Before Jack shut his front door in my face yesterday, he told me to return the next night at eight pm sharp. For my own good, he said. So smugly confident that I'd be back. I want so badly to hate him. So why can't I? What's wrong with me? The last twenty-four hours, I've only had one thought - be far, far away from his house come eight pm. Shouldn't be that hard, this city is literally ninety-nine percent places not Jack's front door. So where am I at 7:45? Standing at the end of his block, searching for the willpower to walk away. For the next fifteen minutes, I scroll through my phone hoping for an unavoidable emergency. Three times, I open my rideshare app to call a car; three times I don't.
In the end, I just stand on the corner watching the minutes tick down...7:58...7:59...8:00. If I can't be proactive then I can just let nature take its course and play chicken with the time. Since there are no seconds on the lock screen, I can only speculate how close I am to being officially late. Late, I'm going to be late. Jack said 8pm sharp, said it twice, actually. He was very specific about it. I start walking, if not quite running, towards his house. I go up his front steps, ring the bell, and double check my phone. It's 8:01. Queen of the meaningless act of defiance. I wait there on his stoop until it becomes clear he isn't going to answer. I ring the bell again and knock.
"I'm not leaving," I announce to no one, well aware that five minutes ago I was plotting my escape. That's how it's always been with me - I always want what I'm told I can't have. To prove I'm serious, I pound my fist on the door.
The door opens, and Jack steps out. He looks me up and down. "You're late."
"Yes." Even I'm not stubborn enough to argue the passage of time.
"Was I unclear?"
"No."
He doesn't answer immediately. "So was it on purpose, or are you just this disorganized?"
"On purpose," I say and make the most contrite face I know how.
"Well at least you're honest. That's something."
I'm an expert at getting my way even after I've fucked up, and sense this is my chance. "Does that mean I can come in?"
"No," Jack says. "But I will give you another chance. Since you told the truth."
"Another chance?"
"Tomorrow night. 8pm. Sharp."
My heart craters. "You're kidding."
"Sharp," he says and closes his door on me for the second time in two days.
I stand there in disbelief. This has to be a joke, right? Any second he's going to reopen the door, and we're both going to have a good laugh.
You should have seen your face
, he'll say. That Jack, such a funny guy. I stand there expectantly, but the door remains resolutely shut. Eventually, I take the hint and retreat back down the stairs with my tail between my legs. Normally if someone pulled this stunt, I'd be in a white-hot rage, but all I feel is disappointed with myself. I should be with Jack. It was right there for the taking. All I had to do was be on time, but I made damn sure that didn't happen.
What is wrong with me?
I walk east towards the nightlife on 14
th
Street. It's only a little after eight on a Saturday night, the golden hour of bad decisions. I scroll through messages from men hoping to meet up, looking for just the right one to crucify myself on. Stupid, stubborn girls deserve to be punished, so I reply to a few of the most reptilian texts. Normally, this gets my adrenaline going. The anticipation of mistakes yet to come. But tonight it all just makes me tired and to my surprise all I want is to be home. So that's where I go. I get a salad on the way and curl up on the couch to watch a movie.
Zodiac
, if you're curious. It's about the psychic toll of obsession and unanswerable questions. I've seen it about a million times, but it feels thematically resonant tonight. My phone won't stop buzzing, and eventually I put it on airplane. I'm asleep before midnight on a weekend for the first time in years.
The next night, I'm back on Jack's corner well before eight. I've been restless all day, which has passed at a sadistic crawl. I've been to Orange Theory, a yoga class, and taken a run in the vain hope of burning off some of my excess energy. Nothing worked though, and I bounce on my toes as the minutes pass. At 7:55, I walk down to his house and reach for the bell but snatch my hand back.
8pm sharp
. That's what he keeps saying to me in that disappointed tone of his.
Sharp
. I already know that means don't be late, but does it also mean don't be early? It feels like trap, and I will lose my mind if he tells me to come back again tomorrow night.
And that's how I come to wait on his front steps for four minutes until my phone reads 8:00pm exactly. I ring the bell and take a half step back. The door opens almost immediately. It's Jack, wearing dark blue jeans and a crisp, white button down. It's criminal how handsome he looks.
"I'm back," I say, queen of the obvious.
"I'm glad," he replies. "I've been thinking about you all day."
"You have?"
"I did
not
know a Sunday could pass this slowly."
"Me either!" It's the first time he's expressed any kind of impatience to see me, and I feel a bloom of warmth towards him.
"Come on in." He stands aside and guides me into the living room. "You want something to drink?"
"What are you having?"
"A bourbon."
"That sounds great." I've never had bourbon in my life.
He gestures to a pair of leather armchairs and tells me to make myself comfortable. I watch him disappear into the kitchen and then stand admiring the rows of hardback novels on his bookshelves. Music is playing quietly from invisible speakers, a man singing about pale blue eyes. I don't know the song, but it sounds old. I love the vibe.
Jack returns with two tumblers and puts one in my hand and touches his glass to mine. "Cheers."
"Cheers," I repeat and take a sip that makes my eyes water. It tastes how I imagine gasoline would taste. How do people drink this stuff? I take a second sip anyway.
"So safe to say, I'm not entirely out of your system?"
I give him a chagrined smile. "Yeah, safe to say."
"Do you still want me out though?"
"I have no idea," I say. "None."
"That's fair. It's been an interesting few days."
That was putting it mildly. "Longer than that."
He nods in agreement and asks me to sit. This time I do. If sitting in an armchair was an artform then Jack would be its Picasso. He settles back, legs crossed, and stares into his drink like a black-and-white movie star.
"You're a very intriguing girl, Mackenzie."
"Thank you?"
"You're not sure if that's a compliment?"
"Well, you don't always act like I am."
"I get how it might seem like that."