Read After We Fell Page 7


  While scrolling through my phone to call Sandra, I almost tap Steph’s name.

  I wonder what she’s doing. Hardin would probably lose his mind if I called her to hang out. Then again, he’s in no position to tell me what to do, being completely belligerent and wasted in the middle of the day.

  I’m calling her, I decide. And she answers quickly.

  “Tessa! What’re you up to?” she says loudly, trying to talk over the voices in the background.

  “Nothing. I’m sitting in the parking lot at Target.”

  “Oh, fun shit, then?” She laughs.

  “Not really. What are you doing?”

  “Nothing; going to lunch with my friend.”

  “Oh, okay. Well, call me later or something,” I say.

  “You can meet us there if you want; it’s just the Applebee’s right off campus.”

  Applebee’s reminds me of Zed, but the food was incredible and I haven’t eaten yet today.

  “Okay, I’ll come if you’re sure that’s okay?” I ask.

  I hear a car door shut in the background. “Yes! Get your ass over here. We’ll be there in about fifteen minutes or so.”

  I call Sandra on my way back toward campus and leave her a voicemail. I can’t ignore the relief that I feel when her voicemail picks up instead of her actual voice, but I’m not really sure what that’s about.

  Applebee’s is really crowded by the time I arrive, and I don’t see Steph as I scan the room for bright crimson hair, so I put my name in with the hostess.

  “How many?” The hostess asks me with a friendly smile.

  “Three, I think?” Steph said she was with her friend, so I assume she meant only one person.

  “Well, I’ve got a booth available now, so let me give it to you just in case.” The girl smiles and grabs four menus from the stand behind her.

  I follow her to the booth toward the back of the restaurant and wait for Steph to arrive. I check my phone for any correspondence from Hardin, but there’s none; he’s probably passed out by now. When I look back up, my adrenaline immediately spikes at the sight of flaming-pink hair.

  chapter twelve

  HARDIN

  I open the cabinet in search of something to eat. I need to soak up the liquor coursing through me.

  “She’s so mad at us,” Richard says, watching me.

  “Yeah, she is.” I can’t help but smile at the way her face was flushed with anger, her small fists bunched at her sides. She was furious.

  It’s not funny . . . well, it is, but it shouldn’t be.

  “Is my daughter one to hold grudges?”

  I look at him for a minute. It’s weird for a father to have to ask a boyfriend about his own daughter’s habits. “Obviously not. You’re in our kitchen eating all my damn cereal.” I shake the empty box.

  He smiles. “Guess you’re right,” he says.

  “Yeah, usually am.” Actually, that couldn’t be further from the fucking truth. “Guess it sucks for you that you showed up now, when she’s moving in less than a week,” I say as I place a Tupperware container in the microwave. I’m not exactly sure what’s in it, but I’m starving and too drunk to cook for myself, and Tessa isn’t here to cook for me. What the fuck am I going to do when she leaves me?

  “It does,” he says with a grimace. “I’m just glad Seattle isn’t too far.”

  “England is.”

  After a long pause, he says, “She won’t go to England.”

  I give him a fuck-off look. “What the fuck do you know? You’ve known her for, what, two days?” I’m about to really go off when the obnoxious beep of the microwave interrupts us.

  “I know Carol, though, and she wouldn’t go to England.”

  So he’s back to being the annoying drunk he was yesterday.

  “Tessa isn’t her mother, and I’m not you.”

  “Okay,” he says and shrugs.

  chapter thirteen

  TESSA

  Molly.

  I pray that her presence here is a complete coincidence, but when Steph appears behind her, I sink back into the booth.

  “Hey, Tessa!” Steph says and sits across from me, scooting in close to the wall so her “friend” can sit next to her. Why would she invite me to have lunch with her and Molly?

  “Long time no see,” Molly the skank says to me.

  I don’t know what to say to either of them. I want to get up and walk out, but instead I half smile and just say, “Yeah.”

  “Have you ordered?” Steph asks, completely ignoring the fact that she brought with her my biggest—my only—enemy.

  “No.” I reach into my bag to pull out my phone.

  “No need to call Daddy, I’m not going to bite.” Molly smirks.

  “I wasn’t calling Hardin,” I tell her. I was actually going to text him; there’s a clear difference.

  “Sure you weren’t,” she replies, and laughs.

  “Stop,” Steph snaps. “You said you’d be nice, Molly.”

  “Why did you even come?” I ask the girl that I loathe more than anyone in the entire world.

  She shrugs. “I’m hungry,” she says matter-of-factly, clearly mocking my emotions.

  I grab my sweatshirt and move to get up. “I should just go.”

  “No, stay! Please, you’re moving, and I won’t see you again,” Steph says, pouting.

  “What?”

  “You’re leaving in a few days, aren’t you?”

  “Who told you that?”

  Molly and Steph look at each other before Steph answers. “Zed, I think; it doesn’t matter, though. I thought you’d tell me.”

  “I was going to; there was just a lot going on. I was going to tell you here . . .” I say, then look at Molly as if to explain my reluctance to continue.

  “I still wish you’d’ve told me. I was your first friend here.” Steph sticks out her bottom lip in a way that makes me feel bad but still seems a little comical, so I’m thankful when a server arrives to take our drink order.

  While Steph and Molly are ordering their sodas, I text Hardin. You’re probably passed out, but I’m at lunch with Steph, and she brought Molly :/ I hit send and look back up at the two girls.

  “So, are you excited to be leaving? What are you and Hardin going to do?” Steph asks.

  I shrug and look around the room. I’m not discussing my relationship in front of Satan’s daughter.

  “You can talk in front of me. Trust me, I’m not interested in your boring-ass life,” Molly scoffs, taking a sip of her water.

  “Trust you?” I laugh, and my phone vibrates.

  Come home. Hardin texts back.

  I don’t know what I expected him to say, but I’m disappointed in his advice, or lack of it.

  No, I’m hungry. I reply.

  “Look, you and Hardin are cute and all, but I don’t really give a shit about your relationship anymore,” Molly informs me. “I have my own relationship to worry about now.”

  “Great. Good for you.” I feel bad for whoever the idiot is.

  “Speaking of which, Molly, when are we going to meet this mystery man?” Steph asks her friend.

  Molly dismisses her with a flip of the hand. “I don’t know; not right now.”

  The waitress returns with our drinks and takes our orders. As soon as she leaves, Molly turns to me, her real prey. “Anyway, so how pissed at Zed are you that he’s planning to put Hardin in jail?” she asks, and I nearly spit out my water.

  The idea of Hardin going to jail sends ice through my veins.“I’m trying to stop that from happening.”

  “Good luck with that. Unless you plan on fucking Zed, there’s nothing you can do.” Again she smirks, tapping her neon-green fingernail on the table.

  “That’s not an option,” I growl.

  I’ve got something you can eat here. Really, though, come home before something happens and I can’t save you.

  Save me? From what? Molly and Steph? Steph is my friend, and I’ve already proved once before
that I can take Molly, and I’d do it again in a heartbeat. She’s annoying and I can’t stand her, but I’m not afraid of her like I once was.

  I can tell by Hardin’s perverted message that he’s still intoxicated.

  I mean it, leave there, his next message says when I don’t reply.

  I shove my phone into my bag and direct my attention to the girls.

  “You’ve already done it before, so what’s the difference?” Molly says.

  “Excuse me?” I say.

  “I’m not judging you. I’ve fucked Hardin. Zed, too,” she reminds me.

  I’m so frustrated that I want to scream. “I didn’t sleep with Zed,” I say through my teeth.

  “Mm-hmm . . .” Molly says, and Steph glares at her.

  “Did someone say that—that I slept with Zed?” I ask them.

  “No,” Steph answers before Molly can speak. “And anyway, enough talk about Zed. I want to know about Seattle. Is Hardin coming, too?”

  “Yeah,” I lie. I don’t want to admit, especially in front of Molly, that Hardin refuses to join me in Seattle.

  “So neither of you will be here anymore? That will be so strange,” Steph says with a little frown.

  It’ll be strange to start over at a new campus after everything I’ve been through at WCU. That’s exactly what I need, though—a new start. This entire town is tainted with memories of betrayal and false friendships.

  “We should have a get-together this weekend—one last hurrah,” Steph says.

  I groan. “No, no parties.”

  “No, no, not a party, just our group.” She looks at me with something like pleading in her eyes. “Let’s be honest: we’ll probably never see each other again, and Hardin should hang out with his old friends at least one more time.”

  I hestitate and have to look away from her, glancing over at the bar area.

  Molly’s voice interrupts the silence. “I won’t be there, don’t worry.”

  I look back at them, and right then our food arrives.

  But I’ve lost my appetite. Are people really saying that I slept with Zed? Has Hardin heard this supposed rumor? Will Zed really put Hardin in jail? My head hurts.

  Steph eats a few fries, and before she finishes chewing she says, “Talk to Hardin and let me know. We could have it at someone’s apartment—Tristan and Nate’s, even. That way no random douche bags will show up.”

  “I can ask . . . I don’t know if he will or not.” My eyes move down to my screen. Three missed calls. One text: Answer your phone.

  I’m leaving after I eat, calm down. Drink some water, I respond and pick at my own fries a little.

  But the tension obviously gets to Molly, and she starts talking like a pot boiling over. “Well, he should like that idea—we were his friends long before you came along and ruined him.”

  “I didn’t ruin him.”

  “Yes, you did. He’s so different now—he doesn’t even call anybody anymore.”

  “His friends,” I scoff. “Nobody calls him either. The only one who even contacts him anymore is Nate.”

  “That’s because we know—” Molly begins.

  But Steph puts her hand in the air. “Enough; oh my God,” she groans, rubbing her temples.

  “I’m going to ask for a takeout box and go home. This was a bad idea,” I tell her. I don’t know what she was thinking bringing Molly here anyway; she could have at least warned me.

  Steph looks at me sympathetically. “I’m sorry, Tessa. I thought you guys could get along since she’s not trying to fuck with Hardin anymore.” Then she glares at Molly, who shrugs.

  “We are getting along—better than before,” Molly says.

  I want to smack that smug look off her face. But Steph’s ring tone interrupts my violent thoughts.

  A puzzled look crosses her face. Then she says, “It’s Hardin, he’s calling me,” and holds her phone up for me to see.

  “I haven’t been texting him back; I’ll call him in a minute,” I tell her, and she nods okay and ignores the call.

  “Jeez, stalker much?” Molly bites down on the end of a french fry.

  I bite my tongue and ask the server for a to-go box. I’ve barely touched my food, but I don’t want to cause a scene in the middle of a restaurant.

  “Please think about Saturday. We can even make it like a dinner thing instead of a party,” Steph offers. Then she gives me her best smile. “Please?”

  “I’ll see what I can do, but we’re going on a trip until Saturday morning.”

  She nods again agreeably. “You can choose the time.”

  “Thanks. I’ll let you know,” I tell her and pay my bill.

  I don’t like the idea, but in a way she’s right—we won’t ever see any of them again. Hardin’s going somewhere; maybe not Seattle, but he isn’t staying here now since his expulsion, and he probably should see his old friends one last time.

  “He’s calling again,” Steph tells me; she doesn’t bother trying to hide her amusement.

  “Tell him I’m on my way.” I stand up and head for the door.

  When I turn back around, Steph and Molly are talking, and Steph’s phone is resting on the table in front of them.

  chapter fourteen

  HARDIN

  Tessa, if you don’t call me back, I’ll come looking for you, hammered or not,” I threaten, then throw my phone against the couch too hard, so it bounces up off the back and hits the concrete.

  “She’ll come back,” Dick assures me ever so helpfully.

  “I know that!” I shout at him and grab my phone. Fortunately, the screen’s not cracked. I glare at the old drunk and then stalk into the bedroom.

  Why the fuck is he here, again? And why the fuck isn’t Tessa? Nothing good can come out of her being in the same room with Molly.

  Just as I start plotting how to go out and find her when I have no keys, no car, and a blood alcohol level that is far beyond the legal limit, I hear the front door open.

  “He’s, uh, lying down,” Richard says loudly, with incongruous cheerfulness. I suspect he’s trying to give me some sort of warning of Tessa’s arrival.

  I pull the door open before she can and sweep a long arm to invite her in. She doesn’t look the least bit intimidated or concerned by the deep scowl on my face.

  “Why didn’t you answer when I called you?” I demand.

  “Because I told you I was leaving soon. And I did.”

  “You should have answered. I’ve been worried.”

  “Worried?” She’s clearly surprised by my choice of words.

  “Yes, worried. Why the hell were you with Molly?”

  She puts her purse on the back of the chair. “Beats me. Steph invited me to lunch and brought her along,”

  Fucking Steph. “Why the fuck would she do that? Was she mean?”

  “No meaner than usual.” She raises her brow, watching me.

  “Steph’s a bitch for bringing her. What were they saying?”

  “I don’t know, but I think people are spreading rumors about me.” She frowns and sits on the chair to remove her shoes.

  “What? What sort of rumors?”

  What I really mean to ask is: Who do I have to kill?

  Fuck, I’m still drunk. How is this possible? It’s been at least three hours. I vaguely remember being told some time ago that each drink takes an hour to sober up from; I’m fucked for at least the next ten or so hours, then. That is, if I’m remembering correctly.

  “Did you hear me?” Tessa’s voice is calm, worried even.

  “No, sorry,” I mumble.

  Her cheeks flush. “I think people are saying that Zed and I . . . you know.”

  “You what?”

  “That we . . . slept together.” Her eyes are weary and her voice is soft.

  “Who’s saying that?” I try to keep my voice at the same level as Tessa’s despite the slow burn of anger building inside me.

  “Supposedly there’s a rumor about it; Steph and Molly were talking about
it.”

  I don’t know whether to try to comfort her or let my anger take over. I’m too drunk for this shit.

  She holds her hands in her lap and looks down. “I don’t want people to think of me in that way.”

  “Don’t listen to them, they’re fucking idiots. If there is a rumor, I’ll be sure it’s cleared up.” I drag her over to sit with me on the bed. “Don’t you worry.”

  “You’re not mad at me?” she asks, blue-gray eyes meeting mine.

  “Yes,” I say. “I’m upset because you weren’t answering, and then Steph didn’t fucking answer. But I’m not mad about this rumor shit—not at you, at least; they probably just made it up because they wanted to be assholes.” The thought of Steph and Molly saying shit to Tessa to purposely hurt her feelings really fucking irks me.

  “I don’t understand why she brought Molly, who then, of course, had to remind me that she slept with you.” She cringes. So do I.

  “She’s a fucking whore who doesn’t have shit else to do but reminisce over the days I used to fuck her brains out.”

  “Hardin,” Tess whines at the too-descriptive reminder.

  “Sorry; you know what I mean.”

  She unhooks the clasp on her bracelet and gets up to place it on the desk. “Are you still drunk?”

  “A little.”

  “A little?”

  I smile. “A little more than a little.”

  “You’re being so weird.” She rolls her eyes and pulls that damn planner out of the desk drawer.

  “How so?” I walk over to stand behind her.

  “You’re drunk and being all nice about everything. Like you were mad that I wasn’t answering you, but now you’re being . . .” She looks up at my face. “ ‘Understanding,’ I guess is the word, over this Molly thing.”

  “What did you expect me to do?”

  “I don’t know . . . yell at me? You don’t have the best temper when you’re drunk,” she says softly.