Chapter Twelve: Second-Class Dream
(Zander)
“So, dinner?” I say as we approach our cars, several paces away from each other after learning my lesson earlier.
“Dinner sounds great. Where do you want to go?” Ivy leans against her car, and the slowly fading sunlight falls over her face and shoulders. The pink and orange of a desert sunset warms her skin tone, making her look flushed and happy despite her earlier frustration.
“How about the Artichoke Café?” It’s a nice restaurant, and a busy one, thankfully. I don’t do secluded booths that are dim and romantic. Actually, I don’t usually do restaurants at all because it’s too risky.
“Where is that?” Ivy asks. “I don’t think I’ve ever heard of it before.”
“It’s in Downtown, on Central.”
Ivy frowns and looks down at her keys. “Do you want to just ride over together? I’m not very familiar with Albuquerque yet and I get lost easily, especially Downtown with all the one-way streets.”
If she sits next to me in the truck, there will be at least two or three feet between us. It’s a big truck. I’ll keep both hands on the wheel to make sure there’s no chance I’ll accidentally touch her. I’m getting even more tired as the day goes on, thanks to this morning. We’ll be in an enclosed space together, but it’s still warm enough that I can turn on the air conditioner to keep her scent from filling up the cab too much. The safer suggestion that she just follow me is on my lips, but her vulnerability puts me over the edge.
“Yeah, sure. We can ride together. I’ll bring you back here to get your car after.”
“Thanks,” Ivy says with relief.
I open the door for her when we reach the truck, but resist helping her step up to the seat, and keep my distance. When I close the door on her, I take several long deep breaths as I walk around to my side. I have to hold my breath until I turn the truck on and cool air blasts out of the vents.
As we drive, I try to fill in the huge gaps of things I don’t know about Ivy. Talking helps distract me a little. I ask her about living in California, moving to New Mexico, and even why they moved. For some reason Van had thought it very suspicious that Ivy’s family moved in the middle of the semester rather than during summer. Turns out, Ivy’s dad was slotted to take over the New Mexico office of the firm he works for. The guy he was replacing didn’t retire until two weeks ago. I shake my head at Van’s ridiculous obsession when I hear that.
We walk into the restaurant talking about what Ivy misses about her old home. Pausing long enough to tell the hostess we want a table rather than a booth, Ivy tells me about how she was learning to surf before she moved as we walk through the restaurant.
We are led to a two person table in the center of the dining room. I smile at the hostess’s choice. It’s perfect. There’s no chance of Ivy sitting next to me, and we’re surrounded by hungry patrons, none of which immediately sets off my hunger. I take my seat, gauging the level of hunger being this close inspires. My shoulders relax when I realize it is manageable enough to bear for a while.
“So, how did Van’s study date with Noah go?” Ivy asks.
Shaking my head, I say, “Wouldn’t know. She didn’t even tell me she was going out with him. There was a note on the kitchen table when I got home.”
“A note? Who leaves notes anymore? Why didn’t she just text you?”
“I don’t think she wanted me to know. The note was for my grandma.” Thinking about the note irritates me all over again. I can’t keep it out of my voice when I speak again. “They weren’t even studying. They went to the gym, for some reason.”
“Oh,” Ivy says, “they were studying. They had to go to the gym to get started on their project.”
“Why? What was their topic?”
“They have to do a battle scene. Noah does some kind of martial arts. I can’t remember which one, but he was going to teach some to Van so they could decide whether they wanted to use it in their scene.” Ivy looks pleased to have been able to defend Van, until the heat of my emotions leaks into my expression. Her eyebrows rise in surprise. “Zander, what’s wrong?”
“Van is doing martial arts with Noah?” I ask through my teeth.
Ivy shrinks back against her chair. “Um, yeah. Is that bad?”
“It…” I close my eyes and suppress my anger and fear as much as possible. “It could be.”
What on earth was Van thinking? Not only are we both forbidden from trying any kind of combat training, but all it’s going to do is make her hunger worse! One minute she’s spouting off about Ivy being some kind of threat, the next she’s running off and putting herself in the worst possible situation.
I push back my chair and storm away from the table, pulling out my cell phone as I go. I have no idea what time she left with Noah. All I know is that she was gone when I got home around three o’clock. Knowing this may get heated, I push through the doors of the restaurant and walk outside. The only hope I have as I dial Van is that if something bad had already happened, my grandma would have called me. The ringing of the phone cuts off sharply, followed by the sound of Van’s guilty voice.
“Hey, Zander,” she says slowly. “What’s going on?”
“Tell me nothing happened to Noah! Tell me right now, Van, that you didn’t just ruin everything for us!”
“What are you talking about?”
“Martial arts?” I snap. “Are you freaking kidding me? You know how dangerous that is! What the hell were you thinking?”
“How do you know what I did today?” Van asks quietly.
I falter for a moment before continuing my tirade. “Who cares? What happened today? Is Noah okay? What exactly did you two do this afternoon?”
“Nothing happened!”
“Don’t lie to me, Van!” I warn.
Her growl races through the phone and snaps at me viciously. “I’m not lying. Nothing happened!”
“I don’t believe that. He was teaching you to fight and nothing happened? You really expect me to believe that?” How could she have been so stupid? That was way too big of a risk to take!
“You know, you don’t know everything, Zander,” Van argues. “You don’t know what I’m capable of, either! You think your way is the only way. You laugh at me and think I’m an idiot for having friends and trying to live a normal life. You think I’ll hurt them because I won’t be able to control myself. You don’t know anything about me if you think I’d ever hurt one of my friends!”
A sob breaks through her yelling. “I’m stronger than you think, Zander, and I’m not stupid. I didn’t let things with Noah get out of hand. I paced myself. I was smart about what I let him teach me. Maybe you can’t handle it, but I can have friends and this stupid curse at the same time. I’ve already given up one guy I love for you. Don’t ask me to do it again.”
She sniffs again, and I know she must be crying. “Please don’t ask me to do that. I just want to be happy for once, Zander. Can’t you understand that?”
I rub my hand over my face and sigh. Most of my anger fell away when I heard my baby sister sob the first time. Right now, all I feel is regret, regret for yelling at her, regret for my anger, regret for stomping on her hopes and happiness so often.
“Yeah,” I say softly, “I can understand that.”
I do want Van to be happy. I’ve just always wanted her to be safe even more. Before today, I never saw the value of giving up safety for the warmth of friends and love. It was always a second-class dream. There’s been so much more pain than anything else in my life lately. I guess I just forgot what it was like to care about someone and have them care in return. I wouldn’t have traded my afternoon with Ivy for anything.
“Look, Van, I’m sorry I yelled at you. I knew you were hiding something when I saw the note in the kitchen. It’s just that when I found out where you went today, I panicked.”
“I… I wasn’t really trying to lie about Noah, I was just afraid t
o tell you,” Van admits.
The way my chest tightens really scares me. “Van, you can’t be scared of me. You’re the only one I can share any of this with. You can’t be afraid of me like everyone else.” I’ve lost so much already. I can’t lose her, too.
“I won’t do it again, okay? I’ll tell you the next time I practice with Noah,” Van offers.
“Do you really think it’s a good idea to try it again? Even if things really went fine today, what if it gets more intense? What if you lose control at some point?”
“Zander, please trust me on this. I’m not going to hurt Noah. I’ll stop before I ever get close. I promise,” Van says.
Sighing, I lean against the building. “You can’t promise that. There’s not always a clear line, or a warning, especially this close to your birthday. Things could change for you at any moment and you might not be prepared.”
“It was nothing like I thought it would be, Zander,” Van says. “The fighting, I mean. It didn’t make my hunger worse. It was like… like it fed it without me having to hurt anyone. It was great, actually. Maybe we could do it together sometime. At least we wouldn’t be able to really hurt each other.”
“I don’t know, Van. It sounds risky. You know your hunger gets carried away. It would be safe enough with me, but you could never let go like that with anyone else.”
“Sometimes you have to take risks, Zander,” Van says quietly. “Just think about it, okay?”
“I’ll …” A noise from behind me makes me turn. Ivy’s concerned face is watching me from the corner of the building. I instantly feel like the biggest jerk in the world. I completely forgot about her. “Ivy, I’m sorry, I’ll be right there.”
“What?” Van screeches in my ear. “Did you just say Ivy? Where are you, Zander? Are you with her?”
Oh, crap. I really should have covered the speaker when I said that. I don’t even bother saying anything. I just end the call and slip my phone back in my pocket. Half a second later, it’s buzzing against my leg. I close my eyes, knowing exactly how much trouble I just got myself into. Here I was just yelling at my sister for being an idiot and putting herself at risk, and then she finds out I’m doing exactly the same thing, only worse.
“Zander, is everything okay?” Ivy asks. The softhearted concern in her voice melts away the weight of the impending fight with Van. Being torn apart by my hot tempered little sister can wait.
“Yeah, everything’s fine. Sorry for running out like that. I just needed to check on Van and make sure she was okay,” I say.
Ivy frowns. “Why wouldn’t she be? I mean, none of us really knows Noah very well, but I don’t think he’d try to hurt her.” Her heads tilts to the side as if she’s trying very hard to find the answer in my expression.
“No, it wasn’t that,” I say honestly. “Van and I aren’t allowed to do things like martial arts because of the violence. If my grandma finds out what Van was doing today, she’ll kill her. And I would probably get into trouble, too, for letting her do it. We’d both be grounded for the rest of the year.”
Disbelief settles on Ivy’s face. “Seems a little harsh.”
“Well, not if you knew my family. There are reasons my grandma is so strict.”
“What reasons?” Ivy asks.
“Is that your one question?” I ask, hoping desperately it isn’t.
“Will you answer it if it is?”
Without hesitation, I say, “No.”
She looks equally disappointed and frustrated, but she merely shrugs. “Then that’s not my question. Now, can we go back in and finish dinner?” she asks. She approaches me casually, her hand brushing lightly against my arm in an invitation to follow her.
I step back from her at the stab of hunger that rushes through me. “Sure.”
Ivy turns away quickly and saunters back to the front door of the restaurant, staying just out of reach as we walk back to our table. Our waitress gives us a strange look when we sit back down, but I barely notice her. My eyes are fastened on Ivy. She sits down like nothing happened and takes a bite of her risotto. At first I feel relieved that she’s letting the matter drop. Our dinner continues quietly, though, and I begin to wonder if she’s just biding her time until I drive her back to her car so she can bolt and get away from me. The idea of her wanting to run bothers me, a lot.
I try to get her talking again a few times, but her answers are always short and subdued. What Van said about needing to take a risk keeps running through my mind. She didn’t know when she said it, but I did take a risk. I took a big risk calling Ivy. It was probably more stupid than anything Van did today. I’m scared to death that I’ll regret ever meeting Ivy. That doesn’t change the fact that I want to be with her. It’s the first risk I’ve taken in a long time, and I can’t stand the thought of walking away from her with nothing.
We pull into the parking lot where we left Ivy’s car an hour later. I stop my truck right next to her car and turn to say something to Ivy. She hops out before I ever get the chance. Surprise at her quick exit keeps me from moving for a few precious seconds. I shake it off and jump out after her. She’s already opened her door when I catch up.
“Ivy, wait,” I say, grabbing her arm out of need to stop her. Even as tired as I am, my hunger flares to life and I yank my hand away as fast as I can. Ivy’s eyes stare at my hand, turning glassy and bright in the moonlight. The hurt radiating off of her is painful. I want more than anything to wrap her in my arms and apologize for every stupid thing I’ve done to her, but I can’t. I’ll hurt her if I touch her.
“I need to get home, Zander. Thanks for dinner,” she says quietly. Then she turns to get into her car. I panic and say the only thing I can think of to make her stay.
“You never asked me your question.”
Ivy pauses. Her body turns slowly, but her eyes don’t meet mine. My heart rate inches up every second she doesn’t say anything. It feels like it’s about to explode by the time she finally speaks. “I changed my mind about the rules. I get to ask one question and you have to answer it.”
My shoulders sag in defeat. I fall against my truck and rub my hand over my face. I can’t answer most of her questions. I can’t let her go, either. It only takes me a moment to decide between Ivy and my secrets. “Okay, what’s your question?”
Ivy’s eyes come up and pierce mine. “Why are you doing this to me? Why are you toying with me, Zander? You pretend to be nice to me, but you clearly can’t stand me. Why not leave me alone and stop all of this?”
The fact that her question isn’t about the bruises or the fighting surprises me, but what really shocks me is what she said about me. I stare at her in disbelief and say, “You think I don’t like you?”
Ivy looks at me like I’m crazy. “Uh, yeah. You act like you hate me practically every time you see me. The only time you were actually nice to me was when I offered to help you with your calculus. I never really expected you to call, and when you did, you made it pretty clear it was only so I could help you study. But then you’re so nice to me out of nowhere, only to go right back to acting like I have some contagious disease. I don’t know why you’re doing this to either of us. Just leave me alone, okay?”
I can’t seem to work out a response to her. My brain is still trying to catch up. Yes, I’ve been horrible to her, but that can’t be all she sees when I look at her. My silence deepens Ivy’s frown and she turns away from me. It only takes me half a step to reach her side. I hook my fingers on her shoulder and turn her gently so she is forced to look at me. My hand trembles from the brief contact.
“Ivy, I don’t hate you. The reason I reacted to you like I did the first time we met… and the other times, was because I liked you too much and it scared me. It wasn’t because I didn’t want to be with you.”
Ivy glares at me. “What? That doesn’t even make sense.”
“I know,” I say. “It doesn’t make sense, because you don’t know me like everyone else arou
nd here does.”
“What are you talking about?”
“I don’t get close to people, ever. You've already heard rumors about how I don’t date, and I’m basically a loner. Well, there are reasons for that, very good ones, and until I met you I had every intention of living up to my reputation,” I say. “The second I saw you, I wanted you, and it scared me to death.”
Ivy’s expression goes from angry, to confused, to surprised and a little bit happy in a matter of seconds. “You… I thought… you really like me?”
“Yes,” I say, sighing deeply.
“Then why do you pull away every time I get near you or touch you,” she asks.
“Because I know that’s what I should do,” I say. Ivy frowns again, clearly not understanding. But who would? I do my best to make some kind of sense. “Ivy, I know I should stay away from you, because pulling you into my life will only get you hurt. I’ve lost too many people close to me to believe that won’t happen. It’s practically ingrained in me to push people away. Every time I touch you, I get scared that you’ll be hurt, and I pull away.”
Scrounging up every last spec of will power I have left, I lift my fingers and trail them down the curve of Ivy’s face. My fingers quiver with the desire to do more. The hunger racing through me is unbearable. I pull my hand away before my willpower evaporates completely. “You have no idea how hard it is for me to touch you,” I say honestly.
She thinks I mean that purely because of my past, and that’s fine with me, but I know every second I’m in contact with Ivy brings her closer to her death. I take a big step back. Relief attempts to wash through me, but it vanishes when Ivy’s hand presses lightly against my chest. I fall back against my truck, agony spreading out from her hand like wildfire.
“You’re shaking,” she says in surprise. She looks up at me with the shimmer of tears in her eyes as her hand drops away. “You really mean it, don’t you?”
“Yes.”
“You like me?”
There’s so much more I feel for her than like, but I can’t and won’t admit to any more than that. “I like you very much, Ivy.”
Suddenly, the only emotion left on Ivy’s face is happiness. “I like you too, Zander.”
I can’t help it. I smile like every other stupid teenage boy in the world would. For a while, we just stand there smiling at each other like idiots and not caring in the least. Without meaning to, I’m the one to break it up when I yawn. My exhausting morning allowed me to spend time with Ivy, but it’s starting to catch up with me now.
“I guess I should let you get home,” Ivy says.
“I guess.”
“Will I see you again?” Ivy asks.
I smile. “Definitely.”
“When?” She grins shamelessly when I laugh at her directness.
“I’m not sure,” I say. “I can’t go out much during the week because of football…” And because as much as I want to be glued to her side, I know that would be suicide. “And I’ve got a game this Friday, and Saturdays are usually pretty busy with sports or chores.”
“I’m not really allowed to go out on Sundays,” Ivy says. “Family time, and all that.”
“So, that pretty much leaves us with Friday night after the game?” Once a week, I can handle that. “We can always call each other, too. Plus, I really do need help with my math. If we can’t get together, maybe you can as least walk me through it over the phone.”
“Okay,” Ivy says. “I’ll plan on Friday night, and you could always meet me in my homeroom class if you need help, too.”
“That’s right, I’d almost forgotten about that. I’m sure I’ll see you in there next week,” I say, “but for now, I should get going before I fall asleep.”
“You do look tired. I hope that isn’t from being around me all night.”
Actually…. “No, of course not. I went mountain biking this morning. That’s all.”
Ivy nods and says, “Oh, okay. Get some rest. Goodnight, Zander.” She moves slowly, after what I said earlier, her hand reaching up to touch my cheek lightly. She gave me enough time to prepare myself, so I don’t flinch away despite the torture she is causing me. She smiles up at me. “See you soon?”
“Very soon,” I assure her.
I hold the door open as she gets into her car. Before I can close it, Ivy says, “You know, that wasn’t the question I was planning on asking you.”
“Next time,” I say, refusing to let fear creep into my voice.
“Next time,” she repeats. The firm edge to her voice assures me she won’t forget.
Next time, I’m going to have to answer Ivy’s most burning questions. I’ve lied to people my entire life. I should be able to lie to her too. I want to lie to her, but I know that once I’m faced with her curious, beautiful eyes, I won’t be able to do anything but tell her the absolute truth about whatever she wants to know.