Chapter 11

It felt good to finally tell Monica what was going on. She said that she would take me to my follow up appointment, so I wouldn’t have to walk there in the cold, November weather. Or beg John.

Since I wasn’t working until later the next day and I didn’t want to look through my texts or get online just to have John message me, I finally decided to look through the pamphlet that the nurse gave me.

“Human Papilomavirus,” I said out loud. The pamphlet was maroon with pictures of women of different ages and races, all smiling. Like it was something to be happy about. I flipped open the first page. “What is HPV, got that. How do people get it? Passed through sex. Anal, vaginal, oral, or any genital contact. Early on, cervical cancer may not cause signs and symptoms. A person can still have HPV even if it’s been years since they have had sexual contact.”

Huh. I’d only had sex with exactly one person in my life and gotten past the rest of the bases a few times. Could I have gotten it from my high school boyfriend? He did cheat on me when he went to college, but I wondered if there were other girls. I didn’t think that would give me a disease. I didn’t always use condoms with Robby. Especially not with oral. I shuddered at the thought. I was so upset about John being a manwhore and I was the one with the disease. I felt like the biggest hypocrite in the world.

My phone was sitting next to me on the couch. There were a few missed text messages from Monica and one from John that I didn’t have the heart to open. But there was something else on my phone. Robby, my high school boyfriend’s, number was still in it. I didn’t know why I kept it. We broke up over a year ago. We weren’t even Facebook friends anymore. But for some reason, I felt the strongest urge to talk to him. Before I could chicken out, I dialed his number.

“Hey, this is Rob. What up?”

Rob? No one ever called him Rob. He had been Robby since kindergarten.

“Um, hey, ROBBY, this is Melanie. Melanie Wilder.”

“Mells Bells? Haven’t heard from you in awhile. What’s going on?” He said it casually as if it was just a normal day. Like the last time I saw him wasn’t when a pretty redhead was going down on him in his dorm room. Would I head down the same path if I stayed with John? Tears threatened my eyes as I thought about how mortified I was to see the guy I was with forever cheating on me. It felt just as bad to see John with another girl. Not saying I was in love with John, but it hurt to think someone was willing to give up his manwhorish ways, be there for me, and then he wasn’t.

“Nothing too big. You know, working, classes, cancer.” I said the whole thing as if it were nothing. Like I would just tell my former boyfriend about cancer any day. I didn’t know why it came out like that, but it did. Like word vomit.

“What the hell, Mel? Did you just say cancer?” His voice slightly squeaked, like it used to do when he was nervous.

“Yeah. Cervical Cancer. HPV to be exact. Have you heard of it?”

“Aw, shit you have AIDS? Who the hell did you get with after me?” His voice now took on an accusatory tone.

I groaned. “No, idiot. Not AIDS. It’s human papilomavirus. It’s a sexually transmitted infection that can cause cancer in women. And I’ve only been with you. I’m wondering if you can actually say the same thing.”

He let out a nervous laugh. “I haven’t been with any dudes.”

“I’m serious, Robby. Look, I’m over you. I’m not worried who you’re with now. I just want to know, how many other girls were you with when you were supposed to be with me?”

“Geez, Mel, do we need to talk about this right now?”

“Yes, Robby or Rob or whatever the hell you want to be called now. We do need to talk about this. Just tell me the truth. For once.”

He sighed. I knew he was probably running his hands over his face like he used to always do whenever he had to get something off of his chest. “I don’t know. A few.”

“How many is a few?”

“I don’t know. There was the time you caught me. Um, some girl at orientation. Another girl I met in the laundry room. Oh, and that girl from my Physics class.”

“Okay, that’s enough. I don’t want to hear anymore.”

Turns out the guy got around more than I thought. The guy who I gave my heart to my sophomore year of high school and my virginity in the back of his truck. Now that all ended with me going to see a doctor. This was not what I had in mind for my future or what I thought would happen because of his cheating.

“Well, you did ask.”

I groaned. “Yes. I know. I should have known that was the answer.”

“Hey.” His voice took on a tone of actual concern. “Are you all right? Like are you dying?”

“No, Robby, you don’t have to worry about that. As far as I know everything is okay. I go back to the doctor on Wednesday to get my results of a biopsy.”

“Let me know what happens, Mells, okay? We may not be together anymore, but that doesn’t mean I don’t care about you.”

Sure he still cared about me. Cared enough to cheat and not talk to me for over a year. But I wasn’t about to say that to him. I just wanted to get him off of the phone. This was starting to get all too familiar. First Robby, now John. Both guys who said they cared about me and both guys who let me down. “Okay, Robby. Talk to you later.”

“Later, Mells. Keep in touch.”

I hung up the phone and tossed it on the couch. I was half tempted to actually read my missed text message from John, but I didn’t want to feel worse than I already did. I felt completely broken. Like everything about my life was shattering into a million little pieces. The supposed love of my high school life had cheated on me multiple times and was probably the reason I had cancer. And the other guy, the one who I thought could be my future, was getting lap dances from random girls at parties.

Just as I was ready to get out the ice cream I had stashed in my freezer for my own pity party, a knock came at my door. I got up from the couch and walked to it, looking out the peep hole. Staring back at me was John’s smiling face. He had some nerve.

“What do you want?” I yelled.

“I came here to talk to you. You won’t answer my calls, texts, or messages, so I thought maybe showing up here would be the better option.”

“Are you sure you want to come in?” I smirked, even though I knew he couldn’t see it. “I may be giving a lap dance to some random guy.”

He groaned. “Come on, Red. Just let me in so I can explain.”

“Why should I?”

“Because if you don’t, I’m going to sing Rhianna songs really loudly until your neighbors call the cops for a noise complaint.”

“You wouldn’t.” Would he? Would my neighbors call?

“I want you to stayyyyyyyyy,” he yelled in a very off key tone.

“I’m not impressed.”

But that didn’t stop him. He kept singing and surprisingly knew all of the words. By the time he got around to the chorus again, I threw the door open. Better to deal with him face-to-face than possibly have the cops show up.

“What do you want?” I stared at him, hard. I was furious, but of course I had to hold back my smile because he was looking pitiful and gorgeous. His mouth still open as he stopped singing. Instead of wearing a hat, his hair was gelled in choppy spikes and he was clean shaven. Like he went out of his way to look good for me. He looked mouth watering in a gray, fleece coat and faded jeans with his Pumas.

No. I couldn’t think about how good he looked. That’s how I fell for him in the first place. I just kept the scowl on my face.

“I came here to see you, and to apologize.” He walked in, even though I didn’t ask him to. I shut the door behind him anyway and stood with my hands folded across my chest.

I wished I would’ve dressed up. Maybe showed him what he was missing. Instead I was still in my pajamas and no makeup.

“Go on.”

He sighed, rubbing the back of his neck. “I didn’t know that you would just show up like that.”

“So that makes it okay that some random chick was giving you a lap dance in your bedroom?” I raised an eyebrow.

“No. No. I didn’t say that. It’s just, ugh.” He ran his hands down the length of his face and then shook his head. “I don’t know what to say, Red. I didn’t ask Missy to do that. I was in my room with a couple of the other guys and she just showed up. Then she turned on some music and started dancing. Before I knew it, the other guys left and it was just her grinding up on me.”

“Yeah, nice excuse, but that doesn’t mean you told her to stop.” I held up my hands. “Whatever. It’s not like we’re together or anything. I don’t even know what the hell we are.”

He plopped down on the couch. “Neither do I, Red. I don’t do relationships. I haven’t dated a girl since junior year of high school. Ever since then it’s just been random flings.”

“And is that what we are? A random fling? Or are we friends? Maybe I’m just part of your valiant knight fantasy and you want to save me? Please explain it to me, because I have no idea what the hell is going on.”

He looked up at me, his gaze meeting mine and I had to keep from getting weak in the knees. His smoldering stare got me every time. “What do you want us to be?”

I let out a deep breath and sat down next to him. “I don’t know, either. I don’t think with everything that’s going on I should be getting into something serious. I wasn’t expecting to get a call about cancer the night that I went to your place. I wasn’t expecting us to become friends or make out buddies or whatever this is. But it sort of just happened.”

“I didn’t expect any of this either. Somehow I knew that if I started something with you, there was no way I could stop. Not just because you’re my little brother’s girlfriend’s best friend.” He put his hand on mine and I let him keep it there.

I sighed. “So what are we, then? I’m not ready for anything serious right now with everything else that’s going on.” It was the truth. I couldn’t handle dating anyone when I always felt like my body was broken. The last serious boyfriend I had cheated on me and got me into this cancer mess. I didn’t want to head down the same path again with John. How could I trust that it wouldn’t happen with someone like him?

“Friends? At least for now?” He looked at me with pleading in his eyes.

“Friends.” I nodded. “That sounds good.”

He laced our fingers together. “You have no idea how happy this makes me that you just didn’t kick me out on my ass.”

I laughed. “I actually don’t think I could kick you out. You kind of have the body of an MMA fighter, so I’m sure you could take me.”

“I prefer professional wrestler.”

I rolled my eyes. “Okay, professional wrestler.”

He stood, letting go of my hand. “So does this mean that this professional wrestler should still be here Wednesday to take you to the doctor?”

“No, Monica’s taking me.” I stood up next to him.

“Monica? You finally told her?”

“Yeah. It was about time.”

A small smile crossed his lips. “That explains why Trey was so persistent on me talking to you. Not that I wouldn’t have anyway, but the dude can convince me to do anything that I’m on the fence about. He’s seriously a politician-in-training.”

“Yeah, he’s pretty convincing.” My shoulders fell. So this wasn’t all John’s doing. He had other influences.

John lifted my chin, forcing our eyes to meet. “Trey may have talked me into it, but I would have found a way to get you back. I sent those messages on my own. He was just the one that told me I should come here. He said face-to-face is better than any technology. And seeing your face does make it all worthwhile.”

I swallowed. Why did he have to say things like that? How was I supposed to just be friends with a guy that made me forget about cancer and feel whole again?

I stepped back. “Well, I’m glad we talked, but I really need to get ready for work.”

He dropped his hands and shoved them in his pockets, looking defeated. “Okay. I guess I’ll see you around then?”

“Yep. See you around.”

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