"No! Tell me."
But the tardy bell rang, and Ms. Campbell said, "Okay, guys, get to work on your journals. No talking."
English class went by pretty quickly, as it usually did. There were some avid conversations going on from other students in the class, about the short story we'd read, "A Rose for Emily." I didn't join in. I usually didn't. I just liked to listen to what everyone else said. I watched Jason soak it all in. He hadn't read the story, but I could tell if he had, he'd throw in his two cents.
Second block was the one class Jason and I didn't have together. He had Biology.
Toby and I had French. Mrs. Zimmerman, the French teacher, would not let me change seats, so I had to sit next to Toby.
I settled into my seat, sulking, and vowing not to speak to him.
"Azazel," said Toby, "we have to talk."
We most certainly did not. In fact, we weren't going to talk if I had anything to say about it. I buried my face in my French book and tried to ignore him.
"Listen, I'm sorry," he said. "I was rude to you for no reason at the party."
Damned right he was. But just because he was correctly describing his behavior didn't mean I was going to forgive him. He'd really hurt my feelings. He'd
mocked
me. In front of everyone. In that second, I'd had this flash that maybe Toby really saw me as ridiculous.
"Please look at me," he said.
I didn't.
Thankfully, class started right about then, and I had other things to pay attention to besides Toby.
After French, Jason rejoined us for history. That was my dad's class. It was weird having my dad for a teacher, but it was either do that or not take Honors History, which just wasn't an option. My dad didn't have a seating chart in his classroom. My dad didn't actually have rules in his classroom. He solved problems by classroom quorums, where we all sat in a circle and talked about how we felt about how the class was going. This worked fine in Honors classes, but I knew that some of the General kids took advantage of my dad. He didn't see it that way though. He thought it was important that the students had the ability to make their own decisions and to discover the consequences.
I was glad that there wasn't a seating chart. I usually did sit in the same seat by Toby, but I sat somewhere else today, and I waved Jason over to me when he came into the classroom.
"How was Biology?" I asked him.
Jason sat down, noting that Toby and I weren't sitting together. "You haven't made up with Toby, yet, huh?"
"No," I said. Maybe I wasn't going to make up with Toby at all.
"Biology was okay," said Jason. "I've done most of the stuff in there. Should be a breeze."
"So, were you really home schooled?"
"Kind of," said Jason and that was all. He never elaborated on anything! I was dying of curiosity. How was I going to get Jason to trust me with his secrets?
After history, we went to lunch. Usually, I sat with Toby. We ate at a table with a bunch of football players and their girlfriends. After I ate, I usually went into the gym to find Lilith. Lilith never ate lunch.
Today, however, for some reason, she was in the lunch line. She saw Jason and I and motioned for us to come stand with her.
"We'll be cutting the line," I called to her.
She rolled her eyes, but she left her spot in the line to come back and stand with us.
"There," she said. "Happy?"
I made a face at her. "What's up?" I said. "How come you're eating lunch?"
"I'm pregnant," she said. "Baby needs nutrition."
"Shut up!" I said, whacking her with my purse. "You are not!"
"No," she said. "I'm not." She smiled at Jason. "And how are you?"
"Uh...good," said Jason.
Every time Jason said something to Lilith, he started out with "uh" or "um." I wondered if Jason was attracted to Lilith. I considered the prospect of Jason and Lilith dating. For some reason, I didn't like the idea of it at all.
"You still pissed at Toby?" she asked me.
"Of course," I said. How could she ask me this? Last night, when I'd talked to her on the phone, I'd explained exactly how I felt about the situation in excruciating detail.
We'd dissected everything he'd said, trying to figure out his motives.
"Maybe you should give the guy a break," said Lilith.
My jaw dropped. What was Lilith saying? "You hate Toby," I said.
"Yeah," she said. "I do. He's a total idiot. But, I don't know, the two of you are like the teen dream couple. You're good together, you know."
"Obviously, we're not if he makes fun of me in front of everyone at that party," I said.
"Plus, he treats me like I'm twelve or something. He's so overprotective. And he won't have sex with me."
Jason cleared his throat.
Lilith and I both looked at him.
"The line moved forward," he said.
We shuffled forward in the lunch line.
"What do you think, Jason?" I asked.
"About?" he asked. He looked a little embarrassed. I realized I'd been talking about my sex life (or lack thereof) in front of him. Maybe that made him uncomfortable.
"Toby," I said. "You don't think I should forgive him, do you?"
Jason didn't say anything.
"You're gonna forgive him," said Lilith. "You guys never fight for long. You might as well just get it over with."
"Do you want to break up with him?" Jason asked me.
I thought about it. Did I? I was in love with Toby. I was mad at him right now, but did I want him out of my life forever? "Let's talk about something else," I said. "Like why are you really eating lunch, Lilith?"
Lilith rolled her eyes. "I'm hiding from Eric Nelson. He was a total jackass to me in the gym because I gave you guys a ride home."
I smiled. "I thought you were going to make Eric fall in love with you."
"Not in this lifetime," she said.
* * *
Could I? The fifth time he called, I was in my bedroom working on my history homework. My mother knocked on my door, phone in hand. "It's Toby again," she said to me.
"I told you. I don't want to talk to him," I said.
My mother put the phone to her ear. "Let me talk to her, Toby."
Oh, great. Not another heart to heart with mom. I loved my mom, but she had this annoying habit of making me examine all my actions and realize how silly I was being. I didn't want that. I wanted to wallow in my anger towards Toby.
My mom came into my room and sat down on my bed. She set the phone down next to her.
Sighing, I closed my history book. "Mom, I just don't want to talk to him."
"Sweetie, I think he's sorry," she said. "He sounds pitiful on the phone. He misses you."
"Well, good," I said. "I hope he does. And he can just go right on missing me."
"Is that what you want?" my mom asked. "He's not going to miss you forever, you know."
"Geez, I didn't break up with him or anything. We're just having a fight." Why was everyone making this into such a big deal? And why was everyone, even Lilith, on Toby's side?
He'd
made fun of
me!
"So you don't want to break up with him?"
"I don't know!"
My mom took my hand. "Zaza, have I ever told you about the time I almost broke up with your father?"
"No," I said.
"It was when we were dating in college," she said. "We got in a big fight one night about something silly. Funny, I can't even remember what it was anymore. But I was so angry with him. I didn't talk to him for weeks."
"What happened?"
"He started seeing someone else."
"Really?"
My mother nodded. "I was devastated. I saw them together at a restaurant one night, and I realized that no matter how angry I was with your father, I couldn't bear the thought of not being with him. So, I called him and told him that."
"And he dumped the other girl?"
Mom laughed. "Actually, it turned out that he wasn't even dating her. She was just a friend. I'd leapt to conclusions."
I laughed too.
"But the important thing, sweetie, was that I realized I didn't want to lose your dad. I couldn't face life without him."
"Right," I said. My mom wanted me to think about life without Toby. But I'd been doing that. Still. I wondered how I'd feel if I saw Toby with another girl. I didn't think I'd like that very much at all. Toby was mine. Even if sometimes he was a big jerk, he was my jerk. "Give me the phone."
My mom smiled and handed it to me.
I dialed Toby's number.
"Azazel?" he said, sounding very happy to hear from me.
"Hey," I said.
"Can we talk?"
"Yeah."
"Face to face," he said. "I'll pick you up?"
"Okay," I said.
Toby showed up in ten minutes. I climbed into his truck. It felt natural. It was the way things were supposed to be. We went back to Toby's house. Neither of his parents was home, so we had the place to ourselves. Still, we went to hang out in Toby's room, like usual. Some habits are hard to break.
I perched on Toby's bed. He sat in his desk chair.
"I'm so, so sorry," he said.
"Look, Toby—" I started. I was going to tell him about what my mother had said to me and about my epiphany about us.
But he interrupted me. "No," he said. "Let me say this." He took a deep breath. "I was an ass. I was...jealous."
"Jealous?" I said. What could he have been jealous of?
"Yeah. I mean, Jason shows up, and suddenly, he's all you talk about. And he's always around. And you're always with him. I couldn't handle it."
"You were jealous of Jason?" I asked. How could he think that? I mean, sure I thought Jason was interesting. But I didn't think of him like that. The idea was so ridiculous that I started laughing.
Toby looked worried. "Why are you laughing?" he asked.
I tried to stop. "Jason?" I said between giggles. "Really? Jason?"
"So that's funny?" said Toby. He looked confused.
My laughter started to subside. "Yes, it's funny. I don't have any feelings for Jason!"
"You sat beside him in every class today."
"Because he's new, and he doesn't know what's going on!"
"So, you're not going to start...dating him or something?"
"Don't be silly," I said. "I love you, Toby. We've been through so much together. I could never just leave you like that. Besides, Jason is...weird. He's strange and mysterious and nobody knows anything about him. And he's really strong, and he beats people up, and he never talks, and he doesn't know what he wants to watch on television."
"And those are bad things?"
"Not bad, exactly, just weird," I said. It was true. I found Jason intriguing, but that was as far as it went. Toby was my boyfriend.
Toby looked relieved. "Okay," he said. "Good."
"Good," I said.
"So, we're cool, then?" he asked.
I nodded. "We're cool."
He grinned. He got up from his desk chair and came over to the bed to sit next to me.
I burrowed into his chest, and he put his arm around me.
"I thought I was losing you," he said.
"You can't get rid of me that easily," I said.
And he kissed me.
Toby was a very good kisser. And I loved how kissing him felt so familiar and safe.
This was the boy I'd been kissing for years and years. Kissing Toby was like coming home. It felt like wrapping up in a worn, warm blanket. One that I'd had since I was a kid.
He pulled me close, and I lost myself in his strong arms.
We lay back on Toby's bed, wriggling around so that we could rest our heads on the pillows. Our lips met again and again. Our tongues darted in and out of each other's mouths. And we held onto each other so tightly. During times like this, I sometimes felt like Toby and I were becoming part of each other. Like we were one entity, and we were melding into each other. It was such a lovely feeling. It was what I imagined sex with Toby would be like. The two of us joined together, completing each other.
Toby's hands started to shift on my body. He traced the curve of my spine, my waist. I moved my hands too, caressing his arms, his chest. Toby rolled over, and suddenly, he was on top of me. His hips pinned mine to the bed. He kissed me. I wrapped my legs around his. He propped himself up so that he could look at me. I gazed into his blue, blue eyes. He was so beautiful. I reached up to touch his chin, his jaw. He stroked my cheek, my neck. His fingers went lower, tracing the outline of my clavicle.
They eased inside the collar of my shirt. My breath caught in my throat. His hands barely skimmed the surface of my skin. I had goose bumps. And he was inches, inches from my breast, which no one had ever touched before. I held my breath as his hand got closer and closer, inching over my skin—
And then he sat up.
He wasn't touching me at all. He buried his face in his hands.
"Toby?" I asked in a small voice. What had just happened?
"We can't," he said, and his voice sounded agonized.
"We can," I said.
"No," he said. "No, no. We're not allowed."
Not allowed? Someone else had something like that. Who was it?
"It's okay," I said, sitting up and touching his shoulder. "We're not in the truck. It's nice here. That was...that was special." And it had been. It had been like something out of a romantic movie. And now it was all ruined.
Toby appeared to get hold of himself. He looked up at me, dropping his hands. "I mean, I can't," he said. "Not now. This isn't...how I want it."
God! Wasn't anything good enough for Toby? "How do you want it?" I asked.