Birds of California(66)



“Yeah, I am.” It feels gross and good to say it, like ripping off a scab. “Quite seriously, how have you spent basically every waking minute with me for the last three weeks and not noticed that? Congratulations, you were right, I’m exactly as much of a fuckup as you’ve always known I was. I have tens of thousands of dollars in credit card debt. I have no idea how I’m going to pay my rent next month. My mom is dying”—he almost gags on the word—“and I’m desperately trying to get my shit in order while she’s still around to see it.”

Fiona smirks. “And doing the Birds of California streaming revival is the thing that’s going to convince her that you’ve really made it?”

Sam feels his whole body flush with shame and anger. “Fuck you.”

“Fuck you,” she counters immediately. “I’m the one person in your life who refused to be manipulated by you, and you couldn’t deal with it, so you spent a month lying to my fucking face instead.”

“Can you blame me?” he bursts out. “You wouldn’t even consider it. Not only would you not consider it, you wouldn’t even do me the courtesy of telling me why.”

“I’ve given you plenty of reasons!”

“Not a single one that isn’t bullshit, you haven’t. What the hell was I supposed to do?”

“Gee, I don’t know.” Fiona looks at him like he’s a clown. “I mean, you could have been the one person in America who respected my fucking boundaries. Just, like, to start.”

“Your boundaries?” Just like that, Sam has had enough. “Come off it, Fiona. You love to act like Darcy Sinclair and whoever else just randomly started picking on you for no reason, but, like: you did all that shit. You did it! I’m sorry, but if you wanted people to stop looking at you all the time then maybe you shouldn’t have walked around for five years of your life acting like a total fucking sideshow!”

Fiona doesn’t say anything for a moment. Right away, Sam knows he’s gone too far. “Fiona—”

“Well!” She cuts him off. “You feel better, now that you finally got that off your chest?”

Sam’s stomach plummets. “I’m sorry,” he tells her, scrubbing both hands through his hair. “I didn’t mean—” He can tell by the expression on her face that he’s just confirmed something for her, some secret fear she’s had that she’s tried to talk herself out of or ignore. He is embarrassed of her, a little bit—more than a little bit, on occasion—and judging by the way she’s looking at him right now there’s a part of her that knew it this whole time. Sam has never felt like more of a coward in his entire life. “I shouldn’t have—look. We’re both worked up, obviously. Why don’t we just—”

“Here’s what’s going to happen right now,” Fiona tells him crisply. She definitely isn’t smiling anymore, but nothing about her is out of control, either. Mostly she just looks . . . blank. “I’m going to go into the bedroom and put my clothes on. You’re going to go out onto the balcony and wait until I’m gone.”

“Fiona—”

“I never want to see you again,” she says calmly. “And I’d like for again to start as soon as possible. So please go.”

Sam stares at her for a long beat, his mouth opening and closing uselessly. Fiona doesn’t wait for his answer before she turns and walks away.





Chapter Seventeen


Fiona


Fiona gets all the way downstairs before she remembers he drove her here last night, the two of them groping each other like teenagers in his stupid fancy car. It feels like a lifetime ago, like it happened to someone else entirely—his hands on someone else’s body, the engine rumbling behind someone else’s knees. She digs her phone out of her bag and calls for an Uber, then stands outside Sam’s apartment for three endless minutes while she waits for it, mostly hoping he won’t come down here after her. Hoping a little bit that he will.

He doesn’t.

She thinks about going to a bar and getting so drunk she can’t see straight. She thinks about calling Richie and seeing if he can hook her up. She thinks about doing something so weird and public and fucked that she winds up back at Cedars, but in the end it all feels like a lot of work for nothing, so instead she rides home in the back of the Uber with her head against the window, looking numbly at Instagram photos of Martha’s Vineyard cottages on her phone.

“Hey,” says the driver, glancing at her in the rearview. “Aren’t you—”

“No,” Fiona says flatly. “I’m not.”

Back at home she gets into bed, puts Wives With Knives on her laptop, and passes out like someone has decked her. When she wakes up, the screen saver is on, and she can tell by the light spilling in through the blinds that it’s already the middle of the afternoon. Her head is throbbing, a dull persistent ache at the back of her skull; the foot masks she did with Claudia and Estelle have finally started to do their thing, and her feet are weird and wrinkly, little shreds of skin flaking off her toes. When she looks at her phone, there’s nothing from Sam—not that she was expecting there to be. There are, however, eleven missed calls from Georgie.

“I have bad news,” Georgie announces when Fiona calls her back, sounding darkly excited to be the bearer of it. “Larry broke both his ankles.”

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