Dear Ana: A Novel -
Dear Ana: Chapter 11
Hey, what time are you coming by today? I have a surprise for you đ âNoah
Hey, itâs getting kind of late, are you okay? âNoah
Maya, Iâm getting really worried, call me âNoah
Please call me so I know youâre okay âNoah
There were about forty more messages and double the amount of missed calls, all sent to voicemail and then deleted without listening. It wasnât because I didnât know what to say to himââthe complete opposite, actually. I had too much to say. Too many reasons. I could tell him about Mikhail. I could tell him that my parents thought I was a mental case and I was starting to believe them. I could tell him that I was extremely disconnected from reality and my days were all blurred together, making it really hard to maintain a conversation. I could tell him that only months ago I was seriously considering death. I could tell him that the sister he lost . . . the sister he loved more than anythingâs heart was living in my chest, pumping two thousand gallons of blood a day, and the guilt was eating away at me with every painful beat.
Or I could lie. I could say that I didnât know what was wrong. That nothing was wrong. That the chemicals in my brain just decided to be scrambled and unbalanced, refusing to provide me with the necessary levels of serotonin and dopamine to get through the day. That the imaginary tiny pills I placed under my tongue every morning just to survive were suddenly out of stock. That I lost my phone, or accidentally dropped it in a ditch, or was out of town, or was super, duper busyââanything. I could come up with any lie that I knew he would believe, and then we could continue with our uncomplicated and fake routine.
Which was easier? When Noah asked me what was wrong and I lied and said I donât know, or when Noah asked me what was wrong and I told him the ugly truth? Neither of them were easy, so instead I chose option three. The option I always chose when things got hard. Instead of dealing with it, I simply stuffed him away in a box of problems I avoided in the hopes that they would somehow just fix themselves. I cut Noah out of my life so that he could never ask and I could never answer.
I missed him, though. I tried not to. I tried to forget about Noah Davidson and that dimpled, lopsided smile that brightened his face every time he looked at me. I tried to forget about that dorky little gap between his two front teeth, and his constant charismatic attitude, and how he would call me chick and I would call him dude, and that feeling I felt where I wanted to tell him about everything, and anything, and nothing at all. But then, like a punch to the gut, Iâd realize that one day I actually would forget and suddenly all I wanted was to remember those simple, yet lovely things forever. As much as I hated to admit it, the last few measly monthsââeighty-six and a half days to be preciseââwere the closest thing to happiness I had felt in a very long time. Heâd become my best friend quickly, bit by bit, and so effortlessly that I didnât even realize it until after he was gone.
âMaya, what are you doing?â Sheila demanded, interrupting my reverie.
âIâm putting away the recovery from the fitting room,â I replied, pointing at the clothing rack I was pushing onto the sales floor.
âDid you do a round of maintenance?â
âYes.â
âAre you sure?â
For fucks sake.
âYes,â I repeated, not able to hide my annoyance any longer.
âOkay, you can finish doing this rack, but when youâre done just focus on cleaning the store. Make sure when youâre cleaning the bathrooms youâre actually wiping the toilet seats.â
As soon as she walked away I closed my eyes and focused on my breathing so I wouldnât scream.
I had somehow managed to avoid working retail for twenty-three years, up until a year and a half ago when I applied to work at Tysons. I assumed at the time I would just be organizing clothes and merchandise, which didnât sound too bad, only to realize once I got hired that wasnât exactly the case. Working retail was honestly code for labor. Dirty work. I was constantly dealing with ignorant customers, drug addicts who only came in to hide in our bathroom to snort some coke, and gangs of thieves who came in to openly rob the store because they knew we werenât allowed to confront them about it.
But despite all that, it was my assistant manager who was the reason I wanted to quit after every shift. I wasnât sure what I could have possibly done to piss her offââI seemed to just have that effect on peopleââbut she was dead set on making each of my shifts miserable. And, coincidently, I was always scheduled on maintenance when we were working together.
âMaya?â
I jumped in surprise at his voice behind me.
âNoah? What are you doing here?â
âYou wear glasses?â he asked instead of answering my question.
I adjusted them slightly on my nose. âYeah . . . surprise! Iâm blind.â
He smirked at my weak attempt at being funny. âThey suit you.â
âI usually wear contacts, obviously, but I was too tired to put them in today. Sometimes I donât wear either though, because I just donât feel like seeing. It sounds weird but itâs actually kind of nice.â
He didnât pretend to laugh this time and examined my face with concern. âYou look exhausted, Maya.â
I was exhausted. Although Mikhail pretty much avoided me, I still couldnât bring myself to surrender into unconsciousness. I needed to stay alert at all times . . . just in case.
âHey, talk to me,â he said quietly, stepping closer. âWhatâs wrong?â
âMaya, what are you doing?â
This bitch is seriously spying on me.
âI was just directing this customer to where we keep our bedding supply,â I said, looking back at Sheila.
âI can answer any questions you have. Sheâs cleaning,â she told Noah, smiling.
Yeah, because you need a fucking Ph.D. to answer questions about thread count.
âMaya is more than capable to assist me,â Noah said, an edge to his voice.
Sheila glanced between us, sensing something there. âWell, donât take too long. You still have to finish your rounds.â
âActually,â I said, putting my cleaning spray back on the cart. âIâm going to take my break. It was scheduled thirty minutes ago.â
She narrowed her eyes at me but nodded and walked away.
âSomeoneâs got a stick up their ass,â he said, glaring at her retreating figure.
âCome on,â I told him and started toward the door. A harsh breeze immediately hit me the second I stepped outside. I quickly walked to the far corner, away from prying eyes, and stopped. âWhat are you doing here?â
âAre you seriously asking me that?â
I looked away, rocking back and forth slightly to keep warm. I saw him move from the corner of my eye and watched as he held up his jacket. After a few seconds of hesitation, I carefully slipped my arms through and let him button me up. He adjusted the collar to cover my exposed neck and pulled his hood up over my head to protect my face from the wind. His fingers grazed my cheeks slightly, erupting every nerve in my body into flames. Despite the brisk cold licking my skin, I suddenly felt warm. Too warm.
Thump, thumpââ
âMaya,â he whispered. âWhat happened last week? I was so worried about you. After going to three different Tysons across town, I finally tracked you down here.â
Lie or truth, lie or truth, lie or truthââ
âYou didnât have to do that, Noah. Iâm fine.â
âEnough with that fucking word, Maya. If you were really fine, then why didnât you say that after the hundreds of messages I left you?â
My once opaque lies were suddenly becoming translucent.
âLook,â he started. âI know I probably came off pretty strong the last time we talked. I didnât mean to make you uncomfortable; I just couldnât help myself. I canât seem to think logically when Iâm with you, which sounds ridiculous since we havenât known each other for very long,â he smiled sheepishly. âBut Iâm sorry. I know you need to take things slow and I respect that.â
Option fourââhe blamed himself for my actions. An option I never considered. An option I didnât accept.
âYou didnât do anything wrong. Itâs me.â
He looked confused for a second before realization sparked on his face. âIs this the part where you give me the whole speech about how youâre a messy sad person, and thereâs a million other people I could be friends with? Because I still have it memorized.â
âIâm sorry for the inconvenience,â I assured him sarcastically.
âYouâre not an inconvenience, Iâm just . . . Iâm worried about you. Whatâs going on?â
âNothingâs going on.â
âThatâs obviously not true,â he disagreed gently. âYou can trust me, Maya, with whatever it is.â
âTrust you? Weâve known each other for five seconds and Iâm just supposed to trust you now?â
âI trust you.â
And he did. I already knew he did. I could hear it in his voice when he spoke to me about his past with raw vulnerability. I could see it in his eyes when he looked at me, pupils open and ready, wholeheartedly inviting me into uncharted territory. It was a wholesome kind of honor to be trusted by someone like Noah. To be seen as a person worth his trust. But it was also a mistake.
I took a deep breath to soothe the sudden ache in my chest. âIâm sorry. I know Iâm being mean, and secretive, and difficult . . . just do yourself a favor and leave.â
âYouâre confusing my flattery for an insult. I like those things about you. I like everything about you.â
Thump, thumpââ
âLeave.â
He didnât move.
âIâm serious, Noah, go.â
I waited silently for him to leave. To accept it and walk away, but he just continued to stand there.
âAre you bored?â I asked incredulously. âI mean, thatâs why you quit your fancy engineering job, right? Because you were bored. And now your cute and artsy cafĂ© isnât fulfilling enough, so youâve decided that your next entertaining challenge is going to be me?â His eyes hardened, but his feet stayed firmly planted, never wavering, fueling my newly accepted rage. âLeave.â
He didnât. He stayed put, scrutinizing me intensely.
âWho hurt you?â he asked suddenly.
âExcuse me?â
âWho hurt you?â he repeated, taking a step closer. âTell me who did this to you. Tell me what happened to make you so closed off, and cynical.â
âNobody hurt me,â I lied. âGod, Noah, I warned you. I warned you about me, but you still went ahead and made me be your fucking friend anyway.â
âMade you? I donât remember holding a gun to your head for the last three months, Maya. Besides, if anyoneâs at fault here, itâs you.â
âMe?â
âYes, you,â he stressed icily. âIf you didnât want me to like you, you shouldnât have made it so fucking easy.â
âThis is easy? Having to track me down for days just to see if Iâm okay, only to get bitched at as a thank you?â I laughed humorlessly at his ridicule. âNobody wants this, Noah. I just need a minute, okay? All my friends know that this is what I do and theyâre fine with it. Why canât you be fine with it too?â
âDonât lump me in with your friends, and not just because theyâre doing a shitty job fulfilling that title,â he snapped. âI can be a better friend than them . . . but I donât want to be your friend.â
Thump, thumpââ
âStop,â I interrupted him.
âI want to be so much more than just your friend, Maya. I want to hold all your deepest secrets in my heart. I want to spend all my seconds of the day with you. I wantâââ
THUMP, THUMPââ
âI said stop,â I repeated louder, to both of them. This conversation wasnât going as planned. I didnât want to hear this. I didnât want to feel the thrilling warmth spreading through me at his words, and wrapping around me like silk. I needed to hold my groundââ
âI want to be with you through everything. The good and the bad.â
âThatâs just it, Noah, there is no good.â
âI know thatâs not true because Iâve seen your good. Even the bad things are good.â
âYou donât know what youâre saying.â
âMaya, I canât be here for you if you donât talk to me.â
âThis isnât a modern day Cinderella story,â I said, rolling my eyes. âI donât need some man to swoop in and magically solve all my problems for me.â
âIâm not some man. Iâm a person who cares about you.â He ran his hands over his face in frustration. âWhy do you do that? Why do you insinuate that needing someone makes you weak and pathetic? Everybody needs help sometimes.â
âYou canât help me!â I shouted, and the people walking in and out of Tysons looked in our direction. I didnât care. All the emotions that had been festering inside me were starting to bubble over and I was so done pretending. âThis is who I am! Youâre so desperate to convince yourself otherwise, that youâre not even paying attention to whatâs right in front of you.â
I squared my shoulders. âYou really want to know whatâs wrong? Everything is wrong. I have had things thrown at me from every direction for my entire life, and nothing ever works out in my favor and itâs exhausting. It is so incredibly exhausting to be me. To hear my thoughts, and to speak my words, and to feel my emotions, and to exist in this body, this vesselâââ I glanced down at my long unfamiliar limbs clad in clothes I could barely remember picking out âââthis thing that doesnât feel like mine. That feels like a stranger.â My voice slipped into a whisper. âAnd sometimes, Noah . . . sometimes I really, truly, desperately, with everything I am and everything I have, donât want to be me anymore. I donât want to exist anymore.â I let out an unsteady breath. âIâd give anything to know what itâs like to wake up and feel rested. To wake up and not think again? I have to do this all again? To wake up and not have to walk on eggshells around my own mind. To wake up and feel like Iâm not just surviving, but living.â
âMaya,â he started softly, but I kept talking.
âIâm not pushing you away because I want to, Noah. I guess I just donât want to see the day when you finally look at meââand I mean really look at meââand realize how exhausted I make you too. I know you think youâve got me all figured out, but Iâm not the girl you get to know as more than a friend. I am the damaged and emotionally unstable girl that will drain you with all her endless problems until you canât take it anymore and leave.â I looked away, the truth behind my words hitting hard. âYou canât try to fix me without getting broken in the process.â
âYou donât need fixing,â he disagreed immediately. âThis isnât forever, Maya. Itâll get better.â
I scoffed. âIt will get better, Noah? Really?â
âYes, it will get better,â he repeated, a fierce fire burning behind his stare. âMaybe only for a second, or an hour, or a day, but things will get better.â
âSometimes things donât get betterââat least not for everyone. Sometimes things only get worse.â
âDo you think I donât know how that feels?â he demanded. âDo you think I donât know what itâs like to have your whole world fall apart around you and thereâs nothing you can do to stop it? Iâve been through shitââyou know thatââand most of the time I didnât think I was going to make it out, but here I am. Still standing, and trying to tell you that you can make it through too.â
âWe are not the same, Noah. You blossomed from the rubble and wreckage of your past and evolved into a thriving, and happy, and amazing human, but I didnât. I didnât find meaning in my pain. I didnât learn a beautiful and heartfelt lesson. The only thing it taught me is how to push people away.â
âYouâll get through itâââ
âNo, you got through it,â I interrupted harshly. âI will never stop going through it.â
âSo . . . what? That means we canât even . . .â He ran his fingers through his tousled hair. âYou donât need to wait until youâre all shiny and polished to have someone in your life, Maya. You donât need to wait until your lifeâs not hard anymore to try and be happy.â
âItâs not that simple, Noah. You donât understand.â
âThen explain it to me. Help me understand. Fuckââjust tell me whatâs going on.â
I could feel myself slipping into his words. Every part of me wanted to cave in and believe him.
âWhatâs really the problem here?â
I glanced up at him, and once again got caught in his stare and couldnât look away. I could feel him tugging the truth right out of me.
âIâm scared.â
âOf what?â
âYou.â He recoiled like I slapped him. âIâm scared of how attached Iâll get. Of how attached I already am. Of how much I already crave your presence. Iâm terrified that Iâm going to put what little I have into whatever this is between us, and then end up getting left with nothing. I donât want to know you, Noah, and youâre making it really fucking hard.â
Slowly, he brought his hands up to each side of my face, hovering inches away for a moment, never quite connecting with my skin . . . like he was afraid to touch me . . . before dropping them back to his sides.
âMaya,â he whispered firmly. âI would never hurt you.â
I didnât reply. What did he see in my eyes? Why didnât he touch me? Why was he terrified of me too?
âI get it, okay? Where you are right nowââIâve been there. Iâve felt that. But youâre never going to reach a point in life where bad things donât happen to you. Youâre never going to reach a point where lifeâs not hard anymore. Youâre just going to waste all your time trying.â
There was nothing but pure sincerity in his eyes, burning intensely into mine. I begged myself to believe him. To open up my heart and let him in. Not my heart, though. It always came back to her. Out of all my terrible secrets, she was the ultimate reason. It wasnât my tight grasp clutching me back from going to Noah, it was Anaâs. She was acting as my moral compass and my constant reminder of why I could never be his friend or more than his friend. How could I truly give him my whole self while lying about this huge part of my life?
âYou still want me to leave?â he asked finally.
I swallowed back the no in my throat. âYes.â
âAnd youâre okay with that? Never seeing me? Never having coffee with me?â
I looked away, the word yes on my tongue but I couldnât spit the lie out. It didnât matter, because he nodded in understanding and took a step back.
âIâm going to go, but only because you want me to. This is your choice, but . . . it doesnât have to be.â His words were coming out breathless and desperate. âLife is short, Maya. Life is short and it sucks ninety-nine percent of the time, but that other one percent can be so bright and wonderful that itâll make the rest of it durable.â His nervous fingers were back in his hair. âYou have this idea of meââthat Iâm this guy who went through a lot and is now a happy, positive, sunshine being, but . . . has it ever occurred to you that maybe Iâm only like that when Iâm with you? Have you ever considered the possibility that you make me happy?â
Thump, thumpââ
He sighed and smiled lightly. âThank you for giving me the moments that you did. Iâm not going to pressure you, but if you ever find yourself willing to try to make another choice . . . choose me. Try with me. Iâll be your stranger, or your acquaintance, or your friend . . . Iâll be your anything, Maya. Iâll wait, no matter how much you donât want me to. And if this isnât something you end up wanting . . .â He looked at me sadly. âI hope you can heal from the things that are silently tearing you apart. I hope you can find happiness.â
He started to turn, but stopped and glanced back at me. âI may not know exactly what youâre going through right now, but I do know you, Maya. I see youââthe real youââand I can assure you that what I feel is the complete opposite of exhausted.â
And then he walked away.
I willed and pleaded with all my might for my body to go. For my legs to run and chase after him. For my lips to yell his name and tell him to come back because he made me happy too. But I did nothing. I just stood there, my pathetic feat glued to the concrete, and watched as my breath of fresh air vanished.
I hope youâre happy, Ana.
I floated through the remainder of my shift, barely aware of anything going on around me. The only perk to being scheduled on maintenance for the day was that no one told me to do anything else. I spent the rest of the night doing round after round, spraying and wiping and spraying and wiping. The only thing flashing in front of my eyes was Noahâs expression before he walked away.
I was the last one in the parking lot after clocking out. I sat in the driverâs seat waiting for the car to heat up, huddled inside Noahâs jacket. If I wrapped my arms tight enough around myself and closed my eyes, I could almost trick myself into believing I was in his arms. His scent was still freshly rooted into every thread and fold of his jacket, encircling me entirely, getting me completely hooked. I wanted the particles of his fragrance to get submerged into my skin, so I could have a piece of him with me forever. So I could feel connected to him for eternity.
Something was crumpling in one of his pockets. I didnât want to be nosy, but I couldnât help myself. I pulled out a piece of paper he must have forgotten in there, and smoothed out the crinkles, examining it carefully.
Mayaâs list
â 1<
â Sad
â Pretty
â My mystery girl
â Iced coffee
â Eagle eye
â Chronically cold hands?
â Scared of birds
â A little mean
â Mostly kind
â No phone calls
â Listens
â Pessimistic
â Winter
â Real
â Chocolate chip banana bread
â TWILIGHT
â Bookstore?
â Make a library card
â Insomnia?
â School and family off-limits?
â Pinky promise
And the list continued on both sides, filled with things . . . about me? Every time he said that he was adding it to the list, he was actually adding it to a list. Most of the stuff on here wasnât anything Iâd ever told him. I never noticed how closely he studied me, probably because I wasnât used to such deep scrutiny. People didnât pay attention to me, which was fine because I didnât like attention. I spent my whole life making myself small and unnoticed to avoid problems. The closer people watched you, the harder it was to keep up the image I was so desperate for everyone to believe was true.
But I didnât mind this. It was sweet. He was sweet. Noah was so, so sweet and I didnât know how to accept it. I didnât know how to let it infect me. What if it turned sour as soon as it touched my tongue? What if it turned to poison as soon as I swallowed? What if I was allergic? What if I got addicted and could never live without it? What if, what if, what ifââ?
And then there was Ana, of course. The one responsible for me meeting him in the first place. The one responsible for every shade of scarlet that flushed on my cheeks and every flutter that erupted in my chest whenever I was in his presence. Was I translating her beats wrong? Was she urging me forward or holding me back?
It wasnât just Ana, though. It was also exactly what he said. I wanted to be better first. I wanted to be healed. I wanted to be shiny, and polished, and new before I could even think about stepping into the next phase of my life. The problem was that I never truly believed it was possible to get better, which was why only months ago I was so desperate to make the next phase of my life start in a coffin. But that wasnât a phase of life . . . it was an ending.
I hadnât been paying attention to where I was driving, but I wasnât surprised to find myself at Espresso & Chill. It was closed, but I could see some light inside so I knew he was in there. I stood outside, still unsure of what I should do until my feet moved on their own accord, up to the door. My fist raised without any effort from me and knocked.
Once.
Twice.
A third time.
I counted to ten before I heard the lock turn. The door opened slowly and Noah stepped through the shadows. His eyes widened slightly in surprise when he saw me, before softening so intensely his pupils melted into two green and blue glittery pools staring deeply into mine.
âI want more moments with you, I justâââ I paused, pathetic longing leaking through my words and making my voice crack.
He didnât respond. Instead, he reached his hand out slightly, letting me make the next move. Letting me choose to take it, if I wanted to. And I did want to, but still . . . I hesitated. I lived my whole life treading water. Always on the verge of drowning, with only enough legroom to keep my mouth barely above the surface. I could breathe, but only if I didnât let my guard crumble. Only if I spent every second fighting with gravity trying to drag me down. Only if I used every ounce of strength wrestling with the weight of the world on my shoulders, and with all the people in my life who were trying to pull me under.
âWhat do you choose, Maya?â he asked.
I looked at his hand. A life jacket falling from the sky and into the water next to me at armâs reach. I wasnât saved, but maybeââjust maybeââI didnât have to choke on water anymore.
My hand moved, not on its own this time. I told it to.
My decision was made.
I grazed his palm with my fingertips and slowly trailed a path up his arm. I only paused for a second before letting them explore his neck and his face. I touched his cheek, his nose, brushed the hair out of his eyes. They fluttered shut and he leaned his head further into my grip like it was pleasurable for him. A low hum vibrated up his throat, parting his lips.
Thump, thumpââ
I pulled my hand away . . . and then lightly placed it in his.
I was choosing to float.
âIâm sorry I was mean.â
âYou werenâtâââ
âI was mean,â I interrupted. âAnd Iâm sorry.â
He was silent for a minute before speaking. âA genuinely mean person doesnât genuinely apologize for being mean. Thatâs how I know you are kind.â
My lips twitched into a smile. âWell, Iâm still a little mean.â
âI wouldnât want it any other way.â His grin mimicked my own. âCan I . . . hug you? Strictly platonic, I swear.â
He was staring at me a little too intensely and gripping my hand a little too tightly to be platonic. I probably was too . . . but I couldnât. Not yet. Maybe not ever.
âThere has to be an off switch.â
âTo what?â
âYour endless thinking,â he groaned.
âI thought you liked how I think.â
âJust because I like it, doesnât mean it doesnât drive me insane.â
âThat wonât stop,â I warned him. Giving him one last out before I crossed over. One last opportunity to run away from something that had no chance of ending well because nothing ever ended well with me. âIf I can guarantee you anything, itâs that I will never stop driving you insane.â
But just like every other time, he didnât take it.
âInsanity with you is the only sane thing Iâve ever wanted,â he replied. âHug me. Please.â
I let go of his hand and wrapped my arms tightly around his neck. Goosebumps erupted everywhere our bodies were connectedââhands behind back, chest on chest, stomach against stomach. His warmth radiated through all the layers between us, melting the first coating of my flesh, and suddenly it hurt. It hurt how content I was in his embrace. He quickly folded his arms around me, pulling me tighter against him, nuzzling his head into the crook of my neck. His heart was beating in my ear and it was the most glorious tune I had ever heard.
Thump, thumpââ
Iâm not letting him go, Ana.
I didnât realize how long it had been since I hugged someone. I didnât realize how much I needed a hug. Iâd been deprived of physical affection for so long, and it was incredibly surreal to finally experience it without any repercussions threatening to follow. Somehow he sensed this because he pulled me even closer.
âPromise me something?â
âWhat is it?â I asked warily.
âWhen everything starts to feel like too much . . . or when you wake up one day and wish that you didnât . . . donât go silent. Donât push me away. Just tell me. I promise I wonât ask questions and that Iâll always respect your privacy, but please donât disappear on me. I canât think properly or go about my day if I donât know youâre okay.â
âIâm sorry,â I breathed. âI donât consciously decide to do it; I canât help it. I wasnât trying to ignore you or make you worry, I just . . . sometimes things happen, and the only way for me to get through it is to detach myself. I just barely go through the motions day after day, hoping tomorrow will be better but knowing that it probably wonât be,â I sighed. âBut I didnât realize . . . I guess Iâm just not used to people noticing.â
âI noticed. I will always notice. I canât just not see you anymore. Promise me.â
âI . . . okay. Iâll try my best. Pinky promise.â
He pulled away slightly, tipping his head down so it was resting against mine, forehead to forehead. His bright, optic globes gazing at me fiercely. âYour best is more than enough for me, Maya.â
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