All this to avoid ending up like
Margot, and yet that was exactly where I
was—broken-hearted, mad, and
desperately wondering if I’d done the
right thing.
TWENTY-FIVE
QUINN
I COULDN’T SLEEP. All night long I
lay there staring at the ceiling, cursing
Jaime’s stubborn streak and her fucked-
up ideas about love and relationships.
Did she think I was stupid? Did she
think I wouldn’t see through her?
I
knew
her.
There was no way I’d misjudged her
over the last six weeks—she didn’t want
to step back from us any more than I
wanted to. It was fear, plain and simple.
She was afraid of letting herself be
happy with me. She saw her friend fall
apart after a bad breakup, and it scared
her. But rather than come to me and
admit that, she’d run in the other
direction. She couldn’t handle her
feelings for me, so she’d just decided to
turn them off.
Well, she’d
try
to turn them off. But
love wasn’t like a fucking oven or faucet
or lamp. There was no OFF switch.
How was she planning to do it? She’d
said something about being friends that
occasionally hung out—and I was pretty
sure by “hang out” she meant
fuck
—but
there was no way I could do that.
Did she honestly think we could still
have sex without feelings?
She wants to think that. She wants
to believe that she’s above falling for
someone this way.
But she wasn’t. I saw it in her face—
she could hardly look at me while she
was talking. And then she’d expected me
to argue with her, as if that wouldn’t just
make her dig her heels in deeper. If I’d
thought for one second that hearing me
say “I love you, don’t do this” would
change her mind, I’d have said it.
But that wasn't the answer.
Jaime wasn’t like any woman I
knew. She didn’t need me to declare my
feelings—she knew how I felt. This
really didn’t have anything to do with
me.
It was about her.
She had to get over her fear and her
skepticism, and it was something she had
to do on her own.
She had to miss me, miss what we
had. More than that, she had to see it as
something she didn’t want to live
without, something worth the risk. I
knew she’d miss the sex, and fucking
hell, I would too, but she had to miss
more than that for her to change. She
could get great sex from any guy with
half a brain and a functional dick
(although I do like to think mine is more
than just functional). What
we
had was
something special.
At least, I’d thought it was.
I’d tried hard to be what she wanted,
give her the space she needed, respect
her boundaries, but if it wasn’t enough,
then I’d have to get over her somehow.
Move on. Try to forget.
The thought was like a
sledgehammer to my chest.
I fucking
loved
her. I wanted to
be
with her. I didn’t need her to be perfect
or wear a ring or spend every waking
moment with me, I just wanted to share
my life with her, make her laugh, make
her happy—and I wanted some
assurance that she wasn’t going to run
away whenever she got scared.
I thought about the way my father had
taken off on my mother and felt a rush of
sympathy for her. Did I love a lost cause,
too?
I knew one thing—I’d been wrong to
think I could prove to her that love
existed…she’d refuse to see it. She
didn’t
want
to see it. She wouldn’t let
herself.
And there wasn’t a thing I could do
about it.
I couldn’t stay here any longer.
Knowing she was up there, probably
miserable and too stubborn to come
down here and talk about it, would drive
me crazy. I’d give in and go up to her,
and we’d either end up fighting or
fucking, neither of which would alter her
point of view.
No. She’d turned me away, so I’d
give her what she wanted.
No matter how much it hurt.
TWENTY-SIX
JAIME
HE MOVED out the next day.
Without a word to me.
He didn’t call or text or leave a note
or anything. He just packed up and left.
I realized this because I actually
went down to talk to him after I got home
from work. I’d spent the whole night
crying and the entire day at work
agonizing over what I’d done and his
reaction to it. I wasn’t even sure what I
was going to say to him when I knocked
on his door; I just knew that I hated
where we’d left things, and I didn’t want
him to move out without at least one
more conversation.
Maybe I’d been too hasty in calling
things off. Maybe I’d let Margot’s
situation influence me too much. Maybe
this time he’d try harder to change my
mind.
I knew my face looked puffy and
terrible—people at work kept asking if
I’d had an allergic reaction to something
—but I knocked anyway. When he didn’t
answer, I realized that I hadn’t seen his
car on the street. (Never did clean out
the other half of the garage. Yet another
thing to feel bad about.) I’m not sure
what made me check the handle to see if
the door was locked, but when the knob
turned, I pushed it open.
I knew right away he was gone. It
just felt empty. All the furniture was still
there, obviously, but none of his things—
no books on the coffee table, no boots by
the door, no photos of him and his mom
on the built-in shelves next to the
fireplace.
Wandering into the kitchen, I noticed
he’d left it spotless—no dishes in the
sink or even in the dishwasher, no
crumbs on the floor, no spills on the
counter. I opened the fridge and saw that
he’d emptied it out, and the freezer as
well.
In his bedroom, I checked the closet
and nightstand drawer. No condoms. The
thought of Quinn needing condoms at his
new place hit me hard in the gut, and I
sat back on the bare mattress as if I’d
been pushed.
But he’s mine!
Fists and jaw clenched in rage, I
went into the bathroom and opened all
the drawers, even peeked into the
shower. Everything was gone, but I
could still smell his soap and cologne.
Goddamn it!
I ran back through his flat, slammed
the door, and pounded up the steps.
Inside my apartment, I threw myself on
the couch and curled into a ball, hugging
a throw pillow to my stomach.
He must have called the movers and
rescheduled for today. But why? He
hadn’t even seemed upset last night! Was
this just to punish me? Make me regret
my decision?
Or maybe overnight he’d decided I
was right, and stepping back was the
best thing for us. Maybe I wasn’t worth
the hassle.
Angry and confused, I spent a
wretched hour staring at my phone, even
picking it up once and nearly pressing
his name, but I never reached out.
I endured another miserable night.
Followed by a miserable week.
And then another.
I even called Alex, hoping he might
drop Quinn’s name, but he didn’t.
I thought about him every day,
endless questions peppering my brain all
day long. What was he doing? Did he
miss me? Was he settling in OK? How
was the view of Comerica Park? Who
would he take to Opening Day? Had he
slept with anyone? Was he thinking about
me? Who did he talk to about his mom?
Who did he tease? Who did he cook for?
His Instagram posting had stopped,
too.
Damn him! It was like he knew I was
trying to stalk him and he was thwarting
my efforts!
My body craved his with such
intensity, even my vibrator didn’t take
the edge off. My heart ached painfully
when I thought about never being close
to him again.
You were always going to feel like
this,
said the cynic in me.
So it’s now
instead of later, big deal. In fact,
better
now than later, because more time
together would have meant even
stronger feelings, right? It would have
been harder down the road. When
there’s a matter to be settled, you settle
it.
Yes! I clung to that. It made sense to
me.
My friends? Not so much.
“You did
what
?” Claire screeched at
GNO, three days after I broke up with
Quinn.
“I broke things off with Quinn. It was
time.” I couldn’t look either one of them
in the eye so I focused on my martini.
“What do you mean, ‘It was time?’”
Margot said suspiciously. “Was there
some sort of expiration date?”
“No. It was just…time to step back.
You know me.” I shrugged, trying to
sound casual. It felt horrible to lie to my
friends, but I thought if I could convince
them I was OK, I’d have a better chance
of convincing myself.
It was not going well.
Claire’s jaw was open and cocked to
one side, eyes narrowed. Margot was
making this face she makes with one
eyebrow up, lips pressed together, her
gaze so searing hot you’d swear she
could fry an egg with it.
(Tonight the role of the egg will be
played by Jaime Owens.)
“This is bullshit, Jaime,” she said.
“This is just you freaking out because
someone finally
got
to you.”
“Exactly,” said Claire. “Quinn is
crazy about you, and you’re crazy about
him. I’ve seen it.”
“That doesn’t mean anything,” I said
lamely. “And I’m not
that
crazy about
him.”
“Don’t lie to us. We’ve known you
too long, and your cheeks get too red.”
Claire shook her head. “You’re
sabotaging this on purpose.”
“I am not!”
“You are, but let’s ignore that for a
second.” Margot waved a hand in the
air. “What did Quinn say when you said
you wanted to break up?”
“He didn’t even care.”
“Another lie,” said Margot.
“Yep,” said Claire.
“It’s not! He didn’t say anything, and
when I told him he had to say
something
,
he said, ‘OK, if that’s what you want.’” I
left out the part where he said it wasn’t
what he wanted. Didn’t really fit into the
Poor Me picture I was painting.
Margot sat back, arms crossed. “I
don’t buy it.”
Claire shook her head. “Me either.”
“Look, you guys can gang up on me
all you want, but that doesn’t change the
fact that Quinn moved out without saying
anything
to me the very next day. I’m
telling you, he
didn’t care
. Now can we
please talk about something else? I’m
trying to forget the whole thing.”
Their faces softened.
“Sorry, Jaims. We’re not trying to
gang up on you.” Margot put her hand on
my arm. “We just don’t want to see you
hurt.”
“I’m looking out for myself so I
don’t
get hurt, OK?” I said, trying to
force the lump in my throat to go away.
“You of all people should understand me
right now.”
She didn’t say anything, but she
nodded and patted my arm. “OK. Let’s
talk about something else.”
“How are
you
doing, Margot?”
Claire asked her.
She took a breath. “Better. Not great,
but better. Thinking things through.
Talking to my therapist. I think you might
have been right about a change, Jaime.”
I smiled, glad to hear I was right
about something.
Maybe I wouldn’t cry myself to
sleep tonight.
ALEX’S BIRTHDAY was toward the
end of March, and Nolan was throwing
him a party at their house. I had to show
my face, but I was terrified of running
into Quinn. We hadn’t seen or spoken to
each other in three weeks, and I was
finally able to go a day without crying or
eating a king-sized Hershey bar, but I
wasn’t anywhere near over him. Would
seeing him again fuck me up completely?
Would I fall apart?
No. Don’t let it. Be strong.
Figuring strength would come easier
if I felt good about my appearance, I got
my eyebrows waxed and my hair blown
out. I wore what I considered my best
armor, a sexy little black dress that
showed off my curves and the leopard
heels. I gave myself a Sophia Loren eye
and a classic red lip. When I saw the
necklace he’d given me in my jewelry
drawer, my stomach twisted. I loved it
so much, but I hadn’t been able to bring
myself to wear it since Quinn moved out.
The reminder of that amazing night was