I definitely should have seen coming, two stand out: my family falling embarrassingly in love with Sophie, and the holiday going far too fast.
On the first day of the holiday, when Sophie arrived with her backpack and her tidy appearance, I could tell that she was very nervous. Mom and Dad, clearly having shouldered the responsibility of making up for my horrible behaviour, were overzealous in their welcoming. They showed Sophie to the guest room, poured her coffee and plied her with food. I barely got to even speak to her that dayâMom and Dad basically spent the rest of the day giving her what I can only describe as a very friendly yet thorough pseudo-job interview.
They asked her about school, her qualifications, her university applications, Harvard. I could tell that they really liked herâhow could they not? Adults always love Sophie. Sheâs smart, well-spoken, earnest. Mom especially was excited at the prospect of a potential future fellow Harvard alumnus, and after dinner, she and Sophie stay at the kitchen island for ages, picking at a box of French macarons and chatting endlessly about university.
That evening, I canât concentrate on anything, and Iâm peering into the kitchen from around the doorway, wondering when I can finally get Sophie to myself, when Adeleâs voice pipes up over my shoulder.
âHow on earth did you get this girl to be friends with you, Ev? Sheâs far too good for you.â
I turn around to glare at her, ready to respond defensively, then I realise that sheâs totally right. I sigh, my shoulders slumping. âHonestly, I have no idea. She really is.â
âDonât be so negative.â Dadâs voice interrupts. He pops up behind Adele. âYouâre amazing in many ways, Evan. Youâre open-minded, optimistic, friendly and kind. You just need to do a better job of showing this girl how amazing you can be, because so far it doesnât sound as though youâve made the best impression.â
âWell, heâs not going to get much of a chance to do that,â Adele says, lowering her voice as she peers around the doorway and into the kitchen. âI think Mom might be in love with herâgood luck competing with that.â
Sheâs not even exaggerating. The next few days, Sophie spends most of her time with Mom and Adele: they go out shopping, for coffee and meals, constantly chatting with her. After dinner, Sophie plays both Mom and Dad at chessâthey apparently both used to be in their university chess clubs and get all nostalgic about it. I didnât even know that. Itâs not until Thursday comes and both Mom and Dad are forced to attend online meetings for work that I finally get a moment completely alone with Sophie.
Weâre both in the kitchen having a late breakfast. The weather is nicer now, and sheâs wearing a plain black t-shirt tucked into baggy corduroy pants. Her hair is loose and gleams like polished wood on her shoulders, a plain black elastic band around her wrist. Sheâs wearing tiny flicks of eyeliner at the corner of her eyes, and thatâs it. Itâs a simple look, but in the lazy golden sunrays, she looks so pretty it makes my chest hurt.
âAre you having a good time?â I ask, heaping bacon onto her plate before taking a seat across from her at the kitchen island.
She nods. âYour family is really, really nice.â
I grin. âI know.â My smile falters a little, and I add. âI hope you didnât think they were going to be dicks just because I was. Theyâre just much better than I am.â
Sophie tucks her hair behind one ear and bites into a crispy slice of bacon. âYes⦠your mom made sure to explain to me how disappointed she was when she heard about some of the things you did and that she raised you better than that and that it isnât reflective of who you can be as a person.â
I sit, completely frozen, staring at her in shock. âShe said all that?â
âAll that.â Sophie gazes at me for a second, then her serious face breaks into a grinâa really cute grin, a little goofy. âHonestly, your family is amazing. Youâre very lucky.â
I swallow hard, gathering my courage. âSophie.â
She stiffens a little, her eyes go wide. She looks like a deer in headlights. âWhat?â
âIâm sorry. Iâm really fucking sorry, for⦠well, for everything, really.â
Her cheeks darken, she looks down. âYou donât have to do this.â
âNo, but I do, donât I? Iâm so sorry. I never should have stopped being friends with you in Year 9. And I shouldnât have been such an arsehole to you all these years. And I definitely shouldnât have ratted you out about your job.â
She stares at me with her wide, dark eyes, and itâs hard to tell what sheâs thinking. The only indication of emotion from her is the dark pink flush in her cheeks, and the way sheâs worrying her bottom lip with her teeth.
âYou donât have to worry about that anyway,â she ends up saying with a light smile. âYour mumâs offered me a summer job in her company.â
I stare at her, shocked even though I really shouldnât be. âShe has?â
Sophie nods, a little smugly. âMm-hm.â
I lean forward. âWait. Which office?â
âShe said I can go to her office in London or New York.â
My heart feels both really heavy and light enough to float away. I wait for her to say more, but sheâs simply buttering a slice of toast with small, tidy movements of her knife. âWell? Which one are you thinking?â
She shrugs. âObviously London.â
âWhere would you stay?â
âIâm not sure.â
I wait a moment, trying to make sure my tone is casual when I speak next. âYou know, if you want to work in the New York office, my aunt lives in New Havenâ¦â
She gives me a blank look, biting into her slice of toast. Butter gleams on her lips and she licks it off when she notices me looking. I continue quickly. âWell, New Haven isnât too far from Boston.â
Her slice of toast stops halfway between the table and her mouth. She raises her eyebrows. âWhat are you saying?â
âIâm saying, if you wanted, you could work at my momâs office in New York, and stay at my auntâs house over the summer, and we could go visit Boston. You know. See Harvard before you start there in the fall.â
â
?â she says, her smoky voice low.
I meet her gaze and donât look away. âWhy not?â
Sheâs the first to look away. âHow do you know if Harvard even accepted me?â
âHow could they not?â
âHow could who not what?â Adele says, gliding into the kitchen in a pair of pink pyjamas with her hair in unnecessarily dramatic rollers.
âNothing,â Sophie says quietly, looking down.
âDo you think Sophie should come stay at Aunt Ameliaâs house this summer? Sheâs going to be working at Momâs office.â
âOh, the New York office?â Adele says brightly, sitting next to Sophie. âIâll actually also be in New YorkâIâm spending the summer there with Cedric. We could totally show you around. And if youâre staying at Aunt Ameâs house, weâll come stay there for a bit too. Ugh, Sophie, she has such a good pool, and the summer in New Haven is actually gorgeous, not like a British summerâno offence.â
Sophie smiles. âNone taken. Youâre very kind, but I wouldnât want to intrude.â
âYou really wouldnâthe intruding,â Adele says, pouring herself some orange juice. âHer house is massive, and she spends half her time visiting her friends in the Hamptons anyway. You should definitely stay. We can take you to parties! Actual American house parties.â
She leans closer to Sophie and lowers her tone conspiratorially. âYou know, youâd be so popular with the boys. Your sexy voice and sexy accent combined would be game over.â
Sophieâs face goes bright pink and I clear my throat loudly. Adele winks at Sophie and whispers loudly. âWeâll go without Evan so he canât cockblock you.â
I throw the strawberry jelly lid at her and she dodges it with a loud âEw!â
I do my best to keep Adele away from Sophie for the rest of the weekâunsuccessfully. Itâs not until Saturday that I finally have some more time alone with Sophie. Mom, Dad and Adele have gone out to watch some corny movie, and Sophie and I spend the evening in the living room, playing chess.
âI didnât know you could play,â Sophie says, watching me set up the board.
âMom and Dad taught me, but I never took to it. I suck at thinking long-term and end up making a bunch of mistakes that bite me in the ass later.â
Sophie gives me the most comical dead-pan expression. âYou do, do you?â
âOh, ha ha. Youâre so funny, Sophie. Like, the funniest person I know.â
âI probably am, as well,â she says. âDo you want to start? You might need the advantage.â
âAt this point, Iâll take whatever advantage I can get.â
Weâre sitting at the little chess table in the reading nook. The sun is just setting outside, lingering rays of pink sunlight fall across the table, shiny particles of dust floating in the slices of light. When Sophie leans forward to move one of her pieces, she crosses the path of one of the sunrays, and it makes her dark hair shine like rubies.
Sheâs very serious and overly competitive, given her clear advantage over me. My mind drifts idly back to the last time we played a game together, the Trivial Pursuit board, Sophieâs tipsy encouragements, and of courseâ
âDonât do it,â says Sophie in a low voice.
I turn to give her a surprised look. âDo what?â
âThink about what youâre definitely thinking about.â
âWhat? How can you possibly tell?â
She rolls her eyes. âYouâre gazing out of the window and have an expression on your face like some lovelorn girl in a period drama. Itâs all very Anne Elliot pining for Captain Wentworth.â
I glare at her. âIâm not piââ I stop, sigh. âWell, how can I not think about it? Donât you think about it?â
âRight now, you should be thinking about my bishop and what that means for your knight.â
âMy knight?â I glance at the board, realise sheâs just trying to deflect and look back up at her. âForget about my knight for a second. My knight hasnât noticed your bishop because heâs probably thinking about kissing your queen and having really hot sex with her. Does your queen think about that?â
âMy queen has more important things to think about,â Sophie says with a serene smile.
I lean forward, narrowing my eyes. âYouâre telling me youâve not been thinking about it?â
She waves a hand, though her cheeks are a little flushed. âItâs just sex, Evan.â
â
? What kind of a life are you secretly living for what we do to be ?â
Now she leans forward, and her eyes narrow, and her lips curl in a sarcastic smile. âOh please, Evan. Look me in the eyes and tell me you havenât fucked dozens of girls exactly the same way.â
âDefinitely not the same way, are you crazy? Besides, itâs not likeââ Instead of defending myself, I realise she just handed me something to get her with. I tilt my head. âWait a second. Are youâ¦
?â
She laughs, a low, scratchy sound that makes the hairs on the back of my neck stand on end. âYou have no idea just how jealous.â
My heart skips a beat, my throat suddenly feels a little tight. âReally?â
âNo,â she says, moving her bishop and knocking my knight off the board. âCheck.â
But Iâm too invested in this line of questioning to even acknowledge the chessboard. I watch her face intently, looking for signs of the truth to reveal themselves on her pretty face. âYouâre lying.â
She shakes her head and speaks with a little smirk. âIs it so hard to believe I might want more for myself than hooking up with a rich boy in his dadâs expensive carsâor whatever it is you do?â
I sit back in my chair with a shrug âWe donât have to hook up in my dadâs expensive cars, Sophie. We have options, you know. We can hook up in my dadâs expensive jacuzzi.â
For a second, Sophie just looks at me. Then she raises an eyebrow. âYou have a jacuzzi? You never said that.â
âYeah, we have a jacuzzi.â I laugh. âWaitâthat actually worked?â
She shrugs. âIâm literally cold all the time. Of course it worked.â
I narrow my eyes, trying to work out whether sheâs being sarcastic, which is always impossible to tell with her. âReally?â
She nods, perfectly earnest. âReally.â
Evanâs house definitely felt like a mistake at the time. But Iâve spent so much of my life trying to be careful, trying to do the right thing, that doing something I want somehow always ends up feeling like a mistake.
So I guess, in the end, I make a lot of mistakes while staying at Evanâs house. Mistakes like accepting his mumâs generous offer to intern at her publishing company, or agreeing to his sisterâs offer to take me to real American house parties over the summer.
Mistakes like sitting in Evanâs jacuzzi with him knowing full well any amount of nudity between us can only end one way. Mistakes like relaxing a little too much under the silvery lights of the jacuzzi, and oversharing about this year and my parents and my hopes and dreams.
Mistakes like noticing the droplets of water tracing the muscles of Evanâs arms and chest, and the way his wet hair curls around his temples and neck. Noticing his hooded gaze, the blue of his eyes, bluer in the pretty lights. Letting Evan touch my hand, lace his fingers through mine, pull me closer.
In the blur of steam and bubbles and low music, all the mistakes merge into one mistake.
A slow, dream-like mistake, where Evan draws me gently to him, and whispers in my ear, in a low, broken voice, how much he likes me, how much he wants me. I wrap my arms around his shoulders, and because Iâm straddling his lap, I can tell that the sweet, dirty things heâs murmuring in my ears are all true.
For someone so blunt and artless, Evan is capable of devastating tenderness.
That tenderness glows in everything he does: the way he sweeps the hair from my face with a slow caress, the way he traces wet, lingering kisses up my neck, the way he wraps his arms around my waist, pulling me to him in an irresistible embrace.
Kissing his open mouth is definitely a mistake, right? But a delicious, delirious mistake, because Evanâs kisses are wet and deep, and my body arches against his, beyond my control.
Itâs a mistake to make out with Evan in his jacuzzi, but Iâm saved from my mistake when his family returns home and we both make a hasty, shameful retreat to our respective rooms.
Except I double-down later that night when I sneak into his bedroom and lie on his bed and let him push up my top so he can run his hands up my waist, across my ribcage and over my breasts. His fingers brush over my nipples until they become hard and so sensitive he has to cover my mouth with one hand when he leans down to drag his tongue over them.
Wanting Evan so much definitely is a mistake, but I never want to not feel the way he makes me feel. Like my entire body is hot with pleasure, like heâs the sun that sets every inch of my body on fire.
For all the things Evan is terrible at, I always assumed being good at sports was how he compensated, but I was wrong. Evan compensates with his lips and tongue and his gentle, cruel fingers. Evan compensates until Iâm suffocating my moans into his pillow and my thighs are trembling uncontrollably and I come against his mouth in deep, shuddering waves of pleasure.
This is a mistake Iâve made beforeâwhy do I keep making it?
Because of him. Because of Evan Knight and the way he looks at me, like Iâm the most important thing in the world.
After that, there are a lot of other mistakes. Kissing his wet mouth and listening to him murmur âI love youâ over and over against my shoulder while he fucks me long and slow and agonising. He comes with a low, rough sigh, and we lie together, trembling and panting. Later, we tiptoe into his bathroom with embarrassed giggles, and clean up in between giddy kisses.
When I sneak back into the guestroom, I lie in bed still shivering all over. I close my eyes, thinking about how wildly irresponsible Iâve been when a realisation dawns upon me.
This is the first time this year Iâve not felt paralysed by fear or worry.