"So where were
you
last night?"
Melody had been expecting that question from April as she slipped into her own room at the rooming house the next morning. She had had to borrow one of Rohit's bikini briefs in the absence of any clean underwear of her own, and could only have imagined April's response if she'd had any idea of what she was wearing underneath the clothes she had worn the previous day. Luckily, April hadn't seen Melody that day; but, even though Melody hadn't gone on a single date, or attended a single party, in the first year and a half of her college career, it didn't take a genius to figure out what Melody had been up to. The only question was who.
Melody's trembling responseâ"None of your business!"âwasn't likely to deter the nosy April.
"Oh, come on!" she said. "Give me a hint! Who've you been seeing?" April had not been aware of Melody's study dates with Rohit.
"It's no one you know," Melody let slip out, thereby confirming all April's suspicions.
"Aha!" she said accusingly. "So you
were
with someone!"
"Well, of course," Melody said in a faux casual way. "What do you thinkâI spent the night on a park bench?"
"So who
was
it?" April cried, almost crazy with curiosity. "Tell me, tell me, tell me!"
"It's someone from my history class," Melody said grudgingly.
"Your history class, eh? Guess you're making some history of your own!"
"April, be serious! This isn't just some roll in the hay."
"Oh, yeah? What's wrong with rolls in the hay?"
"Obviously nothing, if you're any guide."
April suddenly froze, her wide smile erased from her face. "That's not very nice," she said moodily.
"I'm sorry," Melody said, sincerely apologetic. "I just don't want to go to bed with someone just for the sake of it."
"And you think I do?"
Melody felt it best not to reply to that.
"Okay, maybe I do," April admitted. "But there's different kinds of sex. There's sex for love, and sex for fun, and all kinds of things in between."
"Sure there isâI get that. But this isn't just for funâat least, I don't think it is." She had only dimly heard Rohit's final words as she was falling asleep, but she was pretty sure of what he had said. What her feelings were, she couldn't quite sayâbut this was obviously a lot more than just a fling.
"So when do I get to meet him?" April said excitedly.
"Oh, sometime," Melody said vaguely.
She wasn't at all worried that April would try to "steal" RohitâApril wasn't that sort of girl, and anyway, Melody wasn't entirely sure April would appeal to Rohit, aside from the crude physical appeal of her body. But in the first flush of this affairâthe first time she had "won" a man by herself, rather than as a gift from Aprilâshe was a bit inclined to keep Rohit to herself.
But a meeting was inevitable, and it happened a few days later. April had insisted that the three of them go out for some burgers at a place near campus called Burgermaster. As the couple came in, arm in arm, April's eyes widened, and her expression was a complex mix of emotions.
"Well, hi!" April burst out before either Rohit or Melody had a chance to say anything. She stuck her hand straight out, as if brandishing a spear, and Rohit took it in his own hand rather cautiously, as if it might explode.
"Hello," he said equally cautiously.
Melody wasn't so pleased to meet her old friend. April hadâquite deliberately, in her viewâworn a light-colored tank top that not only revealed a substantial amount of cleavage but also caused her nipples to protrude distinctly under the thin fabric; and Rohit, being a man, couldn't help ogling April's chest for at least a few seconds before he flushed and looked away. Melody was on the verge of making a crack of some kind ("Aren't you a bit cold in that thing?"âa valid comment for this chilly, rainy day in February), but refrained.
Instead she said, "Come on, let's eat. I'm starving."
They gave their orders, then headed to a table to wait for someone to bring the food over. That usually only took about ten minutes, and in the meanwhile they got some self-serve soft drinks and sat down at an unoccupied table.
This whole time, April hadn't taken her eyes off Rohit, so far as she could manage it.
"So . . . you're from India," April said in a curious tone of voice, with a quick glance at Melody.
"That's right," Rohit said, perking up. "How did you know?"
"I can tell," April said blandly.
God knows I've been up-close-and-personal with another Indianâas has your inamorata, but we won't talk about that.
She had no desire to mess up her dear friend's relationship with this impressive-looking man (
really handsomeâbut too thin for my taste
) by mentioning Kumar or anything relating to him.
Melody colored at April's simple statement but said nothing.
Presently April and Rohit were chatting away happily, telling their own life stories while Melody took it all in as a kind of silent umpire. When their burgers came, they dived in with gusto, but continued talking as best they could.
Melody was actually pleased that her friend and her lover were hitting it off, and she could sense a genuine fondness for Rohit developing in April as she talked with him. She was happy to be relegated to the sidelines, for she hoped that they would be friends for a long, long time.
After the meal was over, April said to Rohit, "We have some girl things to talk about. May I make off with your sweetheart for a little while?"
That word "sweetheart" made Rohit blush again, and he mumbled a "Sure thing" before giving Melody a hug and a kiss and walking away.
"I'll see you later!" Melody cried after him, knowing that she'd be spending the night at Rohit's place. This time she had a spare pair of panties in her purse.
As April dragged Melody away and headed back toward campus, she said, "Oh, Melody, he's
soooooo
cute!" Then, impishly: "Can I borrow him sometime?"
"April, you're terrible!" Melody exclaimed.
"I'm just kidding. Anyway, he's a little on the skinny side for me. I guess you haven't told him about Kumar."
"Of course not! Are you crazy? You know what he'd think if he knew."
"Yeahâthat you're with him only because he's Indian, or because he reminds you of Kumar."
"Exactlyâand of course that's not it at all. He's nothing like Kumar except in his nationality."
"He
is