Light is filtering through the windows when I wake. I push the hair out of my face and roll to look at the clock on the nightstand.
8:32.
Itâs a punch to the stomach, remembering. A year ago, nearly to the minute, my father was in the car with Charlotte on the way to get donuts. It was his idea, of courseâheâd use any excuse to get his hands on junk foodâbut he said it was to get Charlotte more practice behind the wheel.
I picture his heart attack from her vantage point, again and again: panicked and inexperienced, with no idea how to help him and unable to find a place to pull over. She hasnât been behind the wheel since.
I assume there will come a time when I can think of my father without imagining his last moments. When I can remember him and feel happy instead of lost. But itâs probably a long way off.
I release a single slow breath, waiting for the grief to lessen, and then I throw off the covers and force myself to move on with my day. I rinse off quickly before donning a T-shirt and shorts and brushing my teeth. My hair remains unruly and I refuse to do a thing about itâ¦Iâm on vacation after all. Plus, I secretly suspect Hayes is the sort who likes things a little untamed.
âRise and shine, pumpkin!â I call as I venture into the living room. âItâs time for Starbucks!â
He wanders out in shorts and a T-shirt, hair rumpled and deeply in need of a shave, sweetly sleepy-eyed. He yawns, stretching his arms over his head, and I picture waking up to him just the way he looks now, though in my imagination both the shorts and shirt are entirely absent.
Great. Itâs not even nine AM and I already need another shower. As cold as possible, this time.
âI was sort of hoping youâd surprise me by getting the coffee before I woke,â he says, taking a seat at the counter. âI really hope Starbucks isnât the extent of todayâs plans.â
I roll my eyes. âYou know this is supposed to be my weekend off. Maybe I figured youâd entertain yourself.â
âI did that last night in the shower. Now I want you to entertain me.â
I laugh, unwillingly, but not before I picture it in all its hard, wet, soapy detail.
Whoa. Down, brain.
Hayes jerking off in the shower is not where I need my thoughts focused today. âFine. Weâre going surfing. I know youâll claim youâre not interested, but Matt and I went a few times and I think youâll like it.â
âI suppose Matt was extremely good at surfing,â he says, his lip curling.
âHe was kind of good at everything,â I reply as I head to the door. Except it no longer feels true. Iâm mostly saying it to annoy Hayesâ¦which it does.
âI can think of one or two things he wasnât so good at,â Hayes mutters from behind me.
At Starbucks, the line takes longer than it should, thanks to the woman taking ninety minutes to choose a cake pop.
We get our drinks, and he stirs in his very own sugar like a big boy. âSo,â he says, glancing at the door, âweâre about to experience the magic of walking outside. Will it feel like absolute inner peace or more like an orgasm that lasts and lasts?â
My shoulders sag. Iâd hoped to make Hayes see the value in time off, but how can I when heâs hell-bent on proving me wrong? âI knew youâd be an asshole about it.â
I walk out without him and turn my face to the sun. The air smells like scrub oak and primrose, the weather is perfect and I have a day at the beach ahead of me. It will have to be enough, whether Hayes is grousing the entire time or not.
He comes up beside me, and his arm brushes mine.
âIâm having fun, Tali,â he says softly. âFor some reason complaining to you about things I donât actually mind is just my favorite thing to do.â
Itâs not an apology, but itâs close enough and something inside me warms a little.
âBetter than banging three girls at once?â I nudge him with my shoulder.
He looks around. âIs that an option at the moment? Is that what you meant when you said weâre surfing? Because if so, Iâm one hundred percent in.â
âSadly, no,â I reply.
âAlas,â he says. âBut yes, this will be fun too.â
I arranged for the surf instructor to meet us out in front of the property at ten. I slip on my bikini, grab sunscreen, and wander to the deck where Hayes is already waiting.
His eyes roam over meâface to chest to legs, back to the chest where they remain. My body reacts to his obvious approvalâskin tingling, nipples hardening under my bikini top. I try not to squirm, to let him see how his attention affects me. He turns away and I see him adjust his shorts. I like that I affect him too.
âI kind of figured you for the sporty-swim-shorts-and-tank-top kind of gal,â he says.
âThe surf instructor is bringing us wet suits. Otherwise, youâd be correct.â
He turns and his eyes flicker over me again, and linger. âProbably for the best. That top looks like a light breeze could send it flying.â
We walk down a flight of the stairs to the beach, where Gus, our young, shaggy-haired instructor, waits. We struggle into wetsuits and then he makes us practice popping up on the board until heâs deemed us ready to paddle out.
He nods toward the surf and leads the way, but Hayes hesitates, looking from me to the water. âYouâre sure youâre going to be okay? Those donât look like pygmy-size waves.â
I fight an affectionate smile as I nod. In every important relationship Iâve ever hadâwith Matt and with my familyâIâve been the rock, the one who worries, not the one who is worried about. Itâs a role I think Hayes would refuse to let me play, and thereâs a part of me that is so, so tired of playing it, that wishes badly I could lean on someone the way my family leans on me.
I catch a few waves while Gus helps Hayes. After several false starts, Hayes manages to stay upright for a solid ten seconds. Within an hour, heâs better at it than I am.
Weâre straddling our boards and staring at the horizon, waiting for the next set, when Gus points ahead of us.
âWhales,â he says, and they emerge not thirty feet from where we sit. Out of nowhere, grief hits. It was a dream of my fatherâs, to go on a whale-watching tour and for a moment I allow myself to think of him here with me. The sun on his shoulders, the water lapping at his legs, a huge smile on his face as he enjoys the wonder of it all. I pinch my lips together and swallow hard as a sharp pain pierces my heart.
Hayes says nothing, but he reaches out and pulls my surfboard so we are side by side, knees bumping, as they pass.
âAre you happy?â I ask quietly.
His hand rests on my knee, making small circles with his thumb. âVery,â he says. âWe should do this again.â
I glance up at him and his mouth lifts, one dimple blinking to life. Itâs a perfect moment at the end of a very imperfect year. Iâm not sure my father would approve of Hayes, but if heâs watching, heâs probably smiling despite himself.
âYouâre going to ruin your appetite,â Hayes says with a sigh, eyeing the large slice of apple pie Iâve cut myself. Heâs stretched out on the chaiseâalready irritatingly tan while Iâve been applying SPF 50 every hour this afternoon to keep from burningâand being awfully judgmental for a guy who just bought his weight in baked goods last night.
âRuin my appetite for what?â I counter. âI assume weâre eating Pop-Tarts for dinner. At least this has fruit in it.â
He snatches the fork from my hand and pops its contents in his mouth. âWeâve got dinner in an hour down the street. And the place is niceâ âhis eyes trail over my bare stomach, lingering on the side tie of my bikini bottoms for a moment ââso you might want to be slightly less naked than you are.â
He made us a reservation. I stick the pie in his lap and jump to my feet. I have no idea why, as I rush inside to shower, Iâm smiling as wide as I am.
I take my time getting ready before donning a strapless white sundress. I dab my lips with a rose-tinted balm and get a good look at myself in the mirror. The girl who smiles back at meâthe one with glowing eyes and sun-warmed cheeksâlooks like sheâs on the cusp on something big, something exciting. I try to remind her sheâs not, but itâs hard not to feel like this is a date when I walk out to find Hayes waiting in the living room, his eyes consuming me as I approach.
His teeth sink into his lip and I feel a stab of desire so sharp I almost stumble from it.
Itâs not a date, but if it were, Iâd press up close and whisper in his ear, suggesting we cancel dinner entirely. Then Iâd press my lips to his jaw just to feel that five oâclock shadow of his against my skin. Iâd finish unbuttoning the shirt heâs got on, running my hands down his chest, letting my fingers trace all the hard hills and valleys of his stomach before they trail lowerâ¦to his belt, which Iâd rip loose so fast my speed would shock us both.
But, of course, this is absolutely not a date.
âLetâs go,â I say. âSince someone ate all the pie.â
His mouth slips into a smile. âI believe that someone is you.â
âIâm just pointing out that pie is no longer an option,â I say, lips twitching. âIâm sorry you feel the need to assign blame.â
We walk two blocks down to the restaurant, which is oceanfront and insanely expensive. He orders a bottle of wine that is worth more than my carânot that thatâs saying muchâand tastes like happiness in liquid form.
Dinner is served while we watch the sun dim and then set in an explosion of reds and fiery orange. He eats off my plate and I eat off his. Not a date, I remind myself. Definitely not a date.
âWhat an amazing day,â I say, twirling pasta around my fork. âI canât remember the last time I felt this relaxed.â
I wish we were staying longer. Or never planning to leave at all.
He leans back in his seat, holding his glass of wine to his chest. âWas a day with me better than a day with Matt?â
Itâs so weird how competitive he is with someone heâs not actually competing against. âAnything with you is better than it was with Matt.â My reply is instant, as I reach across the table to take another bite of his risotto. âDonât get too flattered. Iâve finally realized he wasnât all that great.â
âI could have told you that within thirty seconds of meeting him. Men like him want to be the center of someoneâs universe and look elsewhere the minute theyâre not.â
I lean toward him. âYou date all these girls who act like youâre a superhero. Is that so different?â
âI date women who donât expect anything, and the rest of itâ¦just comes with the territory. You donât actually think thatâs what I want.â
Itâs not a question, but a statement. And heâs right. I donât think he enjoys the way women treat him. He simply chooses women who understand what heâs willing to offer and who, I suspect, wonât make him want more either.
It will never make him happy.
But I could, a voice whispers.
What a ridiculous, dangerous thought to entertain.
A waiter clears our plates, but we nurse the last of the wine, neither of us in a rush to leave. It feels, here, as if heâs mineâthe pleasure of his words and his smile and his gaze. I try to ignore the part of me that, increasingly, wants more. Wants to feel the rough press of his skin, his weight above me, hear the sounds he makes when heâs losing control.
The adorable elderly couple at the table opposite us is served a large bottle of champagne on ice and they then rise and bring it to our table. âWeâre celebrating our anniversary, but we canât drink this alone,â the man says. âDo you mind if we join you? My wife keeps talking about how much you remind her of us when we were younger.â
Hayes and I share a glanceâhe looks as reluctant as I do to give up even a minute of our time alone, but it would be almost uncivil not to agree. âOf course,â Hayes replies, his smile forced.
They introduce themselves, and then Jacob, the husband, calls the waitress over for glasses while Hayes asks Barb, the wife, how long theyâve been married.
âFifty years,â Jacob answers for her. He looks at our hands. âHow about you two? I donât see any rings.â
âOh,â I say, startled. âWeâre notââ
âTaliâs my assistant,â Hayes says smoothly. Why do we sound like weâre lying? Probably because you donât have a romantic, oceanfront dinner on a Saturday night with your assistant.
âI know what it looks like, but neither of us are married or anything,â I add hastily. âI thought he needed a break from work, so I arranged this, and he doesnât know how to get his own groceries or coffee, so he made me come with him.â My words come out rushed, nervous.
It still sounds like weâre lying.
âWould you rather swallow ten large spiders or sleep in a bed of rats?â Jacob asks suddenly, filling our glasses.
We look from him to each other. âSpiders,â we both answer simultaneously.
âOkay, you can only bring one person with you to an uninhabited island and you have no way of leaving. Who do you bring?â he asks.
My eyes flicker to Hayes, whoâs already looking at me.
âIâd have to bring Tali, obviously,â he says. âI canât make my morning smoothie on my own.â
I laugh. Only on Hayesâs uninhabited island would there be electricity and a Vitamix.
âTali?â Barb asks.
I grin at my boss. âThatâs a very hard question. Iâd have to give it some thought.â
âYou know youâd pick me,â Hayes argues. âWho could possibly be more fun?â
I shrug. âMy niece is pretty fun.â
âYouâd knowingly choose to make a young child suffer on an uninhabited island solely for your amusement?â he scolds. âWith no access to health care? An uncertain food supply? And you call me a narcissist.â His eyes sparkle with amusement.
âOnly behind your back. And I was under the impression this island somehow had a bounty of organic vegetables and Vitamixes, but youâve made a good point. Iâm more willing to make you suffer.â
We both laugh, and itâs only then I see Barb and Jacob staring at us again, wondering what our deal is.
âWell, if youâre both single, why on earth arenât you together?â asks Barb. âYouâd make the cutest couple.â
I feel as awkward as a twelve-year-old sitting beside her crush. I couldnât look at Hayes right now if my life depended on it.
âTali doesnât trust men,â says Hayes. âAnd I am wholly untrustworthy. That pretty much sums it up.â
Thereâs something in his voice that draws my gaze to him, and for a single moment I see hunger on his face, stark and desperate. As if itâs only the presence of others that keeps him from pushing up my skirt and taking me right here on this table.
I would let him.
Jacob starts talking about how poor they were when they got married: all the canned tuna and potatoes they ate, the car door tied shut with a rope. I am barely listening, watching Hayes instead. If he were mine, I would have no recollection at all of tuna, potatoes, or how we kept a car door shut. Iâd only remember wanting him closer and closer, until I couldnât tell where he began and I ended. Iâd suffocate to death trying to get more and more of his gloriously smooth skin.
Iâm still fantasizing when Barb coughs politely and tells her husband itâs time for them to go. I wonder how obvious my thoughts were.
We stand, and Barb hugs me. âEven if you donât trust men,â she whispers, âthis oneâs a keeper.â
She obviously doesnât know much about Hayesâs careless approach to women. But then again, as he stands there watching me with that look in his eye, he doesnât appear all that careless to me either.
We get back to our rental and walk out to sit in the double chaise, where itâs silent but for the crashing waves and the incessant call of crickets. Our night here is ending, and we leave in the morning. I want to dig in my heels and refuse to go.
âIn a perfect world, Iâd stay in this house and never leave,â I tell him.
I see a flash of his dimple. âWould I be here with you? Before you answer, let me remind you Iâm good at buying pie.â
âHmmm, true,â I agree. âAnd Pop-Tarts. I suppose youâd have to stay.â
Thereâs silence. I lean my head back and shut my eyes. As much as I love this house, itâs Hayes thatâs actually made me happy here. If I were to create a Tinder profile now, Iâd seekâ¦him. Mischievous eyes, a willingness to always say the rudest possible thing, a mouth that twitches when heâs trying not to smile. Someone who holds my door without thinking, but is happy to slam it in my face if it will make me laugh.
We only have two weeks left before Jonathan is back full-time. I wonder if it bothers him at all. I wonder if the thought of it makes his heart clench the way it does mine, if it sometimes hurts to breathe when he considers it. Doubtful, when he doesnât even know Iâm leaving for good. Heâs never asked where Iâll go when Jonathan returns, and I never volunteered it. I guess there was this small part of me that just wanted to see every possibility played out. That wanted to see how things might be with us if I were able to stay.
âAnd in your ideal world,â he says, âwould Matt be here too?â
I stretch and roll on my side to face him. âI swear you talk more about my ex than I do. Do you want me to set you two up? Is that what this is about?â
âIâm just wondering to what extent youâre over him,â he says. His voice is quieter than it was, less certain. âAnd donât reflexively tell me you are. I saw the way you looked at him that night, Tali.â
Has he been thinking, all this time, that I still want Matt back? âI was just shocked. It was the first time Iâd seen or talked to him since the breakup, and I felt like such a failure by contrast. It wasnât about missing him.â
âYou must miss him a little,â he argues. âHeâs basically the only person youâve ever been with.â
I think about this. âThe things I miss are pretty stupid. I miss having someone to eat with, someone to talk to while I brush my teeth at night. I miss having someone who will listen to the stupid stuff that happens each day, the stories that donât really have a point.â
âI feel like much of what you say is pointless, if that helps?â he asks, and I kick him. âAt least he was so deeply unsatisfying in bed you donât have to miss that.â
âI never said it was deeply unsatisfying,â I argue. âBut I guess itâs nice not to have the pressure.â This grabs his attention. He turns his head to look at me, and his body follows, adjusting his position so he is on his side.
âWhat pressure?â he asks.
I flip onto my back. âIâd need a lot more alcohol to discuss that comfortably.â
He grabs the bottle of wine and refills my glass.
I take a heavy sip, wishing Iâd had more to drink before this discussion began. Or that I hadnât said anything to lead to it in the first place.
âIt bothered him,â I begin haltingly. âIt bothered him if I didnâtâ¦finishâ¦which I often didnât for the reason I mentioned earlier. He took it personally, so I was always kind of worried.â
âLots of women donât come through intercourse. Why didnât he just go down on you?â
The ease with which he suggests it, as if itâs the most obvious thing in the world, plucks a string in my core. I picture it. I picture Hayes like thatâ¦how open and shameless heâd be.
God.
âWhat?â he asks. âYou canât come that way?â
âI have no idea,â I groan, as I cover my face with my hand, humiliated. âAnd I canât believe weâre discussing this. Iâve only slept with two people, and neither of them tried. It doesnât matter. It probably wouldnât work anyway.â
âIt would work,â he says. His voice is low and raspy. I shiver at the sound of it. âI could make you come in two minutes flat.â
My gut clenches. I picture him sliding down between my legs, pushing my thighs apart. The rasp of his scruff against my skin, that first flick of his tongue⦠Stop thinking this way. There will be other men in the future. It just canât be him. Itâll ruin everything.
Hayes is perfectly still beside me, silent. Iâm about to brave looking at him, but Iâm scared of what I might see.
And then his hand circles my wrist. âTali,â he says quietly, pulling my hand away from my face. âLet me.â The look on his face is almost pleading, but thereâs desire too.
His smell is everywhereâocean and soap and fresh air, making it impossible to think.
I stare at him, my tongue darting out to tap my lip as I hesitate. I know what heâs asking, and I know itâs a terrible idea. âI donât want to mess upââ
âIt wonât,â he says. âIt wonât, I swear. You donât have to touch me. Just let me do this. Let me be the first.â
Iâve never heard him like this before. Iâve never seen him act like he really wants something, and wants it badly. Iâm shocked by how compelling it is.
I donât think Iâm capable of turning him down when he asks like that.
âOnly this,â I whisper. âNothing more. And it all goes back to normal in the morning. Weâre friends again. No weirdness. Promise?â
His fingers push into my hair, and he turns my face toward his.
âI promise.â He grabs the wine glass out of my hand, putting it down on the little table to his right, and then comes back to me. His hand rests on my waist, face inches from mine and I suck in a breath at his closeness. He glances at my mouth and for one endless second, I think he will kiss me. He swallows and then his lips move lowerâto my jawline, then my neck. They linger there and he breathes deep, as if Iâm wine heâs just decanted. Already Iâm arching toward him, like a flower toward the sun.
I feel the flutter of his pulse beneath my palm, faster than normal. His hand moves up my body, skimming my breast. He runs his fingers along the top of my sundress, dipping for a moment into the cleft between my breasts.
âThis,â he says quietly, his eyes never leaving me, like Iâm a meal heâs waited a lifetime for. âThis made me crazy all night.â
Grasping the fabric, he slowly lowers my dress down to my waist, freeing my breasts to him completely. His quiet groan grazes my skin, pebbling my nipples, and he traces one with an index finger before his mouth lowers to grace it with a gentle kiss.
I arch upward as something bursts open inside me. My blood is racing, my body taut and reckless.
âOh,â I gasp. âThatâ¦â
I canât really form the rest of the sentence, and I donât need to. He knows. He knows I need more, that suddenly I need everything. He does it again, using his teeth this time. A pulse beats in my core, insistent and demanding. My knee bends as my foot slides up the back of his leg, in a silent plea for action.
I want to tell him to forget about his plans. I want to reach for his belt and pull him inside me. But already heâs noticed the way my skirt has fallen to my waist, exposing me. His hands trail along my inner thighs and then he pushes my legs apart, his eyes following their progress as if the Holy Grail is at the end of their path.
And then his fingertips press against my panties.
Oh. Even that tiny brush of his fingers is waking something up in me, something Iâd almost forgotten existed. My eyelids flutter closed, but not before I see him watching my reaction, avid and satisfied.
His index finger hooks under the elastic and drags along my core. My head falls backward, arching my neck. âOh, God,â I whisper. But what if it doesnât work? the voice in my head echoes. I donât want him to look at me like Matt used to afterward, silently resentful.
âStop thinking, Tali,â he whispers, pressing his lips to the soft skin of my inner thigh. âThis is just you and me, no one else.â He strokes me again. âDo you feel my fingers against you?â
I swallow as he refocuses my attention. The calloused pad of his index finger brushes against my clit before it slides lower. That tiny brush lights me on fire. Iâm not sure itâs even possible to worry when heâs doing what he is right now.
âYes.â The word is breathy, desperate.
His mouth moves up my thigh, his shoulder forcing my legs further apart, allowing him more access. He presses his lips to my clit, outside my panties, before pushing the panties to the side entirely and swiping his tongue over me, top to bottom.
âJesus, youâre so wet right now.â He glides his fingers up and down, and then pushes one inside me, to emphasize his point. I let my knees drop open even more, encouraging him. His fingers circle my opening and I groan out loud before he slides two fingers inside me, his tongue continuing to flicker over my clit in the most torturous way.
Itâs unlike anything else. I rock my hips against his fingers as he starts to move them in and out of me. Iâm not even going to last a minute and I want it to last. I want him to keep doing exactly this until we have to check out in the morning. Preferably, until I have to move home.
His thumb replaces his mouth on my clit as he applies more pressure and my head starts to spin. My breath comes out in small gasps, in rhythm with the thrust of my hips. I hear him moan and the clank of his belt as it falls open, followed by his zipper, and thenâ¦the sound of his free hand, moving over his own length.
My eyes open to watch him. His mouth is slightly ajar, his gaze dark and drugged, his grip on his cock so tight it looks painful.
Thatâs all it takes.
Every muscle in my abdomen pulls tight. âOh, God,â I whisper. âIâm gonna come.â
He buries his face between my legs and licks hard as I arch against him with my hands in his hair. Fireworks explode behind my eyes as I finally let go, crying out as the entire world falls away. He doesnât let up for a moment until I reach down to wrap my hand around the one currently gripping his cock.
âCome here,â I gasp, and he knows exactly what I mean, rising quickly, climbing over me to press his cock to my lips like heâll die if he doesnât get it there soon enough.
âIâm close,â he hisses, as my tongue slides over him. âOh, fuck, Iâm so close.â
I take him as far as I can, my fist sliding over his base, and when I pull hard with my mouth, he inhales sharply. âComing. God.â
He starts to pull out but explodes before he can, and I wrap my hands around his hips, holding him where he is, taking everything he gives me.
He finishes with a low, delicious groan of relief, the most gorgeous sound Iâve ever heard him make.
Heâs breathing heavily as he collapses, his head on my chest.
âHoly shit,â he gasps. âI think I understand why your ex came so fast.â
Before I can laugh, heâs pulled my mouth to his and heâs kissing me hard, urgently, the same way he did between my legs. Itâs not what we agreed to, and I just donât care.
Once. It could mean one time, or it could mean one night. We canât really make things worse, andâ¦I want more. His mouth lowers, pulling at one nipple and the other. Heâs already hard. I can feel him there, swollen against my inner thigh.
âCondom,â I gasp. He reaches toward his shorts, still hanging off his thighs and grabs his wallet. He tears the packet with his teeth and raises above me to roll it over hisâpredictably hugeâlength.
âAre you sure?â he asks, positioning himself between my legs. The way heâs looking at me right nowâas if this is all he wants in the world, hits me deep in my gut. I feel empty for him, and my hips arch, pressing him into me before Iâve ever answered.
âJesus, Tali,â he whispers. âIâve wanted this for so fucking long.â
He thrusts inside me, and Iâm suddenly full, so unbelievably full. My gasp is small, almost inaudible, but he hears it.
âYouâre okay?â he asks. His voice is tight. Heâs not moving, trying to let me adjust to his size.
âYes.â Iâm breathless as a sprinter. âGod, yes. The, um, rumors were true.â
He gives a quiet, pained laugh, and then he begins to move. Push in, slow drag out. Repeat. I want to do this for the rest of my life. This and nothing else.
âItâs so fucking good with you,â he hisses, moving faster, his tight control starting to lapse. I love seeing him like this. I love that Iâm capable of producing it in him, this lack of restraint. His fingers move to my clit, light but fast. He changes the angle of his hips and thrusts hard, hitting deep and in just the right spot.
âAahh.â
Something opens up inside me, and no sooner has he begun than heat rushes up my body, my muscles stiffen, everything wound so tight I feel like I might snap in half.
âIâm gonnaââ I gasp, and then I clench around him and my head digs backward. My back arches, pushing my breasts into his chest, intensifying my orgasm as I spasm around him, my core gripping him tight.
âFuck,â he hisses, his thrusts jerky and hard and uneven and perfect. âFuck, fuck, fuck.â
Finally, heâs still above me, breathing hard. When his eyes open, he looks as stunned as I feel. Iâm not sure why. Surely this wasnât as radically different for him as it was for me.
My God. To think I almost went through life without this. Without even knowing it could be this way.
His lips find mine once more before he flops to my side and pulls my head to his chest.
âIâll show myself out,â I mumble against his shirt.
His chest rises with a quiet laugh. His arm tightens. âI knew you were going to say that.â
And then thereâs silence.
I still want more. But he just came twice in a row, and heâs gone quietâ¦undoubtedly because he assumes Iâm now planning our spring wedding and choosing our childrenâs names. Any minute now, heâll say something to place distance between us, to remind me what this was.
The mere thought of it makes my stomach drop. I need to extricate myself before it happens. I donât want this to be awkward for either of us.
I sit up and fix my dress. âIâd say âletâs do this again sometimeâ but I know thatâs not your M.O.â
âRushing off?â he asks. âAm I the new Brad Perez?â Itâs phrased like humor, but thereâs a bite to it. As if it bothers him, when we both know Iâm simply saving him the trouble.
âWho will kick me out in the morning if Iâm not available to do it?â I ask, climbing to my feet. Thereâs this desperate thing inside me that wants him to say this is different, I wouldnât kick you out, I want you to stay.
âI guess I deserved that,â he replies. It makes me feel guilty, like I aimed too low, but itâs not as if heâs stopping me. Itâs not as if he can argue Iâm wrong.
My tread is heavy as I enter the house, like Iâm fighting my way through mud. I wish I hadnât rushed off. All I want in the world right now is to be curled up against him, and I just walked away from my only chance to do it.
As Matt said at the end, maybe Iâm not as smart as I think.
I open my eyes to the sky alight with the colors of the sunrise. The soft bed sheets wrap around my legs from a restless nightâs sleep. I can still remember the feel of him above me and in me, the sound he made when he came. The way he lookedâmouth open, eyes squeezed tight, head thrown back. One day, the memory of him like that will dull, and itâs probably for the best because right now, itâs almost too sharp to bear.
My skin smells like him. My lips, and other areas, are sore from him. I feel him everywhere, and the only way to recover from this is to wash it all away and start fresh.
I shower, lathering my sensitive skin in soap to disguise his scent. Once Iâm dry, I pull on shorts and a tee, throw all my shit in a bag. As much as I love this house, I just want to leave now. I need to move forward, as soon as possible, and I donât think I can do it here.
Heâs already in the living room, already showered. I donât think heâs ever woken before me in his life, which means heâs probably as desperate as I am to get through the awkwardness of our trip home.
âArenât you the early bird?â I ask. My good cheer sounds as forced as it feels. âSex with me transformed you into a new man. I assumed it would.â
His jaw tightens. âI didnât figure you for the type to be soâ¦uncomplicated the morning after.â
I go to the kitchen and start unloading the dishwasher, clanging flatware and pans as if I donât have a care. âBest just to put it out there. Otherwise, it turns into The Thing That Shall Not Be Named.â
He comes to the other side of the counter. âI did figure you for the type to work a Harry Potter reference into any given conversation, so that lines up.â
I can tell heâs watching me. I continue to focus on the dishes, as if the task requires all my attention. If our eyes meet, heâll see every single thing Iâm feeling. Heâll see Iâm the stupid girl who wants more when she should know better.
âNow I just have to decide what I should say on the flowers I send myself.â
âAnd youâll want breakfast, too, I imagine. Will Starbucks suffice?â he asks, tying off the trash bag. âProbably not. Iâll get you a gift card. Applebees? That seems like a place a person from Kansas would enjoy.â
I started this, but Iâm a little stung that heâs replying in kind. The dumb teenage girl inside me wanted him to hold my face lovingly and explain how much it all meant to him. And maybe if I stopped being so offhanded about it, he would. But I feel too raw for that. I just canât. I need to protect my heart.
âIâm deeply impressed by your thoughtfulness,â I reply. âIâll frame it as a permanent reminder. Although testing positive for syphilis in a few weeks will probably be permanent enough.â
He sets the trash by the front door and returns. âAs far as I can recall, we were careful. And Iâm clean.â
âThat you just referenced a sexual encounter with âas far as I can recallâ,â I reply tartly, âindicates my concern is valid.â
The kitchen is spotless. Iâm forced to meet his gaze at last. His eyes are dark, and his face is drawn. I wonder if he ever went to sleep at all.
âI remember, Tali,â he says, his voice quieter, more earnest, than normal.
I swallow. âYeah, me too,â I whisper, reaching for my bag.
This is precisely what I didnât wantâthe awkwardness of I know you want things from me I canât give. Itâs not how I pictured our trip ending.
The drive home is fine. He doesnât seem to mind my running commentary on every car and building and view we pass, which I find absolutely necessary. If Iâm silent, I start looking at his profile and remembering the scrape of that jaw against my thighs, the way heâd push in hard and drag out slow, eyes shut as if I was expensive scotch, meant to be savored. The sounds he made as he came. Oh, God, I hope I always remember the sounds he made.
We finally reach my building. As uncomfortable as the morning has been, I donât want to leave his car. Iâd take discomfort over being apart from him, hands down.
I force myself to open the door, and he climbs out too. The air no longer smells like him. Santa Monica suddenly seems like itâs nothing but pavement and reflective surfaces, and Iâm not sure Iâve ever felt more alone.
âThanks for bringing me,â I say, swinging my bag over my shoulder. âIt was fun.â
âIâm glad you came,â he replies. Our eyes meet. âThat wasnât meant to be a double entendre.â
I laugh. He beat me to the joke.
By the time I reach the stairs, heâs driven away, probably eager to put this behind him. I get to my apartment, collapse face-down on the bed, and cry like a child.
How is it possible I got over ten years with Matt more easily than I did ten minutes with Hayes?