After a miserable week, in a long line of miserable weeks, I pulled my tired body and aching head towards my foster-mom's house for our monthly family dinner. I hadn't gone there for our last family gathering, because I hadn't felt up to it, and I'd contemplated "calling in sick" again, but I'd had calls from several of my brothers over the past week, some just calmly reminding me of the date and time, some blatantly telling me I had to come. I felt pretty crappy about it when I realized that they'd been worrying about me, when I hadn't thought about them one bit, all because I'd been stuck inside my own head. Stuck inside my own head and my own heart, if I was to be real honest.
It had been weeks and she was still firmly lodged under my skin, and I just couldn't understand it. We had only met three times and we'd only spent one night together, that was all. It should have been easy to just shake it off and move on, and god knows I had tried, but she was like the worst kind of drug; it only took one try and then you were either hooked for life or spent weeks with the worst kind of withdrawal symptoms.
Yes, we'd only met three times, but every one of those meetings had been pretty memorable, hadn't they? And the night even more so, in several unexpected ways. I suppose it was those damned movies that had made me expect more aggression and domination from her side, but except for that first time in the hallway, most of it had been soft, gentle, almost loving in its nature. I wondered if she had been as surprised as I was. I didn't do gentle, I didn't do loving and I never stayed the night. And perhaps that was the key to my problems. Holding, kissing, touching and fucking someone was one thing, but sleeping together was something completely different. She had fallen asleep in my arms and I had fallen asleep in hers and it had been good. It had been fucking great.
The day after that one night I'd been walking around with a silly smile on my face, probably pretty similar to the one I'd seen on Sean's, when I'd been called to a one-vehicle accident in the middle of the city. And when I saw her in that car my heart damned near stopped, I couldn't breathe, I wanted to puke, because she was sitting there, pale, blood smeared across her cheek. It was almost as if her pain was my pain and at the same time as I wanted to pull her out of the car and just hold her I kept wishing that it was me sitting there instead of her. And that's when I realized that she was important, so fucking important, to me.
But that was all before I knew that she loved someone else and I realized that what had been an eye-opening, heart-expanding experience for me probably hadn't meant shit to her. That also meant that the feelings I was fighting were as absurd as they were unwanted. The scene at the hospital kept repeating in my mind, day in and day out. The way that bubbly feeling of love in the pit of my stomach had been so instantly replaced by a churning feeling of dark despair, suspicion and anger. How could you love someone and hate her at the same time?
"Fuck it! Fuck her!" I muttered as I walked up the stairs to mom's house.
"Who are we fucking?" the cheerful voice of Eric asked from right behind me, another sign of my preoccupation, I hadn't even noticed him.
I turned around prepared to say something to him about minding his own business, when I realized he had company. It was that singer-songwriter guy, whatever his name was. The singer who was Mary's friend. Oh great, fucking awesome, a real-life, living reminder of the woman that I really, really didn't need or want any reminders about.
"Hey there," I said with a fake smile on my face that I hoped looked sincere "good to see you both!"
"I'm glad you're here," Eric said with a much happier smile on his face "then Mike will have someone he's met at least once to lean on, if the going gets rough."
"Don't worry," I said to Mike, smile still in place "just keep away from the dark corners, make sure you keep an eye on the ones with the sharp teeth and you'll do just fine!"
"Simoooon," Eric whined "be nice!"
"Sugar and spice!" I muttered before I opened the door and walked into the house.
My "honey I'm home" shout was interrupted by two dark-clad shapes with capes who tackled me and almost sent me to the floor. I'd forgotten about the twins, and they made sure I knew about it as they told me they'd missed me and tried to trip and tickle me at the same time. I hadn't been to see them in weeks and I cursed my mindless heart and heartless mind once more. I grabbed the two boys around the waists and carried them with me into the kitchen, where I found mom occupied with cooking the massive amounts of food needed to satisfy twenty or more hungry mouths of all ages.
"Haven't you found a way to extract, bottle and sell some of this excess energy yet?" I asked her as I leaned in and kissed her cheek.
"Well, then I should have started with you, shouldn't I?" she asked with a laugh before she turned to take a proper look at me.
Her laughing, golden brown and far too knowing eyes started scanning me, the way they always did, extracting information better than any lie detector in the world. At first it had made me afraid of her and more angry and determined to leave her house, but now I knew she only did it because she wanted to know and because she cared about me, so I let her see it all, the pain and chaos inside of me.
"But you're running pretty low on energy now dear Simon, aren't you?" she said with a low but concerned voice.
Thankfully the boys stepped up their attempts to try to get out of my hold so I turned around and carried the two seven-year-olds out of the kitchen. I didn't want to talk about it, because I realized how stupid it all was; a love that had lasted for mere days, not counting the last miserable weeks, shouldn't hurt this much.
Just before I left the kitchen I heard Eric introduce Mike as his "special friend" and with a laugh I remembered mom's silly use of the term "special lady friend", which of course made me think about Mary again, because even though it would have been hard to call her a lady, she really had been special. With a silent groan I let go of the twins and decided to never think about her again.
I actually managed to stay away from any thoughts of women, love and heartache for a good half hour whilst wrestling, tickling and chasing the boys in the big garden. But then it was time for dinner and I was placed next to Mike, who already seemed to blend in well with the rest of the family, and I just couldn't stop myself from thinking about her, the way she had looked when she sat on that stage, when she closed her eyes and just became the music. I really was totally and royally screwed.
I tried to keep up with the happy bantering that was as much a part of our monthly dinners as mom's wonderful homemade food, but I saw that a few of my brothers threw worried looks my way and I knew there would be questions, questions I didn't want to answer. What was I supposed to say? I met a girl, fell in love with her and then I found out she loved someone else, that's all. And the answers would be your standard "you lose one, there's hundreds more out there waiting for you" message, or other similar versions used to cheer me up.
I was pulled out of my bitter thoughts by Eric's happy voice telling us all how he'd met Mike. I looked up and tried to signal to him to shut up by shaking my head as discreetly as possible, but he was too caught up in his story and he kept his big, blue eyes focused on Mike, so I guessed even a red flag and trumpets wouldn't have been enough to get his attention.
"... and when the show ended I couldn't stop myself," Eric said, his words almost too fast "I just had to meet him, and I stood in line to tell him I'd been deeply moved by his story, but when it was my turn, one of the crew members walked up to him and whispered something and he walked away and I just followed, and that's when I saw Simon..."
"... talking to my friend Mary," Mike interrupted "and Mary and Simon introduced us, and that's really all that happened. We ended up exchanging phone numbers, and here we are."
I gave Mike a grateful smile and a nod. I really didn't want to explain the make-out session to anyone, in addition to explaining why I was not my own at least moderately happy self. I threw a look across the table and met mom's hawk eyes again. Shit, she'd probably seen all of that, hadn't she. I hoped she would just let it be, but when I saw her worried look change into a very well-known stubborn one I knew she wouldn't. I exhaled slowly and decided to try to sneak off early, before she could pull me to the side and have one or her talks.