Chapter Three #2

of school before finals was traditionally Senior Ditch Day—where

students cut class for the entire day. The faculty took issue with

that a few years ago, the seniors complained, and thus a compromise

was reached—Senior Sleep-In, where seniors can come in late, after

fifth period and thus ditch half the day. Since we get to sleep

until like eleven in the morning, new tradition apparently dictates

that the night before, we have to go out and have a late—well, the

word Dave used was epic—night out in the

city.

I can't say I'm especially

looking forward to it. The truth is, ever since Miami, I haven't

really felt particularly comfortable going out at night at all.

It's all just too familiar. The loud music, crowded bar or house,

drunk people… all loud whispers of a memory I'd rather soon forget.

But I've only been to one small get-together in these past weeks,

and Carl made me promise not only to commit to going out the night

before Senior Sleep-In, but to come to Andrew's tonight. Something

I'm definitely not looking forward to.

But I agree, because

becoming a depressed shut-in would mean Robin won. And I can't have

that. Not after everything he's already taken from me.

****

I ride with Carl and Tina to Andrew's for his regular Friday

night party. Sometimes it's an all out rager, other times it's your

average high school party, but usually, like tonight, it's more of

a get-together. Thirty or so of their friends. Of my friends, I

guess. Though there are only about six of them I actually consider

friends.

I feel a strange, new kind

of anxiety. Not the kind that threatens a panic attack—though

that's never more than some random trigger away—but the Sam-induced

kind. It's this elusive mixture of eager anticipation and dread. A

hint of excitement, a whisper of fear. Because I am both desperate

to see him, and terrified of the exact same thing.

I miss him. Terribly. But

I hate the act. The show. Of pretending I don't miss him terribly. Of being

right next to him and at the same time, in another way, so

excruciatingly distant. Of acting like this is really all I want,

and forget the something

more.

I dread it. When I have to

step into the facade and pretend this is all okay. That

I’m okay.

But I’m so not okay. And

considering I’m in love with someone I can never have again, I’m

pretty sure I’ll never be okay.

Nevertheless, I slip on my

mask as we all climb out of Carl’s Audi. Carl is in an

exceptionally good mood—she has been ever since she and Tuck

resolved their issues in Miami. But her concern for me is weighing

down her contentment. It's in her sideways glances—the ones she

intermittently casts my way to make sure I'm coping. And so I

plaster on the mask even when Sam's not around. Carl's a great

friend, the best girl friend I've ever had, and now that she's

finally happy, the last thing I want is to mitigate that with my

own misery.

Andrew marches right to

Tina as soon as we walk in, obviously impatient over having had to

wait on his girl to arrive at his own party. I half expect him to

be angry, maybe to grab her arm or growl some reprimand. But he

doesn't. He just kisses her sweetly on the lips and laces their

fingers together.

I'm reminded again of how

screwed up I really am. I think about what Cam told me the night I

told him what Robin had done, the night before he died. He said

that what Robin did—how he was—it wasn't normal. He was right of

course, it wasn't normal.

And now, neither am

I.

Carl's eyes lock on Tuck

right away, and I immediately turn in the opposite direction.

Because I know that where Tuck is, Sam usually is too. And as much

as most of me wants to see him, that small part of me—the coward—is

painfully aware of how weak I am in his presence, and it's

scared.

I'm scared. Because I've exerted the greatest strength of my life

in letting him go, and despite what Sam used to think, I'm not

strong enough to feel confident that I won't falter.

But as soon as I turn, I

nearly smack right into him. I catch myself at the last moment,

though part of me regrets the instinct. If we'd collided, at least

he'd have to touch me. He hasn't touched me in weeks, not since

Miami, and that small fearful part of me vanishes at just the mere

thought of his touch. But I caught myself, and so he doesn’t have

to.

And he doesn’t.

He doesn't give me a hug

or kiss on the cheek in greeting. He doesn't even shake my damned

hand. He just startles barely instantly before offering me a warm

smile. His perfect dimple is there, and it affects me, and it takes

me a moment to gather myself. I try to force the mask back in

place.

I am okay.

But Sam notices. He

pretends not to, but it's there in his eyes. He saw me fluster and

he's put off by it. His reaction makes me even more anxious.

Immediately I realize my mistake. That my reaction to him, no

matter how fast I tried to cover it, wasn't fast enough. He's

annoyed, because he's trying to act normal for the sake of our

friendship—my request—and here I am, acting like some lovesick

puppy, even if only for a moment. Robin's words from Miami invade

my mind, the accusation that I was following Sam around like

a fucking puppy, and I blush, ashamed.

But ever so quickly, we

both slip our masks into place, and Sam's smile returns.

"How are you doing, Ror?"

he asks. I worry my lip between my teeth before I can stop myself,

and then release it as nonchalantly as possible. I wonder if Sam

has picked up on the lying tell only Cam and my parents have ever

recognized.

"I'm doing okay," I reply.

Sam seems unsure as to whether he wants to hide his skepticism or

not.

"What are you up to this

weekend?" he asks.

I shrug. I know his family

is hosting some brunch on Sunday. I know because Tucker invited

Carl, and Carl mentioned Chelsea was going to be there as well.

This irks me, of course, though I have no right to be

irked.

Chelsea's parents are

friends with Sam's mom, and Sam and Chelsea have been friends since

they were little. They had one spat when Chelsea tried to take a

photo of my scar while I'd been changing in a bathroom stall after

phys ed, but apparently Chelsea saw the error of her ways after Sam

stopped speaking to her, she ended up grounded, and her parents

cancelled her spring break trip.

I understand why Sam

accepted her apology. Really, I do. What I don't understand is how

he fell for her story about being over her "little crush". Chelsea

and I both know that her feelings for Sam were more than some

insignificant crush. For as long as she must have been pining for

him, there can be no small amount of feelings that have amassed

over the years. I mean, I've only known him a matter of months and

look at me. Chelsea didn't just get over him in the past couple of

weeks, and I can't understand how Sam doesn't get that.

And it's not like I can

say anything about it. Surely I'd just come across like the jealous

girl who's still pining over Sam herself. Or like I'm annoyed Sam

accepted Chelsea's olive branch because I'm still holding a grudge

over the bathroom incident.

I'm both, of course. But

neither are the reason for my perception of the situation. It's

simply the situation. And Chelsea's pretense of being

over Sam, is just that,

an obvious and utterly transparent pretense.

But Sam seems to have

accepted her story without question. And just as he's done with me,

he's managed to act as if nothing disruptive to their friendship

ever even occurred and gone back to being just

that—friends.

I don't know why this

facade is so much harder for me than it is for everyone else. It

seems as if wearing a mask of some kind or another is par for the

course in high school, I just hadn't noticed it until I'd had to

start wearing one myself. And for the hundredth time, I doubt the

wisdom in attending this party when the person I wear the mask for

most of all can read every thought or emotion I might possess right

there on my face.

I fix my expression into

what I hope passes for inscrutable before I finally manage to

answer Sam's generic, friendly

question about my weekend plans.

"I have an, uh,

appointment tomorrow," I murmur, fully aware that Sam knows

precisely with whom my appointment is scheduled. He nods vaguely to

signal as much, as if it makes perfect sense that a shrink's office

is where I spend my Saturday afternoons.

"And Sunday?" he asks, and

I shrug again. I thought I might possibly consider some studying in

the afternoon, but that's all I'd had planned.

"Cap!" someone—Marshall I

think—calls from across the room.

"My mom's doing a brunch

at my house. You should come. Tucker and Carl will be there, and

Chel, and my cousins, Thea and Danny. And Bits would love to see

you. And my mom, too," Sam rambles adorably.

The truth is any excuse to

see him sounds good as hell to me. But if I can barely act like I'm

okay when were at a crowded party where I only run into him for a

couple of minutes, how could going to his house possibly be a good

idea?

"Cap!" Marshall shouts

again. "Come on, beer pong. Today, bro!"

Sam shakes his head and

rolls his eyes before letting out a exasperated sigh. "I should go

deal with Marshall's new obsession with what he thinks are things

people do in college. Never mind that we used to play beer pong as

sophomores."

I smile, gradually growing

more at ease despite myself. Sam has his way of doing that to

me.

"I bet less so in

Columbia, though," I hedge.

Sam's smile grows, and his

dimple deepens, and just as quickly as he put me at ease, he has me

on edge again, sending butterflies aflight in my stomach. "You'd be

surprised."

"Cap!"

I'm both furious with

Marshall and indebted to him. The mask is slipping, and right now

all I can think is how much I miss Sam. I'm standing right next to

him, again, and I miss him, again.

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