Authors: Abby McDonald
I look at her blankly.
“The first women at Oxford to be admitted to the real colleges.” Her eyes take on a new glint. “Oh, they let us in before, but only if we kept to the new women’s schools. They all said it would be the end of the institution, that girls didn’t have the character or intelligence for the rigors of a
male
education.” Her lips twist into what I swear is a smirk. “I suppose we proved them wrong.”
“We?” I repeat slowly.
“You’re on a semester abroad, undergraduate, I think it was?” I nod. Dr. Aldridge opens a drawer. “Perhaps you’ll consider coming back to us. We run summer programs and even master’s degrees. I don’t do a lot of teaching anymore, but I’m sure I could find time to supervise you.”
Mouth open, I walk back to the desk and take the papers she holds, outstretched. “Something to do with
feminism and the media, maybe.” And then she winks at me, so fast I think I’m imagining it.
“I . . . Thank you,” I breathe, clutching the sheets. She nods again, curtly, and stands.
“Now, I really do have other appointments.”
And just like that, it’s over.
I spend the rest of the day packing in a daze. The health center is safe, and I have a maybe-invitation to do a master’s. At Oxford. The ideas dance around my head like some kind of promise, and it’s nearly time to meet Holly for a good-bye drink in the bar when I realize I have one more stop I have to make before I can be done here.
Light from Professor Elliot’s study filters under the door into the cloisters, so after a quick knock, I walk in. She’s at her desk with a stack of papers, and her whole face tightens when I walk in.
“You missed our tutorial,” she says with this icy voice.
“I know,” I reply, calm. She may not think I’m worth anything, but I know now she’s not the only one who matters. “I figured I could miss another attack on me and my terrible morals.”
Her eyes narrow. “So what can I do for you?” Her tone is like the least helpful thing ever.
“I came to collect my paper.”
“Oh, yes.” Lifting a folder from the edge of the desk, she holds it between her finger and thumb like it’s contagious. “It was certainly an interesting perspective, but
hardly up to
Oxford
standards.” She smiles but it doesn’t reach her eyes.
“I’ll bet.” I take the file and don’t even bother looking at the grade. I know it’ll suck, but that wasn’t the point.
“I’m sure you’ll have fun back at home.”
“I’m sure I will.” I’m at the door before I turn back to her. It’s the same as this morning with Dr. Aldridge, but this time I’m the one who’s getting the final word.
“You know, you’re the one who’s supposed to be the adult here.” I make sure every word carries, not caring when her mouth drops open in a tiny “o.” “I really respected you. I mean, you were so helpful and supportive; it was like my opinions mattered.” I stare at her, this woman who made me feel so smart and so dumb all in the space of one semester. “But you’re just as hypocritical as the rest of them. The minute it looks like I’m not one of Carrie’s little clones, you act like I’m totally worthless.” I shake my head. “That’s not good teaching, but more than that, it’s crappy feminism.”
I don’t stick around to hear if she’s got anything to say. It wouldn’t mean anything to me, anyway. Besides, I’ve got a good-bye celebration to get to. There’s only the two of us, but who needs a crowd?
I spend the next two days after our premiere inhabiting the delightful state of denial. I sleep on Carla’s floor to avoid Morgan’s wrath, refrain from answering my phone to avoid Ryan’s enthusiasm, and throw myself into studying for finals to avoid thinking about the end of my stay and my impending return to Oxford.
I am nothing if not a multitasker.
“Put the poor guy out of his misery.” Carla points a highlighter at me as my mobile begins to vibrate again. “That’s, like, the sixth time tonight.”
“I can’t.” I look up from my textbook and press “decline call.” “I don’t know what to say to him.”
“What is there to say?”
“Um, ‘You know that summer job you’re so excited about us doing together? I’m not taking it, I’m going
back to England, and I’ll probably never see you again.’ Yes, that’s just perfect.” I sigh, reaching for my aspirin. Ever since my life exploded into drama, I’ve had the most terrible headache.
Carla rolls her eyes. “So take the job.”
“You know I can’t.”
“Because of your dream internship, yeah, I know.” Carla fixes me with a stare. “If you’re switching back to the old you, what’s with the outfit?”
I look down at my powder-blue polo shirt and denim skirt and shrug. “Habit, I suppose. Don’t forget, half my things are still at Morgan’s.”
“Which you need to get if you’re going to pack in time,” Carla reminds me.
“What’s the point? She’s probably burned them all by now.”
“True.”
I think of Morgan’s drama-queen routine and wonder if I can do without all those trivial possessions. My laptop, for example. Or my passport. “It’s all right. I doubt I’ll need Uggs in the offices of Sterns, Cahill, and Coutts.”
“For something you swear is the perfect job, you’re sure not enthusiastic about it.”
I stiffen. “Because I feel terrible about letting Ryan down.”
“Sure, sure.” Carla glances back at her notes. “If I didn’t have a killer history final tomorrow morning, I’d be grilling you right now.”
I sit back in my seat, looking around the busy study section full of panicked last-minute crammers and
take-away coffee cups. If only we hadn’t kissed. My life would be so much simpler if we just hadn’t kissed.
“And even if I did want to come back for summer, which I don’t,” I muse, “I couldn’t give up my dream for Ryan. What kind of girl would that make me?”
“Julian Morton’s personal protégée?”
“No! I’d be one of those girls who sacrifices all her own ambition to fit around a boy’s plans.” I cross my arms firmly. “And I hate those girls.”
“That’s true.” Carla shrugs. “But . . .”
“No ‘but.’ There are no ‘buts’ involved.”
She laughs. “What if you really do want to take the L.A. job, but you’re refusing to even think about it because of Ryan? Isn’t that still making your decision based on a boy?”
I narrow my eyes at her. “You’re not helping.”
“Hey, I was just putting it out there.” She holds her hands up. “But if you want to let the chance of a lifetime slip by, just because it happens to come with a summer of hot make-out action as a bonus . . .” Carla’s expression is supremely dubious.
I sink my head onto the table and groan.
“I had a plan!”
She pats my head gently. “Plans change, Em.”
“Not mine.” I sigh wistfully. “My plans come with built-in contingencies and backup insurance and special allowances for unexpected variations. The plan itself never changes.”
“So think of this as one of those unexpected variants.”
I smile sadly. “It doesn’t fit. Summer working on a
film in L.A. . . . How does that get me any nearer to my law career?”
Carla shakes her head. “Get it together. So you spend the summer in L.A. or London; either way you have to talk to Ryan.”
“No, I don’t.”
“Yeah, good luck with that.” Carla’s eyes flicker over my shoulder, and I turn to find Ryan fifteen feet away, his battered black sneakers approaching fast.
“Oh, crap.”
“Em.” His face isn’t happy, and I can’t blame him. If he’d kiss-and-run the way I did, I would be an angry, raging mess by now.
“Hi.” I try to smile, but he simply towers over me. My stomach tightens.
“Let’s go talk somewhere.”
“I’d really love to,” I say limply, “but I have finals and —” He takes my hand and looks at me with those cloudy dark eyes. “I suppose I have time,” I finish in a whisper. He nods and walks away, out of the side library entrance and toward the small memorial garden.
I follow slowly, apprehension growing with every step. I’m not usually this way, shrinking away from difficult conversations as if I’m scared of confrontation. In fact, I’ve often been the one urging friends to face challenges head-on, rather than let them grow out of all proportion. And here I am, dreading every word because this time it all seems to matter so much more.
But I can’t delay the inevitable. Soon I’m standing next to the arrangement of shrubbery, just inches away
from Ryan, his hurt expression making me regret being such a coward.
“Um, hi,” I start.
“Are you OK?” He’s angry, it’s obvious, but his first question is to see how I am. I feel a pang. He really is one of the good ones.
I swallow, avoiding his eyes. “I’m fine.”
“I was worried. I thought Morgan might have” — his lips lift slightly — “killed you. Maimed, at least. You took off so fast after she found us.”
“Death by lip gloss,” I try to joke, but my words just hover awkwardly between us. “No, really I’m fine.”
“Look, I know you must feel guilty, like you betrayed her or something.” Ryan takes my hands and forces me to look at him. “And I get that, you’re too nice sometimes, but you can’t break things off, just because she —”
“That’s not it.” I can’t bear it any longer. He thinks I’m doing this because I’m a good person, not because I’m putting myself first. I swallow. “This — us — I don’t know how it’ll work. I’m leaving in a few days, and then I’ll be thousands of miles away.”
“But you’ll be back for summer.” He tries to pull me closer. “That’s only two months away. We can email and talk — it’ll be no time at all.”
“I’m not coming back.” I feel something inside me break as I say it. All this avoidance has been to delay those words; as if saying it out loud makes my decision final. This really was just a brief escape from my real life.
Ryan frowns. “I don’t get it.” I slowly detach my hands from his.
“The job with Julian Morton, I’m not taking it.”
“What?”
“I got an internship offer, the one I told you about.” Ignoring the confused look in his eyes, I keep talking. “I’ll be working in a law office all summer, so I won’t be coming back. And after that, it’s my final year, so I’ll be studying through my holidays.” I try to keep my voice steady. “So it just won’t work with you. If we’re not going to be spending time with each other, what’s the point in pretending?”
He’s quiet for a moment. I can’t bring myself to look at him, so I study the leaves shivering slightly in the breeze.
“You’ve already made your mind up, haven’t you?”
I nod. “You know how important this is to me. I can’t just throw it away for a fun summer on some movie.”
Ryan exhales, his whole body going still. “So all that stuff you said about letting go and being happy was just bullshit.”
I flinch. “That’s not true.”
“So why won’t you even think about the internship?” Ryan grabs me again, pulling me into him until I can feel his body against me, so I can’t help but look up into his eyes. “Just think about it.”
“I have! But I can’t change my life around for you.”
“No, not for me.” He shakes his head. “For you, for what you really want to do. You’ve loved this movie, Em, you know you have. The writing, the production. Admit it.”
I stay motionless in his arms. “Of course I’ve enjoyed it, but —”
“But nothing! Do you have any idea how many kids would kill for this chance?” I don’t answer. “So why are you so scared to give it a shot?”
I wrench away. “I’m not scared! You don’t understand. I’ve worked my whole life to get on this path. This is what I want!”
Ryan looks at me, his expression slowly closing off. I know I picked this, but still it hurts more than I expected.
“Well, this is good-bye, I guess.” He clears his throat. “You fly back to England on Friday?”
“To Florida,” I say, digging tiny half-moon prints into my palms. This is worse than how it was with Sebastian. “I’m going to meet Natasha. Then home.”
“Right.” He nods slowly. “I’ll drop by a copy of the movie before you go; you should have one. You did a great job.”
We did a great job,
I think. But saying that would be useless, so I just nod. “Oh. Thanks. I’d like that.”
“So . . .”
We stand, awkward.
“Good-bye,” I say softly. Ryan tilts his head slightly in acknowledgment. Part of me wishes he would keep fighting, kiss me, say anything to convince me to stay, but we don’t have somebody writing this scene for us, and life doesn’t happen like that.
I just walk away.