For those more familiar with my romantic stories, please take note of the category for this story. It features an unlikable narrator and a tragic victim. You've been warned!
*****
I'm not going to even try to defend what I've done. It was wrong, and I know it. It knew it was wrong at the time, too, but I didn't care. I could try to blame my circumstances, I could tell you what a horrible week I'd had. I could try to convince myself that I didn't mean any harm, that I didn't think it would really hurt her. But I'd probably be lying. Something in me snapped when that waitress raised her eyebrows, hinting at something she wasn't bold enough to say. And from that moment on, I went willingly and maliciously along with what my baser instincts were driving me to do.
I won't even say I'll let you be the judge. I don't need that- I can judge myself just fine, and I've done so many times since that night. But I'm not brave or virtuous enough to try to go back and make things right. I doubt I even could if I wanted to...
*******
It was December- a cold, drizzly, winter evening. I was in a sports bar just a couple miles away from the campus where I had been teaching. I say "had" been teaching because a few days earlier, only an hour after I finished my last lecture, I had been dismissed. "We're not renewing your contract," was the only explanation I had gotten, but I knew it was office politics. One of the other professors in my department was envious of how popular my classes had become, and she had some influence. I had a book almost ready for publication, and she knew it was going to put me in an even better position around campus. So she acted while she still could, and I got ousted.
Sure, they gave me another month to wrap things up, but my contract technically ended at the end of December, so they didn't really owe me anything. I had foolishly assumed it would be renewed and hadn't pushed earlier to make it official. My own damn fault, I guess.
So there I was, my car packed full, ready to drive to God knows where. I'd probably go visit family for the holidays and figure out my next steps. My lease ended that week, so I either had to renew or move. I opted to throw stuff in storage and make a clean break of it. That's why I was at the bar, getting myself almost wasted. I was planning to head over to a cheap motel for the night, then to drive across state the next morning.
I was debating whether or not to get one mug deeper in trouble when I realized someone was talking to me. Over the din of the sports bar- thirty screens blasting all kinds of competitions, popular music over the loudspeaker, conversation all around- it was hard to make anything out. I swiveled around from the bar stool and looked at her.
Aw hell, she was hot. And I was pretty sure is wasn't beer goggles making me think that. She was holding a big tray of food in one hand and a pitcher of beer in the other. She was shorter than average, thin, and blonde. She wasn't too chesty, but the uniform for waitresses was very flattering to all her curves. Her straight hair was tied back into a ponytail and the referee's whistle that was a part of her uniform hung between her breasts, drawing your attention to their light swells.
I blinked a few times and tried not to sound drunk when I said, "Huh?"
"Professor DeWitt? I
thought
that was you. I just wanted to say Hi."
Professor DeWitt? Not me. I was Dr. Darius Allen, and I was quite proud of the work I had put in to the
Doctor
part of that. But she was staring right at me and there wasn't anyone next to me. Not wanting to make a big deal out of it (and not thinking clearly), I said, "Oh. Hi," and raised my mug in greeting. She gave a friendly smile and walked away. Of course, I watched her nubile form nimbly navigating the maze of chairs, tables, and unpredictable patrons. She was the kind of beautiful young girl who made working at a university both a pleasure and a trial.
I wasn't bad looking, and I had been forced to turn down a few young things in my two years at that school. I was barely 30 years old, so that didn't make me so old that the girls found me creepy, and I was attractive enough that they weren't propositioning me for any reason other than a good lay. But I knew the rules and didn't want to risk my job over a fling with a hot co-ed, even if she wasn't in one of my classes and was the one to initiate it. But as careful as I had been, I was still unemployed, thanks to petty office politics.
I turned back to the bar and decided to order some food. It was likely to be better there than at whatever greasy spoon would be next to my lodgings for the night. Besides, I could see that an NFL game was just coming out of halftime on one of the TV screens. I might as well stay and watch.
A half hour later, I saw the waitress again. She had an empty pitcher in her hand and leaned against the bar next to me. When I looked over at her, she smiled and said, "I guess it's OK for
you
to be hung-over during the exam tomorrow. It's the rest of us that will be freaking out."
"It's not so bad, is it?" I said, not sure why I was keeping up the ruse.
Her smile faded, and she looked down at the pitcher in her hand. "Not for everyone. But I'm on the border of failing your class. This semester has kicked my butt- trying to pay bills
and
study. I'm worried I'm going to lose my scholarship, which would be the end of my time here."
I almost made some comment about being able to understand, but I doubted Professor DeWitt had just lost
his
job. Instead, I asked, "Will you have time to study after work?"
"It's either study or sleep," she said, faking a smile and standing up. "I haven't decided yet." With that, she walked back to the kitchen.
For the next hour, I saw her moving around the restaurant, never failing to smile and flirt with customers, but often looking sad when her back was to the crowd. She definitely had the body and the look for this job, but if she had managed to get an academic scholarship to this school, she had to be pretty sharp, too. I wondered what field of study she was in. I knew all the Political Science students, so I was sure she wasn't in my department. But that didn't narrow it down much. I also knew that students with academic scholarships were held to pretty high standards, and one failed class would surely be enough to get her in trouble.
Part of me felt bad for her. I had worked my way through college, too, getting minimal help from my parents, who were struggling to pay their own bills back then. Nine years later and we were all a little more financially stable- or at least I had been until that week. I remembered painting houses sixty hours a week in the summers and driving a bus thirty hours a week during the school year. I barely kept up, and every time exam week rolled around, I swore I wouldn't get so far behind on my studies the next semester.
As the NFL game was winding down to its foregone conclusion (it was a blowout), I called for my check. My server handed it to me, and as I pulled out my wallet, the pretty waitress stopped by again. Still not wanting to confess to my little deception, I grabbed cash instead of a credit card. She took it from me and said, "I'll take care of it." A few minutes later, she walked back, wearing a coat. Handing me my change, she said, "Walk out with me?" I looked at the money and saw she'd returned all my cash, just changing out a twenty for smaller bills so I could leave a tip at the bar. I dropped a few bills on the table and hurried to catch up with her.
"Need a ride?" I asked.
"Nah," she answered. "I'm about two blocks away." She stuffed her hands in her pockets and nodded in one direction.