henri stares down at the carefully crafted plate of green in front of her. it sounded good on good the menu, like most overpriced salads do. richly colored arugula and thinly sliced pears doused in a zesty vinaigrette and sprinkled with pine nuts and artisan cheese. recommended to pair well with the premium cut and compliment the house riesling. which henri ordered as well. not the steak, but the wine. it looks delicious, piled up on the handcrafted ceramic plate, but now that it’s here in front of her she’s lost her appetite.
“what?” sam asks, glancing up from his own plate, the prime cut, that he slices into expertly. “what’s wrong with it?”
“nothing,” henri says easily, picking at her salad with her fork. they’ve never been here before. it’s a nice restaurant, with its clean, modern industrial interior and warm lighting. probably better suited for a night meal, rather than an after school snack, but it’s a nice place. new, which is why sam was so adamant about here in particular. he prides himself on his restaurant knowledge and recommendations, knows the perfect place for any time or occasion. he’s almost obsessive about new places to eat, always one of the first to walk into any newly opened door. he’s been like this since he was a teenager, and henri has often been his dining partner. it’s their thing. comforting and familiar.
“if it’s not the salad, then what?” he asks again. “what could possibly be going wrong three months into the semester? and don’t say ‘nothing’. i know you.”
henri looks at him, the corners of her mouth curling up against her will. he does know her. and sometimes that’s a problem, but most of the time it’s a relief. she likes having someone she doesn’t have to pretend in front of, and sam is one of the only people she has that fits the criteria. most of the time.
she gives up on her salad with sigh, falling back against her chair. she’ll have it boxed up for later, will eat the soggy arugula when she’s too drunk to notice the texture and text sam her review before passing out.
“are you going to chapel tonight?” she counters.
“yeah,” sam says, like it’s obvious. and then because he likes to entertain her ploys, he makes a dramatic face and asks, “are you?”
sam looks at her, and then bursts into laughter.
“detention for what? on a friday evening?”
“stop it, i’m serious! i have tardy write-ups. i have to clean the study stacks or something, i don’t know.”
sam shakes his head and returns his attention back to his steak. henri looks around for their waiter and waves him down for another glass of wine. her stomach protests. she ignores it.
“what else is wrong?” sam asks eventually, when the silence is well settled.
henri doesn’t even know where to begin. she shrugs, head shaking. really, it’s been fine. other than her habitual tardiness and belated adjustment to her new schedule, the semester has been fine. but fine isn’t good enough. fine isn’t going to cut it in a few weeks when she’s rehashing her progress to her parents over dinner. to theo’s parents, to his brothers and their wives, all their eyes on her expectantly, waiting.
“i just have a lot to do,” she says. “and we’re already three months into the semester and i don’t have any idea where to start.”
“….you know i could kick theo’s ass, right? like, i’m well capable.”
henri looks at sam pointedly across the table and he pointedly stares back, unfazed.
“this is not a theo problem,” she says.
“isn’t, though?” sam returns. isn’t it always?
“no,” henri says, even though it is. their waiter returns to fill henri’s glass. she waits until he leaves to continue. “i don’t know. i’m starting a campus organization completely from scratch and i hardly even know what goes first. it would be so much easier if i had some social club to inherit like valentina and theo did, but i need something i can be the… founder of.”
“because it will look good on my résumé.”
“what do you need a résumé for?”
“sam-.. i don’t know. because it sounds good when i say it. because i can’t keep going home empty handed.”
“i’m just asking,” sam says, knowing that he has cornered her. “look. i get it, okay? but you can’t take on impossible tasks that you don’t even want to do to begin with. it’s not going to work. if you want my advice, don’t fucking do it. but because i know you will anyway, you need a partner. like a co-founder or something. someone you can bounce ideas off of. start small, make a solid plan. the rest will fall together.”
start small, make a solid plan. he always makes it sound so easy. henri gives him a wide-eyed, hopeful look. he tuts and places a slice of meat on top of her salad.
it’s ironic, actually. funny, even. how even on her way to being punished for being late, henri is late.
her first mistake was stopping at the dorm. not necessarily a problem from the start, because she had the time and she wanted to shower and put her boxed salad away for later, but she came home to a cloud of mingling perfumes and loud music and her friends all in the common area with bottles of don julio and dom perignon open between them as they sipped on their mexican 75′s and stared at henri like she’d lost her head when she walked through the door.
“you’re seriously not going to chapel, i thought you were joking,” mina said after valentina had looked her up and down and asked is that what you’re wearing? to which henri replied, no. because she wasn’t even going.
“but it’s the first chapel of the year,” emily supplied uselessly. henri knew that.
the first chapel is always the most exciting. for a handful of weekends every semester, the chapel—which isn’t actually in the chapel, but under it—is hosted by different groups of students with different themes and dress codes and, sometimes, invitation lists. the goal is to be the most notorious, the one that everyone talks about even years later, like some st. agathe’s underground hall of fame, and the only way to host is to have the baton passed along to you. last year, stephanie had inherited the baton from her then girlfriend, and the theme had been glow in the dark. she was the only one from their freshman class to get the chance, but now the keys are in their circle.
henri hopes she never gets them.
it was hard to watch her friends pre-game knowing she wouldn’t be able to join them. the first chapel of the year and henri can’t go.
the shower is the second mistake. she gets so caught up over the twisting knot of fucking fomo in her belly that she loses track of time. she stands under the spray for too long trying to drown out the laughter in the other room and nearly forgets why she’s the odd woman out in the first place. needless to say, she’s struck with deja vu as she scrambles into a pair of jeans and ties her hair back into a patterned silk scarf.
her goodbyes to the girls are quick and half hearted. there is a small, shameful part of her that hopes none of them have any fun tonight. shameful mostly because it’s not actually a small part at all. and then she’s off to the library in a rush, apologies already on her tongue when she arrives.
“sorry, sorry,” she half pleads as she slips through the front doors, the october chill rushing in behind her. the deans secretary fixes her with an unamused look.
“sorry, i know i’m late. my roommate had a crisis. she…” she lies, words dying out when she looks from the dean to the student beside him. sinclair park-morozov. of fucking course.
“yes, well,” the dean’s secretary starts warily, checking his watch. “the two of you should get started as soon as possible. when you finish, the keys are in the third draw of the second desk behind the main counter. i expect them returned to me in my office no later than 7:45 on monday morning. do remember to actually lock the doors behind you. any damages that may fall onto the library this weekend will be your responsibility. enjoy your evening. miss huang. mister morozov.”
he nods at them both and offers nothing else, turning on his heel to no doubt spend his friday night doing something much more entertaining than…. this. henri observes the piles of books, posture deflating as she realizes this is going to be worse than she thought.
“we really do have to stop meeting like this.”
sinclair breathes out a cross between a laugh and sigh, shoulders sinking in resignation. of course, there is still the ever-constant urge to react in anger and cruelty, simmering just beneath his skin. it is not something that he could get rid of, even if he tried. but he breathes back in his irritation, and he remembers it is his own carelessness that got him here. not the dean’s secretary, no matter how unpleasant and sadistic. and not henrietta huang, though he doesn’t quite jump from joy at the sight of her, either. no, in the end, it’s all himself.
“you should try being on time at least once, then,” he says, without any heat behind his words. he eyes the piles in front of them, scanning the titles from top the bottom. he notes dejectedly they’re all out of order, be it alphabetical or thematical. almost as if they’ve been scrambled for the sole purpose of making whoever’s in detention die of utter boredom. “we should get started. i don’t want to be here all night.”
he pulls at the sleeves of his dark green hoodie, the fabric bunching at his elbows. he glances back towards henrietta.
“any suggestions on how to be most efficient?”