Helena's face felt like it had burst into flames.
Come to bed?
Did that mean--did that--no, it couldn't, Diane wouldn't--
"Well?" Her professor raised an eyebrow.
"I--but you--"
"But I?"
Helena wasn't even thinking as she buried her face in Diane's shoulder. She only registered what she'd done a second after, and by then it was too late, and Diane felt so warm, smelled so good... and the idea of showing her burning cheeks felt absolutely overwhelming.
"S-Sorry," she mumbled, humiliated. She tried to steel her nerves, to force herself to pull back...
But Diane's hand touched the top of her hand, gentle, tender, and thoughts of pulling away fled Helena in a wave of relief. "Shh. Shh. No need to apologize for that, Helena. That's okay. That's the first smart thing you've done all night." Her voice was like ambrosia on Helena's tongue, and Helena wanted to whimper, but bit her lip hard to hold it in.
"S-Sorry," she whispered again, not quite knowing what she was apologizing for, but--but Diane was being so kind, and she was being so stupid, and--and--and she'd said such awful things earlier, things she felt so unsure about now, and even if they were true, she was the one harassing Diane like this, she was the one who'd gotten drunk. She'd meant to take the high road against her professor, and now she felt more vulnerable than she could imagine. And wasn't that only fair? She'd wanted power over Diane, wanted to see Diane
squirm.
Helena had set out to manipulate Diane, and she hadn't even realized it until Diane had pointed it out to her.
And what a
pathetic
attempt it had turned out to be.
What a pathetic attempt it had been to try to manipulate this woman ten years older than her. No wonder it had ended up this way. Diane had disarmed her like she was an idiot child running with a pair of scissors, and now she was the one saving Helena after Helena had made a drunken fool of herself.
She stayed buried in Diane's shoulder, welcoming the warmth, breathing in Diane's musky scent and trying not to feel too many things about it as Diane opened the door and half-led, half-carried her into a cozy little...
... guest bedroom.
Helena felt shame boil in her gut at how her heart sank. It was obviously not Diane's bedroom. The bed looked untouched, and the room's furnishments were spartan. The cute, kitschy floral wallpaper depicted twining roses, and everything smelled of dust and disuse. It was the sort of room she'd expect to find in a grandparent's home, or a nursery.
She was so glad Diane couldn't see the look on her face.
Of
course
Diane hadn't been implying...
that.
Diane had always overlooked her before. What had Helena done lately to earn any new attention beyond pity?
But...
Are you coming to bed?
Hadn't that been what Diane had asked her? Coming, not going. Didn't that mean... God,
was
that even what Diane had said?...
Her head swam, and she squeezed her eyes shut. It was all too much. Her memories of right before her first blackout out were thick and opaque, and her memories of everything after waking up weren't much better.
Everything about this situation felt absurd. Felt
wrong.
But it felt so hard to place what was absurd about things, to place why a tiny voice in her head was urging her to
get away from her, get away from Diane, she's hurting us, she's evil, she's dangerous,
run--
It felt hard.
Nuzzling Diane's shoulder (
the first smart thing you've done all night
) felt... easy.
Simple.
Much simpler than accusing Diane again. Much less likely to hurt anyone. And she'd done enough hurting, hadn't she? She had been hurting Diane, or tried to. Pathetically. Weakly. Just to get Diane's attention. All she'd managed to do is hurt herself. Or make Diane have to hurt her. Or something.
She felt so tired. She couldn't keep track of which ideas were real and which were just the alcohol fuzzing things over, which emotions were rational and which were her social anxiety running roughshod over her common sense. It was so hard to separate all these stupid brain worms from what she'd actually done wrong, but assuming she was
entirely
in the right, that Helena was some kind of pure evil cartoon villain...
Narcissistic. That was how it felt. Amber's parting words from their breakup still haunted her, even a year later. Whatever Helena's therapist said, Amber had known her better than anyone.
Narcissistic.
"Helena?" Helena only realized she'd drifted off again when she felt cool softness beneath her rear, heard Diane's voice as if from down a tunnel, and realized Diane was lowering her onto the bed.
"S-Sorry," she mumbled. Her tongue was thick and clumsy in her mouth. She couldn't remember if she'd already apologized.
"No more apologizing." Diane's voice was soft as she reached down to gently stroke Helena's hair. Her hand slid down to the space between Helena's shoulder blades, helping to hold her upright. "I don't want you to apologize except when I tell you you need to apologize. Okay?"