Something Borrowed - BestLightNovel.com
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I suppose this is what happens when you're not accustomed to having secrets. You don't learn the art of holding back. In fact, I am surprised I have lasted this long. I hear static in the line as the news travels across the Atlantic. I panic, wis.h.i.+ng I could suck the admission back in.
"Get the f.u.c.k outta here. You're kidding me, right?"
My silence tells him that I'm serious.
"Ohhh, shhhit." His voice is still smiling.
"What? What are you thinking?" I need to know if he's judging. I need to know what he thinks of me, if he is siding with Chanel Suit.
"Wait. Whaddaya mean, hooked up? You didn't sleep with him, did you?"
"Um. Yeah. Actually I did."
I am relieved to hear him laugh, even though I tell him that it's not funny, that this is serious business.
"Oh, trust me. This is funny."
I picture the dimple in his left cheek. "And what exactly is so amusing?"
"Miss Goody Two-shoes screws her friend's fiance. This is raw comedy at its best."
"Ethan!"
He stops laughing long enough to ask if I could be knocked up.
"No. We had that covered."
"So to speak?"
"Yeah," I say. Any pun I ever make is an accident.
"So no harm done, right? It was a mistake. s.h.i.+t happens. People make mistakes, especially when they're wasted. Look at me and Brandi with an i."
"I guess so. But still..."
Ethan whistles and then says the obvious-that Darcy would flip if she ever found out.
My other line rings. "You need to get that?" Ethan asks.
"No. I'll let it roll to voice mail."
"You sure? It could be your new boyfriend."
"Ask yourself if you're being helpful," I say, although I'm relieved that he is not preachy and serious. That's not Ethan's style, but you never know when someone is going to take the moral high ground. And there is definitely moral high ground all around here, particularly considering that Darcy is a friend of his too. Not as close as he and I are, but they still talk occasionally.
"Sorry. Sorry." He snickers. "Okay. Just one more substantive question."
"What?"
"Was it good?"
"Ethan! I don't know. We were drunk!"
"So it was all sloppy?"
"C'mon, Ethan!" I say, as if I'm not thinking about the particulars. Meanwhile, a snapshot of the Incident flashes through my brain-my fingers pressed into Dexter's back. It is a perfect, airbrushed image. There is nothing sloppy about it.
"So you've spoken to him since?"
I tell him about the Hamptons weekend and the date with Marcus.
"Nice touch. Going for his friend. That way, if you marry Marcus, you guys can be swingers."
I ignore him and continue with the rest-the ride to the jitney, last night, a summary of the e-mail.
"Wow. s.h.i.+t. So... do you have feelings for him too?"
"I don't know," I say, even though I know that the answer is yes.
"But the wedding's still on?"
"Yeah," I say. "As far as I know."
"As far as you know?"
"Yes. It is."
Silence. He is not laughing anymore, so my guilt returns in full force.
"What are you thinking now?"
"I was just wondering where you want this to go," he says. "What do you want from it? Is it a fling, or do you want him to call off the wedding?"
I flinch at the word "fling." That's not what it is at all, but at the same time, I don't think I want Dex to call off the wedding. I can't imagine doing that to Darcy. I tell Ethan that I don't know, I'm not sure.
"Hmm... Well, has he mentioned the engagement at all?"
"No. Not really."
"Hmm."
"What? What does 'hmm' mean?"
"It means I think he should call the s.h.i.+t off."
"Because of me?" My stomach drops at the thought of being responsible for Darcy's canceled wedding. "Maybe he just has cold feet?"
I hear my voice rising hopefully at the suggestion of mere cold feet. Why does part of me want it to be that simple? And how can I be so thrilled to be near Dex, so deeply moved by his e-mail, and still want, on some level, for him to marry Darcy?
"Rach-"
"Ethan, I know what you're going to say."
I don't know exactly what he is going to say, but I have a hunch from his tone that it has something to do with where things are going to end up if I don't cease and desist. That it's going to blow up somehow. That someone-likely me-is going to get hurt. But I don't want to hear him say any of it.
"Okay. Just be careful. Don't get busted. s.h.i.+t."
I hear him laughing again.
"What?"
"Just thinking of Darcy... It's sort of satisfying."
"Satisfying how?"
"Oh, come on. Don't even tell me that part of you doesn't like zinging her a little bit. There's some poetic justice here. Darcy's been riding roughshod over you for years."
"What are you talking about?" I ask, genuinely surprised to hear him describe our friends.h.i.+p like that. I know I've been feeling more irritated by her recently and I know that she has not always been the most selfless of friends, but I've never thought of her as riding roughshod over me. "No she hasn't."
"Yeah, she has."
"No. She hasn't" I say more firmly. I'm not sure who I am defendingme or Darcy. Yes, there was the matter of you, Ethan. But you don't know about that.
"Oh, please. Remember Notre Dame? The SATs?"
I think back to the day we all received our SAT scores, sealed in white envelopes from Guidance. We were all tight-lipped, but dying to know what everyone else got. Finally Darcy just said at lunch, "Okay, who cares. Let's just tell our scores. Rachel?"
"Why do I have to go first?" I asked. I was satisfied with my score, but still didn't want to go first.
"Don't be a baby," Darcy said. "Just tell us."
"Fine. Thirteen hundred," I said.
"What was your verbal?" she asked.
I told her 680.
"Nice," she said. "Congratulations."
Ethan went next. Fourteen ten. No surprise there. I forget what Annalise got-something in the low eleven hundreds.
"Well?" I looked at Darcy.
"Oh. Right. I got a thirteen hundred five."
I knew instantly that she didn't have a 1305. The SAT is not scored in increments of five. Ethan knew too, because he kicked me under the table and hid a smile with his ham sandwich.
I didn't care that she lied per se. She was a known embellisher. But the fact that she lied about her score to beat me by five-that part really figured. We didn't call her on it. There was no point.
But then she said, "Well, maybe we'll both get into Notre Dame."
It was her Ethan power move in the fifth grade all over again.
Like a lot of kids in the Midwest, my dream growing up was to attend Notre Dame. We're not Irish or even Catholic, but ever since my parents took me to a Notre Dame football game when I was eight, I wanted to go there. To me it was what a college should be-stately stone buildings, manicured lawns, plenty of tradition. I wanted to be a part of it. Darcy never showed the slightest interest in Notre Dame and it irritated me that she was infringing on my terrain. But I wasn't too worried about her taking my spot. My grades were higher, my SATs were probably higher, and besides, more than one student from our high school got into Notre Dame every year.
That spring, the acceptance and rejection letters trickled in slowly. I checked the mailbox every day, in agony. Mike O'Sullivan, who had three generations of alumni in his family and was the president of our cla.s.s, got into Notre Dame first. I a.s.sumed that I would be next, but Darcy got her letter before I did. I was with her when she got the mail, although she wouldn't open the envelope in front of me. I went home, hoping guiltily that she had received bad news.
She called an hour later, ecstatic. "I can't believe it! I got in! Can you believe it?"
In short, no. I couldn't. I mustered up a congratulations, but I was crushed. Her news meant one of two things: she had taken my spot, or we would both go to Notre Dame and she would upstage me for four more years. As much as I knew I would miss Darcy when I went away, I felt strongly that I needed to establish myself apart from her. Once she got in, there would be no perfect resolution.
Still, I wanted that acceptance more than I had ever wanted anything. And I had my pride on the line. I waited, prayed, even thought about calling the admissions office to beg. One sickening week later, my letter arrived. It looked just like Darcy's. I ran inside, my heart pounding in my ears as I sliced open the envelope, unfolded the paper that held my fate. Close... you are very highly qualified... but no cigar.
I was devastated and could barely speak to my friends in school the next day, especially Darcy. At lunch, as I fought back tears, she informed me that she was going to Indiana anyway. That she wanted nothing to do with a school that would turn me down. Her charity upset me all the more. For once, Annalise spoke up. "You took Rachel's spot, and you didn't even want to go thete?"
"Well, it was my first choice. I changed my mind. And how was I supposed to know it would happen like this?" she said. "I a.s.sumed she would get in; I only beat her by a few points on the SAT."
Ethan had had enough. "You didn't get a d.a.m.n thirteen hundred five, Darcy. The SAT is scored in increments of ten."
"Who said I got a thirteen hundred five?"
"You did," Ethan and I said in unison.
"No I didn't. I said a thirteen ten."
"OmiG.o.d!" I said, looking at Annalise for support, but her gumption had run out. She claimed that she had forgotten what Darcy said.
We argued for the rest of the lunch hour about what Darcy had said and why she had applied to Notre Dame if she didn't want to go there. We both ended up crying, and Darcy left school early, telling the school nurse she had cramps. The whole thing blew over when I got into Duke and talked myself into being happy with that result. Duke had a similar look and feel-stone buildings, pristine campus, prestige. It was just as good as Notre Dame and maybe it was better to broaden my horizons and leave Indiana.
But to this day I wonder why Notre Dame picked Darcy over me. Maybe a junior male member of the admissions staff fancied her photo. Maybe it was just Darcy's typical good luck.
In any case, I'm glad that Ethan refreshed my memory about Notre Dame. It replaces the Becky Zurich showdown in the forefront of my mind. Yes, Darcy could be a good friend-she usually was-but she also screwed me at a few pivotal moments in life: first love, college dream. Those were no small matters.
"All right," I say to Ethan. "But I think you're overstating the point a little. I wouldn't use the term 'roughshod.'"
"Okay, but you know what I mean. There's an undercurrent of compet.i.tion."
"I guess so. Maybe," I say, thinking that it isn't much of a compet.i.tion when one person consistently loses.
"So, anyway, please keep me posted. This is good stuff."
I tell him I will.
"Oh, one more thing," he says. "When are you going to visit me?" ooon.
"That's what you always say."
"I know. But you know how it goes. Work is always crazy... I'll come soon, though. This year for sure."