I'll be right thereLochlan fell asleep the night that Caleb and I had our two-restaurant date and now blames himself for my fear.
But you'll have to grab my throat and lift me in the air
If you need anyone
(If you need anyone)
I'll stop my plans
But you'll have to tie me down
And then break both my hands
As always, he blames himself where the blame surely lies more squarely on the devil, aligned perfectly along the edges so that it doesn't stick out sharply, wounding me with clean cuts that bleed a waterfall down through the house, drowning everything in crimson.
I don't let him take that blame. He can't have it. It does not belong to him. It has nothing to do with him. He makes a generous allowance for my wants and then stands back and bites his tongue as I throw myself over the edge of it, taking too much, being greedy, and as always it comes back to bite me on the shoulder in the throes of its own selfish ecstasy.
For him that fear is confirmation of my loyalty. It's his peace of mind, his own watershed of comfort in playing the hero of my story now, again, as always.
Enough, Lochlan said when Caleb remarked that he enjoyed our evening and that we should extend it through the weekend.
I thought we had fun, Caleb looks at me curiously (maybe accusingly) and waits for my confirmation, waits for my assurance that Lochlan is being possessive and overbearing.
I shake my head just slightly, as if his interpretation is just plain mad.
Alright, outside. Caleb orders, he doesn't ask.
This is new.
Fine. I bring my coffee cup. In the daylight he doesn't scare me. With my clothes on as armour he doesn't scare me. It's only when conditions are just right and the night is full of regret and poor choices and old wounds and inexplicable needs that he terrorizes (I mean terrifies me).
This is supposed to be working.
What is?
You, me. This. Even Lochlan is on board with trying to make things better for you and trying to give you what you want.
You won't give me what I want.
He stares at me. He knows exactly what I mean and we're going to be at a stalemate until one of us dies, and then I'm going to be so disappointed because it will be him.
I can't do that, Neamhchiontach.
Then we're done here. I take my cup and go back inside.