Chapter 11
Learning Curve
Scottie
The concrete steps of the pedestrian court in front of Beckley Theatre chafe at my bare thighs as I look up into the streetlight so Kayla can grab the eyelash thatâs worked its way into the corner of my eye.
We walked while I cried for thirty minutes or so, and then Julia suggested we sit down somewhere we recognized so we didnât end up lost. It was a good idea. Iâve hardly spent any time on the east side of campus so far, and being this close to the football stadium will make it easy to find my way back to my dorm when I can get it together.
All my smoky makeup is caked beneath my eyes instead of on themâI can feel itâbut Julia and Kayla have been nice enough not to mention it.
My breath comes out in a stuttered puff, the tail end of my sobs turning into uncontrollable shaking. Julia wraps an arm around me and rubs just as Kayla gets the offending lash.
âGot it!â she cheers, holding it up in front of me on her finger.
I laugh sardonically. âI think itâs a little late to make a wish on it, though.â
âI know youâre upset,â Julia says softly, squeezing at my bicep. âAnd you deserve to be after what happened back there.â Kayla nods in solidarity. âBut I promise you, the only one who looks stupid is Dane. Outing all your business in front of everyone like that?â She shakes her head. âAfter being so rough with you in public?â She leans her head into my shoulder and hugs me. âYou deserve so much better than that, and there wasnât a single person at that party besides Dane and Nadine who couldnât see it.â
Embarrassment sits on my lungs, heavy and all-encompassing, and it suddenly feels hard to breathe again.
I have two years of history with Dane, but with the way heâs been acting since we got to Dickson, all the history is starting to feel like it never even existed. It makes me wonder if my memories are clouded by rose-colored glasses.
Has he always been this way, and I just wasnât letting myself see it? Or has he really changed into someone I donât even recognize?
I let myself think of high school and the way things used to be. âHe wasnât like this,â I hedge carefully when the barrage of everything our relationship used to be makes me feel a little less crazy. I donât want to defend him nowâhis behavior is unacceptableâbut once upon a time, I loved Dane for a reason. âI know most people say that because they were ignoring the red flags, but I swear, for the first year we dated, our junior year, he was so patient and kind. He brought me flowers to school every day, even when his mom had to take him to get them because he hadnât gotten his license yet, and he liked that I applied myself in my classes. He used to joke that he was going to be a house husband while I ran the world.â I shake my head as fresh tears form in the corners of my eyes and threaten to fall. âI donât know what happened.â
Kayla shrugs in front of me, grabbing my knee and squeezing. âYou outgrew him, and I think he knows that.â
Julia nods. âIf he belittles you, he thinks itâll make you slow down. But Scottie, you donât deserve to slow down for anybody. The right guyâll ride a rocket to the moon if youâre inside it, you know?â
I nod. Theyâre right. And I know it. I just canât believe it all had to happen this way.
âYou guys, Iâm going to be okay.â I stand from my spot on the steps and brush off the back of my dress. âYou can go back to the party.â
âAre you sure?â Kayla asks, standing up in front of me and dabbing at the mess on my face one more time.
I nod.
But Julia eyes me with concern.
âI promise. Iâm okay,â I say, my words only a little more resolute than Iâm feeling. âItâs time for the whole thing with Dane to come to an end. Iâm tired of trying to find a way to fix him. Iâm tired of giving him the benefit of the doubt. Iâm justâ¦tired. But no conversation is going to happen tonight, so for now, I just need to climb under my covers and rest.â
A girl should feel safe and protected and loved by her boyfriend. Not like sheâs walking on eggshells all the time out of fear sheâs going to do or say something that will upset him.
âHeâs an asshole,â I say out loud. Kaylaâs and Juliaâs eyes go wide, but they also both nod. âNo matter who he used to be, now, heâs, like, a really huge asshole,â I add. âThe other night, I was scrolling through TikTok, and this girl on my FYP was talking about how her ex was a narcissist, and everything she was describing is exactly what Dane does to me. Do you think heâs a narcissist?â
âGirl, Iâm certain he is,â Kayla comments without hesitation. âHeâs always gaslighting you. Always doing whatever he can to make you feel bad. Heâs a dick. A total fucking dick. And with the way he acted tonight, it honestly makes me worried for you.â
âDo you think the same thing?â I look at Julia. âI mean, this was the first time you met himâ¦â
Julia nods. âMy dad is like the chillest, most understanding guy on the planet, but if he found out a guy I was dating was treating me like that, I honestly think heâd end up in prison on murder charges.â
âSo, itâs just as bad as I think it is.â I cringe. âGood thing youâre dating a guy like Ace. He seems like a real character, but also, a total sweetheart.â
âOh, hell no.â Julia laughs. âIâm not dating Ace. Heâs legit just a friend.â
âWhat?â Kayla whips her head toward Julia. âSeriously?â
âIâve known Ace my whole life. Weâre just friends.â
âAre you sure?â Kayla questions. âBecause I thought you two were together.â
âHoly moly! Yes, Iâm sure!â Julia exclaims on another laugh. âAce and I arenât like that. Weâre just good buddies.â
Both Kayla and I share a look, and Julia doesnât miss it.
âStop it right now,â she says through a snort. âWe are just friends. Period. End of story.â
âOkay.â Kayla grins. âYouâre just friends. But when you end up marrying him, Iâm going to remind you of this conversation.â
Julia snorts. âYouâre insane.â
A yawn makes my mouth gape and my cheeks shake, and Kayla gives my shoulders a squeeze. âYou sure you donât want us to hang out with you tonight?â
âIâm positive.â I pull her in for a hug. Then, I do the same to Julia. âYou guys are the best. Thank you for taking care of me. Iâll talk to you tomorrow.â
âOh wait!â Julia says and pulls out her phone. âI need your digits, girl.â
It doesnât take long before we both have each otherâs numbers, and Iâm heading back to my dorm while they go the other direction, back toward Sorority Row.
The walk to Delaney, the girlsâ dorm, is a short trek through Wheaton, where the teachersâ offices are, and then a quick jog across Broadway. There are people everywhere, despite the fact that itâs late, and I feel surprisingly safe even though Iâm by myself.
The door on the Broadway side doesnât have a key scanner to get in when the doors are lockedâa fun little fact I forgotâso I round the corner onto 116th Street to go in the entrance at the end of the building. I dig in my bag for my key for a full minute before finally finding it, and unfortunately, by the time I look up, thereâs no time to turn around.
Dane. Heâs sitting on the steps in front of the door, hard eyes on me as I approach.
âWhere the hell did you go?â he questions, his mouth set in a firm line. He stumbles to his feet just as I reach the first step. âIâve been waiting for you here for hours.â
I know for a fact that it hasnât been hoursâitâs only been a little more than an hour since I left the party altogether. Heâs just too drunk from all the alcohol heâs consumed tonightâI can still smell it wafting off himâto have any real concept of time.
âI donât want to talk to you right now.â
âScottie, donât be like that. Let me come up.â
âNo.â I shake my head, and when he tries to grab my hand, I yank it away from him.
âWhat the fuck, babe?â he questions and steps closer to me. âJust let me come up.â
I crowd the door, but I donât unlock it yet. âGood night, Dane.â I donât know what I think heâll doâif heâll rush the door and overtake me or somethingâbut heâs been just unpredictable enough tonight for me to question it.
âWhy are you being such a bitch?â
The tension in my shoulders and the knot in my stomach tighten like vises. Iâm stretched to the max capacity, my heart feeling like itâll jump outside of my chest at any moment from pure desperation, and his words are my tenuous holdâs undoing. This conversation should be happening tomorrow, when heâs sobered up, but I canât do this anymore.
I need finality now.
âDane, itâs over.â The words are harder to choke out than I expect. Thereâs so much history, so much heart between us. But more than that, in this moment, thereâs fear. A whole hell of a lot of it.
And thatâs a giant red flag. I wonât allow myself to ignore it.
âWhat did you just say?â
I swallow hard. âI said, itâs over.â
âYouâre breaking up with me?â
I nod.
âYouâre breaking up with me?â he questions again, a scoff leaving his lips. âWow, Scottie. How fucking pathetic are you?â
I shake my head. Itâs so disappointing to watch someone you once loved become so cheaply callous. âGoodbye, Dane.â
âSo, thatâs it? Two years together and thatâs all youâre going to say?â
With the way heâs treated me for the last month and a half, I donât know where he finds the audacity to be sentimental about all the time weâve spent together, but it does strike a nerve. I donât want it to, but it does. âWe arenât who we used to be, Dane. Either of us. You crossed a huge line tonight, and regardless of the past, Iâm unwilling to let it happen again. I canât be with you.â
âYouâre such a bitch, Scottie.â A maniacal laugh jumps from his lungs. He steps closer to me, and for the first time, real dread sends a chill down my spine and into a tingle in my toes. His previously mellow eyes are a harsh storm of malice, and I donât know what heâs going to do next.
âEverything okay here?â an uncharacteristically strong female voice asks. I look around Daneâs imposing body to see the source. Itâs a girl from my dorm, obviously coming home for the night. Sheâs got copper-red hair and fairylike features, but I swear the tone of her voice made her sound six feet tall. Iâve never met her, but Iâve seen her around.
âEverythingâs fine,â Dane slurs. âMind your business.â
The girl looks at me for a real answer, and I know by the way my teeth are chattering that my smile is shaky at best.
She reaches out to grab my hand, boldly putting her body between Dane and me. âReady to call it a night?â Sheâs asking, but sheâs not asking. We havenât stopped moving since she gripped me.
I donât dare look over my shoulder to see what Dane is doing. Instead, I clutch her hand probably way too tightly as she unlocks the entrance door with her keycard and puts herself between me and Dane.
As soon as weâre inside, she slams the door closed with a click.
Dane stands there staring at me through the glass, but she doesnât let me be a part of it for long, dragging me up the stairs a flight and out of sight.
âYou going to be okay?â she asks when we stop. Her honey eyes are so sincere, I canât stop myself. I reach out to pull her into an abrupt hug. She gives me more than I can ask for by squeezing me back.
âThank you,â I whisper into her ear. âJustâ¦thank you.â
When we pull away, she wipes a tear I didnât even realize Iâd shed from my cheek with the edge of her sweatshirt sleeve. âIs that guy your boyfriend?â
I shake my head. âNot anymore.â The words donât quite feel real, but they do feel right.
âGood,â she says. âIâm Carrie, by the way.â
âScottie.â
Her smile pulls down at the corners of her long-lashed eyes. âI hope to see you around under better circumstances.â
I nod. âMe too.â
âIf youâre good now, though, Iâm headed to bed. Iâm exhausted.â
I crack a smile of my ownâa real one. âMe too.â
With one last wave, Carrie climbs to the third floor before dipping through the stairwell door to head to her room. I stay on the second so I can make a stop at one of the vending machines. Iâm on the fifth floor, and vending is only on the even numbers.
I grab a bag of pretzels and some M&Ms and then jog up the three remaining floors of stairs, practically sprint down the hallway, and lock myself in my dorm room. Tonight, of all nights, Iâm thankful that I donât have a roommate. I was supposed to, but according to my RA, the girl backed out of admission right before move-in day. All the other girls of Delaney are stuck sharing their space and their toilets with other girls. I have to go to the communal bathroom for showers, but I at least have my half bath to myself.
Itâs not long before Iâm under my comforter, eating my pretzel and M&Ms mix from a bowl, and scrolling mindlessly on my phone.
With the weight of the evening, stupid internet content seems like the only way to shut my mind off enough to be able to sleep.
Itâs only when I close out all my apps to finally give in to exhaustion that I see the little red number two on my messages icon. I open it immediately, hoping itâs not Dane.
The first is from Wren, babbling about some movie scene starring Glen Powell, which Iâm sure will seem more worthwhile tomorrow.
But the other is from an unknown number and makes me sit up in bed with a scoot, turn on my bedside lamp, and put on my glasses.
Are you okay? Itâs Finn.
Finn. Holy shit. My heart pounds furiously inside my chest, tripping on itself every time I try to take a breath. My hands shake as I program his number into my phone and try to find the right words to say back.
Me: Yeah, Iâm okay.
Itâs a ridiculously simple message that makes me roll my eyes, but itâs the best I can come up with under this kind of duress. My head is still spinning from the whole freaking night. Not to mention, he texted this a while ago, so who even knows if heâll text baâ
Finn: I know you have friends, but if youâre ever looking for someone you can come to when things get bad, you can come to me.
Me: When things get bad?
Finn: Scottie, your boyfriend shouldnât treat you like that.
Me: I guess itâs a good thing heâs not my boyfriend anymore, then.
Finn: Youâre done?
Me: He showed up at my dorm tonight after everything. I broke up with him.
Finn: Okay, then. Good.
Okay? Good? Thatâs it? I bounce up and down in my bed, shaking my hands in a silent scream. Where the hell am I supposed to go from here? I can only think of one thing to say, and it feels unbearably pathetic. Desperate, I send it anyway.
Me: I guess Iâll see you in class, then?
Finn: Yep.
Yep. Gah, why are boys so hard to understand? Is he just a short texter? Is he over it? What the hell is he thinking?
I take a deep breath in and close my eyes to calm down. Scottie, you need to chill.
Right. Well. Okay. I mean, whatever. At this stage of the game, I need to focus on myself anyway. Dane and I have been together for the majority of my transition to adulthood. Half the time, Iâm not even sure I know who I am anymore.
For now, I need to think about me, so Finn Hayesâs text messages and what they may or may not mean donât matter anyway.
Right?
Right.
Me: Goodnight, Finn.
Finn: Goodnight, Scottie.