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Instead, I rummage around in my purse for tissues—none, not even a fast-food napkin—and then paw for loose change to top off the fourteen dollars I have in cash for cab fare. I’m teetering on the edge of my credit limit and I’m afraid my card might be declined.

When the cab pulls up to Neil’s apartment I tap on the glass. The meter wasn’t running and I’m nervous the cabbie’s going to try to overcharge me.

“How much?” I ask as I glance at his taxi license and try to memorize the numbers.

“It’s paid,” the driver says. “It was paid when they ordered the cab.”

Shit. Tyler’s just rubbing it in now, or trying to make it up to me so I won’t write something horrible about Tattoo Thief. I feel like such an idiot. He played me and I fell for it.

SEVEN

“So. The elephant in the room. You haven’t told me why you gave me those papers last night.” Across the table, Beryl nibbles on a thin, crispy breadstick at a hole-in-the-wall restaurant that can’t decide if it’s Greek or Italian.

Oh, good. Let’s explore another item on my list of colossal failings. Last night with Tyler left me wrung out and sleepless until I finally drowned my nattering doubts in alcohol.

But today’s lunch is about fixing what’s broken. The two pages I gave Beryl show I trust her with my biggest and most painful secret.

One page was a court document my parents filed against the first man I ever loved. The other was a picture of an ultrasound.

“You know I transferred to the University of Oregon as a sophomore,” I start. “I spent my first year at Manser Academy, the performing arts school in San Francisco.”

“Performing arts? What was your major?” Beryl’s only known me as an aspiring journalist, but being a Broadway star was my first ambition.

“We had a visiting artist-in-residence, a hot musical director who filled in while the regular prof was on sabbatical. And when I say he was hot, I don’t just mean popular. I mean panty-incinerating, turns-every-head, Gavin- or Tyler-hot.”

Beryl raises her eyebrows when I mention the guys in Tattoo Thief, but she lets me continue.

“Dixon Ross was thirty-five and I was a freshman, but he cast me as Cinderella in Into the Woods and we spent a lot of time together. A lot.”

We order plates of pasta from the lone waiter, though right now I just want a shot of Ouzo. The story creeps from my mouth in rancid breaths, hidden too long inside me.

“I fell for him in every way. His looks, his intelligence, his talent. And he wanted me. I thought I was so grown up. I thought I could handle it.”

“He was your first?”

I nod miserably. “I’d always been a good girl. My parents gave me anything I wanted and I lived to be onstage, in front of the lights, to sing my heart out and bring the house down. I never needed a reason to rebel. But when I met Dixon, I was out of the house and could do anything I wanted.”

“And you wanted him.”

“Yes. I think I really fell in love with the power he gave me, the ability to perform. But he was a director to his core. It got to the point where I’d do anything he asked.”

“He took advantage of you.” It’s not a question. Beryl knows where this is going.

Like a puppeteer, Dixon used my thirst for affection to manipulate my obedience. He’d beckon me to his office with a text and take me on his desk between appointments. We even had sex on the stage one night, with the spotlights trained on us. It was exhilarating.

Our pastas arrive and I chase my ravioli around on my plate before I continue.

“It was stupid,” I conclude. “I let him do what he wanted with me and he used me. I knew we should use protection, but he told me he didn’t like the way condoms felt. And I was afraid to ask my family doctor for birth control for fear he’d tell my parents.”

“That’s why one of those pages was an ultrasound.”

“Yeah. When I went home for Christmas break, my period was way too late. I peed on a stick and it was positive. The housekeeper found the test in the bathroom trash and told my mom.”

“How did your parents react?” Beryl’s tone is calm and without judgment.

“My father had the college ship my stuff back from the dorm. My mom kept saying I’d let ‘the world’ influence my morals. When they found out who the father was, they really lost it, but I think they just wanted someone to blame.”

“I don’t understand why they sued him,” Beryl says. “The court paper looked like some kind of civil settlement. Were they trying to pay him to stay out of your life?”

“No. You know how my birthday is in November? I started college when I was seventeen. In California, that makes my affair with Dixon statutory rape. My parents threatened to press charges and ruin his reputation.”

Beryl shakes her head sadly. “Oh, Stella, I had no idea. What a mess.”

I blink back tears and tell her the rest—Dixon settled with my parents for a large chunk of money that I can’t touch until I’m twenty-five, and any hope I had of working on Broadway vanished because he’d probably blacklist me. My parents cut off tuition for Manser Academy, blaming the arts for corrupting their little girl.

“So what happened to the baby?” Beryl orders us coffees to linger a little longer. I feel guilty that I never told my best friend this. I’ve never told anyone.

“My parents put me under house arrest so I couldn’t get an abortion.”

“Did you want to keep the baby?”

“I don’t know. But not having an option was like a noose around my neck. I felt like a prisoner in my own body.”

Beryl’s eyes widen. “They forced you to have it?”

“They would have. When I complained about stomach pain, my mom didn’t even want to take me to the doctor at first, she was so afraid I would try to get an abortion. But then I started bleeding. I passed out on the bathroom floor and our housekeeper found me.”

Beryl gasps and squeezes my hand and I’m transported to that long, dark month, confined in my house and the hospital. I didn’t listen to music the entire time.

“I had an ectopic pregnancy, so they had to do emergency surgery. I think of the baby as Blue, because he was the size of a blueberry when I lost him.”

Beryl and I sip our coffees in silence, letting old secrets sink into fresh wounds. I tell her that after I healed, I got into yoga and applied to new schools. My parents didn’t want me to go far from our southern Oregon home, but when I got into the University of Oregon, I decided to get away, take out loans for the in-state tuition and work-study my way through college.

“At least I was able to make my own decisions and my own mistakes.”

“Do you regret it?” Beryl asks. “Do you think of your choices as mistakes?”

“I wish it had never happened, if that’s what you mean. I wish I’d never met Dixon Ross, never gotten pregnant, and never had to sever ties with my parents. I just want to put all of that behind me, pretend it never happened and start fresh.”

“But it did happen. Cutting out a part of your history, no matter how painful, isn’t that like cutting out a part of your body? Something that makes you, you?”

“I think of it as moving forward. If you can’t forgive, at least forget and get on with life.”

Beryl hmms and I can tell she’s unconvinced. But I don’t need to convince her, only show her that I trust her with this secret, and try to earn her trust again.

Beryl checks the time on her phone and I know she’s got to go. I should go back to work, too, but I’m afraid how we’re leaving things still isn’t right.

“Gavin and I are flying out to Oregon tonight and we’re going to finally get some time together, just the two of us,” she says.