days, it becomes painfully obvious how empty Evanâs life is. All he does is go for runs, work out in his massive home gym, walk around the kitchen looking for snacks and play video games.
Nobody visits him, since his friends, like mine, are all home with their families or holidaying abroad. He doesnât seem bothered about university applications or homework or revisionâor about much at all, actually. He just ambles aimlessly through his days, looking for stuff to do.
Whenever I return home from the café , he comes bounding down the stairs like an eager puppy. We get into the habit of cooking together, which mostly involves me doing the cooking and Evan looking over my shoulder and asking a million questions. I give him tasks, and he does them without complaint: washing up, peeling veggies, emptying the bins.
We eat together at his kitchen island and then watch TV for a bit in his fancy living room. Sometimes, weâll play some video games, but Iâm not very good at them, and Evan isnât the best teacher, so I always end up giving up.
Other times, weâll play some music and Iâll sit and chip away at my homework while Evan lies on his back on the floor with his legs on the sofa, playing games on his phone.
On Friday evening, I come home exhausted after five consecutive days at the café . I have Saturday and Sunday off, so I put away my coat and backpack and go find Evan. Although we never talked about the kiss at the party, it no longer feels like a phantom haunting us every time weâre together, so most of the awkwardness has dissipated by now.
Heâs perched on a stool in the kitchen, watching something on his phone and sipping a massive protein shake. His blue eyes light up when I enter the room and he holds up his glass.
âWant some?â
âAfter Iâm done working out in your basement, maybe.â
âYouâre going to work out?â he asks with honest surprise.
I give him a look. âNo, Evan. No, Iâm not going to work out. But there something I want us to do.â
He stares at me wide-eyed, and his phone slips from his hand, landing on the marble tabletop with a thud. A dull flush colours his cheeks. Immediately, the ghost of the kiss rises between us. I have to intervene quickly if I donât want this to become unbearably awkward.
âNot whatever it is youâre imagining,â I snap.
âOh.â He blinks at me with a slight frown. âWhat, then?â
I raise my eyebrows. âDo you remember the decorations we bought at the beginning of the week?â
He sits up. âFuck off. Yes. Yes, I remember! What about them? Is it time?â
I nod solemnly. âItâs time.â
He runs from the kitchen, abandoning both his phone and his protein shake. The decorations are in bags and boxes in the hallway. I walk over to find Evan flitting around them like a giddy kid.
âWhere do we start?â
Decorating takes us the rest of the afternoon and most of the evening. But when we finally finish and walk around to admire our handiwork, it doesnât feel like we wasted our time. The austere elegance of the rooms is transformed by the soft glow of coloured fairy lights, the strings of tinsel, the garlands and wreaths.
Even our small Christmas tree, tucked by the ornate fireplace in the living room, looks pretty good now itâs decorated.
âDoes that mean weâre doing presents, then?â Evan asks as we both stand admiring the tree.
âI mean, itâs a little late now. Do you want to?â
âYeah! It would be weird to have a tree with no presents under it.â
I shrug. âAlright. Weâll do presents.â
I still remember the present Evan gave me in Year 9: a silver necklace with a tiny bear on it. The present was too nicely packaged for him to have wrapped it, but he had remembered what my favourite animal was, which had touched me profoundly.
Itâs one of my last good memories of him.
I glance away from Evan. As hurtful as the memory is now, itâs a much-needed reminder of the reality of a friendship with Evan. Just because weâve reached a sort of friendly civility during my stay at his house doesnât mean weâre friends, and thereâs no chance Iâm letting him hurt me again.
Still, when I go to town the next day to look for a present while Evan is out for a run, I canât help but feel a strange pressure. Rationally, I know that it doesnât matter what I get him. This whole thing isnât real, itâs more of a play-acting between us. Despite that, I canât help but want to get him something heâll like.
I spend hours looking, ambling from one shop to the next. What do you get someone who can have anything he wants?
The answer is⦠anything.
In the end, I settle on a soft, oversized hoodie the same summer sky-blue as his eyes. I buy blue wrapping paper with silver stars, and a Christmas card with a mischievous looking snowman on it.
When I get home, Evan is nowhere to be found, and Iâm guessing heâs either sweating away in his gym or out doing the same thing Iâm doing. So I carefully wrap his present, place it under our little tree and amble into the kitchen to cook some dinner.
He returns a little before I finish cooking. To my surprise, he apologises for not being back in time to help. Then he sets the kitchen island with cutlery and pours two glasses of wine. He offers me wine with every meal, which I always decline. But since I donât have work the following day, and either Iâm tired, or his candour has managed to lower my defences somewhat: I end up accepting the glass he gives me.
We sit and eat, Evan regaling me with tales of American Christmas extravagance and overzealous house decorations. I take a slow sip of wine and watch him over the rim of my glass.
Heâs animated, cheeks flushed, blue eyes bright. I never realised how much of a fan of Christmas he was, but maybe all Americans love Christmas this much. He pauses in his stories to shovel stew and bread into his mouth, and I take the opportunity to ask the question thatâs been on my mind.
âDo you miss America?â
He shrugs. âKind of. I have good memories there, especially my auntâs house in New Haven when the whole family gets together. And New York is pretty cool too. Everything in America feels bigger and newer compared to here.â
âWould you ever move back?â
âI mean, yeah, I think Iâm gonna have to. Iâll probably intern for my dad in one of his offices or something. Who knows.â
âWell, I might end up moving there before you,â I say.
Evan freezes with a spoonful of stew halfway between his bowl and his mouth.
âYou want to move to America? I thought you were going to Oxford or Cambridge. Thatâs where most of the kids in our year seem to be planning on going.â
âExactly.â
He smirks. âOh, of course. I forget how much you hate being associated with the rest of us Spearcrest kids. Wouldnât want anyone thinking youâve been handed anything, right?â
Itâs an odd comment from him, subtly pointed. Evan might be many things, but subtleâs not one of them.
âNothing wrong with that,â I say drily, taking another sip of my drink. I donât particularly like wine, but this is good wine, and it warms me up from the inside on its way down.
âNo, nothing wrong with that,â Evan says with a sudden smile. âTheyâre going to love you in America, you know.â
That, I did not expect. âReally?â
âYeah, really. Youâve got this sort of stuck-up British sophistication, but youâre also an underdog. Itâs a winning combination. All the American boys are going to fall head over heels in love with you.â
I try to imagine it. Being noticed by tall, smart American boys at Harvard. After years of being poked at from a distance like a roadside show bear by the Spearcrest boys, I canât honestly say itâs not a pleasant image. It would be quite nice to be wanted for once.
âI wouldnât hate that,â I say with a little shrug.
Evan looks scandalised. âWhat are you talking about? Youâd never date an American!â
âWhat are talking about? Since when are you such an authority on who I would or wouldnât date?â
âIâm not saying Iâm an authority. Youâve made your opinions on us thick, bull-headed Americans pretty clear.â
âI donât think Americans are thick and bull-headed. Americans have plenty of qualities too.â
He stares at me with his mouth open in an expression of incredulity. â
? Like what?â
âThey can be friendly, optimistic, full of hope. Thereâs something kind of romantic about the American Dream, the belief that anyone can make it if they work hard enough. It might not be realistic, but itâs idealistic. I like that.â
Evan narrows his eyes and leans forward. âSo what about me?â
âWhat you?â I laugh. âYou donât count.â
âI donât count? What do you mean, I donât count? Iâm American, arenât I?â
âYes, but,â I shake my hands, trying to think of the best way to explain what I mean, âyouâre not an boy, youâre a⦠a boy.â
I laugh and realise at exactly that moment that even though Iâm not quite tipsy yet, the wine has definitely loosened my tongue a little. I make a mental note to reel myself in, because Iâm not about to have another repeat of the party disaster. But thereâs something about talking with Evan without a filter thatâs somehow more intoxicating than the wine itself.
âSo what youâre saying is that you wouldnât refuse to date me on the grounds that Iâm American, but rather on the grounds that I go to Spearcrest?â
I shake my head, then realise heâs not completely wrong. âRight, yeah.â
âYou realise you go to Spearcrest too, right?â
I nod. âI wouldnât date me either, if thatâs what youâre asking.â
He sits back. âOh my god, Sutton. Youâre drunk.â
âIâm not drunk. Iâm not even tipsy. Iâm just being honest.â
âOkay. Alright. Then how about this: what if a guy asked you out, and you liked him, but he was from Spearcrest?â
âDonât be stupid,â I say, pushing aside my empty bowl and grabbing some more bread. âThat would never happen.â
âBecause youâd never like a guy from Spearcrest?â
âBecause nobody in Spearcrest would ever ask me out. You made sure of that.â
âOh.â Evan looks away for a moment. His cheeks go several shades redder, as if heâs blushing. I narrow my eyes at this unexpected reaction, but then he turns back to look at me. âIsnât that what you want, though?â
I let out a bark of laughter. âWhat, to be a social pariah because you and your shitty friends picked me out to be your personal pinata for the last few years? No, thatâs not really what I want, Evan.â
He frowns. âWe didnâtâcome on, we never went too far. Mostly it was just teasing.â
â
? You insulted me every chance you got, made my life a fucking nightmare for years and somehow made me out to be both a freak weirdo loner an attention-starved social climber.â
âWell, you didnât help yourself, did you?â
Itâs my turn to blush and stumble. âWhat are you talking about?â
âSucking up to the teachers, being a prefect and ratting everybody out, acting stuck-up all the time just because your parents work at the school.â
âItâs almost as if I was putting in the effort to make sure I would leave Spearcrest with excellent grades and references, something you and your millionaire mates clearly donât worry about. Andâand stop saying Iâm stuck-up, Iâm not stuck-up!â
Evan raises his eyebrows. âYou think youâre better than the rest of us because our parents make our lives easy and we donât ever have to do anything for ourselves or face consequences.â
âBut thatâs the truth!â I protest angrily.
My face is hot and Iâm no longer laughing. Even though I donât want to be, I canât help but be offended that Evan thinks Iâm stuck-up.
Thereâs a difference between having dignity and self-worth and being stuck-up, and Evan doesnât seem to be understanding that.
âSometimes, yes,â Evan admits. âBut it doesnât mean youâre better than us just because your life is more difficult.â
âI donât think Iâm better than you.â
Thatâs definitely a lie, and I hope Evan doesnât realise. He leans forward again and speaks in a low, serious tone. âFine. Then let me rephrase my question from before. If asked you out, on a date, would you say yes?â
âAbsolutely not.â
âWhy not? Itâs not because Iâm American, and itâs not because I go to Spearcrest, right? So why not?â
âBecauseââ I stare at him, astounded that I even have to explain my answer after everything thatâs happened between us all these years. âBecause itâs notâthis whole scenario isnât real, youâre obviously not going to ask me out. Weâre barely even friends. Why are you even asking? To prove your stupid point?â
âIâm asking. Go on, Sutton. Let me take you on a date. It can be your practice run at dating an American boy.â
His blue eyes are fixed on mine, intense and unyielding, daring me to look away. A smile plays on his lips, impossible to read.
Itâs hard to tell how sincere heâs being, or even what point heâs trying to make anymore. But Iâm completely out of my depth, like Iâve waded too far into the surf and am now being pulled under by a powerful, treacherous current.
A current alive with memories of cold night air and alcohol and Evanâs tongue sliding against mine.
Time for some evasive manoeuvering.
âFine, Iâll make you a deal.â I lean toward him and meet his gaze. âIf I get accepted into the US universities Iâm applying to, then Iâll go on a date with you and can tutor on how to date an American.â
He tilts his head and narrows his eyes. âWhat universities are you applying to?â
âHarvard, Yale and Stanford.â
âFuck me, Sutton.â He glares at me and then extends his hand out to me. âBut fine. If anybody can do it, itâs you. Shake on it.â
I shake his hand, relieved that heâs fallen for my distraction tactic and more than a little triumphant at my trick. Except that when I try to pull my hand away, his fingers tighten around it, pulling me closer across the countertop.
âBut weâre making out on the first date.â
I glare at him.
âAbsolutely not.â
âToo late,â he says with a wicked grin. âWe shook on it.â
And he releases my hand. My triumph vanishes as quickly as it appeared. Instead of tricking him, I think I might have just tricked myself.