The moon shines down on me as I make my way across the empty parking lot. Despite the warmth of the summer night, I shiver. I feel hot and cold all at once. My hands are cold and clammy, but my face is hot. To say I was a bit nervous would be an understatement. I can’t believe I’m doing this, I think. He’s going to think I’m such a creeper. I should turn around and go home before I make a complete idiot out of myself. Before I have a chance to move, an older woman and a young man emerge out of the dimly-lit grocery store. I duck down behind a dumpster and watch the duo. The older woman bids the young man “good night” as she walks to her car.
“Are
you sure you don’t want a ride home, Micah?” the older woman asks anxiously. “I don’t like to see you walking home alone at
night.”
I can tell that
she’s a very sweet woman who probably worries too much. I smile to myself as I realize that she
sounds just like my grandma. There would be
pretty much no danger of walking home alone at night in this tiny town. It’s so different from the big city I used to
live in. It was a lot to get used to at
first. I wasn’t acquainted to how close
the people in a small town could be.
I was born and
raised in a little apartment with my mom in New York City ,
where I barely knew any of my neighbors.
When we moved into Owlton, however, we found out that everyone knew
every person and every thing in the town.
If someone got a new lawn mower or got a new job, pretty much the whole
town knew about it. I guess that’s what
happens when you live in a town with a population of 4,000. So, it’s safe to say that when my mother and
I moved in a few months ago, the whole town was informed about it. We’d barely gotten one box into our house
before the neighbors started coming over and welcoming us with cookies and
casseroles. Small town life has been
both a blessing and a curse, but mostly a blessing. I don’t think I was ever cut out for city
life. I felt so small, insignificant,
and unnoticed. Owlton has been a totally
different story.
When it was my
first day at school, everyone knew my name already and where I’d come
from. The very second I walked through
the front doors, I was surrounded by an excited fan club. They all wanted to get to know the “exotic”
city girl, which I most definitely claim not
to be. I’m kind of shy and plain, not
the “flashy” city girl type that I’m sure they were expecting, but yet they
still seemed intrigued by me. So, for
the first few days I had a posse that surrounded me everywhere I went, even
into the bathrooms (though not all the way into the stalls, thank goodness)! After a couple of weeks, my “intrigue” wore
off (which I was quite glad of, to be honest) until I was left with two girls
who are now my best friends and the first true friends I’d ever really had:
Amber and Stephanie. Life couldn’t be
better, right? Think again.
The very instant
I walked through the front doors of my new school, surrounded by my fans, was
when I first saw him. Micah Mordel. I know it’s probably corny to be saying this,
but it truly was love at first sight. I
couldn’t take my eyes off him. His wavy
blonde hair, his sweet face, his ocean eyes, and his awkward bearing instantly
drew me in. Later on it was more than
just those things that attracted me; it was also his beautiful sadness. Micah seemed to always be lonely and sad; I
wanted to get to know Micah, to ease his pain, to be a part of his life. Even through his depression, I occasionally
caught glimpses of his personality, and I relished these brief glimpses of his
true character. I can count on one hand
the amount of times I’d seen Micah smile, so the few I’d seen were greatly
treasured. When he smiled, the world
seemed to glow and I felt curiously light-headed; it was the happiest sensation
I’d ever felt. From a distance, I’d
fallen in love with Micah Mordel, and now I am going to possibly close that
distance……maybe…..if I finally get up the courage to speak to him, which I’d
had no luck with in the past.
The sound of
Micah’s low, gentle voice breaks me out of my brain stew. “Yeah, I’m sure. It’s okay, I’ll be fine,” Micah assures the
older woman. “I live pretty near the
store, so it’ll be no problem walking.”
The woman seems to be placated by his answer, so she tosses him one last
wave, heads to her car, and drives away.
Now there’s only
me and Micah. My heart starts pumping
faster and faster, and I involuntarily begin to shake, which in turn causes the
dumpster that I’m leaning up against to rattle.
Micah turns around, searching for the source of the sound, while I duck
down and hold my breath. Thankfully he
dismisses the idea that he heard anything, turns, and begins walking away. Wait,
I think. I don’t really want him to get away, do I? Come on, Melody, you can do this! So, before I can stop myself, I jump out
from behind the dumpster and yell, “Wait!”
It’s difficult to tell who’s more surprised: me or Micah. He jumps, very startled, and just stops and
stares at me. To my horror, I begin to
blush, and I am unable to find the ability to form any words. We stand there gawking at each other
awkwardly for a tortuous moment that seems to last a lifetime. Say
something, the voice in my head screams at me, anything! “Umm, hi,” I
say. “Sorry that I scared you. I didn’t mean to sneak up on you like
that. I just…” I trail off, not knowing what to say and
feeling like a crazy stalker.
“It’s okay,”
Micah assures. “I just wasn’t expecting
to find someone…hiding behind a dumpster…”
He looks at me with curiosity and a bit of fear. “If you don’t mind me asking you this, um,
who are you, and what were you doing back there?”
I feel a bit
disheartened that he doesn’t recognize me.
At first I tell myself that it’s probably just because it’s hard to tell
who I am at night and the fact that I’m out of the usual environment that he’s
seen me in, but then the reality hits me: he doesn’t know me at all. I’ve fallen in love with him from a distance,
so we’ve never spoken to each other before.
We’ve had classes together, but I’d never introduced myself to him. So of course Micah is freaked out. I would be too if a complete stranger yelled
at me in a dark, deserted parking lot. Nice, Melody. Nice.
“M-my name’s
Melody. I’m sort of new to your school…I
just moved in a few months ago.”
There’s a little
glimmer of recognition after I say that.
“Oh, yeah, I think I remember you now,” Micah says. “You moved from New
York , right?”
“Yep, that’s
me,” I chirp nervously. There’s another
awkward silence before Micah speaks again.
“Well,
I guess I’ll be going. It’s getting
late.” He waves and half-smiles. “Good night.”
Micah then begins to walk away.
I’m frozen for a
few moments, confused by his abruptness.
“Wait!” I say, running to catch up with him. I search frantically for something to say to
him. “Don’t…don’t you want to know why I
was behind the dumpster?’
Micah turns
around and a rare smile flashes across his face. “Well, yeah, actually,” he says. “I am
a bit curious, to be honest.”
I’m quite flustered
now, entranced by his beautiful smile.
“Um…well….I was…waiting for you to get done with work so I could…ask you
a question.” I blush deep red and look
at my feet.
“Okaaaaay…what
was the question?” Micah asked.
Still looking at
my feet I respond, “I was just going to ask you if…if you’d like to, um, hang
out.”
“Oh,” he says. His voice now sounds emotionless and dead. “Well, that would be fun and all, but I really
should be getting home. It’s getting
really late.”
I narrow my eyes
and put my hands on my hips in irritation.
“It’s really late?” I say, “but it’s only nine
o’clock , and it’s a Friday night.”
Micah turns away
from me, looking very uncomfortable, so I decide to just let it go. I don’t want to make things uncomfortable for
him. I just wanted to make him happy,
but I guess it wasn’t meant to be. So,
discouraged and heartbroken, I start to quietly walk away. I barely go a few feet, however, before Micah
calls out to me.
“Wait!” he
says. I jerk my head back to face him
with curiosity, and he suddenly becomes flustered. “Um, I...I’d like to hang out. If you still wanted to.”
Inside my heart
is squealing like a little girl, but I try to remain calm and cool on the
outside. “Oh, awesome! Great!” I say, my
smile probably just about blinding him.
“Did you want to…go see a movie or something?”
“Well, I don’t
really have any money with me,” Micah says, embarrassed.
“Oh, that’s
completely fine,” I reassure him. “We
can just go for a walk around town or something.”
Micah looks very
relieved and a smile floats onto his face.
It’s the start of a magical evening, I can just feel it.
----
Our conversation
is slow and awkward at first, but surprisingly quickly our words stream out in
an effortless flow. It’s as if we’ve
known each other our whole lives. We
talk and laugh blissfully. Micah smiles
tonight more than I’d ever seen him smile.
I treasure each and every one that flits across his face, stowing it
away in my memory. This is so much more fun than going to the movies, I think to
myself. Walking around town has never
been more fun. We run through people’s
sprinklers, dash away from mean dogs, and eventually end up at the beach. As we dip our toes in the water and skip
rocks across the lake’s glassy surface, we start to feel raindrops on our
foreheads. Before we know it, it’s
raining buckets. We’re completely soaked
in a matter of seconds, but we don’t care.
We just laugh and dance around joyfully.
The cool drops feel like heaven on this warm summer evening…or should I
say “morning”, for morning it now is.
Looking across the water, my breath catches in my throat at the sight I
behold. I tap Micah and gesture
excitedly. Across the lake the sun is
starting to rise, and right above the rising sun is a gorgeous rainbow. We both stand in awe for quite some
time. This is the perfect end to a perfect night, I dreamily think to
myself, when suddenly I’m surprised to feel an arm beginning to wrap itself
around me. I freeze in place, wanting to
let this moment last forever.
“It’s been a
wonderful night,” I say, leaning my head on Micah’s shoulder. When I do this, however, he stiffens and
pulls away. Micah walks a bit away and
sits on the dock, gazing morosely at the water.
I tentatively walk over and sit beside him, with plenty of space between
us.
“Is everything
alright?” I ask. This is answered with
silence, so I add, “If you don’t want to talk about it, I understand.”
Micah sighs,
hesitantly looks over at me, and then opens and closes his mouth a few times
before finally deciding to speak. He
then spills the reason for his sadness, the sadness that I’d wondered about
ever since I’d met him.
“Melody, do you
remember when I said that I didn’t have any money with me tonight?” Micah asks.
“Yes, I do,” I
say, a bit perplexed.
“Well, the
reason why I don’t have much money in general is because I used up all of my
money to help my girlfriend pay for her chemo treatments. You see…she had cancer, and she was from a
pretty poor family, so I did everything that I could to help her…” Micah pauses.
I patiently wait for him to continue.
He takes a deep, shaky breath and continues, “But it wasn’t enough. My girlfriend died two years ago today.” I sit, transfixed, as Micah begins to crumble
before my eyes. When I try to comfort
him, wrapping my arms around him, he lets me.
I hold him close, my cheek resting close to his, until his racking sobs
subside. As I release my hold on him, I
notice one last tear coursing down his cheek, and before I can stop myself, I
delicately kiss it away.
“Sorry,” I
mumble, as I blush and turn away, but Micah then turns me back around and gazes
earnestly into my eyes. Taking my face
into his hands, he gently kisses my lips.
I feel a spark of electricity run down my spine and a wave of desire rushes
through me. My hands, which have been
hanging limply at my side, now begin to impulsively wrap themselves around
Micah’s neck, as my body presses as close to him as possible. I can tell that Micah must be feeling a spark
of connection between us too because he sighs in the back of his throat and
kisses me again but urgently this time.
Before he gives me a third kiss, however, he pulls away hastily. We both stand up, breathing hard, as the rain
continues to fall from the sky. I look
at Micah and see that his cheeks are flushed, and his eyes are misty. When our breathing eventually slows down
Micah, gazing into my eyes with what I see as a mixture of sadness and guilt,
softly trails his hand down my cheek, and walks away.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Days pass by, eventually
turning into weeks, without me seeing Micah.
Not that I try that hard to see him again. I miss him like crazy, but I’m afraid to
approach him. Afraid of the hurt that I
know I’d cause him if I did. By the time
three weeks pass, I decide I can’t take it anymore: I need to see him. Everything around me reminds me of Micah, so
naturally he is all I can think about.
My heart yearns for him so much that my stomach twists in knots and my
heart burns with desire to see him, to feel his hand in mine. It’s like I’m a drug addict who is in
withdrawal, and Micah is the drug that I need to have, or I just might
explode.
So that evening
I drive my car (a Pacer) down to the grocery store, but this time I don’t
hide. I park in the deserted parking lot
and walk into the store. As I step
through the automatic doors, I scan the aisles, hoping to catch a glimpse of
Micah while at the same time I feel guilty with the knowledge that seeing me
will severely hurt him. I’ll probably
always be associated with his dead girlfriend now. I don’t have to worry about seeing him though
because he’s not there. I search the
whole store, earning some curious glances from a few customers and a few “May I
help you?”s from the employees. After
about 15 minutes of searching that seems like an eternity, I give up and reluctantly
slump to the front of the store. At the
front of the store, however, I find a surprise: Micah. He must have been on break or something when
I first came in because now he’s working the registers. I stand and watch him from a distance as he works,
scanning items and politely smiling at his customers. Even though I can easily tell that these
smiles aren’t truly authentic, they still make me melt a little. I’m so caught up in watching him that I forget
that I’m standing in the middle of an aisle.
“Umm, excuse
me,” a kindly young woman says as she attempts to push her cart full of
groceries and children down the aisle.
“Oh! Sorry!” I say, snapping back into
reality.
The woman just
gives me a knowing smile as she winks and walks away. Okay,
note to self: be a bit more discrete whilst openly gaping at Micah. I snort, amused by my thinking, and then my
amusement turns to a mixture of fear and anticipation as I make my way over to
Micah. I hastily grab a candy bar and
walk up to his register. Micah tells the
man in front of me to “have a nice day” and then he turns toward me. As he turns toward me, for a fraction of a
second his smile flickers and a blush reddens his face, but then he regains his
composure.
“Hello,” Micah
says. His voice is too cheery. Too fake.
But I’m still just so happy to hear his voice.
“Hi,” I say,
suddenly breathless.
Micah looks
unseeingly back at me with his fake smile as he grabs my candy bar and scans
it. “That’ll be 94 cents, please.”
I stare at him
in disbelief. He’s acting as if nothing
ever happened between us. Wait, not even
just that. He’s acting as if we are
complete strangers. I feel really stupid
and hurt, but I try not to let it show.
I hand him a dollar, and Micah is careful not to let his fingers touch
mine as he grabs the money and gives me my change.
“Thanks for
coming in, and have a nice day,” Micah says as he hands me my pathetic bag with
a mere candy bar in it. I grab the bag,
but I don’t leave. I just stand there,
still staring at Micah.
“ ‘Have a nice
day’, huh?” I say in a dead, cold voice. “How can I ‘have a nice day’ when you
pretend…when you pretend…you…d-don’t even know me?” Angry tears now threaten to
fall from my eyes, and I notice that a line of curious patrons has started to
form at Micah’s register. Don’t cry, Melody, don’t show how weak and
desperate you truly are!
“I’m sorry,
ma’am, but I have customers waiting,” Micah says.
I feel as if
I’ve been smacked in the face. Stunned,
I stand there a few seconds before I turn and dash out the door. Ironic,
I think to myself, it's me who’s running away this time. Away
from nothing and everything.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Tears blur my
vision as I speed out of the parking lot in my Pacer, but I don’t feel
sad. I feel nothing but emptiness. When I make it home, I lie down on my bed and
unseeingly stare at the ceiling. I don’t
know how long I end up sitting that way, feeling and thinking nothing, until I
eventually notice the time that’s projected on the ceiling from my alarm clock
and realize that it’s time for me to leave for work. I quickly change clothes and drive to
McDonald’s. I dread going in, feeling
like I won’t be able to handle working today, but as I begin taking and filling
orders, I actually start to feel better.
The busyness and constant chaos keeps my mind from straying onto
thoughts of Micah.
“Ah, man,”
Peter, a fellow employee says to me as we both walk out to our cars later that
night. “That was an especially crazy day
today. I can’t wait to go home and go to
sleep. What about you?” He throws me a lazily imploring look with his
tired green eyes and ruffles his black hair as he waits for me to respond.
“Ummm…I don’t
know, but I’ll definitely not be going to sleep right away. I’m actually feeling…really energized for
some reason,” I say. “Weird, right?”
Peter looks at
my hands, notices them shaking, and then laughs. “Not really,” he says. “I think those two cappuccinos you had during
break completely explain why you’re feeling that way.”
“Oh, that’s
right!” I say. I laugh too, but it comes
out creepily high-pitched. I clasp my
hand to my mouth in embarrassment, and Peter gives me a look of amusement,
which gets me laughing hysterically for some reason. My whole body is shaking now: arms, legs, the
whole caboodle. I’m laughing so hard
that I lose my balance and almost fall down, if it isn’t for Peter catching my
arm and steadying me.
“Woah. Careful there,” he says, grinning. “I don’t know if I feel comfortable letting
you drive while intoxicated,” he adds teasingly but also with a hint of concern
in his voice.
I roll my
eyes. “I’m fine, Peter. See you tomorrow.” I wave, get into my car, and begin backing up
the car before I notice that Peter is still standing where I left him, watching
me. I roll down my window and call out
the window, “Why are you still standing there?
Are you okay? If you’re worried
about me, I really am fine.”
“I was just
thinking…and now, way to go, you’ve made me lose my train of thought!” Peter
says. His words are thick with sarcasm,
but even through the darkness I can tell that he is blushing. This confuses me, but I humor him and pretend
to not notice.
“Well, you
better go catch it then. See ya.”
----
As soon as I turn the car around
and head down the road alone, thoughts of Micah completely cloud my mind. I can’t believe that I didn’t think of him
all day long! Instead of feeling hurt or
feeling nothing at all about him, however, I feel uncharacteristically brave
and optimistic. It’s amazing what a couple of cappuccinos can do,
I think to myself, but at around the same time that I’m thinking this, Peter
pops into my mind. I’d never really
talked to Peter much before. We’d worked
together ever since I came to Owlton and started working at McDonald’s, but I’d
never really taken much notice of him and vice versa. We were just co-workers. End of story.
…But why does Peter seem to all of a sudden be taking an interest in me? I can’t deny that it flatters me, but I’ve
got enough to think about right now. I
need to focus on what to do about Micah.
The more I think about him, the more restless I become, and with the
assistance of my caffeine high, I don’t even hesitate before I call my friend
Amber.
“Hello?”
“Hey, Amber! This is Melody.”
“Oh, hi,
Melody! How’s your summer going? We so
need to hang out! It feels like forever
since I’ve seen you!”
I laugh. “It’s barely been a month, but I do agree. Want to come over to my house and go on a
little, uh, adventure with me?”
“Sure, I love
adventures! When do you want to do that?”
“Well, how about
right now?”
There’s a slight pause of surprise
before Amber recovers. “Oh. Sure!
I’m super curious now...does this have anything to do with a guy
perchance?”
“You’ll just have
to come over and find out for yourself,” I say and hang up the phone. I’m
starting to think maybe Peter laced my cappuccinos with something, I
bemusedly think to myself. That would explain why he was so concerned
about me driving intoxicated. Five
minutes later, the door bell rings and there’s Amber. I sure
have to give her credit. She’s quick.
“So, what’s up?”
Amber says, while she tries to read my expression. “Wait.
Is something wrong?”
I had been
completely composed before, but at the sight of my friend, I start to fall
apart. Before I can stop myself tears
begin to fill my eyes, and as Amber embraces me, they fall down like rain. I try to wipe them away, but the effort is in
vain; another batch of tears immediately takes their place.
“S-sorry
ab-about this,” I say. “I don’t know why
I’m suddenly falling apart.”
“It’s
okay. That’s what friends are for,
right?” Amber says.
Eventually I
settle down and spill my guts about everything that had been happening. I hadn’t talked to Amber or Stephanie since
school was let out, and I hadn’t told anyone else about what happened between
Micah and me, so it was a great weight off my shoulders to let Amber into my
mind.
“Wow. A lot sure has happened since I’ve last
spoken to you. Figures, I guess. I mean, you are the happenin’ city chick and
all, right?”
“Yep,
that’s me!” We both laugh, and I smile as all of the tension seems to be
released from my body. It’s a relief,
but then I start to think about what I need to do next. Thankfully, Amber interrupts my thoughts.
“So,
what’s the plan?”
“Um,
well…I don’t really have one,” I say.
Amber’s
eyes widen a bit in surprise. “Wow. That’s
a first!”
“Yeah,”
I say, “I guess I’m learning that love can’t be planned.” Right after I say this, I instantly regret it
because now Amber is giving me an excited look.
Oh no.
“So
you really are in love with him,
aren’t you?” Amber gushes. I slap my
palm to my face and groan, trying to hide my mixture of embarrassment and
elation. It suddenly hits me that what
she says is true. I am in love with
Micah Mordel. Amber just laughs and
grabs my hand. “Come on. Let’s go find your prince.”
----
Fifteen
minutes later I’m sitting in Amber’s car, nervously looking out the window at
Micah’s house.
“I
don’t think I can do this,” I say.
Amber
gives me a disapproving look. “I won’t
take ‘no’ for an answer,” she says. “I
know you can do this.”
“But…what
should I say?”
“Just
tell him how you feel, and let him know that it’s okay for him to feel afraid,
but that there’s no need to feel that way.
You don’t want to break his heart; you just want to help him.” I stare at her in amazement, speechless. “What?” Amber says, looking around.
“That
was perfect,” I sigh. “If only I had the
social skills you have.”
“Right. I’m just the ultimate social butterfly,” she
says, rolling her eyes. “I didn’t lie
when I said that I knew you could do this, so just go out there and follow your
heart!” Amber then abruptly gets out of
the car, wrenches my car door open, and brusquely pulls me out.
I stumble forward and look back at
Amber, but she’s already in her car, beaming and giving me a thumbs-up. I throw her a death glare, but that just
makes her smile larger, if that’s even possible. Sighing and slightly shaking, I turn to look
at Micah’s house. It’s very small and
definitely not fancy, but it’s quaint.
It has an undeniable charm to it.
I guess any run-down house that’s painted a pastel green in the middle
of a fancy, white-picket-fence neighborhood would inevitably have some charm
and quirkiness to it. The house’s charm
soothes me as I begin to walk up to Micah’s front door. Ringing the bell, it takes all of the
strength I have to keep my feet rooted to the spot instead of running away in
fear. I hear footsteps approaching the
front door, which makes my heart start bounding and hands start sweating. The door swings open, and there he is. Micah looks very uncomfortable and awkward,
but he also looks so gorgeous that it’s painful. His blonde hair is ruffled, like he’d just
gotten out of bed, and his blue eyes seem to glow under the light of the
moon. We just stand and stare at each
other for a while before I decide to break the silence.
“Hi,”
I say. “I’m, um, sorry that I just kind
of randomly showed up at your house and all, but I need to talk to you.” I pause and take in a deep, shaky breath
before continuing. “
“I just want you
to know that it’s okay for you to feel afraid.
I understand. I’ve--I’ve never
told anyone about this, but my dad left my mom when I was ten, and he just
never showed his face again. I always
told people that my dad divorced my mom, and that he just lives a long ways
away, which I suppose is kind of the truth, but it’s more like he’s dead to
me. So, I know what it feels like to be
afraid of relationships; I know how fragile they can be, but you don’t need to
be afraid. I don’t want to break your heart. I just want to help you…because I…I…I love
you.” Micah stands and stares at me with his mouth slightly agape. I watch him as he continually opens and
closes his mouth, beginning to speak and then deciding not to. “I know.
Saying that I’m in love with a person I’ve only spent one night with
probably sounds crazy, doesn’t it? But
I’d actually known you, albeit from a distance, a few months and those months
feel like so much longer, and after our…um…night together, I feel as if I’ve
known you my whole life…” I trail off, trying to hide my blush by looking at my
feet.
The most deafening and agonizing
silence proceeds my rant, so that when a little black cat sneaks up on me and
almost scares me to death, I’m still very grateful for the distraction. My gasp of surprise turns to a coo of delight
as I bend down to pet the little kitty.
“That’s my cat,”
Micah says. “His name is Sneaky. Fitting, right?”
I laugh. It’s a self-conscious laugh, but much better
than the alternative (the silence).
“Yeah. Very.”
Micah bends
down beside me and begins to pet Sneaky, too.
I pretend to be entranced by the cat’s shining black fur, while I glance
up at Micah every once in a while. The
only thing seeming to keep him together is his cat. His eyebrows are furrowed and his eyes are
vacant. He looks as if a million things
are going through his mind. Micah breaks
out of his trance when he realizes that I’m studying him closely. I have a sudden, odd urge to giggle, so I
bite my lip and quickly turn my face away in embarrassment.
“What?”
Micah asks, staring at me with a bemused smile on his face.
“Nothing,”
I say quickly.
I know for sure I could never tell
him what really had made me feel embarrassed.
The true reason was that he looked really…sexy when he was thinking so
deeply. Admitting this in my mind makes
me blush beet red and a strangled giggle is reluctantly released from my
mouth. Oops. Micah laughs gently but then turns serious again.
“Melody,
I’m—I’m really sorry about how I’ve treated you, especially earlier today. It was…horrible of me. I feel like such a jerk,” Micah says. His eyes sparkle with intensity as they gaze
into mine, and I can feel his sincerity wrapping itself around me.
“It’s
okay,” I say. “I forgive you. I can’t say that I know exactly how you feel,
but I do understand.”
“Thank
you. For everything.”
“No
problem,” I say.
We stand
there with our eyes locked on each other for quite some time until Micah’s
front door opens and out steps a middle-aged woman who I assume to be his
mother. Even with only the faint light
of the moon to see her by, I can tell that she is very pretty. She’s tall and thin, just like her son, and
she has tousled, short chestnut -brown hair and is wearing a purple pajama
dress. Micah has a guilty look on his
face, but his mom seems to not be angry at all.
On the contrary she seems overjoyed.
“Who
is this?” she asks, giving him a wink and a smile. Micah rolls his eyes and groans.
“Her name’s
Melody. She’s a friend from school,”
Micah says.
“A friend,
huh?” She then turns to me and
introduces herself. “Well, hello,
Melody. It’s nice to meet you. I’m Micah’s mother.”
“Nice to meet you,
too, Mrs. Mordel,” I say. “I hope I
didn’t wake you up.”
“Oh,
don’t worry about it. The whole Mordel
family is just a light-sleeping bunch,” she says. “And you can call me Michelle. It’s nice to be called something other than
‘Mrs. Mordel’ for at least 3 months out of the year.” A flash of confusion must be crossing over my
face because she then adds, “I teach fourth grade at the elementary school in
Owlton.”
“Ohhh,
okay,” I respond, nodding.
I awkwardly stand on Micah’s porch,
watching as his mom continues looking at him with an impatient smile.
“Well,
um, I really should be going. Sorry if I
intruded on you at all,” I say.
“Oh,
no problem! You weren’t intruding at
all!” Michelle says. “Are you
hungry? I’ve got some cookies that I
baked this afternoon.”
“Oh. No, thanks.
I’m fine,” I say, smiling. “Umm,
see you later?” I say to Micah, waving and starting to walk away. He looks at me, blushing, as he stops me.
“Wait,”
he says, touching my arm. I look down at
where his hand has touched my skin, and I can almost see the shivers of chills
gently shaking my body. “Umm…can I give
you my number?”
Now
it’s my turn to blush. “Sure,” I
say. Micah then fishes in his pocket,
pulls out a pen, and begins to write his number on my hand. I study him as he writes, watching as a
graceful script appears on my hand.
Every number he writes makes my heart skip a beat. When he’s completed, he steps back and smiles
down at me. My heart melts a little, and
I feel a little high.
“Thanks,”
I say.
“No
problem,” Micah says. He then
puts his hand in mine and gives it
a gentle squeeze before he heads back to his house.
----
Sitting in the passenger seat of
Amber’s car on the way home, I’m speechless.
Amber excitedly chatters on, which is fine with me because that way I
can zone out and focus on what has just occurred. As I gaze out the window, I see the world in
a whole new light. Everything seems so
much more beautiful. It’s really amazing
how a person’s emotions are able to seemingly make the whole universe
shift. Before I know it, I’m already
home and getting into the shower. While
I am taking my clothes off and am about to hop in, I suddenly remember that
Micah’s number is still on my hand. I
wrap a towel around myself and dash out of the bathroom. Hurriedly, I find a scrap of paper and
carefully write down Micah’s number, taking great care in not making
mistakes. Then I scurry back to the
bathroom and take my shower. As the
water washes away the ink of Micah’s number, I gently press my fingers to my
hand. I close my eyes and sigh as I
recall the sensation of his hand on mine.
There’s hope for us yet, I
think to myself.
After I eventually get
out of the shower, put my pajamas on, and hop into bed, I notice the slip of
paper with Micah’s number on it. A
sudden impulse to text him “good night” pops into my head. Should
I do it? I think to myself. It
would be harmless, wouldn’t it? Before
I get a chance to lose my resolve, I pull out my phone, type out the message,
and send it. My heart skyrockets when my
phone notifies me that the message was sent, and then skips a beat when I
receive a message a few minutes later.
It’s a simple “good night,” but it still means the world to me, just
knowing that he is thinking of me. I
feel like he’s almost right here with me...almost. I feel myself aching to have him right here
with me, holding me like he did a few weeks ago. Well, there’s always tomorrow, I think to
myself, smiling as I drift off to sleep.
---
At work the next day, my mood is a
huge contrast from what it was yesterday, but despite this the day actually
goes slower than yesterday. I’m
extremely antsy. I find myself
constantly checking the time, and as soon as my break comes along, I flip out
my phone to check for any new messages.
Disappointment clouds my mind every time I check and see that there
isn’t any, but this displeasure doesn’t last long. My strange mood swings don’t go unnoticed;
Peter watches me suspiciously all day.
When it’s finally time to go home, Peter questions me about it as we
wander out to our cars.
“So, uh, what’s the deal? You’ve been acting kind of…odd today.”
I blush, as I consider telling him
the truth, but I then decide not to.
“Nothing,” I say quickly. This,
however, does not fool Peter.
“Sure,” he says sarcastically,
giving me a mocking smile.
His snide remark bothers me, so I
say, “Well, you know, it might be PMS.”
Now that really shuts him up.
Peter stands there uncomfortably, mumbles something unintelligible,
waves, and walks away. I laugh
hysterically all the way to my car, proud of my ingenious remark. I check my phone once more before hitting the
road, and when I see that have one new voicemail, a barely-contained squeal
pops out of my mouth. Once again,
however, I find disappointment when it turns out to just be a message from my
mom.
Hey,
Melody. I hope you had a good day at
work! Umm…I’m going to be late getting home tonight, so don’t wait around for
me for supper. Just though I’d let you
know. Okay. Love you!
Bye!
I sigh, my good mood dissipating
quickly as I realize what that message implies.
Whenever my mom comes home late, which has been pretty much every night
lately, that means she’s out on a date.
I wouldn’t be so against it if it was the same guy every night, but it’s
not. It’s always a one night stand. I still love my mom, but I just wish she
would make better decisions. I wish
she’d stop going out with random guys every night and just wait until the right
guy comes along. It’s kind of like I’m
the mother, and she’s the child. I press
my face in my hand, trying to push out these unpleasant thoughts, but they
still remain. So, I decide to drive down
to the beach. There’s just something
about the outdoors that makes me feel so peaceful and happy, and that’s exactly
what I need right now.
---
Dipping my toes into the water, my
troubles dissolve away into the water. I
smile and gaze out at the water, basking in the sensation of the evening sun
and the breeze softly caressing my face.
I close my eyes but open them up quickly as I hear a familiar voice
calling my name.
“Melody?” a boy’s uncertain voice
calls out to me.
I turn toward the voice and find
Peter standing a couple of feet away from me, smiling widely and holding a
fishing pole.
“Oh, hey!” I say. “I didn’t expect to see you here.”
“Yeah, I didn't expect to see you either,” he says. “What are you up to?”
“Oh, just enjoying the nice summer
evening, you know?” I say. “I see it
looks like you’ve been fishing. Have you
caught anything good?”
“Nah. Just a few small blue gills.”
“Well, on the bright side, at least
you didn’t get skunked.”
“True, true,” Peter says. He then sends me a look filled with what
appears to be longing, mixed with sudden doubt and insecurity. I’m paralyzed and hold my breath as Peter
hesitantly pushes a strand of lose hair behind my ear. His hand lingers on my face for a couple
seconds that seem to freeze in time before he pulls away. We stare at each other for a few moments
until I feel someone behind me, tapping on my shoulder. I start in surprise and, turning around, I
find Micah beaming down at me.
“Hello,” Micah says. He looks from me to Peter and back
again. “I hope I wasn’t, um,
interrupting anything…”
“Oh, no, of course not!” I say. “I was just soaking up the sun,
and Peter, my friend from work here, happened to notice me while he was
fishing.” I gestured to Peter. “Do you guys know each other at all? Peter goes to our school, too, but he’s a
couple grades ahead of us.”
“Yeah, I know him,” Peter
says. He looks a little bitter all of a
sudden but also resigned. “Micah,
right?”
“Yep, that’s right. I think I remember you, too,” says Micah. “You’re part of that band the Turbo Toasters, right?”
I look at Micah in confusion and
then set my eyes on Peter. “You’re in a
band? You never told me that!
That’s so cool!”
“Well, you never asked,” Peter says. “It’s not that big of a deal. I mean, it’s not like we’re famous or
anything. It’s just for fun really.”
“Speaking of things untold, I have
something to show you,” says Micah.
“Follow me.” I give Micah a
questioning look, but he just beckons me to tag along. Peter trails behind, looking unsure whether
he should follow as well or not.
“So, what do you think?” Micah
says.
I peer around him and see a
moped. I can tell that it’s quite old,
but it has character, just like his house does.
It’s painted a bright shade of red, with rust showing through in a few spots,
and has tons of bumper stickers plastered to it.
“I love it!” I say.
Micah smiles brightly, very
pleased, and it makes me feel so happy. That
smile of his is so infectious. “Would
you like to go for a ride?” he asks.
“That would be awesome!” I say.
“Great! Go ahead and hop on then!”
I sidle onto the moped, and Micah
sits down and takes a hold of the handlebars in front of me.
“Hold on tight!” he laughs.
I hesitate, blushing, as I loosely wrap
my arms around his warm body. His scent
is intoxicating: sweet and soothing. I
sigh and hold him tighter as relaxation pours over me and the moped revs up to
life. Speeding across the parking lot, I
look and see Peter standing, forlorn and forgotten. I give him a weak wave, feeling guilt and a
mixture of feelings I can’t explain. As
we pull out of the parking lot and speed down the street, however, these complicated
feelings are forgotten for now. Now it’s
just Micah, me, and the open road.
“So, where would you like to go?” Micah
asks, peeking a glance at me in his rearview mirror.
I feel so alive that I couldn’t
care less where we go, as long as this feeling continues. “Anywhere is fine
with me,” I say as I take in a deep breath of fresh air.
“Well, that narrows things down
quite a bit,” he says sarcastically.
“Sorry,” I say. “It’s just the truth is all.”
For a while we stop talking, and
all that can be heard is the soothing sound of the moped humming. I think I could seriously fall asleep on this
thing, I’m so relaxed.
“How about we go get some ice
cream?” Micah asks.
It’s official: my day is completely made. “I’m totally down with that,” I say. “Let’s do it!”
----
Ten minutes later we pull into the Dairy
Queen parking lot. Micah gracefully
leaps from his seat, while I clumsily wobble my way off. He laughs, steadying me.
“You okay there?” he asks,
grinning.
I narrow my eyes at him in irritation,
unappreciative of his teasing. “Yeah,
yeah. I’m no ballerina, I know,” I
mumble. Instead of causing him to be
serious, this only makes him grin even more.
I try to maintain my anger, but once again his laughter is infectious,
and my smile can’t be contained.
“I’m glad you’re not a ballerina,”
Micah says. “They’re so graceful that it’s
creepy. I’m a fan of imperfection,
myself.”
I snort. “You think ballerinas are creepy?”
“Yeah, I do,” Micah says. “Seriously,” he adds, after noticing my
barely- suppressed smirk.
“Alright, alright,” I say. “Let’s get some ice cream. I can hear it calling my name.”
“I’ve changed my mind,” Micah says. I give him a questioning look before he
continues, “Now that’s creepy,
hearing inanimate objects calling your name.”
“Hey!” I say, as I swat his
shoulder playfully and roll my eyes. “I
take offense at that.”
Micah chuckles, and then suddenly
becomes serious as he gazes at me with an intensity that heats up my whole body
a few degrees. I giggle self-consciously
and look down at the ground in order to break my gaze away from his. As I do this, a strand of my hair falls
across my face. Noticing this, Micah
takes this opportunity to push the strand back behind my ear. My body buzzes with electricity and a puzzling
sense of guilt. Why have I been feeling so guilty lately? I’m so confused. I
mean, I love him, so why do I feel like this?
Micah doesn’t notice my discomfort, thankfully.
“Come on, slowpoke!” he calls back
at me. I must have been in a daze
because Micah is already to the door of Dairy Queen. I run to catch up to him, and as we open the
door, I come face-to-face with an unexpected person: my friend Stephanie.
“Melody! It’s so nice to see you, chica!” she coos,
her blonde curls bouncing daintily.
Stephanie is the girl you want to hate but you just can’t because she’s
so darn nice. She’s tall, skinny,
gorgeous, athletic, and as if that wasn’t enough, she’s super smart. Like I said, though, she is the sweetest
person ever. When I first moved to
Owlton, Stephanie took me right under
her wing and helped me so much. We’ve
been great friends ever since.
“Hey, Stephanie!” I say. “It’s great to see you, too. How is your summer going?”
“It’s going great,” she says. Suddenly she notices that I’m not alone. She smirks at me and gives me a wink. I groan and look away in embarrassment. “Micah!
It’s so good to see you, too,” Stephanie says in a sing-song voice. “I’ve heard such great things about you. Melody is probably one of your biggest
admirers.” I blush beet red and slap my
palm to my face. Micah is very amused,
but sensing my discomfiture, he asks me if I’d like for him to go and get our
ice cream while Stephanie and I chat.
“You and Micah, huh?” Stephanie
teases me as Micah walks up to the counter.
“It’s nothing serious. I mean, we’re not officially dating or
anything,” I say.
“Sure,” she says, rolling her eyes
in disbelief. Her expression then abruptly
turns to excitement, and she looks around hastily before whispering in my ear,
“Can I tell you a secret?”
“Of course,” I say, leaning
in. “I love secrets. I’m so curious!”
“Well, there’s this guy,” Stephanie
says, trailing off.
“Ooh, a guy, huh?” I say, raising
my eyebrows. “So, who is this mystery
man?”
“Well, you know that adorable guy
you work with at McDonald’s? The one
with the black hair and gorgeous green eyes?” she says, shyly.
I gape at her in confusion at first,
and then the reality sinks in like a ton of bricks. “Peter?”
“Yeah,” Stephanie says with a
dreamy look on her face. “Peter…”
“What—how—did he ask you out or
something?” I stutter.
“No,” she says slowly, peering at
me in curiosity. “I asked him out. Are you alright? You seem really agitated all of a sudden.”
“What? No, no, I’m fine,” I say, of course denying
the truth. What is wrong with me? So many
weird emotions. First guilt, and now…jealousy? Thankfully Micah returns with our ice
cream, dispelling the discomfort a bit.
“Mmm,” I say, very grateful for the
change in topic. “That looks so good.” I dip my spoon in and take a huge mouthful of
vanilla ice cream mixed with chocolate chip cookie dough and peanut butter cups. My very favorite combination. “Ohf, man.
Thish ish amashing,” I say, barely able to speak over the pile of ice
cream in my mouth. Stephanie and Micah both laugh.
"Well, I better let you guys go," Stephanie says. "I have, um, somewhere I need to be in fifteeen minutes." Though she tries to suppress it, a giggle pops out. She blushes, tosses me a breezy wave, and then prances out the door.
Micah watches Stephanie leave, and then turns to me in confusion. "What was that all about?"
Micah watches Stephanie leave, and then turns to me in confusion. "What was that all about?"
“Nothing,” I say.
“Are you s—?”
“I don’t want to
talk about it,” I say, brusquely.
Micah’s eyes go wide and he looks like he’s been smacked in the face,
and I instantly regret how harsh I’d been.
“Sorry,” I
mumble.
“It’s
alright. Don’t worry about it,” Micah
reassures.
There’s an
awkward silence for a bit, so we both take that opportunity to shovel some ice
cream into our mouths. Micah watches me
closely as I eat, which makes me nervous, so the next scoop I take misses my
mouth and drops onto my lap. I just
stare at it for a second, not wanting to meet Micah’s eyes. When I hear him begin to laugh, however, I look
up and throw him an irritated glare, mixed with a hint of playfulness. He must be entranced by me because a goofy
smile lights onto his face and his hands shake a bit, causing him to drop his
ice cream in his lap as well. My death
glare disappears in an instant, and I burst out into a laughing fit. I’m laughing so hard that my side feels like
it’s going to explode with the joyful agony of my laughter rippling through my
body. People begin to stare, however, so
I cover my mouth, trying to conceal my laughter, unsuccessfully. Micah just shakes his head in mock annoyance
and wraps his arm around me. I lean on
him, my laughter still racking my body, as we get up and exit Dairy Queen.
People gawk at us as we go, but I barely notice them. I feel a little insane, to be honest. So much happening, physically and
emotionally, in such a short period of time, has really started to get to
me. For example, at this very instant I
am feeling giddy, envious, sad, and worried all at once. If you’ve never felt all of these at once,
just believe me when I say that it’s straining and bewildering, to say the
least.
“Micah?” I
ask. “Would you mind giving me a ride
back to my car? I’ve got a headache all
of a sudden, and I’m really tired.”
“Oh, sure,”
Micah says. Disappointment colors his
voice, despite his tries to hold it back.
We walk to the
moped and get on in silence. Meanwhile,
my head continues to rage with emotions, pounding like crazy. My mom and her erratic love life, Peter and
Stephanie and my conflicted feelings for their relationship, and Micah with the
sweetest smile: all of these thoughts are thrashing through my head. No wonder my head hurts. Can things ever just be simple? I guess not.
----
I wake up to the slam of a car door
and the revving of an engine. Drowsily I
get up, pull aside the drapes, and peer out the window. I see what appears to be a young man in a
shiny black Mustang speeding down the street.
Standing at the curb is my mother.
Of course. Leave it to my mom to
find a young guy with a fancy car. I
sigh as there’s a knock at the front door.
This happens so frequently that I have the routine completely down. My mom comes home around 1:00 in the morning
from her hot date with a guy about 20 years younger than her, and she can never
remember where she put her keys because she always comes back drunker than a
skunk whenever she goes out with a guy. Continuing,
though, guess who always comes to her rescue?
Yep, that’s me. I stumble down
the stairs as her knocks continue and gain intensity.
“Coming, coming,” I mumble.
When I finally push the door open,
my mom would’ve fallen over if it isn’t for me to catch her.
“Oh, Mom,” I sigh in
exasperation. “You need to stop doing
this.”
“D-doing w-what?” she stammers,
giggling. My mom is a very pretty woman,
but she dresses and acts like a teenager, which ironically makes her look even
older than she is. She has the same
light-brown hair and brown eyes, but unlike me, she’s also tall and super
skinny.
“You know what I’m referring to,” I
reply.
“No, I don’t,” my mom whines.
Throwing up my arms in vexation, I
storm out of the room. I am just so sick of this, I think to
myself. I want a mom, not a child. I
hop into bed, slamming my bedroom door behind me, and bury my face into my pillow. Though I squeeze my eyes as tightly closed as
I can, the tears somehow find a way to flow down my cheek and onto my
neck. I wipe the tears away and sniffle
quietly, not wanting to call attention to my emotional state, though I’m sure
that my mom probably can’t hear me regardless.
Even so, I don’t want to take a chance.
I may be a very emotional person, but for some reason I’m afraid to
publicly show how I feel, especially with my mom. I don’t want to cause her any more pain than
she already has. That’s one of the few
reasons I put up with her antics. I need
to be there for her because she doesn’t have anyone else. When my dad left my mom, she didn’t just lose
him; she lost herself as well and reverted to being a teenager again. So, it’s kind of like we’re sisters, I
guess. I always wanted a sister, but
this wasn’t what I had in mind. I stare
up at the glow-in-the-dark stars on my ceiling and make a wish, just as I’ve
done every night since my dad left. I’d
tell you what I always wish for, but then my wish wouldn’t come true. I’m sure it’s not that hard to guess what it
is, though.
----
When I
finally roll out of bed the next morning, I’m surprised to find that it’s
already 10:15, and then I panic as the realization sets in: I’m supposed to be
at work in fifteen minutes. I scramble
out of bed, throw on my uniform, stick my hair into a ponytail, and rush out
the door, my keys and a granola bar in hand.
As I pull into the parking lot and leap out of my car, I happen to see
that I’m not the only one running late.
Peter is just arriving, too. When
he gets out of his car, he looks up and notices me. Smirking, he calls out to me.
“Hey! You
better hurry up. You’re going to be
late. What were you up to last night,
huh? You and Micah out too late?”
I can’t
speak for a few moments. I’m hit with anger and shock at his words at
first, which then turns to hurt. “That’s
none of your business,” I say, my head haughtily held high. “I could ask you the same question.”
Peter
inexplicably blushes and smiles sheepishly at this, mumbles a “sorry,” and
walks away. I’m left standing there confused
for a brief instant until I suddenly realize a major possibility for why he was
late. The realization tears at my heart
and makes me feel sick. The reason was
Stephanie.
----
For the
rest of the day, I try my very best to avoid Peter whenever possible. I make sure to take breaks at different times
than him, work the counter when he’s working in the back, and convey messages
to him through other people. My
avoidance is highly obvious, I guess, because Peter looks hurt and
confused. I should feel bad about this, but
the only thing I can think about is my anger and jealousy. I know I shouldn’t feel like this, but I
can’t help it, and it’s so confusing. I
think about how love is portrayed in fairy tales and Disney movies, and I laugh
cynically.
“What’s so
funny?” a customer asks me.
“Oh,
nothing,” I say, embarrassed. Oh,
great. I’m starting to laugh out
loud. I think I really am going crazy.
Peter must
have noticed this exchange from a distance because he approaches me later, a
worried expression on his face. “Are you
alright, Melody?” he asks. “I’m worried
about you.”
“I’m fine!”
I say, instantly regretting how defensive my voice came across.
Peter looks
taken aback by my response and hurt, like I just told him that there’s no such
thing as Santa or something. He looks
like a sad, disappointed child. It’s so
darn cute, and it infuriates me even more.
I’m supposed to be mad at him, not wanting to compliment him on how cute
he looks. Besides, I’m not in love with
him, and he has a girlfriend. This is
all just so wrong. All of a sudden I
feel like I’m suffocating. I need air,
but it has all seemed to slip out of my reach.
Peter’s hurt expression turns to concern once more as he notices my
barely-concealed panic.
“Melody? Please tell me what’s wrong,” Peter
says. “Is it something I did, or did
Micah hurt you, or--?”
“Peter,
just…just leave me alone, okay?” I snap.
This suffocating feeling has made me lose all sense of control. “I don’t want to talk to you right now,
alright?”
Peter’s
face flashes with anger. “Fine,” he
says, with a threatening voice as calm as the eye of a storm. He then walks away, leaving me shivering in a
room several degrees cooler than it was before.
----
Several
weeks pass without one word being spoken between Peter and me. The tension between us continually grows
tighter and tighter every day. I just
keep waiting for it to snap. It seems like
we’re never going to speak again, and it hurts.
If this wasn’t enough, Stephanie won’t talk to me either, which is
ironic. I mean, I’m the one who should
be mad. Wait. Why am I mad? That’s the big question, and I can’t even
answer it. When I try to figure out the
answer, it slips right out of my head. I
can never grasp it because my head is so jumbled with random emotions. So, lately I’ve decided to try channeling all
of those thoughts and emotions into poetry.
It works when I’m actually writing the poetry, but as soon as I put my
pen down, my mind clouds up with a swarm of thoughts. Needless to say, I’ve been kind of writing
non-stop as a way to relax and escape from reality for a bit. I look down at the journal on my lap and
re-read the poem I just finished writing:
Heart
Burn
Conflicting,
frightening, confusing:
My
heart burns with a fire of emotions.
I
try to read the signals in the smoke, but
They
constantly change and contradict.
I
thought love was supposed to be easy.
Just
follow your heart,
Someday
your prince will come,
But
it was all a lie.
It’s
not all sweet and beautiful.
It’s
also sickening, painful, scary.
It
haunts me like a ghost,
And
I sometimes wish
I’d
never loved at all.
“Melody,
are you listening to me?”
Startled, I
reflexively close my notebook and look up, blushing slightly. I hope
she didn’t see what I wrote, I think to myself. I don’t
want her to be worrying about me.
“Sorry,
Mom,” I say. “I didn’t hear you at all.”
It’s a
Friday afternoon in mid-July, and my mom and I are sitting on our back
porch. I should be enjoying this quality
“mother-daughter” time, but I just can’t get my mind to clear without writing
my poetry, no matter how hard I try.
That’s probably my problem right there: I try too hard.
My mom
sighs in exasperation. “I was asking
what your plans were for tonight,” she says.
I stare
down at my fingers and pick at my nails.
“Micah and I are going to go to a concert in town.”
“Well, that
sounds fun, so why are you so down right now?” my mom asks.
“I’ve
just…kind of got a lot on my mind right now, I guess,” I say. Ha. Now that’s
an understatement.
“Oh,” she
says. She then takes her sunglasses off
and concernedly looks me in the eye. Oh no, I think to myself. It’s the
dreaded “concerned parent” look.
“What’s on your mind? Is there
anything you want to talk to me about?”
“No, I’m
okay,” I say quickly. “I’m just having
an off day, I guess.”
Thankfully,
my mom accepts my explanation, and we start chatting about all sorts of random
things: celebrities, Owlton gossip, my mom’s past boyfriends (which there
surely isn’t a lack of), etc... It feels
great to spend some time with my mom again.
We hadn’t had a day like this in forever. She’s either always busy waitressing at the
restaurant she works at or out on another date, and I’m always busy with either
work or school. Eventually, I look up at
the outdoor clock hanging by the garage and notice the time. 5:00. I
sigh. Micah is going to pick me up at
6:00, so I should really take a shower and get ready, but I just don’t feel
like going out tonight. I wish I could
just stay home and hang out with my mom, but that’s not even possible. She has to work tonight, and then I’m sure
she’ll have another date night afterward. So, resignedly, I get up and stretch.
“Well, it’s
been awesome talking with you, Mom,” I say.
“We really need to do this more often.”
“Yes,” she
says, smiling and getting up too. “We
really should.”
We stand
there smiling happily at each other for a few moments. I feel like I’m a kid again, and then I start
to involuntarily choke up when I realize that I’m not a kid anymore. To hide my tears, I pull my mom into a hug,
and then dash up to my room before my mom can see my face.
----
Ding-dong!
I rush down the stairs and, opening
the door, a beautiful smile greets me. The
barrage of thoughts in my head is still beating down on me, but seeing Micah’s
beautiful face makes those thoughts fade away, not completely, but at least to
the back of my mind.
“Hello, Melody! You look absolutely lovely tonight.” I can’t help but grin and laugh. “What’s so funny?”
“Is there something you’re
wanting?” I ask, playfully. “Do you need
a favor or something?””
“No. I’m being serious, Melody,” Micah says, a
somber and intense expression on his face.
“You look like a princess.”
“But not like a ballerina, I hope,”
I say, smirking.
Micah looks confused for a second
before he then suddenly understands the reference. “Ohhhh,” he says. “Yeah, you definitely don’t look like a
ballerina. If you did, I’d be scared.”
I snort, our eyes meet, and then we
both burst out laughing.
“Oh, man,” I pant between
laughs. “It feels so good to laugh. I don’t think I’ve laughed this hard since
that day at Dairy Queen.”
“I love it when you laugh,” Micah
says, “especially when I’m the one making you laugh.”
I smile sweetly, and my eyes mist
over with emotion. “Aww. That’s so sweet,” I say. “I feel the same way. I love to make you laugh. Your laugh is perfect.”
“Alright. I think we’re getting too sentimental now,”
Micah laughs, with an adorable blush coloring his cheeks, “especially right
before a rock concert.” As he takes my
hand and helps me onto his moped he winks and adds, “We’re not going to a
ballet, you know.”
----
By the time we arrive
at the concert I’m feeling even better.
My conflicting thoughts had pretty much completely drifted away into the
breeze as we traipsed through the balmy summer evening. As I hop off the moped and take off my
helmet, my ears are met with a cacophony of loud music and crowds of people.
“Looks like
they’ve got a pretty decent turn-out,” I say, as I survey the scene before
me. The concert is being held in an open
field in the countryside. It’s quite a
lovely location: a field of wildflowers radiates like a rainbow and a
meandering river flows nearby. The
natural beauty and tranquility of the scene starkly contrasts with the rough
and deafening concert being held there.
I sigh, wishing the band and the crowd would just disappear so I could
enjoy the splendor of this place without it being defiled by the loud noise. That obviously isn’t going to happen though,
so I try to enjoy myself. I mean, I do
love to jam out to music; it’s just that sometimes I want the world to be
quiet, and I’m in that sort of mood right now.
The feeling of a hand on my shoulder brings me back out of my thoughts.
“You okay?”
Micah asks, peering at me in concern. “You
looked like you were in another world or something.”
“Oh, yeah, I’m
fine, but maybe I was in another
world for a while,” I tease.
“Where? La La Land?” Micah jokes.
“No,” I say,
mock serious. “I was in Ballerina Land.”
Micah shakes his
head, feigning disgust. “You are
something else, aren’t you?” he says, as he takes my hand and guides us over to
join the crowd. Once we reach the middle
of the group, completely surrounded by the mass of bodies, the world somehow
disappears except for Micah and me. A
sudden fit of passion strikes me, and I wrap my arms around Micah’s neck,
kissing him urgently. At first he is
unresponsive, still too surprised, but eventually he joins in as well and even
more passionately. Micah cups a hand
under my chin, holding me there, as we continue kissing. My arms alternately rove his body and hold
him as close to my body as humanly possible.
There’s a vague thought in the back of my mind that I’ve never acted
like this before and that I’ve lost control, but I push it away. I feel like an animal, driven by desire and
instinct.
After a while we
run out of breath and have to stop.
Panting, we relinquish each other’s grasp and look around. I feel light-headed and dizzy as I dimly
notice that the people around us are staring at us like we’re crazy. I blush and am about to flee from the scene
when I notice two familiar faces in the crowd who make my face turn from red to
white in record time: Stephanie and Peter.
I stare at them in shock which then turns to guilt when I notice Peter’s
hurt and appalled expression as he gazes back into my eyes. Before I have a second to think, Peter wraps
his arms around Stephanie and begins making out with her. My eyes grow wide and a cry of disgust and
anger bursts from my mouth. Micah looks
at me in confusion.
“What’s wrong?”
he asks, trying to peer in the direction of where I’m looking. “Oh,” Micah says, looking from me to the
entwined couple and back.
Before I can change
my mind and lose my resolve, I shove my way through the crowd, marching over to
where Stephanie and Peter are. Micah
yells for me to wait up, but I ignore him.
My mind is suddenly clear and has only one emotion left in it: anger. As I finally shove my way to where they’re
standing, Peter looks over Stephanie’s shoulder and sees me. Instead of stopping, he starts holding
Stephanie tighter and kissing her more forcefully. Stephanie yields willingly, and I look on in
utter revulsion. I’ve become so angry, hurt,
and conflicted that I don’t even know whether to laugh or cry. So, I do both. I laugh like a madman and violently rub away
hot tears that leak from my eyes. My
insane laughing gets Stephanie’s attention.
She breaks free and turns around.
Quickly rubbing away any remaining teardrops, I face her with a
sickeningly sweet smile.
“Well, hello
there, Stephanie…Peter,” I say cheerfully, my voice laced with poison. “I didn’t expect to see you two here.”
“I didn’t expect
to see you either,” Peter says, smiling, going along with the sinister cheerfulness. “Are you enjoying the concert?”
“Oh, yes,” I
say. “I can tell you and Stephanie have
been enjoying yourselves as well.”
Stephanie, who
has been following our exchange interestedly, finally can’t hold back her
tongue. “And so what if we have?”
Stephanie asks impetuously. “It’s none
of your business what we do or don’t do.”
I glare at her in lieu of a response.
“Okay, why the hell are you mad at me?
I don’t understand. Enlighten me,
please.”
I’m still too
angry to speak, so I just stare at her and her perfect hair done up in a
perfect bun, her perfect make-up, and her perfect body in a short, low-necked
dress that perfectly shows off her perfect cleavage. Needless to say, her perfection suddenly
nauseates me.
“Well, maybe you
could get a room for that little business back then, huh?” I spit. “Nobody wanted to see that, you know. It was sickening.”
“Um, excuse me,
Miss Hypocrite, but I could say the same thing about you and Micah. I wouldn’t have been surprised if you two
hadn’t started taking your clothes off even.
You were like animals.”
“Yeah, well at
least I don’t dress like a stripper,” I say, pointing at Stephanie and her
scantily dressed body.
Stephanie chokes
out a spurt of disgust, and then she laughs cynically. “Even if I was dressed like a stripper, which
I’m not, by the way, what the hell does that have to do with anything? Man, you are acting like such a bitch!”
“At least I’m
only acting like one instead of actually being one like you are,” I say fiercely. Almost instantly I regret what I’ve said, but
there’s no turning back. The words have
been spoken. I now finally understand
that quote about the pen being mightier than the sword. A wound caused by a sword can heal
eventually, but a wound caused by words can never fully heal. Even if Stephanie forgives me someday, our
friendship will never be the same.
----
Hours turn to days and days turn to
weeks before Stephanie and I even acknowledge each other’s existence. Meanwhile, Micah and I are having our own
problems. He’s still angry with me about
making such a scene at the concert, and I know he’s suspicious of my jealousy. It seems like things can’t get any worse, can
they? At that very moment, the sky
suddenly bursts open and lets out a torrential downpour. I yelp in surprise as the cool, late-August
rain soaks me completely through in a matter of seconds. I spoke too soon, I guess. Shivering, I dash into McDonald’s. Man,
this sucks. I’m not only going to be stuck at work with Peter all day, I’m also
going to be stuck there with wet clothes.
Is it so much to ask to have at least one thing go right for me these days?!
Walking through the door, however, I find that Peter isn’t there. At first I figure that he’s probably just in
the bathroom or on break, but after a few hours and still no sign of him, I
realize that he’s not working today at all.
I’m slightly relieved but I also have a strange feeling of anxiety come
over me. Peter almost never misses work,
so it must be something pretty important.
What could it be? I decide to investigate.
“Do you know where Peter is, Lisa?”
I ask, turning to a co-worker with blonde hair pulled up into pig tails. Her eyes light up, and she pulls me aside
conspiratorially.
“Well, right before you came in at
11:00, Peter suddenly left the building and went outside to talk to this curly-haired
blonde girl. Now, you didn’t hear this
from me, but I was taking my break and overheard them talking. Guess what I heard her say to him?” she asked,
her eyes bulging in excitement, which then turns to impatience as she waits for
a response from me.
My mind buzzes with a myriad of
thoughts and questions. The girl must have been Stephanie, I
think to myself. What would have been so important that she had to talk to Peter while
he was at work, instead of just waiting until he was done or at least until he
had a break? “What?” I finally ask, a little curious but mostly apprehensive.
Lisa looks at me in silence for a
few moments with her eyebrows raised. She
revels in this dramatic pause, while it made me feel even more uneasy.
“She saaaaiiiid…are you ready for
it?...she said… ‘I’m pregnant’!”
“What?” I ask blankly, thinking
that she must be joking. “Be serious.”
“I am being serious. That girl
(I’m assuming she’s his girlfriend) is preggers, and from Peter’s reaction, I’m
fairly certain that it’s with his
child.”
I stand there gaping at Lisa in
utter disbelief, thinking I must be dreaming.
This is not real. But when I squeeze my eyes shut, pinch
myself, and open my eyes again, nothing has changed. Lisa is still standing in front of me, now
eyeing me in concern.
“Are you okay?” she asks.
“Yeah,” I say, weakly. “I just…I just need a glass of water...” Dots form in my eyes, clouding my vision, and
I begin to feel dizzy. My heart races as
I realize what might happen. All of a
sudden, it happens: the world turns to black.
----
When I open my eyes, I find that
I’m on the ground and surrounded by worried faces peering down at me. Embarrassed, I sit up fast. It was a little too fast, I guess, because I
wobble and the dots form over my vision again.
I shake my head, trying to clear the dizziness and trying to remember
what happened. Then, it all comes back
to me: Stephanie is pregnant. Not just
pregnant with any old baby, though; she’s pregnant with Peter’s baby. Oh my God.
“Melody, are you okay?” Lisa asks
again.
This time I don’t lie. I need to get away, and I need to find out
for myself if what Lisa has said is really true or not. “No, I’m not okay,” I say. “I feel kind of sick. I think I’m going to go home.” The first part is true, yes, but the last
part about going home isn’t. I’m not
going home; I’m going to find Stephanie.
----
A half hour later I find myself on
Stephanie’s front porch, ringing her doorbell.
While I wait for her to come to the door, I stand in shock, wondering how I ended up here, why I ended up here, and what I was doing here. What am
I going to say to her? What is there to say? I begin to hear footsteps behind the door and
panic, still unsure what to say or what not to say. Before I can chicken out and run away,
however, the door opens, and Stephanie appears.
At least, I think it’s Stephanie.
She looks absolutely terrible.
Her eyes are all puffy and red, her hair is a completely tangled mess,
and she’s wearing a holey old tee shirt and sweat pants. As if this wasn’t uncharacteristic enough for
her as it is, a very uncomfortable and embarrassed look is on her face. I have never seen Stephanie look anything but
beautiful and confident; it’s almost like she’s a whole other person.
“Melody,” Stephanie says, blushing
and self-consciously wrapping her arms around her chest. “W-what are you doing here?”
I stand and stare at her in silence
for a while until I can compose my thoughts.
“Well, I heard…a…um…a rumor that you’re…that you’re…pregnant,” I
say. “Is…is it true?”
Stephanie’s face crumples before my
eyes, and soon tears are cascading down her cheeks. “Y-yes,” she chokes out. “It’s t-t-true.”
In shock, I stand limply for a few
moments, unsure what to do now. I’d
never seen Stephanie cry before. She has
always been so confident. I
unrealistically believed that nothing could bring her down. I guess I was wrong. Suddenly our fight and all of the jealousy
doesn’t mean anything to me. Compared to
what Stephanie is going through now, all of that was nothing. So, I do what any true friend would do: I
hold her shaking, sobbing body and tell her that I’m here for her and that
everything is going to be okay. After a
long while, her sobs stop racking her body, and her tears begin to slow. When we pull apart, Stephanie gives me a weak
but genuine smile.
“Thank you, Melody,” she says,
taking my hand and squeezing it. “You’re
a great friend.”
“You’re welcome, Stephanie,” I say,
“though I don’t know if I’m really such a great friend...”
“Why do you say that?” Stephanie
asks.
“Well, I pretty much called you a
slut and a bitch at the concert a few weeks ago. I don’t think a ‘friend’ normally does
something like that,” I say.
“Don’t worry about it,” she
reassures me. “I know you didn’t really
mean it.”
“Still, I’m really sorry,” I
say. “It was completely insensitive and
terribly mean. I’ve just always been
jealous of you, I guess.”
“Well, there’s no need to be
jealous now, unless you want to be
pregnant,” Stephanie says, sighing.
I don’t know how to respond to
that, so an awkward silence ensues. I
look down at my hands, nervously picking at the skin around my nails. Then a sudden, insane idea pops into my mind. A way for Stephanie and Peter to stay
together and for me to still have a close connection with Peter, too. Something that would strengthen the bond
between Micah and I. Something absolutely
crazy. I have no idea where it came from, but it’s so wrong that it just might
be right, so to speak. Stephanie looks
at me in confusion, noticing my conflicted face.
“What are you thinking about?”
Stephanie asks.
“Nothing,” I say quickly.
This doesn’t fool Stephanie one
bit. “Come on,” she says. “Tell me!
You can tell me anything.”
“I don’t know,” I say. “You might not like what I have to say…”
“It doesn’t matter,” Stephanie
says. “We shouldn’t hide things from
each other. You’re one of my best friends and always will be.”
“Thanks,” I say. “You’ll always be one of my best friends
too.” There’s a terribly deafening
silence as Stephanie waits for me to speak.
I gulp and take a deep breath, preparing myself for the big reveal. “Well, I had this really insane idea
that…well…if you didn’t want your baby when it was born and needed someone to
adopt it, then….maybe Micah and I could adopt it…?”
I watch Stephanie’s face change
from utter shock to contemplation. Her
reaction surprises me. I expected the
shock but not the fact that she’d actually consider the idea. Though maybe she just appears to be considering the idea…
“You know, your idea is so crazy
that I find myself…liking it,” Stephanie says.
“Really?” I ask, unable to believe
my own ears.
“Yeah…yeah, I mean it,” she says,
nodding her head fervently to confirm the decision of her opinion. “It’d be the perfect solution to our whole
boy issue. I know you’re jealous of
Peter and me because you love Peter. You
love Peter, but you love Micah more.
He’s your true love; I can definitely see that. Letting you guys have our baby will
strengthen the bond between all of us, too.”
My brain buzzes pleasantly with the
knowledge that the great mystery has finally been solved. I’d been confused for so long about how I
really felt about Micah and Peter, and here Stephanie knew how I felt all
along; she knows me better than I know myself.
I am also still very surprised (but also very glad) that Stephanie likes
my strange idea.
“Well, awesome!” I say. “Are you sure you don’t think it’s a
little…unrealistic or strange though?”
“To be honest, I do have one major
concern with the idea,” Stephanie says, biting her lip. “What is your mom going to think about all of
this? She probably won’t be too happy
about having another mouth to feed…or two, if Micah moved in with you…”
My stomach twists in knots and my
heart races at the thought of telling my mom about all of this. I’m sure it would all go over very
well…not. I think about it a little
harder though and consider the fact that she actually might like the idea. She’s been so lonely since my dad left. Having two more people in the family would
give her more company, plus there would finally be a man to help around the
house, to fill the hole that my dad left behind.
“You know, I think my mom would
like the idea,” I say. “It would be a
shock at first, I’m sure, but I think having more people around the house would
fill the void in her heart that she’s been trying to fill with all those guys
she’s dated.”
“What about the extra money it
would cost though?” Stephanie asks.
“Well, Micah makes a decent amount
of money, and I might be promoted to manager pretty soon…” I say, a little less
certain than before.
Stephanie gives me a weak smile and
then sighs. “I don’t know if this is
very realistic after all,” she says. “Could
this really work? I mean, I haven’t asked Peter what he thinks
about this yet; he might want to keep the baby.
You haven’t asked Micah what he thinks about it yet either. What if Micah wants to go to college? I’m sure he does, and that wouldn’t work very
well with a baby…”
I look away, embarrassed and
disappointed by my idea, trying to figure out how to respond to that. What she
says is true. “We could make it work,” I
say. “I know we could. I’m sure Peter and Micah would both get used
to the idea pretty fast.”
“Well, there’s only one way to find
out,” Stephanie says, giving me a nervous look as she takes my hand. “Let’s go tell them.”
----
I put the car in park and stare in
silence at the steering wheel. I can’t believe we’re actually doing this,
I think to myself. We’ve just arrived at
McDonald’s to tell Peter our plan.
Stephanie leans over and waves her
hand in front of my face. “Earth to
Melody, are you there? You ready for
this?”
I suddenly find irony in the
situation. I’m not the one who should be
nervous; it’s Stephanie who should be.
Instead of her being concerned about how I’m doing, I should be concerned about how she’s doing. I chuckle.
“What’s so funny?” Stephanie asks,
confused.
“Nothing,” I say. With a shake of my head and a quick, deep
exhale I steel up my courage and get out of the car. Stephanie follows close behind. Of course, when I walk in the doors, who do
you think is the first person who sees me?
Peter. I was hoping I’d get a
little bit of time to compose myself first before I approach him but no such
luck. He has a look of guilt on his face
at first, which then turns to panic when he sees that Stephanie is with me.
“M-Melody? Stephanie?
What are you two doing here?” Peter asks, looking frantically from one
of us to the other.
“Well, I for one work here,” I say,
mischievously feigning irritation to try and lighten the troubled atmosphere. It works; Peter snorts and rolls his eyes, a
relieved and playfully exasperated look on his face. I can tell that he’s happy to know that I’m
not angry with him, but now he’s warily eyeing Stephanie.
“That’s true, but what are you
doing here, Stephanie?” he asks, concern etched across his face. “Is something wrong?”
“Nothing’s wrong, Peter,” she
reassures him. “Melody just had an idea
that she wanted to share with you.”
“An idea?” Peter asks, his brows
furrowing in confusion. “About what?”
“About…well…,” Stephanie begins. “…I’ll just let Melody tell you.”
I turn pale as Peter’s eyes rest on
mine. I can almost see the question
marks in his eyes. The anticipation is
so bad that it makes me feel sick. I
know that I need to just get it over with and tell him before I explode from
keeping it bottled up inside of me.
“Okay, this idea is going to sound crazy, but hear me out. It’s so crazy that it just might work.”
“Okaaaayyy,” Peter drawls out, raising one of his eyebrows and darting his
eyes back and forth in suspicion.
I take a deep breath and then dive
in. “I thought that if you and Stephanie
didn’t want your baby when it was born, then maybe Micah and I could adopt it.” There.
I said it. It’s such a relief to
just have it out there in the open, but my relief doesn’t last long. Peter is now gaping at me, his eyes wide and
his mouth hanging open.
“Wait…what?” Peter asks. “Are you serious, or is this some kind of
joke?”
“I…I’m serious,” I say, biting my
lip and looking down at my feet. I
should’ve known this wouldn’t go well.
“Well, did you ever stop and think
about the fact that maybe Stephanie and I want
to keep our baby? I mean, it is our baby after all,” he says. “What does Micah think about all this? I’m sure he just absolutely loves the idea,
right? Such a suck-up as he is.”
I let out a sharp gasp of anger,
but I don’t know how to respond. If I
tell Peter that I haven’t even shared the idea with Micah yet, then it will
make me look even worse. So, I just
stand and glare at him with my mouth gaping in incredulity. Thankfully, Stephanie comes to the rescue and
calms the tense atmosphere.
“Melody already told me about her
plan, and I like the idea,” Stephanie says.
“I know it’s a bit…well…odd, but I think it could work.”
Now it’s time for the tense
atmosphere to form between Peter and Stephanie, but this atmosphere has more of
an injured, awkward texture. I can almost feel the hurt that Peter is
radiating.
“You…you don’t want our baby?”
Peter asks. “I mean, I understand that
this was all completely unexpected, but I thought…I thought maybe we could make
it work. I…I really care about you. I mean, I…well…” He trails off, suddenly noticing that there is
a whole audience of people, customers and workers, who are all surreptitiously eavesdropping. Peter lowers his head a moment. He then raises his head once more, looks
intensely into Stephanie’s eyes, and blushes beet red before quietly and
hurriedly sputtering out, “I love you.” In
unison, a chorus of “aww”s and a scattered applause fills
the room.
Stephanie beams back at him with
tears in her eyes. “I love you, too,”
she says. “I’m not ready to be a parent
yet, but I’ll always love you.”
More “aww”s ensue and claps
ensue. Peter is terribly embarrassed by
being the center of attention, I can tell, but it all slips away with Stephanie’s
words. He suddenly leaps over the
counter and wraps Stephanie up in his arms.
She giggles in surprise as he holds her tight and plants a kiss on her
cheek.
“You know,” Peter says to me over
Stephanie’s shoulder, “Your plan is starting to grow on me. I mean, you’d make a great mom. I can’t believe I’m saying this, but if
that’s what you and Micah really want, then I’m all for it.”
“Thanks, Peter,” I say, a feeling
of relief washing over me like a cool breeze on a hot day. Everyone
is agreeing to my plan! …Well, almost
everyone. A layer of guilt rises in
my stomach at this realization. My mom
and Micah still don’t know about it. How am I going to break the news to my mom
that she might become a grandma and to Micah that he might become a father in
nine months? This should be
interesting. There’s never a dull moment
in my life, that’s for sure.
----
As my shift comes to a close, dread
clouds my mind. For probably the first
time ever, I don’t want to leave work.
I hang around talking to a few of my co-workers who are on break, but
eventually their breaks end, and I have to accept the fact that I have to
leave. Well, technically I don’t have to leave; I could stay here until
McDonald’s closes at midnight, but I know I need
to leave. I need to face my problems,
instead of hiding away from them. So,
dragging my feet, I slowly make my way to my car and drive away. Being a coward and dreading what I need to
do, however, I make multiple pit stops along the way. I stop at Starbucks for a cappuccino. In my defense, they are having a special, “$1
mocha” day. How can I resist,
right? Besides, I’ll need to be good and
awake when I break the news…hopefully not literally
breaking the news…
Sipping on my mocha, I leisurely
make my way to Micah’s house. When I
reach his street, I slow to a stop and park the car on the opposite side of the
street, not wanting to bring attention to myself. With no blaring music or my Pacer’s purring
engine, I am now enveloped in a silence laced with dread, uncertainty, and
fear. “I don’t want to do this,” I say aloud to myself. “I don’t even know if I physically can do this. What if he hates me for this and breaks up
with me? I can’t fathom the thought of
losing him.” I sigh and press my hands
to my face in emotional stress, feeling the tears begin to build up. “No, Melody,” I tell myself, taking a deep
but ragged breath. “Crying isn’t going
to help anything.” I finally build my
resolve, take a long swig of my mocha for added strength, and force myself out
of my car. Crossing the street and walking
up the path to Micah’s house, I feel my determination wane. “Shit, shit, shit,” I whisper, vaguely
surprising myself by my uncharacteristic swearing. “I can’t do this.” I stand at the front door of his house, my
hand shakily hovering over his doorbell.
I can’t seem to garner up the courage to ring the bell, and the tension
is killing me. I’m sweating buckets, hot
and cold all at once. Just when I think
I’m going to blow and considering running away, I see a pair of eyes peering
out the window: Micah. Shit, I curse, inwardly this time. I’ve
been caught. There’s no turning back
now. The eyes disappear, and the
front door opens. Micah now peers down,
his blue eyes bright with concern upon seeing me.
“Melody? Are you okay?” he asks. “Why didn’t you ring the door bell or knock?”
I don’t answer for a moment,
suddenly distracted by his beauty. It’s
hard to believe that someone as perfect as Micah is actually mine. …And then I begin to panic again at the
thought of potentially losing him after he hears what I have to tell him.
“Melody?” Micah asks again. This time his tone is very serious, and his
eyes blaze with concern.
“I-I’m fine,” I stutter out
quickly, trying to regain my composure.
“I just…needed to talk to you.”
Micah’s demeanor completely changes
with those words. He hunches over, his
eyes go dull, and his face looks dead. He thinks I’m breaking up with him, doesn’t
he? I think to myself, in shock.
“It’s about Peter and Stephanie,” I
clarify. “They’re, well, they’re having
a baby.”
Micah looks at me in confusion for
about half a minute before he responds.
“Having a baby? You mean,
adopting, right?”
“No,” I say. “Stephanie’s pregnant.”
Micah’s eyes go wide. “Wow.”
“I know,” I say. We both awkwardly stand and stare at the
ground, both not knowing what to say.
“How long has she been pregnant?”
Micah asks finally.
“She just found out today,” I say,
and then I take a deep breath and plunge into the sea of uncertainty. Here
goes nothing. “I have something else
I want to tell you, too. It’s kind of
crazy, but please try to keep an open mind about it.”
“Okay,” he says, curious now. “I’m sure it can’t be any more unbelievable
than what you just got done telling me.”
You
have no idea, I think to myself. Slightly amused and somewhat insane, I
laugh. Micah looks concerned again, so I
take a deep breath and continue in order to prevent the questions that I can
tell are forming in his mind. “Well, I don’t know about that. It’s pretty crazy, but please don’t freak
out, okay?”
“Alright, alright,” Micah says
impatiently. “Just tell me already,
would you?”
“Okay, as you wish,” I say, sighing
before continuing. “Stephanie and Peter
don’t think they’re ready to have a baby and were thinking of adoption as an
option, and well, I had this idea that maybe…maybe you and I could possibly…” I trail off and pause a moment, too scared to
continue, but Micah urges me to keep on going, and I know I must. So, I look down at the ground, unable to meet
his eye, as I continue, “...we could possibly…adopt their baby.” Cheeks flushing with humiliation and fear, I
continue to stare at the ground, too afraid to meet his gaze. Finally I find the courage to look up. Micah is standing with his hands limp at his
side and his mouth gaping in shock.
“You think we should adopt their baby?” Micah asks.
“Um, yeah,” I squeak out.
Micah just stares at me, wide-eyed,
for a few excruciating seconds that seem to last a lifetime. “You’re serious?”
“Yeah, I am,” I say.
“This is unbelievable. You actually think I would willingly want to tie myself down with a
baby before I’ve even finished high school?
It’s just crazy talk! I mean, how
would we support it, and what about college?
All of our hopes and dreams, down the tube. Stephanie and Peter aren’t ready for a baby;
what makes you think we are? That’s a
huge commitment.” Micah stops, sucks in
a deep breath of air, and then exhales loudly.
“Well?” he asks, impatience and anger hardening his voice.
“I-I’m sorry,” I whisper, tears
shimmering in my eyes. I can feel it
coming. I’m suddenly reminded of a
Taylor Swift lyric: “I brace myself for the ‘goodbye’ ‘cause it’s all I’ve ever
known.” That lyric really rings true for
me right now; all I’ve ever known is loss: first, I completely lose my dad, and
then my mom drifts away from me with her busy sex life, and now it looks like
Micah will probably leave me, too.
Unable to hold back the tears any longer, they start cascading down my
cheeks. Before I know it, I’m shuddering
with sobs and, trying to hold them in, I begin hiccupping.
“Oh, Melody,” he says. “I didn’t mean to make you cry. Please...please d-don’t cry.” Through the blur of my tears, I can see him
standing awkwardly a few feet away from me, biting his lip. Seeing him and hearing his voice only makes
my tears increase in intensity. All of a
sudden, Micah takes me by surprise and wraps his arms around me, holding me
tight against his chest. I begin bawling
like a baby. The loss, hurt, and stress
of my whole life seemingly suddenly bursts to the surface. As Micah holds me, I feel it slowly ease away
and disappear into the night. I wish I
could stay here in his arms forever, where I feel so safe and loved, but
eventually he lets me go, though still holding me at arm’s length
“I’m so sorry, Melody,” Micah
whispers. “I shouldn’t have spoken so
harshly with you.”
“It’s okay,” I say, putting on a
brave, emotionless face. “I understand
if you want to break up with me. I
deserve it.”
If I thought Micah was surprised
before, he is even more so now. “Oh my
gosh, no, no, no. Is this what you were
crying about? You thought I was going to
break up with you?”
“Yeah,” I murmur. “I completely understand though, and I’m used
to it. It’s not the first time I’ve lost
somebody.” As soon as I say that, I
instantly regret it, knowing that what I said was probably a painful reminder
of Micah’s own loss, of his girlfriend to cancer. Now he’s really going to be mad at me, I
think to myself as I wince and look away, ready for the blow-up. Instead, however, Micah takes me by surprise
again and gently lifts my chin in his hand so that I’m peering into his eyes.
“Melody, I’ll never leave you
alone,” he says. “I promise. I love you.”
Micah kisses me tenderly, and I’m
filled again with the same passion that I’d felt that night at the concert,
except this time it’s even more intense.
It’s as if Micah’s confession of his love has some magic power over me. It’s more than just wanting him as close to
me as possible. I want to be even
closer; I want to share a deep connection, the most intimate connection
possible. I’d never even considered sex
before, but now I find myself imagining Micah’s naked body…Oh my God. I blush even just
thinking about it.
Micah eyes me curiously, noticing
my sudden change in emotion and colored cheeks.
“What are you thinking about?” he murmurs.
“Nothing,” I say.
Micah raises his eyebrows, skeptical.
“I mean, I was…um…thinking about
what a beautiful night it is tonight? Yeah,
yeah, that’s it,” I fluster out.
“Suuuurrre,” Micah says, “and pigs
can fly.”
I blush beet red and look at my
feet.
“Come on, Melody,” Micah
coaxes. “You can tell me anything. I won’t laugh at you. I promise.”
I continue to stare at my feet, too
afraid to meet his gaze. “If you’re sure
you want to hear it…,” I begin.
“Of course I want to hear what you
have to say! Please tell me.”
“Alright,” I whisper. “I was just thinking about...well…this is so embarrassing…”
“Go on,” Micah urges. “It can’t be that bad.”
“To me it is,” I say, taking a deep
breath before continuing. “I was
thinking about…sex.”
“Oh,” Micah says, surprised at
first but then a gleam comes into his eyes that I’d never seen before, and it’s
super sexy. I feel a pleasant tingling in my lower
stomach. “Do tell,” he purrs.
My stomach does a back flip with
those words and saliva builds up in my throat.
I gulp, as Micah attentively watches my every move. “I...well…I kind of want to do the whole, you
know, sex thing with you…” I stutter out.
So awkward.
“I do, too,” Micah says, “and it’s
not just because I want sex. There’s no
one else I’d rather have this experience with than you.”
Tears of emotion fill my eyes. “That’s exactly how I feel, too. I want to be as close to you as I can. I want that connection.”
Micah gives me a stunning, sweet
smile, and then abruptly shifts mood on me.
That gleam returns to his eyes and a mischievous smile replaces the sweet
one. All of a sudden he snatches me up
in his arms and carries me into his house.
I shriek in delight, and then quickly cover my mouth, not wanting to
wake his family.
“You don’t need to worry about
waking anyone,” Micah says. “My parents
are gone on vacation, and my brother is sleeping over at his friend’s house. We’ve got the place all to ourselves.”
Micah continues to carry me through
the house and we eventually end up in his bedroom. He sets me down on his bed and sits down
beside me. We both stare in silence at
the opposite wall for a few moments. My
mind buzzes with anxiety, pleasure, and excitement as I consider what quite
possibly will happen next. I have no idea what I’m doing. Will it hurt?
What if I do it wrong, or I make a complete idiot of myself? All of these thoughts bombard through my
mind, but when Micah taps my shoulder and I turn to look at him, my doubt and
fears disappear.
“Are you ready?” he whispers.
“Yes,” I whisper back.
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