Unloved: Chapter 17
Unloved: A Novel (The Undone)
Roâs hand feels warm, soft, and delicate in mine. I donât want to let go.
âTake Careâ by Beach House plays through my speakers that desperately need some love and care. Iâve brought us to a park between downtown Waterfell and the dorms, refusing to take her home just yet.
Sheâs eaten half of the first pizza. Iâm not hungry, but I watch her nearly soak her pizza crusts in garlic butter and savor them most. Her tears have stopped now, but the pain is still thereâburied under marinara, cheese, and a desperate need to make me smile.
This I know because she keeps peeking up at me with the same grin I give when Iâm trying to decipher if someone is upset. If I need to please them somehow, to make it better.
I want to ask her what happened. Instead, I offer, âDo you want to watch something?â Because I canât take another gentle glance from her like sheâs done something wrong. I fumble for my phone, setting it up like I have a thousand times on my dashâa perfect, precarious balance. âDo you want to watch your movie?â
âMy movie?â she asks, brows furrowed and mouth full enough that the words mush together, almost incomprehensible. Her blush is immediate as she chewsâmouth sealed tightâand swallows.
âYeah,â I laugh, pulling up one of my streaming apps;
is already queued. âI downloaded it for my next away game. Figured I could watch it on the bus. I fell asleep the other night, so I didnât finish it.â
Hazel eyes alight on mine, more steadily than they have all night, and I feel a wave of deep relief at the beautiful sight. She grins as the opening starts playing, watching it as intently as I am watch-ing her.
After a few minutes, Iâm sucked into the story easilyâa princess story for the girl Iâll always call princess feels almost too perfect.
âDo you have a comfort movie?â she asks quietly, as if weâre in a movie theater and sheâs afraid to speak too loudly and disturb the other patrons.
I consider her question for a moment but shake my head, resting my elbow on the center console so our arms touch. âNot really. I mainly watch YouTube videosâI like .â I donât say that I watch them all the time, often to fall asleep or when I first wake up; it weirdly makes me feel not so alone.
âBut,â I say, my mouth moving before I can even about what Iâm saying. âMy mom loved . It always made her feel better. We used to watch it all the time, especially when sheââ
My words fall away and I drop my gaze, pulling my arm back from the comfort of her skin to run a hand through my hair and scratch the back of my neck. Eyes burning slightly, I swallow hard against the press of emotions.
âAre⦠you okay?â
Sheâs hesitant in asking. My stomach somersaults again before I nod.
âYeah, sorry. Iââ Clearing my throat again feels like a stall tactic, but my voice is stuck to the back of my throat, hoarse and scratchy.
âMy mom died,â I say, then rush to continue with my usual, âbut it was like four years ago. And Iâm fine now, so itâs okay.â Every word is more placating than the last.
The truth is that some days I barely feel anything, if I even think about it. And some days it hurts like she died .
Roâs eyes watch me again with the same intensity sheâs always had that makes me feel stripped bare, vulnerable. âItâs okay to miss her, you know. And to cry about it. I cry about missing my parents all the time, and theyâre just far away.â
Her words feel like a hug and I lean into it, meeting her gaze with my reddened eyes, not trying to hide or joke around this moment.
âYeah?â
âYeah.â She nods before biting down on her plush bottom lip and fiddling with a curl, one of her nervous tells. âDo you ever get lonely?â
A disbelieving laugh bursts from me before I can help it, but I nod and smile at her. âAll the fucking time.â
âYeah?â She asks it this time.
âYeah.â
âItâsâ I love Sadie, sheâs my best friend,â she says, words flowing as her comfort level grows. âBut sheâs my only friend and⦠and sheâs busy, a lot. She has a lot going on.â Her voice fades slightly, and a bolt of irritation with the figure skater rouses me yet againâfor Rhys and for Ro. âI donât see her as much when sheâs busy, and last semester I barely saw her at all. Itâs not her fault.â
, I want to argue, but I bite down on my tongue.
âSo.â She shrugs. âSometimes I canât help feeling really, really alone.â A huff of laughter finishes the statement, but thereâs not a drop of humor in it.
âIâll be your friend, Ro,â I say. âI want you to see me as your friend.â
âIâd like that, Matt.â
She smiles, small and gentle, and I feel another layer of care and protectiveness reach out from me to her.
not because of being on the same hockey team or some kind of trade-off.
Just my friend, because she to be.
Arguably, I enjoy my friendsâ birthdays more than my own. And today is Rhysâs birthday.
We decided last week on a more low-key party at our beloved Hockey House, inviting the team and some close friends. I even splurged on the fancy local IPA bottles so Bennett would be enticed to drink, which has paid off considering heâs on his third and smiling across from me in spite of the mess in his beloved kitchen.
The problem, it turns out, isnât our beloved goalieâs usually surly nature. Itâs the deeply felt absence of the pain-in-my-ass figure skater.
Rhys informed us both last week that he invited Sadie. His smile was obnoxiously big, dimples gleaming as he confessed that he âdidnât careâ who we invited or what we wanted to doâjust that Sadie was coming. It was all that seemed to matter to him, which only raised my apprehension tenfold.
We try playing a few drinking games, but Rhys is distracted the entire time, eyes lighting up every time the door opens, and going dark as soon as it Sadie.
Even Paloma makes an appearance, wishing Rhys a quick âhappy birthdayâ before joining Holden and a few of the second line playing Kingâs Cup in the living room, which Bennett surprisingly joins as well.
Meanwhile I tryâand mostly failâto entertain Rhys. Several girls flirt with our handsome captain, but he wonât even look at one of them, eyes trained on the door. Itâs hard not to drop a snarky comment or two about the missing figure skater, but I can see it hurts Rhysâs feelings more, so I try to tamp them down.
âActually,â he finally says, with a smile so fake itâs half cracked. âI think Iâm gonna go up. I just⦠Iâm tired and my head is killing me.â
Heâs done this a few times now. Itâs frustrating because he uses the injury that he wonât actually talk about so we donât press him on whatever the issue isâand he talk about whateverâs going on with Sadie.
Meanwhile, my anger toward the girl only grows with every hesitant step my captain takes up the stairs, eyes over his shoulder.
Itâs late now; most of the party has headed downtown or dispersed. Holden and Bennett are back at my sideâthe latter looking more relaxed than Iâve seen him in a while, a light smile on his lips as he cracks open a beer. I canât seem to muster the same peace or joyâI feel like an utter disappointment. Rhys is upstairs, miserable and hurting over a girl I couldâve warned him about at that very first party. Heâs in too deep now.
Iâm about to bother Bennett about the entire situation when someone steps into our kitchen with clicking heels.
Sadie Brownâin a very short dress, a big leather jacket, and tall black heeled boots, with her signature dark red lipsâis two hours late.
âFreddy.â She nods. âHeyâhave you guys seen Rhys?â
âLook who finally decided to show,â I say, finishing the shot Holdenâs poured into my cup. âA little late for him, actually.â
She looks upset, and my stomach lurches a little, like Iâve done something wrong. But I shake that thought from my head quicklyâ
I give Bennett a quick once-over. Heâs uncomfortable, his smile gone completely as he hunches massive shoulders over the table, avoiding both Sadieâs and my glances.
âI know Iâm late,â she says, her voice shaking a bit. âBut I need to talk with him.â
âNot happening,â I snap, more harshly than I mean to. âGet out.â
âFreddy.â Bennett finally breaks, sounding frustrated, hardened. He looks at Sadieâsomething like sympathy or deep understanding flickering in his blue eyes. It only ignites my frustration further, as if the one who doesnât understand. The outsider. The broken, left-out other to the Bennett-Rhys-and-now-Sadie triad.
âNo.â I crush the cup in my hand, fury flushing through my blood. I toss it into the trash can, narrowed eyes never leaving Sadie. The words I want to say to her are all jumbled in my head. I want to yell and rage over her friendship with Ro as much as I want to erupt on her about Rhys.
I may not know Sadie, but I know of herâespecially last year. Every single party I attended, she was there. And never alone; she even showed up with Paloma a few times, but she always found what she wantedâalcohol, an athlete, and a quick romp in the bathroom. Itâs not judgment of her that makes me disapprove of her with Rhys. Itâs the fact that I Rhys couldnât do a one-night stand if he tried. Friends with benefits donât exist for Rhys. Heâs an all-or-nothing kind of guy, and I admire him for it.
The same way I admire Ro, her devotion to her friendships that becomes more apparent with every interaction we have. And I canât help but want to tuck them both away from Sadie where she canât hurt them.
I stomp out the threatening voice inside before turning to Bennett instead of the small figure skater in our kitchen entryway.
âYou saw him, Reiner. He stared at the fucking door all night waiting for her.â I barely give him time to speak before Iâm back to Sadieâthe slight leash on my anger disappearing. âYouâve already hurt him once tonight. Considering your track record, I think itâd be better if I stop you now.â
Each word seems to hit her like a slap, but I canât stop myself. Itâs like acid, burning my throat as I push it all out.
âYou donât give a shit about him.â
The room feels too quietâeven with the music trilling through our speaker system. Still, thereâs a cold flush to my skin now. I feel hollow.
âIf I didnât give a shit about him, Freddy, I think youâd know. But this isnât like last semester. And Rhys is⦠different.â
I roll my eyes and mumble sarcastically beneath my breath, which seems only to set off the mini volcano that is Sadie Brown.
âI love sex as much as you do, , and thatâs not a fucking crime just because Iâm a girl. But I guarantee I care more about Rhys than youâve ever cared about a girl you put your dick in.â
Each word hits like an arrow, finding her intended target until Iâm bleeding out.
friends âHeâs in his room,â Bennett finally says, but his words sound garbled and distant in my ears. She takes off, a desperation to her movements that makes me feel like I may have crossed a line.
âLittle harsh, Freddy,â Holden mutters, wincing. âLet them do what they want.â
I shutter my eyes to all their reactions before reaching for the dark bottle of Jim Beam. Bennett knocks my hand away with a hard shake of his head.
âYouâre done.â
âIâm fine,â I snap back.
He grows in size, pulling his spine straight and staring down at me darkly. âYouâre done. Hang out with us and get over it or go to bed.â
âFuck off, Reiner.â
He means well, I know he does, but it feels too much like a reminder that Iâm like a kid brother trailing behind him and Rhys. I feel ridiculous, embarrassed and annoyed, so I swipe my phone off the table and start to march off.
âMake sure everyone goes home safely,â I hear Bennett mumble, probably talking to Holden. âYou can stay here in the spare room if you want. Iâm gonna make sure heâs okay.â
Heâs silent as he trails me up the stairs, but I can feel him all the same. I stop in front of the space between our doors.
âYouâre upset,â Bennett says, voice flat. Itâs an observation, nothing more, but from him it feels like a hug. âIâm sorry. I didnât mean to make you upset.â
Bennett and I donât have conversations like thisâheart-to-hearts arenât our vibe. I annoy him out of love and he grumbles like an irritated bear, also out of love, I assume. But Bennett is harder to get to know than most.
Rhys explained it to me once. â
â
At first it felt like Iâd done something wrong. But what Bennett really wanted was to be my friend. He didnât understand me the same way I didnât always understand him.
We still tend to irk each other, but it feels more like itâs purposeful. Like a family.
âYou donât make me upset, Ben. Iâm frustrated with Rhys and Sadie and⦠myself. I donât know.â I shake my head. âI didnât mean to act like an asshole.â
âYou usually act like an asshole.â He shrugs his big shoulders and the hint of a smile echoes even as he stares down at his feet. âMakes things feel normal. And, with Rhys⦠maybe Sadie will help.â
. I bite my tongue not to word-vomit yet again.
âYeah, maybe.â
âSheâs not so bad. And she makes Rhys happy, so, maybe she can help more than weâve been able to.â He opens the door wide as he speaks and his black lab, Seven, lifts his head from the bed before stepping gently over someone in Bennettâs bed.
My eyebrows shoot upâbecause Bennett doesnât date or even sleep around, from what I know. And Iâve known Bennett Reiner for going on four years now.
His service dog pads toward him with a whine and nudges his hand with a wet nose. Bennett whispers, âGo back to her,â so quietly I can barely hear him.
Still, I can see Seven settling back against the lump beneath the covers, partially covered by the door and Bennettâs body as he protectively pulls it farther to block my now searching gaze.
âGet some sleep,â he says distractedly, and I nod. âEverythingâll be fine.â
Heâs more positive about this than he has been, so I trust in Bennettâs solid presence and say a quick good night before heading to my room, ignoring the jagged edges of loneliness that beg me to find someone to occupy my mind.
Instead I turn on and fall asleep to a lull of memoriesâmy momâs hand in my hair, the flavor of slightly burned popcorn, the sound of Archer asking, â
â before carrying me in his arms to my room.
â
,â heâd say, voice quiet as my mom lightly giggled.
â
,â she would say, soft and happy. â
â
â
,â Archer would say. â
â
The mix of their tones in my memory is more soothing than any lullaby.