I spent the night sitting on the kitchen floor, not quite sleeping. I was trapped, bouncing through every moment with Lisa, reinterpreting our interactions through her trauma.
I couldn't force myself to move. I lacked the energy to do anything. I wanted to slip away, even breathing was an inconvenience.
The first rays of sunlight forced me to act. Morning was here. Lisa would wake eventually. I couldn't be here when she did.
The solution was as painful as it was obvious. Lisa wasn't safe around me, and I wasn't cut out for her sadomasochistic dance.
I needed to find Jett. I could have Uber'd the three and a half miles to her apartment, but I walked. I thought better of knocking on her door so I called her. No answer. I called again.
"Brett?" her tired voice.
"I'm outside," I said.
Jett was at the door shortly after. She was wearing a fluffy white robe tied loose around her waist and nothing else.
She leaned in and kissed me.
"I'm sorry about last night," she said.
"Can we talk?"
She led me inside. Her gait was off, moving to avoid incidental contact between her back and ass and the robe. I tried not to think about her back, what it must look like. Jett led me to her couch, but she couldn't sit. It broke my heart.
"Did it help?" I said. I meant the whipping.
"I'm still here," Jett said. She flashed a sad smile. "I know it was... hard on you."
Her apologies only made me feel more guilty. I didn't know how I could get through this. I pressed forward anyway.
"I don't think we, Lisa and I, can live together," I said.
This caught Jett by surprise. She stared at me. I saw gears turning.
"What happened?" she asked.
What had happened... I finally understood. Lisa's exhibitionism wasn't flirting, it was a coping mechanism. To paraphrase her words, the only way to survive overwhelming uncertainty and pain was to taunt the thing you dread, to prove that the fear is worse than reality.
Lisa could trust me not to assault her because every day she checked. She tested.
It worked until it didn't.
"Brett?" Jett asked.
"I figured Lisa out," I said.
I couldn't lay Lisa's trauma at Jett's feet. It wasn't fair to either one of them. I only knew I couldn't face her again.
"And?"
"Can she stay with you?" I asked.
"What happened?" Jett asked again.
I took a deep breath. Even if it was my story to share, I couldn't. Just circling around last night was difficult. I needed to hold it together.
"You'll have to ask her," I said.
"I'm asking you," she said.
The root of the trauma was bad communication. I wished Lisa hadn't chosen such a terrible method to cope, wished she had just told me the truth, or trusted me to control myself.
Bad strategy and shit communication.
"I fucked Lisa," I said.
"Last night?"
"No," I said.
"I don't understand," Jett said.
"I didn't either," I said.
I knew the words I needed to say. But I couldn't. I just stared at Jett. We were both so raw, so swept up in emotional pain that physical pain sounded like a blessing. How could I get through this?
"Brett?" Jett asked. I heard the concern in her voice.
"She was always pushing me to fuck her. I thought she wanted it, but was afraid to ask. When it finally happened, she didn't say no. But it wasn't what she wanted. I just... I didn't know."
Jett looked confused. I didn't blame her. She reached her hand out and I took it.
"She can't live with me anymore," I said. "I can't..."
I finally understood the masochism, why the both of them would torture their bodies. Feeling anything, even pain, was better than this.
"So you two fuck around and then you throw her out?"
"That's not..." I started. It wasn't fair. "I can't unsee it. Maybe she can forget, but I can't."
"What about you?" Jett asked. Her voice was quiet. "What if you wanted to stay with me instead of Lisa?"
I had come over here ready to confess, to have Jett yell and throw things, to be out of her life, anything necessary to make it right with Lisa. I didn't expect this.
"Is that what you want?" I asked.
I looked in her hazel eyes. Tears were forming.
"Help me," Jett said. "Why? When?"
"When we were fighting," I said. "I was mad."
"What fight?" I watched Jett's eyes, confusion. She didn't remember. My world had been on the edge of collapse, and she had just gone back to painting, another afternoon.
I watched her eyes narrow. She found the moment.
"Right before you loved me," she said. An accusation. The anger was finally coming through in her voice.
"Yeah," I said.
"I..." Jett hesitated. A tear went streaking down her perfect cheek. "Goddammit Brett!"
She pushed me as hard as she could. I didn't budge.
"I wasn't the man you needed me to be," I said. I fought hard to keep emotion from leaking in to my voice.
"You pull this shit now?" Jett said.
"I'm sorry," I said.
She untied the sash holding her robe together. It fell open, revealing her pale body. Jett started slipping out of the robe. She wanted to show me what she was feeling, to let me know that no matter what damage I saw on her body, the emotional pain from her dad was worse.
I grabbed her robe and held it closed.
"Please," I told Jett.
Jett was crying. "Why now?" she asked.
"I didn't understand until last night, until Lisa explained what you were trying to do," I said.
"Maybe she doesn't care," Jett said, angry and hopeful at the same time.
She leaned in close to me. I let go of her robe. Jett wrapped her arms around my body, a hug. She pressed her face against my chest. I didn't hug her back, too afraid of causing more pain.
"I do," I responded.
Jett pulled away.
"You're the asshole here--"
"I know--"
"You don't get to be the good guy," Jett finished. I saw her jaw flex.
"Will you call her?" I asked. "I can't--"
"Yeah, whatever," Jett said. Her face was twisted in a sneer.
Her eyes were fire when she spoke next.
"I'll call her, but think about this Brett," Jett said. She took a breath, then another. A part of my brain thought about weather, about tornado formation. Warm air is the necessary fuel for violent storms. Not so different than people, and Jett was a tightening vortex of anger.
"Once Lisa moves in, what will I need you for?"
In that moment, Jett boiled down months and months of our relationship, love and support, down to just sex. Just a physical relationship, easily replaced by a random girl with a need for pain.
I loved Jett, but it didn't matter any more. I was empty, a dead tree that only looked alive, rotten and hollow when you get close.
"So do you still want me to call her?" Jett asked.
Her voice was a soft mixture of anger and hope. Maybe I would let this go. We could pretend this discussion never happened. After all, we had both fucked Lisa. Why should we fight based on something silly like when?
"Yes," I said.
--
I lost them both that morning. Fucking Lisa. I always knew she was dangerous. I didn't know I was dangerous too.
I still loved Jett but it wasn't enough. It only made things worse.
Jett would reach out, find a way to take care of Lisa. I didn't want any part of it, and it wouldn't happen instantly. I wasn't fit to be in public, but I had nowhere to go.
--
I ended up in the library hours later, not really remembering how, not reading or drinking coffee. I found a table and just sort of sat. I needed to survive. An hour could lead to a day to another day.
I felt a cackle of madness, understanding Lisa's masochistic urges. Too late.
--
"Brett?"
It wasn't Lisa. Not Jett. I closed my eyes.
"Brett!"
The voice approached, so close I couldn't ignore it. Mia.
She was always smiling. I didn't mind. I envied her. Could the world be bleak if you weren't able to see it?
"Hey," I said.
She pulled out a chair, lacquered wood on soft carpet. Mia sat across from me.
"You alright?"
Was I alright? I was a black hole, and this nice girl was ignorantly flirting around an event horizon, unaware of the danger.
"No," I said.
She peeled off a glove, ran the back of her soft hand against my cheek, then pressed her palm to my forehead.
"You don't have a fever," she said.
"I'll be fine," I said. It wasn't a statement of hope. It was pure despair. I was too miserable to die.
Her hands reached across the table, curled around mine. I looked up at her, seeing her for the first time. Behind thick glasses, her eyes were a clear gray. Light eyes and dark hair. Unusual. I saw concern.
"I'm taking you home," she said.
That was the only wrong answer. I pulled my hand away.
Mia was watching me, waiting for something.
"I..." I started. I shut my eyes. I couldn't get one fucking word out without breaking down. "I can't."
Mia was worried. She was processing something, the same concentration on her face when cross referencing values in a binomial distribution.
I saw her land on an answer.
"Something is wrong," she said.
I didn't bother to deny it. I spent my willpower to remain stoic, to not be sobbing in the library.
"Brett?"
I just looked away. I didn't have the energy to be cruel to Mia, but I couldn't do this.
"Whatever it is, it will be okay."
She took my hands in hers again.
"You don't have to tell me what's wrong," she said finally, "we can talk about something else. Anything. The weather."