: Chapter 13
The Risk (Briar U)
Tuesday brings another storm. Even the meteorologist at the local cable station seems fed up with the weather. When I watched the morning news earlier, he was glaring at the camera the entire time he read the forecast, as if he holds his viewers accountable for the buckets upon buckets of rain that have been dumped over New England this past month.
Luckily, Iâm spared the walk home from campus because Summer and I have class around the same time. Mine lets out an hour before hers, so I work on an assignment in the lobby of the Art and Design building. Comfy couches litter the big space, which is surprisingly empty. Itâs just a girl with a laptop on a couch near the windows, and me with my laptop on another couch across the room, giving me some semblance of privacy while I wait for Summer.
My assignment is for my least favorite course: Broadcast News Writing. Since I canât major in All Things Sports, my classes involve all areas of journalism. This particular class requires writing copy for television news as opposed to print news, and my prof decided it would be fun to assign me a political topic. Which means coming up with copy about our presidentâs latest shenanigans, while worrying whether my professor supports this current administration, or condemns it. Heâs never revealed his political leanings, and Iâm sure, if questioned, heâd give some spiel about how journalists always remain objective. But come on, letâs be real. At the end of the day, we all have our biases. Period.
I write about five hundred words before taking a break. I scroll through my phone, checking my messages, but thereâs nothing new. Jakeâs name taunts me from the list, because we exchanged numbers at the coffee shop yesterday so we wouldnât have to communicate via Insta.
A groan gets stuck in my throat. What, oh what, compelled me to tell Ed Mulder that Jake was my boyfriend? Why did I do that? I regretted the lie about a nanosecond after it slipped out, but it was too late to take it back. Mulder was so overjoyed, youâd think Iâd offered to blow him. Though, really, heâd probably be more excited to receive a BJ from Jake. God knows he has a massive hard-on for the guy.
And speaking of Jake, what, oh what, compelled him to ask me out? Iâm still baffled, not to mention leery of his intentions. The night of the concert proved that the two of us have some chemistry, but that doesnât mean we have to act on it. He plays for Harvard, for Peteâs sake. Thatâs inexcusable.
A message pops up as Iâm scrolling, eliciting a rush of unhappiness. Itâs from Eric. Again.
ERIC: Please, B. I donât know why youâre ignoring me.
Technically, Iâm not ignoring him. I responded to his previous message on Sunday night when I got home from Maloneâs. I told him the next few weeks will be super busy thanks to final exams and life in general, and that I wonât be around at all. Clearly he didnât like my answer.
Another text comes in: Call me
Crap. I know Eric. If I donât call, he wonât stop texting. And when I donât text, heâll start calling. And calling. And calling.
Fighting a burst of aggravation, I dial his number.
âB, hey!â His relief is palpable, even over the line. âIâm glad you called.â
Heâs on something. I can tell from the way he speaks, the breathy tone he uses when thereâs toxic shit coursing through his blood. Iâm glad I canât see his eyes right now. That was always the worst part for me, seeing his eyes when heâs high. It was like looking at a completely different person. The Eric Royce I was madly in love with was replaced by a pathetic stranger. And being there for him wasâisâexhausting.
Maybe it makes me a terrible person to think that, but I donât care anymore. Heâs not my responsibility. I didnât sign up to be his mom. Thatâs a job for his mom.
But Mrs. Royce is, and has always been, an absentee parent. Sheâs a corporate lawyer, and Ericâs father was a stay-at-home dad before he died. And after he died, Mrs. Royce didnât cut back on her work hours to spend time with her son. She just kept chugging along without paying a lick of attention to him.
The only effort she made after it became apparent he had a substance-abuse problem was to try to ship him off to Vermont. But Eric refused to go. According to him, heâs not an addict. He simply likes to party âhere and there.â
âYou donât sound good,â I tell him. âYouâre wheezing.â
âAh. I have a bit of a cold.â
Is that what weâre calling it these days? âYou should try to get some rest, then.â I hear what sounds like a gust of wind. âAre you outside right now?â
âIâm leaving a Dunkinâ Donuts. This rainâ¦itâs crazy, right?â
I stifle a curse. âYou didnât ask me to call you to talk about the rain. What do you need, Eric? Whatâs going on?â
âI justâ¦â An agonized note enters his voice. âIâm, ah, strapped for cash right now, B. My rentâs due next week and everything in my account is gonna go to cover that, and, you know, that doesnât leave me much for groceries and, ah, basic shitâ¦â
By âbasic shitâ I assume he means meth, and anger brews in the pit of my stomach. âYou live with your mother,â I remind him. âIâm sure sheâll let you off the hook for this monthâs rent.â
âShe doesnât give a fuck,â he mutters. âShe said sheâll kick me out if I donât pay rent.â
âWell, luckily you have enough money to cover the rent,â I remind him. âAs for groceries, Iâm sure your mom isnât going to let you starve.â
âPlease, I just need like fifty bucks, a hundred tops. Come on, B.â
He isnât asking for an obscene amount, but I donât care. Heâs not getting a dime from me ever again, especially when I know itâs all going to drugs. Besides, itâs not like Iâm rolling in money. I donât pay tuition, but I still have expenses. Rent, food, âbasic shitâ that isnât crystal meth. I have some saved up from waitressing jobs, but Iâm not using it to fund Ericâs self-destruction.
âIâm sorry, you know Iâd help if I could, but Iâm broke,â I lie.
âNo, youâre not,â he argues. âI know you have some cash lying around, B. Please. After everything weâve been through, you canât just forget about me. Weâre in this together, remember?â
âNo, weâre not,â I say sharply. âWe broke up years ago, Eric. Weâre not together anymore.â
Voices echo from a nearby corridor, floating into the lobby. I pray that Summerâs class has finished.
âIâm sorry.â I soften my tone. âI canât help you. You need to talk to your mom.â
âFuck my mom,â he snaps.
I bite the inside of my cheek. âI have to go now. Iâm about to walk into class,â I lie. âButâ¦weâll talk soon, okay? Iâll call you once things settle down on my end.â
I disconnect before he can argue.
When Summer appears, I paste on a smile and hope she doesnât notice Iâm quieter than usual on the ride home. She doesnât. Summer can carry a conversation all by herself, and today Iâm grateful for that. I think I need to cut Eric out of my life for good. Itâs not the first time Iâve thought that, but Iâm hoping this time itâll be the last. I canât keep doing this anymore.
The rain has eased up by the time Summer drops me off at home. âThanks for the ride, crazy girl.â I smack a grateful kiss on her cheek.
âI love you,â she calls as I dart out of the car.
Friends who say âI love youâ every time you part ways are important. Those are the ones you need in your life.
Summer peels out of the driveway, and I round the side of the house toward my private entrance. A short flight of stairs takes me down to my little entryway, andâ
Plop.
My boots sink into an ocean.
Okay, not an ocean. But thereâs at least a foot and a half of water lapping at the base of the steps.
Sickness swirls in my stomach. Holy shit. The basement flooded. My fucking apartment flooded.
A surge of panic spurs me forward. I slosh through the ocean in my leather boots and assess the damage, horrified by what I find.
The basement has wall-to-wall carpetingâruined. The legs of the coffee table are underwaterâruined. The bottom half of the couch I bought at a secondhand store is soakedâruined. My futonâruined.
I bite my lip in dismay. Luckily my laptop was with me today. And the majority of my clothes are untouched. Most of them are hanging in the closet, well above the ocean, and my shoe rack is one of those tall ones, so only the soles of the shoes on the last shelf are wet. My bottom dresser drawer is full of water, but I only keep PJs and loungewear down there, so itâs not the end of the world. All the important stuff is in the top drawers.
But the carpetsâ¦
The furnitureâ¦
This is not good.
I wade back to the entry where I hung my purse. I find my phone and call my landlord, Wendy, who Iâm praying is at home. Neither her nor Markâs cars were in the driveway, but Wendy usually parks in the garage, so thereâs a chance sheâs upstairs.
âBrenna, hey. I just heard you come in. Itâs really raining out there, huh?â
Sheâs home. Thank God. âItâs really raining in here, too,â I answer bleakly. âI donât know how to break it to you, but thereâs been a flood.â
âWhat?â she exclaims.
âYup. I think youâd better put on some rain boots, preferably ones that go up to your knees, and come downstairs.â
Two hours later, weâre facing a nightmare scenario. The basement is fucked.
At Wendyâs SOS, her husband Mark rushed home from work early, and, after turning off the electricity to avoid, well, dying, the three of us conducted a thorough assessment with flashlights from upstairs. Mark assured me that insurance would cover the furniture I lost. Lost being the operative word, because none of it can be salvaged. There was too much water damage, so everything needs to be thrown out. All I could do was pack up the items that survived the Great Flood.
According to Mark, the house doesnât have a sump pump installed because Hastings isnât an area where flooding is at all common. My landlords will need to bring in a professional to pump the water; thereâs far too much of it to be removed by a wet vac or mop. Mark estimated they would need at least a week to pump and thoroughly clean the basement, maybe even two weeks. Apparently without the proper cleanup, thereâs danger of mold growth.
Which means I need to make alternate arrangements until the process is complete.
AKA, Iâm moving back in with my father.
Itâs not ideal, but itâs the best option Iâve got. Despite Summerâs insistence that I stay at her place, I refuse to live in the same house as Mike Hollis. No way can I deal with Hollisâs personality and him constantly hitting on me for an extended period of time. A home is supposed to be a safe, sacred place.
The dorms are out, too. My friend Audrey isnât allowed to have anyone stay with her for more than a night or twoâher resident advisor is a stickler about that kind of stuff. And while Elisaâs RA is more lenient, she lives in a cramped single, and Iâd have to crash in a sleeping bag on her floor. Possibly for two weeks.
Screw that. At Dadâs house, I have my own bedroom, a lock on the door, and a private bath. I can suffer through Dadâs bullshit as long as that trifecta is met.
He picks me up from Mark and Wendyâs, and ten minutes later we trudge through the front door of his old Victorian. Dad carts my suitcase and duffel into the house, while I shoulder my backpack and laptop case.
âIâll take these upstairs,â he says brusquely, disappearing up the narrow staircase. A moment later, I hear his footsteps creaking on the floor above my head.
As I unzip my boots and hang up my coat, I silently curse the weather. Itâs been the bane of my existence for more than a month now, but itâs officially crossed the line. Iâm declaring war on the climate.
I go upstairs and approach my room as my father is exiting it. It jars me how close his head comes to the top of the doorframe. Dad is tall and broad-shouldered, and I heard that the hockey groupies at Briar salivate over him as much as his players. And to that I say ew. Just because Dadâs handsome doesnât mean I want to think about him in a sexual context.
âYou okay?â he asks gruffly.
âYeah, Iâm fine. Just irritated.â
âI donât blame you.â
âI swear, the last few days have been a nightmare. Starting from the interview on Friday and ending with tonightâs flood.â
âWhat about the follow-up interview yesterday? How did that go?â
Abysmally. At least until I pretended Jake Connelly was my boyfriend. But I keep that part to myself and say, âIt was all right, but Iâm not holding my breath. The interviewer was a total misogynist.â
Dad arches one dark eyebrow. âIs that so?â
âTrust me, if I get hired, itâd be a miracle.â I shove a strand of hair off my forehead. âAnyway, Iâm wet and my feet are frozen from wading around in the basement all afternoon. Do you mind if I take a hot shower?â
âGo ahead. Iâll leave you to it.â
I crank the shower in the hall bathroom, strip out of my damp clothes, and step into the glass stall. The warm water seeps into my bones and brings a shiver of pleasure. I make it even hotter, and it almost triggers an orgasm. Iâm so tired of being cold and wet.
As I soap up, I think back to my arrangement with Jake. Was it a mistake? Probably. Itâs a lot of effort to go to for an unpaid internship, but if I want to gain experience by working at a major sports network and be able to do it during the school year, I only have two options: ESPN and HockeyNet. And the former is even more competitive.
I dunk my head under the spray and stand there for as long as I can justify. When I can imagine my father lecturing me about running up his hot water bill, I turn off the shower.
I cocoon myself in my terrycloth robe, wrap my hair in a turban, and cross the hall to my room.
Because Dad bought this house after Iâd already moved out, this bedroom doesnât really feel like home to me. The furniture is plain, and thereâs a noticeable lack of personal items and decorations. Even my bedspread is impersonalâsolid white, with white pillows and white sheets. Like a hospital. Or a mental institution. At our old house in Westlynn, I had one of those four-post beds and a colorful quilt, and on the wall over the headboard thereâd been a glitter-painted wooden sign that said PEACHES. My dad had it custom made for my tenth birthday.
I wonder what ever happened to that sign. A bittersweet taste fills my mouth. I donât remember the exact moment that Dad stopped calling me âPeaches.â Probably around the time I got together with Eric. And it wasnât just mine and Dadâs relationship that suffered. What started out as admiration for a talented hockey player turned into a deep hatred that exists to this day. Dad never forgave Eric for what happened between us, and he doesnât feel an ounce of sympathy that Eric has been spiraling ever since. A real man admits when he has a problem, Dad always says.
I unzip my suitcase and pull out some warm socks, panties, leggings, and an oversized sweater. Iâve just finished dressing when Dad knocks on the door.
âYou decent?â
âYup, come in.â
He opens the door and leans against the frame. âYou want anything special for dinner tonight?â
âOh, donât worry,â I tell him, amused. âYou donât have to cook.â
âWasnât gonna. I thought weâd order a pizza.â
I snicker. âYou know Iâve seen those meal plans you force the boys to follow, right? And meanwhile youâre over here ordering pizzas?â
âYouâre home,â he says with a shrug. âItâs cause for celebration.â
Is it? Our interactions are so strained and awkward that it feels like two strangers talking to each other. Thereâs no warmth between us anymore. No hostility, either, but heâs definitely not the same man who used to call me Peaches.
âOkay, then. Pizza sounds great,â I say.
A short silence falls. He seems to be examining me, searching my gaze forâ¦something.
For some reason, I feel itâs imperative to say, âIâm an adult now.â
Except saying Iâm an adult now pretty much ensures that the person claiming adulthood is viewed as the complete opposite.
Dadâs mouth quirks wryly. âWell aware of that.â
âI mean, just because Iâm staying here for a week or so doesnât mean you can give me the âyou live under my roof, you follow my rulesâ shtick. I wonât follow a curfew.â
âAnd I wonât have you lumbering in here drunk at four in the morning.â
I roll my eyes. âThatâs not really a habit of mine. But I might come home a little tipsy around midnight after hanging out with my friends. And I donât need you to lecture me about it.â
Dad drags his hand over his close-cropped hair. Heâs sported this no-nonsense military buzz cut as far back as I can remember. Dad doesnât like to waste time on frivolous things. Like hair.
âYou do your thing, I do mine,â I finish. âDeal?â
âAs long as your thing doesnât harm yourself or others, then I wonât have a reason to interfere.â
My throat grows tight. I hate that when he looks at me, he still sees that self-destructive girl with the poor decision-making process. But Iâm not her anymore. I havenât been her for a long time.
Dad turns away. âLet me know when youâre getting hungry and Iâll place the pizza order.â
He firmly closes the door behind him.
Welcome home, I think.