"Perry. Perry. Wake up, sleepy. I have practice," a low voice spoke gently into my ear. A large warm hand brushed my eyelashes. My eyes fluttered open to deep blue walls illuminated by the early morning sun. A room that was not my own. I turned slowly into the callused palm, a small smile illuminating my face. Ben's lips soon found mine, and I worked to stifle a yawn. Nationals were three and a half months ago, and I practically lived at Ben's apartment now. So much for my going back to my roots and being a strong, independent woman. I rolled my eyes at my own weakness.
A few days after the plane landed, life settled back in, and Ben surprised me at my apartment with a bottle of red wine and cooked me one of the two things he knew how: Spaghetti with canned marinara sauce. After the leftovers were in the fridge, we marched wordlessly up to my bedroom and closed the door. I had washed the sheets, along with any remaining traces of Kyler, days before, and when Ben held me afterwards, the only thing I could smell was his cheap cologne and the smell of my fresh tears that fell after he dozed off. I didn't know why I felt so sad, everything had been fine like it had before, but now it just didn't feel right. For the next three months, I tried to force the feeling away. I tried to surrender myself wholly to Ben, like I had before, but still something continued to nag at the back of my mind. Sure, I was blissfully happy at times, but more often than not, I felt like I was playing a role. An actress of sorts.
"Do you have to go?" I asked, sleepily clinging to him beneath his soft blue plaid sheets. The same ones he had when we first met. He put a hand on my face and kissed me deeply, not caring that I hadn't yet brushed my teeth. I snuggled closer, relishing the relaxing feeling. Ben may not elicit fireworks from head to toe, but the feeling was nice.
"Babe, you know I have to focus on baseball right now. Our first scrimmage against Lubbock Christian is this weekend," he said, and I bristled a little at this sentiment. The last time Ben and I had broken up, he had also used the excuse "he needed to focus on baseball." Douche. I pulled myself from him and grappled on the floor for my volleyball pullover and combat boots. I knotted my hair on the top of my head and shoved my black knock-off Ray Bans onto my face. I had bought them a month ago at the resale shop across from campus, probably because subconsciously they reminded me of Kyler's.
I chewed on my clear fingernail polish as I watched Ben pull on his white t-shirt and blue baseball sweatpants, trying not to think about all the ways he was more than a little boring. Typical hot jock my mind whispered. I tried to ignore the nagging feeling again. I grabbed my backpack from the kitchen counter, but Ben caught me by my arm before I could leave his apartment and pulled my sweatshirt up to cover the hickey on my neck. A battle scar from last night. Classy, Perry. I had the sinking suspicion my hickey and I would miss Bible class this morning.
YOU ARE READING
The Protection
Science Fiction***COMPLETE*** The book I wrote in grad school... America was safe again. Free from murders, and rapes, and the darkness that lived within us all. The Protection made sure of it when they became public last year, lurking in the darkest shadows of th...