I know better, I do.
I know I canât ask a guy who remains uncertain about commitment where we stand when Iâm moving, and I wouldnât have the guts to do it anyway. But that doesnât stop me from hoping heâll bring it up.
I mention Kansas every once in a while, as if the reminder Iâm leaving will jolt him into action. And it never does, not once. Yet I keep trying.
âThai food back home tastes nothing like this,â I tell him one night as we share red curry chicken and drunken noodles on his back deck. âItâs closer to paprika sprinkled over a chicken pot pie.â
This isnât entirely true. I mostly say it in order to mention home, the place Iâm returning to very, very soon. As if heâs going to say speaking of home, letâs talk about how we can continue this when weâre far apart.
âIâm surprised you even have Thai food in Kansas,â he says instead.
âYou act like I live in Siberia. Iâm ten minutes from a college town.â And a small airport. âOf course we do.â
âYouâre there a lot, then,â he says. Thereâs something hard and certain in his voice that makes it feel as if heâs saying another thing entirely, but I have no idea what it is. He pushes his plate aside, the food barely touched, and pours himself a glass of wine.
âIs something wrong?â I ask.
His eyes have gone almost black in the dim light. âItâs still unclear to me why all of this is falling on you. Youâve paid for everything. Why canât your sister step up?â
âLiddie has a kid and a husband in another state. Iâm the only one of us whoâs unencumbered.â
He stiffens but doesnât argue. Weâve only been together a few weeks, with not a word about commitment spoken, so Iâm certainly not encumbered by him.
âThey seem very happy to let every ounce of the weight fall on your shoulders, Tali,â he says quietly. âI guess what Iâm wondering is why you never object to it.â
I feel a pinch of frustration. Itâs as if heâs blaming me for being mature about a situation I canât really control in the first place. âWhat good would it do to object?â I argue. âCharlotte and my mom are both pretty fucked up by my dadâs death and need help. End of story.â
âAnd you werenât?â he asks. âI see the way your face falls whenever I bring up your father.â
âI wish you werenât ruining our nice night by bringing it up now. Why do I feel like you want a fight?â
His jaw tenses. âI donât. It seems like youâre leaving something out.â
He doesnât understand because he doesnât really have a family. Neither of his parents have shown him much in the way of loyalty or obligation. And when I leave here, heâll be alone again. That, of all this, is hardest for me. He will probably fill my seat with a thousand Angelas and Savannahs and Nicoles, but I know they wonât care about him the way I do. I know they wonât fill him the way I do, but Iâm not sure he really sees the difference.
We are silent for a minute, him sipping his wine, me pushing around my food while I worry about him.
âLetâs go away this weekend,â he says suddenly. âIâll do the planning.â
My mouth falls open. I can think of nothing Iâd like more. And then I smile like an absolute lovesick loon. âWhat are we going to do?â
âItâs a surprise,â he says. And for the first time since this conversation began, the light returns to his eyes.
âWhere do you think youâre going?â Drew asks me breathlessly over breakfast in her cottage at the Chateau Marmontâwhich is far more 1950s traditional than celebrity luxe, but at least the food is good.
âI have no idea,â I sigh, digging into my omelet. Iâve begged, cajoled, attempted to barter. Iâve walked in on whispered phone calls to Jonathan and Ben, seen papers couriered to the house. Itâs a whole new side of himâa playful, doting sideâand I adore it, even if the mystery is driving me crazy.
âItâs sweet, though,â Drew says. âThat he wants to surprise you. I just want Six to invite me somewhere. He doesnât even have to surprise me.â
âI thought we agreed you were going to go out and meet someone else and have an amazing time?â
âI canât!â she cries. âWhoâs going to go out with me, looking like this?â Sheâs convinced sheâs gained weight, which is why weâre hiding out in her cottageâotherwise there will be the inevitable photos, accompanied by a story implying sheâs broken-hearted. Worse this time, she says, because itâs true.
âAnyone in the sane world would go out with you,â I reply. âYouâre gorgeous.â
She grabs a croissant and tears off a piece. âNot according to my manager. He wanted me to lose five pounds before my tour, and now Iâve gained five instead.â
I set my fork down. Drew seems to surround herself with people who are awful to her, who say the worst things to her with absolute impunity, things that arenât even true, and she believes every one of them. âYou donât need to lose weight. You do need to fire that manager, however.â
She shrugs. âHe wouldnât say it if it wasnât true. Itâs fine. Iâll go on an all-cocaine diet for the next week and the weight will come right off.â Her eyes light up, suddenly. âMaybe heâs going to tell you he loves you this weekend!â
âI donât think you need a lawyer for that.â I still have no idea why Benâs involved.
Her eyes grow wide. âMaybe heâs going to propose. Itâs a prenup!â
I force a smile. âWeâre only a few weeks past âoh good, you got the vomit out of the dressâ. I seriously doubt itâs anything like youâre thinking.â
And it would need to be, wouldnât it, to have this all work out?