Fake Dates & Ice Skates: Chapter 32
Fake Dates & Ice Skates: (The North University Series Book 1)
We spent most of last night doing anything but sleeping and I donât think we got to sleep until after four in the morning. I force myself to climb out of bed and see what the noise is.
I walk into the kitchen, the bright lights peeking through the window. Wrensâ back is to me as she rifles through her suitcase that she brought full of books. As I inch closer, the floorboard creaks and her head spins around.
âSorry, I didnât mean to wake you,â she mumbles, tossing her hair over her shoulder.
âWhat are you doing? Itâs ten AM,â I yawn, rubbing the sleep out of my eyes. âArenât you tired?â
âOh extremely,â she says cheerfully. âIâm just going to the beach. I need to- I just need to read for a while to clear my head. Iâll be back before we have to leave.â
Her smile doesnât reach her eyes when she looks at me. Remains of freckles scatter along her nose and cheeks and Iâm instantly reminded of where my hands were all night. She seems to have the same thought as she takes a quick sweep of my body while Iâm in nothing, but my boxers and her face turns a deep red.
I make my way towards her when she turns her back to me again and I wrap my arms around her waist, kissing on her neck lightly, feeling her warm body mould into mine for a split second. She pulls away from me, kneeling down to look through her mini bookshop. She stands up again to turn to me. Her brown-green eyes donât meet mine when I try to search hers for something. Anything.
âIs something wrong? Are you okay?â I ask cautiously. She stands up to me on her tiptoes and presses a kiss to my cheek.
âEverythings fine, Milesy. I just need to get out of here for a little bit. Iâll be back.â She offers me a small smile before walking out the door.
When sheâs gone, I lie back down on the empty bed, staring at the ceiling for what feels like hours. Long painful hours without anybody to talk to. Anyone to hold.
Did I do something wrong? Maybe we went too overboard last night. And this morning. Itâs like every time we tried to go back to sleep, we went back to each other instead. Like it was the first of the last times we would do this. It didnât feel like I was getting it out of my system. It didnât feel like scratching an itch. It felt like I was preparing myself for whatâs going to be a few weeks of hell. I knew sheâd try and block me out after we had sex, but I thought that it would take her longer to freak out than rushing off straight away.
I need to think of some way to make her believe that this was a good idea. That she doesnât need to run away from me. From us. Whether or not either of us are willing to admit it, Iâm still the moth and sheâs the flame. Weâre tied together in some strange, unshakeable way.
I catch a taxi into town, to a good bar restaurant to let myself think. I knew sheâd be close to the hotel, so I didnât want to stay near her in case she didnât want me to interrupt her own thinking time. The best thing I can do is to give her space to figure out what she wants. Whatever the fuck that is.
I knew from day one that I wanted her. That I couldnât think about anything else but her. That she fascinated me and challenged me. A part of me knew that I was hyper-fixating on her because she reminded me of Carter. I know that he would be screaming at me now to not mess this up.
Unsurprisingly, this early in the morning on New Yearâs Day, the bar is deserted. In a shady bar like this, I knew my fake ID would be accepted so the bartender doesnât look twice when I continuously ask for more shots. I shouldnât be doing this. Iâve worked too hard to fuck it up now.
All the good reasons I had to come to the bar fall out of the window when I hear the same whiny voice from last night.
Emily Fraser.
For a second, I think I can slip away. Maybe if I turn my head, down my drink and walk out she wonât notice me. Or maybe if I approach her first, she might just leave me alone to drink until my flight. None of those things happen. Instead, dressed in blue jeans and a white sweater, she slides into the seat next to me at the bar, somehow looking refreshed as if it isnât New Yearâs Day.
âHey, Miles. Nice to see you again. Sober. Well, Iâm sober this time youâre definitely notâ¦â She searches my eyes, but I try to look away. This is the last thing I need right now.
âPleasure to see you as always. I donât want to do this right now,â I groan, swishing around my shot glass before downing it.
âDo what? Iâm just saying hi. Your âNo, it wasnât just her. I had a problem with it too. You acting like you hate her, isnât cute. Youâre lucky she didnât say anything else to you last night.â
âYeah, like what? She looks harmless,â Emily challenges humorously.
âWren is anything but harmless. Just keep your distance and everything will be cool,â I say, turning to her.
âYouâre no fun,â she grumbles, sulking.
âIâm heartbroken,â I whine sarcastically.
She gives me a quick look before sliding off the seat and walking away. I donât know whatâs gotten into her. She was never like this when we were together, but I knew she was a little protective. I didnât expect her to be jealous too.
I groan at myself when I remember just how protective Wren was last night and everything that happened after. Because fuck me, it was hot when she got angry.
Like the loser I am, I pull out my phone and flick through photos of us over the past few months. My whole camera roll has been consumed by her the same way my brain has. Iâve always been a picture-taking person.
I love to have these kinds of memories on my phone to look through over the years. Whenever I post any pictures of Wren and I, my followers go insane as if weâre the new celebrity couple. Hell, my home screen is a picture of her gorgeous face smirking at me when were at the gala.
One of my first pictures of her is when we went to meet up at the gym one cold morning. I forgot to give her my keys before I told her to go to the car so I could pee quickly. When I walked back out, she was stood at the side of my truck with the most ridiculous look on her face. Her hair was braided into two pigtails, wrapped in a huge puffer jacket, a beanie, and a scarf while she sulked at the camera as I snapped pictures of her. âItâs for the memories,â I said, and she pushed me almost making me topple over in the snow. I catch myself smiling and donât bother to hide it.
I have tons of candid pictures of her in the library, at the rink, in my room, in her car. And my current favourite picture of us; a candid taken by Kennedy on Christmas Day. In the photo, Iâm leaning on the sink drying the dishes while Wren washes them, but the picture is a small moment caught where we both look at each other, smiling as she passes a dish to me. Kennedy sent it to me on Instagram and I didnât get it until I was in bed that night.
Itâs moments like those, the ones that we donât always remember but appreciate, are the ones where I can feel myself falling for her even harder. Where being around her makes me feel like all the problems that I thought were huge are able to subside. Even if only for a little while. Being with her this week has stopped this constant orbit that I have been in, trying to get her to pull me into her. To get her to notice. But when that happens, she pushes me back out again and Iâm stuck circling around her.
I sit there, scrolling aimlessly through my camera roll, smiling to myself. Iâm so caught up in listening to her laugh that could melt in my hands that I donât realise the tall dark-haired guy who sits next to me. He looks around my age, maybe a little younger but definitely not allowed to be drinking, âIs that your girlfriend?â he asks, nodding towards my phone. Instinctively, I lock my phone and turn it face down on the table.
âYep. I think,â I reply but my voice sounds distant. As if itâs not my own. The drinks must be getting to me.
âWhat do you mean, âyou think?â Is she or not?â He looks at me with kind eyes. His features seem boyish and friendly, a lot like Carters.
âDo you want to hear a story?â