Let me just get this out right now: Truth or Dare is actually not that fun when youâre sober.
And when youâre trying to forget that you slept with the only other player in the room.
Somehow, though, weâve been playing it for an hour. Weâve been sitting on that same wooden bench, sipping our coffees, pretending to be interested while keeping the game as PG-rated as possible, for obvious reasons.
Iâve been gradually slumping over on the bench, trying to make myself comfortable, using my cardigan as a pillow and wrapping my lower half in Milesâ flannel. Iâm trying to ignore that it smells like his aftershave, so masculine and clean I want to bury my face in it. âAll right. Truth or dare?â
âDare.â
I roll my eyes. âThatâs all you keep asking for! Iâm running out of ideas.â
He shrugs and looks around. âGoddamn. I wish I had a chessboard. Maybe I can make one?â
âGod no. So you can beat me again?â I stand up and start to rub my hands together, thinking. âYouâre doing this dare, and youâre gonna like it.â
In the interest of keeping the game PG-rated, I havenât asked him to do anything that requires stripping, cursing, lewd gestures, touching me, or thinking/talking about/imitating sex. Thus, basically, weâve discovered how to suck the fun clean out of the game. So most of my challenges to him have been athletic stuff, like running around the building three times.
His havenât been much better. He actually had me alphabetize the brochure rack.
I look around, and an idea strikes.
âOkay. Drop and give me twenty push-ups.â
He smirks like, Thatâs all? Then rolls to the ground and gets on his knees.
âBut,â I announce, standing in front of him. âevery time you go down, you have to kiss my feet and say, You are not a Bridezilla.â
He sits back on his haunches and shakes his head. âFuck. Truth, then.â
I clap my hands together. âReally? Okay!â
Actually, that makes the game more interesting. There are a lot of little mysteries in Miles Fosterâs world. When I was a freshman in college, all of my friends in the dorm whispered about him like he was some kind of celebrity. They all wanted to know what made him tick.
As big an ego as he has, heâs surprisingly mum about his background. Iâm not even sure Aaron knows much about it.
So hereâs my chance to get to know him better. Iâm grabbing it by the horns. âOkay. You keep making fun of my wedding. If you were going to get married, how would you do it?â
He smirks. âThatâs a big if.â
âYou never saw yourself married?â
âNo, I have not,â he says automatically.
I lean forward. âSo you donât agree with the institution, or you donât want to tie yourself down to one woman, orâ¦?â
âAll of the above.â
âAh. But hypothetically, if you did⦠?â
He laughs and scratches his temple as he looks up at the ceiling, thinking. âHmm. I guess I only want one thing for sure.â
âWhatâs that?â
Iâm on the edge of my seat, as if this one answer will open him up totally to me.
âSnow. Lots of snow.â
I glare at him. âHa ha. Youâre a dumbass. Since youâre not being truthful, I get another chance.â
âI was being truthful.â
I cross my arms, still glaring at him.
After a brief showdown, he nods once, conceding.
âOkay. Truth. Hmm. Let me think.â I stroke my chin as I mentally sift through the possibilities. âWhy did you rush D-Phi?â
He raises an eyebrow. âThatâs the burning question youâre dying for an answer to?â
I nod.
âWhy do you want to know?â
âBecause there were the real frat brothers, the guys who really embraced being part of the fraternity. And then there was you. You never went to any of the sorority mixers, you spent more time playing chess with me than you spent in the basement for the parties, and the second you graduated, you left it all behind. Soâ¦why?â
He throws up his hands. âI donât know. I didnât get into all that. Not like Aaron. But you know Aaronâs been my best friend since fifth grade. He was doing it, so I did it, too.â
âBecause you didnât want to be left behind?â I make a little pouty face. âPoor baby.â
âI donât know.â He yawns and blinks, like heâs starting to fall asleep. Yes, this game is dull as hell. âMaybe. It was a long time ago.â
âAaron told me you guys met on the recess yard. He said you and he were the only athletic guys in your class so when they chose teams, you were always against each other. So at first, you hated each other. True?â
He nods, a little surprised I know this about him. âTrue. What else did he tell you about me?â
I wiggle my eyebrows mysteriously. Honestly, not that much, but I like that heâs interested. âThat your dad moved your family to Boulder from New Jersey when you were ten, as part of the witness protection program or something like that.â
His eyebrows shoot up. âSomething like that.â
âSo itâs true?â
He shrugs.
âThatâs kind of badass. Did your dad witness a big crime or something?â
âNo. Most of my family was involved in organized crime. My father wanted to get out, so he made a deal with the FBI that he would testify against them in exchange for our protection.â
My jaw drops. âReally? Waitâ¦is Miles Foster your real name?â
âWhat do you mean? Sure, itâs my real name. Is it my given name? No, it is not.â
My jaw is now on the floor. âWhat?â I lean closer to him. âThatâs interesting. So what is it?â
He shakes his head mysteriously.
âWow. I get it, I get it. But should you be telling me any of that? Isnât that supposed to be secret? Like, if you tell me, you have to kill me?â
He laughs. âNope. I mean, I guess it is. But who would you tell? Itâs not a big deal. Besides, the organization got broken up after my fatherâs testimony. Most of the big players are in jail. My grandfather, my unclesâ¦I doubt anyoneâs looking for me, and if they are, itâs not because they want to kill me. Iâm blood.â
I lean forward. âBut theyâre looking for your dad, right? Since he got them jailed?â
His face falls. âMy parents were killed in an auto accident when I was eighteen,â he says, shifting back against his seat. âAaron never told you that?â
I shake my head, stunned. âIâm sorry.â I feel like an ass for bringing it up. And no wonder he was driving slow, back there in the snow. âBut that meansâ¦youâre all alone.â
He nods.
âYou donât care?â
âNot in the least. Because I like myself. Thereâs nothing wrong with liking the company of yourself better than the company of other people. And Iâm not completely alone. I have people.â
âNo girlfriend, though.â
âNo.â He shoots me a curious look. âWhy are you so concerned about that?â
âIâm not. Just curious,â I say nonchalantly.
âWell, I have other people. I have Aaron.â
âYeah, but you two barely get together anymore.â
He nods, staring at the ground pensively. âLike I said. Iâm good by myself.â
âYou donât get lonely?â
âRarely.â
âBut in those rare moments?â
He shrugs. âI remind myself how annoying most of the human race tends to be.â
âHmm. Oh, right. And youâre not annoying at all.â
âThatâs right.â
God, heâs such a smug bastard. I want to smack that superior look off his face. I sit instead. âSo⦠Why donât you ever invite Aaron to visit you in Denver?â
He snaps his eyes to mine. âHey. Whatâs with the third degree? I thought itâs my turn.â
I guess I did overreach my turn. But once I got started, I couldnât help it. I mean, heâs Mafia! Every fascinating thing I find out about him only makes me want to learn more. Heâs like my exact opposite. My backstory is the historical equivalent of watching paint dry.
I sit back and pull my knees up, digging my toes into the soft flannel folds of his shirt for warmth. âAll right. Truth.â
He strokes his chin pensively. For my truths, all heâs been asking are these really deep questions that require me to think super-hard, which is probably why I have a little headache. âAll right. Pretend Aaron didnât exist. If you could date any movie or literary character, who would it be? Who would be your perfect mate?â
âOh! Thatâs easy. Andy Dufresne.â
He lifts his brows, impressed. âShawshank Redemption, huh? Interesting.â
âI totally ship that guy. In the movie? When he says that he loved his wife but she used to say he was a hard man to know. That he was quiet and kept things to himself and was this big mystery and â¦â
I stop. Because heâs listening attentively, nodding along, and I suddenly realize that Andy Dufresne is nothing like Aaron.
And almost everything like Miles. Right down to being crafty as fuck with figures and a chessboard.
Blushing, I find a loose thread on my cardigan and start to pull on it. âAnyway⦠Truth or Dare?â
He straightens and stretches. âAll right. You want the truth as to why I never ask Aaron to visit me?â
I pull the hair tie out of my hair and shake out my hair, nodding.
His gaze sweeps over my hair as it tumbles in my face, and for the briefest of moments, I wonder what it would be like to have him reach over and push it out of my eyes. Itâs been a long time since heâs gazed at me like he wanted me; five years, in fact. And yet, up to that moment he first looked at me like this, Iâd never experienced anything so thrilling.
Before him, sex was awkward. With him, I learned that it could be pleasurable, intimate, fun. It was like heâd opened up a whole new chapter in my life that night. I wonder if he realizes that.
Iâm studying his lips and imagining them on me when out come the words, âI guess you can say Iâve moved on.â
Iâm thinking about the way heâd put a finger under my chin and lifted my mouth to his, when his words suddenly register. âWhat do you mean?â
âI gave him some time, after college. I thought heâd get past it when he finally got out, almost two years ago. But look at me. Iâm twenty-five. Iâve been out of college almost five years. Iâve spent five years waiting for him to grow the fuck up. It hasnât happened. And rather than letting him drag me down to where he is, Iâm happy where I am. Being an adult.â
My eyes widen. âBut heâs getting married. Thatâs adult.â
âYeah. Maybe itâll change him. And if it does, you two are more than welcome to stay at my place downtown. But right nowâ¦I donât want to have to ask my maid to clean up vomit in my guest bathroom from a night of hardcore partying. Iâm not there anymore.â
I blink. I suppose it makes sense, now, why Iâve been seeing Miles less and less. âHave you told him that?â
He rakes his hands through his hair. âYeah. Often. He calls me an old fart and tells me I need to loosen up.â
âIs that what he said the night of the bachelor party?â
âYeah. And hell, maybe heâs right. Maybe Iâm living life the wrong way. But Iâm happy with my choice. Thatâs me. Iâm not him.â
Right. I know that. They might be best friends, but theyâre nothing alike.
Heâs eying me curiously. âObviously it doesnât bother you.â
âWellâ¦no, itââ
âYouâre still young.â
He says it like Iâm a toddler and heâs some ancient, wise elder. âIâm three years younger than you, dude. And yes, it does bother me.â
âAnd yet you donât tell him that. You never told him that. You went along with it.â
âI have.â Not that it did much good. âUm⦠Whatâ¦happened the night of the bachelor party? Why did you guys get back so late? I meanâ¦how much did he loosen up, exactly?â
He presses his lips together and shakes his head, wagging his finger in front of me. âI think youâve asked way too many truths, Shorty. Itâs my turn.â
Right. Anyway, even if he isnât on the same wavelength with Aaron, I know Miles wouldnât betray his trust. But then again, Miles is not a liar. Heâd tell the truth if I asked him straight out. I just need to wait my turn.
But maybe I donât want to know the answer.
âOkay.â I look around. âIâm feeling adventurous. Dare.â
âAll right.â He reaches into his pocket and pulls out a dollar bill. âI need a blindfold.â
I raise an eyebrow and lift my hat. âIf I put this over my eyes, I canât see.â
âAll right. Do it.â
I slip the hat on and pull it down over my head.
âStand up.â
I stand cautiously, fanning my hands out in front of me. As I do, I feel him flick the pom-pom. âStop. Where do Iâ¦â
I feel his hand on the small of my back suddenly, nudging me ever so slightly ahead. I take a couple of steps. Weâre heading down the hallway toward the restrooms and the vending machines. I can hear the soft hum of them, in front of me, when he tells me to stop.
âAll right. Put your hand out and pick one.â
âButââ
âThatâs the dare. Whatever you choose, Iâm going to feed to you.â
I frown. âYou jerk.â
âSo make sure itâs extra-fattening. You have a dress to fit into tomorrow.â
Iâd go back like he did and ask for a truth, but I am kind of hungry. I wish I remembered where the popcorn was. I put out my hand and it collides with the glass faster than I expected, making my knuckles ache. âOw.â
âGood choice.â I hear the sound of the dollar bill being fed into the machine, buttons being pressed, and the buzz as the item is released. It sounds suspiciously heavy, rattling down there in the bottom drawer.
He guides me back to the bench. I sit down, having absolutely no idea what is going in my mouth. Iâm kind of picky when it comes to food. Especially since Iâve been on my diet, Iâve pretty much sworn off all junk foodâ
âOpen up.â
I hear paper ripping as I open my mouth. Iâm oddly scared as I feel something hard pass between my lips, and he pops it in.
I chew.
Then I gag. I bring one hand to my mouth and rip off the hat with the other. âEw. Ew! Good and Plenty? Really?â
âWhat? You donât like licorice?â
âNo!â I rush to the garbage can and spit it out, then rush and take a sip of coffee to kill the taste. âThatâs vile!â
He pops one into his mouth and chews. âItâs not bad.â
âYouâre weird.â
âI am not weird.â
âSure you are. You know, all the girls my freshman year were always whispering about you, asking all these questions. They thought you were pretty damn looney tunes.â
âDid they now?â He doesnât seem offended, just interested. âAnd what kind of questions did they ask?â
I grin. âBasically, since you were never interested in any of them, whether you were gay.â
He freezes with a handful of candy poised between the box and his mouth. Then he pops them in, his brows furrowing a little. âWell, you of all people couldâve set the record straight on that one.â
Now I freeze. When I meet his gaze, his deep blue eyes are intent on mine. Heâs struck me speechless for a moment, and suddenly I knowâI feel it in every inch of my faceâthat my cheeks are burning.
I turn away from him. âYou remember that?â
He laughs, a grumbling sound low in his throat. âYeah. Donât you?â
âWellâ¦yes, butâ¦â Iâm trying and failing to get control of myself. I must be as red as a tomato.
He smirks. âAnd it mustâve been so memorable for you, because the next thing I knew, you were with Aaron.â
I donât know why but it feels as if my stomach is in a freefall. I start to babble aimlessly, like I always do when Iâm uncomfortable. âWell, I seem to remember that after it happened, you vanished for like, two months. And I didnât realize you remembered. Because we were drunk.â
Feeding off that, he doesnât seem uncomfortable at all. âI wasnât drunk. Iâve never been drunk in my life.â
Heâ¦really? Heâs got to be kidding me.
âWere you?â
I glance at him. Of course I was drunk. I wouldnât have slept with him ifâ¦
A little voice intercedes at that moment.
Oh, yes, you would have.
The voice is right. The night had worn on and Aaron disappeared without getting me that beer. And the buzz Iâd had started to wear off. I couldnât find my friends and Iâd left my cell phone in my dorm so heâd brought me upstairs to use his. And, with pretty much all my faculties intact, Iâd gone into his bedroom andâ¦fallen completely, irrevocably under his wizardâs spell.
I canât think about that right now.
We need to stop going down this path.
âWellâ¦that one time doesnât prove anything. That might have been the time that made you decide once and for all to play for the other team.â
He smirks. âTrust me. It didnât.â
Only then am I aware my mouth is hanging open, completely dry. âWell, you never had any girlfriends. I know you had women, but no repeat engagements.â
âYou know that?â
Iâm not willing to admit that every time I left Aaronâs room while Miles still lived in the frat house, I practically stalked him, seeing all those gorgeous girls leaving his bedroom. I wondered to the point of near madness whether heâd made them come, whether heâd called them âinsanely beautiful,â whether heâd opened up new worlds of pleasure for them, too.
His eyes are so hot on me that I canât look at him. Even when I look away, I feel them.
When I open my mouth again, my voice is weak.
âAaron always said you had unrealistic expectations. That you wanted a triple-D model type. And we never talked about it afterwards, so I assumed you were drunk and made a mistake.â
He leans forward and puts his forearms on his knees, nodding. âWell, yeah. Thatâs true.â I wish I knew what part heâs talking about. âI donât know about the triple D, but I have high standards.â
I roll my eyes. âWhy do you have such an ego? Why do you think no one is good enough for you?â
He thrusts his hands into the pockets of his jeans and strolls casually over to me, so heâs looming like a towerâa warm, hot tower of male fleshâright in front of me. âNot true. I have met someone.â
I donât know why my heart plummets at the news. âYou have? Why didnât you bring her to the wedding, then?â
âOh, sheâll be at the wedding, all right,â he says, as I venture a look up at him and his eyes capture mine. Theyâre darker than Iâve ever seen them. âSheâs the bride.â
A quick flutter sends my heart skipping, and a moment of breathlessness passes through me. His expression doesnât change for the longest time. His jaw is set, his eyes tinged with defiance, like heâs just issued a challenge and now he wants me to respond.
My first instinct? I ache to grab his shirt and put his mouth on mine, feel the scratch of his beard and entwine my tongue with his.
But whoa. Where did that come from? And how wrong and awful would that be of me?
I canât say my second instinct, the desire to push him back down on the bench and straddle his hard body, is any better.
Itâs a good thing we donât have to obey our instincts, because Iâd be in so much trouble right now if I did.
Before I can have a third instinct, I notice the color of his eyes has changed. Theyâre dancing now, vibrant blue.
He was joking. Trying to get me to react, which is his specialty.
I shove him. Hard. So hard, he takes a step back.
He chuckles, almost to himself. âYou shouldâve seen your face.â
âFucker. I really hate you,â I growl, slamming my fists into his hard chest. âSure, youâre so beyond Aaron. Youâre just as immature as he is!â
Heâs not laughing anymore. He puts his hands up to block my fists, and when I donât stop, he turns away.
I stomp away, feeling embarrassed and stupid as hell. What was I thinking? Itâs nearly ten oâclock and I must be exhausted because for a split second, Iâd actually entertained kissing mindfucker Miles Foster. Which isnât really even his name. The day before Iâm supposed to marry his best friend.
What the fuck is wrong with me? When I pictured my Wedding Day Eve, I imagined a nice night with family, preparing for the adventure of my life.
Not this. This beyond-shitty clusterfuck that makes me want to go outside, tilt my face to the snowy night, and scream like a fucking banshee that I. Am. Done.
Miles Foster canât keep getting under my skin like this. Any more, and Iâll never be able to pry him out. Maybe itâs already too late.