Better Left Unsaid

Jazmine Figueroa

He makes me nervous. No boy has ever made me nervous. As he walks toward me I take a deep breath and try not to lose my words. He smiles and my heartbeat quickens. I can feel the heat rising in my cheeks and chest. He doesn’t know it, but inside I’m dying. My hands tremble as he speaks to me softly. He reaches for my hand, and for just a moment our fingers are interlocked. He looks down into my eyes and all I can do is stand there. I take in his words and I nod and smile, unable to respond. He checks his phone and the home screen reads “10:40”; time to say goodbye. He leans in to hug me and I fall into him, wrapping my arms around his waist for stability. I let go as he releases me from his hold and give him a sweet smile as I watch him walk away, breathless. I stand in the hallway listening to my rapid heartbeat trying to contain the flush of color clearly showing in my cheeks replaying our small yet intimate moment in my mind over and over again.

Why couldn’t you just say something to him? He’s just a boy, a boy who is also your friend. Relax, I think. I breathe in deeply wishing I could’ve said something, anything before I turn and walk away leaving our shared moment behind me.

***

We leave the dining hall in silence as he walks me to my dorm. He looks down at me and smiles as he connects his fingers with mine. I look back up at him and smile. Blood rushes through every piece of skin on my body. I’m at a loss for words, so I simply watch him. He walks with a slight hop, as if he’s dribbling a basketball everywhere he goes. He always looks up when he walks -- never at the ground -- a skill he’s also probably learned after years of basketball training. I let go of his hand as we reach the door of my dorm, and he leans down to hug me. I release my grip on his waist as I turn to leave, but he holds onto me longer. He drops his head onto my shoulder and we stand in the cold. He holding me. Me holding him. He whispers words into my ear and I laugh softly. And then he lets go. I make it to my door and turn to say one last word of goodbye, when he calls for me to stop. He walks up to me and grabs my face to kiss me, and I freeze. I grab onto his jacket and attempt to kiss him back, until I let my nerves get the best of me and turn away from him. He backs away from me, and I from him. He leaves towards his dorm, and I enter mine wishing I had just kissed him.

***

I sit in bed as my phone buzzes, the home screen lighting up with a message from him.

“I want you so bad, but idk.” His words cut at me like a million knives.

“Are you unsure because you don’t think I would try?” I reply. I sit and wait for what seems like hours for a simple response until my phone finally buzzes again after what seems like hours.

“Yeah.” I was expecting a long, meaningful message, but I don’t get that. I never get that from him.

“I will try this time” is all I can respond.

I know I can’t try as much as he would want me to though. I can’t put myself out there the way he wants me to. He drives me insane. When we talk I seem to misplace my ability to speak. I melt every time we make simple eye contact, and I am taken over as I watch him play basketball from afar. My stomach quivers every time he smiles. And my hands shake at the mere feel of his touch against my smooth skin. I lie awake at night replaying our conversations and wish on every 11:11 that I could’ve done things differently.

As a child my mother always told me to express my emotions. Nothing good will ever come from hiding how you feel she’d say to me. My mother was right. Girls nowadays expect guys to always understand how they feel, and what they’re thinking, but the truth of the matter is they don’t. Boys will never understand how a girl is feeling or what she is thinking until she tells him. If she never tells him, he’ll never know. I expected him to understand how I felt. I expected him to know he made me nervous, and why he made me nervous. I expected him to come running back to me every time I was too shy, too scared or too nervous. I was wrong.

***

We’re sitting in the dining hall and my legs are shaking. He’s in the chair across from mine, my hands folded within his on his lap. His hands are dry but I like the feel of them against my soft skin. His friends surround us with their laughter and silly jokes. He laughs. He tilts his head slightly with every giggle and squeezes his fingertips into my palms to control his laughter. I don’t laugh. Other girls are starting to like him, and I’m left as a bystander, a distant memory he’s clearly forgotten all about. I watch him joke with his friends about the girls with long brown hair, tanned skin, and perfect bodies -- none of them anything like me. I collect myself and prepare to leave when he stops me in my tracks.

“What do you want from me?” I yell. “Please just tell me, because I can’t keep doing this. I drive myself insane with all these little girl emotions over you and I’m just so done with it.”

“I want you,” he yells back.

“If you wanted me you wouldn’t be texting her.”

“What am I supposed to do if I never know what you want? One day you tell me I make you nervous, but you’re gonna try. And the next you want nothing to do with me. No girl drives me as insane as you do, Jazmine. Can’t you see that?”

“No. I can’t see that. And I’m done trying to see it. I can’t keep doing this back and forth with you. I don’t want to do us or whatever this is anymore. I’m tired.”

“Is that really what you want?”

“Yes. I want us to be friends. Nothing more, nothing less. Just friends.”

“Just friends then,” he says.

And yet somehow I don’t just want to be friends. I’d never tell him that though. I want him to want me in all the ways he says he does. I want him to make me feel like I’m the only girl in the world, and he can’t. I wish he could see that. He doesn’t. So I will keep how I feel to myself, because sometimes things are just better left unsaid.

He comes close to me and looks into my eyes, as if he’s searching for something, anything. I keep my head down and my eyes plastered to the ground as I turn away and walk out the door. I turn once more and watch him at the top of the steps. He wants me to run back into his arms, I can feel it in my bones. He’s staring at me, begging me to come back. I can’t. I walk out the door and don’t turn back. The tears burn my face in the cold walk back to the dorms. My chest shudders at the sound of the dining hall door opening and closing. I fight back the urge to turn around, convincing myself it isn’t him.

***

It’s a quick kiss. But it’s still a kiss. I sit on the bleachers as he stares at me awaiting a response. He doesn’t get one. My chest trembles, and my mind is empty. I’m nervous again. I’m back in the place I told myself I wouldn’t go back to. I can’t help but melt a little inside when I watch him smile. He notices I’m staring and winks at me. I redden faster than usual watching him, and I shake my head in frustration. I can’t let him do this to me anymore. I can’t let him make me nervous anymore. I can’t freeze up at the sight of his touch. And I can’t lose my words when he talks to me.

***

We’re still friends. Nothing more. Nothing less. Just friends. Sometimes I wish we were more. Sometimes I wish we weren’t. Sometimes my heart doesn’t flutter when I see him smile at me. I don’t always stumble a little when he touches me. My cheeks don’t usually redden when he leans in to kiss me on the cheek. My heart still races when I see him. I get lost in his smile when we have conversations. He makes me nervous.