argue at the party.
Even though itâs a hazy spring afternoon and the air is calm and fragrant and full of the splash of water and the sound of music and laughter. Even Evan and Sophie are in a good mood, having traded their warring for playful flirtation. Luca sits at the edge of the lake, uncharacteristically pensive and taciturn, while Iakov lounges in the grass, tapping a cigarette lazily against his phone.
In the distance, Sev chases his strange, adorable fiancée through the trees like a mortal chasing an elusive naiad.
Thereâs a mingled sense of satisfaction and nostalgia that permeates the air. The wind blowing across the lake shifts the fluffy cattails and spiky reeds at the edges.
Everything feels peaceful, almost magical.
But still, we fight.
Theodora wears a summer dress with a pale floral pattern and thick shoulder straps tied into bows. Her short hair floats in the wind, tickling her cheeks and lips. Sometimes, the wind tugs at her skirts, revealing more of her legs.
Theodora looks gorgeous, and once I draw closer, she smells gorgeous too, and her eyes, in the hazy golden sunlight, are a dreamy blue. And all of this gorgeousness makes it impossible to be gentle as a lamb.
âWhat was the point of self-sabotage?â I ask, drawing her into the treeline for some privacy. âI didnât want you to hand me the win.â
âAnd yet you wanted to hand it to .â
âThatâs different and you know it.â
âAnd how?â she asks.
âBecause I didnât the win.â
âNeither did I.â
I clench my fists and take a deep breath, to still myself. âLet me rephrase. I didnât the win.â
âHow could you possibly know? We only found out today I was the front-runner.â
âMr Ambrose had already told me.â
Her eyes go wide. âHe did not.â
âWhen you left. He told me.â
âThen why did you self-sabotage? Why didnât you just hand in your essay?â
âBecause you were gone for so long, and if I won just because of what happenedâbecause of what you had to go throughâthatâs not the kind of victory I wanted.â
âSo you thought you would simply hand me the trophy?â
I shrug. âYou tried to hand it to me.â
She gives me a haughty look. âMake no mistake, BlackwoodâI demand a rematch. You and I, in the arena of the greatest academic institution of the country.â
I give her a solemn nod. âIâm for it. Oxford, three years, one rematch. A fair one, this time. No self-sabotage, no sacrifice of love or show of devotion.â
âItâs agreed.â We shake hands. âJust try not to submit any blank pages this time.â
âAt least I would never submit a chapter from a salacious pirate romance.â
Her lips quirk. âHow could you know whether or not itâs salacious?â
âBecause itâs a book about piratesâand we all know how you feel about those.â
She smirks and steps closer, hands behind her back. âStill jealous over a fictional character, Zachary Blackwood? Itâs a bad look.â
âStill in love with a villainous pirate from a childrenâs book, Theodora Dorokhova? Thatâs a bad look.â I stretch out my open palm towards her. âAnd I want my copy of back.â
She bats my hand away. âYouâre not getting it back. Ever.â Her smile widens. âAnd to answer your question, I donât see myself in James Hookâand I donât like him because heâs like you.â
âI never asked you thatâI would never ask such a nonsensical question.â
âYou asked it black on white in your annotations.â
I clench my hands into fists. âTheodora. Those were my annotations.â
âYes, and Iâm answering you . I donât like him because heâs like you. I like you because youâre like him.â
âWhatâ
?â
â
.â
I laugh and shake my head. âBecause it took me so much courage to hand in a blank piece of paper for my assignment?â
âBecause it took you so much courage to love me when I was so difficult to love.â
I take a step closer and capture her gaze with mine, daring her to look away. Our height difference is significant enough now that she has to tilt her head back to look at me.
âListen to me, Theodora Dorokhova, and listen well. You are not difficult to loveâyou have been difficult to love. Whatever happened in your life to make you believe you might be is a tragedy and a betrayal, a crime against truth. Whoever told you or made you believe youâre difficult to love is a liar. Youâre not difficult to love. You are so easy to love that I fell in love with you without even meaning to, I fell in love with you even when you wouldnât let me, and I keep falling in love with you every day. I donât even think Iâll ever stop falling in love with you. In fact, I fell in love with you earlier, when I saw you in that summer dress, and I fell in love with you five minutes ago when you were talking about James Hook. And I believe I shall fall in love with you in a few minutes when I take your hand and take you into the tree to kiss you where nobody can see us and get on my knees to worship you the way I know best. And Iâll fall in love with you this summer, when we go swimming in the lake and take road trips to Oxford, and Iâll fall in love with you every night when I take you to my bed or when you decide to be stubborn and take to bed instead. And Iâll fall in love with you when you finish that damnable pirate romance book, and Iâll fall in love with you when weâre in university and youâll be angry at me for looking down my nose because Iâm studying philosophy and youâre not. Iâll keep falling in love with every part of you because every part of you is perfectly, utterly lovable.â
Tears blossom in her eyes. Deep inside my chest, my heart aches because I know that a part of her needed to hear that.
Theodora has probably always believed she wasnât easy to loveâand I suspect part of her will always believe that insidious, foul little lie.
It doesnât matter. Iâll attack that lie every single day, Iâll fight it tooth and claw until itâs completely gone, until Theodora has forgotten it ever even existed.
âMaybe should become the writer,â she says in a small voice, smiling through her tears.
âIâm going to throw my life away on academia and educationâremember? Besides.â I swipe away her tears with a thumb and take her hand, drawing her deeper into the treeline. âI donât need to become a writerâI already have a writer girlfriend.â
âA writer girlfriend?â she asks, following me. âSince when?â
âSince forever. Since Christmas. Since today.â The wind blows her hair across her face, and I push it away with a laugh. âSheâs a little elusive, this girlfriend of mine.â
âBut I think she loves you very much.â Theodora holds my arm in hers and stands on her tiptoes to whisper in my ear. âI think she loves you and has wanted to be your girlfriend for a long time.â
âShe loves me?â I ask in a casual tone.
âOh, sheâs ridiculously in love with you.â
I whisper back. âDo you think she would like to be seduced amongst the trees?â
âYes. Often.â
âThen I must begin at once.â
I catch her in my arms like a princess in a fairy tale, and she throws her arms around my neck with a surprised yelp.
âI can walk, you know!â
I kiss her lips. âBut why would you when I can carry you?â
She laughs and kicks her legs, throwing back her head. âNow I really feel like an innocent maiden being captured by a handsome pirate.â
âWho would have thought my girlfriend would have such frivolous fantasies?â
She taps her finger over my lips. âLess judging, more ravishing.â
âYes, my beautiful darling.â
âThank you, my handsome love.â
I stop, and we stare at each other for a second.
âToo much?â she asks.
âNo. Never.â
She laughs, and I kiss her laughing mouth, and my heart is full of that perfect, luminous soundâthe sound of Theodora Dorokhova laughing.