âI donât know what yâall do. Hell, he probably wouldâve screwed you in the front yard while his sisters watched, for all I know.â
And thisâthis is where Becca was wrong. Because sometimes, he
is
straight-out mean.
I slide off his lap before following through on the urge to junk-punch him. He shouts my name, but I stomp through the mud on the way to my car, the sounds of the party fading to a dim roar. I slide into the driverâs seat. Slam the door closed. Close my eyes and count to ten. Twenty. My breathing doesnât relax until I reach fifty-six.
Beccaâs words reappear in my head, twisting and mingling with Mattâs, and I wish more than anything that my brain would just shut the hell up until the only words in my head are my own.
You deserve better. Donât be scared of being alone. Be more scared of someone sucking the life out of you.
Donât cry.
You are so much stronger than you think.
Donât you dare cry.
You donât have to make ANYONE else happy. Make yourself happy.
Tears spill on to my cheeks, faster and harder than the freaking Mississippi, and my chest clenches and thereâs
no air
and why donât they ever tell you about this part of loving people? Why donât they ever tell you how much their words can hurt, how much they can seep into your brain and cloud every other thing that you thought you knew about yourself?
Why donât they tell you how hard it is to do what you know needs to be done?
A sob escapes me as I grab my phone from the dashboard, where I tossed it after getting into the car with Eric. I glance at the empty passenger seat. Maybe tonight
was
my fault. Maybe I shouldnât have given him a ride home. I shouldâve known better. I shouldâve known it would piss Matt off.
I wonder what life is like when youâre not living for other peopleâs happiness.
With trembling fingers, I scroll through my phoneâs contacts to call Becca. I canât drive like this. I canât sit here alone, either.
My passenger door opens and I jump, the phone clattering to the floorboard. Mattâs eyes widen as they pass over my tear-streaked face. Sighing, he closes the door. My heartâs on standby, my chest tighter than a steel cage because the poor heart has no clue whether itâs in the car with Jekyll or Hyde.
âBaby,â Matt breathes. âBaby, Iâm sorry.â He takes my hand, pulling me toward him. Wraps me in a hug as the gear shift digs into my leg.
And as always, I let him. I let him hug me, and I let him whisper that heâs sorry, and I let him cling to me like Iâm the only girl in the world.
I close my eyes. I donât let any more tears fall. Not in front of him. Never in front of him.
âIâll forget all about it,â he whispers into my hair. âI forgive you.â
And for some reason, those three words break through the brain fog. Those three words are all the confirmation I need. This needed to be over a long, long time ago. He shouldnât have to
forgive
me for helping a friend. I shouldnât be sobbing in my car at a party because he canât keep his mouth shut.
He shouldnât be able to control my emotions like a freaking puppetmaster.
But the problem is that, even when you know something needs to be done, itâs hard as hell to get the words out when you have the chance.
Right now, I have the chance. Iâm pulling away and staring into his eyes, but theyâre back to that clear blue that make me want to stay. Those eyes switch so quickly between rage and love that my brain is confused as all get-out.
He settles back against the seat and closes his eyes, lacing his fingers through mine beside the gear shift. And all I can do is stare at him, my mouth slightly open. My brain screams the words, but my heart keeps them tucked deep down. Because even when theyâve been beaten, hearts are stubborn.
âMatt?â I