Mr. Wrong Number(5)
Mr. Wrong Number: Three examples, please.
I smiled. It felt wildly freeing to talk to someone who didn’t know me.
Me: In college, I was clipping my toenails and ended up having to wear an eye patch for a month.
Mr. Wrong Number: Disgusting, but impressive. #2?
Me: I once got stuck in a tipped-over porta-potty.
Mr. Wrong Number: Good Lord.
Me: Music festival, strong winds. The thing blew over, door side down. I still have nightmares.
Mr. Wrong Number: I want to move on to #3, but I have to know how long you were trapped.
Me: Twenty minutes but it felt like days. My drunk friends lifted it enough for me to squeeze through the door crack.
Mr. Wrong Number: I’m assuming you were . . .
Me: Absolutely covered in waste.
Mr. Wrong Number: I just threw up a little in my mouth.
Me: As you should. And just to add a cherry to the top of your entertainment sundae, the story ends in me being doused with gallons of high-powered water that were dispensed by a fire hose.
Mr. Wrong Number: Wow. You definitely can’t top #2.
Me: Oh, you ignorant little fool. #2 is but a warm-up.
Mr. Wrong Number: Well give me #3, then.
I thought about it for a minute. I mean, there were hundreds of embarrassing bad luck moments I could’ve shared with him. The time I dropped a bowling ball on my toe on my first date, the time I fell into an empty pool and broke my elbow; such was my life. But since I didn’t know him and he didn’t know me, I shared the rawest one.
Me: Not only did I introduce my boyfriend—now ex—to my stunningly beautiful coworker, but I encouraged him to collaborate with her on a project that required them to spend countless hours alone together in her apartment.
Mr. Wrong Number: Oof.
Me: Right? Probably doesn’t qualify as bad luck when it’s pure stupidity.
Mr. Wrong Number: I don’t know you, so you could be a raging psycho. BUT. If you’re not, I think it makes you unbelievably cool, the fact that you’d trust them both that much.
I hadn’t actually told anyone in the world what’d happened with Eli yet, so it felt good, having someone say that.
Me: You say that, but would you ever be that stupid?
Mr. Wrong Number: No comment.
I snorted. See?
Mr. Wrong Number: How about I give you one of my stupid moments to even this out?
Me: I thought you said it wasn’t stupid.
Mr. Wrong Number: Hush.
Me: Please continue.
Mr. Wrong Number: In college, I proposed to my girlfriend without a ring.
Me: That’s not stupid.
Mr. Wrong Number: She said no because—and I quote—“if you knew me at all, you’d know I want a ring.”
Me: Oof.
Mr. Wrong Number: Right?
Me: I can’t imagine having my life together enough IN COLLEGE to propose marriage. I was still getting floor-licking drunk every weekend right up until graduation.
Mr. Wrong Number: Maybe I should’ve tried that, instead.
Me: I’m guessing you’re over it?
Mr. Wrong Number: Why are you guessing that?
Me: Because you’re sending “what are you wearing” texts to randos.
Mr. Wrong Number: I AM over it, but you were a misdial, not a rando. I was sending that text to someone I knew, remember?
Me: Oh, yes—of course.
I stretched my legs out in front of me and looked up at the stars. It was a gorgeous night, and I was actually having fun.
Talking to a wrong number.
God, I was pathetic.
Me: Listen, Wrong Number, you seem like a damned delight, but I don’t have any interest in an internet friend. I’ve seen Catfish and 90 Day Fiancé, and that is not my jam.
Mr. Wrong Number: Nor mine.
Me: So . . . have a great night, then.
Mr. Wrong Number: So that’s it? It’s either zero or Catfish?
Me: Afraid so.
Mr. Wrong Number: And this isn’t the internet, for the record.
Me: True, but still the same.
Mr. Wrong Number: You don’t find this kind of . . . entertaining?
Me: I do, actually.
Mr. Wrong Number: So . . . ?
Me: So . . . sticking with my original answer. These things always get weird.
Mr. Wrong Number: You’re probably right. Especially with your bad luck.
Me: Yup.
Mr. Wrong Number: Well, good night, then, Miss Misdial.
Me: Good night to you, Mr. Wrong Number.
I put my phone away and it almost felt like I was waking up from something, like I’d just come outside after a month in a dark basement. I felt more relaxed than I’d been in a really long time as I stretched in the moonlight and stacked my hands behind my head.
It was strange to think, but I kind of felt like it was because I’d unloaded on Wrong Number. I felt lighter. Light enough to go back to the apartment, in fact.
Because really, who cared if Jack and Colin thought I was a loser? Why had I let that bother me in the first place? I loved my brother, but the reality was that theirs was just an apartment for me to sleep in for the next month.
A really nice apartment that I was going to enjoy, dammit. Like an Airbnb without the required payment.
I texted Jack: Are you guys home?