Well, things were good for a while.
But not long enough.
When Miles said he was going to go fast, I shouldâve realized that term was relative. Miles is careful and calculating. Heâs slow and decisive. Heâll never be a race car driver.
For the hundredth time, I imagine reaching over and stomping my foot on the gas pedal. But heâs just as possessive of the pedal as he was of the horn.
I never shouldâve let him have the wheel.
The good? We havenât slid once. And it must be slippery out there, because there are cars all over the shoulders, pressed against the guardrails at unnatural angles.
The bad? We are still at least four hours away from the lodge.
The radio is all static, so we donât have that. Without my car charger, my phone only has about thirty percent charge. Not that it matters, because I canât get a signal up here, anyway.
So the really bad? Iâm stuck up on this mountain with nothing but Miles to keep me occupied.
Welcome to hell.
âDoes your phone have a signal?â I ask him, sighing.
He sucks on his teeth. âI donât know. Let me check,â he mutters, his voice leaking sarcasm.
Okay, I should give him a break. Itâs not the easiest drive in the world, and he definitely shouldnât be peeling his eyes off the road to check the phone in his pocket. The Miniâs headlights cut a light about ten feet ahead of us, and the snow steadily keeps falling. There has to be at least eight inches on the ground now, and itâs showing no sign of slowing. He looks relaxed, but he always does. Heâs always had that stoned-out look about him. Iâve never seen him get excited about anything.
Well, once I did, but Iâm not thinking about that night anymore.
Weâve been driving for a half hour without seeing another soul. I know this route. Itâs usually busy. Iâve driven in about a dozen times, especially lately as Iâve been working out plans for the wedding, but Iâm not even sure where we are because itâs so dark and visibility is nil.
When I see a sign for the Overlook Pines Rest Stop, I sigh. Thatâs so far from our destination, itâs not even funny.
Suddenly, our slow pace feels like a snailâs pace.
âCan you just step on it a little bit?â I rock in the passenger seat like Iâm on a racehorse, as if thatâll help us pick up speed.
He rubs at his eye. âI think we should take a break at this rest stop.â
I glare at him. âWhat? No!â
âYeah. I all but slid the whole way down that last hill. I had no traction at all. You should have chains on your tires. Weâre not going to get up the next one. Iâd rather wait out the storm someplace warm, get some coffeeâ¦instead of getting stuck in this car.â
I start to hyperventilate. âYouâre sayingâ¦you want to give up? Youâre telling me Iâm going to miss my wedding.â
âNo. Iâm not saying that. This is farther along than if weâd turned back. If we wait in the rest stop, the plows might come through in the morning and we can leave then. Youâre weddingâs not untilâ¦when?â
How does he not know this? He received the hand-written, embossed invitation like everyone else, didnât he? âEleven.â
âYeah. So, plenty of time.â
I shake my head vehemently. I have a hair and makeup artist arriving precisely at eight AM to beat my unruly locks and tweeze my wild eyebrows into submission. The spa stuff was just the precursor to the real work that needs to happen before I can walk down the aisle. âNo, itâs not. You donât get it. I missed the spa day. I have to get myself ready. If I breeze in there at ten forty-five, Iâll look like crud!â
He doesnât deny this fact. âBut my point is, youâll make the wedding. It sure beats lying dead in a ditch somewhere.â
I picture the whole scene. Me, rushing into my wedding with my crazy, frizzed-out locks, my bush-woman brows, like some wild woman. The pictures that weâll show our grandkids, attesting to the fact that Grandpa married a cavewoman.
âNo,â I mumble, âI want Aaron to look at me and go, âWow,â not, âWhat the hell is that?ââ
âYou mean Aaron the Oblivious?â
âWhat do you mean by that?â
He doesnât answer and doesnât have to. Unless I go in there brandishing a keg or stark naked, Aaron probably wonât notice.
Still, with the incongruous image of Aaronâs horrified face still marinating in my mind, I shake my head. âNo. We need to get there. No stopping.â
He lets out a tortured breath, along with something that sounds like Bridezilla.
Really? So heâs going back to that old standby insult again? I canât take it anymore. âListen to me, you fucking absolute shithead. Iâm not a Bridezilla. This is the single-most important day of my life. Aaron is the most important person in my life. I want to look good for him. Do you understand?â
He doesnât answer.
I cross my arms. âOf course you donât. I forgot who I was talking to. Have you ever cared about anyone other than yourself? I mean, youâve never even dated anyone.â
He narrows his eyes. âIâve dated.â
âReally? How long was your longest relationship?â
He doesnât answer.
âYeah. Youâve hooked up, is what you mean. Thatâs all. Have you ever had a repeat engagement? Hmm?â
I study his face, outlined in the dim glow of the dashboard. He runs his tongue over his top teeth. âSure I have.â
âRight. With who?â
He turns away from me so I canât see his face. I wait for the answer.
He doesnât speak at all.
âAdmit it. You canât know what Iâm feeling right now because youâve never attempted to look good for anyone. Youâre lucky youâre hot, or else youâd never get any tail at all.â
He grins. âYou think Iâm hot?â
I bite my tongue. My face heats. Did I just say that?
âIt doesnât matter, though,â I quickly say, hoping to cover up for that slip. âYou act like your normal asshole self, and most women canât stand to be near you. You drip your opinions and your ego all over them and make them rue the day they ever met you.â
He swings his head toward me, taking his eyes off the road to sweep his gaze over me. I see something different in his eyes. He doesnât say a word, but maybe Iâve pricked that outer shell, because he looksâ¦incensed.
So incensed, I have to look away.
For the first time, I think I might have gone too far.
Thereâs an arrow for the rest stop to the right. The top half of the sign is draped in snow so it just says STOP EXIT. The lines of the road are hidden under ten inches of snow, and the tire tracks of cars that came before us have been swept away by the wind, so itâs hard to tell where the road is.
When he starts to veer off toward the exit, I grip the door handle. I point. âHey. The road is that way.â
He nods. âWeâre stopping so we can switch. If you want to get back to the lodge tonight that bad, you drive.â
âFine,â I say, forcing my chin up. âBring it on.â
He thinks heâs so smart. Well, I can drive as well as he can. Probably better. This way, we can stop pussy-footing around and really make up some time.
Iâve never been to this rest stop, because Iâve never run into weather like this before. Itâs not much of a stop. Thereâs a giant, empty lot and a small, square brick building in the corner, lit by a single streetlamp. A sign that says Restrooms is all but hidden by the snow.
âWhy is there no one here?â I wonder. Surely there are other people waiting out the storm.
âThey all had the sense to go back to Boulder.â
He draws the car to a stop in the middle of the lot. âBeautiful,â I mutter, bracing myself to open the door to make the switch. âOkay. Letâs go.â
He points to the building. âMind if I use the facilities?â
I roll my eyes. âIf you must.â
He puts his skullcap on and throws open the door, letting an icy gust of wind and snow inside. He says something before the door slams, but the wind is too loud.
I decide Iâm not going out there in my flip-flops, so I carefully climb over the console, which, in my itty-bitty car, involves the movements of a contortionist. By the time I get there, heâs still making his way over to the building, trudging through shin-high snow, his flannelâs collar pulled up around his face.
I lay on the horn.
He doesnât turn around, just holds his middle finger up and out to me. I see it, silhouetted so nicely underneath that one bright bulb in front of the building.
What an insufferable ass. I canât believe I actually told him that I think heâs hot. Iâm surprised heâs getting snow on his boots when he should be using his inflated ego to float to the restrooms.
As he disappears into the building, I think about the other thing I said to him, about him being repellant to women once he opens his mouth. Iâd never seen him that pissed. Yeah, maybe it was harsh, but itâs true. If it bothered him that much, he could change. How hard is it to be kind sometimes? It doesnât even need to be always. God knows Iâm not perfect either, but still.
He canât possibly know what itâs like to care about a person the way I care for Aaron. The first year I was with Aaron, Iâd seen different beautiful women leaving Milesâ frat-house room, doing the same walk of shame Iâd done after my first frat party, every single night. After Miles graduated, when weâd meet up, it was the three of us getting together at a restaurant or barâMiles never brought along a female friend. Even when weâd invited him to the wedding, weâd added a Plus One to his invitation, but he didnât even add a Plus One to his RSVP.
A lone wolf. Thatâs him. The kind of guy whoâll probably be single for the rest of his life.
A complete and total asshole.
No, thatâs not right, I realize, as I think of the GREs.
It was in March, almost two years ago, prior to the incident that nearly ended Aaron and me for good. Miles had come to town, and since Iâd just turned twenty-one, we were all drinking at Grittyâs, a local bar I was finally able to go to. I lamented to Aaron that I should probably take the GREs and try to get into the Masterâs program at CU, because I wasnât sure my degree would get me anywhere. But I didnât know where to start, especially with the math section.
Miles told me that heâd taken them a few years ago when heâd gone back for his MBA, and would tutor me if I needed the help.
I was blown away by the offer. He was so busy with his job, or so Iâd thought. I figured he was doing it because he absolutely loved to flaunt that big old brain of his around. So I didnât read too much into it.
I always knew Miles was smart, but that was how I learned he was a genius. He and math went together like peanut butter and jelly. He could work out complex equations in his head, coming up with the answer before Iâd even finished reading the problem.
Heâd meet me in my dorm, and weâd sit in the common area. Heâd driven all the way out from Denver to help me. All weâd ever do was talk math. But Miles was the talk of the all-female floor. Whenever we were together, girls would show up in the common area to gawk at him and try to catch his eye, especially when I told them all he wasnât my boyfriend.
He never bit. He was almost businesslike when it came to those meetings. Once, one of the girls tried to flirt with him as he was leaving, but he shut her down.
Later on, Aaron told me that Miles had gotten perfect scores on all three sections of the GRE. I didnât even know that was possible.
For the record, I didnât get a perfect math score, but I did do a lot better than I wouldâve if I hadnât had the help.
Not only that, Miles has always been a prince of a best friend to Aaron. I remember once, at the end of my freshman year, weâd all gone to a party at TKE with the sole purpose of stealing some of their things, which was what the seniors did. While Aaron really got into the game, being the fraternity president, Miles wasnât interested. The plan was for me to distract the TKE guys by playing Asshole with them, while Aaron and some of his other brothers lifted the goods.
Iâd played the card game, but unfortunately Iâd lost so terribly that I wound up so drunk I could barely stand up straight.
The last thing I remembered that night, as Iâd drifted off on the common room couch, was hearing Miles talking to one of the TKE brothers. The brother had said, âAnd who do we have here?â in a lilting way, like he wanted to get into my pants, and Miles had replied, âMy best friendâs girl. Touch her, and Iâll break your fucking fingers.â
Hmm. Maybe I was just a little too harsh to him. He volunteered to help me. Heâs not all bad.
Iâm still thinking of the way heâd looked, with his glasses on, nose buried in a book as he tried to help me with an equation, when he appears in the doorway of the rest stop and starts trudging back to me. Of the way he smelled; clean and manly, making something inside me heat up, as much as I donât want it to.
Cool down, girl, youâre engaged to his best friend!
By the time Miles gets to the door, my mind is where it shouldnât beâon that night, in his immaculate room, under the snow-white sheets of his futon bed, doing some very dirty things, things no guy with a fear of touching people should have the right to do.
Then he throws open the door, and a shiver grips me. He closes the door and holds out a Milky Way. âHungry?â
I blink. He scowls, growling, âSorry. Steak au poivre wasnât on the menu.â
I shake my head, surprised that he bought me anything at all. Iâm starving, but I also have that dress to fit into. And I am going to wear it tomorrow. Iâm determined like that.
âSuit yourself.â Miles rips the package open.
Trying not to think of Miles eating a delicious chocolate, I throw the car into drive and start to head out, squinting as I try to see the road.
Honestly, I canât.
Itâs just a sea of white.
Thereâs no telling at all where the road ends and the mountains begin.
Thatâs okay. I can do this.
Iâm not going to let the genius next to me, Mr. Perfect GRE Score, be right again.
He takes a bite of his Milky Way, and my mouth is watering as I hear him chewing. I havenât eaten any cheat foods like that since Aaron proposed, and Iâm not going to start now, when Iâm in the home stretch.
âPlace was pretty good back there. Warm. Had coffee. Television. Weather said this should be letting up around daybreak.â
I sigh. Letting up at daybreak isnât helping us now, when itâs midnight-dark, even though itâs barely six in the evening. I could do with some coffee. I think about stopping and going in for some, but thatâs wasting time. If we get on the road now, we can make it back, maybe not for the rehearsal dinner, but so I can have a good nightâs sleep.
He stretches his seat belt over his broad chest and I hear it click into place. Then he says, âYou know, I donât thinkâ Uh, Shorty? Thatâs not the road.â
I squint, too tired, worried, and frazzled to think. âWhat? Of course it is.â
He points in a totally different direction than where Iâm heading. âThatâs the road.â
I start to take my foot off the gas and lean closer to the windshield as I turn the dial to pump up the defrost. âThen whereâs this lead?â
His lips curve upward and for the merest second, I think he smiled. âIâm not sure we want to find out.â
Feeling a knot in my stomach because of his stupid barely there smile, I put the windshield wipers up a notch and press on the gas.
I shake my head as I see the guardrail, up ahead, as well as a level line of white up ahead that has to be the road. Iâm heading straight toward it. âWeâre good.â
âAhhh, no weâreââ
He doesnât have a chance to say anything else, because before I know it, thereâs a massive bumpâand suddenly, weâre heading downward.
I jam on the break, but the car fishtails, spinning out, sending a flood of snow up onto the windshield.
Miles is shouting orders at me. âLay off the brake! Steer into it!â
But I just want to stop and I donât know what the hell Iâm steering into.
I hear tree branches scraping along the sides, rocks scraping along the bottom of the chassis, and still, the car keeps sliding down into the unknown. In my mind, thereâs a three-hundred-foot drop at the end of this.
I start to shriek and cover my face with my hands.