Spoiler Alert (Spoiler Alert #1)(95)
One armful at a time, minute by minute, everything settled back into place. Clothing, toiletries, tech, emotions. His life, restored to its state pre-April. If he didn’t know better, he’d think he’d never left at all.
Then he saw it, carefully tucked inside a pocket, cushioned from damage with newspaper.
“I changed my mind,” she’d told him one Saturday, as they’d stood on the cliffs above the Sutro Baths and watched the tide roll in. “I thought you were a diamond, and then I thought you were gold. But none of that was quite right. Not once I knew you better.”
After squeezing his hand, she’d let go of him and gone digging in her oversize purse.
“I’ll be glad to hand it over.” The setting sun sparked in her hair as she shook her head ruefully. “It’s heavy as fuck. You’d think it would be easy to find for exactly that reason, but . . .”
He’d help her, only he had no idea what the hell she was talking about. “I’m sorry?”
“I got you a gift,” she told him cheerfully, and kept digging.
He stared down at her, speechless. The last time anyone had given him a present with no ulterior motive, no special occasion or achievement to celebrate— Well, that had never happened before. Not once in his memory.
“There it is.” Lifting her head, she smiled with satisfaction and put something extremely heavy in his palm. It was wrapped in newspaper, but vaguely round. “Open it.”
The sheets of newspaper crinkled as he carefully unfolded them, revealing . . . stone. The most beautiful stone he’d ever seen. It was a rich, intense blue, speckled with white, veined in what appeared to be gold. A polished sphere, cool in his cupped hand.
“It’s lapis lazuli.” With a fingertip, she tapped the stone. “When we went to that gem and mineral warehouse the other weekend, I picked it up. While you were in the bathroom.”
He’d have appreciated anything she gave him. Movie tickets. One of those fossilized pieces of feces—coprolites?—they’d seen in the warehouse. A soda. Whatever.
But this . . . this was gorgeous, as lovely as the woman who’d gifted it to him.
Then she kept talking, and his heart swelled to fill his entire chest and push up into his throat.
“Lapis is a metamorphic rock. The original rock is subjected to intense heat and pressure, and then . . . this.” She laid her palm on his chest, over his expanding heart, her touch reverent. “Beauty.”
He’d bitten his lip, unable to respond directly to the implied praise without weeping. “Those veins in the rock aren’t actually gold, are they?”
“Nope.” She lifted a shoulder, the movement a bit jerky. “Pyrite. Fool’s gold. Sorry.”
Shit, she thought he was criticizing the gift, and nothing could be further from the truth.
“Gold couldn’t make this any more beautiful than it is.” Tipping up her chin, he kissed her with all the adoration one man’s overfull heart could contain. “Thank you. I love it.”
Maybe she hadn’t said the words, but he’d recognized the gravity of her offering. It wasn’t just a sphere of stone, but— Her heart. It had felt like her laying her heart in his palm, despite all her fears.
When it came to bravery, April possessed more than her fair share.
When it was much too late, he’d been brave too. He’d told the truth, all of it. He’d exposed his heart to her without artifice or omission and told her, This part of me is pyrite, not gold.
And once she knew, she didn’t want him. He was a liar, valuable only to a fool who mistook him for something more.
And now that she was gone, he was no longer more to anyone. He was no longer a sphere of rich, speckled blue, polished and beautiful but substantial too. Weighty in his palm, then and now.
Now he was a speck of a man. One of the sunlit dust motes that sparkled and floated inside her car, glinting and aimless and adrift.
Yes, he was angry that she’d dismissed his concerns about his career with such blithe disregard. But he was angrier at himself. Still. Always.
He never learned. He never, ever learned.
His phone buzzed from the top of the dresser. Another text from Alex, who’d apparently received Marcus’s own message at long last.
Dude. I’m so sorry, read the bubble on the screen. I’m coming over.
Marcus exhaled. Thank fuck. He needed his best friend, and he needed something to both puncture the silence of his house and quiet the cacophony in his head.
Alex could do all of that easily, with a single rant about unrealistic judging expectations in televised baking competitions. Especially if he brought— Another incoming message. I know it’s not your usual thing, but wanna get drunk? I can pick up booze on my way there.
Yes, Marcus wrote back. Please.
He didn’t unwrap the lapis sphere. Instead, he placed it, still swathed in newsprint, in the back corner of his closet, behind the shoe box containing a pair of hiking boots he’d never managed to break in.
There, it couldn’t taunt him with what he’d lost, and it couldn’t remind him of what he’d never truly had.
APRIL WAS DONE hiding. Which meant, unfortunately, that she was going to Con of the Gates tomorrow, less than a week after her breakup with Marcus. Public scrutiny and potential humiliation and her own misery be damned.
She didn’t fool herself. It wasn’t going to be comfortable. After all those tweets and blog posts and articles, too many people knew her face now. They knew her body. There would be no hiding in a crowd, and no hiding the fact that she and Marcus hadn’t attended the con together.