My fingers start to hurt just as the sun starts to rise. I finally put down the charcoal when the first colors come in the window, soft and golden. I drink a cup of water and listen to people using the toilet down the hall, the sounds of Leonard shuffling to the porch to drink coffee out of his pink mug.
My head is bursting from the beer. My eyes hurt and my mouth tastes terrible. Iâm grateful that I donât have to be back at True Grit for two more days. I peel off my clothes and sink to the futon and fall into a deep sleep.
â
When I wake up, itâs the afternoon, and my room is sweltering hot. I made it through the night, but Iâm still jittery and tense. I want to talk to someone, but the only person I know is Mikey, and now Iâve probably ruined that. I decide to go to the library and email Casper. Like, maybe I should tell her Iâve failed, now, by drinking, by throwing myself at Mikey.
Outside, the heat is stifling already, but I donât want to not wear my overalls because I feel more comfortable, protected, somehow, with them on. I go back into the apartment building and knock on Leonardâs door. He lends me a pair of scissors without a word. Upstairs, I cut a couple of pairs of overalls off at the knee. That way, I might be cooler, but my thighs are still hidden.
Iâm sweating profusely by the time I get to the library. Everyone else seems so cool, even in this heat. Maybe Iâll get used to it after a while. Thereâs a thermometer outside the library. Ninety-seven degrees and not a cloud in sight.
I log on. I reply to Blue first, because I know sheâll know how I feel, exactly.
I wait, stupidly, like sheâs going to respond right away. Of course she canâtâsheâll have to wait to sneak a turn at the computer and who knows when that will happen. But just writing it eases something in me.
And then I write to Casper, because I should tell her what I did. I tell her I drank three beers, that I tried to kiss Mikey, that I did kiss Mikey, and that he didnât like it. But I also tell her I didnât cut, even though not cutting made me exhausted.
I press Send. I just sit at the terminal for a little while, watching the people in the library. The longer I sit and watch them as they pick books, whisper on their phones, fall asleep in chairs, the more lonely I feel, the more weighted down inside. Everyone seems to have a grip on life but me. When is anything going to get better?
Mikey is waiting on the front steps of the building when I get back, a grocery sack next to him on the top step. I panic a little and start to walk past him, but he pulls the buds from his ears and grabs my hand.
He says, âHey. Charlie. Donât do this shit, okay? Sit down.â
I drop down heavily, avoiding his eyes, trying to block out the scent of him, the nearness.
Down the block, the line outside the plasma bank moves like a slow snake. I wipe sweat from my forehead self-consciously. I bet Bunny never sweats.
âHey, look what I brought for you.â Mikey parts the top of the grocery sack so I can see whatâs inside: a loaf of bread, a jar of peanut butter, an apple, and an orange. I sigh. Iâm so sick of peanut butter.
I pull out the apple, rub my thumbs over its shininess. âThank you,â I say softly.
He clears his throat. âWhat happened, that canât happen again. That wasâ¦not good. Kissing.â
A stinging, a tightening in my chest. Angrily, I say, âYou kissed back, you know, before youâ¦didnât.â
âAnd you drank. I tasted the beer. You promised.â
âIâm sorry.â Itâs a whisper, spoken to the sidewalk.
âIs that the only thing youâve had to drink since youâve been here?â
âYes.â
âAre you sure?â
âYes. Yes!â
He sighs. âCharlie, do you know why I decided to go to college all the way out here? You and Ellis were exhausting. Your little games with each other, with me, that shit tired me out. Did you ever realize that? Probably not. You two were so wrapped up in yourselves.â
âYou came to the hospital. You said you didnât want me to die. I just thoughtâ¦â My voice cracks. I press my head against my knees to block him out. I want to cry all over again. I thought, I thought? What did I think? That Mikey would like me, dumb little me?
âOf course I donât want you to die! I never want you to die. Youâre my friend. But I didnât mean that Iâ¦that weâ¦â
Mikey goes silent. After a while he says, âThis is what it is, Charlie. Iâm here, but Iâm with somebody. Iâve moved forward. Coming out here really changed something for me. Iâve moved on. I made goals for myself. I want to help you get better, and I will, but I can only help you if you want to be helped.â
I lift up my head, blinking in the daylight. Mikey looks at me head-on.
âOkay?â he asks. He takes my hand. âAre we okay?â
What else am I supposed to say? âOkay,â I answer. âOkay.â
He stands up, all business, pulling me with him. The apple tumbles off my lap. Like the good person he is, he jogs down to the sidewalk to get it.