Emma stood in the loud hallway as the other students shuffled by her and through the open door. Her heart clenched, and she glanced towards the stairwell that led to the city outside, the peace of a place away from him. But, she'd already missed four days of classes.
Thank God for Miriam and her total disregard for rules and authority figures.
Miriam found her sitting on the curved stairway that led to their small lofts. Her knees were pulled to her chest, her eyes puffy and swollen. Her cousin sent away the guy she'd brought home to screw and took control of the situation.
She reassured Emma with constant affirmations: "He's an asshole." "Don't worry about that old fucker. You can do better." "You were sleep-deprived and hungry, Em. Don't worry about what he thinks."
It did little to comfort her, but it was nice to hear.
Mostly she was grateful when Miriam posed as the concerned mother she'd never had, calling the school to say how she'd shown up at home with a terrible case of the flu. Normally, the very idea of even her pretend mom dealing with a problem was reprehensible, but now it just didn't matter. She wasn't ready to face him.
"Well, let's get this show on the road," Noah's voice echoed out the still-open door to the quieter hall.
Her boots felt glued to the floor. It required actual effort to lift one foot and then the other. She watched her reluctant feet as they took her to the place she least wanted to be.
Noah's stomach dropped when he saw her moving slowly around the back of the classroom to an empty space. A mixture of relief and sickness stopped him in his tracks. When he realized he was staring, he quickly occupied himself with straightening the note cards he'd carried with him to the front of the classroom.
She'd returned. He'd worried after a couple days. He knew it took courage for her to come back. In an odd way, he felt proud of her, even though she looked pale and defeated. He despised the fact that he'd done that.
"Asshole," He didn't realize he said it aloud until one of his most attentive students asked all too loudly, "Who?"
Noah's mind traveled slowly to the boy at the front of the class and said, "Who? What?"
Benjamin cackled and asked again, "Who's the asshole?"
'Dammit,' he thought, wishing some people weren't so intent on his every word, forgetting for a moment that he was their teacher.
He muttered, "Sorry, just thinking of the guy who cut me off in traffic this morning."
Ben nodded, "Yeah, Noah, man, it's a jungle out there."
He smiled at the boy's look of empathy.
She was afraid to look at him. Tears seemed to dwell just beneath her breached shell at every conceivable moment. She hated it, but it was true. His words played in her mind for the millionth time.
"Oh, baby. You don't mean that. You're just...honey...that feeling isn't...real...It's just a chemical reaction to sex. It happens to everyone, and then it fades away."
He tried to be cool about it. But, with every passing moment, her shame and her heartbreak grew. Not real? A chemical reaction? Happens to everyone? It had never happened to her. That his every understanding, kind word left her more crushed, that was real. She tried equally hard to forget the never-ending car ride back to the store.
He'd tried to talk music as she stared out the window. He'd tried to talk art as she stared out the window. He'd tried to touch her face again as she stared out the window. Finally, he accepted her silence and her distance and didn't say a word when she got out of the car. She shuddered again remembering the feel of his stare as he waited by the curb for her to open the door. She'd dropped the keys twice. Twice.
His voice brought her back to the present, but she had no idea what he had said. When students started to shuffle around the room, she thought for a moment that maybe, just maybe, the universe was being nice to her and that he'd dismissed class early. She began to gather her things when the realization struck her. They weren't leaving. They were pairing off. Two by two. Nineteen students. She sat alone and closed her eyes.
It was Vaughn who tapped her on the arm. For the first time ever, she was grateful for the sight of him.
Her sense of gratitude was fleeting as he said, "I guess you can work with Noah, huh?"
She realized Vaughn had migrated to her table in pursuit of a thin blonde named Lacey.
Her eyes flew open, and she stuttered, "No, I can work by myself."
She was sure the urgency in her words sounded inappropriate and stupid.
Vaughn shook his head and answered, "You are one strange chick. How are you going to do this assignment by yourself?"
Emma looked around the room. She couldn't answer because she hadn't heard the assignment. She saw Noah out of the corner of her eye moving through the room, between the tables, stopping at each self-selected pair to drop off a large piece of rough, cheap paper. His movements to her table were slowed by the constant tugs at his shirt; they all wanted his attention.
'What a bunch of four-year olds,' she told herself.
But, for the first time, she secretly understood why they wanted to tell him their ideas and see the approval in his eyes. They had no idea the things she'd seen in his eyes.
He caught her eye as she turned to look at the door. Abject fear and pain. She looked away quickly. He swallowed hard. Of course she'd be the odd man out. Before he'd have been thrilled to be paired with her, to share a dance with her creative mind and skilled eye. Now, not only did it feel uncomfortable, he felt true pity for her. She was young, passionate, emotional.
'Asshole,' he said it again, this time silently.
A small part of him wanted her to bolt. Most of him hoped she wouldn't. She was still his student, and he didn't want to add her failure in his class to his ever-increasing guilt.
Emma waited and waited. She fought down the desire to run as the minutes ticked. She knew she'd have to face him sooner or later. As often as she'd considered it in the previous week, she wasn't leaving college. He'd most likely be her professor for three more years. She kicked herself for not having considered that before she got on her knees, before he moved inside of her, before she felt what she felt.
She sighed. People camped outside the night before registration to get into his upper level classes. For the juniors and seniors getting their names in his roll book was more exciting than scoring front row tickets. Her mind drifted to a land where he was a rock star and she was a groupie.
She smirked to herself, 'Well, I should have an 'in' now.'