“They’re totally doing incantations about you right now.”
“I know.”
“Which way do you think Sharon will go?”
“I don’t know.”
“Are you going to be in trouble at work?”
“I assume I’ll find out tomorrow.”
Megan went quiet again. “Lil—why didn’t you tell me you actually liked Alex?”
I closed my eyes. “I think I was in denial. If I didn’t admit it to myself, I couldn’t get hurt.”
“How’d that work out?” I didn’t respond and she didn’t press it. “Let me know what happens tomorrow?” I told her I would. “Your maid of honor speech better be amazing, now that I’ve seen your writing.”
“Ha. I’ll get right on that. I may have two of the next three weekends free.”
“Good. You can help me finish favors.”
I smiled faintly.
“I still love you, you know. Even though this was a horrible friend move.”
“I love you too. Even if I suck at showing it.” I started to say goodbye, then realized I had forgotten about Tim’s sister’s threat to not be in the wedding if I was. “Wait, what about Claire?”
“She’s all talk. There’s no way she’d miss the chance to snub you at the wedding.”
“Great. Something to look forward to.” I hesitated. “I know I don’t have any right to ask this, but you won’t make me walk down the aisle with Alex, right?”
“It would be a fitting punishment.”
“Megan, please.”
“You’re not. You’re with the best man. You’re all at the same table at the reception though. It’d look weird if I had one bridesmaid somewhere else.”
“Okay, that’s fine. I just—I can’t walk down the aisle with him. And I know this is what you were trying to avoid, and I’m sorry, but I can’t—”
“How many times have you said those words today? ‘I’m sorry.’”
“More than I think I have in my entire life.”
“Have a glass of wine and get some sleep. It sounds like tomorrow might be a rough one too.”
I agreed and we said good night.
I had one last apology to send that night. I was lying in bed, where I always texted him before I went to sleep. I opened the conversation with Alex, then typed the same two words that I had been saying all day. No buts. Just, I’m sorry.
The three dots appeared to show he was typing, then disappeared. They didn’t reappear.
I turned my phone facedown and cried, one more time, knowing it was really and truly over.
CHAPTER FORTY
Caryn still hadn’t returned my messages by the time I stopped crying and settled in to try to sleep Monday night. But on the plus side, I hadn’t gotten any emails indicating I would be fired in the morning, so I would take the victory there.
They don’t give you advance warning on that anymore, Becca texted when I told her that was the good news. Prevents workplace shootings and all.
“Thanks, Bec,” I said out loud. Great.
I tossed and turned, unable to get comfortable. And God, how I missed Alex. I hadn’t realized how much I would miss talking to him before I went to bed at night. He would have known how to make me feel better.
When I woke up Tuesday morning, I looked in the mirror. The eyelash extensions just highlighted how red my eyes were, so I dug through the bathroom drawer for some unexpired eye drops and eventually found a bottle that still had a month left. I couldn’t walk into my own execution looking like I was high. My eyes were still glassy after the drops, but at least they were a more normal color.
I rushed out the door and hopped on the Metro. As I passed Starbucks, I looked longingly at it, but decided not to stop. There wouldn’t be anything from Alex, and I couldn’t be late today. Coffee in the break room would be good enough.
My keycard to enter the building still worked, which was a good sign. I went upstairs and put my bag at my desk. Caryn’s office was down the hall, light spilling from it to indicate she was there. Tomorrow was her last day until after her honeymoon; she was taking Thursday and Friday off to finish wedding preparations, then would be gone the following ten days.
I squared my shoulders and walked toward the rectangle of light. I had realized, as I failed to sleep the previous night, that there was no chance I was still in Caryn’s wedding. That was why she hadn’t returned my call. And that was fine, but assuming I wasn’t fired—which was a pretty big assumption—working here would be a lot harder if Caryn couldn’t forgive me.