
After My Boyfriend Kissed Another Woman at His Party
Chapter 2
The silence in the AP Physics lab wasn't organic; it was choreographed.
Mrs. Gable had just announced the term project, and the room immediately splintered into factions. I remained at my desk, organizing my notes. I didn't need a partner to carry the weight of the coursework, but the rubric mandated pairs.
Theo Callahan leaned back in his chair, effectively blocking the aisle. When I caught his eye, he smirked—a shallow contraction of facial muscles that signaled his intent before he even spoke. "Looks like we're full up over here, Woods."
The vacuum formed around me instantly. It was a crude social quarantine, executed with the clumsy precision of entitled teenagers.
Right on cue, the scrape of a chair broke the quiet.
Spencer Harrison navigated the room with that same unhurried, inherited ease. He stopped at my desk, sliding his hands into his pockets, casting a shadow over my notebook. "Looks like it's you and me, Woods. Try to keep up."
He waited for the softening. The sigh of relief. The gratitude.
Instead, I looked past his shoulder. Theo caught Spencer’s eye and gave a microscopic nod. A transaction, successfully cleared.
I tapped my pen against my knuckles. One, two, three.
"Chapter four outlines are due Friday," I said, my voice entirely flat, registering zero emotional fluctuation. "Don't be late."
I didn't give him the satisfaction of a thank-you. I simply watched the slight, confused tightening at the corner of his mouth as I returned to my reading.
Two days later, I found him in the east corridor. The afternoon light cut through the high windows, throwing sharp, geometric shadows across the linoleum. He was alone, leaning against a locker, scrolling through his phone.
When he looked up and saw me approaching, the half-second delay kicked in.
"Don't," I said, stopping exactly three feet away.
The smile aborted before it could fully render. "Don't what?"
"Monday morning, 8:14 AM," I said, keeping my voice pitched low, a clinical recitation of data. "Theo intercepts the sign-up sheet. 8:16 AM, he makes a point of loudly excluding me. 8:17 AM, you arrive, perfectly timed, to play the reluctant savior."
Spencer shifted his weight. The loose confidence stiffened into something brittle. "I don't know what—"
"You have a tell, Spencer," I interrupted, my tone as steady as a metronome. "When Theo blocked the aisle, he didn't look at me to gauge the reaction. He looked at you to confirm the execution."
The silence stretched, thick and heavy. The air in the hallway suddenly felt too warm.
"I was doing you a favor," he finally said. The charm evaporated, replaced by a defensive edge that made him look younger, smaller. "Nobody else was stepping up."
"You manufactured a deficit so you could sell me the solution," I corrected. I held his gaze, refusing to let him look away. "I respect Theo more than I respect you."
His jaw clenched, a muscle feathering beneath the skin. "Excuse me?"
"Theo's cruelty is honest," I said, my voice dropping to a whisper that echoed louder than a shout. "He doesn't like me, and he doesn't hide it. But your cruelty wears a mask. You engineer a fire just so you can expect a thank-you for holding the hose."
I didn't wait for a rebuttal. I turned and walked away, leaving him anchored to the linoleum, the silence behind me heavy with the wreckage of his ego.
I didn't have time to dwell on the architecture of his arrogance. The structural integrity of my own life was already fracturing.
My mother’s illness, usually a quiet, manageable hum in the background of our lives, violently spiked that weekend. The hospital smelled of bleach and old coffee, a sterile purgatory where time lost its shape. I sat by her bed, doing calculus problems while the monitors beeped out the fragile rhythm of her failing heart. I didn't cry. Tears were an inefficient use of saltwater.
The real toll was extracted at dawn.
At 4:30 AM on a Tuesday, the air at the farmer's market was a biting, damp cold that seeped directly into the marrow. I stood alone at the back of our family's leased stall, staring down a pallet of Fuji apples and heavy root vegetables.
My breath plumed in the freezing air. I grabbed the rough wooden edge of the first crate. Splinters bit into my bare palms, but I welcomed the sharp, localized pain. It was something tangible I could control.
I hoisted the crate, the muscles in my shoulders screaming in protest. Fifty pounds of dead weight. I dragged it to the front display, my boots slipping on the frosted asphalt.
I stacked the second crate. Then the third. My knuckles were white, my chest burning with the exertion.
I thought of my mother, who had poured her life into a man who only took and never carried. I thought of Spencer, expecting applause for a manufactured rescue.
I locked my jaw, grabbed the next crate, and lifted. The wood scraped against my collarbone, leaving a bruise I would hide under heavy sweaters. I arranged the produce with mathematical precision, row by perfect row, building a fortress out of fruit and cold resolve.
No one was going to rescue me. And I was never going to ask them to.
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