Chapter 67
Learning Curve
Friday February 7th
Scottie
I zip up my coat and walk out the doors of Brower into the dark, frigid wind with my cheerleading duffel and a bag full of sustenanceâsnacks in every formâin hand.
As the second month of the semester starts up, Iâm finally starting to find a rhythm. Itâs clunky and well offbeat, but I donât spend every second of my life locked away in my dorm either.
As the whispers have dulled, Iâve found the strength to go back to class, and my performance at cheerleading practice is getting back up to snuff. With NCA Nationals coming up and my alternate expelled out of the picture, Coach Jordan has been on the brink of a breakdown, waiting for the old, capable me to show back up.
Tonightâs practice was the first time she didnât make herself hoarse from screaming at me to get it together.
But missing nearly three full weeksâ worth of classes has taken a toll. I have two quizzes to make up in calculus, an essay on abstract expressionism to write for art history, and about three hundred pages of reading in Anna Karenina for English Lit to catch up onâand not a whole hell of a lot of time in which to do it.
Julia and Kayla have been champs, though, checking in and getting notes from my classes without request or complaint. Considering we donât have a lot of classes together, I know it took a serious amount of coordination, and itâs the one thing thatâs been keeping me afloat.
Thankfully, we have this weekend off from cheerleading, so Iâll have a full two days to get as caught up on everything as I can.
Once Iâm back in my dorm, I take a quick shower to wash away the practice sweat and plop down on my futon with my bag of snacks and another cup of hot chocolate thatâs been left anonymously at my door.
Itâs funny how when I first got here, I longed for the friendships I left upstate. Now, I know that these are the formative yearsâthe ones that create friends for a lifetime. Iâll never forget this group of people and the way theyâve stepped up for me, even at my lowest of lows.
I put Perfect Matchâmy new reality show that Iâm watching but not watchingâon in the background and grab my copy of Anna Karenina.
While everyone else is going out for the night, Iâm tucking in. I donât have even the slightest interest in going back to sorority and frat rowâeven if Delta Omega did lose their charter over the whole incidentâand the Double C event I got a text for will be swarming with the kind of company Iâm trying to avoid.
The social media notifications have calmed down, but the sex heard âround the world has hardly disappeared entirely. Kaylaâs been insistent that people donât actually blame me for any of itâeven the sorority getting shut downâbut I find that hard to believe. She and Julia have both been coddling me too hard to ruin it by telling the harsh truth.
I flip to page ten of Anna Karenina and will myself to concentrate. Itâs not going to do me any good to read it without paying attention.
Just as Iâm finishing the thought, an ironically distracting knock pounds on my door, and I shake my head with a laugh. âWell, then. Maybe old Annaâs not meant to be right now.â
Familiar voices outside are a comfort as I climb to my feet and open it.
âHey, girl,â Julia greets as Kayla pushes inside with a pizza box and makes herself at home.
âYou got any paper plates?â Kayla asks, and Julia flashes me a little grin.
âKay is starving, so she doesnât have time for pleasantries.â
âYes!â Kayla exclaims, already opening the pizza box to grab a slice. âIâm starving, and after that practice this afternoon, I know you have to be hungry too, Scottie.â
I shrug. My appetite isnât exactly back to normal, but I know it wonât ever be if I donât make myself start eating regularly again.
âSoâ¦uh⦠Iâm happy you guys stopped by, but, like, whatâs the plan?â I ask as Julia and Kayla get comfortable. âYou going out after this?â
âNo way,â Julia answers around a mouthful of cheese and sauce. âWeâre here for a girlsâ night sleepover.â
âItâs been flipping years since Iâve had a sleepover,â Kayla comments and pops the tab on a soda she got from my fridge. âDid you guys have sleepovers when you were growing up?â
âAll the time,â Julia comments. âUp until I was about eight, I even used to have sleepovers with Ace.â
âYou guys have the strangest relationship,â Kayla responds, making Juliaâs head explode. I canât blame her, honestly, with the number of times sheâs gone over this.
âI donât know why everyone keeps saying that! Ace and I are best friends, and weâve known each other our whole lives. Everything about us is normalllll.â
Kayla looks over at me to garner support, but when she realizes Iâm still hovering by the door, she frowns. âWhatâs wrong?â
âNothing.â I shake my head and stare at my feet, trying to gather the courage to say it out loud. âItâs just thatâ¦â I pause and lift my gaze to meet theirs. âYou guys really donât need to keep babying me, you know?â
âBabying you?â Julia asks, confusion evident in her voice. âWhat are you talking about?â
âMaking sure I have all of my notes, leaving me hot chocolate every night, dropping off dinner and snacks,â I list off everything theyâve been doing over the past month. âThe old-school Discman with burned CDs with very specific playlists. I appreciate it all, and Iâll admit, the âI want to break shitâ playlist has really gotten me through some rough days, but itâs not necessary anymore. Iâm doing okay. Almost good, even. You donât have to keep going out of your way for me. Okay?â
âUmâ¦Scottie?â Julia ventures, her eyes darting to Kayla and back to me. âThat wasnât us.â
I furrow my brow. âWhat?â
âThat was Finn,â Kayla answers. âI mean, we helped him with a few things, like getting notes from some of your classes when he couldnât make it to that part of campus, but it was all his doing.â
Everything has been Finn this whole time?
âHeâs been really worried about you,â Julia says, her voice soft. âI know you guys have had your moments in the past, but Ace says Finnâs officially in his emotionally healthy era.â She rolls her eyes and laughs. âI mean, you know Ace, heâs dramatic, but every time Iâve seen Finn this semester, he has seemed different. Steady, you know?â
My body feels warm, my hands tingly. The idea of an emotionally stable Finn Hayes isâ¦overwhelming. And frankly, seems a little too good to be true.
âAgain, itâs none of my business, and I know thereâs been some shit thatâs gone down between the two of you,â Julia says, and her eyes lock with mine. âBut when a guy is willing to do the kinds of things heâs been doing for you, I think he might be worth talking to.â
I canât say I disagree with her. Heâs always been special, and I love him for a reason. But my heart canât take another U-turn. I wonât survive it.