(The next chapter--in which we'll finally get a little more insight into Ginny's secrets--has a lot of family shenanigans, so here is an episode that is...well, pretty light on plot, let's put it that way. Thanks to everyone who's been reading!)
It was a cold, wet, ugly December day; the light watery and weak, the wind sharp and biting, and she knew from the moment she woke up that it was going to be a bad one. She'd been dreaming about her parents. Her eyes were wet and she wanted Calvin.
For months she had been able to ignore, if not quite forget, all the reasons that she wasn't supposed to fall in love. It was easy to do that with Calvin; he kept her in the present in a way that she hadn't ever quite experienced, anchored her to the now and let her memories and fears recede. She associated him with happiness, with safety, with trust. But on this particular morning it was impossible for her to brush aside the fact that she'd been lying to him. She couldn't tell herself she'd worry about it tomorrow; the day felt heavy, leaden, inescapable. And even in the shame she felt about the lies, she wanted him, more than anything.
It was the last week of classes. Final exams loomed. She didn't normally worry about them, and she didn't now, but the idea of studying for them suddenly felt pointless. She didn't think she could bear dragging herself to classes and listening to her peers talk about banal things, their excitement for the break or how their exams were going to fuck them sideways. Who cared?
Instead, she just stayed in bed, watching the limp rain patter on her windowsill. In just over a week she was due to go with Calvin to New York to spend Christmas with his family. Burning curiosity had made her agree to this. She wanted to know exactly how a family produced a person like him, to see where he had grown up, to meet his parents and sister. At the same time, she dreaded it. Family happiness, Christmas traditions, inside jokes--the thought was exhausting.
She did drag herself out of bed for her late afternoon yoga class at the university's rec center. She slogged through the rain as the last of the daylight faded; she'd missed any hint of the sun. Executing the poses, she tried to focus, to find the sense of tranquility that yoga often brought her, but instead of looking inward she felt almost dissociated from herself. In the big mirrors she watched her body working, every muscle flexed to precision. Watched herself balance on one foot, the other tucked against her thigh, her hands pressed tightly together. The girl in the mirror was the very picture of youth and strength, and all she could think was that she was a creature of deception.
A week ago she'd been ebullient, dressing for Calvin's departmental soiree and looking forward to her night with him. Now she trudged down to his apartment in the rain, falling harder now and turning to sleet. She had her own key now, and she let herself in, knowing he would be working. He was at his desk, wearing headphones and transcribing something from the scattered pieces of staff paper piled around him; he looked up, smiled at her, and then went right back to what he was doing. She was grateful to find him so engrossed. In her current mood, she didn't want to interact with him so much as be around him. Just having him there was a balm, but she did not want to be the object of his single-minded focus just yet.
She settled on his couch with a book, one she should be brushing up on for one of her exams, but really she just watched him. He was clad in fleece pajama pants and an old white shirt, his hair was mussed from the headphones, his feet were bare, but he was as serious and attentive as if he were directing air traffic. For over an hour she glanced at the same few paragraphs and found her eyes drawn to look at him again and again.
And then he leaned back, stretched, took off his headphones, and came to sit next to her, flopping his big body down with lazy ease. He looked pleased with himself. "Hi," he said, smiling. "I'm glad you're here."
"Me, too," she said, though her voice didn't sound very convincing.
"What's wrong?" She could tell that he was ready to devote himself to fixing it with the same tenacity he'd brought to his music moments before. Calvin would slay all of her dragons if he could.
"It's just this time of year," she lied. "I hate exams."
"In a week, you'll be done," he said. "And then we'll go to New York. I talked to my mother earlier today, she's really excited to meet you. They all are."
She tried to push the day's bad mood away. "Will they care if I want to do touristy things while I'm there?"
He shrugged. "They probably won't want to come, but I'll go with you. The Professor might give me a hard time about it."
"He thinks it's silly to go skating at Rockefeller Plaza?"
"He wouldn't be caught dead on ice skates."
"You all never skated under the Christmas tree?"
"No. I should tell you, we don't make a big deal out of the holiday in general. We have a meal and give presents, but we usually don't have a tree or anything."
"I'm still going to make you go skating with me."
"If you insist, I'll indulge you."
She kissed him on the cheek. Then he cocked his head and asked, "What were your family holidays like?"
Not now, she thought. She tried to summon up the requisite coyness, but her reply came out flat and dispirited. "We went to the Caribbean. Get a villa on the beach."
He sighed. "Ginny, when are you going to tell me the truth?"
"How do you know that anything I've told you isn't the truth?"
"I tell you everything about my family. I'm taking you to New York because I want you to meet them. Why won't you tell me one single thing about yours?"
She opened her mouth to say something and thought: I can't keep lying. "Why do you think, Calvin? It's not a happy story."
"I suspected as much, and I'm sorry for that. I am. But I hate that I don't know anything about what your life's been like. What are you going to tell my parents when they ask you questions? Because they will ask." She heard frustration creeping into his voice.
But she could not respond, words frozen in her throat. She didn't want to have this conversation now, not with herself, let alone with Calvin. She stared down at her book, trying to think. Trying to stop herself from crying.
"Ginny?"
God, she thought, I'm such a coward. "I've had a terrible day," she finally managed, which wasn't a lie, at least. "and I can't bear it. I'm begging you to let me off the hook tonight. Please."
He would be the world's worst poker player; she could see everything written on his face as his irritation with her and his general persistence warred with his concern. She saw the moment the concern won out. "All right," he said, softening. "Don't cry, sweetheart. I'm sorry."
"It's not your fault," she said, wiping at her eyes.
"Let me be sorry about it anyway?" He raised an eyebrow, trying to tempt her into a smile, and the sweetness of him just made it worse.
"Cal," she said, "can you take me to bed?"
"Mademoiselle." He stood and did a mock bow, then reached for her hand. "My pleasure."
He pulled the covers back and laid down next to her; for a moment they both rested on their sides, looking at each other. She looked at this boy--this man--who had somehow, when she wasn't paying attention, become nearly her entire world.
"I love you," she told him. "I never say it enough."
"I know you do," he said easily, as if he'd never doubted it. She reached to run her hand over his chin, to pull him closer and kiss him.
"Whatever it is," he murmured, "forget about it. Forget about everything but this."