Scandalized(69)


I barely move. I stare up at my ceiling, at the fan that goes around and around and around, wishing for nothing more than the distance of time. I remember this feeling after Spence—the helpless, skin-clawing crawl of time passing after heartbreak. Wanting to skip all the pain and anguish. And on top of it, there is guilt this time, knowing that a choice I made without asking has complicated things for Alec. I snatched an easy explanation right out of his hands.

And all I can do is sit in the pain, breathing through it. Remembering the sound of his voice and the weight of his hands, the heat of him in the bath last night and his lazy, slippery kisses. I can only let this hurt and anger and sadness pass through me. I know I didn’t imagine what happened between us, and I’m worried this is it for us. I’m worried about him.

I wonder whether he’ll get written out of the show, whether the network will back him up, whether there is some other way to clear his name that doesn’t involve Sunny. I wonder all of these things for him in a flurry, hoping that he can make it out the other side all the while knowing that if the media is unkind, the internet is a mass of bloodthirsty savages. Every minute that passes without Alec fixing this is a year off his life as an actor.

I’m in the middle of a mental tornado when Eden walks into my room. “I thought you were at work.”

“I was,” she says. “I came home.” Dark circles carve shadows beneath her eyes; she looks like she is about to fall over. She looks worse than I feel. “Have you seen Twitter?”

“I saw his pics, yeah. It’s not what it looks like.”

She shakes her head and hands me her phone, and I don’t even feel satisfied to have been right that we were not anonymous on the beach. That the stupid-hat-and-sunglasses trick did not hide our identities when we went out for doughnuts. And that no matter how many times Alec looked over my shoulder at the bar in Seattle, he still missed the cell phone pointed right at us.





Nineteen


Alec sitting across the low bar table from me, our hands are joined over the center, eyes locked.

Alec pinning me against the rock cliff, his hand grasping my waist, mouth sweetly pressed to mine.

Alec in sunglasses and a baseball hat, laughing as I feed him a bite of doughnut.

Me reaching to wipe a smudge of chocolate from the corner of Alec’s mouth.

All these perfect memories have been posted by TMZ for the whole world to see. Their carefully curated collection, shared in a single tweet, has nearly five thousand retweets and ten times as many likes in only two hours.

I’ve seen the internet dogpile before, but I’ve never even been a close bystander. Now, in the same tweets that contain thinly veiled rape accusations against Alec, I am accused of covering up his crimes, of using my position at the LA Times to shelter a criminal. With the photos of him outside Jupiter, it is a veritable bloodbath now. Eden has already had to delete all of the social media apps from my phone because I was starting to hyperventilate.

Two hours later, still numb and reeling, I’m walking to the kitchen for a glass of water when my phone rings. I’ve been expecting this call at some point from Billy, but adrenaline makes me light-headed anyway and I perch carefully at the edge of the couch. I can’t decide whether this call took more or less time to arrive than I expected.

He’s silent for a good five seconds before saying only, “Hey, George.”

My voice is hoarse from yelling into the void of my bedroom. “Hey.” I close my eyes and pull my brain into order. “I bet I know why you’re calling. We need to craft a response plan.”

A long, blown-out exhale. “Actually, kiddo, I gotta ask you to come in and drop off your credentials.”

My world hits pause, and my stomach drops through the floor. He’s… firing me? Sex with sources is frowned upon but rarely results in termination anymore. “What?”

Billy’s voice comes out thinner. “We’ll do a quick exit interview. I promise to keep it painless.”

I stare at the wall in shock. Painless? Is he for real? I didn’t think it would be possible, but this conversation with Billy is more painful than the last one we had. He sounds so defeated, telling me I’m out of a job. I’ve seen my boss excitedly foulmouthed, angrily foulmouthed, and joyfully foulmouthed. But I’ve never heard him sound resigned before. He isn’t even going to fight for me?

“Billy.” My voice comes out wavy with heat. I’m past devastated now and am sliding into angry. “You’re firing me for sleeping with Alec? Are you serious? This is exactly why I didn’t include his account in the story!”

“You know this isn’t coming from me,” he says.

I don’t know what to say to that. It is absolutely him—Billy has been at the Times for twenty years; he has pull there. The Netflix and BBC spokespeople have already come out and stated unequivocally that Alec is not in any way involved in the alleged crimes that happened at Jupiter. Billy and the Times could come out with the same; they could keep me if they wanted.

“Unbelievable,” I say, pacing. “You know I tried to do the right thing here.”

“I hate being told what to do,” he says, “but in this case, I agree the optics aren’t good.”

I lift a shaking hand and smother back an agitated, disbelieving laugh. It was Eden who, only an hour ago, in a brief moment of hysterical levity, suggested we revise our drinking game with some truly macabre rules:

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