Read I Unlove You Online

Authors: Matthew Turner

Tags: #coming of age, #love story, #literary fiction, #contemporary romance, #new adult, #mature young adult

I Unlove You (11 page)

BOOK: I Unlove You
7.34Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

I glare at him. Because I hate
him.

“‘
Oh
B
, I love how you just
lay there like a dead giraffe,
’”
he says, mimicking
me now, I assume.
“‘
Why, I think I may write a letter about how I
feel about this. I love you so much, and our medicare, and our
uninspiring nights together.
’”

I hate him, but instead of
punching him like I should, I laugh and throw a beer mat at his
head. I miss.


Even you find your life pitiful
and hilarious,

he says, laughing.

I sigh.

Shut
up.


You love my
stories.


No. No, I do not. And
besides,
B
and me get up to a lot in the bedroom.


Pray tell.


It stays there. Not all of us
feel the need to share our seedy lives.


How could I keep a night like
that to myself?


Silence is easy,
Joey.

He
smirks and places his pipe back into his mouth, leaning back and
motioning his head towards the door.

Well, I suppose we can
ask the woman herself how adventurous you are.

With my back turned to the door, I can

t see
her, and for once I don

t turn round to
watch her glide in my direction. Picking up the nearest beermat, I
twiddle it between my thumbs and pick at each corner. I
wouldn

t say chatting to Joey has helped me to forget
or relax, but for the first time in a few days my chest
doesn

t throb and ache. But now, as each second brings
her closer, my chest tightens once more. Thick breath and heavy
shoulders. Knotted neck and lead-like arms.

I
can

t avoid seeing her, nor can I delay telling Joey or my
parents, or the world, for much longer. I keep telling myself this
is real, and that this isn

t some test or
dream. But avoidance, like procrastination, seems to ease the agony
for a little while longer, even it is mere respite. I need respite.
I need a few more minutes

a few more
hours

a few more days and weeks to figure out how the hell
I

m so supposed to be a father and someone stronger than
who I actually am.


How are my two favourite
boys?

she asks over my shoulder.

How are you
doing?

she continues in a softer tone, kissing me just below my
ear.


I

m
fine,

I whimper, and as soon as I catch her face I close my eyes
and slip deeper into my heavy heart. I hate feeling like this
towards her. I

m angry at my cowardice.
I

m frustrated because I long for her, and when I do see
her

smell her

touch her

I

m head over heels in love with her. She remains
my girl. She

s still my
B
.

Yet
I feel like I

ve lost part of her,
or part of me, maybe. Last night, I tried to write down my feelings
like I always have. I wanted to write her a letter and express that
which my lips could not. I can

t recall a single
time I

ve met a blank page when writing to her. The
words usually spill from me. The chaos within, whatever it may be,
eases.

Last night

I couldn

t write. I
couldn

t calm the mess.


What are you two talking
about?

she asks. Perfect. Calm. No different to the last time we
all sat at a table together, before everything changed
forever.


Well, Aus was telling me how
you love the missionary position.

She bites her lip and looks at
me.


That

s not exactly
how the conversation went,

I say.


I may have filled in some of
the blanks,

Joey
says.

But that

s the
gist.


He had rather disturbing sex
last night.


Say no more,

she says, holding up
her hands.


Seriously, if you two become
any more prudish, I may hire prostitutes to surprise you throughout
the week. Maybe they could teach you something,

he says, standing
up.

Scooting closer to me,
B
grabs my hand.

Wait, sit down for a
second,

she instructs Joey.


But I need a
drink.


You can get one in a minute. We
have something to tell you first.


Now?

I ask, literally feeling the blood
drain from my cheeks.

Squeezing my hand, she nods. I remember before our first
big gig in Leeds, at the Cockpit, before a hundred-or-so strangers,
she calmed me. I knew once I got on the stage I

d be
okay, because as soon as I strum and focus on the music instead of
the bright lights and judging eyes, I slip into a comfortable and
safe place. But this gig wasn

t like the ones
before it, and I couldn

t calm. I
couldn

t settle. As Joey bounced around the room, and
the rest of the guys lounged on couches, I tore beer bottle labels
and sketched in my notebook like an out-of-control
lunatic.

Without saying a word, she grabbed me, framed my face with
her long and pristine fingers, and gazed at me with those rich,
succulent eyes. She didn

t speak. She
didn

t hug me. She just smiled and stared, but
it

s all I needed because the world began to slow, as did
my heart and breath, and nothing else mattered or even existed. Me
and her, void of the chaos and noise; I found peace and stepped on
stage, playing like I always play, and losing myself in the music
like I always do.

Like some mysterious elixir, she soothes my inner turmoil
at times I think are impossible. She rarely makes a sound, simply
stares and smiles. Her eyes, and those lips, and the way she
strokes me with her fingertips

I
don

t know how she does it but she always has. I hope she
always will, because I

m not sure how
I

d handle life without her magic.


Oh God, you two
aren

t getting married are you?

Joey asks, sitting
and planting his head in his hands.

I take a deep breath and lock my
eyes on hers, nodding and gritting my teeth.


Not exactly,

B
says.

I
want to do this. He

s my friend.
It

s my responsibility to tell him and accept all this is
real. I want to be strong. I want to be brave. I need to do this,
but I can

t move my jaw. Dry lips and trembling throat, I
can

t do it. I

m weak.
I

m afraid.


Okay, you two are freaking me
out. What

s up?

he says, slicking his dirty blonde
hair back and to the side.

B
squeezes my hand once more.

There

s no easy way to say
this, as I

m pretty sure
you

ll freak out regardless, so I

ll just come
out and say it. We

re
pregnant.

Mouth agape and shoulders slumped,
Joey falls silent. A rarity in its own right, each ticking second
intensifies the moment, his wide-open mouth an eerie clearing in
his bearded forest.


You okay?

B
asks,
taking his hand with her spare one.

He
remains still.

You

re pregnant?

She nods.


Is this
true?

he asks, turning to me.


Yeah,

I whisper.


So, in a few months
you

re going to be parents?


Yes, Joseph,

B
says.


But

how?


I

m almost certain you
know the answer to that,

she says.


But

we

re twenty-two
years-old. We

re too young to be
parents.


You

re not the father,
Joseph. Don

t
worry.


Well, I know that,
but

I don

t think
we

re ready for this.


Again,

she says,

you

re not the
father.

Straightening up, he brushes down his grey
waistcoat.

Well, I think I kind of am.

Shaking her head, she
sighs.


Aus,

he says.

You

re going to be a
dad?


Yes, mate,

I whisper, folding my beer mat in
half.


Is this a good
thing?

I
freeze, sensing another hue from my already pale cheeks slip into
oblivion. I

m not sure
I

ve hated the sight of his face as much as this before.
How can he ask me a question like that? Why the hell would he feel
it

s a good question to ask right now?
It

s an impossible question with no goddamn
answer.


Is this a good
thing?

I ask him in return, digging my fingers into my
thigh.

He
nods.

Yeah.
You

re happy about this?

Widening my eyes, I imagine
lunging over the table and pulling his head off his shoulders. Am I
happy? What sort of bloody question is that?

BOOK: I Unlove You
7.34Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

The Constantine Affliction by T. Aaron Payton
Taste of Desire by Lavinia Kent
Modem Times 2.0 by Michael Moorcock
Break by Hannah Moskowitz
Torn (Cold Awakening) by Wasserman, Robin
Beyond the Shroud by V M Jones
A Bone From a Dry Sea by Peter Dickinson
A Reluctant Companion by Kit Tunstall