Fake Dates & Ice Skates: Chapter 10
Fake Dates & Ice Skates: (The North University Series Book 1)
I went back two days ago to help him with his meal plan which was too easy. He was willing to throw out all the junk he had for healthy alternatives. I tried to give him his shirt back, but he refused it. âI donât want it back,â he said. âIt looks better on you anyway.â
I need to figure out a way to control myself before this tension turns into more before weâve even publicly announced our relationship.
Iâm now running around the house, trying to find my good sports bra to wear to the gym with Miles. I burned through more workout clothes this week than I usually do in a month, and I havenât been on top of the laundry. The only one I have now is a black Nike one which I havenât worn since high school. And not to my benefit now, my boobs have grown a ton since then.
âDid you shave?â Scarlett asks through of a mouthful of toast when I get to the kitchen. Sheâs sat at the island, eating her breakfast while balancing a study video on the back of her cup. Sheâs been pestering me with these kinds of questions all morning.
âNo, Scarlett, I didnât. Weâre going to the gym, Iâm not trying to fuck him,â I counter but she shrugs. Under very different circumstances I would have. Hell, if I was unstable enough last week, I âCanât you do both?â Kennedy asks, walking in the kitchen as she rubs sleep out of her eyes. âHe might just trip and fall right between your legs.â
âDo you guys both have to be on my case right now?â I sigh frustrated. They both giggle and thereâs rapid knocking on the door. They exchange glances and pull a stupid face as I run to answer it.
Itâs Miles. Heâs in grey shorts and a white tee, a duffle bag slung across his shoulder. He looks devastating. He steps into the apartment and raises a hand to Kennedy and Scarlett who are so obviously ogling. I am too.
âYou look hot,â he says quickly, gesturing to my tiny sports bra and joggers. I suck in a breath at his forwardness. Swatting him on his shoulder, I try to battle the blush on my cheeks.
âYou donât have to pretend to like me. They already know that weâre pretending,â I say, walking away from him to collect my bag from the couch.
âI know,â he whispers. I turn to see him smirking. Scarlett gets out of her seat, standing in front of him. I donât have to see her face that sheâs either smiling or judging him. Theyâre almost the same height, Miles only a few inches taller.
âMiles. Nice to finally meet you. Again,â Scarlett says, her voice humours and light. He shakes her outstretched hand. I walk up towards them, standing at her side.
âOoh, donât say âfinally.â Heâll think that I talk about him all the time,â I warn, rolling my eyes. Milesâ mouth opens then closes, shaking his head. I smile to myself.
âBut you âYou ready to go?â I ask. He nods, exchanges goodbyes with my friends and we head out of the door and catch the elevator down to the bottom floor. He walks past my car in the parking lot and continues walking down towards the main road. âWhere are you going?â
He turns around dumbfounded. âTo the gym. Why are you taking your car? Itâs, like, five minutes away.â He sighs, throwing his hands up and then dropping them.
âOh, you sweet, innocent, child. Get in,â I demand, and he obliges. He looks so out of place in my car. His larger-than-life shoulders barley fit in the seat, and he has to adjust his chair to give his legs more room. Itâs comical, really. We barely make it out of the drive before he starts asking me a million questions.
âWhere are we going? Thereâs not another gym for miles. Are you going to murder me? Is this a kidnapping? Why arenât you answering my questions?â he asks rapidly.
âIf I wanted to kidnap you, why would I ask you to come to âYouâre right but that still doesnât make me feel any better.â
âCan you chill? I said we were going to do He looks at me and laughs. âYouâre insane.â
âThat is the second time youâve called me that. Iâm just being practical. Why would we waste our time in a gym where the equipment is mediocre, at best, when we could go to a luxury one that has just been built.â
He doesnât ask any more questions while I drive. He does change the music every two minutes, never letting a full song play. In the last ten minutes Iâve heard, Taylor Swift, Lana Del Rey, Lil Nas X and Miley Cyrus. I was beginning to think that heâs not that bad. That heâs not the douche hockey guy I made him out to be. Until he started singing. I almost crashed four times in the thirty-minute drive at his screeching.
âRemind me to never carpool with you again,â I say when we walk into the hotel.
âIâve got a gorgeous voice, Wren,â he whispers in my ear at the reception desk. His breath tickles my neck and I shiver. I ignore him and get our day passes and we walk through the transparent doors into the gym.
Secluded gyms like these, that nobody knows about just yet, are my favourite. They always smell fresh and Iâm usually one of the first people to use the equipment. Itâs like opening the cap of a fresh orange juice bottle. Itâs so satisfying and calming.
We place our bags in the corner of the room and we start a light warm up. It was easy settling into a routine with him. The girls took forever to get into going to the gym with me. After a few painful months for them, they saw it more as an annual thing to come along with me. Apparently, Iâm too intense for them. Miles and I quickly get into a smooth rhythm of doing a few miles on the treadmill and the Step Master. We then move to the weights.
âHow much can you bench?â I ask when we take a small break. I pull out the lid off my water bottle with my teeth and gulp some while he just stares, catching his breath.
âIsnât that the same as asking a girl what their bra size is?â he asks back. I canât help but laugh.
âThatâs not the same thing. You donât have to tell me. I was just wondering,â I say, getting ready to go on the bench press myself. He stands behind me as I slide in, getting ready to spot me.
âI donât know. Maybe, one-seventy,â he concedes, suddenly looking embarrassed. I let out a âUh, one-ninety. On a good day,â I say, my cheeks turning red. I donât know why I asked, and I donât know why I told him.
âHow the fuck can you do that? Youâre, like, the size of a child. You really are hard core,â he sighs. I ignore his child comment and let out a disbelieving chuckle.
âNot really. Iâve been training since I could walk pretty much. I did a lot of gymnastics growing up, to improve my arm and leg strength,â I admit.
The silence stretches between us as we become a mess of heavy breathing and grunting. After alternating on the bench press, we move back to the floor space, changing between weighted squats and sit ups. It brings a strange sense of comfort being her with him. I usually try to work out on my own in these private gyms but knowing someone here is a lot nicer than I thought.
âYouâre doing it wrong,â I groan at Miles for what feels like the thousandth time. Iâm a picky eater and Iâm a picky person. Watching someone continuously do something wrong is one of my pet peeves.
âI think I know how to do a squat, Wren,â he retorts, still standing weirdly in front of the mirror. I go towards him, standing in front of him so he can see me in the mirror.
âWatch what Iâm doing,â I say, meeting his eye in the mirror. He just blinks at me as I spread my legs to decent position, make sure my back is correct and I squat down low. I didnât think about the proximity until I feel my ass brush against his shorts. I watch him inhale before letting out a shaky breath. I grab his hands from behind me.
âWhat are you doing?â he asks, his voice hoarse.
âYou donât seem like a very visual learner,â I murmur as I place one of his giant hands onto my lower back and the other on my stomach. âCan you feel how my back isnât leaning too forward?â
He doesnât say anything. He makes a noise in the back of his throat and nods at me in the mirror. âJust feel that when I go down, okay?â He nods again. Slowly, I lower myself down to the squat position, holding it for a few seconds before coming back up. âSee?â
I repeat the motion again before moving away from him. I watch him do it himself until heâs got the hang of it.
We mostly work another round in silence until were both on the floor. Miles slides his phone to me before laying down in front of me. I hold onto his feet while he does his first round of sit ups.
âI found someâ¦questionsâ¦on BuzzFeedâ¦that we should⦠know the answers to if weâre going to be a fake couple,â he breathes. I laugh at his persistence to work out and talk at the same time. I open his phone.
âYou should put a password on here, you know?â I say.
âIâve got nothing to hide,â he challenges. Fair enough. âTheyâre in my Notes.â
I scroll through his phone and open the Notes app. I skim through the questions, not sure what I was expecting. They are all relationship based or weird icebreakers to get to know each other. He sits up from his position because I can no longer hold his feet. We sit facing each other, cross legged, looking sweaty and dishevelled.
âOkay,â I draw out. âThis will be fun. First question. What was the first thing you thought about me when we met?â
Miles runs a hand through this hair. âHonestly, all I could think about was how hot you are.â
âMiles, be serious,â I say, poking him with my foot.
âI am!â he replies. I poke him again. âFine, when we met at the party, I just wanted to keep you talking to me. To keep you interested. I had already recognised you from school and the photos in the deanâs office, but I donât know. When we started talking, I guess I just wanted you to like me, and I could tell it wasnât going to be easy.â
His honestly catches me off guard. Iâve always been aware of the way I come across to other people but still hearing him point it out like that makes me feel a little uneasy. I take in a shaky breath, watching his eyes dance across my face. âThanks for being honest.â
âWhat about you?â he asks, nudging his foot into mine.
âMy first thought was: God, I hope he doesnât die right now because that would suck,â I start, remembering the night at the party, watching him convulse over the sink. He chuckles lightly. âAnd then, I thought you were pretty annoying but youâre more tolerable now.â
âJust tolerable, huh?â he says, plucking the phone out of my hand. I roll my lips between my teeth and nod, trying not to smile. âOkay, Iâll take it. Did you go through any phases growing up?â
âOh my God, âTell me now. I want to know what little Wren was like,â Miles pleads, pulling at my hands. I try to ignore the way the electricity shoots up my arms from his touch.
âWell, my first phase was making everybody call me Wren instead of my first name,â I say shuddering. He looks at me, his eyebrows drawn.
âWait? What?â
âAmelia is my first name, and my middle name is Wren. I hated the way Amelia sounded so I told everyone to call me Wren and it stuck.â I shrug my shoulders and he just stares at me in awe.
â
âOh, she was a lot. I went through my One Direction phase; a lot later than Iâd like to admit. I once went through a British phase, where I forced everyone in my house to speak with a British accent for a week. I also forced my family to eat my terrible creations that I thought were gourmet meals after watching Master Chef, but they were really just random condiments that I found in the refrigerator. I was just a general nightmare. I thought that I didnât have friends in middle school other than Scarlett, Kennedy, and Gigi because I was skating all the time but itâs because I was a little weirdo,â I say in one go, surprising myself at how much I just rambled. Miles stares at me with wide eyes and a huge smile.
âI think thatâs the most youâve spoken to me in one sitting,â he says through his wide smile. I roll my eyes and he laughs. âWhy do you always talk about skating like you hate it?â
âWhat do you mean?â
âI donât know. The other day, you were saying how hard you work and how it isnât fun. It sounds like youâve quite literally been training all your life. If you donât like it, why donât you just quit?â
No one has downright asked me that in a long time. What can I say?
This has been my momâs dream for her whole life until she was injured.
Her first daughter couldnât handle the ice and I was her only hope. I put the work in, I got good and now itâs the only thing I can do. The only thing Iâm good for.
âItâs complicated,â I mutter but he doesnât seem convinced. âThatâs a story for another day. What was little Miles like?â He gives me a sympathetic smile before dropping it. If we got into that now, weâd be here for hours.
âI wasnât as crazy as you, thatâs for sure,â he begins. âI donât think I went through any phases exactly. The only thing I can really remember loving as a kid was hockey. Carter and I lived and breathed hockey. It was all we talked about. We could go weeks at a time talking about the same game over and over. I guess Iâm still in that phase, though.â
I see the way his face changes when he talks about him. Itâs nostalgic but pained. Something in him smooths out when he talks about him. Remembrance. He looks a little lost. Distant. As if talking about him has made him materialise in front of him.
âSorry, I donât think that really answered the question,â he says after a while.
âNo, itâs okay,â I reply. Iâve always been a physically affectionate person, so I donât hesitate before I reach out and put my hand over his. He flips over his hand, so his palm is facing up. We both look at our hands before I slip my hand into his. It feels strange but I need to comfort him in some way. âI can tell you really miss him.â
âHe was my best friend. My brother.â
âWe donât have to talk about him if you donât want to,â I whisper. He shakes his head.
âItâs okay. I brought him up.â He squeezes my hand before letting go. He stands up, groaning as he stretches. âCome on. We need to get back to work.â
âDo we have to?â I moan, falling on my back. Miles stands next to my aching body, towering over me.
âThis was your idea. What is it that you say? Beauty is pain,â he chants. I reach my arms up and he grabs my hands, pulling me up. When Iâm standing upright in front of him, I almost sway over.
âAw, are you calling me beautiful?â I mock as I shake out my arms and legs.
âYou didnât need me to tell you that, Wren,â he whispers before tapping me on the shoulder and sprinting to the other side of the gym. Why does this grown man love to play tag?
*
I look back at his house.
Then back to him.
Heâs still staring.
âWhat?â Suddenly I feel uncomfortable under his hot gaze.
âHow many guys have you slept with?â he asks without hesitation.
âIs that one of the questions?â I ask back, turning to him. His face is serious but thereâs something swirling in his eyes. Curiosity? Desperation?
âNo.â
âThen why do you need to know that?â
âIâm your boyfriend, I think Iâm meant to know,â he argues.
He looks adorable and ridiculous at the same time. He walks towards his front door, stomping like a child, before I wind down my window shout after him.
âOne and a half,â I shout loudly, almost cringing at myself. He turns around, jogging back to me until heâs at my door.
âWhat?â he a, leaning his arms on the hood of the car.
âOne and a half. Thatâs how many guys Iâve slept with,â I say quieter this time. His face unknots with confusion as he looks at me intensely.
âA half?â he asks, not hiding the surprise in his tone. âWhat the fuck does that mean?â
âHe couldnât make me come,â I murmur. I watch Milesâ throat as he swallows audibly, his pupils becoming dilated. I start the car up again and change the gear. âBye, Miles.â
âYou⦠You canât leave like that,â he stutters.
âSee you later, alligator,â I shout as I back out of his drive, leaving his jaw open and hands hanging at his sides.