At first, there's no response. I'm starting to wonder if he's even home, and why I assumed he must be - when there's suddenly a series of shuffling and clicking noises, and the door swings open.
His clothes are rumpled, his hair a complete mess, with a bottle of Jack Daniel's in one hand and a half-empty glass in the other. I'm starting to understand why it was such a production to get the door open.
"It was you the whole time," I practically shout at him, not caring if anyone hears.
"It was me the whole time!" he echoes, spreading his arms out in a dramatic gesture. Jesus, he's even drunker than I thought.
I storm inside, kicking the door closed behind me. "Are you fucking serious right now? How long did you know it was me?"
"I suspected, at first," he says, swaying a little as he heads for the kitchen. "Then, when the details started to come out, I knew."
"Bullshit." I fold my arms across my chest, protectively. "There's no way you couldn't have known from the first email."
"Okay, okay." He sits down, heavily, on a stool at the bar. "I knew, but I didn't want to know. I told myself it had to be a coincidence, because if it really was you, that'd be too big of a coincidence. It made sense at the time." He swallows with an effort. "Also, I wanted to know what you say about me behind my back."
"Big fucking mystery there." I stand there, in front of him, wondering if he'll even remember this tomorrow. "I can't believe this. You told me to wear lingerie at work." My face burns as I recall that conversation.
"And I stand by that suggestion." He manages a lopsided grin. "You should see the emails I didn't send you."
Fuck, fuck, fuck. I cannot deal with this right now.
"I'm not proud of it," he says, at last, a little more quietly. "But then I saw the things you'd never tell me to my face. Like that you think I'm a good person. That you like how I make you laugh. I shouldn't have done it, but I'm not sorry I had a chance to find out." He looks up at me, and there's no humor left in his face. "I was just begging for scraps, Meg. When it comes to you, that's all I've got."
I let out a bitter laugh. "No, no, you are not putting me in a position to feel sorry for you. Not today."
"Will you please sit down?" he slurs.
"No, Adrian!" I shout, adrenaline coursing through me as I let five years' worth of bottled-up anger spill out. "No, I will not fucking sit down! I'm done with this. I'm done with you. You're fucking toxic, and you poison everything around you, and you already ruined half a decade of my life. I let you take my self esteem, and my self respect, and my sanity. I even shared your bed because I just needed something to make me feel better about all this shit. And it did, you know that? You're pretty fucking good at making me forget what a train wreck my life is. And the fact that you made it that way. You're my own personal heroin. I'm fucking done, Adrian. I hate who I am now. I hate what you've turned me into."
He just stares at me. I watch his nostrils flare, his eyes flash, his chest rising and falling more rapidly as he listens, but he doesn't say anything. My face is burning, and I can feel angry tears beginning to gather and trickle down my cheeks. I don't even care. After today, I'm never going to see him again.
"I used to be a good person, Adrian." My voice is thick with sobs I force myself to swallow. "I used to have friends. I used to have fun. I even used to be able to tolerate my parents, for a monthly phone call, for a couple visits a year. It was shitty, but at least it was something. Now I'm going to be eating a fucking Swanson meal for Christmas with a god damn plastic tree in my discount apartment because paying me another couple dollars an hour would mean you have to cut down on your Dom Perignon consumption. And I can't start my own family, because now, thanks to you, I'm exactly the shrill insufferable bitch you always thought I was."
He just keeps staring at me.
Finally, he speaks, his tongue sounding thick in his mouth. "You're not … you're not," he says.
"Really? That's the best you've got?"
His eyes are barely even open anymore. Jesus Christ.
I storm out of Adrian Risinger's penthouse suite, out of his building, out of his life.
Chapter Seventeen
Time passes.
I wake up in the morning. I shower. I swallow a mouthful of vitamins I know I'm supposed to be taking, and I update my resume.
I make a Linked In profile and I send in applications and I wait. Most of the time, I remember to eat. At night, I stare at the ceiling until I fall asleep. Sometimes it takes too long.
If I dream, I don't remember it.
I do all of these things without feeling. If there's still a heart beating in my chest, I'm not particularly aware of it. I've had to excise the part of myself that was stupid enough to fall in love with a man like Adrian, and it's left precious little behind.
Someday, I know, I will look back on this time in my life and wonder what the hell I could have possibly been thinking. I might even laugh at it, perhaps with my kind, slightly older, curly-haired husband who is a college professor or an assistant regional manager of who gives a fuck. We'll swap stories about the crazy exploits of our youth. He'll tell me about the time he broke his leg jumping into a shallow lake, I'll tell him about the time I slept with my boss. We'll be that kind of couple. He won't get jealous, because he knows that time is long gone.
He knows, as well as I do, you can't grow old with a man like Adrian.
Maybe someday we'll see each other. Not bloody likely, in a city this big. But it could happen. Maybe he'll be reduced to doing his own food shopping at some point, and I'll meet him in the ice cream aisle with a baby on my hip. Maybe I'll pretend not to recognize him.
A month passes, and I find myself with a new job. It doesn't pay as much, but it's enough. My boss is patient and understanding. A normal person, basically.
I hate it.
My first day, I get home and suddenly realize what a sty I'm living in. A month's worth of the shitty local newspaper scattered across my kitchen table, junk mail everywhere, empty bottles of God knows what. I haven't had an adrenaline rush in ages, so I find myself cleaning. I flip on the TV and let the financial news drone on in the background while I gather up the recycling.
As I walk to the bin in the kitchen, something on one of the newspapers catches my eye.
Animal shelter says "guardian angel" responsible for saving location; furry tenants
The eye-rolling headline notwithstanding, I have to wonder.
I flip to the human interest section. Sure enough, it's a picture of Shelly cuddling a very photogenic polydactyl cat with striking green eyes, taking up half the page.
My heart squeezes painfully in my chest.
… .the donor, who insists on remaining anonymous, has promised Masterson his ongoing support for her shelter, and its mission. "He really is a guardian angel," she says. "I've always believed that the universe will provide when you're at your most desperate, but until now I didn't realize just how true that was."
The universe, hell.
Guardian fucking angel? Not likely.
I'm laughing and I'm crying and I'm laughing some more.
And he never said a word to me. Why would he? He didn't know. It's not his job to update me on every charity he decides to support.
But the anonymity is different. That means he's not supporting them as Risinger Industries, he's just supporting them as himself. Like he actually cares.
My heartbeat comes back. And with it, a pain in my chest that I wonder if I'll ever live completely without.
***
When I show up at the shelter, with its shiny new coat of paint and expanded kennel area, Shelly hugs me and cries.
"I thought you might be back," she sniffles. "I was hoping. After we ran into each other … "
She pauses, looking at me. It seems like there's a thousand things she's not saying.
"I'm just so glad you're here," she says, finally.
I puzzle over this while I supervise the open play time for the dogs, throwing balls and sticks and sitting down on the bench with the elderly beagle who just wants to cuddle all day. I know he's going to have a hard time finding a home, and I try not to think about it as I stroke his ears.
The one nice thing about this new, terminally boring job is that it leaves me plenty of time and energy to volunteer again. It feels strange, like a time machine has taken me back five years and dropped me in a place where I no longer really fit in. Nothing else has changed much, but I have.
I start spending weekends, evenings, and even some early mornings at the shelter. When I mention it offhandedly to my new boss, he offers me a flexible schedule to help out with my charitable endeavors. He loves animals, you see.
I feel like I'm on a different fucking planet.