Stars in Your Eyes(43)
I feel so sick that I think I’m going to cry. I don’t want to cry. I don’t want to make this about me right now. I want to support Gray. I don’t know if I can. “I’m so sorry,” I tell him. That’s all I can manage. “I’m so, so sorry that happened to you.”
He shrugs. “Like I said. It happens all the time. But it’s made me feel like I’m disgusting. I can’t get out of my own skin. I can’t escape my own body. And everyone who hates me—yeah, sometimes I think I deserve it because…” He doesn’t finish his sentence.
“But you didn’t do anything, Logan,” I tell him. “All those disgusting creeps who abused you—” Abused. It’s such a euphemism. I grimace. “They should be punished for what they did to you.”
And his own father? His own dad sent him to be hurt, purposefully, for his own benefit. How fucked up is that? I struggle with my dad—and yeah, the shit he’s done has hurt me, too, but this…
I let out a shaky breath. “Can I…I don’t know what to do. What do you need?”
Logan pauses. He looks at me. “What?”
“Is there anything I can do to help you?”
Logan blinks. “No one’s ever asked me that before.” He looks at me like he isn’t sure if he can really trust me. “Maybe. I don’t know. Just being here with me. Lying down together. We don’t even have to talk, if you don’t want to.”
“We can lie down and talk. That’s not a problem.”
It’s awkward at first. He lies down on his side. I don’t touch him, but then he takes my hand and pulls it across him, so I wrap my arms around him. We try to shift around to find a comfortable position. I end up on my back, holding him as he curls into my side. We’re quiet for a while. Just breathing, the movie still on in the background.
“Thanks for listening,” he tells me. “Not a lot of people would’ve actually cared.”
“I care, Gray.” And I have a feeling a shit ton of people would care if he told them, too. But I can’t force him to trust anyone. It’s a shock, I think, that he’s chosen to trust me with this. “I’m not going to judge you. I’ll never ask you to do something you don’t want to do.”
He clutches my sides tighter.
“You’re safe with me,” I say. “Okay?”
“Yeah. Okay.”
Logan
The lines we’re crossing are making things complicated. I was high and drunk when I went to Matt’s hotel room and spilled the truth for the first time. I’ve never told anyone else about my past. No one. What was it about Matt? Maybe it was the image I couldn’t get out of my head. The way he smiles at me. He didn’t react the way I’ve always thought others would. He didn’t look at me with disgust and say there must’ve been something I’d done. That I deserved what happened. Since the night I went to his hotel room and lay down with him for hours, and with the romance we’re playing in and out of work, it’s getting a little hard to remember what the lines between us are supposed to be.
We still do the public shit. Holding hands so that photos can be snapped. Eating together at restaurants for lunch. Something’s different between us now, though. There was a silent comfort when we lay down beside each other in Matt’s hotel room. The safe sort of quiet that doesn’t need to be filled. The sort of easy calm where the two of us can meet each other’s eyes and don’t feel the need to immediately look away, holding the stare, seeing curiosity glint in Mattie’s eyes before he reaches for my hand. Yeah. I don’t think this is just an act anymore.
We start getting invited out all the time. All of the fucking time. Jesus Christ. Willow Grace reaches out to me for the first time in months, saying she wants me and Mattie to hang out with her and her new boyfriend. She just wants the attention Matt and I would bring her.
Matt’s game, because he’s too fucking innocent to know when he’s being used, so I pick him up and drive him to the club in WeHo. One of those places where everyone’s in tight dresses and heels and thousand-dollar jeans, and you’ve probably got to be a model or an actor or something to even get in. I hate it already. Matt winces at me. “We can always leave early, right?”
“We shouldn’t have come at all.”
He’s been gentler with me since I told him the truth. It pisses me off. I’m not so fragile that I’ll crack and break. “We’re supposed to be convincing people that we’re together,” he says.
“You take shit too seriously.”
The bouncer lets us in, and the music is loud, smell of sweet alcohol and perfume and conditioned air making me remember the days before rehab. I’ve fallen off the wagon, obviously, but I’m doing better than before. A couple of years back, I’d be on so much coke and Adderall when I came to a place like this that it’s a wonder I’m still alive. Maybe that’s partly why I haven’t been going out so much. I know it’d be easy to get swept back into that old life of mine, and I’m trying not to. Really, I am.
Mattie takes my hand and we wander through the crowds, toward the VIP section where Willow said she would be. She’s always been good at figuring out how to find the spotlight. Her golden dress shimmers when she turns to us with a squeal. She immediately hugs me, squishing herself against me, fingers against my ear. Probably purposeful. We had sex a few times, and the memory twinges through me, making me a little hard as she pulls away with a fuck me smirk.