots for your doctor? How old is he?â
I shift uncomfortably on my chair at the reminder that, even if she isnât aware of it, Beth knows exactly what James looks like. She knows his age and even some of his hobbies. And maybe because Iâve already had this conversation with James himself and it canât get more embarrassing than that, I decide to tell her the truth.
âFun fact.â I lick my lips and play with my napkin, my elbows resting on the table. âRemember that guy you swiped up on, on the dating app? Turns out heâsâ¦â It takes everything in me not to wince. âAh, heâs my physical therapist. James. The guy treating my ankle.â
If shock had a face, it would look exactly like Bethâs. Her lips form a perfect circle, jaw on the floor and eyebrows on the ceiling. It would look comical if I wasnât dying inside.
She shakes her head. âNo. Fucking. Way.â
I press my lips into a thin line and nod.
Beth covers her mouth with both of her hands and squeals into them, grabbing the attention of a handful of people around us. I roll my eyes and bat her hands away. âItâs not a big deal,â I shush her. âI mean, it was at first, but I talked to him and weâre cool.â
Her jaw hits the floor again. âYou talked to him about swiping up on him on the dating app? The balls!â
Now that I think about it, maybe it was a bold move after all.
âWhat did he say?â she asks.
So, for the next ten minutes, I explain how everything went down between us and where weâre currently at. I even throw the mandalas and the car ride into the mix because why not. If I want my friendâs honest opinion, I must be fully honest myself, first.
âWow.â She sits back on her chair once I finish, shoulders relaxing after being so on edge. Seriously, my friends take gossiping as a life-and-death matterâI kind of love it too, so Iâm not judging. âThat was⦠I need to think about this for a second.â
I gulp down what remains of my Diet Coke. âDonât think too hard. I wonât see him again after next week.â Iâll probably have to meet with him at some point in the next few months to monitor my progress, but maybe not. Maybe another PT will do my checkups.
Beth glares at me like she doesnât fully believe what Iâm saying. âI donât know, Mads. What kind of guy stays hours in a parking lot so he can get you home safely? Think about it. He clearly feels something for you.â
Pity is the first word that assaults my brain.
âHeâs ten years older than me,â I quip.
She shrugs. âSo? Thatâs kinda hot.â
Sheâs been reading too many romance books. Clearly.
âHe has his whole life figured out. His adult life,â I add.
âSo do you.â
âI used to.â Itâs out in the open air before I can prevent it.
Bethâs eyes soften at my words, and I hate it. I loathe it with all my heart. âOh, Maddie.â
No. Nope. Iâm not doing this right now, or ever. I wonât have someone else pity me for my own mistakes. âItâs fine. I didnât really mean it,â I lie, something that has been coming really easily for me these days. It worries me. âIâm just confused aboutâ¦you know, him.â
âWell, I donât think it would be a good idea if you guys hooked up while youâre still his patient,â she says, as if there was an actual chance of that happening. âSo just wait until your treatment is over and see what happens. You say you wonât see him again, but something right hereââshe taps her gutââis telling me youâre wrong.â
Maybe. Maybe not. My head hurts just thinking about it.
I stay silent as Beth finishes her lunch, forcing my mind to stay blank. No James, no future, no âwhat would my brother think,â no nothing, but it proves to be a near impossible task.
Iâm about to excuse myself to go to the bathroom when I feel it.
A prickle of uneasiness travels down my spine, an uncomfortable tug in my stomach, just like that day at the park.
Feeling safe now that Iâm with Beth and inside a crowded place, I gather my strength and look around.
Nobody is staring back at me, but even so, thereâs something inside me that would just know if I saw this person. An instinct, a feeling, something.
I feel nothing. If someone is watching me, they arenât inside the café.
âGod.â Beth chuckles, pulling me out of my momentary lapse. âKyle is going to be so pissed he missed this.â