STACY
Lisa and I were sprawled out on my bed, our heads propped up by pillows, legs stretched out in front of us as we dug into the half-empty plate of ice cream between us. Our room was dimly lit by the warm glow of my bedside lamp, the soft hum of Lisa’s laptop in the background playing some random rom-com neither of us was really paying attention to. This was how we usually spent our sleepovers—talking, laughing, and indulging in ice cream therapy.
The last time we intentionally had one of those was back in Ohio. Since we’ve been roommates, we have t planned a proper sleepover.Tonight, we were both sad and in our feelings so here we were, engaging in our first planned sleepover together since we moved.I could feel Lisa’s eyes on me as she took another spoonful of ice cream, and I knew she had something on her mind. She’d been unusually quiet for the past few minutes, and for Lisa, that meant she was either deep in thought or aJEROMEMost mistakes are made even after we consciously remember that we are about to make a mistake. That was my case on Thursday night, after school, when Nattie and I stumbled out of a bar. The air was crisp, pleasant to take in, promises of a new season. I knew we were heading to dangerous waters when we decided to have a drink after school and Kingston was absent. He had gone for his sister’s wedding after continuous complaining and filling in on what had transpired between him and his sister. The thing was with Kingston around, Nattie and I could easily always be friends, nothing more. With him out of the picture, we were two adults, man and woman, going to have a drink, knowing fully well the history we had. It was a night headed for doom, and I knew that all though and still agreed to drinks, agreed to having more than one glass and staying out longer than expected, inviting Nattie her to my home. We stumbled out of the bar, softly
STACYThe music was already pulsing when Lisa and I arrived at one of Bridget’s acclaimed parties, the beat vibrating through the floor and into my chest. The house was packed, with people spilling out into the front yard, laughing and shouting, red Solo cups in hand. I glanced at Lisa, who was grinning ear to ear, clearly excited to dive into the chaos.Hee eyes were also darting a lot and I knew she was looking for Bridget.I wasn’t in the mood to give her the talk so I said nothing.“Come on, Stace,” she said, nudging me with her elbow. “Let’s grab a drink.”I smiled, trying to match her energy, because that’s what tonight was about.All the times I have tried to use a party to distract myself from Jerome, or literally any other guy,
STACY“What do you think about… me and Bridget?” she asked.I had a lot of questions I was expecting. She could have asked about Jerome and I, or who my secret partner was, she could have even asked me why I kissed Bridget.If she asks me any of this, I would not have been relived but it would have been expected.Her question was shocking, new. I didn’t know how to react.My stomach twisted, surprised by the question. “You and Bridget?” I repeated, trying to make sense of what she was saying.“Yeah, I mean, us. Bridget and I as a couple, do you—I know you said you don’t judge me or whatever but is it ever wired to you?” She was fidgeting now, playing with the hem of her shirt.She swallowed and straightened, seeming more confident.I blinked, caught off guard. “Weird? No, not at all.” I tried to sound casual, like the question didn’t knock me off balance.It
JEROMEThe next morning, I woke up feeling sore. The sunlight filtering through the blinds woke me up before my alarm did. I squinted against the brightness, my head still heavy with sleep. For a moment, I stayed there, disoriented, trying to gather my train of thoughts about the day before, the day ahead and the present time.That’s when I felt the warmth beside me. Nattie’s arm was draped across my chest, her steady breathing confirming she was still asleep. That’s when the memories from last night came flooding back in a very heavy push.I turned my head to look at her and I wasn’t sure what I was feeling. A little bit of everything —guilt, regret, and confusion. We’d had sex. It hadn’t been planned; it hadn’t even been thought through. One minute, we were hanging out at my place, just talking like we always did, and the next, things escalated faster than I could’ve anticipated. And now, here we were—tan
STACYI hurried down the sidewalk, heart thumping beneath my coat as I mentally ran through a list of things I may have forgotten. Today was Jace and Jake’s drama show and I had promised to be there, severally.Last night, Jace called to remind me.My relationship with the twin was something I could say I cherished. They’d been really nice to me from the day I volunteered for the talk and this was my first way to prove that I was really grateful.Jacket? Check. Ticket? Definitely. Nerves? Uncheck. For some reason, I was freaking out.This show involved me going to sit with a bunch of people I didn’t know, at the theatre hall auditorium.The good thing was Lisa and I were going to be together. I took some peace in remembering that.The scent of fallen leaves wove its way into my nose, filling the crisp air.I was hurrying to the auditorium, Jace and Jake had to see me before the show would start, but I couldn’t stop thin
JEROMEAs the lights came up and the applause for the play died down, everything o had been feeling through out the length of the show returned a thousand times more. The tension, the discomfort, the need to break something, maybe even my head.They all knotted in my chest.Stacy and given up hee chair for Nattie, I noticed that.She didn’t want to be close to me, that was all my mind told me at the moment.Nattie was still pressed up against me, her fingers trailing along my arm, her hand slipping into mine as if to mark her territory. I tried not to pull away, tried to keep everything looking normal, but the truth was, I felt suffocated. Every touch, every glance she threw my way, felt calculated—deliberate. And with Stacy just a few seats away, it felt like the walls were closing in on me.
STACYI was probably the happiest when the show came to an end. After it all, we all spilled out of the theatre, Lisa and I, leaving Nattie and Jerome to be alone.We had all gone back stage at some point to say hi to the twins and now, we had plans of getting a spot to chill at for a while.They had done an amazing job, and I could still hear snippets of Jake’s deep voice as Prospero booming in my head. Jace had been equally mesmerizing as Miranda, playing the role with a graceful strength that seemed to captivate the entire audience. I was proud of both of them, and even though the tension with Jerome was evident all through the night, they made the moment worth it by giving us a hood play.Tonight wasn’t about that. It was about celebrating with my friends. There was one thing I could be grateful to, that they didn’t invite Jerome and Nattie to come with us.“Let’s grab a drink,” Jake had suggested as he bounded over
JEROMEAttending church was not my thing to do, I honestly couldn’t remember the last time I hadn’t been to a church.For no reason, exactly, I just got busier with a lot of other things and it had never felt like a necessity to me, so today, when I woke up with an impulse to go, it confused me a lot.The feeling was something I couldn’t quite explain to myself.I just knew that i had to go, no matter what and that Sunday morning, I found myself walking into a church downtown.It was the kind of church with stained-glass windows and an old wooden sign out front.Not once last night did I make a plan to be here but as I approached the building, I aimed to understand why I was doing this.Elena and Marilyn, emptiness, sadness.I was going to church because I felt like a waste.As a teenager, when Marilyn and I were together, I had heard she abs her mom on different occasions talk about their faith and their love for God.
JEROMEIt was a Tuesday morning, and I was expecting Lisa. She hadn’t been by in a while, and I figured it’d be good to catch up. I hadn’t been the best brother lately—too wrapped up in my own mess to notice hers, or anyone else’s for that matter. So, I cleaned up the house, cleared away the clutter of half-written scripts and empty coffee cups, and made a quick breakfast, nothing fancy. Scrambled eggs, toast, some fruit I’d been meaning to finish before it went bad. I didn’t expect anything more than a few hours of easy conversation and maybe a few jabs at me for being a workaholic.Work has been hectic on me and even on Nattie so for that reason, we had not found the time to catch up on lost times. What was even more crazy was the fact that Kingston had returned from his hometown.Normally, when ever stuff like that happened, we prioritized sitting down together and having lunch or dinner, even if it was at the staff loung
STACYThese days, spending time in our dorm room was something I tried to avoid. The air there always felt thick and heavy silence gave way to the underlying tension, lingering emotions pooped up here and there. lingering tension.But I couldn’t run away forever, and running away was a coward thing to do so here I was, in my dorm room, instead of hanging at the library after class.Lisa sat on her bed, legs crossed, scrolling through her phone. I was at my desk, pretending to organize notes from class but really just shuffling papers aimlessly. Neither of us had said much since we got back from dinner that night, and even though we’d kissed and shared those moments, it still felt awkward. More than awkward, actually—like something had shifted, and I wasn’t sure how to navigate it.The ball was in my court, really and that terrified me to shit.I kept glancing at her from the corner of my eye, unsure of how to start a conversation th
JEROMEI showed up to class earlier than usual that day, hoping to settle into a groove before the students started pouring in. My mind wasn’t exactly where it needed to be though I couldn’t place exactly where it was.This morning, I had randomly gotten a notification from Nattie and my eyes oddly moved to the date. Today was the thirteenth day of October, the day we got into the accident, the day Marilyn died.Then there was Elena with her surgery slated to happen tomorrow. And there was Nattie’s words to me about what I really wanted. I had been revising that question, spending time understanding myself.All of these issues were static in the back of my mind, being present while I did every little thing.If there’s one thing I’ve learned, is how life just keeps moving. No pause, no time to drop off and take a breather, we just keep moving.I’ve had to do everything without complaining. Go to the studio, pick up m
STACYI was having dinner with Lisa tonight and it felt out of this world. It wasn’t the first time we had gone out to eat together, but this time was different. She’d asked me out on a date, an actual freaking date.I didn’t know if I should crash out or crash out, all I know is my body could not contain the excitement and uncertainty moving around one another, becoming a flickering, present flame in the core of my stomach. “Let’s go out on a dinner date,” Lisa had casually said.I thought I didn’t hear well.After the kiss and her confession, we had not said much about that night again.Occasionally, she would lean into me and occasionally, I would do the same but we did stuff like this even when we were just friends so I wasn’t even meting myself think it out of proportion.Aft
JEROMEAttending church was not my thing to do, I honestly couldn’t remember the last time I hadn’t been to a church.For no reason, exactly, I just got busier with a lot of other things and it had never felt like a necessity to me, so today, when I woke up with an impulse to go, it confused me a lot.The feeling was something I couldn’t quite explain to myself.I just knew that i had to go, no matter what and that Sunday morning, I found myself walking into a church downtown.It was the kind of church with stained-glass windows and an old wooden sign out front.Not once last night did I make a plan to be here but as I approached the building, I aimed to understand why I was doing this.Elena and Marilyn, emptiness, sadness.I was going to church because I felt like a waste.As a teenager, when Marilyn and I were together, I had heard she abs her mom on different occasions talk about their faith and their love for God.
STACYI was probably the happiest when the show came to an end. After it all, we all spilled out of the theatre, Lisa and I, leaving Nattie and Jerome to be alone.We had all gone back stage at some point to say hi to the twins and now, we had plans of getting a spot to chill at for a while.They had done an amazing job, and I could still hear snippets of Jake’s deep voice as Prospero booming in my head. Jace had been equally mesmerizing as Miranda, playing the role with a graceful strength that seemed to captivate the entire audience. I was proud of both of them, and even though the tension with Jerome was evident all through the night, they made the moment worth it by giving us a hood play.Tonight wasn’t about that. It was about celebrating with my friends. There was one thing I could be grateful to, that they didn’t invite Jerome and Nattie to come with us.“Let’s grab a drink,” Jake had suggested as he bounded over
JEROMEAs the lights came up and the applause for the play died down, everything o had been feeling through out the length of the show returned a thousand times more. The tension, the discomfort, the need to break something, maybe even my head.They all knotted in my chest.Stacy and given up hee chair for Nattie, I noticed that.She didn’t want to be close to me, that was all my mind told me at the moment.Nattie was still pressed up against me, her fingers trailing along my arm, her hand slipping into mine as if to mark her territory. I tried not to pull away, tried to keep everything looking normal, but the truth was, I felt suffocated. Every touch, every glance she threw my way, felt calculated—deliberate. And with Stacy just a few seats away, it felt like the walls were closing in on me.
STACYI hurried down the sidewalk, heart thumping beneath my coat as I mentally ran through a list of things I may have forgotten. Today was Jace and Jake’s drama show and I had promised to be there, severally.Last night, Jace called to remind me.My relationship with the twin was something I could say I cherished. They’d been really nice to me from the day I volunteered for the talk and this was my first way to prove that I was really grateful.Jacket? Check. Ticket? Definitely. Nerves? Uncheck. For some reason, I was freaking out.This show involved me going to sit with a bunch of people I didn’t know, at the theatre hall auditorium.The good thing was Lisa and I were going to be together. I took some peace in remembering that.The scent of fallen leaves wove its way into my nose, filling the crisp air.I was hurrying to the auditorium, Jace and Jake had to see me before the show would start, but I couldn’t stop thin
JEROMEThe next morning, I woke up feeling sore. The sunlight filtering through the blinds woke me up before my alarm did. I squinted against the brightness, my head still heavy with sleep. For a moment, I stayed there, disoriented, trying to gather my train of thoughts about the day before, the day ahead and the present time.That’s when I felt the warmth beside me. Nattie’s arm was draped across my chest, her steady breathing confirming she was still asleep. That’s when the memories from last night came flooding back in a very heavy push.I turned my head to look at her and I wasn’t sure what I was feeling. A little bit of everything —guilt, regret, and confusion. We’d had sex. It hadn’t been planned; it hadn’t even been thought through. One minute, we were hanging out at my place, just talking like we always did, and the next, things escalated faster than I could’ve anticipated. And now, here we were—tan