The Lie

Because, fuck, did Brigs ever have a hot arse. It’s like he was born to do lunges.

“Stop thinking about him,” I tell myself. Out loud. Because I’m crazy like that. Luckily there’s no one around to hear me, and honestly that would be the least of my problems if my train of thought continues. Brigs is a trigger. He was once the man I loved more than anything in the world. But he was also the man who would never be mine. There was that beautiful, brief period where I thought we had a chance. We were so close to being together, to putting an end to the guilt. Then it all fell apart.

And by falling apart, I mean his life imploded and I was sucked into the blast.

It was my fault.

It was our fault.

And I’ll never stop blaming myself for what happened. For what happened to them, and what I did to him.

If I didn’t exist, if I had never met Brigs and fallen for him the same way he fell for me, his wife and child would still be alive.

My love killed.

My love ruined that man’s life.

I’m shocked to find a tear rolling down my cheek. I wish I could blame it on the rain like the song says, but I can’t. I haven’t cried over Brigs, over the incident, in months. It’s what my old doctor would have called progress. And this tear is what my father would have called “humanity.”

“Embrace your humanity, Tasha,” he would say to me. “For if you didn’t cry, your soul would never heal.”

It hasn’t healed, and I don’t think it ever will. But I don’t think crying has anything to do with it. It’s just that there are some things in life that you can’t walk away from.

But I’m trying. I’m trying.

One foot in front of the other.

Starting over.

As long as I keep focused on the future and not the past, maybe, maybe I can come out of it. This is a new life, a better life. I’m even going to a better school now: Kings College. If I can just keep moving forward, maybe then my soul will have a chance.

I get on the train and head to school.

***

Well that was a fun class, said no one ever, I think to myself, getting out of my seat. The lecture hall is absolutely crammed with students leaving, and I have a feeling that myself and the other two TAs, Devon and Tabitha, will be expected to stay behind and talk to Professor Irving.

The man is such a chauvinistic piece of shit. With his balding head covered in liver spots and the permanent scowl etched upon his wrinkled face, he’s the kind of teacher that obviously just crawled out of the stone age. Even though all we had to do during this lecture is listen to him and watch the film along with all the undergrads, the sexist remarks he made to me and Tabitha at the start of the hour were uncalled for. He told me if I want the students to respect me, I shouldn’t come to class like a slob. He said the same thing to Tabitha too, even though the woman is wearing a damn pantsuit. I think he said it because Tabitha is borderline obese, and he knows he’d get into some major shit if he commented on that.

Meanwhile, Devon with his penis and his nonexistent chin gets all the praise and glory, just for knowing a few answers.

“What are you still doing here?” Professor Irving says as he spots us standing around. He waves his hands at us. “Go on with your day. I’ll email you about the tutorials later.”

I turn around, happy to get the fuck out of there, when he says, “Wait, you. The girl who had a break.”

I stop and take a deep breath. How did he know about that?

Tabitha shoots me a sympathetic glance, while No Chin Devon looks a bit butthurt that he didn’t get called on.

I slowly turn around and give Professor Irving a big smile. “Yes, sir?”

He narrows his eyes at me, raising his chin in appraisal. It’s not a good appraisal. “You did take a break, did you not?”

I nod, rubbing my lips together. “I did. Four years.”

“And why was that?”

I have a prepared answer for this. It’s only half true. “I went to France to be with my father. He was sick.”

“I see.” He sticks his finger in his ear and wiggles it around. I try not to grimace, keeping the awkward smile plastered on my face. “You went to Met before and completed one year of your Master’s. Four years is a long time to mess things up, family or not, don’t you think? Do you think you’re ready to be back at school, at this school in particular?”

My smile falters. “Of course.”

He raises his brow. “Good. I just want to make sure we’re on the same page here. I expect a lot out of my students and a lot out of my TAs. You see, when I talked about my book, Iconography in Early Film Texts, you were the only one who didn’t comment. Have you read it?”

Ah, shit. I swallow hard. “No. I haven’t yet. I didn’t realize it was part of the curriculum.”

He chuckles rather nastily. “My dear, when you’re assisting my class, you’re grading the students. You can’t grade them until you know how I think. It’s only common sense, don’t you think?”