"Hey, lover..." Julia's tone was overtly suggestive as she settled next to me on the couch.
It was Saturday morning, and I had barely spoken last night after getting home from the Academy.
I wondered if Julia thought it was her fault, like I was mad at her for something, but I couldn't even bring myself to reassure her. If I did, I would have to acknowledge the way I'd been acting.
She'd ask for an explanation. I couldn't give her one.
I couldn't even bring myself to be scared shitless, like I knew I probably should be.
"Hey, babe," I murmured. I brought the mug of coffee up to my mouth and sipped.
Black. Bitter. Good. It fit my mood.
I leaned forward and set it with a soft
click
on the glass top of the coffee table.
My girlfriend nestled up against me, her own mug cupped in both hands. She kissed my shoulder and I glanced down into her face.
"So..." she murmured, her lips curling into a sly grin. "Any plans for the morning?" She took a sip, eyes far too wide and innocent.
"I'm actually just about to head out." I stood, too abruptly. I bumped the coffee table. The dark liquid sloshed and spilled over onto the glass. "Shit..." I shook my head, swearing softly under my breath. "Just a sec." I strode to the kitchen, grabbed a couple paper towels and returned. "I'm sorry," I muttered, not looking at my girlfriend as I wiped at the spill.
Julia was watching me carefully, her brows furrowed and a look of hurt and confusion in her eyes.
I swallowed, glanced away. I sniffed. "Well..." I picked up my mug, still mostly full, and carried it into the kitchen. The bitter flavor was suddenly harsh on my tongue. It twisted in my empty stomach. I dumped the rest of the cup down the sink. I glanced back over at the couch.
My girlfriend was still watching.
"I'm going to head to the gym," I said. With the new job and all, I hadn't had time to reintegrate working out into my schedule.
Julia narrowed her eyes. "Is something wrong, Mitch?"
I knew her tone wasn't suspicious, just concerned, but I had to control the urge to flinch and grimace. "Of course not, babe. Just antsy." I gave her a smile that I hoped looked slightly normal. It felt like a sickly mask on my face. My stomach churned with burning guilt.
"Okay..." She blew out a sigh and glanced away, tugging her phone from the pocket of her lounge pants. She glanced at it, then back up at me. "It's still pretty early. And I don't have anything to do today. I'll probably be here when you get back. If you want to do something..." But the teasing tone of invitation was gone from her voice.
I nodded, swallowed past the tightness in my throat. "Yeah, that sounds great."
I escaped.
* * *
My feet pounded out a dull rhythm on the treadmill, slower than my usual pace. I wasn't really here for a workout. I was here to think. To think and to get away. The pounding of my wordless EDM running music drowned out the rest of the world. I focused on my churning legs.
One, two, three, four. One, two, three four.
I counted it out. Mathematics. My safe place. Even just a small infusion of order in the chaos.
What the hell is wrong with you, Mitch?
I demanded.
One, two, three four. First, you cheat on your girlfriend with a student. Then you cheat on your girlfriend with a student
again
. ... two, three, four. You're teaching better than you ever have in your life and yet apparently using your brain less than ever.
I'd been mulling it over last night, lying awake next to a slumbering Julia, and I'd come to a conclusion. The sensation of focus and concentration that I had been feeling during my classes, the flow state that had excited me so much, wasn't real. It was fake, an illusion, somehow... It was too good to be true.
And then
, I continued.
Then you're
physically unable
to confess, unable to ask for her forgiveness or beg her for advice.
And
that
was what scared me. No matter what I tried — and I hadn't given up easily last night — as soon as I started to talk about what had happened at the Academy it was like my vocal cords betrayed me. If I tried to write a note, my hands froze.
One, two, three, four.
Three miles. Four miles. Just for a few minutes, I let my thoughts slip away. The slow, steady addition of steps to my run made sense. Five miles, and I hit the Cool Down button.
The treadmill groaned, then began to slow. As I gently came to a stop, I shook my head and paused my music. I blew out a breath. My face was slick with sweat, my hair falling into my eyes. I pushed it back.
You need to figure this out, Mitch. If you thought Denton was bad, this is ten times worse. At least with that whole fiasco you had Jules to lean on. Now...
My throat was dry when I swallowed. I tried to imagine losing Julia and I felt my stomach wrench.
No...
I couldn't let that happen.
Then you know what to do.
I nodded, filled my lungs, squared my shoulders. I had to figure out what was going on. And I had to put a stop to it.
Afterwards...
I turned and eyed the weight room.
Yes.
That was a method of dealing with tension that I knew I could trust. Because I could trust myself. Couldn't I?
At the end of the day, lifting weights is just about numbers. In a workout, I might lift thousands of pounds. But that weight was broken down into individual pieces, an accumulation of divisions so that my relatively weak human body can handle the overall load. Each rep just adds to my overall total. Each set is just another piece of arithmetic. And a sharp, strong physique is the output at the end of the function.
I slid the thick, metal plates onto the bar at the nearest bench press, wondering why I wasn't freaking out.
This isn't normal, Mitch. You know it isn't...
My body was failing to obey my explicit orders, and instead of flipping out my response was to spill some coffee and head to the gym.
I shrugged. I slid under the weight and lifted it easily into the air. I pushed out some warmup reps, then lowered the bar back down into its rack. It settled in with a heavy, satisfying solidity. I pushed myself out from under and went to add more weight.
I turned the problem over and over in my mind.
The problem is at the Academy, that much is obvious.
I nodded to myself, hefted a 45-pound disk and added it to the bar.
And...
The realization struck me with the force of an obvious truth.
There's no way that it's happening on accident.
I grimaced, added the second disk to balance the other side of the bar.