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)
She's Jewish
and was very up-front about her expectations of me.
She wanted
me to convert, raise our kids Jewish, the whole nine yards. And
maybe I would have been okay with that I'm not very religious
but I wasn't okay with the fact that she made it a bright-line rule. I
saw a life of her browbeating me into shit. Just like her mother
does to her father. Besides, we were too young to commit It still
killed me when she walked, though."
"Is she married now?"
"Funny you ask that. I actually just heard from a mutual friend
that she got engaged. About a month after " He stops, looks
uncomfortable.
"After you did?"
"Yeah," he whispers. He pulls me against him and kisses me hard,
erasing any thoughts of Darcy. We undress and slide under the
covers.
"You're cold," he says.
"I'm always cold when I'm nervous."
"Why are you nervous? Don't be nervous."
"Dex," I say into his neck.
"Yeah, Rach?"
"Nothing."
His body covers mine. I am not cold anymore.
We kiss for a long time, touching everywhere.
I don't know the time, but it is just getting dark.
I almost stop him, for all of the obvious reasons. But also because
I'm thinking we should wait until we can spend a night together.
Then again, that might never happen. And likely I will never
shower with him, watch him shave in the morning. Or read the
Sunday Times over coffee, whiling away the hours.
We'll never
hold hands in Central Park or cuddle on a blanket in Sheep's
Meadow. But I can have him now. Nothing is stopping us from
this moment.
I can see just a fraction of Dexter as we move together his
sideburn with a trace of gray, his strong shoulder, his seashell of
an ear. My fingertips graze his collarbone, then hold on more
tightly.
I can't stop thinking about Dex. I
know that we won't end up togethei, that he will marry Darcy in
September. But I am content to live in the moment, and allow
myself the daily pleasure of obsessing. Nothing lasts forever, I tell
myself. Especially the good stuff. Although typically you aren't
faced with a hard deadline. I think of a few other examples of
concrete, predetermined endings. Take college, for example. I
knew that I would go away for four years, accumulate friends and
memories and knowledge, and that it would all come to an abrupt
end on a set date. I knew that on this day, I would collect my
diploma and pile my belongings into a U-Haul bound for Indiana,
and the Duke experience would be done. A chapter closed forever.
But that awareness didn't stop me from enjoying myself, sucking
all of the joy out of the deal.
So that is what I am doing with Dex. I am not going to dwell on
the end at the expense of the here and now.
Tonight I am home when Dex phones from work to say a quick
hello and tell me that he misses me. It is the sort of call a
boyfriend makes to his girlfriend. Nothing covert or complicated
about it. I pretend that we are together for real. The phone rings
again a second after we hang up.
"Hey," I say, in the same hushed tone, thinking that it is only a
follow-up call from Dex.
"What's that voice?" Darcy asks, yanking me back to reality.
"What voice?" I ask. "I'm just tired. What's going on?"
She launches into the details of her latest work crisis, which
typically amounts to no more than a paper jam at the copier. This
one is no exception. A typo on a flyer for a club opening. I resist
the urge to tell her that the target audience won't notice a
misspelling, and instead ask her who is going to the Hamptons
this weekend. I feel my senses heighten, anticipating Dexter's
name. He already told me that he was going, convincing me that I
had to go too. It will be awkward, but worth it, he said.
He has to
see me.
"Not sure. Claire might be having friends in town. Dex is in."
"Oh, really? He doesn't have to work?" I ask, sounding a bit too
surprised. I feel a stab of worry, but Darcy doesn't notice my false
tone.
"No, he just finished with some big deal," she says.
"Which deal?"
"I don't know. Some deal."
Dexter's job bores Darcy. I have observed the way she can shut
him down, interrupting him in the middle of a story, transitioning
back to her own petty concerns. Am I fat? Does this look good on
me? Will you come there with me? Do that for me.
Reassure me.
Me. Me. Me.
As if on cue, she tells me that she is considering sending in a tape
to
Big Brother, that it would be fun to be on the show.
Fun for an
exhibi-tionist. I can think of few things more horrifying than
being on national television, out there for the world to judge,
assess, tear apart.
"Do you think I'd get picked?" she asks.
"You'd have a good chance."
She is pretty enough to get picked, and she has a vivid personality exactly what they look for on reality television. I study
my own face in the mirror, think of Dex telling me that I look like
a J.Crew model. Maybe I am attractive. But I am nowhere near as
pretty as Darcy, with her precise features, incredible cheekbones,
bow-shaped lips.
Now she is laughing loudly into the phone, telling me another
story about her day. She hurts my ears. The word
"strident" comes
to mind, and as I study my reflection again, I decide that although
I'm far from beautiful, perhaps I have a softness that she lacks.
It is Thursday, the day before we leave for the Hamptons. Dex is
over. We had planned on waiting until next week to see each other
alone, but we both finished work early. And well, here we are,
together again. We have already made love once. Now I am
resting my head on his chest. As he breathes, his chest lifts my
face slightly. Neither of us speaks for a long time, then he asks
suddenly, "What are we doing?"
There it is. The Question.
I have thought of it a hundred times, worded the inquiry exactly
like that, with the same intonation, the same emphasis on the
word "doing." But every time I answer it differently: We are following our hearts.
We are taking a chance.
We are crazy.
We are self-destructive.
We are lustful.
We are confused.
We are rebelling.
He is afraid of marriage.
I am afraid of being alone.
We are falling in love.
We are already in love.
And the most common: we have no idea.
This is the one I offer up. "I don't know."
"Neither do I," he says softly. "Should we talk about it?"
"Do you want to?"
"Not really," he says.
I am relieved that he doesn't. Because I don't. I am too afraid of
what we might decide. Either choice is scary. "Let's not, then. Not
now."
"Then when?" he asks.
For some reason, I say, "After July Fourth."
It sounds arbitrary, but it has always been a benchmark of sorts,
the summer midpoint. Even though more than half the summer is
left after the Fourth of July, the part that follows is the faster half,
the part that always flies by. June, although a day shorter, feels so
much longer than August.
"Okay," he says.
"No examining anything until July Fourth." I state the rule clearly,
as I would at the outset of a law-school exam. My voice is firm,
even though I'm not sure what we've just decided. That we are
finished as of July Fourth? Or maybe no, he couldn't think that I
meant that is when he would tell Darcy he can't go through with
marrying her. No, that is not what we just decided. We simply
decided to decide nothing. That is all.
Still, picking the date scares me. I picture a giant countdown of
days, hours, minutes, seconds. Like the clocks set up in 1999 for
the countdown to the new millennium. I remember watching the
seconds roll off such a clock in the post office near Grand Central
Station sometime in December. That clock made me nervous,
frantic. I wanted to attack my to-do list, clear my desk of backedup
calls, finish it all immediately. At the same time, watching
those numbers tick by paralyzed me. I had too much to do, so why
do anything at all?
I try to calculate the number of hours left before July Fourth. How
many nights we will have together. How many times we will make
love.
My stomach growls. Or maybe it's his. I can't tell because I am flat
against him. "Are you hungry? We can order food," I say, and kiss
his chest. "Or I can make us something."
I imagine myself whipping up a tasty snack. I can't cook, but I
would learn. I would make an excellent, nurturing wife.
He tells me that he doesn't want to waste time eating.
He can get
something on his way home. Or just go to bed hungry.
He says he
wants to feel me against him until it's time to leave.
The next day I ask Dex if there were any problems when he
returned home. It is a vague question, but he knows what I am
asking. He says that Darcy was not home when he got in, so he
had time to shower, reluctantly wash me off him. He says that
Darcy had left him a message: "It's eleven and you're not
answering your cell or your phone at work. You're probably
having an affair. I'm going out with Claire."
It is her usual tongue-in-cheek accusation when Dex works late.
She asks him if he's having an affair, never believing that he would
do such a thing. She changes the person every time, selecting a
random female name from his office. The less attractive the
woman, the more amused she is. "I know you're in love with
Nina," she'll say, knowing that Nina is a chubby word processor
from Staten Island with fake nails adorned with glitter art.
I think of Dex returning home last night. A whole scene unfurls in
my mind Dex stealing into his apartment, hurrying to shower and
get in bed, waiting for the key to turn in the lock, pretending to be
asleep when Darcy enters their room. She hovers over him,
studying him in the dark.
"How was your date with Nina?" she asks in a wry, loud voice.
He wipes his eyes with his fists as people do on television when
they're awakened from a sound sleep. "Hi," he says wearily and
then pretends to fall back asleep.
She cuddles up to him in bed, tossing out an "I love you."
His jaw clenches, but he says it back. What choice does he have?
He falls asleep thinking about me. Thinking that her chin is too
sharp against his chest.
I am watching them on the beach, down by the water.
Darcy and Dex standing together in the not-too-hot June sun.
This weekend is the first that I have seen them together since Dex
and I soberly, willfully, made love. I am wearing dark sunglasses
so I can study them from my towel without being obvious, while
Claire babbles to me about what else? the wedding.
What if the
night is chilly? Should we buy matching wraps, a light, gauzy
cardigan? I nod and murmur that it is a good idea.
Dex has just finished a quick swim, even though the water is
freezing. Now they are talking, huddled close together.
Perhaps he
is giving her the report on the water temperature. She hesitantly
steps closer to the ocean's reach, just enough to let the water coat
her feet. They are both smiling. Dex kicks water onto her shins
and she shrieks, turns, and scampers a few feet from him. I can
see the muscles strain in her long, tanned legs. She is wearing the
nude-colored bikini. Her hair is down, blowing around her face.
He laughs, and she raises her index finger as if to scold him and
then walks toward him again. They are engaged in a full-fledged
frolic. It pains me to watch them, but I can't stop. I can't look
away.
I feel as if they are putting on a show. Well, Darcy is always
putting on a show. But Dex is a willing participant.
Surely he
knows we are all watching. That I am watching. It is always that
way when you are in a group and someone decides to go for a
swim or walk to the water. The ocean is like a giant stage. It is
natural that the others watch, if only for a moment. Dex must be
aware of this, yet he is still in full-throttle playful-couple mode.
He should be brooding on his towel, napping, or reading a
novel something dark, to give me the impression that he is
confused, upset, torn. But instead he is splashing Darcy and
grinning.
Marcus cups his mouth with his hands, yells down at them. "How
cold is it?"
"Freaking freezing!" Darcy announces, her hand stroking Dex's
back, while he reports a manly "Nah, it feels good.
Come on
down!"
Rage commingles with hurt. For the first time, I completely regret
having sex with Dex. I feel foolish, suddenly sure that it meant
next to nothing to him. Tears sting my eyes as I force myself to
turn away from them, slip on my headphones. I order myself not
to cry.
Before I can hit play, Marcus asks me what I'm listening to. I have