Stories We Ruined Together Pt. 10

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Things boil over dramatically.
2.1k words
4.44
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3

Part 10 of the 12 part series

Updated 06/11/2023
Created 07/18/2022
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I was stuck for a while. Pulled in opposite directions, confused and hurt and angry and sad. Mostly I was angry. At life -- for throwing this unpleasantness into my path right when I had thought that I was in love and loved back (even if we hadn't said the words aloud). I felt I'd been cheated, cheated by fate. Of course I should have thrown my anger at Ed, I should have confronted him, and told him how his actions had made me feel, how much he'd hurt me. But I didn't. Instead I found excuses to avoid him, and told myself I was buying time, while I figured out what I wanted, what I could do, how I could resolve all of this.

Four days after Mary's revelation, I met Brian after work. We sat in the half-empty pub, on comfy chairs, with pints of snakebite because he said he was in a very nostalgic mood. It was good to see his face. Good to see someone who hadn't hurt me, who I could actually trust. We shot the shit for a while, and then with the second pint he described the recent misadventures of his sister, and his concerns, and I listened sympathetically. When he talks seriously, which is not often, you can't not feel for him. Sometimes I think he's one of those too-sensitive souls, underneath. One of the ones who are too innocent for this world that we all have to live in.

"Anyway, that's all that's going on with me. So! You." He looked at me expectantly. He knew me well enough to know that I wasn't quite right. He could read me like that, even just from texts. I picked up my glass and drank, considering how much to share.

"I thought Ed and I were doing really well. I actually thought he could be the right one for me, everything... everything was great. And I thought he cared about me. Then I got a bit of a shock."

"Oh?"

"Yeah. So, basically... a little while back I put on a bit of a show for him...and-"

"- wait, wait." That cheeky smile. "Set the scene for me here. What kind of show?"

I couldn't help but grin. Here I was spilling my guts in the most sensitive fashion, and this crazy queen was zeroing right in on the smut. "You're such a bitch. Well, I was on the bed... with a dildo... so... do I need to continue?"

Brian laughed gently at my blush. "I get the picture. I always want details, sue me. So, what went wrong? He's damn lucky to have seen that, any man would be delighted to. Well you know, any straight man."

"Fuck me, how do I even say this. So yeah, it all went well. Yeah, he loved it. And I enjoyed it too, to be honest. It was... it was really nice."

"Just nice?"

"It was an escape. From being so... me, all the time." I exhaled slowly, and he raised his eyebrows, waiting for the problem. With me there's always a problem - have you noticed that yet? "But I found out later that he took photos of me, without me realising. I had my eyes closed mostly." I had my eyes closed... hilarious. Wonderful. I could have been talking about the whole relationship, the whole thing. What a naïve person I was.

"I'm really sorry to hear that. That's just... wrong. It might be illegal too, I'm not sure. What the hell is his deal? Why would he think that was okay?"

"I don't know." I explained how I found out, and said that I felt sorry for Mary, getting caught up in the middle of this shit-show, caught in the crossfire. Poor cow.

"What did he say then? Did he try to defend himself?"

"I haven't actually confronted him about it, as yet." I blushed again, this time it was real shame. Cowardly old me.

"You could just block him, on everything. Or contact the police, set them on him."

"No, I don't want to get any more people involved. I really, really don't want anyone else to know, if I can avoid it. I don't think he's shown anyone else but who the fuck knows what he's done." I gulped my drink too hard, spluttered some of it, but Brian didn't laugh like he normally would. His eyes showed only concern.

"Just block him then. I mean, you could have it out with him first, that would be cool. Let him know what a lowlife he is, and then ditch him."

I nodded, and said I would do that. Although I wasn't sure that I would. I wasn't sure about much, I was wading through thick muddy uncertainty.

For a couple of days I dodged Ed's messages, even the pleading one that made me feel weirdly guilty. At work I maintained my cheerful veneer, and did my best to get on with my job, and look normal. Brian messaged me to ask if there was any update, and I ignored him too.

Saturday morning came around and I found myself pushing cereal around my bowl, daydreaming about quitting my job and moving away, when the buzzer for my flat rang. Romeo fixed me with a cold feline stare, like 'are you going to get that or what?'. I shook my head. Zero desire to. But the buzzer went again, and my daydream had been chased away, so I got up and walked over to the door. I opened that and went to the main door of the building, the big heavy Victorian one, or at least I think it's probably Victorian. Maybe they replaced it at some point, I don't know. It looks old. Anyway, that's not relevant to my story. I opened it knowing that Ed was probably on the other side, and he was. His face looked sad in spite of the smile he had placed upon it.

"Hi Lizzie."

"Hi Ed."

"Are you... okay? Have you been alright? I just..."

"Yeah, I've been... yeah. Do you want to come in?" I didn't want him inside but I really didn't want my neighbours listening. "Or actually, shall we go for a walk or something?"

Ed shrugged, and pawed his messy hair. "Sure, let's do that."

I got my coat and off we went, down the road and towards the town centre. Neither of us spoke for a few minutes, and then he asked if he had done something wrong. And inside of me there was so much anger, so much hurt, but also confusion, and desire. And I didn't know how to express any of it to him, how to make him understand. I didn't even want to put into words what he had done to me by taking those photos in secret, and then showing them to someone else. I've thought about that since -- why was it so hard to say the words, to tell him 'here, look -- this is what you did to me. And this is why it hurt me so much.' To be honest I think a lot of me was just afraid of letting go of him, even though he'd betrayed me. So all I did was say that I'd had a tough few days, and wasn't feeling too sociable.

"I get that, don't worry about it. I mean, bloody hell, I know what that feels like. I've had my fair share. He rubbed his face and glanced over at me, but I kept my gaze forward. "Is it anything... specific, going on? Anything I can help with?" I shook my head, no. "Really? Are you sure? Okay. Well just let me know, anytime. And whatever it is... I think you're wonderful. I really do. You're amazing."

That shouldn't have made me feel good but it did. It worked on me. I suppose that's how much I was craving affection, and acceptance. Ed must have seen my face clear a bit, or maybe I even smiled, because he visibly relaxed and launched into a story about a colleague of his making a huge scene with a customer, during a very unprofessional argument concerning the last general election. Normally it would be my kind of anecdote, but I struggled to concentrate. He babbled on while I bubbled up, inside. Everything was turning over and over, the wants and the hates, the pain and the love, all scrapping and wrestling like cats in a sack, and I with every passing minute it increased, making me feel like my sanity was at sudden and serious risk.

We stopped at a pedestrian crossing, traffic passing at the speed-limit of thirty, normal vehicle numbers for a usual steady Saturday afternoon in our town. Waiting for the lights to change, we stood side by side, and Ed put his arm around my waist as he continued to talk. His fingers felt like iron, felt like he had me trapped, encaged with the lightest of touches, helpless. I wanted to move, was desperate for the lights to change, felt that too long just standing there with him would destroy me, somehow. I wanted out. I wanted to get free, get free from everything. It was all welling up, it was all too much, high pressure, unsustainable intensity, something had to give -- and then without conscious thought I twisted my body and shoved myself into Ed, pushing him off the curb and into the road. I closed my eyes immediately and the sound of the car's brakes filled my head.

No, he didn't die -- you already know that. The driver did a good job, really slammed on those brakes, and swerved at the same time, ending up just brushing Ed's coat -- and they even managed to avoid crashing into the traffic island. There was fallout, obviously. I don't remember it very well -- just that a few onlookers rushed over to check on us, the driver got out, creating a traffic jam. Maybe that person was shaking, maybe they were calm. I can't even remember if it was a man or a woman. A woman, I think. Middle-aged? Probably a mother, probably someone with a very busy life who really didn't need this in her day. But I don't recall any harsh words -- only concern. The superfluous folk drifted off when they realised no one had been hurt, no further help was required. Off to their lives, whatever those lives were. I don't think I spoke. Ed and the driver talked, and a couple of minutes later we parted from her, she drove slowly away and the traffic resumed. The first few motorists who passed the lights looked over at us, cautiously, probably wondering what the incident to delay them had been, but everyone else just went by oblivious.

I'm still not sure if anyone saw me shove him. He knew, and I knew, and we both knew that the other knew. But we didn't talk about it. We just walked slowly back to my flat, in silence. Some of it must have been shock. I didn't know what I had really wanted to do, what I had really tried to make happen. I still don't, honestly. You don't have to believe me, but it's true. It's true. On the way back I didn't look at him, I counted the chewing gum patches on the pavement. At least I think I did. At the door to the flats we stopped, and it started to spit, the early warnings of real rain. It was cold, it was so cold. Ed took my hand and opened his mouth, about to say something, but I pulled away from him and in an instant I was inside, and I closed the door behind me and entered my flat, and threw myself down on the sofa. Romeo trotted over and miaowed for his lunch but I didn't move. That turmoil was gone, at least. That burning, swirling, aching mix of emotion that had climbed up before I pushed him, that was gone. Now I felt nothing.

Eventually I did feed Romeo. Then I turned off my phone, closed my curtains because darkness had fallen hard, and dug out my emergency bottle of wine. I found a film on the TV, not caring what it was, and returned to the sofa, and stayed there until the film was over and the bottle was empty. I couldn't tell you what that film was about, I've really no idea. As the credits slowly rolled I picked up my phone and turned it on again, and before I could think too much I sent Ed a message.

It read:

I'm sorry about today. It's over, we shouldn't see each other again. Bye

Then I tossed my phone across the room, left it where it landed on the carpet in the corner, and put myself to bed, blocking all the thoughts that I could, and, trying and failing to hold back my emotions, I pulled the duvet up over my head and shivered and shuddered with the English winter cold and my irrepressible tears.

**

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AnonymousAnonymousover 1 year ago

Over shocking betrayal still stewing

Confusion and anger a-brewing

From a daze of duped love

Bursts one fateful shove ---

Goodbye text admits no misconstruing.

5 stars

MigbirdMigbirdover 1 year ago

So much achieved in short/brief space — you write so very well; really bring to life your main character — feel like we know her/could talk with her. Thick muddy uncertainty is ideal metaphor for her state of mind; this entire chapter/scene makes real that uncertainty in various ways and you literally share with us. Like referencing the Victorian door and acknowledging that distraction as irrelevant to story — speaks to us and her distracted state of mind, And her almost rambling introspection around the near accident is exactly what would happen — very well done. Some might say curb side event bit melodramatic, but disagree. It reflects perfectly her emotional state of mind — his arm around her in her conflicted state only heightens already very tense/conflicted feelings and forces “release” — almost metaphorical moment. But at the end of this piece tension simmers and conflict unresolved. Obviously I enjoy “overthinking” your work; a compliment. Isn’t that what one does while reading good fiction?

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