***CONTINUES***
No,” I immediately
answered, blinking
away tears.
Almost too gently, he
brushed away strands
of hair from my face,
tucking them behind my
right ear. “What is it?
Come on. I can’t help
you if I don’t know
these things.”
Around us, the people
were doing different
things, doing their
planned activities for
the day, their worlds
still moving even as
mine seemed to have
stopped. A gust of wind
rushed past us, blowing
with it a few leaves. A
single dry leaf made its
way to us, landing
neatly on my dress.
Yellow, almost crispy—
seemingly a dead,
fragile thing. It
reminded me of me.
After a moment of
prolonged silence, he
said, “Hey, it’s okay if
you don’t want to tell
me. But you should also
know that it’s okay to
just tell Cedric that you
still like him, that you’re
still hurt. That you
want him back.”
“But I don’t want him
back!”
“Are you sure?” he
asked me, unfazed by
my outburst.
“I… I don’t know. But I
don’t want to want him
back. I keep… I keep
telling myself that he
hurt me, that he broke
my heart, that he will
only break it again, over
and over again, but I
don’t know why the
fuck I still feel like I like
him.”
Silence aired for a while.
Yet behind it, behind
this silence, heavy
words were waiting to
be said. Words loudest
in the passing silence.
“I think that’s normal,”
he said. “To feel that
way, even after you’ve
been hurt many times.”
Hearing this from him
made me stop. Had he
been hurt before? Had
he been brokenhearted
once?
“That’s why I think it’s
okay to cry,” he said.
“It’s better if you do.”
He shifted again, sitting
right beside me so we
were shoulder to
shoulder. He pulled me
closer as he draped his
arm over my shoulders,
not saying anything
more than what was
needed to say.
The tears didn’t spill
over. I was better than
that. After a moment
of silence, I decided it
wouldn’t hurt for me to
tell him. It’s not like I
have anyone else to
talk to, seeing as Hail
and Cedric were
officially in the bottom
of my friend list.
“Hail used to be my
best friend,” I said, a
pang of hurt making it
harder to continue. “I'd
always been kind of
socially awkward. I only
had two friends. Hail
and Cedric. Back then,
though, I thought they
were enough. I thought
I didn’t need anyone
else as long as I had
then. I was so, so
stupid,” I said, my
hands taking the dried
leaf from my dress,
slowly, slowly, tearing it
apart bit by bit.
Unlike the way Cedric
broke my heart—not
slowly, not bit by bit,
but all at once in one big
crash.
“Now I can’t even have
either of them,” I
continued, regretting a
lot of things, a feeling
of anger washing over
me.
“Well,” he said, pausing
for a while before
saying, “then they don’t
deserve you. You
deserve better than
them.”
I looked down at my
hands, the dried leaf
now fully crumbled.
“You know what? It
seems as if this day is
ruined, but fear not!”
His tone changed from
his serious, gentle,
weirdly understanding
voice into his playful,
happy one. “I know
something that will
take your mind off of
this.”
I looked at him
quizzically, puzzled.
Then suddenly, he
leaned into me and
kissed me as if he had
every right to do so. My
eyes widened, and I
would have pushed him
away if he hadn’t
broken the kiss before I
could. He was grinning
impishly at me. “Well, I
do kiss better than that
guy, right? What the fuck? You
are so full of yourself.
I--I only said that to
make a point. I didn't
mean it!”
“Honestly, Kyla, I’ve
lost count on all the lies
you’ve told me.”
“You are such a pig,” I
told him. “Here I was,
telling you my stupid,
stupid thoughts and
here you were thinking
about shit that could
boost your ego.”
"Hey, I was only trying
to help,” he said, raising
both his hands—the
universal sign of
surrender.
My mouth dropped
open. “How is this
supposed to help?”
He simply shrugged.
“See, now you’ve
forgotten about hating
him and started hating
me for kissing you,” he
said. “Which is better,
right? For you, anyway.”
I was more than just
surprised to hear this
from him. It didn’t
make sense. How could
this guy, this vain, self-
centered, egotistic guy
who knows nothing but
fool around with girls,
be so different?
He smiled at me,
ruffling my hair with his
hand in a surprisingly
brotherly gesture. I was
rendered speechless,
my mouth slightly
parted as the weight of
his hand rested atop
my head—warm,
gentle and friendly.
The exact opposite of
the Seth Everett I had
in mind back then.