Comments are welcome. All characters are fictional and cannot help themselves from being what they are. This chapter is heavier on exposition and not as explicit. Along with the previous chapter, all the dominoes are finally in line. The next installment begins knocking them down.
*****
Hannah's secret did not stay quiet. One of her more conservative friends, a brunette named Rebecca, cornered Ben with what had happened at the party. Apparently, she had no hesitation to pass judgment on Hannah to his face. Ben made it clear he already knew, hoping Rebecca would catch the hint that it wasn't her business. She didn't.
"Ben," Rebecca said earnestly, "you can't let her do this to you. Hannah told you whatever she needed to feel better about herself, but just admitting something doesn't excuse it. It isn't even an apology."
"She apologized."
"So?" Rebecca snapped, with a bit of an edge in her voice. She gave an exasperated sigh, seeming to realize she was being pretty hard on the man she was ostensibly trying to help. Tucking a long brunette strand behind her ear, she looked around to see if her voice had carried.
Ben had been watching the other customers ever since Rebecca ambushed him with "something important" right there in the coffee shop. The ambient noise didn't quite cover her voice, particularly two tables away where his friend Esha sat, locked into her work and feigning total concentration.
Esha really couldn't help overhearing. But when it got awkward—when Rebecca started spilling details about Hannah coming out of a man's room at the party, Esha considerately put on headphones and focused on her laptop.
For a moment, Ben imagined Rebecca dressed up like a severe puritan, with a long black dress with a high waist, a white cap and a long white apron, and just a hint of a vindictive smirk hidden behind a flinty scowl of moral judgment. A puritan with a pretty healthy bust, actually.
"Look, Rebecca," Ben said, leaning forward and keeping his voice down. "I appreciate what you're trying to do for me. This is a really tough situation Hannah's in, but it's something we want to put behind us."
"She should have thought about that before."
"Maybe. Anyway I'm—" Words weren't coming. He said the first diplomatic thing he could think of. "I'm glad you were honest with me. It's good to know you have my back."
"Any time, Ben. You're a good guy," said Rebecca. She glanced at her phone. "Shit—I've got to go. Seriously, if you want to talk—"
"Thanks," Ben said. "I might take you up on that."
Rebecca smiled. "Message me." She took her empty mug and headed out.
When the coast was clear, Esha took off the earbuds, ran a hand through her long black hair and looked over at Ben with a sad, sympathetic smile. She kept quiet, politely. Ben shrugged, gathered his now-cold coffee and took the last couple of steps over to Esha's table.
"Drama," he said.
"Need to talk about it?"
Ben cocked his head toward where Rebecca had gone away. "No, it was just...one of Hannah's friends."
"Hmm. Your girlfriend's friend...where have I heard that before?"
"It's not like that. Rebecca's very...I don't know, straight laced. Good girl from a strict family."
Esha raised an eyebrow, reminding Ben of who he was talking to.
"Chalo,"
she said in Hindi, then repeated in English, "Let's go where we can talk."
* * *
Ben slipped off his shoes and put them next to Esha's on the rack beside the door.
Esha had a studio apartment unlike any other Ben had seen, brimming with bright colors. Living alone had so brought out the desi girl's vibrant personality that Ben could have picked her apartment from a photo lineup. Any part of the wall not hidden by bookshelves were covered in prints: Erotic temple art, yakshinis, gopis dancing with Krishna. In front of one window stood a desk cluttered with notebooks, painted ceramic figurines of dancing elephants and half a dozen pairs of silver hoop earrings. All the shelf space was so full with novels, non-fiction and textbooks that the books sat two rows deep, and stacked horizontally on top of each other.
The corner kitchenette was crammed full of cooking implements, fresh produce in hanging baskets and dishes on display in glass-door cabinets. An electric kettle sat to one side of the sink, and a steel karahi rested on the stove top.
There was no couch. Instead, her bed (covered with an embroidered teal duvet) rested on the floor with a long body pillow resting up against the wall. Between the bed and the flat-screen tv on the wall, the wood floor was covered in thick carpets, a few cushions and several cylindrical decorative pillows.
A nightstand beside the bed was covered in yet more books, candleholders and an incense burner—the source of the luxurious perfumed scent in the air. A full-length mirror across from one of the window reflected more light into the room, even though the window itself was draped with a translucent yellow and orange tapestry.
When the kettle began to boil, Esha filled two small tea cups and offered one to Ben with some imported biscuits. "So, I don't want to pry, but are you and Hannah alright? It sounded like..."
"Yeah," said Ben. "It's been tough."
"So, Hannah came out of this chap's room at a party. Nothing serious went on?"
"Yes—yes and no. I mean, yeah, it was a bad time to get caught, but she literally got caught walking away from the situation, and she was honest about it."
"Do you think it was okay for her to go into his room in the first place?"
"Yeah, I mean...it wasn't like I was there to stop her. It was just a party. People were hanging out in the bathroom and all over the place."
"Be honest, Ben. Tell me what's bothering you."
Ben sighed. "Okay. No, I don't think it was okay for her to go to his room. I think she should have known what was on this guy's mind."
"Go on."
"I don't know. I feel conflicted. In the back of my mind I wonder if she
did
know, and just went along with it to get back at me for ditching her. Maybe she wanted to cheat on me to begin with. Maybe she just got enough of a thrill after she teased this guy, and it made her feel better."
"You wonder if you can trust her."
"Sure. I mean, what if Hannah hadn't gotten caught? Would she have told me at all?"
"What do you think?"
"I wish she'd never gone to that fucking room."
"But do you think you can trust her?"
"I...I don't know. She made the right choice—she walked away. But how does that balance with letting him kiss her to begin with? You know, she even says he felt her up. I mean, I feel like she'll never do it again, not as long as she's with me, but...I mean, what if she