person who had managed to come to her senses before she completely screwed up her life.
In retrospect, I probably should have pondered this last part a bit more.

I woke up super-early on Monday morning (okay, more like 9 A.M.—but I
I stumbled over a cascade of paper airplanes (don’t ask, really) and, hopping into a robe, ran out the door to answer the phone.
“Hello?”
“Amy?” The voice at the other end of the line was not maternal, yet it did sound worried. “It’s Malcolm.”
“Oh.” Couch. Plop. “Call to apologize?”
Silence. “Right. Yesterday. No, as a matter of fact, I didn’t, because I, for one, do not agree with—well, I can’t really talk about that right now.”
“Figures.” I wondered when Brandon’s first class was.
“That’s actually not why I’m calling. I need to see you, ASAP. Do you have any classes this morning?”
“Don’t you already know that, with your awesome Digger mind tricks? Oh, wait, I forgot, there
“Amy, I need to see you right away. It’s important. Barbarian matters.”
Barbarian? I stole another look into my bedroom, where Brandon, still dead to the world (lucky guy), was making my lumpy duvet look even lumpier. Did Malcolm know about that? And how? Maybe it wasn’t all a trick. I looked around the room. Nah. That whole bugging thing was just another one of the conspiracy theories.
And yet…“What is it?” I asked.
“Not on the phone.” Oh, right, and I’m not supposed to buy into the bugging thing when he says stuff like that? “Can you meet me in half an hour?” He named a campus coffee shop.
“Well, I kind of have some work—” Like a kilo of WAP.
“It’s an emergency.”
I grunted. “Fine. You’re buying the mochas.”
Having agreed to the rendezvous, I rushed off to the shower for a quick eradication of last night and then back to my room to dry off and dress in a manner that wouldn’t disturb my—my boyfriend. The pristine term fairly crackled in my head.
I ran a comb through freshly shampooed hair and glanced over at Brandon, who lay twisted in my sheets. Blue morning light from the small window above my bed cast a pale glow over his golden skin, and his hair stood up in all directions. Even in sleep, he was smiling.
I twisted my hair into an impromptu updo, leaned over the bed, and deposited a light kiss on his cheek. “I’ll be back soon,” I whispered to his sleeping form.
First, I had to get some things straight with Malcolm.

A very weary Malcolm looked as if he’d been waiting at the coffee shop for a while, but the paper cup of mocha he slid at me the second I arrived was still scorching hot. I softened slightly. He still owed me an explanation for what had gone down at the meeting yesterday, but at least he was picking up the tab.
“Right on time,” he said. “Promptness is much admired by Diggers.”
“So I was told at my interview.” I slugged back a draught of the coffee. “But let’s get a couple things straight here,
“That was never
Frickin’ Poe.
“In fact,” he went on, “I want to apologize for the way the meeting went yesterday. If it’s any consolation, most of the seniors went and found the taps at the bar last night. We heard about the New York scheme and we’re willing to do whatever it takes to help.”
“I’ll believe that when I see it.” After all, when the girls had stormed out yesterday, Malcolm hadn’t moved a muscle. And I wanted to know why.
“You would have seen it last night. But I think you’d already left.” He tilted his head and looked at me curiously. “With…George?”
Oh, yeah. That reminded me. “And another thing, I will date whoever I want to, and sleep with them, too, and there’s not a thing you society people can say about it.”
Malcolm stared at me with his mouth open. “Excuse me?”
“Come on, Malcolm. ‘Barbarian matters’? Please.”
He laughed out loud then, the creases between his eyes momentarily fading. “Yes, Amy, you can sleep with whomever you want. But that’s not why I called you this morning. I don’t care what you and George do, and none of the other Diggers do, either.”
“I did
Malcolm blinked. “Um, okaaaay. Whatever. I don’t have time for a rundown of your obviously very busy social life.”
Hey! It wasn’t all that busy!
“And honestly, I don’t really care. Save it for your C.B.”
Those Connubial Bliss reports he’d told me about after the initiation, where we spill the history of our sex lives. “Right. As if we’re ever going to see the inside of that tomb again.”
“I think you will. The taps I talked to last night seemed pretty determined.” He shook his head. “But I digress. Amy, I need your help. It’s an emergency.”
“The ‘barbarian matters’ of which you spoke?”
“Exactly.” He took a deep breath. “Remember that girl you saw on the stairs yesterday?”
“The one from the
“Well, she’s my ex-girlfriend.”
Does not compute. Though it explained her hostility. “How long ago was this?”
“Would it surprise you if I said six weeks?”
“Recalling our conversation in your bed not two days ago, yes.”
He took a sip of his drink, as if for fortification. “Are you familiar with the term ‘beard’?”
I furrowed my brow. “Not the facial hair?”
“No. The fake lover.”
“Not really.” But then it hit me. “So you were dating Genevieve in order to throw off—”
“My dad, other suspicious individuals, anyone who might rat me out.” He toyed with the corrugated cardboard ring on his cup. “Anyway, Genevieve didn’t really get it, though after a while, she kind of figured out the score when I didn’t…” He gestured weakly. “The problem is, she sort of fell for me. I liked her a lot, she was a really great girl. But not like that. I couldn’t give her what she wanted.”
But he hadn’t bothered to tell her beforehand! Even I hadn’t been that cruel to Brandon. At least he’d known where I stood all these months. “And she resents that? Gotta tell you, buddy, so far I’m on her side.”
“Just wait.” He looked down at the table, as if bracing himself for the next part of his story. “When we broke up, it was…really bad. I wanted to stay friends. I wanted it to be what it has always been, but she was…
My sympathy meter hovered in the negatives. “Well, yeah, but she was the victim here. You made it out as if you wanted to be her boyfriend, but you were just using her.”
“I’m not saying it wasn’t wrong,” Malcolm replied. “I know I shouldn’t have done it. At least, not without her understanding what was really going on.”
“Did you tell her that?”
Malcolm shrugged. “Do you think it made her feel better?”
He had me there. If she had truly been in love with him, hearing that he’d thought she’d be cool with using her wouldn’t have mollified her in the slightest. But what was the point? “So what does this have to do with me?”
He took a deep breath. “Actually, Amy, it has everything to do with you.”
“You lost me,” I said, shaking my head.
“I really cared about Genevieve. She was so smart, so talented, so accomplished. The editor of the
I circled my hand in the air. “Yeah? And?”
“A model woman.” He looked at me meaningfully.
Where had I heard that phrase recently? Someone had said it to me, like a command, almost. Like an expectation to live up to…
Oh. My. God. He was
Malcolm, like a runaway train speeding toward a cliff, went on. “But after we broke up, she was so wretched and mean-spirited, I just couldn’t bring myself to —”
“Tap her.”
He let out the breath. “Yeah.”
“So,” I said, pushing forward to the excruciating finish, “you tapped me instead.”