Read i 0d2125e00f277ca8 Online
Authors: Craig Lightfoot
bother to remember it.
He lets go of a slow, deflating sigh and starts to underline a sentence,
then turns the line into a circle around the entire paragraph. For lack of
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a better word, NO, he scrawls on the side, and then drops his head
heavily down on the depressingly-high yet-to-be-marked pile.
“Why did past Louis assign an essay he knew present Louis would
have to grade?” he whines into the paper. He lifts his head and blows
his fringe off his forehead. “Past Louis is the worst.” Harry snorts, but
keeps his eyes on the television.
About two minutes and three paragraphs of drivel later, Harry clears his
throat. “Lou,” he says, still looking at the game. “Do you think you‟ll
stay on at the school? I mean, like, permanently?”
Louis looks at him curiously. “What do you mean?” he asks, cocking
his head to the side.
“Just,” Harry seems to grasp for words, his brow furrowed, “you
always seem stressed out. And, I mean, you just said you hate
marking.”
Now it‟s Louis‟ turn to snort. “Nobody likes marking, Haz. And
nobody likes every part of their job.” He picks up the stack of marked
papers and taps them on the counter, straightening them out. “I like
actually, you know, teaching. Talking to the kids. Getting to know
them. Putting on shows. Introducing them to the things I love.” He puts
the marked stack to the side. “If I have to deal with marking a few
papers for that, I don‟t mind. And anyway, if I held out for a job that I
loved 100% of the time I‟d be waiting a long time.”
Harry doesn‟t say anything. “Plus,” Louis adds, “If I was totally happy
you wouldn‟t get to hear me bitch about it, and I know how that thrills
you.”
Harry leans across the coffee table, grabs the remote, and puts the
match on mute. “Louis,” he says, and there‟s that pause again that has
Louis taking his glasses off in preparation, “Are you happy at your job?
Honestly?”
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Louis puts his glasses down gently on the stack of marked papers.
“What?”
Harry‟s looking at him, finally. “I mean, I don‟t know, Lou, you‟re
always overworked. You‟re only friends with three of your coworkers,
if you count me. You‟re exhausted all the time, you don‟t have time for
anything else, you‟re always worrying if you‟ll have enough money to
make ends meet. You‟re not even out at work. I don‟t know, Lou, it just
sometimes seems like it isn‟t what you want to do forever.”
Louis‟ mouth smiles. How interesting that Harry of all people would
complain that Louis gave up too much for his job. “It‟s not a perfect
job, Haz, but spend a few months out of work and you‟d be amazed
how your imagination broadens. I even convinced myself that pot
noodle was actual food.”
“I‟m serious, Lou.” He‟s got that pissed-off toddler face on that Louis
hates so much.
“So‟m I. Ate that shite every day for weeks.”
“Christ, Louis, I‟m trying to have a conversation here.”
“And I‟m trying not to, Haz, since I‟ve got better things to do. Like my
work, which you‟ve decided I hate,” he says, tapping his finger against
the stack in front of him. “Where the hell is this coming from, anyway?
Since when do you care what I do permanently?”
“Does it matter? Why don‟t you want to talk about this?”
Louis grinds his teeth and turns his face away, trying to tamp down the
rapid swell of panic in his chest, because this isn‟t how it‟s supposed to
go. This whole process is only going to keep working if Harry never
catches on or says anything about it. All he wants is for Harry to leave
it alone and just let them fall apart naturally, because it's all a foregone
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conclusion and fighting for or about anything is just making it more
painful than it has to be for no good reason. Nothing‟s going to change.
“Because,” Louis drags a hand down his face, because he has to give
Harry an answer, “because you and I would come at this conversation
from very different places and it ends with us liking each other less.”
Harry has a look on his face like Louis just admitted to stabbing
grannies recreationally. “You don‟t know that.”
“Yes, I do.” Duchess is climbing haughtily into Harry‟s lap, and he lifts
his hands to make room. Louis wonders idly how many more times
he‟ll watch that happen. Then he wonders when he started counting
down instead of up. “Just let it go, Harry.”
“Why are you so sure we‟ll disagree?” Harry says, raising his voice.
“Why are you so sure I‟m wrong when you won‟t even talk about it?”
“Why the fuck are you so hung up on this?” Louis snaps, because he
was honestly finished with this conversation before it started.
“Because I think you‟re too afraid to go after what you really want or to
be happy!” Harry shouts, throwing up his hands, and no.
“Who the fuck do you think you are,” Louis bites out, “To talk to me
about fear?” When there‟s no response, he continues, because Harry is
going to fucking learn today. “Go on, tell me. What the hell do you
know about fear, Harry? What have you ever, ever had to be afraid of
in your life?”
“That‟s not fair—” Harry starts, but fuck that.
“I don‟t give a shit if it‟s fair, Harry. You think it‟s fair to tell me that
because my life isn‟t exciting enough for you that makes me a
coward?”
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“That‟s not what I was saying.” Harry stands and walks towards the
kitchen, staying on the other side of the counter with his shoulders
tense.
“First off, that‟s exactly what you were saying, so go to hell,” Louis
says, voice tight. “Secondly, I don‟t know what exactly you think I
would be doing if I wasn‟t at the school. The only thing I‟m qualified to
do is teach, so if it‟s all the same to you, I‟ll stay at the job where I‟ve
got friends and a flat and tenure track, thanks.”
Harry puts both hands on the edge of the counter, staring at Louis
across it. “You‟re qualified to act. And sing. And don‟t tell me you
don‟t love it, I‟ve seen you, you live to perform.”
Louis laughs, really laughs, because this is all just hilarious. “Tried
that, didn‟t I?” he says. “I spent a year running from audition to
audition, sitting in rooms with ten other nervous blokes with my same
haircut, and you know what? It didn‟t work out. Because sometimes, in
the real world, things don‟t work out, Harry, though I‟m not surprised
you don‟t know that.”
Harry doesn‟t answer that, just stares back at him with a look Louis
can‟t read, so he keeps going.
“And you know what?” he continues. “I‟m glad it didn‟t, because I
enjoy my life now, as unimpressive as it is. It wasn‟t my first choice,
but teaching is something I like, always has been, and I‟m fucking good
at it. It‟s not glamorous, but it‟s what I do, and I actually make a
difference for some of these kids, difficult as that may be for you to
believe.”
Harry just looks at him, his nostrils flaring. “That‟s not difficult for me
to believe at all, Louis, I‟m just trying—.”
“Then stop implying that it‟s beneath me, or whatever it is that you‟re
trying to say. Yeah, it‟s exhausting, and the pay is shit, but I like it,
Harry, and I wouldn‟t pick anything else over it, ever.” Harry blinks a
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little at his forcefulness, but Louis barrels on. “Maybe it‟s not good
enough for you, or not the way you think life should go, but it‟s not
your life, Harry, it‟s mine. So just. Drop it. And don‟t you dare act like
it‟s the coward‟s way out when you don‟t know a goddamn thing about
it or me.”
“Fine, it‟s not my life and I don‟t know shit, but stop fucking acting
like I‟m some naive child.” Harry says, moving around the counter and
getting in Louis‟ space. He looks angry and tense and fully present and
Louis is fucking glad. “If I don‟t know things then fucking tell me—”
“I‟ll tell you if you can name one thing you know about fear,” Louis
says, standing up in a rush that has him half-tripping off his stool.
“I know you scare the shit out of me,” Harry snaps back, grabbing one
of Louis‟ wrists.
“Good,” Louis says, and reaches out to pull him down into a kiss that
hurts.
Harry‟s hands are on him in a way that he already knows will leave the
kind of bruises he wants, and Louis thinks at least this still works. For
the rest of the night he doesn‟t think anything at all.
The next morning, Louis wakes up to the buzz of his alarm in an empty
bed.
He makes toast and stares at it for a bit before picking it up and
sweeping it into the trash. He isn‟t hungry.
He gets through the workday on autopilot, barely remembering what
happened in every class after it‟s over. Harry doesn‟t come to the
lounge for lunch. Zayn takes one look at Louis‟ face and decides not to
ask, thank God, and cuts Niall off when he starts to. Zayn doesn‟t seem
that interested in talking himself, so it‟s a dreary hour filled mostly with
the sounds of chewing.
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Harry doesn‟t show during his free period, either, but Louis does get a
text from him. Louis can‟t help but wonder where he is, if he‟s sitting
in his car or in the gym or in the lounge now that the rest of them have
cleared out.
sorry. was out of line and picking fights. none of my business. forgive
me? x
The problem is, it‟s not a question of forgiving. That‟s not what
matters. Whether Louis forgives him or not, Harry is still leaving,
which means that nothing he does now really matters one way or
another, and Louis just doesn‟t have the energy to stay angry. His heart
is too heavy with everything else. Harry‟s still leaving, and Louis still
doesn‟t have the strength to stay away from him. So. Here they are.
Harry knows now, he thinks, that things aren‟t okay. He has to. Maybe
Louis‟ moments of weakness were enough to hide it before, but their
fight last night must have given him some kind of sign. Maybe that‟s
for the best. Maybe Harry won‟t push it.
He leaves the text about an hour and then types out come over
tomorrow with something sugary and i‟ll consider it. He wavers over
adding a final x, but then finally does because, well, fuck it. It‟s not like
they won‟t end up sleeping together tomorrow, or like he doesn‟t have
to talk himself out of inviting Harry over tonight. It‟s all a fucking mess
and he can‟t get himself anywhere but farther into it.
Louis always makes fun of Zayn for keeping a spare set of clothing in
his classroom, but Zayn knew it would pay off. It only takes one
mishap—a geography teacher not watching where he was going with
that coffee—to render a shirt unwearable. Thankfully, Zayn‟s got a free
period, and has time to get changed. He grabs the spare white button-up
from the closet of his room and heads to the men‟s room. And Louis
had called him neurotic. What would Louis do if he‟d been
unexpectedly spilled on, hmm? Feel bad, that‟s what.
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Well, actually, he‟d come nag Zayn to let him borrow his spare shirt.
But that‟s beside the point.
Zayn walks into the men‟s room and heads straight for the handicapped
stall, the one with its own mirror. He quickly undoes the buttons of his
ruined shirt, stripping down to the undershirt beneath.
Christ, this is the last thing he needs today. It‟s half his own fault,
really. He‟s incredibly antsy right now and it was a particularly twitchy
gesture of his that put him in the path of that rogue geography teacher
in the first place. It‟s just that—well, he hasn‟t talked to Liam for a few
weeks now, and he thinks he might be going through withdrawal.
It feels stupid and adolescent, but since the direct, vaguely obsessive
approach hasn‟t been working, he might as well try to play it cool,