Read Something Borrowed Online
Authors: Emily Giffin
Tags: #Romance, #Contemporary, #Fiction, #General, #Single Women, #Female Friendship, #Psychological, #Contemporary Women, #Triangles (Interpersonal Relations), #People & Places, #Juvenile Nonfiction, #Risk-Taking (Psychology)
have already surrendered. We have crossed a new line together.
Because even though we have already slept together, that didn't
really count. We were drunk, reckless. Nothing really happened
until this kiss today. Nothing that couldn't have been stuffed into
a closet, confused with a dream, maybe even forgotten altogether.
That is all changed now. For better or worse.
I have always done my best thinking in the shower. The night is
for worrying, dwelling, analyzing. But in the morning, under the
hot water, I see things clearly. So as I lather my hair, inhaling my
grapefruit-scented shampoo, I pare everything down to the
essential truth: what Dex and I are doing is wrong.
We kissed for a long time last night, and then he held me for even
longer, few words passing between us. My heart thumped against
his as I told myself that by not escalating the physical part we had
scored a victory of sorts. But this morning, I know it was still
wrong. Just plain wrong. I must stop. I will stop.
Starting now.
When I was little, I used to count to three in my head when I
wanted to give myself a fresh start. I'd catch myself biting my
nails, jerk my fingers out of my mouth, and count. One.
Two.
Three. Go. Then I had a clean slate. From that point forward I was
no longer a nail-biter. I used this tactic with many bad habits. So
on a count of three, I will shake the Dex habit. I will be a good
friend again. I will erase everything, fix it all.
I count to three slowly and then use the visualization technique
that Brandon told me he used during baseball season.
He said he
would picture his bat striking the ball, hear it crack, see the dust
fly as he slid safely into home base. He focused only on his good
plays and not the times he screwed up.
So I do this. I focus on my friendship with Darcy, rather than my
feelings for Dex. I make a video in my head, filling it with scenes
of Darcy and me. I see us hunkered down in her bed during an
elementary-school sleepover. We are discussing our plans for the
future, how many kids we will have, what we will name them. I see
Darcy, ten years old, propped up on her elbows, pinkies in her
mouth, explaining that if you have three kids, the middle one
should be a different sex from the others so everyone has
something special. As if you can control such things.
I picture us in the halls at Naperville High, passing notes between
classes. Her notes, folded in intricate shapes, like origami, were so
much more entertaining than Annalise's notes, which simply
reported how bored she was in class. Darcy's were chock-full of
interesting observations about classmates and snide remarks
about teachers. And little games for me to play. She'd put quotes
down the left-hand side of the page and people's names on the
right for me to match. I'd crack up as I drew a line from, say, "Nice
brights, buddy" to Annalise's father, who made that comment
every time drivers forgot to turn off their high beams.
She was
funny. Sometimes cutting, even downright mean. But that only
made her funnier.
I rinse my hair and remember something else, a memory that has
not surfaced before. It is like finding a photograph of yourself that
you never knew was taken. Darcy and I were freshmen, standing
beside our locker after school. Becky Zurich, one of the most
popular girls in the senior class (but not the nice kind of popular,
more the mean, feared variety) walked by us with her boyfriend,
Paul Kinser. With her virtually nonexistent chin and way-too-thin
lips, she really wasn't pretty at all, although at the time she
somehow convinced a lot of people, including me, that she was. So
when Paul and Becky passed us, I looked at them, because they
were popular seniors, and I was impressed, or at the very least,
curious. I'm sure I wanted to hear what they were talking about so
that I could glean some insight into being eighteen (so old!) and
cool. I think it was only a casual glance in their direction, but
maybe it was a stare.
In any case, Becky gave me an exaggerated stare back, making her
eyes pop out like a cartoon. She followed this with a hyenalike, lipcurling
sneer and said, "What're you lookin' at?"
Then Paul chimed in with "Catching flies?" (I'm sure dating Becky
made Paul meaner, or maybe he just figured out that being mean
earned him action later.)
Sure enough, my mouth was wide open. I snapped it shut,
mortified. Becky laughed, proud to have shamed a freshman. She
then reapplied her pink frosted lipstick, inserted a fresh piece of
Big Red into her mean little mouth, and made one final face at me
for good measure.
Darcy had been shuffling through books in our locker but clearly
caught the gist of the exchange. She spun and eyed the pair with
revulsion, a look she had practiced and mastered. She then
imitated Becky's shrill laughter, craning her neck unnaturally
backward and rolling in her lips to make them invisible. She was
hideous and looked exactly like Becky in midchortle.
I stifled a smile while Becky looked momentarily stunned. She
then gathered herself, took a step toward Darcy, and spat out the
word "bitch." Darcy was unflinching as she stared right back at the
senior duo and said, "It's better than being an ugly bitch.
Wouldn't you agree, Paul?"
It was Becky's turn to stare, mouth agape, at her newly discovered
adversary. And before she could formulate a comeback, Darcy
threw in another insult for good measure. "And by the way, Becky,
that lipstick you're wearing? It's so last year."
Everything about that moment is suddenly in sharp focus. I can
see our locker decorated with pictures of Patrick Swayze in Dirty
Dancing. I can smell that distinct, starchy, meat-based odor of the
nearby cafeteria. And I can hear Darcy's voice, forceful and
confident. Of course, Paul had no response to Darcy's question, as
it was clear to all four of us that Darcy was right she was the
prettier of the two. And in high school that sometimes gives you
the last word, even if you are a freshman. Becky and Paul scurried off and Darcy just kept talking to me about whatever
it was we had been talking about, as if Becky and Paul were totally
insignificant. Which they were. It just took a lot to realize that at
fourteen.
I turn off the water, wrap a towel around my body and another
over my head. I will call Dexter as soon as I get to work. I will tell
him that it has to stop. This time I really mean it. He is marrying
Darcy, and I am the maid of honor. We both love her.
Yes, she has
flaws. She can be spoiled, self-centered, and bossy, but she can
also be loyal and kind and wildly fun. And she is the closest thing
to a sister that I will ever have.
During my commute, I practice what I will say to Dex, even
talking out loud at one point on the subway. When I finally arrive
at work, I have my speech so memorized that it no longer sounds
scripted. I've inserted the proper pauses into my Declaration of
Mind-set and Future Intent. I am ready.
Just as I am about to make the phone call, I notice that I have an
e-mail from Dex. I open it, expecting him to have reached the
same conclusion. The subject line reads "You."
You are an amazing person, and I don't know where the feelings
that you give me came from. What I do know is that I am
completely and utterly into you and I want time to freeze so I can
be with you all the time and not have to think of anything else at
all. I like literally everything about you, including the way your
face shows everything you're thinking and especially the way it
looks when we are together and your hair is back and your eyes
are closed and your lips are open just a little bit. Okay.
That's all I
wanted to say. Delete this.
I am breathless, dizzy. Nobody has ever written words like this to
me. I read it again, absorbing every word. / like literally
everything about you too, I think.
And just like that, my resolve is gone again. How can I end
something that I have never experienced before?
Something I
have been waiting for my whole life? Nobody before Dex could
make me feel this way, and what if I never find it again? What if
this is it?
My phone rings. I answer it thinking it could be Dex, hoping it's
not Darcy. I can't talk to her right now. I can't think about her
right now. I am buzzing from my electronic love letter.
"Cheers, baby."
It is Ethan, calling from England, where he has lived for the past
two years. I am so happy to hear his voice. He has a smiling voice,
always sounding like he's on the verge of laughter.
Most things
about Ethan are just as they were in the fifth grade. He is still
compassionate, still has cherub cheeks that turn pink in the cold.
But the voice is newer. It came in high school with puberty long
after friendship had replaced my schoolgirl crush.
"Hi, Ethan!"
"What's the statute of limitations on wishing someone a happy
birthday?" he asks. Ever since I went to law school, he loves
throwing out legal terms, often with a twist.
"Strawberry tort" is
his favorite.
I laugh. "Don't worry about it. It was only my thirtieth."
"Do you hate me? You should have called and reminded me. I feel
like an absolute ass, after eighteen years of never forgetting. Shit.
My mind is going and I'm still in my twenties not to rub it in."
"You forgot my twenty-seventh too," I interrupt him.
"I did?"
"Yeah."
"I don't think I did."
"Yeah you were with Bran "
"Stop. Don't say that name. You're right. I forgot your twentyseventh.
That makes this infraction somehow less egregious, right? I didn't break a streak So how is it?" He whistles.
"Can't
believe you're thirty. You should still be fourteen. Do you feel
older? Wiser? More worldly? What did you do on the big night?"
He fires off his questions in his frenetic, attention-deficit-disorder
way.
"It's the same. I'm the same," I lie. "Nothing's changed."
"Really?" he says. It is like him to ask the follow-up.
It's as if he
knows that I am holding back.
I pause, my mind racing. Do I tell? Not tell? What will he think of
me?
What will he say? Ethan and I have remained close since high
school, although our contact is sporadic. But whenever we do talk,
we pick up where we left off. He would make a good confidant in
this emerging saga. Ethan knows all the major players.
And more
important, he knows what it's like to screw up.
Things started out right for him. He did well on the SATs,
graduated as our salutatorian, and was voted most likely to
succeed, picked over Amy Choi, our valedictorian, who was too
quiet and mousy to win votes for anything. He went to Stanford,
and after graduation took a job at an investment bank even
though he majored in art history and had no interest in finance.
He instantly despised everything about the banking culture. He
said pulling all-nighters was unnatural, and realized that he
preferred sleep to money. So he traded his suits in for fleece and
spent the next several years drifting up and down the West Coast
snapping pictures of lakes and trees, gathering friends along the
way. He took writing classes, art classes, photography classes,
funded by the odd bartending job and summers in Alaska's
fisheries.
That's where he met Brandi "Brandi with an /'" as I called her
before I realized that he genuinely liked her, and that she wasn't
just a fling. A few months into their romance, Brandi got pregnant
(insisting she was part of that woefully unlucky .05
percent on
birth-control pills, although I had my doubts). She said that
abortion was out of the question, so Ethan did what he thought to
be the right thing and married her at City Hall in downtown
Seattle. They sent out homemade marriage
announcements
featuring a black-and-white photo of the two hiking.
Darcy made
fun of Brandi's way-too-short-and-tight jean shorts.
"Who the hell
hikes in Daisy Dukes?" she said. But Ethan seemed happy enough.
And that summer, Brandi gave birth to a baby boy an adorable,
bouncing Eskimo baby boy with eyes that turned coal black
almost immediately. Brandi, with blue eyes that matched Ethan's,
begged for forgiveness. Ethan promptly had the marriage
annulled, and Brandi moved back to Alaska, probably to track
down her native lover.
I think Brandi soured Ethan on the whole fresh-air, live-off-theland
kind of life. Or maybe he just wanted something new.
Because he moved to London, where he writes for a magazine and
is working on a book about London architecture, an interest he
didn't acquire until he landed on British soil. But that's how Ethan
is. He figures things out along the way, always ready to back up