The apartment Aaron has in Boulder is right across from the fire station, and about a block from the CU Boulder campus. Itâs also within walking distance of the D-Phi frat house. Though we graduated nineteen months ago, heâs still guest of honor at their parties. He was on the seven-year plan and wound up graduating the same time I did, even though heâs three years older than I am.
What can I say? Even though heâs not in college anymore, he couldnât fully detach himself from that world. He still considers it the best time of his life, which is probably why heâs constantly bringing up those old stories.
Aaronâs had it pretty good, though, since graduating with his degree in electrical engineering. His father is CEO of an engineering firm in downtown Boulder, so he got him a great job there. We think he can make manager in another couple years, if he keeps at it. Heâs been trying to put away money so that we can buy a house.
Me? Well, Iâm another story. I graduated with a degree in English and couldnât find a job anywhere. I blanketed the world with resumes, and nothing came of it. So I decided to go back for my Masters in Library Science and add to my already impressive student loan debt. Iâm still living in the same apartment that I had for my undergrad, but the lease runs out at the first of the year. When weâre married, Iâll move in with Aaron.
Thatâs the plan.
I canât wait. My apartment on campus is just a dorm. But sharing his place with him, starting our lives together as man and wife? Maybe itâll feel like a home.
Next to me, Miles is drumming his hands on his thighs, something Iâve noticed he only does when heâs nervous.
Hmm. I wonder what thatâs about?
Miles may be Aaronâs best friend, but he didnât get into D-Phi the way Aaron did. He easily transitioned off campus. He graduated summa cum laude from CU in the usual four years with a dual degree in business and math and cut all ties with D-Phi and everything college. Then, he got a job as an investments manager at some big-deal firm in Denver, where he quickly climbed the ranks and is now vice president. Heâs rolling, though you wouldnât know to look at him most days, since he seems to favor the Paul Bunyan look over suits and ties. Aaronâs always saying what a âlucky son of a bitchâ Miles is, but I think itâs a lot more than luck.
First of all, heâs a genius.
Iâm not just saying that.
Oh, you know that beer pong he was watching the first night I saw him? He wasnât staring dumbly into space, stoned. I learned later, when I saw all the napkins he had scattered around him, that he was working out a formula to find the exact trajectory and velocity or somethingâI wasnât paying attention when he explained itâso that one of his brothers could hit a cup, every single time. And heâd been testing it with Aaron, which was why he was cleaning up against all the poor, unsuspecting girls who happened to challenge him.
Somewhere, in the drunken haze, I remember asking him why he didnât play beer pong, testing out his own theories himself, and heâd actually said, âBecause it doesnât sufficiently interest me.â
Iâd asked him what did, and heâd said, âYou,â right before he kissed me.
My heart flutters a little at the thought, but I clamp a hand over it to remind it to chill out.
Wrong guy. Wrong, wrong, really fucking wrong guy.
As I pull into the parking lot of the Grammercy Acres, Aaronâs apartment building, I swallow a few times, trying to rid myself of the memory of Milesâ taste. Drunk as I was, Iâve somehow managed to keep so many memories of that night not only intact, but absolutely crystalline-clear. Itâs a curse, Iâm sure. Meanwhile, Miles probably doesnât remember a damn thing.
I coast into Aaronâs spot outside the building, cut the engine, and hold my hand out to Miles.
But heâs already reaching for the door. As he slips out, he says, âIâll get them. You stay here.â
âWhat? No.â I open my door and jump out, following him up the narrow pathway.
Halfway up the sidewalk, he wheels on me. He wags a finger in my direction. âWhat are you doing? Just go back to the car.â
I cross my arms, standing toe to toe with him, doing my best to stare him down even though heâs a foot taller than I am. âNo. I want to make sure he didnât forget anything else. Besides, I have to use the bathroom. I havenât peed in five hours.â
He lets out a long breath. âFine. Whatever.â
He heads to the apartment, walking fast, and I nearly trip over myself trying to keep up. Damn his long legs. When I get to the door, heâs already opened it and gone through, leaving it just barely cracked for me.
I push the door open and look around. Yep, itâs just the same as it was the day before he left, when I stopped by before we all caravanned it over the mountain. Thereâs clothing strewn everywhere from his whirlwind packing expedition. His giant red sectional is barely visible, itâs so covered in shit.
As Iâm crossing to the bedroom, Miles appears in the door, holding a velvet bag. âYour rings.â
I take them from him and peek inside. There they are. A little thrill passes through me as I touch the cool platinum. The tension Iâve felt in my neck this whole trip starts to ease.
âGeez, this place is a shithole.â
I raise my head to see Milesâ eyes ping-ponging around the place, that superior glare back. Iâve never been to his flat in downtown Denver, but I imagine that his housekeeping staff must hate working for him.
But heâs right. Itâs a bachelor pad. Thereâs not a painting on the wall or a decorative element anywhere. âSo heâs not Martha Stewart. Iâll fix things when I move in.â
âWill you?â He seems doubtful.
Well, Iâm sure nothing I ever do will be up to his standards. Sometimes Iâm surprised I even made him come as many times as he did.
Ugh, why am I thinking of that?
I hand him the rings. âYou should take these, then. Youâre not going to lose them, are you?â
He takes the bag, opens the flap on his flannel shirt pocket, and tucks them in. âNo.â
Itâs sad that even though I hate him, I trust him. Miles is a man of his word. He promises, he delivers. Aaron should have entrusted the rings to him to begin with; then maybe none of this wouldâve ever happened.
Stepping through the minefield of discarded crap on the shag rug, I head toward the bathroom door, which is right across the narrow hallway from Aaronâs bedroom.
Suddenly, Miles says, his voice an octave higher than usual, âWait. Where you going?â
I point to the bathroom. âI told you.â
âOh. Right.â Relaxing, he thrusts his hands into his pockets and strolls around the living room, taking it all in. He kicks one of Aaronâs sneakers with the toe of his boot and shakes his head.
Aw, Mr. Clean is about to blow a gasket.
As I walk toward the bathroom, though, I get a distinctly odd feeling. It only grows as I yank my leggings over my thighs, sit down on the toilet and pee.
Aaron insisting Miles come with me.
Miles fidgeting when I pulled up at the apartment and trying to get me to stay in the car.
Miles being nervous when I walked toward the bedroom.
As Iâm finishing up, looking for some soap and a towel so I can wash and dry my hands, it hits me.
Thereâs something in Aaronâs bedroom that he doesnât want me to see.
I dry my hands on my leggings since I canât find a towel, telling myself Iâm being stupid. Aaron sent Miles along with me because he didnât want me going alone. He cares about me. Thatâs all there is to it. And Miles was acting nervous and weird because, well, Miles is weird.
Still, by the time Iâm ready to open the door, I know I will not be able to leave unless I know for sure.
Taking a deep breath, I crack open the door to the hallway. Not seeing Miles, I step across the hall as quietly as possible and push open the door to his bedroom.
I donât know what Iâm expecting to find. A naked woman sleeping there? Long blonde hairs all over the bed? The last time Iâd slept hereâin fact, the last time we slept togetherâwas nearly two months ago. I suggestedâand Aaron agreedâthat our wedding night would be much more exciting if we hadnât gotten any in a while.
I find everything as I expected. White, unpainted walls, scuffed in places, except for a giant framed painting of the Boulder Flatirons at the head of his bed. Iâd given it to him a month ago, for his birthday. Iâd gotten it from a local artistâs gallery as the start of a promiseâthat when I moved in, Iâd make this place homey and livable. Iâd make it ours, not just four walls and a roof.
Other than that, his king bed, sheets all rumpled in a pile at the very center. His dresser, all but one drawer open and vomiting clothes.
Nothing else.
But then my eyes settle on the night table drawer. Iâve never looked in there before, but it must be where he keeps important things, since he kept the rings there.
I hurry over to it and yank it open.
The first thing my eyes fall on is a dog-eared picture of us, at the D-Phi semi-formal, taken years ago. Itâs my favorite picture; I actually have a copy of it blown up and framed in my apartment. I sit down on the bed, lifting and admiring it. Weâre so young there.
My eyes fall back to the drawerâ¦and the yellow box of condoms.
I tamp down the initial urge to freak out. Sure, Iâve been on the pill forever, and we stopped using condoms four years ago. They could just be old. And Aaronâs a pack-rat. He never throws anything away.
Even though he only moved here a year and a half agoâ¦thereâs got to be an explanation.
I lift it out, looking for the expiration date.
As I do, I notice the half-used tube of lube.
Half-usedâ¦and I know heâs never used it with me. Heâs always trying to get in my back door, but Iâve been pretty firmly closed for business on that front. I mean, really. What is the allure of anal, anyway?
Donât guys use lube to masturbate? So, thatâs probably not a big deal. But that, and the condoms, and the fact that Aaron clearly didnât want me snooping in hereâ¦
I look up suddenly as Milesâ form fills the doorway.
Heâs gazing at me, and at the condoms and lube in my lap, with an expression I canât read.
Then he says, âAre you ready?â
I replace the contents quickly and stand up. âUm, yeah.â
As I follow him out the door, I canât breathe. Because I thought Iâd resolved this with Aaron. And now there are all these doubts. Less than twenty hours before Iâm supposed to marry him.
I need air.
I need to talk to Eva.
I need Xanax.
I most definitely do not need the six feet three inches of sarcastic man-flesh that Iâm doomed to spend the next five hours with. Aaronâs partner in crime, who I think may have actually been working in cahoots with Aaron to keep this from me.
I walk through the apartment behind Miles, in a daze, and part of me wants to punch him.
He goes to open the door, but I attack it, slamming it closed. âIs that why you came here?â
He looks annoyed. âWhat?â
âI mean, the condoms, the lubeâ¦we never use any of that, andââ
âHuh? Get out of the way, Shorty, or youâre gonnaââ
Heâs deflecting. I wonât have it. âNo. You know what Iâm talking about. Did Aaron make you come here because he wanted you to keep things from me?â
He glares down at me for a long moment. I brace myself for the news. I can already almost feel it, harder than a smack across the face.
But it doesnât come.
He easily nudges me out of the way and opens the door. âYour upcoming nuptials are making you into even more of a headcase than usual.â
He goes through the door and down the steps, leaving me alone.
Miles is right.
I am being a headcase.
But this is the rest of my life Iâm talking about. Andâ¦
I step outside and pull the door shut as heâs reaching the bottom of the stairs.
âMiles!â I cry desperately.
He stops on the last step and turns to look up at me as he puts on his mirrored sunglasses.
âPlease. You would tell me, right? If he wasâ¦â I canât bring myself to say the word. âYou know. Right?â
His mouth stays a straight line. I know what that means.
Iâm Aaronâs friend. Not yours. Donât ask me these questions.
He shoves his hands into his pockets, tilts his head to the sky, and lets out a breath. âWant me to drive?â
I swallow and follow him down the steps. No, he wouldnât tell me. Heâs loyal to one person only: Aaron. His best friend. His only friend. âNo. Iâll drive.â
I didnât notice the clouds coming in, or the air getting colder. When I reach the car, an arctic blast of wind rips across the parking lot, making my teeth chatter and my bare toes curl. I rip open the door and slide into the warmth of the car.
And as if I couldnât feel any worse, the second I start the engine, the first tiny snowflakes scatter across the windshield.