Keep loving me.
I’m so mad at him for demanding I make that promise. For using me at my most vulnerable to vow something I wanted nothing to do with in the wake of my heartbreak.
I hate that I love him and likely always will.
I love that I love him hard enough that he’ll always own the deepest parts of my heart.
I hate the person he brings out in me.
I love that my love for him consumes me to a point where no one else exists.
I’m destined to love him. For keeps. For always. And for that reason, I hate the way I love him.
I check the time, knowing I should call it a night and attempt to catch a few hours of sleep before my flight tomorrow. But I can’t bring myself to leave. This place has become my security blanket, and tomorrow, I’m throwing it off.
My heart was broken, and I came to a place that could offer me peace. I overdosed on tea and spoke to flowers in an attempt to heal all that was destroyed inside me. The plants didn’t talk back, but their allure offered me a glimmer of hope. Even with a heart shattered beyond repair, grace and beauty can be found in the world. And slowly but surely, that beauty infiltrates you within, growing like a seedling and giving you the belief you can bloom again.
And that’s what I was going to do.
By. Myself.
I was going to fuckingbloom.
I was going to find happiness.Alone.
Alex was right. I owed it to any man in my future to erase the longing I had for my best friend before trying to move on. It wasn’t fair. Not for them and not for me.
Standing, I smile at the couple moving to occupy the table next to mine. They return the gesture before their focus returns to one another. I don’t let jealousy overtake me like it normally would. Love isn’t something to envy. It’s something to look forward to. It’s a hard lesson to learn, a more difficult one to accept.
Paying, I hand over the equivalent of one hundred American dollars to the cashier who is as close to any friend that I have here.
“No change,” I tell her. “Use the rest toward their meal.” I point at the couple I passed just seconds ago.
“You know them?” she asks in soft, broken English.
I shake my head. “A random act of kindness.”
A wide smile forms on her face. “So nice.”
“I won’t be back for a while,” I explain. “I’m leaving tomorrow.”
“Where to?”
“Sri Lanka.”
Her eyes widen.
“Tea gardens and mountains and beaches.”
“Take me with you,” she jokes. “Be safe, Henley.”
* * *
Bags packed,I drop to the hotel room bed. It’s soft, the goose-down comforter melding around my backside the way I’d imagine a cloud would feel.
A frivolous expense, one that I don’t partake in often. I’m comfortable enough in hostels and budget motels, but every once in a while, I splurge. I use up a chunk of my very limited savings for a spa bath and king-sized bed.
I’m excited about my next adventure, at becoming lost in this big, wide world. It’s nice to know how small and insignificant I am against the backdrop of Planet Earth. My past problems seem so purportless. It’s nice.