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)
along in a slow jog, her elbows jutting out awkwardly.
Otherwise,
we have the usually populated path to ourselves. I listen to the
gravel crunching beneath our sneakers as we walk in perfect
rhythm. I am content. The reservoir, the views, the city, and the
world belong to Dex and me.
Dark clouds are rolling in when we finally leave the park. We
decide not to change for dinner, heading straight for Atlantic Grill,
a restaurant near my apartment. Both of us are in the mood for
fish and white wine and vanilla ice cream. After dinner, we dash
back to my apartment in a downpour, laughing as we cross the
streets midblock, splashing our way through the puddles formed
on the sidewalks. Back inside, we strip off our wet clothes and
towel each other off, still laughing. Dex puts on a pair of boxers. I
wear one of his T-shirts. Then we play a Billie Holiday CD and
open another bottle of wine, red this time. We stretch out on my
sofa where we talk for hours, only getting up to brush our teeth
and transfer to my bed for another satisfying sleep together.
Then suddenly, as it always happens, time accelerates.
And just as
being with Dex on our first night felt like the start of the summer,
fearing the end of our time together reminds me of late August,
when those daunting back-to-school commercials for Trapper
Keepers would replace the ones featuring gleeful towheaded kids
sipping Capri-Sun poolside. I remember the feeling well a
mixture of sadness and panic. This is how I feel now as we sit on
my sofa on Saturday while afternoon bleeds into evening. I keep
telling myself not to ruin the last night by being sad. I tell myself
that the best is yet to come. He loves me.
As if reading my mind, Dex looks at me and says, "I meant what I
said."
It is the first reference to our sacred exchange.
"I did too." I am filled with a deep longing, and am sure that our
talk is coming. Our Post-Independence Day Talk. We are going to
discuss ways to make this crazy thing work. How we can't bear to
hurt Darcy, but that we must. I wait for his lead. It is his
conversation to begin.
That's when he says, "No matter what happens, I meant that."
His words are like the sound of a needle dragging across a record.
A sinking, sickening feeling washes over me. This is why you
should never, ever get your hopes up. This is why you should see
the glass as half empty. So when the whole thing spills, you aren't
as devastated. I want to cry, but I keep my face placid, give myself
a psychological shot of Botox. I can't cry, for several reasons, not
the least of which is that if he asks why I'm crying, I won't be able
to articulate an answer.
I fight to salvage the night, bring the golden cast back.
He loves
me, he loves me, he loves me, I tell myself. But it is not helping.
He looks at me worriedly. "What's wrong?"
I shake my head, and he asks again, his voice gentle.
"Hey, hey, hey" He lifts my chin, looks into my eyes.
"What is
it?"
"I'm just sad." My voice trembles tellingly. "It's our last night."
"It's not our last night."
I take a deep breath. "It's not?"
"No."
But that doesn't really explain much. What does "no"
mean? That
we will continue in this fashion for a few more weeks?
Until the
night before their rehearsal dinner? Or does he mean that this is
only our beginning? Why can't he be more specific? I can't bring
myself to ask. I am afraid of his answer.
"Rachel, I love you."
His lips stay curled up at the end of the last word, until I lean over
to kiss him. A kiss is my response. I won't say it back until we have
our talk. Way to take a stand!
We are kissing on my couch, followed by the unzipping and
unbuttoning and attempting to gracefully slide out of denim,
which is impossible. We move various sections of the Times out of
our way and onto the floor. The sure fix, I think the panacea. We
are making love, but I am not in the moment. I am thinking,
thinking, thinking. I can feel the dials of my brain whirring and
rotating like the inside of a Swiss watch. What is he going to do?
What is going to happen?
The next morning, when I wake up beside Dex, I hear him saying
"no matter what happens." But during sleep my mind reprocessed
the meaning of his words, landing on a perfectly logical
explanation: Dexter just meant that whatever shit hits the fan, no
matter what Darcy says or does, if we need some time apart in the
aftermath of blood and guts, he will be waiting to love me and it
will all be fixed in the end. That is what he must have meant. But
still. I want him to tell me this. Surely he will say something more
before he returns to the Upper West Side.
We get up, shower together, and go to Starbucks.
Already we have
a routine. It is eleven. Darcy and the others will be home soon. We
are down to minutes and still no conversation, no conclusions. We
finish our coffee and then stop at a toy store. Dex needs to buy a
baby present for one of his work friends. Just a small token, he
says. I can't decide whether I enjoy the feeling of being such an
established couple that we run errands together, or whether I
resent wasting our dwindling moments on this random task. It's
more the latter. I just want to get back so that we have a few
moments together. Time for him to share his plan.
But Dex lingers over various toys and books, asking me my
opinion, laboring over a decision that doesn't matter one bit in the
scheme of things. He finally decides on a stuffed, green triceratops
with a cartoon-ish expression. It's not what I would choose for a
newborn, but I admire his conviction. I hope he will have similar
conviction about us.
"It's cute. Don't you think?" he asks, cocking its small head.
"Adorable."
Then, as he's about to pay for the dinosaur, he spots a plastic bin
full of wooden dice. He picks out two red ones with gold-painted
dots and holds them up in an open palm. "How much for a pair of
dice?"
"Forty-nine cents per die," the man at the register says.
"A bargain. I'll take 'em."
We leave the store and walk toward my apartment.
People are
returning to the city in droves; traffic has resumed its normal
pace. We are almost at my block. Dex is holding the bag with the
dinosaur in his right hand and the dice in his left. He has been
shaking them along the way. I wonder if his stomach hurts as
much as mine does.
"What are you thinking?" I ask him. I want a long answer,
articulating everything I am thinking. I want reassurance, some
small nugget of hope.
He shrugs, licks his lips. "Nothing much."
ARE YOU MARRYING DARCY? The words roar in
my head. But I
say nothing, worrying that pressuring him is not strategically
wise. As if what I say or don't say in the final minutes of our
togetherness might make a difference. Maybe it is that tenuous the fate of three people hanging in the balance like the
cradle in the nursery rhyme.
"You like to gamble?" Dex asks, examining his dice while still
walking.
"No," I say. Surprise, surprise. Rachel playing it safe.
"Do you?"
"Yeah," he says. "I like craps. My lucky number is six a four and a
two. You have a lucky roll?"
"No Well, I like double sixes," I answer, trying to mask my
feelings of desperation. Desperate women are not attractive.
Desperate women lose.
"Why double sixes?"
"I don't know," I say. I don't feel like explaining that it stems from
playing backgammon with my father when I was little.
I'd chant
for double sixes and whenever I rolled them he'd call me Boxcar
Willy. I still don't know who Boxcar Willy is, but I loved it when
he called me that.
"Want me to roll you some double sixes?"
"Yeah," I say, pointing down at the filthy sidewalk, humoring him.
"Go ahead."
We stop on the corner of Seventieth and Third. A bus lurches past
us, and a woman with a baby nearly runs her stroller into Dex. He
seems to ignore everyone and everything around him, shaking the
dice with both hands, an expression of intense concentration on
his face. If I saw him exactly like this, but in Atlantic City wearing
polyester and a gold chain, I would wonder if he had his house
and life savings on the line.
"What are we betting?" I ask.
"Betting? We're on the same team, baby," he says in a Queens
accent, and then blows hard on his dice, his smooth cheeks
puffing out like a little boy blowing the candles out on his birthday
cake.
"Roll me double sixes right now."
"And if I do?"
I think to myself, You roll double sixes, we end up together. No
wedding with Darcy. But instead I say, "It will mean good luck for
us."
"All righty then. Double sixes coming right up for ya."
He licks his
lips and shakes his dice more vigorously.
The sun shines in my eyes as he tosses the dice in the air, catches
them easily, and then dramatically lowers his arm toward the
ground as if he's about to roll a bowling ball. He opens his hand,
fingers splayed, as the cubes clatter to the concrete right at the
busy Manhattan intersection.
One red die lands on six immediately. My heart skips with the
thought,
What iff We are crouched over the landed die and its spinning
twin, rotating on its axis for what seems like forever. If you tried
to make a die go that long, you couldn't do it. But there it is,
turning on its corner, a blur of gold dots and red background. And
then it slows, slows, slows, and lands neatly beside the first one.
Two rows of three dots on the second die.
Double sixes.
Boxcar Willy.
Holy shit, I think No wedding with Darcy! He wanted to talk
about "no matter what happens" as if someone were steering from
up above; well, here you go. Here you have it. Double sixes. Our
fate.
I look up from the dice at Dex, debating whether to tell him what
the roll had really been for. He looks at me with his mouth slightly
open. Our eyes return to the dice as if maybe we got it wrong.
What are the chances?
Urn, that would be precisely one in thirty-six. Just under three
percent.
So we aren't talking one-in-a-million odds. But those statistics are
misleading when removed from our context. We have reached the
end of a pivotal, meaningful weekend together. Right as we are
minutes from parting ways (for the day? forever?), Dexter buys
the dice on a whim, plays with them instead of putting them in the
bag with his stuffed dinosaur, and adopts his boyish gambling
persona. I play along, even though I'm in no mood for games.
Then I decide, albeit silently, the terms of the roll. And he rolls
double sixes! As if to say, we are foolproof, baby.
I look at his ninety-eight-cent (plus tax) dice with the reverence
you would have for a crystal ball in a richly upholstered room with
the world's greatest fortune-teller, wrinkled by the Persian sun,
who has just told you how it was, how it is, and how it is going to
be. Even Dex, who doesn't know what he just sealed for us, is
impressed, telling me that he needs to take me to Atlantic City,
Vegas, that we'd make a hell of a team.
Exactly.
He smiles at me and says, "There's your good luck, baby."
I say nothing, just pick up the dice and wedge them into the front
pocket of my shorts.
"You stealing my dice?"
Our dice.
"I need them," I say.
We return to my apartment, where he collects his things and says
good-bye.
"Thanks for an awesome weekend," he says, his face now
mirroring mine. He is sad too.
"Yeah. It was great. Thank you." I strike the pose of a confident
girl.
He bites his lower lip. "I better head back. As much as I don't want
to."
"Yeah. You better go."
"I'll call you soon. Whenever I can. As soon as I can."
"Okay." I nod.
"Okay. Bye."
After one final kiss, he is gone.
I sit on my sofa, clutching my dice. They are a comfort the roll is
almost as good as a talk. Maybe better. We didn't have a talk
because it is all so obvious. We are in love and meant to be
together, and the dice confirmed everything. I place them
reverently in his empty cinnamon Altoids container, nestled in the
white paper liner with the sixes still facing up. I touch the rows of
dots, like reverse Braille. They tell me that we will be together. It
is our destiny. All of me believes it. I close the lid of the tin and
push it against the base of my vase filled with lilies that are still
clinging on. The dice, the tin, the lilies I have created a shrine to
our love.
I glance around my prim, orderly studio, perfectly neat except for
my unmade bed. The sheets have molded against the mattress,
revealing a vague outline of our bodies. I want to be there again,
to feel closer to him. I slip off my sandals and walk over to the