"Stop it!" Karl said as he slapped my phone out of my hand. "She's not going to text you back anytime soon."
I stared back at his cold brown eyes. "Fine," I said, sitting back in my chair.
I looked back over my right shoulder. Kristin was sitting with her friends, all of them laughing and conversing with each other.
"Give it a break," Karl said, shaking his head. Karl was my best friend.
"She's not your friend, not anymore."
"What's the conversation?" Sandy asked as she sat down at our table in the cafeteria. Her girlfriend Lucie sat down next to her.
"What else?" Karl shrugged as he motioned to Kristen.
"Give it a fucking break already," Sandy said. "Whatever you guys had in High School is now gone, she has moved on and so should you."
I looked back. Kristin and I weren't the best of friends even in High School. We were good friends at best. Then we came here, it wasn't planned or did we know we would end up at the same college.
When we saw each other the first day, we hit it off. We talked every day and all night for the first two years. We never were in a serious relationship. It was excellent and comfortable.
Now we barely spoke, not because of me. I tried everything to keep the friendship going, but it seemed like I was the only one.
"Tell you what," Lucie sat up in her chair. "I will pay you fifty dollars for every comment or like she has given any of your drawing on Instagram."
"You're serious," I looked over at her.
Lucie came from a wealthy family. They had paid her full tuition and for the house, not a condo, not an apartment, a whole three-bedroom place for her to stay in while she was away at college.
"Sounds good," Karl said.
"Well?" Lucie asked as she looked at me.
"Fine," I shrugged.
I hit my Instagram app and began going through my drawings. I loved to draw and had taken it as one of my main courses. I planned to be an architect or something along those lines. I enjoyed drawing buildings and parks as well as cities. I flipped through my drawings, looking for Kristin's name.
"A hundred if it is a like and a comment," Lucie added as she threw fuel to the fire.
"This year," Karl blurted out.
"Yes," Sandy added.
I scrolled faster. I saw likes and comments from teachers past and present. Even comments from people I didn't know, I was nearing the beginning of the year and nothing from Kristen.
"Aha!" I said out loud as I found a like and a comment. I flipped the phone around and showed Lucie.
"One of your drawings, not a sketch of her," Lucie shook her head. "Of course she would comment on a picture of herself."
"Seriously?" Karl said, shaking his head.
"Okay, I give in," I said, dropping my phone to the table.
"I just checked hers, you have commented on every single picture she has on there," Karl laughed. "Seriously? Every single picture?"
I shrugged. I had nothing to add.
"What's the big deal anyway?" Sandy asked. "It's not like the two of you dated or fucked or anything. You were just friends."
"You wouldn't understand," I said, shaking my head. "Anyway," I said, lifting my head to look at them. "What are you guys doing for the summer?"
"Cancun, duh," Lucie said, shaking her blonde hair.
"Heading home to see the parents," Karl said. "They got me a private coach to work on my speed."
Karl was a wide receiver for the football team. He had only played two games with the team so far, but the coach promised to give Karl more reps if he got his speed up.
I knew I was going to head back home. It wasn't something I was looking forward to, but I was out of money, and Mom had found me a summer job.
I looked over at Lucie; a thought was going on through her blonde head.
"Say it," I surrendered.
"There are five categories of friendships," Lucie said as she took a pen from her bag. "Best Friends Forever like you and Karl."
"We aren't," I began to shake my head. Karl shook his head.
"Please, the two of you are inseparable at times, it is what it is," Sandy said, smiling.
I nodded my defeat.
"Then there is the basic friend. You can call hang out, tell each other basic shit that happens in each other's day, ask for advice, the usual basic bullshit." Lucie shrugged.
Again, I merely nodded.
"Then there are the frenemies, where you are friends only because you don't want to be enemies because it gets downright nasty," Lucie said.
"Like the relationship you have with Jacob," Sandy pointed out.
Jacob was a friend that I couldn't stand. We barely talked, and most of the time, it was just a nod. "Understandable," I nodded.
"Then there is the friend zone," Lucie said. "Like what you two have," she said, looking at Sandy and me. There was an uncomfortable silence between us.
"Moving on," I said, breaking the silence.
Sandy and I were definitely in each other's friend zone. There was a time when each of us had a crush or liked the other. First, it was her, but I told her I was seeing someone when I wasn't. Then I wanted her, and that was when she realized that she liked women and not men.
"Now you sir," Lucie said as she made a big circle on a piece of paper and put my name in the middle. "Are neck deep in the acquaintance zone. Where you're just someone she knows or used to know. That's it. Nothing more, nothing less, you're just there floating around and being annoying."
I sat back and looked at her. "Annoying?"
Sandy and Lucie both looked at me and began nodding their heads. "Let her go, cut her loose."
Karl looked at me and nodded. "It's time, bro, you know, I know. Hell, most of the campus knows it."
"I got another bet," Lucie said as she reached for my phone. "I will give you four hundred dollars at the end of summer. If she sends a text, calls or reaches out to you first."
"I'm in," Sandy said, looking over at me.
"Me too," Karl piped up.
"You're just as broke as I am," I said, looking over at Karl.
"I know, but I also know she won't," Karl said.
"You in or out?" Lucie said.
"That's a lot of money," Karl said.
I looked over at my shoulder and looked at Kristen. She saw me looking at her and gave me a wave with a smile. Then mouthed "Sorry," as she looked at everyone around her.
"I'm in," I looked back at them.
They all sighed.
"Delete all of her contacts and unfollow anything you have her on," Lucie said.
"Fine," I said, taking out my phone. "You guys don't know her as good as you think you do."