The Roughest Draft(32)
It’s ironic, I realize. In our pretense, we’ve somehow stumbled into honesty. We’ve let ourselves share things we wouldn’t when we were our combative selves, entrenched in our present life.
I wonder where it leaves us, because this fake friendship is starting to feel unnervingly real.
18
Katrina
We’re on the couch, where we’ve wordlessly agreed we’re working today instead of the dining room. Brunch left me feeling off. I don’t know why I confessed to Nathan things I hardly concede to myself, truths whose faces I only glimpse when I’m turning over in bed every night. Hearing them out loud, they sounded ridiculous. But the way Nathan listened told me they weren’t.
I might’ve preferred feeling ridiculous.
When we got home, I pushed those insecurities to the side, knowing what scene lay ahead of us. If discussing our lives over pancakes was the warm-up, writing romance together feels like stepping into a boxing arena. We’ve avoided it long enough, though.
We drifted into the living room, Nathan carrying his computer, and eased onto the couch in front of the porch windows. It’s warm, not hot. The cushions sink welcomingly beneath me. The room is cozy, and completely incongruent with what we have to do. Nathan, next to me, is sitting legs crossed with his ankle propped on his knee.
While we write, I feel his eyes move from the screen to my hands folded in my lap. I know what he’s noticing, not for the first time. Just like I recognized Nathan was so strikingly similar to how I remembered him, he would’ve done the same. He would have seen how little I’ve changed from the Katrina he knew, despite the enormity of the upheavals in our relationship. My hair is long, my skin pale from my indoor workdays.
Except for the ring.
The engagement ring I’ve worn for two years now is the one outward sign of what’s changed in the years Nathan and I have spent pretending each other didn’t exist. To be honest, the ring is not the one I would have chosen for myself. But it’s very Chris, for which, I have reminded myself, I’m grateful in other ways. It’s princess-cut, with strands of diamond and platinum sweeping up the sides of the square stone. Which is huge. I have small hands—comes with being five foot four—and I remember how weird typing was with the noticeable extra weight on one finger. With time, I’ve gotten used to the feeling.
Chris proposed to me on New Year’s Eve. He’d told me we could celebrate at one of our favorite hotel bars, and he’d booked us a suite in the hotel for the night. We went. We had fun. It was predictable fun, uncomplicated. I remember feeling grateful for this. Everything in my life for too long had been hard. Working with Nathan, fretting over Only Once, escaping my subconscious in a maze I sometimes suspected had no ending. I wanted something comfortable, ordinary, comprehensible. Enjoying music and drinks with my boyfriend in the company of strangers was perfect.
With minutes until midnight, Chris gently insisted we head up from the crowded bar to check out the room. He walked me to the balcony, the night stretching lavishly below us. Chris handles his liquor well— though there was some pink in his cheeks, his eyes were bright and intense and his speech emotional and clear when he asked me to marry him.
It was easy saying yes. Chris kissed me, drawing my face to his. While he snapped a photo of us, I closed my eyes for some reason. We had sex. I remember feeling happy getting into bed next to him past midnight on what was officially New Year’s Day. I was loved. I was okay. I was moving forward. The future in front of me was welcoming and sure.
Maybe Chris wasn’t the love story I’d imagined for myself. Our romance wasn’t pining and fanfare and fated flourishes. But it was better because it was real. I didn’t need to be in a love story—I only needed to be in love.
In general, I couldn’t care less what Nathan feels when he sees my engagement ring. Right now, however, I doubt it’s helping our progress into the day’s scene. The first page is finished—we’ve written the opening without incident. It’s a flashback, one where Evelyn and Michael have just returned home, exhausted from the long day they spent driving down the coast. A spark between them leaps into flame.
It’s as far as we’ve gotten. They exchange one heated look, and now we can’t push the cursor forward.
“What if we just don’t do the flashbacks?” Nathan proposes, his voice halfway to pleading.
“The book doesn’t work without them,” I say gently. “We have to show the height of their passion.”
Nathan unfolds his leg, putting his other foot on the floor. “Okay, well, what if the height of their passion is . . . gardening, or making pasta? Why does it have to be sex?”
I smother a laugh. Pasta? “Are you listening to yourself right now?” I ask. If Nathan Van Huysen is suggesting something so obviously counterproductive to the book’s interests, then he’s as uncomfortable as I am.
I don’t examine the reasons because they’re not worth examining. When we first started working together, writing physical romance was awkward. Writing anything is vulnerable. It’s stripping yourself bare for your reader even when your content has nothing to do with sex. Nathan and I blushed and averted our eyes and covered over our discomfort with laughter in those early days. Getting to know each other better didn’t make it easier. It made it worse. I didn’t want to think about how my friend liked to undress a woman or how he liked to be touched. I didn’t want him to know what I liked, either. It doesn’t even matter if the things I write don’t reflect my personal preferences. I’ve chosen them, which means enough.