Page 29
Chapter 29 of "The Secret" starts with: The truth was, halfway through Saturday I had finally found the courage to turn my... Continue exploring!
The truth was, halfway through Saturday I had finally found the courage to turn my phone back on. After scrolling past the tons of texts Iâd gotten from Lila, Audrey, Diane, and Gavin (which I was too embarrassed to read, afraid of what Iâd find out about my drunken behavior), I opened Stefanâs, bracing myself for an angry barrage of messages that he would have sent the night before when I hadnât shown up for dinner.
But there was only one from him, right around 7:30.
Where are you?he had asked. And that was it.
Iâd been shocked to see that he hadnât followed up. That, combined with his oddly solicitous behavior on Saturday, still had me on edge. Stefan was acting differently. Strangely. And I didnât know why. I had no idea what his intentions were, when the other shoe would drop.
Compared to Stefanâs radio silence, it had been nice to see the torrent of texts from my other friends. At leasttheyseemed to care. And yetâŚbesides the multiple âWhere are you?â and âare u ok?â texts that Iâd gotten on Friday nightâand never responded toâno one had bothered to check in on me. For the rest of the weekend, I didnât get any more texts. Apparently once I was out of sight, I was out of mind. Some friends.
And here I had thought that school and my colleagues would be a substitute for the attention and love I had been missing in my private life.
It was my turn to order, so I asked for a tall mocha and then stood off to the side with my girlfriends as the barista whipped up our drinks.
Just then, Diane rushed up in a cloud of patchouli oil. âTori! Youâre safe! Where did you go on Friday? Iâve been on a personal media ban all weekend so I could meditate in harmony on midterms, but then I realized this morning that I never heard back from you.â
âShe lost her phone,â Lila said breezily, slurping her frappuccino. âBut actually, Tori, you never answered us. Howdidyou get home? You seemed pretty wasted.â
Now three pairs of eyes were focused on me as I tried to wrack my brain for the memoryâany memoryâof that night. But I was still drawing a blank. Except for the blurry hallucination of Stefan. There was no doubt in my mind: someone had drugged my drink.
âThatâs right,â Diane said, peering at me curiously. âWe did those shots with Gavin and then I went to go dance and then you were justgone. I figured maybe youâd left with someone.â
Lilaâs mouth dropped open. âTori,â she hissed. âDid you go home with a sexy stranger?! Is that why youâre being so coy? Tell me his name!â
âNo,â I protested. âI didnâtââ
âScandal!â Audrey crowed, taking a joyful swig of her espresso. âI bet heâs frigginâ hot.â
âGuys. Weâre not here to judge anybody,â Diane scolded, plucking Lilaâs frap out of her hand to steal a few sips. Then she smiled sweetly at me. âBut you can tell us anything.â
I was offended and horrified. Not only did my friendsâwho knew I was marriedâthink I was the kind of person whoâd just walk out of a club with a complete stranger (and try to keep it a secret later), but they didnât seem at all worried about how dangerous that could have been.
âI really didnât,â I said, my voice tight. âI didnât leave with anyone.â
âHuh,â Lila said, tapping a neon fingernail on her cup as if she didnât quite believe me.
âTo be honest, I donât remember anything that happened after those shots I took,â I admitted, blushing hotly. âI have no idea how I got home. But I did make it home that night.â
Dianeâs eyes widened. âHave you talked to Gavin? He was stuck to you like glue the whole time. He said he was babysitting since heâs the one who got you that new fake IDâbut he didnât seem worried at all when I asked about you later. In fact, he insisted you were fine.â
Gavin.
I remembered being with Gavin on Friday night. Joking with him, flirting a little. The warmth between us. I even remembered briefly considering what it would be like to date him. Wondering if maybe, once my marriage was officially over, we could try it. If heâd wait for me.
Now I didnât know how to feel.
He showed up late to Latin class that afternoon, so I had to wait over an hour before I could finally talk to him. By the time the bell rang, I was practically vibrating with nervous energy. Surely he had an idea of what had happened to me that night. Heâd been my self-appointed official babysitter. And he was the one whoâd gotten me home, hadnât he?
âGavin,â I said, rushing over to grab his arm before he could leave class.
That was unusual. Usually he came to my desk and waited for me to pack up my things after Latin was over, so we could walk to the library together to study.
But then he turned and smiled at me, his usual, friendly, handsome smile, and I felt some of my worry ease. Gavin was a good guy. I liked him. I trusted him. He would tell me the truth.
âTori. How are you feeling?â he asked, his voice kind and gentle.
âIâm okay,â I told him carefully, pulling him off to the side a little. âBut to be honest, most of Friday evening is a bit of a blank. Do you think you couldâŚfill me in?â
Every time I had to admit my alcohol-fueled amnesia out loud, I felt a surge of embarrassment. I wasnât that kind of girl. The kind who got so drunk that she couldnât remember what happened later, who blacked out in the middle of a club. I was sure something had been slipped into my drink, but even so, Iâd never been the kind of girl to put myself in situations where that could happen. Iâd messed up. And I didnât want Gavin to think less of me.