In the days following, Jake kept in
frequent and enthusiastic contact and I was coming to the sinking realisation
that getting rid of him was not going to be an easy task. I wasn’t even sure I
wanted to get rid of him. After all, we had a lot of giggles, and he knew me.
He knew me a little too well, actually. Yet, for reasons unknown to me, he
still liked me. I was sure that this was his love-is-blind eyes telling him
that I was good for him, that I would make him feel good. But I would see Owen
in a couple of weeks, so any ties connecting to Jake had to be cut before that
date, and Jake knew it. Yet, he persisted.
I’d often wondered to myself; why,
when I warn guys to steer clear of me, is it so difficult for them to just do
that. Take my word for it that I actually will hurt them, and walk away. Must
they all think that they are an exception to the rule? Evidently, yes. I
decided that Jake was going to have to know, for sure, that he wasn’t the
exception, Owen was.
A few days later, I called Jake and
asked him for coffee. He wasn’t aware of my agenda. In fact, he was probably
optimistic and encouraged by the engagement. He tended to have it all wrong.
“Hi”. I tried not to focus on his
smile when he saw me walk in, too aware that I would be turning that upside
down soon enough.
“Hey” I replied. “Do you want
something to drink?” Buying him a coffee was the least I could do for him right
now.
One grande cappuccino for him and one
tall white chocolate mocha for me, and we sat at a table in an intimate corner
that he picked out. I had gone over it in my head, the exact words leading up
to my point that I would utilise. It would be articulate and smooth, and he
would be blissfully unaware that I planned out the whole conversation ahead of
time; something I generally had great success in achieving. I had a knack of
pre-empting a persons’ response and strategically planning out two-way conversations
so as to extract what I wanted from them. Some called it manipulation; I called
it insightful. This situation, however, got the better of me, and I was left
abandoned by words and blank.
“How you doing kid?” he asked,
casual.
“I’m alright”. I wasn’t alright. Jake’s
friendship had somehow managed, over a short couple of months, to be what I
relied on for sanity and actuality. We spoke for hours every day and I knew I
could count on him to be honest and straight with me. He would tell me when I
was being a stubborn, selfish jerk, and I would tell him was being a
rebellious, self-righteous and closed minded boy.
I knew that once I pushed hard enough,
our friendship would never exist in the same capacity. And yet, I had to push
him away in order to have the slightest chance with Owen.
“I wrote some lyrics” I decided to jump
straight to the point. “They are from ages ago, but I just found them scribbled
down on some paper when I was cleaning yesterday”.
“Can I read them?”
“Umm” I faltered. Did I really want him to read them? Ugh stop
it Alice. This was the point, after all. “I guess you can read a little. They
aren’t very good”.
He seemed pleased even so. I told him
that I didn’t have them with me, and that I definitely wouldn’t be saying them
out loud, so we compromised and decided that I would write them on napkins for
him to read to himself.
He gathered some napkins and I stared
at them, blank in front of me, before starting to write.
She
grabs your phone and puts her number in under “it’s best if you avoid me”
She
takes your hand, drags you along and says “come dance with me”
She
tells you; “girls like me should come with a warning label”
You
choose not to listen; now whose fault is that?
I saw his smile fade, but I continued.
He had to believe that this was me, writing about him, for it to have any
chance of success.
So
let’s dance boy, come and dance with me
I
like this and I know you like me
Can I
take you home then let you off the hook by saying you’re not really what I’m
looking for?
Keep
you wanting more
Can I
stay with you until light becomes night, then leave just cause I want a fight?
By this stage I’d gone through at
least 5 napkins and I wondered if it was even worthwhile continuing. Surely he
hadn’t missed my point. But he looked at me expectantly, so I grabbed another bunch
of napkins and buried myself in them.
Well
don’t say she didn’t warn you, remember that she did?
It’s
always fun in the beginning but it’s really just a tease.
So
let’s dance boy, come and dance with me
I
like this and I know you like me
This time, I made the words “this” and
“me” larger, for emphasis. Again, I looked at his face. It was crushed. Evidently it had sunk in. He liked me; I liked
the current situation of control and play I was lingering in with him. I kept
writing, not ready to face him.
You’re
stuck wishing you’d never met her
She
leaves you thinking about her
Makes
you dream about her
And
you’ll hate her for being your distraction
Beg
her for a reaction
I stopped, put my pen down. I had
forgotten a few lines but I didn’t suppose that mattered.
“Fuck” he said. “Fuck”, and again.
I waited, knowing that this had told
him everything and I needn’t say more. “You wrote that about me” he said, cut.
“No”. I lied. The truth was; I wrote
it about every guy who I had been in this situation with. He was one of them.
“I wrote it before I met you, a couple of years ago”.
“But it’s exactly our situation” he
continued, seemingly baffled, which again reiterated my knack for insight and
made me smile inside. I was going to make a good lawyer. I silently hated on
myself for being so conceited as well as distracted whilst in the middle of
breaking my friends’ heart. “Down to where it says she is the distraction.
You’re constantly in my thoughts, distracting me all the time”.
“I’m sorry, Jake”. And I was. “It
really wasn’t written about you. I just found it, honestly”.
“But that’s what I am to you, aren’t
I?”
Oh, God. I hadn’t realised that in
bringing it up in this way, I would have to answer some seriously hard
questions. There wasn’t a lot I could do about that now, and I had to admit, a
couple of difficult questions were the least I deserved. Jake, however, deserved
answers.
“You’re not that” I tried to justify.
“But you also aren’t what you want to be”.
“I see”. He didn’t. He had already
told me that he couldn’t comprehend what made me feel genuine emotion towards Owen
that couldn’t be directed at anyone else. He didn’t understand that no matter
how much I liked him, I could never love him, or that no matter how frequently
we talked or how much affection he showed me or how passionately he kissed me, he
could never break my heart if he took it all away. I wanted something real. I
wanted something that he couldn’t give me. I wanted Owen.
“Look, Jake” I tried again. “In a
couple of weeks, I will see Owen. And when I am with Owen, nobody else matters.
I can’t be with you then. You can’t touch me then or sit too close. You can’t
hold my hand or look at me with suggestion. I won’t reciprocate. He will be
there, and I will want him nothing more than him. You won’t be able to stand
it.” I let out a sigh. “I think it’s best if we start speaking a little less
frequently starting now, in preparation.”
This was me; trying to be kind.
This resonated with me more than a blog has any right to. Deep, gritty and emotional.
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