Chapter 33
Chapter Thirty-Three
Daphne
I 've had serious boyfriends before, but I've never lived with a lover. A few guys asked. Sometimes for practical reasons—I slept there half the week anyway, why not save on rent—and sometimes for romantic ones—the guy just wanted to wake up next to me.
As a scientist, I saw the logic. I agreed. Yes, it is smarter to save half the rent. In the short term.
But what if I meet someone else? I'll have to find a whole new place to pursue the relationship. Or if he decides to go to grad school in San Francisco? Will he expect me to come with him?
Or maybe I'll just get stuck with the rent, all on my own, in a space that's designed for a couple rather than two roommates.
And what about medical school?
I wasn't over-confident. I didn't assume I'd get into a school close enough to my current apartment to commute.
I did. I got lucky.
But I didn't want the boyfriend to stay with me on that journey anyway. I wanted the space and time for myself.
I didn't trust anyone to give me that.
I saw every other relationship in my life. The way women rearranged themselves around a man's interests, priorities, work, needs.
It always happened that way. Don't get me wrong. Men made compromises, at times. Sometimes, they offered enough the women deemed the trade-off worthwhile. Money, love, affection, sex, cooking skills, the sperm necessary to fertilize their egg.
But from my outside point of view—
It wasn't worth it. I wasn't willing to trade freedom for a shared lease or easy access to a sexual partner or a more efficient division of labor. And would it even be more efficient?
Studies show that coupled women do more housework than single women, not less.
Instead of sharing things fifty-fifty, they take on new tasks. And I barely had time to take care of myself, much less someone else.
The logic circles through my head as I unpack. Jackson didn't furnish the place with a girlfriend in mind. The open dresser and closet are in the guest bedroom.
Which I like. Well, I should like it.
But every time I hang a dress in the empty closet, I feel a twinge of something I can't place.
I can see my clothes here.
I can see myself studying at this desk.
I can see myself waking up next to him.
That's not in the cards. But it's a nice image anyway.
For a while, I let myself fall into fantasies of a life we could have. Talking all night, sleeping arm in arm, waking up together, fixing each other breakfast, kissing goodbye on our way out the door.
It wouldn't be like it was with other guys.
I'd trust him to give me space.
To listen.
To cook me dinner.
I've never had that before. I've never had someone take care of me.
When I was a kid, yes, my parents did their best. But their best wasn't enough.
Dad was on the road a lot. Mom worked a million hours. They had help, a nanny and a housekeeper who took great care of us, not that I remember much about her besides her tendency to run Spanish and English together and the smell of cinnamon.
She always made coffee with cinnamon.
When Dad stopped touring, he started spending more time at home. He went from never being around to always being around to, one day, not being around anymore.
I know what happened now. How he let his doctor talk him into taking painkillers after a surgery. He thought he was recovered enough for it.
He wasn't.
After that, my parents were different. Even though Dad went to rehab, came back stronger, stayed sober for the next two decades, even though he's sober now.
They started to look for the signs of addiction in us. They started to look carefully at Damon and me. He rebelled. I got in line.
Straight As, track and field, clean room, no needs. Because that year Dad was struggling and all those years Damon was struggling after—
No one ever said Daphne, thank goodness, you're so easy, thank goodness, you're not as difficult as your brother, because if you were, I'd fall apart .
But it was in the air anyway. I couldn't ask more of Mom. She was trying to juggle work as a doctor with a husband and son who struggled with addiction. And Dad wasn't there to help.
And even when he was—
I love my father. I do. We're close now. I understand now.
But I'll never trust him the way I did when I was a little girl.
I guess that's normal. A part of growing up. Don't most girls see their dad as their knight in shining armor?
At some point, we realize our parents are human beings with flaws and foibles.
My point just came a little earlier.
Back then, I wasn't old enough to understand what was going on or why I felt drawn to Jackson. I wasn't even old enough to want him, really. It was a different sort of attraction. Based not on his strong jaw or his muscular frame but on some essence of his personality.
A strength. A maturity. A stoicism.
Over the years, my crush came and went. Sometimes, it was stronger. Other times, I faded to a speck of dust. I was with another guy. Or he was with another girl. Or I needed to see him as a friend more than I needed to see him as a potential lover.
We didn't spend a lot of time together one-on-one. Only the mornings I slept over before Cassie or anyone else was up. He would talk about the books he was reading, the classes he was taking, the way he got to see more of the world late at night and early in the morning because he often had trouble sleeping.
Is that why he hasn't invited anyone to live with him?
I want to know everything about him. And I want to share extra parts of myself. It's scary.
It feels safer unpacking in this spare room. But the sense I want to crawl into his bed forever makes that even more dangerous.
I finish unpacking, I set up my temporary work desk (there isn't a lot to do, but there are a few things), and I finalize my plans for the evening. For the next three weeks, actually.
A few nights of domestic bliss, then the task of impressing his boss, then more nights of, well, sex.
That's what I expect.
Dinner, sure. And shared space, yes. But sex and company for a few hours a night.
Three weeks and we part.
The math is the same as it was two days ago, but somehow, it feels wrong. Different. More painful.
I push the thought away. It doesn't matter how much it will hurt to leave him. I'm leaving him.
Every ex-boyfriend I've ever had was right. My work is my first priority.
But for the first time, I'm not sure if it will always be my first priority. And that's a terrifying feeling.
So I seek refuge in the place where we fit so well, where I know exactly what I want to take.
I pick out the perfect outfit to seduce him.