
After My Boyfriend Kissed Another Woman at His Party
After My Boyfriend Kissed Another Woman at His Party Chapter 1
I noticed him before he noticed me, which is how I notice most things.
He walked into AP Calculus on a Tuesday in October like he'd been there a hundred times before — unhurried, shoulders loose, the kind of ease that isn't performed so much as inherited. New transfer, someone whispered behind me. Spencer Harrison. The name landed in the room before he did, carried on the particular frequency of girls who'd already looked him up.
I didn't look him up. I had a problem set due Thursday and a mother whose hospital follow-up I needed to reschedule before noon. Spencer Harrison was not a variable I needed to introduce.
Mr. Aldridge put the equation on the board within the first ten minutes — a layered differential, the kind that looks worse than it is if you know what you're actually looking at. He asked for a volunteer with the particular tone teachers use when they mean it as a warning, not an invitation.
Spencer stood up.
I'll give him this: he wasn't embarrassed about not knowing. He went to the board with the same loose confidence he'd walked in with, picked up the chalk, and started working. The room watched him the way rooms watch someone attractive do anything — with a generosity that had nothing to do with the math. He tried one approach, then another. He backtracked. He wrote something, paused, erased it. The clock above the door moved through twenty minutes like it had somewhere better to be.
I watched his process the way I watch most things — not unkindly, just accurately. He wasn't unintelligent. He was simply working from the wrong entry point, the way someone might try to open a lock by feel when the key is sitting right there on the table.
Mr. Aldridge's silence had shifted from patient to pointed.
I stood up.
I didn't ask permission. I walked to the board, took the chalk from the space beside Spencer's hand without touching him, and started from the third line — the place where his logic had forked wrong. Four steps. Clean substitution, variable isolation, the solution resolving itself the way they always do when you stop fighting the structure and just follow it.
I set the chalk down and turned back toward my seat.
He was looking at me. Not the way boys usually look — not appraising, not defensive. Something more unguarded than that, like I'd said something in a language he didn't know he spoke. I gave him the only look the situation warranted: the mild, impersonal acknowledgment of a problem that had been solved and was no longer relevant.
Then I sat down and returned to my notes.
I didn't think about it again. Not until the library.
---
Three days later. I had a corner table near the east window — good light, low traffic, far enough from the study rooms that the sound didn't carry. I was forty minutes into a paper on recursive sequences when I heard the chair across from me move.
I didn't look up.
"You know," he said, "most people at least pretend not to notice when someone sits down."
I turned a page. "Most people sit down somewhere they've been invited."
A pause. Then, undeterred — and I noted the undeterred, filed it — he leaned forward slightly, bringing with him the particular gravitational pull of someone who has never once had to work for a room's attention. I could see it in my peripheral vision: the angle of his posture, the easy set of his jaw, the smile already loading.
I looked up.
The smile arrived exactly half a second after his eyes met mine.
I set my pen down. Picked up my notebook — the small one, black cover, the one I keep for observations that don't fit anywhere else. Uncapped my pen.
He watched me write with an expression that was trying very hard to stay amused.
"I've clocked it three times now," I said, not looking up from the page. "Half-second delay, every time. Right before you say something you've calculated will land well. It's a deflection mechanism — you smile first so the other person is already responding to the smile before they've processed the words." I capped the pen. "It's effective. I imagine it works on most people."
The silence that followed was a different quality than the ones before it.
I closed the notebook, tucked it back into my bag, and gathered my paper.
"I have a deadline," I said. "Good luck with the differential equations."
I left him sitting there — genuinely, completely speechless — and I did not look back.
I noted, later, alone, that my pen had tapped against my knuckles three times before I'd opened the notebook.
I didn't examine what that meant. Not yet.
After My Boyfriend Kissed Another Woman at His Party of Contents
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