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Every Summer After: Chapter 18

Winter, Twelve Years Ago

Delilah took a taxi from the train station straight to my house as soon as she got home for Christmas break, dragging her suitcase behind her. She threw her arms around me as soon as I opened the door. I can still remember the smell of her as I pressed my face into her shoulder—a mix of her wool coat, damp from the heavy snowfall, and her Herbal Essences shampoo.

“You look like a piece of shit,” she said when she released me. “We’re not supposed to let men do this to us.”

“I did this to myself,” I replied, and her face crumpled with sympathy.

“I know you did,” she whispered, and then hauled her suitcase up to my room and lay with me on my bed while I recounted everything I had already told her on the phone, including the many messages I had left for Sam that he never returned.

“I haven’t spotted him on campus,” she told me when I’d asked. “But I promise I won’t keep it from you if I do.”

Having Delilah back in Toronto for those short weeks of winter break was the first slice of normal I’d had since summer. She and Patel had gotten back together (for the hundredth time). Delilah said it was a purely casual hookup relationship, but I wasn’t sure I believed her. They had plans to get together over the holiday, but Delilah spent almost all her time with me. We took the subway downtown and bummed around the mall, eating poutine in the food court and sprawling out in the movie theater when our feet got sore.

We sat together on my bedroom floor one day, digging into a whole cheesecake with our forks, and I told her how I’d been struggling at school, how the words weren’t coming to me as easily as they used to when I wrote.

“I miss his feedback,” I told her through a chocolaty mouthful. “I don’t know who I’m writing for anymore.”

“You write for you, Percy, just like you always did,” she said. “I’ll be a reader for you. I promise to keep sex-related requests to a minimum.”

“Is that even possible?” I asked, feeling a rare smile creep across my mouth.

“For you, I’d do anything,” she said with a wink. “Even give up erotic literature.”

On New Year’s Eve, we went to the big concert and countdown in the square outside city hall, huddling against the icy wind and taking covert sips of vodka from her dad’s flask. We didn’t talk about Sam, and when we were together, I felt like I could see past the haze I’d been stumbling through for months. But when she left for Kingston, the fog descended again, draining me of my energy, my appetite, and any ambition I’d once had for excelling at school.

Delilah kept her promise. She called me in early March.

“I saw him,” she said when I picked up. No hello. No small talk.

I was walking between buildings at the university, and sat down on the nearest bench.

“Okay.” I said, exhaling loudly.

“It was at a party.” She paused. “Percy, he was really drunk.”

There was something un-Delilah about the way she spoke. Something too gentle.

“Do I want to hear the next part?” I asked.

“I don’t know,” she said. “It’s not good, Percy. You tell me if you want to hear it.”

I put my head down so my hair fell around my face, protecting me from the bustle of students.

“I have to hear it.”

“Okay.” She took a deep breath. “He hit on me. He told me I looked good and asked if I wanted to go upstairs.” The world stopped moving. “I didn’t, obviously! I told him to go screw himself and left.”

“Sam wouldn’t do that,” I whispered.

“I’m sorry, Percy, but Sam did do that. But he was really, really wasted, like I said.”

“You must have done something,” I cried. “You must have flirted like you always do or told him how cute he was or something.”

“I didn’t!” Delilah said, sounding angry now. “I didn’t do or say anything to make him think I was interested. How could you think that?”

“You can’t blame me for thinking that,” I said crisply. “You know you’re a bit slutty. You’re proud of it.”

The shock of what I said stretched between us. Delilah was silent. I only knew she was there because I could hear her breathing. And when she spoke again, I could also hear that it was through tears.

“I know you’re upset, Percy, and I’m sorry about Sam, but never speak to me like that again. Call me when you’re ready to apologize.”

I sat with my head bent and the phone pressed to my ear long after she hung up. I knew I shouldn’t have said what I did. I knew how ugly it was, and I hadn’t meant it. I thought about calling her back. I thought about saying I was sorry. But I didn’t. I never did.


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