She nods, looks at me like she thinks I might jump off a bridge, and picks up her bag. “Call me if you need me.”
“I will.” I sit and wait for the front door to close.
Tears stream down my face, soaking the girl power t-shirt I tossed on haphazardly in the parking lot. It’s wrinkled and had been in my backseat for who knows how long, but I wasn’t planning on coming here after work today. I wasn’t planning on any of this.
Facing the mirrors on the far wall, I start my stretches. Silently begging for the peace I usually feel here to come, I go through the motions. One pose leads fluidly into the next, followed by the third. Then fourth. By the fifth, I’m not finding any serenity.
The silence is loud, every buzz from the refrigerator in the back sounding like a swarm of bees. The drip in the bathroom sink is relentless. Sounds I’ve never heard before, never noticed, build on the fear that’s knotting my stomach in the worst way.
Maybe I shouldn’t be alone.
Crawling across the floor, I dig my phone out of my bag and turn it on. There are missed calls from Graham. I know that before they show. But I don’t expect him to call in right as I press the call button for Joy.
“Mallory?” His voice is a rush—ragged and pained and uneasy. It hits me hard in the feels. So hard, in fact, that I fall onto my back and just hold the phone to my ear. “Mallory? Are you there? Please, talk to me.”
“I have nothing to say to you.”
“Shit,” he groans. “I’m sorry.”
“Not good enough,” I sniffle.
“Where are you? Let me explain.”
I sit up, watching myself in the full-length mirror. “I don’t feel like listening to you explain right now, Graham. You hurt my feelings.”
He groans. “Please . . .”
“You know what? I wanted to explain and apologize to you earlier and you didn’t have the decency to listen to me.”
He sounds like the wind just got knocked out of him.
“I made a mistake,” I continue, fueled by the strength I see in the mirrors. “People do that. We aren’t all perfect like you.”
“I’m not perfect,” he groans.
“Guess what? I know that. I know you’re just as far from perfection as I am.”
“You’re wrong,” he says quietly. “I’m much farther away than you are.”
My heart pulls at the sadness in his voice. I just have to remember that he made me sad today too. It’s easy to recall that when Vanessa’s face shoots across my mind.
“I forgot to mention something.” I glare at my own reflection. “Actually, I didn’t forget. You didn’t give me the chance.”
“Vanessa . . .”
“Yeah. She was in to see you.”
“I knew nothing about that. I swear on my life, Mallory, I knew nothing about that.”
“She said you talked a few days ago. I’m assuming since you didn’t mention it that she’s full of shit.”
He doesn’t respond right away and I think I gasp.
“Well, I think I stand corrected,” I say bitterly.
“No, Mallory,” he rushes. “Just listen to me.”
“Why should I?” I say, standing. My heart is racing too hard to stay sitting. I need to walk off some of this energy. “Because you were so kind to me today? Because you treated me with such respect? Because you gave me the opportunity to explain, so I should afford you the same?” He starts to talk, but I just laugh. “You know what? Fuck you, Graham.”