I pull up to Milaâs parentsâ and admire the mammoth of a house as my thoughts turn to my mom and the hope that I can someday afford to buy her a place half this nice. Mila had asked me yesterday if Iâd mind meeting her here.
Milaâs dad Alex answers the door wearing khakis, a blue sweater, and a Santa hat covering most of his graying hair. âHi, Grey. Nice to see you.â He takes a step back. âPlease, come inside.â
Wide-planked floors and light walls invite me inside where the ceilings span twelve feet, making the large room feel even bigger. An overstuffed sectional is positioned around a stone fireplace, and windows that stretch from floor to ceiling bring in extra light, lending to the rich feel of the house.
Jon joins us from the open kitchen, dressed in a T-shirt and jeans. He has dark hair, a short beard, and glasses.
âJon, you remember Grey,â Alex says.
Iâve met Milaâs dads a few times over the years, usually for celebrations or holidays.
âOf course. How are you?â Jon asks, giving me a firm handshake.
I nod. âIâm well, thanks. How are you?â
Jon nods. âGlad to hear it. Iâm doing great, thanks.â He looks at Alex, brows furled as they share a look, and then he clears his throat. âSo youâre here to go running with Mila?â
Alexâs smile hints at amusement as he slides his hands into his pockets and rocks back on his heels.
I nod. âWeâre going to take the trail around the lake. Hudson mentioned he takes it when heâs home.â
Alex nods. âThatâs right.â His smile grows. âYou know you should stay for brunch, Grey. Weâre having a belated Christmas today.â
âMaybe we should wait until we have pizza night orââ Jon says, but Alex shakes his head.
âNo. Todayâs perfect.â Alex brushes his hands as though heâs just completed a chore.
âI donâtââ I start to object, but Alex shakes his head.
âYou can. I know it will mean a lot to Mila, and weâd love to get to know you better.â He looks at Jon, waiting for him to agree.
Jon gives him a panicked expression, one so damn similar to a look Mila makes that I know for certain not everything stems from genetics.
Mila jogs up the stairs then, a wince tightening her brow, revealing sheâs still sore as she looks between her parents and me. âYouâre earlyâ¦â she says.
âPunctual is good,â Alex says.
Jon cringes.
âNot a movie,â Mila tells him.
âWhere do you think screenwriters get their ideas?â he asks her.
Mila shakes her head, moving closer to me. Sheâs wearing a pair of skintight black leggings, tennis shoes, and a black tee that hugs her chest.
I swallow, trying to pull my attention away from her thighs, hips, and breasts. Sheâs so damn perfect it hurts.
âYou should wear a jacket,â Jon says. âThereâs a light breeze, and being close to the water, you might get cold.â
âIâll be okay,â Mila says, shaking her head. âWe wonât be gone long.â
âOh, good. Maybe the four of us can play a game before dinner,â Alex suggests.
âSorry?â Mila asks.
âWe invited Grey to stay for brunch since you didnât,â Alex tells her.
Mila shakes her head. âWeâre just working out. Heâs helping me learn a new routine.â
âA routine?â Jon asks. âSince when did you have an routine.â
Mila drops her chin.
âWe want to meet your friends. The only people we ever see are Hudson, Evelyn, and Griffin. Ease our parent guilt a little and let us hang out with him for a couple of hours. We swear we wonât embarrass you,â Alex says.
â
,â Jon tacks on.
Mila winces. âIâm pretty sure weâve already surpassed much.â She turns to me, her cheeks stained pink. âYou really donât have to stay.â
âHe wants to,â Alex says before I can reply. He steps forward and opens the door. âAre you sure you donât want a coat?â
âIf weâre keeping on script, shouldnât you be cleaning a shotgun or something, not inviting him over for dinner?â
Alex quirks a brow. âMaybe next time.â
Mila steps outside, leading me halfway down the driveway before she turns around to face me. âI told you to text me when you got here.â
âIf youâre that embarrassed, I can say no.â The truth is, I was entirely distracted.
Mila sighs. âTell me weâre going to do something besides run today.â
âYouâre only on day seven.â
âIt feels like a month.â
âYou wonât be this sore in a month,â I tell her.
She huffs out a sigh. âLetâs go.â
I lead Grey to the side yard, where we stop and stretch. The air is deceivingly warm after our promised snow that never cameâtypical winter weather here in Oleander Springs.
I expect Grey to ask me how to get out of staying for dinner or complain about having to drive the extra ten minutes it takes from campus to get to my parentsâ house, or even about the prospect of having to work out with me for the seventh consecutive day that was met with my snarky comment, but he says nothing.
I stretch my hamstrings, which are beginning to burn less. Iâm tired this morning both physically and mentally. After dinner last night, Iâd rode home with Hudson and Evelyn, where we stayed up entirely too late, theorizing what Julian Holloway had meant when claiming I ignored him for years.
I didnât sleep well. Every bump and click had me sitting up in bed, checking our alarm and doorbell camera.
At four, I gave up on sleep, and decided to read until it was time to take Hudson and Evelyn to the airport. I dropped them off and returned to my parentsâ house to meet Grey.
I clear my throat and shove thoughts of Julian out of my head. âWho taught you how to fight?â
Grey lifts one long arm above his head and reaches for his opposite shoulder, the width of this biceps nearly wider than his head. My heart skips, defiantly recalling how hard those muscles are and how secure his touch had been.
That kissâthose few minutesâhas become a forbidden thought, one I havenât discussed with even Evelyn, knowing she would read into it and imagine it signifying more than it did. Instead, Iâve locked the details up and thrown away the key.
Except for these specifics, which I quickly shove into the same stash as I turn my attention to the trees behind us. I sit down, stretching my legs out in front of me.
âWe learned a lot of things on our own, and then, Coleâs cornerman, or coach, picked him up after a few months and taught us the rest.â
âColeâs your friend from Highgrove.â
Grey nods once with confirmation.
âHow long have you guys been friends?â
âMy whole life.â
âWhy donât you ever bring your other friends around?â
Grey looks at me with pinched, cautious eyes. âWhat do you mean?â
âI mean, why donât you ever invite them to hang out with the rest of us?â
âWhy donât you invite your other friends to hang out?â
âBecause I donât have other friends.â
He looks at me like Iâm lying.
âI have other acquaintances, but Iâve always had a small friend circle,â I clarify.
âWhyâs that?â
âBecause Iâm shit when it comes to trusting people.â Itâs the absolute truth.
Grey swallows, and similar to when he asked about my forgotten accent, I see questions humming in his thoughts, ones he doesnât ask, maintaining the boundaries of our relationship. âThey donât trust people, either,â he says.
I stare at him, knowing he includes himself when he says âthey.â I wonder what heâs like when heâs around them. If heâs less serious and laughs more. âWhy?â
His eyes turn calculating as he runs his knuckles over the length of his chiseled jaw. Over the past few days, our conversations have been minimal, all business. My questions cross those lines we carefully constructed two and a half odd years ago. âHighgrove is a quintessential plutocracy.â
I raise my brow. âA what?â
âItâs run by the wealthy. A minority influence nearly everything. Theyâve managed to stop competitors from opening businesses that would offer better job opportunities so they can be richer while everyone else struggles.â
I think of some of the worst foster care homes I spent time in, where greed and strength equated to power and influence.
âGrowing up and seeing how money can corrupt everything from school to police, it makes trusting othersâespecially others with moneyâdifficult.â Grey waves a hand toward my house. âPeople who have this in Highgrove are assholes who looked down on my friends and me and treated us like trash.â
I think of the biting look Grey shot me a couple of weeks ago when I paid for dinner after my botched self-date, wondering if he took that as an insult. I know how desperation can lead to cruelty, and losing even a tiny bit of anything feels significant when you have so little.
âI canât really relate,â I admit. âMy mom was poor, but so was every foster family I stayed with. I never knew anyone who had money until moving here, or if I did, I donât remember.â
Grey swallows, his eyes stuck on mine. âI never in a million years imagined a rich kid with a dad who played in the fucking NFL would become one of my best friends.â
I grin, but for some reason, my eyes feel wet with tears. âI still pinch myself, too.â I glance at Hudsonâs. My love and loyalty for Hudson has nothing to do with his wealth or his fatherâs status, and I know they mean nothing to Grey, either.
âI donât look at our Camden friend group as being less. Itâs just ⦠complicated.â
I nod. âItâs hard not to assume everyone will be like the person who hurt you.â
Greyâs gaze darkens, and his jaw locks. Before he can ask more questions, I dance back across the line of oversharing to comfortable with a playful grin. âBut Palmer can befriend a rock, and Iâm pretty sure, given a chance, Evelyn would make friends with the woodland creatures. Itâs impossible for people not to like them.â
âThen why donât you include Palmer as one of your friends?â
I try and muster an eye roll, but I know it falls flat. âI never said I donât like Palmer, but itâs not like he calls me to hang out or invites me to parties. We are, by definition, acquaintances.â
âYouâre really sticking to that term.â
âBecause it fits.â
âCole would be cool. Heâs easy to get along with and likes most people, but his brother, Abe, is a loose cannon. Heâd punch a fridge if he thought it looked at him wrong.â
âMaybe we should invite Lennyâ¦â
Grey huffs out a laugh. âThe thing is, weâre tight. One guy dives in, and the rest follow. Thatâs how itâs always been. So if I invited them to hang out with the others and Nolan makes a wisecrack or Palmer says something stupid, things would get tense real quick.â
âAnd youâre stuck in the middle.â
He stares at me, his silence confirming he wouldnât be in the middle but on their side. Something in my stomach twists with unease.
âAre you done stretching?â I ask, already turning toward the trail that surrounds Lake Oleander. The lake is manufactured but vast, covering over forty miles. We live on the only section parceled for building. The rest is a county park with trails, sports courts, and green spaces. Iâm pretty sure my need for nature and greenery was born here, where even in January, when most of the trees are barren, itâs tranquil and beautiful.
Grey nods and follows me to the foot trail. On this side of the lake, itâs unpaved and narrow, forcing me to run in front of Grey, which unlocks a new level of self-consciousness that makes this arrangement even stranger.
My frazzled thoughts wane as sweat pricks my brow and spine, and my insecurities steer me to fears as Julianâs words about ignoring him ring in my ears.
Ravens crow from nearby, giving me something to focus on. I find four things: the uneven path, the ferns still shamrock green, the dozen geese floating across the lake, and the glassy surface of the lake. I listen to the lap of the lake against the nearby shore, the whir of a boat engine in the distance, and the raven still crowing before picking out two scents.
When we reach the paved section where the path grows wider, Grey moves to run beside me without saying a word. The silence was easier when he was behind me, but Iâm breathing too heavily to talk, and having him next to me is more comfortable, so I shove the discomfort aside and continue the pace.
I want to collapse when we return to my parentsâ yard, my lungs screaming and mouth parched, but I begin stretching without instruction, feeling my heart pounding in my ears as sweat trails down my back and temples.
âYouâre already finding a good stride,â Grey says. âAre you still pretty sore?â
âOnly when I move or breathe.â
He flashes a surprised grin and chuckles but doesnât offer to help me stretch again. I work to ignore the stab of disappointment.
âI didnât know running would make my ribs ache.â
Grey nods. âNext week, weâll start adding some calisthenics.â
âWill I want to punch you?â
âIf you donât, I wonât be doing my job.â
I bend over and try to touch my toes to hide my smirk.
âAre you guys done, or is there more?â Alex asks, leaning over the porch railing.
âWeâre done. Weâre just stretching. Iâll be in shortly.â
Alex leans closer. âYou mean youâll both be in shortly. I set Grey a place at the table, and Jonâs making him a mocktail, now.â
âIâd tell you to fake sick, but he likely watched us through his bird-watching binoculars and knows youâre fine.â
Greyâs eyes flare with alarm. I recall him asking me over to his table for dinner with Emma and the booster date, and my mortification is shelved.
âDonât worry. Heâll probably wait until the next time he sees you to mention wedding dates and venues.â
Grey goes entirely still. This time, Iâm pretty sure even his heart has stopped.
âThat canât be healthy,â I tell him, shaking my head as I turn toward my house.
âWhy does he look pale?â Alex whispers as I climb the stairs.
I look over my shoulder at Grey as he follows a dozen feet behind. âIf you ask him to call you Dad or mention what you expect from a son-in-law, I swear, I will be the best child ever for all of eternity.â
Alex steps closer, wrapping an arm around my shoulders. Heâs an inch shorter than I am, his eyes a dark brown, with impossibly long lashes Iâve always envied. âBut I like him.â
âYou donât know him.â
âIâve met him at least five times. Plus, he makes you smile,â he bumps his hip against mine. âI saw it.â
âSo does Jim Gaffigan.â
Alex rolls his eyes and slips his arm free of my shoulders. âGrey, you can use the guestroom if you need a shower. We even have some spare clothes in there that I think will fit you because Jonâs brother is cursed, and his bag gets lost every time he visits.â
I breeze through the doorway as Alex tells Grey how heâs made a habit of collecting shirts from every place they go to add to the closet. I find Jon mixing drinks in the kitchen.
âShould I put alcohol in his drink?â he whispers. âHow old is he?â
âYou should put alcohol in mine,â I whisper back.
He glares. I giggle.
âHe doesnât drink much. I wouldnât worry about it.â
âBecause of Hudson or because it doesnât mix well with steroids?â Jon glances toward the doorway where Grey is listening to Alexâs tale of clothing. Heâs wearing a white tee that sculpts to his biceps and broad chest and a loose pair of black basketball shorts that reveal he doesnât skip leg days.
Laughter peels out of me, and I donât know if itâs because itâs been several months since Iâve seen my parents or because, for the first time, someone else isnât a hundred percent team Grey.
âLetâs have a drink on the porch,â Jon says, distributing tumblers filled with a bubbly and light red cocktail garnished with pieces of rosemary skewered with fresh cranberries.
Alex swoons. My parents are openly affectionate and ridiculously obsessed with each other.
Out on the sun porchâmy favorite space except in the spring when everything turns yellow with pollenâI sit in one of the two wicker chairs.
âHow were finals?â Jon asks, sitting next to Alex on one of the couches while Grey sits on the other couch, subtly inspecting his drink.
âA few were borderline brutal,â I tell him.
Jon winces. âSociology?â
I nod, taking a sip. The bubbles tickle my mouth and nose. âAnd that Shakespeare class Alex convinced me to take.â
Alexâs eyes grow wide. âYou didnât like it?â Shakespeare is practically his god.
I cross my legs and lean forward. âMy professor doesnât believe Shakespeare wrote his own plays.â
Alex leans back, repulsion flickering across his features as he brings a hand to his chest like heâs been wounded. âAnd heâs allowed to teach?â He turns to Jon. âThis is what happens when we allow our daughter to attend a liberal college.â
Jon and I giggle as Alex takes a long drink to ease the sting.
âWhat about you, Grey? Are you relieved finals are over?â Alex asks.
Grey looks rigid and entirely uncomfortable, making the glass look like a bomb about to detonate rather than a cranberry spritzer. âVery. Between football and finals, the month before the break was ruthless.â
âCongratulations on your win at the bowl game,â Jon says. âThat was a great game.â
Grey nods his appreciation.
âHow have things been going at work?â I ask Alex. âAre things calming down?â
Alex leans back, sighing heavily. âWeâre still having some disagreements.â
âDiva actors? Budget?â I ask, listing the common complaints.
Alex waves his hands. âJust business. You know how it gets.â
I donât. My time spent in his world could be compared to sticking a toe into a pond.
âIs it something with the story?â I press.
Alex looks at me, his eyes bright with adoration and a familiar look I wish would eventually fadeâone of pity that I used to mistake as shame. âNothing to worry about. They always realize Iâm right eventually.â He brandishes a smile that has me laughing.
âSo you two are running together?â Jon asks, raising his eyebrows. âHow did that come about?â
âI pretended to be his date, and so he owes me.â I lay out the facts as I usually do with my parents.
Grey swallows, his attention volleying between my parents. Heâs usually the epitome of calm and collected, but over the past couple of weeks, Iâve seen him uneasy a dozen times. Somehow, he wasnât even slightly nervous after kissing me, which still has me feeling a little bitter because I felt wholly unhinged afterward. Still do, any time I think about it.
I put that thought into the locked box as well.
âAnd for that, you want him to run with you?â Alexâs voice reflects his confusion, likely for my long avoidance of organized sports or hobbies that included exercising.
âIt was a black-tie event,â I explain to mark the significance of the favor, omitting the largest part, which, of course, is the fact we kissed. I still remember the taste of him. Recall the weight of his hand against my spine when Iâm trying to sleep. âI wore a gown.â
Jon smirks.
âSo you guys areââ Alex starts.
I shake my head before he can dive into tropes and plotlines in an attempt to dissect whatâs going on between Grey and me. âItâs just a deal we made.â
âOr friendshipâ¦â Jon says. âKind of like Hudson.â He gives a pointed look at Alex, backing me up, only heâs missed the mark.
âWeâre not friends,â I regret saying the words as soon as they leave my mouth because they sound childish and cruel even before all three men look at me.
Alexâs shoulders rise, and his demeanor switches from matchmaker to protector in a flash. I can see it, feel it in the way his gaze scrutinizes mine. Iâm pretty sure I can even sense it in the air, as though the energy has changed.
âGreyâs cool. Heâs a nice guy. I just mean that heâs Hudsonâs friend. Heâs working out with me because he owes me. Nothing nefarious, romantic, or wherever you were going.â
I swallow, looking at Grey and trying my damnedest to offer a silent apology.
Grey stares back at me, his blue gaze lacking the animosity I was expecting to discover. Instead, he looks almost perplexed with only a hint of bitterness.
âMila,â Alex says, pulling my gaze to him. His dark eyes are filled with tenderness that has me wondering if Iâll always feel like a child, fragile and exposed, when he looks at me like this with so much love and compassion.
I swallow thickly as a rush of emotions tangles in my throat.
âWould you mind helping me with the charcuterie board?â he asks.
I clear my throat and stand, my knuckles white around the glass Iâm gripping like a stress ball. I appreciate that it doesnât compress and falter under the pressure.
Inside, I lean against the kitchen countertop, pressing the fingers of my free hand together without thought, just habit. Alex stands across from me, allowing me a moment of time and space.
âIâm proud of you for trying something new.â
âDid I embarrass him and make this really awkward?â I ask. âI didnât mean⦠It just came out. I feel like such a jerk.â
âI think he was taken aback. I would guess if you asked him, he would have thought you were friends.â
I shake my head. âHe doesnât like me, and Iâm not talking romantically.â I hate the thin veil of tears that form in my eyes.
Alex steps closer, pulling me into a hug that feels forced and uncomfortable until I remind myself that itâs not. Alex cares, wants to be here, and like the glass, wonât break. I wrap my arms around him a little tighter and breathe in the calming scent of cypress that is so familiar until my tears recede and my breathing become even. Still, he holds me.
âIâve missed you, my beautiful girl.â He doesnât make this about Grey or my insecurities that some argue will never change or go away. Instead, he is again the glass, reassuring me of his presence, consistency, and love.
âIâm surprised Jon chose a charcuterie board. He seemed so adamantly against them when we spoke at Thanksgiving,â I say, stepping back once my feelings are intact.
Alex gives a rueful smile. âYou know him and how he hates anything that gets trendy. I swear, itâs like heâs allergic to anything popular.â He goes to the fridge and withdraws the wooden board filled with cheeses and fruits.
âCan you grab the crackers and nuts out of the pantry? He put them in a basket, so weâd know which ones to use.â
I grab the wire basket and a bag of goldfish crackers I spot on the shelf beneath them and bring them to where Alex adds small ramekins for the different dips and nuts.
âMaybe running together will be good. Hudsonâs always been a good judge of character. I know my trainer wouldnât be willing to come over every day to work out with me in exchange for me dressing up for a couple of hoursâ¦â
âItâs only been a few days.â
âHe was willing to meet you at your parentsâ house.â
âYouâre in your producerâs mind again.â
âAm I?â he asks. âOr are you assuming he doesnât like you because you still sometimes struggle to remember that others see how amazing and awesome you are, just like Jon and I?â
I glance toward the back porch where Jon and Grey are talking, their expressions somber but amicable.
âHe tolerates hanging out with me because of Hudson. We wouldnât be hanging out otherwise. In the two and a half years Iâve known him, do you want to know how many times weâve texted or called each other before last week?â I make a goose egg with my hand. âZero.â
Alex fills the middle container with goldfish crackers. âEverything begins somewhere.â With a meaningful look, he lifts the board and carries it out to the porch.
âGoldfish?â Jon squawks, raising accusing eyes at me. âThose werenât in the box.â
I lean over and grab a small handful to set on one of the plates I brought out. âBut they should have been.â I wink.
He shakes his head. âSome of these cheeses are a hundred dollars a pound.â
âFor cheese?â I ask, shocked but not entirely surprised, feeling a twinge of guilt as my conversation with Grey floats to the top of my thoughts. I came to Oleander Springs with a half-filled garbage bag that fit all my belongings. I still remember walking into this house, amazed by the size and how nice everything was, and how hard I cried when they showed me my room. It was the first time Iâd had my own bedroom, and it was made for a princess, filled with toys, clothes, and books that I struggled to accept.
âAnd these grapes are from France,â Jon says, interrupting my trip down memory lane.
I grab a small bunch of the purple globes heâs referring to. âAre you saying my crackers arenât fancy enough for your board?â
He frowns at me and the insinuation. âIâm saying these are all quality ingredients, and those are processed and high in sodium. How are they even in the pantry?â He turns his accusing stare to Alex.
âThatâs what happens when you send me to the grocery store alone. Things fall into the cart.â Alex shrugs, grabbing a handful of the crackers.
I chuckle, passing a plate to Grey. âEat the cheese or eat the crackers. Jonâs a food snob but an excellent cook, so we donât hold it against him.â
Grey accepts the plate with a broad smile. âI donât think Iâve ever eaten hundred-dollar cheese before.â
âPlease, help yourself. We have more of everything in the fridge.â Jon sits forward, pointing to each cheese and telling him where they came from and how they taste. He turns to Alex as he finishes. âWhen we return to California, youâre back on your diet. You heard what your cardiologist said.â
My back straightens. âWhat did your cardiologist say?â
Alex waves a hand. âThat Iâm healthy as a horse.â
Three years ago, Jon had a heart attack following his sixtieth birthday. The devastating and terrifying event changed what Jon cooks and buys.
Jon plucks a strawberry from the board. âAs long as you avoid salt and saturated fats.â He puts a handful of vegetables on Alexâs plate, then grabs a celery stick and points to a hard white cheese, thinly sliced. âTry this one, Mila. Itâs going to remind you of Florence.â
I take a small bit of it, and he smiles with satisfaction when I nod. âIt really does.â
Our conversation shifts as Jon asks Grey about his major and football before Jon tells me about the new condo theyâre considering buying.
âDo you need a coat, Mila?â Jon asks as I lean back in my chair. âThereâs a breeze.â
âYes. Why donât you get one and check on the timer for the potatoes, please? We need a minute to speak with Grey, anyway. Make sure I approve of his intentions.â Alex crosses his legs and shoots me a wink.
I donât feel even a hint of guilt as I ignore Greyâs stare and go inside.