Two days after my seeing my mom for the first time in months, my brain is still going in circles about her awkward concern. About how, at some point, I felt like I was having dinner with a stranger.
Maybe meeting her wasnât what I needed when I was already feeling low about my injury, but I canât find it within myself to regret it. Not exactly.
What Iâm sure Iâm about to regret is entertaining this conversation.
âYou need to get laid.â
What I need is for my best friend to set down that glass of wine and drink some common sense instead, but alas.
âI canât exactly move right now, you know?â I say, reaching out my hand until my fingers wrap around some salt and vinegar chips. They are the superior flavorâI donât make the rules.
Beth arches a blond eyebrow at me. âYour point?â
I shake my head in amusement and focus on chewing down some more chips.
An hour ago, a loud banging on my front door woke me up from my nap. Afraid it was a murderer on the other side, Iâd stayed in bed and held on to my crutch for dear life, ready to use it as a weapon if necessary. But I was being too dramatic.
âMaddie! Open up! Itâs your favorite Sagittarius!â Iâd recognized Bethâs voice immediately, but I still wanted to kill her for the heart attack sheâd almost given me. The only thing that saved her was the wineâthat I couldnât drink because of my medicationâand the two bags of chips that I was absolutely going to devour.
Beth graduated with me, but she decided last minute that professional ballet wasnât her calling. She made a brave decision and rejected the life of castings and ballet companies, and she focused on teaching instead. She has a job at a local dance studio, which she loves, and Iâm proud of her for having found her path.
I wish I could say the same about myself.
âTrust me on this one,â she insists, a mischievous gleam in her eyes that red poison is responsible for. âI know exactly what we should do.â
Why do I feel like this wonât end well for me?
âWe need to find you a hot date,â she concludes.
And the reason Dr. Simmonsâs chiseled jaw flashes in my head at the mention of hot will forever remain earthed.
I point to my ankle with an exaggerated gesture. âThis wonât exactly help me meet anyone.â Not that I want to in the first place.
âAnd thatâs what dating apps are for.â
Oh, no. Please, no.
âGive me your phone.â
I let out a nervous chuckle. âAre you kidding? Iâm not going on a dating app, Beth. I donât want to get murdered.â
âPfft. You watch too many crime documentaries, Mads. People meet online all the time. Thereâs a thing called âsending your location to your friendsâ or even âhaving your friends sit at a nearby table the whole time.â Kyle and I would totally go with you.â
Sheâs also a close friend of Kyleâs, and Iâm grateful she isnât taking any sides. Beth knows better than to stand in the middle of a fight, although technically we arenât even fighting. Iâm just dumb.
And Iâm also not sure Kyle would want to keep being my friend in the first place after this, but I donât say it out loud.
âThatâs not the point. What if heâs a weirdo? Or a catfish? I donât want to waste my time with someone who may not even be real.â
Beth lets out a deep breath, as if I were irritating her. Thatâs a funny one. âMaking a profile wonât hurt. Plus, it will be fun. You could use some fun these days, Mads. Thereâs this new app, Heart Swap, and itâs blowing up for a reason.â
âIsnât that a Pokémon thing?â
She slaps my arm. âFocus. What do you have to lose?â
Letâs seeâI lost my chance to follow my dream career, I injured my ankle, I just had a disastrous meeting with my mother two days ago⦠I guess Beth is right. What do I have to lose? More of my sanity? I donât have much to spare.
âFine. Whatever.â I give in, which makes her squeal with excitement. She reaches out her eager hand, and I give her my phone, which she knows the password to. âBut youâre doing all the work. Iâm too tired to type.â
âOh, donât worry. I was already going to.â
Her eagerness is contagious, and despite hating the whole online dating idea, I find myself invested in choosing my most flattering photos minutes later.
With Bethâs help, I finally opt for three picturesâa casual, smiley one my brother took when I visited during Easter break this year, one in my ballet outfit, and another one with my late dog Rocket.
My brother and Grace adopted him from a shelter a year after I moved in with them, and he loved Lila and me with all his soul until he passed away. I miss him every day, but thinking of him doesnât hurt anymore. He lived a good, long life, and heâll always be part of our family.
Once we get my profile description ready with a bunch of my hobbies, I ask, âIâll see men of all ages here?â
She nods. âYep. Thereâs no age filter, which means youâll see everyone geographically close to you that is older than twenty-one because thatâs the minimum age to sign up. Unfortunately. Boys are dumbâyou need a man. Someone whoâs like, thirty-five.â
My eyebrows shoot up in surprise. âThirty-five?â Iâm not sure about seeing someone that much older. It feels forbidden, and it would give my brother an aneurysm if he found out.
But Beth only shrugs like it doesnât matter. Maybe it doesnât. âWhy not? Youâre a responsible and mature woman. You know what you like and what you want to do with your life.â That last part might not be entirely true, but I get what sheâs saying. âYour boundaries are healthy and firm. I really donât see the problem. Donât you want a man who also knows what he wants? I donât think college boys are for you.â
Perhaps she has a point. I didnât date anyone while I was in college, although Iâve had a handful of hookups here and there. My only relationship was in my last year of high school, and while he was a sweet guy, I couldnât see myself with him long-term.
Itâs not like Iâm looking for a husband or anything right now. Iâm not even looking forward to any kind of date, but if I had to choose right now, I wouldnât want a boy. Iâd want a man who has himself figured out. I refuse to endure a human-shaped headache, not even for a night.
âWeâll see,â I concede.
Maybe being with someone that much older would be too weird. I mean, Dr. Simmons must be around that age, andâ
Donât think about him.
Yeah, I probably shouldnât.
It doesnât help that Iâm nervous about our upcoming session tomorrow since it will be the first time weâll see each other after that weird encounter in the alley behind Monicaâs Pub. I bet heâs ready to give me the lecture of a lifetime for not staying at home to rest my ankle.
Beth taps something else in and then says, âOh my God! Itâs done!â She squeals and cuddles up next to me, passing me the phone. She points at the screen, where a profile that isnât mine has appeared. âYouâll see the different men here, all within a few miles from your location. You can check their photos and bios, and if you like them, you have to swipe up. If you donât, swipe down.â
Sounds simple enough. âWhat happens when I swipe up? Can I justâ¦talk to them?â
âNo, to chat with someone, theyâll have to accept your invitation.â
I think I get it now. âSo it has to be mutual?â
Beth nods, and I redirect my focus to the screen, where a shirtless twenty-two-year-old Max stares right back at me. I swipe down at once, which makes my friend gasp. The dramatics.
âBut he was so hot! And you didnât even look at the rest of his profile.â She pouts.
âAny man who has a shirtless photo of themselves on their dating profile is a big no-no,â I say. âIâm not looking for a random hookup.â
âWhat are you looking for, then?â
Honestly? âI have no clue, but definitely not a one-night thing.â
âWell, you may want to think about that for a second. Some guys could ask you.â
âIt wasnât even my idea to do this.â I swipe down on yet another shirtless picture. Itâs concerning the amount of defined abs Iâve seen in the past minute alone. âBut this is fun, Iâll give you that.â
âI knew it,â she beams.
We spend the next five minutes swiping down, despite Bethâs complaints.
âBut he has the cutest dog!â
âWhat do you mean, he looks like a player? Heâs only wearing his cap backwards!â
âOkay, that was totally a mistake, Mads. When have you ever seen an eight pack?â
âThis is pointless,â I say after minutes of mindless browsing. âThese boys are clearly looking for something Iâm not interested in.â
âFine, no packs of any number for you.â Beth snatches my phone from my hands, and I let her be.
It was fun at first, but itâs obvious that online dating isnât for me. Plus, Iâm not entirely sure Iâm as ready to get out there as Beth thinks I am. Iâm too much of a mess, too much too lost. Dragging down an unsuspecting man with me wouldnât be fair.
âOh. How about him?â
Iâm not ready to see another arrogant smile or staged picture at a ski vacation, but when I turn my head, all blood drains from my face.
My palms start sweating, and my heart beats like a war drum.
âHeâs thirty-one, likes normal things like hiking, and⦠Aww, he wrote âhanging out with my two catsâ as one of his interests. Too bad there are no pictures of them. I bet they are so cute.â
Yeah, no way this is happening right now.
No. Way.
âShould I swipe up?â Beth asks.
âNo!â I snatch my phone right back, managing to keep my ankle in place by some miracle. I scan my screen with sharp focus to check that my eyes arenât playing sick tricks on me.
They arenât.
Oh, God, they arenât.
This is Dr. SimmonsâsâJamesâsâprofile.
He only uploaded two pictures, but he looks terribly handsome in both. I hate him so much.
Heâs hiking on some trail in the first one, his blue eyes covered by dark sunglasses. Heâs sporting a black T-shirt similar to the one I saw him wear the other night, and now I can take my time ogling his massive arms openly like the biggest creep in existence.
In the second picture, heâs sitting at some kind of wooden bench in front of a small fireplace outside. It looks cozy. Heâs holding a bottle of beer in his hand and looks mildly annoyed at whoever is taking the picture.
He isnât smiling in either of them, but his attractiveness stands out, nonetheless. It must be that beard. It should be illegal for facial hair to fit a person so well.
âYouâre interested, arenât you?â Beth asks in a conspiratorial voice as she nudges my arm. âI think you should swipe up. He looks a bit grumpy, but it adds to the sexy.â
I canât argue with her on that.
No, stop. Heâs your physical therapist. This is inappropriate. Go get some bleach for your eyes so you can unsee his dating profile.
Onlyâ¦I canât. Iâm physically incapable of not looking at it. Heâs listed some other interests in his profile, like hiking, being in nature, and going out to eat at various restaurants. And Iâve just confirmed his age tooâthirty-one. Thatâs a whole decade older than I am, and I donât know how it makes me feel. All I know is that it shouldnât send this stupid thrill down my spine.
âWhy arenât you saying anything? Do you know him or something?â Beth asks, taking my phone again to get a closer look at the pictures as I internally curse myself at her question.
Because Iâm mortified. Not because he has a profile on the dating app, but because heâs been nothing short of professional with me, and I canât for the life of me stop staring at his pictures like I have a right to. Beth finding out about my confusing feelings for my physical therapist will only make things worse.
So even though I hate lying, I end up saying, âItâs just that heâs too old for me.â
Thatâs not it at all. Before today, I already suspected he had to be in his early thirties, and that didnât stop me from appreciating his attractiveness. Not once.
Iâm such a mess.
âWeâve talked about this.â Beth rolls her eyes. âI have a feeling, Mads. A strong one. If you donât swipe up, I will.â
My heart does a cartwheel inside my chest. âYou wouldnât dareââ
âDone.â
My stomach drops to my feet. This canât be happening to me. âTell me youâre fucking joking.â
Beth shows me the phone with a proud smile I intend to smack off her face right about now.
She isnât joking.
âI bet youâre his type too,â she muses out loud, oblivious to the hell sheâs just cast upon me. âHe looks like heâd be a beast in bed. I want all the juicy deets if you go on a date with him.â
I swallow, but my throat remains dry. âIs he going to get a notification that I swiped up?â
Donât say yes, donât say yes, donât sayâ
âYes. He wouldnât get a notification if you swiped down, though. Thatâd be mean,â she explains, but my brain is barely listening anymore.
I swiped up on Dr. Simmons on a dating app.
Heâs going to get a notification and see what Beth did.
I canât look at him on Monday.
IÂ canât.
With no short amount of frustration, I come to terms with the fact that the shit show that is my life has just added a whole new season.
â½â½â½
Like a total fool, I convinced myself all through Sunday that Monday morning would never come. That, by some strange miracle, all those articles about the world ending that never got the date right would suddenly become true and a huge asteroid would hit our planet, wiping me and that stupid dating app from existence.
But Monday morning does roll around, no catastrophic event kills me or my embarrassment, and I still swiped up on Dr. Simmons this weekend.
Technically, I didnât do anything, but itâs not like that would make a difference. Itâs done.
I barely slept a wink last night, worrying about what he would say to me when I entered his office. Would he call me out? Or just ignore the whole fiasco? That would be the professional thing to do, right?
I swear the ride to the clinic feels faster today, and during the trip, I try to convince myself one more time that he probably didnât even see it. Many people get tired of dating apps and end up uninstalling them without actually deleting their profile. Their information is out there, and people keep swiping up and down on them, but they never find out because the app is no longer on their phones. That can happen, right? Iâm too scared to google it.
Holding my crutches a little tighter this morning, I greet the lady at the front desk and make my wayâvery, very slowlyâto his office. I donât care if Iâm a couple of minutes late. Iâm waiting to see if the ground decides to swallow me after all.
After the awkward dinner with my mom on Friday night, I thought my biggest concern come Monday would be the realization that we donât seem to be in a better place than we were last year. Or the year before, or the one before that. And even if my brother has always encouraged our mother-daughter relationship, I still feel the guilt eating up at my conscience for not telling him about our dinner. I tell Sammy everything, especially when it comes to our mom. Itâs just thatâ¦Â Ugh.
How do you tell your brother you might not want to see your mother again because she managed to make you feel like shit in under an hour?
When I returned to our table after my brief interaction with Dr. Simmonsâwho was nowhere to be found at the barâI told her I was tired and that I was going to call an Uber. She didnât object, and she didnât try to set up another dinner either. I canât say Iâm disappointed.
What I wasnât expecting was this to be the cause of my anxiety. A huge mistake, a total disaster I donât know how Iâll recover fromâor if I ever will.
But I need to stay calm. Iâm probably blowing things out of proportion.
At least thatâs what I tell myself until I step into his office and the air shifts.
Dr. Simmons, who I now know looks ridiculously handsome in casual clothes and has two cats, doesnât look at me differently or for longer than usual, which only manages to confuse me even further.
Am I imagining this? Thisâ¦zapping electricity in the room?
Maybe itâs just my nerves. I shouldnât listen to my judgment right now. Itâs poor, at best.
âGood morning,â he greets me. Not enthusiastically, but that is to be expected. He types something on his computer and gestures to the exercise mat on the floor, not looking at me. âWeâll begin shortly with some stretches.â
If I thought our session would be awkward, I would be a hundred percent right.
Iâm excruciatingly aware of every breath he takes, of the pressure of his fingers on my sensitive skin, of the tightness of his jaw every time heâs about to ask me a question. As if acknowledging me is the last thing he wants to do.
And I donât die inside when he touches my back to correct my posture during one of the exercises. Of course not.
Dr. Simmons avoids my gaze as much as I avoid his, which only fuels my suspicion that he knows about the dating app fiasco. Heâs a man of few words on a normal day, and I donât expect him to bring it up at all. Itâs on the tip of my tongue to do it myself, because only fifteen minutes have gone by, and I canât stand this tension any longer.
Sure, what happened is mortifying and not my fault, really, but thereâs an itch inside me begging to be scratched by clearing the air. For hours Iâve been dreading facing him in todayâs session, and now I want to talk about it? I mustâve hit my head this morning when I woke up.
Halfway through the session, we move on to some strengthening exercises that involve him touching the back of my ankle, and for a second there, I think I might pass out. Seriously, I canât take this anymore.
More than anything, I want to apologize for crossing an invisible boundary and making him uncomfortable, even though, if weâre getting technical, it was Beth who did it. But still, every time I picture his face after he read the notification, I want to puke.
Thereâs only one small problem, one thing that makes me stop in my tracks. What if he really hasnât seen the notification? What if he doesnât use the app anymore and I make a fool of myself for nothing?
My headache heightens, and it only gets worse when he dismisses me half an hour later. âThatâll be all for today.â
I have seconds to make this decision. Pressure never gets to me onstage, but when it comes to dealing with daily situations, dealing with normal people and saying actual words, letâs just say I could use a lesson or two in self-control.
And so, I blame my lack of proper training for my next words. âIâm so sorry.â
Slowly, too slowly, he turns his head. His eyes pin me in place, and I have to swallow past the sudden lump in my throat.
Well, I guess Iâm doing this.
Mustering all the courage my dread has left behind, I let it all out. For better or for worse, here it comes.
âAbout the dating app.â I swallow again because the ice-cold look heâs giving me right now could freeze an entire continent. Itâs definitely frozen my sparse confidence. âI⦠A friend swiped up, and Iâm sorry if it made you uncomfortable. I wouldâve undone it if Iâd known how. Iâm sorry, again.â Iâm rambling. I know Iâm rambling. Oh, God, this is bad. âWe were just joking around. I didnât mean anything by it. It wasnât likeâ¦a serious thing or anything. But Iâm sorry anyway.â
A second goes by.
Five.
Ten.
And finally, finally, Dr. Simmons blinks.
Are his cheeks flushed?
âItâs fine,â he says, shattering my world with just a few words.
Itâs fine.
That means he saw the notification. That means he uses the app. The dating app.
That also has to mean heâs single, right? Unless heâs an asshole, but I donât peg him as one.
And why am I focusing on his love life right now when I should be putting all my efforts into getting a new identity and fleeing this country?
âIâm very sorry,â I insist.
At this point, Iâm not sure what else to say. Maybe I shouldnât have brought it up at all.
Dr. Simmons lowers himself down into his rolling chair, types something on his computer, and takes his sweet, sweet time responding. âYouâre good.â
âMyâ¦my friend swiped up on you.â I feel the need to clarify once again. Itâs very important that he knows this, I decide. âWe were just playing around. I didnât even want to sign up or anything.â
And now it sounds like a lame excuse. I can never win, can I? I hate everything.
âSo why did you?â he surprises me by asking.
I shrug, even though heâs not looking at me. Holding my crutches, I answer as I walk up to his small desk, âMy friend said I could use some fun.â Which is sad to say out loud, now that I think about it. âI just didnât know that was her idea of fun. It really wasnât. Fun, I mean.â
He gruntsâwas that a grunt?âunder his breath and adds nothing else. Okay, then.
Before he inevitably dismisses me, my eyes dart to the small pile of books on his desk. Most volumes have boring titles with words such as âphysiologyâ and âfibromyalgia,â which Iâm sure are fascinating for the professionals in the field, but they donât catch my attention.
However, that one mandala coloring book sure does.
âI didnât know you liked mandalas,â I blurt out in a hopeless attempt at changing the topic.
It doesnât work.
âWhy would you? I didnât put that information on my dating profile.â
What. The. Hell.
âRelax.â He eyes me carefully from behind his glasses. âIâm just messing with you.â
Him? Messing with me?
I clear my throat, unsure of what to say now. Luckily, he makes that choice for me. âIâll see you tomorrow. Your ankle is recovering as expected, so keep resting.â
I donât know if thatâs a jab or not. After all, he knows I havenât been properly resting my ankle. He saw me at Monicaâs Pub, which neither of us seems to want to bring up for whatever reason. Works for meâIâve suffered enough embarrassment to last me a whole decade.
But I still ask, âAre you sure itâs fine? Iâm really sorry if I crossed any boundaries.â
His deep voice sounds seriousâand tiredâwhen he says, âMiss Stevens, itâs okay. Stop apologizing.â
I swallow. âAll right. Well, I⦠Iâll see you tomorrow.â I give him a small smile and turn around, heading for the exit.
Iâm pretty sure my mind is playing cruel tricks on me, because I swear I feel his scorching stare on my back the whole time.