The Edge of Never
For the first time, I see the tattoo down his left side and I want to ask about it, but I’ll save that for later.
He smiles gently at me.
“It started about a year and a half ago,” I just come out with it, “a week before graduation—my boyfriend was killed in a car accident.”
His gentle smile fades and he softens his eyes, letting me see just enough remorse to show that he feels bad for me without it seeming fake or exaggerated.
He pushes the door open the rest of the way and I walk inside. The first thing he does before I even sit down on the end of the bed is pull a shirt over his chest. Maybe he doesn’t want me to feel like he’s trying to be distracting or flirty, especially when I came here to tell him something obviously painful. I respect him even more for that. That small, seemingly insignificant gesture speaks volumes, and although it might be unfortunate that he hid that body away, I’m OK with it. That’s not what I came here for.
I think….
There’s a sort of genuine sadness in his green eyes, mixed with something thoughtful. He turns the TV off and sits down next to me, the same way he did on my bed and he looks over, waiting patiently for me to go on.
“We fell in love at sixteen,” I begin and look out ahead of me, “but he waited for me for two years—two years—,” I glance over once in emphasis, “before I slept with him. I don’t know any teenage guy who would wait that long to get in a girl’s panties.”
Andrew makes a slight you-have-a-point face.
“I had had a couple of short-term boyfriends before Ian, but they were so…,” I look up in thought searching for the word, “…mundane. To tell you the truth, I started seeing a lot of people as mundane by the time I was twelve.”
Andrew looks reflective, his brows gently creasing inward.
“But Ian was different. The first thing he said to me after we met and had our first real conversation was: ‘I wonder if the ocean smells different on the other side of the world.’ I laughed at first because I thought it was a weird thing say, but then I realized that simple sentence set him apart from everyone I knew. Ian was a guy standing on the outside of the glass, looking in at the rest of us shuffling back and forth, doing the same thing every day, taking the same paths, like ants in an ant farm.
“Now, I had always known that I wanted something more in life, something different, but it was when I met Ian that things started to become clear to me.”
Andrew smiles gently and says, “Established and matured before twenty—that’s a rare trait.”
“Yeah, I guess so;” I say, smiling back at him and then I let out a small laugh, “you wouldn’t believe how often Damon or Natalie or even my mom and my brother, Cole, messed with me about how ‘deep’ I was.” I quote ‘deep’ with my fingers and roll my eyes.
“Deep is good,” he says and I glance over coyly because I detect the attraction even though he’s taming it very well for the sake of the conversation. But then his smile fades and his voice drops a little. “So when you lost Ian, you lost your partner in crime.”
My smile fades, too, and I prop my hands on the edge of the bed and let my body slump between my shoulders. “Yes. We were going to backpack across the world after graduation, or maybe just Europe, but we were determined; had that much planned out at least.” I look straight at Andrew now. “We knew we didn’t want to do the college thing and end up working the same job for forty years—we wanted to work everywhere, try everything while on the road!”
Andrew laughs. “That’s actually a pretty cool idea,” he says. “One week you’re waitressing at a bar and bankin’ on tips and the next week, in a different city or town, you’re belly-dancing on a street corner and tourists are tossing money in a jar as they walk by.”
My slumped shoulders bounce softly with laughter and I blush, looking over at him. “Waitressing, sure, but belly-dancing?” I shake my head. “Not so much.”
He grins and says, “Ah, you could pull it off.”
Still with a hot, blushing face I look out ahead of me again and let the blush fade.
“Six months after Ian died,” I go on, “my brother, Cole, killed a man in a drunk-driving accident and now he’s in prison. And after that, my dad cheated on my mom and they got divorced. My new boyfriend, Christian, cheated on me. And then, of course, you already know about what happened with Natalie.”
That’s all of it. I told him everything that, combined, made me want to get away. But I can’t look at him because I feel like I shouldn’t be done, like he’s thinking to himself: OK, where’s the rest of it?
“That’s a lot of shit to dump on a person’s lap,” he says and I look back up when I feel him adjusting on the bed beside me. I smell his minty breath now that he has turned fully at the waist to face me from the side. “You have every right to be hurt, Camryn.”
I don’t say anything, but I thank him with my eyes.
“I guess I can see now why you weren’t hard to convince to go on this road-trip with me,” he says.
His face is unreadable. I hope he doesn’t think I’m using him to mimic that part of my life I had planned with Ian. The whole road-trip situation seems similar, even to me now that I think about it, but it couldn’t be further from the reason I left with Andrew. I’m with him now because I want to be.
It’s in this moment that I realize I haven’t been thinking of Ian and Andrew so much because I’m trying to find Ian in Andrew…I think it’s guilt…maybe I’m trying to replace Ian completely.
I stand up from the bed and shake those thoughts from my mind.
“So what are you going to do?” Andrew asks from behind. “After this road-trip is over, what do you plan to do with your life?”
My heart hardens in my chest. Not once during this trip with Andrew, or even before I met him after I left North Carolina, have I thought beyond the present. It wasn’t ever that I tried not to think about what lies ahead, I simply just didn’t think about it at all. Andrew’s question wakes me up and now I feel panicked inside. I never wanted a dose of that reality; I was content with my illusion.
I turn around, my arms crossed over my chest. Andrew’s beautiful eyes are gazing intensely at me.
“I…don’t really know.”
He looks mildly surprised, his gaze becoming more contemplative and his eyes stray.
“You can still go to college,” he says, offering ideas to help me feel better, I guess, “and it doesn’t mean you have to get a job afterwards and work there until you die—hell, you can still backpack across Europe if you want.”
He stands up with me. I can tell the thinking gears are churning in his head as he paces the dark green carpet a few times.
“You’re gorgeous,” he says and my heart flutters, “you’re intelligent and obviously have more determination than the average girl; I think you could do just about anything you wanted—shit, I know that all sounds commonplace, but it couldn’t be truer in your case.”
I shrug. “I guess so,” I say, “but I don’t have the slightest idea about what I want to do except that I don’t want to go home to figure it out. I think I’m afraid that if I go back there, I’ll be drowned in the same crap I pulled myself out of when I got on that bus that day.”
“Tell me something,” Andrew says suddenly and my eyes lock on him, “what part of being around everyone else frustrates you the most?”
Frustrates me?
I think on it for a second, my gaze fixated on the brass lamp mounted on the wall beside the bed.
“I-I’m…not sure.”
He steps up to me and places two fingers at the bend of my arm, guiding me to sit back down with him and I do.
“Just think about it,” he goes on, “based on what you’ve told me already, what is different between you and them?”
I hate it that it’s taking me longer to figure something out that he seems to already have an idea about. I stare down at my hands within my lap and think about it long and hard until I come up with the only answe
r I feel might be right, but I’m still unsure of myself:
“Expectations?”
“Is that a question, or your answer?”
I give up.
“I really don’t know—I mean I feel…restricted around everyone, with the exception of Ian, of course.”
He nods and listens, letting me go on without interruption while the answer is hanging on the tip of my brain.
And then out of nowhere, the answers just come:
“No one wants to do what I want to do,” I say and my explanation begins to unfold more quickly now that I feel more confident in the answer. “Just like with living free and not taking the ordinary route, y’know? No one wants to step out of their comfort zone to do that with me because it’s not something most people do. I was afraid to tell my parents I didn’t want to go to college because that’s what they expected me to do. I accepted a job at a department store because my mom expected it to fulfill me in some way. I went with my mom every Saturday to visit my brother in prison because she expected me to go, because he’s my brother and I should want to see him even though I didn’t. Natalie relentlessly tried to hook me up with guys because she thought it was abnormal that I be single.
“I think I’ve been afraid most of my life to be myself.”
My head whirls around to face him. “In a way, that was even true with Ian.”
I look away quickly because that last part was not something I really expected to say out loud. It just came out while the realization was taking shape in my mind so fast.
Andrew looks inquisitive, but at the same time, unsure if he should probe.
I’m not sure if I should elaborate.
He nods.
Apparently, he decides it’s not his place to further this particular subject.
He twists the inside of his cheek in-between his teeth. I watch him for a moment, always trying to force down the obvious attraction I have for him, but it’s becoming harder to do. I glimpse his lips and wonder what they taste like. And then I force my eyes away—I’m doing it again. Right now. I’m afraid to tell him what I want. Or, at least what I think I want.
“Andrew,” I say and his face quietly reacts to my voice saying his name.
Think about this, Cam, I say to myself. Are you sure this is what you want?
“What is it?” he asks.
“Have you ever had a one-night stand?”
It feels like I just let the biggest secret I’ve ever been told slip while standing in front of a microphone in a room full of people. But it’s out of the bag now. I’m still not entirely sure if it’s even what I want, but it’s there in my mind and has been for a while. I remember vaguely thinking about it while up on that roof with Blake.
Andrew’s face loses all emotion and he can’t seem to find words to say. Instantly, my heart freezes and I feel sick to my stomach. I knew I shouldn’t have said that! He’s going to think I’m a slut or something.
I jump up from the bed.
“I’m sorry—God, you must think I’m—.”
He reaches out and takes my wrist, “Sit back down.”
Reluctantly, I do, but I can’t look at him. I’m completely fucking mortified.
“What’s wrong with you?” he asks.
“Huh?”
I look back at him.
“You’re doing it right now.” He motions his hands to emphasize ‘right now’; his eyebrows are knotted.
“Doing what?”
He licks his lips, sighs as if disappointed and finally says, “Camryn, you started to tell me something that maybe you’ve contemplated a time or two and just when you got the courage to speak your mind, you did a one-eighty and regretted it.” He looks deep into my eyes, his full of intensity and knowledge and something else I can’t yet place. “Ask me the question again and this time, wait for me to answer.”
I pause, searching that tense look on his face, unsure of it. Or, maybe it’s just me that I’m unsure of.
I swallow and say, “Have you ever had a one-night stand?”
His expression doesn’t shift or fall. “Yes, I’ve had a few here and there.”
He’s waiting for me now, even though I’m not sure yet how to make myself feel comfortable in this awkwardly-developing conversation. It’s like he knows I’m squirming inside, but to teach me a lesson he’s going to make me do the talking instead of being my shrink like he’s been since I came into his room.
His eyebrows arch a little as if to say: Well?
“Well, I was just wondering…because I’ve never done something like that.”
“Why not?” he says so casually.
I look down and then back up at him so he doesn’t scold me for it.
“Well, it’s just kind of slutty, I guess.”
Andrew laughs and it surprises me.
Finally, he relieves me somewhat of my torture.
“If a girl did that a-lot,” he draws out that word with a squeamish smile, “then it would be slutty, sure. Once or twice, I don’t know…,” he motions his hands at level with his shoulders as if shaking the numbers around in his mind indecisively, “there’s nothing wrong with that.”
Why isn’t he taking full advantage of this right now? I start freaking out a little inside, wondering why he’s still all shrink-mode rather than amping-up the flirting and getting down to business.
“Alright, so….”
I can’t say it. It’s just not me, to be able to casually talk about my sexual anything. I can only vaguely do that with Natalie.
Andrew sighs and his shoulders slouch over. “Are you wanting to sleep with me, to have a one-night stand with me?” He knew I wasn’t going to come out and say it, so he gave in and did it for me.
The question, although obvious for both of us, stops my breath. It embarrasses and mortifies me with him saying it as much, maybe more, than if I would have.
“Maybe….”
He stands up and looks down at me and says, “I’m sorry, but I’m not into you in that way.”
The biggest fist in existence just slammed into my stomach. My hands go rigid, gripping the edge of the mattress, making my arms all the way up to the top of my shoulders, completely unmovable. All I want to do right now is run out that door and lock myself inside my room and never look at Andrew again. Not because I don’t want to see him, but because I don’t want him to see me.
I’ve never been so embarrassed in my entire life.
And this is what speaking my mind got me!
I don’t know whether to accept it as a lesson learned, or to hate him for making me do it.
19
IN A SPLIT-SECOND, I leap off the bed and walk as fast as I can to the door.
“Camryn, stop.”
I just keep moving, even faster when I feel him coming up behind me, and I grab the lever and swing the door open and then I run out into the hall.
“Please, just wait a damn minute!” he says, following me and I can hear the aggravation elevating in his voice.
I ignore him and reach into the little pocket on the back of my shorts and yank out my card key, thrusting it in my door. I push my way inside the room and go to close the door, but Andrew is already through it behind me.
The door shuts after him.
“Will you just listen to me?” He tries once more, exasperated.
I don’t want to look at him, but I do anyway.
His eyes are wide and fierce and sincere when finally I turn around.
He steps up to me and grips my upper-arms carefully in his hands. And then he leans in and presses his lips softly against mine. I wilt, but I’m still too confused to react properly to it. Confused and stunned and my heart is racing.
He pulls away and looks in at me, his face every bit of sincere and he tilts his head to one side…smiling.
“Why is that funny?” I ask sharply and go to push away from him.
He holds me still by my arms and forces my humiliated gaze, which is beginning to reflect resentment.
 
; “I say that I’m not into you like that, Camryn, because…,” he pauses, searching my face, looking at my lips for a moment as if deciding whether or not he should kiss them again, “…because you’re not the girl I could only sleep with once.”
His words snap the thoughts out of me and my racing heart flickers behind my ribs. I can’t make myself understand what he just said and instead of trying to figure out exactly what he means, I pull my head together the best I can and try to gain back some of the composure I lost when I stormed out of his room.
“Look,” he says, moving to my side and slipping his hand around the back of my waist. Just feeling his fingers graze my skin causes shivers along that side of my body. What the hell is happening to me? I do want him…I mean, right now I feel like there’s no going back, that I would force myself to be a slut just for tonight just to keep him in the room. But what I don’t understand is why I feel like I want more from him than sex….
“Camryn?” His voice snaps me back into whatever it was he was trying to say moments ago. He guides me to sit down on the bed and then crouches down in front of me on the floor. He gazes up into my eyes. “I won’t have a one-night stand with you, but I will make you come, if you let me.”
A tiny jolt of electricity just shot through my belly and down in-between my legs.
“…What?” I can’t say anything else, really.
He smiles gently, deepening those dimples just a little, and he rests his arms across the length of my naked thighs, clasping his hands to my sides.
“No strings attached,” he says. “I’ll get you off and tomorrow morning when you wake up, I’ll be in my room next door getting ready to head out with you to our next location. Nothing will change between us—I won’t even bring up what happened joking around or otherwise. It’ll be like it never happened at all.”
I can hardly breathe. He just made the sweet spot between my legs swell with just a few direct words.
“But…what about you?” I manage to get out.
“What about me?”
He presses his fingertips into my sides a little more. I pretend not to notice.
“That doesn’t…seem fair.”