I am so stupid.
Iâm sitting in the car, wipers going at top speed, headlights illuminating a snowy pine tree, the branches of which are pressed up against my carâs windshield. Iâm not sure where we are, because if I look in my rearview mirror, I see nothing but the dull red of my tail lights. I have the heat going on full-blast because I canât stop shivering.
A second later, the door opens. Miles pokes his head in.
âGood news. I donât think your car is damaged. It just went for a little joyride.â
Heâs actually being kind of human to me, which I appreciate, since I feel like shit to the millionth power.
I sniffle. I think Iâm getting a cold. Perfect. Itâs been at least fifteen minutes since the accident and I havenât been able to pry my fingers off the steering wheel. âWhat do we do now?â
He slips into the car and closes the door, shaking the snow off his hair. A second later, I realize heâs holding a piece of Milky Way out to me. I take it and stick it in my mouth.
I have never tasted anything so delicious in my life. Sweet nectar of the gods.
âBetter?â
I nod, licking the chocolate from my lips.
âMore?â
âOh, god no! I canât. I have to fit in a dress tomorrow, remember?â
He snorts. âIf you ate from now until the wedding, youâd still be fine. Live a little.â
I can still smell the chocolate. Heâs lucky I donât dive into his hands and lick the rest from his fingers. âDonât tempt me. Iâm good.â
He pops it between his own lips and I watch it longingly until it disappears.
âAll right. Hereâs what weâll do. The rest stop isnât far away. Turn off and lock up your car. Weâll wait it out up at the rest stop, and when a plow comes, weâll see if they have a winch and can tow your car out. Okay?â
âLeave the car? Butâ¦â
âItâll be fine here. Letâs go.â
I cut the engine and pocket my keys in my purse. Cold air starts to seep in. Miserably, I look down at my feet. âIâm wearing flip-flops.â
He chuckles. âYou sure are. Come on. Itâs not that far.â
âHold on.â I reach into the back of the car and take inventory. I may not be the slob Aaron is, but Iâm not the clean-freak Miles is, either. I have a little collection of things I threw in the backseat and never pulled out. I find a giant cardigan and wool hat that Iâd thrown back there in October, when Iâd gone pumpkin picking with Aaron and itâd been too hot. No boots, unfortunately.
I slip them on and nod at Miles, my hand on the door. âIâm ready. Letâs do this.â
Miles looks up at my hat and shakes his head.
I scowl at him. âYou have something against pom-poms?â
âNo. If youâre three.â
âWhen we get up to the rest stop, please go drown your head in a toilet. All right?â
He smirks, and thereâs that tiny excuse of a smile, like the smile of a guy whoâs too good to smile at all. But why is it so attractive? Even if itâs a smug smile, like heâs so proud heâs gotten me riled?
Sheez, I need to stop giving Miles that power over me. Any power over me. If Iâm going to be stuck with him in this rest stop for the next few hours, I need to find my Zen and not let him get to me.
On the count of three, we push open our doors. The windâs not bad down here, because weâre on the side of a hill. But the second my bare feet sink down into the icy snow, I yelp.
Oh, god. Itâs so cold, and itâs nearly up to my knees.
I fight to close the door. Squeezing my bag to my chest, I lift my foot high to take a step toward the back of the car, heading up the steep incline.
I take one awkward step. Then another.
Then I freeze. I look behind me, at my footprints, already filling up with snow.
âOh, no!â I shout as my face is pelted with snowflakes. âOh, no!â
Miles is already far ahead of me, on the incline. I canât really see where the slope ends and things start to flatten out, but it might as well be a million miles. Becauseâ¦
Oh, god.
Miles pivots, his hands in his pockets. This is like a Sunday stroll to him. âYou realize youâve been out in the snow for fifteen seconds?â
âYes, butâ¦mayday. I lost my flip flop in the snow. Somewhere.â
He gives me a look like Iâm pathetic. Iâm going to cry now.
âAndâ¦â I moan miserably. âI canâtâ¦my feet. They hurt.â
He snorts. âSuck it up, buttercup.â
âNo, you donât understand. Thatâs why I hate snow. I have Raynaudâs.â I grimace. Ouch. Ouch. Big, big ouch. The pain is too much. Itâs like walking on needles. I might as well die. This is a big nope. Canât do.
I twist my upper half around and reach for the door, prepared to dive in, create a little hobbit hole for myself and wait out the storm there. He can wait in the nice warm rest stop with the coffee and food and heat and television. Maybe I deserve this.
Before I know it, a hand slips behind my knees and under my armpits, and Iâm hoisted up off the ground. I feel a flash of dizziness as my world is upended, and then Iâm in the cocoon of his arms. âWhat are youââ
âI canât listen to you bitch anymore, Shorty.â His voice isnât strained in the least. His body is warm as hell, and I lean into the soft, damp flannel, feeling the heat of his body radiating through his shirt.
He climbs the incline with even, measured steps, as if heâs been doing this all his life, never once getting out of breath. My feet are pale white, bordering on blue, but my cheeks are burning more when he pulls open the door of the rest stop.
He sets me down, and as I pull awkwardly away from his delicious, masculine smell, I inhale something awful. Acrid and vile, like Pine-Sol mixed with urine. My stomach turns.
âUm. Thanks.â As I shake the snow off my clothes, pull off my hat, and start to blink in the bright fluorescent light and bare surroundings, it hits.
The screaming, stabbing, worse-than-death pain in my feet. Itâs like fire.
âOw!â Still wearing one flip-flop, I hobble toward a bench in the center of the room and collapse on it.
My feet are bright crimson, redder than the worst sunburn. My toes are purple, almost the same color as my pedicure. But thatâs nothing compared to the throbbing, burning pain.
Miles walks over to me and inspects them. âSeriously?â
âLook at my feet.â I hold them up so he can see them. âItâs a real medical condition! Thatâs why I hate the snow. I canât go out in it, orâ¦ow!â
Tears of agony spring to my eyes. I pull my feet up and grab them, trying to rub away the pain, but my hands are burning, too. Iâd had gloves somewhere in the back of my car. Why didnât I put those on?
âYouâre a total mess, Cupcake,â he mutters, sitting down beside me. âCome on. Give âem here.â
I straighten. He canât mean that. I mean, heâs OCD. He doesnât like to touch or be touched. âWhat?â
He lifts one of my feet, so I have to turn a little, and then he places both of them on his jean clad thighs. He strips off the flip-flop and tosses it on the ground.
He lowers his hands to cover them. His hands are big and so warm.
âWhat are youââ
âThis okay?â
Heâsâ¦warming up my feet. Okay.
No, more than okay. Aaronâs never done anything like this. The last time I had a bout of Raynaudâs, it was during the honeymoon period of our relationship, when we were each pretending to like the things the other did, so we could show each other how chill and fun we were. Weâd gone tubing up at Winter Park and Iâd nearly died on the first ride down, when my glove came off. Heâd just laughed at me, told me to go sit in front of the fire at the lodge, and went off to do some skiing.
âOh. Yes. I just didnât know you were okay with touching.â
He shrugs. âSeemed like a matter of life or death. Besides, Iâll do anything to stop you from bitching.â He gives me a little sideways eyebrow-raise.
âAnything? Hmm,â I tease.
His mouth quirks in a half-smile.
He slowly presses against my arch, working into the muscle. He isnât just warming my feet. Heâs massaging them, working in slow, rhythmic motions that make my heart speed up in my chest. Then he works deep into each little toe.
This goes on for the next five minutes. Heâs extremely thorough and careful. I never thought I had a foot fetish until now. I canât help feeling an odd buzz in my skin, my stomach, and flutters in my chest somewhere in the place where I should have a heart but suddenly have a flapping bird instead.
My feet are fine now. More than fine. Theyâre warm and buzzing, like parts of me that probably shouldnât be. My breath hitches, and my thoughts threaten to return to that night, when he and Iâ
No. I canât do that.
âThat feels good. Are you a professional?â I ask, to lighten the mood.
He blinks, and whatever spell he was under breaks. He lifts my feet up and slides out from under them, dropping them unceremoniously to the floor. âI think theyâre good now.â
âYes. Theyâre much better. Thanks.â
I pull my legs up under me and sit crisscross applesauce on the bench as I look around. There isnât much to look at besides the things Miles mentionedâthe lobby is bare except for the bench, a rack of brochures for nearby attractions, a plastic dispenser of free real estate magazines, trash and recycling bins, and a television on a bracket hanging from the ceilingâ¦and oh! A coffee station.
I guess I didnât notice it first because the smell of urine and cleaning solution is so much stronger than the coffee aroma.
I nearly trip over my still-sore feet, trying to get to the little service. The lip of the pot is cracked and there isnât much left, but I grab a Styrofoam cup and fill it. I take a sip. Itâs awful and wonderful, all at once. I let the bitter taste settle on my tongue and feel the warmth seep into my bones.
Miles has been conducting what looks like a detailed surveillance of the place. Heâs tried all the doors and is now peering in the windows of a gift shop, the door of which is locked behind a roll-down security shutter. He looks a little on-edge.
âWhat, you wanted to buy an I Love Colorado magnet?â I ask, making myself as comfortable as possible on the wooden bench.
He points at the television.
Thatâs when I see whatâs got him upset. The news anchor is talking about a jackknifed tractor trailer, in Dunnâs Landing. Which is, incidentally, between us and the Midnight Lodge.
I bring a finger up to my mouth to gnaw on the nail, then yank it away quickly. âWell, theyâll probably clear it up overnight.â
âMaybe.â
Or, maybe not. I know what heâs thinking. This has already been the trip from hell. With our luck, theyâre not going to clear that mess up anytime soon.
And Iâll miss the wedding.
No, I refuse to think about that.
Everythingâs going to be fine.
The hallway leading off the lobby has two doors for the restrooms, one on each side, and two vending machines for soda and candy. The floor is cold concrete, which feels awful against my bare feet. I pad to the closest machine and the first thing I see is popcorn. I lift my purseâand thatâs when I remember that I rarely carry money. I use my debit card for just about everything.
âYou have a dollar?â I call out.
No answer.
I go back into the lobby and look around. Miles is gone.
A second later, he appears from the back door, holding his phone in front of him. âI got a bar out there.â
âYou did?â I drop everything, reaching for my phone as I rush to the back door. âWhere?â
âAbout ten feet outside the door. To your left.â
I go to the door and nearly press my nose against it, trying to make out whatâs out there. Thereâs a little porch, but other than that, heaps and heaps of snow. I donât want to get my toes frozen again, so I sigh and hold my phone up, moving it in an arc above my head. Maybe I can find some reception inside.
âDid you at least text Aaron?â I call to him as I walk around like a confused Statue of Liberty, trying to find reception.
âYep.â
I wait for him to say more, but I guess I have to pry it out of him. âAnd?â
âAnd? He said heâll see you when we get there.â
My nose wrinkles. Thatâs it? âWhat about telling them where we are and that our carâs in a ditch? Maybe they can call the state police so they know to come out and help us when the snow stops?â
He nods slowly. Then he says, âNo. I didnât do that.â
Great. Why am I the only person who seems to think this is a big deal? Maybe if Miles actually had a heart? Or if Aaron had been the one socking all of his money into the day? Or if any of them had seen all the sleepless nights and chewed fingernails Iâve gone through over this? Maybe then, theyâd care?
Ugh. Men. Entirely too blasé about the important things.
I climb on the bench and hold the phone up, almost to the water-stained ceiling. No signal. Of course.
Hopping off the bench, I trudge to the back door. Iâll just run out there, quickly send Eva a little bit more detailed text, since itâs clear the men in my life have no communication skills.
I push open the door, into a whipping wind that goes right through all the layers of clothes I have on. The concrete floor is coated in a thin layer of wind-blown snow. The building is doing nothing to ward off the rushing wind. Hunching over, I inch to the edge of the concrete porch until I find the bar on my phone and quickly type in: Weâre at the Overlook Pines Rest Stop. Car slid into a ditch. Can you call the state police and see if they can send a tow out asap? Spotty reception here.
A second later: Oh, honey! Of course. But I hear there is a jackknifed tractor trailer.
I sigh. I know. Maybe the tow can come early tomorrow morning. I can still make the wedding then.
I shiver as another cold wind blows my hair out of the disaster of a bun. Miles is right; I am a wreck, with my crap mani-pedi, my Cro-Magnon eyebrows, my hair all over the place, my one flip-flop.
And itâs all my fault.
All because I couldnât settle for chicken wire and wanted to make everything perfect.
No.
It will still be perfect. What had Mimi said? Itâs not so much the event as it is the man. She had a kick-ass time on the boardwalk at Santa Monica, sharing funnel cake with my great-grandfather. I can have a kick-ass time with Aaron, even if I look like a bushwoman. Thatâs what marriage is all about, after all. For better or worse? Plus, even if I get there a little late, I can just have the makeup and hair people do something simple, not the elaborate up-do I had in mind. Itâll be fine.
See, Miles? Iâm not Bridezilla. I can totally go with the flow.
Another harsh wind blows in. I shudder and type, Sorry Iâm missing the rehearsal. Is everyone bummed?
A few moments later, she responds with: Itâs ok. Everyoneâs having fun. Aaron brought out the karaoke.
I smile. Well, thatâs good. Iâd hate them to be sitting around, bored, wondering why theyâre there. But I shouldnât worry about that. Aaron is the life of the party. Where he goes, everyoneâs entertained.
My smile fades.
I want to be there. Iâm supposed to be there.
With my family. My friends. My fiancé.
This is my pre-wedding extravaganza, something Iâve been waiting for almost all my life. And Iâm not even there to enjoy it.
Sucking back the whirlwind of emotions inside me, I go in. Miles is sprawled out on the bench, legs crossed at the ankle, watching the television as if heâs hanging out in his own man-cave. Thereâs some cheesy old television sitcom starting, with a too-cheery jingle. The words The Facts of Life show on the screen in big bubble font.
Miles is staring at it, rapt, nursing his own cup of coffee, which is sitting on his chest. The Boy Scout has made a new pot.
My feet are burning again, but I have other things on my mind. I go to the front door and peer out. Thereâs got to be at least a foot of snow out there. I hug my big cardigan over my body and turn back to him. âYou think we should do something to let the police know weâre here?â I ask. âI mean, the car isnât visible from the road.â
âWhat?â he mumbles, eyes glued to the television. âSmoke signals?â
I shrug. âI donât know. You have any ideas?â
âYeah. We wait. This is a public rest stop. Someoneâll be around eventually.â
âBut I donât have the time.â I reach up and vise my head in my hands. âI feel like this situation calls for some out-of-the-box thinking. Thereâs got to be a way to get there. Work with me, here. You think my dad would pay to have a helicopter airlift us there? Orâ¦I donât know. Maybe we could get a police escort. A police officer could take us there. That one back down the road was kind of sympathetic. What do you think?â
No answer. Not even a blink.
I snap my fingers at him, releasing him from his trance. âSo hello? Any words of wisdom, oh brilliant one?â
âYeah.â He nods, then looks out the window, and at first I think heâs coming up with this great plan to get us off the mountain as quickly as possible. Then he says, âYou take the good. You take the bad. You take them both. And there you haveâ¦The Facts of Life.â
I stare at him. âSeriously?â
âYeah. That about sums it up.â He gives me that smirk that gets to me.
And thatâs it. I canât take it anymore.
âI. Hate. You!â I say, lunging at him, ready to shove him until I remember he hates touching.
Oh, fuck it. I donât care. Iâll touch him anyway.
I punch him square in the chest, which doesnât even make a dent in his relaxed façade.
That only makes me angrier.
I scream, âI really, really fucking hate you!â
He sits up and crosses his arms casually, watching me stalk back and forth, flipping out. Heâs eaten at my last nerve and I swear Iâm going to kill him.
âYouâre such an asshole, Miles. You know that? You sit there, all smug, acting like youâre better than everyone.â
âYou want wisdom? Why should I give you any? Youâll just go and do your own thing, anyway.â
âThatâs not true! If Iââ
âYeah, it is. I told you we should take Aaronâs Jeep. I told you it was going to snow. I told you we needed to stop at the rest stop. And did you listen?â
I press my lips together, fisting my hands on my hips. I want to yell at him harder. For pushing my buttons. For being here instead of Aaron. For making me feel furious in ways I donât even understand. And for speaking the truth because heâs right. Itâs my fault. All of it. And I hate that he knows it too.
He laughs, noticing my disdain. âOkay. Wisdom. How about this? Get real, Princess. Thereâs no knight in shining armor whoâs going to come and take you down this mountain for your quote-unquote special day. You fucked up, despite being warned, and now youâre finding out that youâre actually not that special, even on your special day. So deal with it.â
I stare at him, breathing hard.
And then his words sink in, and as usual, they have a way of piercing me right through my center.
Because as usual, heâs right.
I donât want to do it. He hates me enough as it is. But I canât help it. My face crumples, my eyes twitch and cloud over, and I know whatâs coming.
But I canât let him see me cry. I canât let him get to me. He lives to get to people, to worm his way under their skin and make them uncomfortable.
Without a word, I skip into a run and go back outside, where I throw my back against the brick wall and sink down in a heap on the snow-covered ground.
This time, I donât care about the wind or the cold. Let my feet get frostbitten and fall off. Let a gust blow me off the mountain. Itâs got to be better than being here, with him.
A second later, the door opens a crack. âHey. Come back in.â
I bury my face in my knees, wiping the tears from my eyes with the fabric of my leggings. I harden my voice. âNo. Iâm good. Just got some calls to makeâ¦â
He walks until heâs right in front of me, his big hiking boots toe-to-toe with my bare feet. He crouches down and lets out a sigh.
Then he shrugs out of his flannel shirt and lays the big, thick fabric over me, like a blanket, tucking it under my freezing toes.
I canât meet his eyes or heâll know Iâve been crying.
âLookâ¦I might have spoken out of turn back thereâ¦â he starts, scratching at the back of his neck. âI donât know what else to say.â
âYouâve said enough,â I mutter, more too my knees than to him. âAnd you know what? Youâre absolutely right, Mr. Know-it-All. Mr. Genius. But thereâs one thing you donât know. You canât know what itâs like to be me. To be completely ordinary, because youâre so special in so many ways. But Iâm not. And this wedding? Itâs my whole life. Call it pathetic, but thatâs what it is. I donât have an amazing career or an amazing talent like you. Iâm just boring old Dahlia Ripley. Yes, I guess Iâm hitching all my hopes to this wedding. So call me Bridezilla. I donât care what you think.â
He doesnât say anything for a long time.
Then he says, âAnd then what? What happens after the wedding?â
âWellâ¦then Iâll be married to Aaron. Iâll be Mrs. Aaron Eberhart.â
âSoâ¦what? You just give up your own identity?â He looks a little disgusted at that prospect.
âNo,â I mumble. âBut together, weâll form a new one. A better one than when each of us is on their own. And maybe weâll have kids, and raise them, and all that. And maybe Iâll learn that my talent is in being an amazing wife and mom. I canât wait for that. It meansâ¦I mean, Aaronâs everything to me.â
âYou really do love Aaron? For better and worse?â
I meet his gaze, my thoughts flashing to the future Iâve always thought we can have. âOf course. Iâm marrying him, arenât I?â
âRight,â he mutters. He straightens up and starts to walk to the door. âYeah. Come on in. Your feet are going to get cold.â