Chapter 11 #2
He doesn’t respond, so I look down at him.
His sage-green eyes are soft but pained.
They glow slightly in the lamplight, and I have to tear my eyes away, unable to bear the feeling growing in my stomach.
His eyes. That look. It brings back memories at a dizzying speed.
Me yelling “Do you not understand anything about me?” and storming out.
Never to see him up close again. Until now.
“Sorry, that was…” I mumble. “Uncalled for. I’m just anxious to get to the job I have waiting for me.”
He nods, shoulders dropping marginally.
“It’s a consulting position. In New York City. Consulting analyst, technically,” I tack on, hoping my openness will make up for the outburst.
“Oh. That’s awesome. You’re only here for the summer then?”
“Yep! Just for the summer. Gotta save up for the move, and then I’m out of here,” I say with faux enthusiasm, waving the paintbrush in the air.
“Just a few more overtime shifts and you should be good to go then,” he says up at me, and then strides back over to his notebook.
“Can you help me with something, actually?” he asks.
“Sure,” I say, holding the paintbrush out to him like a question mark.
“You can put that down for now. Hold on a sec.” He walks to the corner of the room and grabs the raw slabs of wood leaning against the wall.
“I’m building out a bar for customers to sit at, where they can watch the baristas make their drinks or just get their work done without taking up a table with multiple spots.
” He gestures toward the half-finished bar area, tracing the invisible vision in the air with his hands.
“I’ve got the wood measured out here. Could you help me hold it steady while I drill it into the ground? ”
“Of course,” I say, grateful for the distraction.
He stands in the center of the shop holding a slab of wood upright as he waits for me to replace his hands, so I climb down the ladder and meet him there, taking the slab from him and keeping it steady in the exact position he demonstrated.
He takes the pencil from behind his ear and marks something on the wood, then puts it back, making the soft bristles of his hair move slightly.
From this close, I can smell the faint woodsy aftershave scent of him.
I can see the new crinkle lines by his eyes as he squints in concentration.
The color of his mouth is just as vibrant as it was when we were kids.
He flicks his eyes to me, and I flinch slightly, having forgotten I wasn’t observing him in isolation.
“Hold steady,” he says softly.
And then he bends down to drill the wood into the floorboards.
We haven’t stood this close to each other in years, and I try to distract myself from marveling at his quick, efficient movements, but I have nowhere to look as I keep both hands on the slab, so I keep staring.
It’s a bit awe-inducing to watch him work.
I missed the part of his life when he learned how to do all this, and seeing it up close feels disorienting.
In between drills, I ask, “Did you end up going to college?”
He stills, one knee bent as he rummages around for another nail.
“For engineering,” I add, hoping I didn’t cross an unspoken boundary.
He steadies a nail in place. “No. I didn’t.” He continues drilling. “Self-taught.”
“What was that?” I ask, the sound of his voice starting and the drill stopping too close together to make out.
He stands to full height, taller than when he was seventeen. The single slab of wood is the only thing between us, and for a moment I tense, not knowing if he’s about to speak or expects me to.
“I taught myself,” he clarifies, and then walks over to a pile of wood in the corner.
“You taught yourself how to build?”
“Mm-hmm,” he hums. The sound is bright, open, despite his lack of eye contact.
He takes a measuring tape out of his back pocket and lays it on a slab of wood, then picks it up and brings it over to me.
“For this one, I need you to hold it horizontally, like this.” It balances on top of the one he just drilled.
“Got it.”
I stand in the middle of the slab, making sure to keep it flat, while Declan walks over to my side to drill it down.
“I watched a lot of YouTube videos of random dudes building decks for their wives or doghouses for their dogs, and then eventually started with trying to build small things when I wasn’t mobile yet.
And then about eight months into that I tried building bigger projects with my uncle who’s in construction,” he says, eyes trained on the wood as he makes a notation with his pencil again.
I wasn’t expecting him to offer up that much detail, and with this tiny peek behind the curtain that closed shut between us, I become aware of how hungry I am to learn more about what he was doing during all that time.
What he was doing during his first week without me. His second month. The third year. There was so much unknown, stretching between us like an ocean. It felt like he’d just handed me the oar to a row boat. I wanted to keep paddling until I got to his shore.
“That’s so cool,” I start, mind racing in a million different directions of ways to encourage him to continue opening up. “So, you did that while you were recovering and then you what? Got this job and moved up the ranks? Or did the owner contract you to do renovations?”
“I guess you could say that,” he says, and then the deafening buzz of the drill drowns out all other sound.
I’m expecting him to continue when he finishes drilling, but he doesn’t. Just moves back to the pile of wood and measures a new one before bringing it over.
“So,” he starts, eyes focused on his measuring tape and pencil marks. “You went to Pepperdine for writing?”
“Hah-gah.” A strangled laugh forces its way out of me. “Not quite. Pepperdine, yes. But not for writing. I majored in economics with a minor in psychology.”
Declan pauses, returning the pencil to behind his ear. “You majored in economics?”
“Yes…” I say. “Is that difficult to believe?”
“No, it’s just…” He returns to lining up the wood and finding a nail. “I guess it’s just surprising for someone who loves words so much.”
I’m momentarily stunned. From a man who wanted nothing to do with the details of my life, to assuming he knows how they panned out.
“I can love both,” I rebut.
“Both what?”
“Words and… economic theory.”
He chuckles slightly at that and I feel a flush of satisfaction.
“Yeah. I guess.” He steadies a nail over pencil markings, preparing to drill it in. “I just figured for someone so enraptured by words her whole life, they’d still somehow worm their way into your adult life. Even if not professionally.”
“Enraptured. Good word.”
“My point—”
“Taken,” I finish for him. “We already went through this,” I say, annoyance and perhaps a tiny bit of defensiveness bubbling out. “Besides, isn’t this pretty far from what you wanted to do?” I gesture to the pile of wood and the coffee shop surrounding us.
“Yeah, I guess it is… but not because I didn’t try my best at my first choice,” he says, and then begins drilling again.
“Excuse me? What are you trying to imply?” I spit over the sound of the drill.
He stops drilling and looks at me. “I stopped playing football because I didn’t have a choice. You had a choice.”
My neck physically cranes backward. “I had a choice? Where exactly was my choice, Declan?” He starts walking back to continue rifling through the slabs of wood, so I talk to his back.
“I only went to Pepperdine because they gave me a full ride. I wasn’t going to waste that on a creative writing degree only to be humbled the moment I was spit out into the real world.
Not all of us have rich parents to fall back on if our unrealistic pipe dream doesn’t pan out.
Who was I supposed to fall back on? Lottie?
” I emphasize her name like a curse, knowing it will land with the intended shock value.
Declan stops, turns around, and looks at me. All challenge leaves his eyes. A sympathetic, pity-filled look replaces it. Like he knows my outburst is really misplaced grief taking itself out on him. Which isn’t an excuse, and I realize it immediately.
“Oh, no,” I say, shaking my head, shifting my weight from leg to leg, and placing my hands on the slabs of wood in front of me for lack of a better idea. “You don’t have to look at me like that. I shouldn’t have said that.”
“I’m sorry,” he says anyways. The two words are filled with so much care, delivered with an intimacy that shouldn’t be there. I feel the urge to flee.
He stops and crosses the room, places a hand on my shoulder, and dips his head to meet my eyes. “You’re right. I shouldn’t have—” I rip my shoulder away from his touch.
“No, you really shouldn’t have said anything, but I shouldn’t have either.
And you don’t need to comfort me. I’m fine,” I protest, but he holds my eyes and I feel a whimper forming, threatening to come out.
He stares at me, like he knows it’s a lie before I do.
I press my lips into a thin line, the force with which I’m trying not to cry becoming a painful, expanding orb in my throat.
I slide my fingers back and forth on the wood mindlessly to distract myself, but then something sharp catches, and I pull my hand back with a cry.
“Ah!” I grunt an embarrassing sound, the pain of it shocking me. “Ow. Ow. Ow.” I keep my tone dry despite the sharp stinging sensation spreading through my palm. I bring it to my lips to soothe it.
“Woah.” Declan grabs my wrist. “Don’t put it in your mouth. There could be splinters.” His voice is calm but insistent.
“Come here.” He beckons me to the section where drinks are prepared. He pats the countertop, and I hop onto it. He disappears, retreating to the back room briefly before returning with a first-aid kit under his bicep, brow furrowed in consternation.