Fake Dates & Ice Skates: Chapter 36
Fake Dates & Ice Skates: (The North University Series Book 1)
Itâs like Iâve forgotten what I used to do it for. At the beginning, it was for me to have fun because it seemed cool. Then it was for my mom, because she wanted me to. She wanted me to be a star for her. But today, for one of the first times in a while, Iâm skating for myself. For fun. With Miles.
âI donât know how I feel about this. I feel weird,â he stutters, turning around on the ice almost falling over. I spin and turn effortlessly just to show off.
âThatâs because youâre used to trying to kill people while you skate,â I reply. âSometimes you just need to relax, yâknow?â
He glides towards me in his jeans and baggy sweatshirt, as he grabs my hands while he spins me around. He has awful balance. Itâs like trying watch Bambi on ice: both adorable and ridiculous at the same time. I canât help but laugh when he pulls me in and skates backwards as if weâre doing the hokey pokey.
âYouâre right,â he says when he lets go, sliding down the rink seamlessly. âThis âIâm always right,â I say with a smug grin, gliding in the opposite direction.
If it wasnât empty in here, I wouldnât have been able to hear him charge up behind me as he wraps his arms around my waist. He pulls me into him until my back is flush against his chest. He kisses me lightly just below my ear where my pulse is hammering. He sends rapid kisses across both sides of my neck.
âWhat are you doing after this?â he murmurs into my skin; his proximity and warmth makes me shiver. There is something so wildly comforting about being with him like this.
âIâm, uh,â I stammer when he bites my earlobe. âIâve got to go to my momâs house. She said itâs an emergency, but I have to come My mom sent one of her very ambiguous messages this morning. Iâve slightly been avoiding her since my performance. When we went to Palm Springs, I had an excuse not to talk to her but now after being back for almost a month, I have to turn up to whatever she needs me to.
âBoo. I was going to coax you into coming over to my house,â he groans. âDo you know what the emergency is?â
âNo but Iâm going to find out. And donât you have practice, like, now?â
âI do.â
âThen why arenât you there?â I ask, turning around to see him.
âBecause I want to be here instead,â he whispers. He kisses me softly on the lips and I mould into him. He moves his lips around mine and I gently bite at his bottom lip. I laugh and pull away.
âYou need to go to practice, and I need to get going anyway,â I say, skating towards the exit of the rink. âIâll see you tomorrow.â
âWait!â he shouts after me when I sit on the bench outside the rink. He stumbles out of the exit and sits down next to me. âYou told me to remind you about the sports achievement evening this weekend â so this is your reminder.â
âOh shit, yeah,â I say, kissing him on the cheek for the reminder. âThank you, Milesy. Iâll order a dress tonight. I wouldnât want to miss you fangirling over NU alumni.â
*
Iâve always felt off being here since the divorce. I know itâs never been my home in a sense but something else hangs in the air.
âMom?â I call out but nobody responds. I walk through the kitchen, and I canât see anybody. I wander through the living room and the den and still, nobody is there until I get to the dining room which leads out to the backyard and pool.
I spot the back of my momâs blonde head first, stood next to one of the lounge chairs, staring out to the pool. When I get closer, I hear another voice, a female voice. I slide open the door, walking carefully out onto the patio.
âAustin?â I ask, my voice suddenly sounding miles away.
Sure enough, my gorgeous brunette older sister turns around. Her heart shaped face is luminous. Sheâs always had flawless and striking features, but this pregnancy has given that a whole new meaning. Itâs even more jarring when I havenât seen her in person in years. I can hear my heart thumping against my ribs.
She gives me a side glance before turning back away from me. âWhat are you doing here?â
âYouâre late,â my mom interrupts, not looking up at me either.
âIâm not. I was trying to find you in the house. You could have told me you were out here.â
âOh, so this is my fault?â she replies. I almost laugh  at her absurdity. Why does she always make it difficult to deal with her? She has always been one for the dramatics and to make things seem worse than they are. I make the brave decision to take a seat next to them, while Austin still stands away from me.
âWhatâs going on?â I ask cautiously.
âWhen were you going to tell me that Austinâs pregnant?â My momâs piercing blue eyes stare into mine and my breath catches. Iâve been avoiding it in hopes that Austin would tell her. I donât know how this has been flipped on me.
âIt slipped my mind. Iâm so sorry,â I say wearily. This is starting to feel like an ambush. My mom gives me a long look without saying anything, just letting her gaze sink into me before walking back into the house.
What the fuck is going on?
Iâm left alone with Austin, and I donât know what to say. We havenât spoken since she told me she was pregnant. The same day that she told me âI asked you to tell her and you couldnât even do that, Wren. I had to fly out here and tell her myself. I told you that I didnât want to do that,â Austin turns to me, showcasing her small bump. Her voice is steady and more dejected than angry.
âIâm confused as to how this is âI was going to figure it out. I told you to just do one thing for me. Do you have any idea how I awful I feel? I could barely stomach the look of disgust on her face,â Austin retorts, her sad brown eyes flickering over me. My stomach jolts and I start to feel the nausea kicking in already.
âHow do you think I feel after having to keep that a secret on top of everything else? I worked my ass off for the showcase so I could tell her, and she didnât even see the whole thing. She didnât even say that I did good but she somehow managed to let me go away for a week. I donât get it.â
âWren,â Austin says thickly as she comes to sit down next to me. The slight anger that was in her face has softened as she takes me in, her shoulders relaxing. âWhen are you going to realise that thatâs how she is? She can tell within the first minute of a performance if itâs going to go well or not. Thatâs how sheâs always been.â
I donât know when I started crying but I did. Everything is crashing down on me so quickly that I donât have the time to process it. Hot stupid tears rolling down my face. Maybe it was seeing my pregnant sister for the first time. Maybe it was because I feel trapped in a confusing confrontation. Or maybe itâs the words that are coming out of my sisterâs mouth are the kind of thoughts Iâve spent so long trying to avoid. The ones that creep up at me at night and lay next to me, but Iâve trained my brain enough to forget them.
âIf you know that, why are you still doing ballet? Why do you care so much about what she thinks?â I ask.
âThatâs the way Iâve felt my entire life and I canât get rid of that feeling â to constantly crave that validation from her. To make it up to her for not being able to skate like she did. When youâre put on that kind of pedestal from so young, itâs not easy to just snap out of it. Iâm too far in to change my career path now. This is what sheâs made us believe. To only have this one choice. I thought that you knew that,â Austin explains. She reaches out her hand to me, rubbing her thumb over my knuckles. I can feel my hand shaking under her gentle touch.
âI need to go,â I whisper. âI canâtâ¦â
âI know itâs hard to hear, Wren, but you need to be tougher if you want to survive in this world. Sheâs not going to be your harshest critic. There will be people a lot stricter than her. If you want something, if you want to skate, regardless of your reasons for doing so, you need to learn how to hold your head up.â Her words sound like daggers straight to the heart, no matter how gently she attempts to say them.
âI want to be able to do things that make me happy without feeling the need to please her. Iâm sick of doing it for her and not myself,â I admit.
âYouâll find out the reason youâre doing it soon. If you werenât doing this for yourself, you wouldnât be in this deep. There is a part of you that wants to do this for Her words weigh on my brain as if Iâve been watching too much TV. Iâve known that. Of course, I have. Itâs all  she would talk about when we were kids. Some part of me hoped that if Austin succeeded â which I thought she would â then I wouldnât have to try as hard. I could be good enough for myself and that would be enough.
I made bets with myself. If Austin won her competition, I could come second in mine. If Austin didnât succeed in school, I could be fine too. If Austin could balance her relationship with her work, I could too.
âWhy do we have to do this, Austin?â
âBecause. Sheâs our mom. Sheâs hard on us but sheâs given us everything. Even if theyâre not what we wanted, itâs what we have.â Austin looks at me with kind eyes, understanding and sympathy laced within them.
âYou should have just become a chef,â I whisper under my breath. She laughs and the noise almost shocks me hearing her laugh for the first time in years. Her smile reaches her blushed cheeks as she shakes her head lightly.
âWell, since Iâll be staying at home when the baby comes, who knows what could happen,â she says, rubbing her stomach as she looks down at it. âThey say anything happens when youâre pregnant.â
âYou seem calmer than you did on the phone,â I murmur.
âIâve come to peace with it. Iâm happy. Excited, even,â she responds.
âDo you know what youâre having yet?â
âA boy,â she says, turning to me with a grin. My heart doubles in size. âThank God for that, right?â
âIâm so happy for you, seriously. Dad is going to be over the moon. And Iâm going to have a nephew!â
âYep,â she says. âWeâre thinking of moving back here too. Well, maybe not Salt Lake but closer.â
âReally?â I donât bother to hide the excitement in my voice. As much as she can be hard to deal with, Iâve missed having my sister around. Sheâs the only close family I have here other than my parents even if sheâs only visiting.
âYeah. Iâve missed you, Emmy. I know we werenât the kindest to each other growing up, but this baby has really made me rethink it all. I want to be closer to you.â
âI would really like that.â
After a much needed catch up with my sister, she stays on the patio when I walk back into the house. For a second, I feel like Iâm floating. Hearing what she said about our mom was hard, but it had to be said. There had always been some unspoken rule between us that we could never admit what we were doing our sports for. We pretended to ignore the rants that mom would go on as to how her life was ruined when she first fell in love with dad and got pregnant with Austin.
As kids, it wasnât something we could laugh about. It was a cautionary tale. Something for us to learn from. It wasnât anything we could just joke about because it really was our whole lives. We trained, we preformed and that was it. There was no reason to sit and look into it. By the time I realised what was underneath it all, Austin had already gone to college, and it felt like it was too late. As if bringing it up would start either and argument or a revolution.
When I get to the kitchen to walk out the front door, Iâm stopped by my mom.
âIâm disappointed in you Wren,â is the only thing I can hear her say. My eyes adjust to the kitchen counter, and I can just about make out my momâs figure. Sheâs sitting with a glass of wine, staring out into the front yard through a sliver in the blind. Yeah, this is how all my nightmares start.
âOh, really?â I retort sarcastically. She scoffs before taking a large sip of her drink. There is nothing I love more than my mom when sheâs drunk. Kidding, of course. She is the âSince youâve been hanging out with that boy something has changed in you. You would never talk to me like this.â
After the day Iâve had, I donât bother to hold back on my candour. I donât usually like to air out my shit like this, but it needs to happen. Thereâs no use for us to hide this anymore. Thereâs no reason for me to be up her ass 24/7 and let her control every aspect of my life like she has been for the past nineteen years.
âThatâs because I was afraid of you for so long. I was so scared that youâd stop loving me if I did something wrong. Like you did with dad. But he didnât even have to do anything. You just stopped. No explanation. That was it and you never told us why. I have spent my whole life trying so hard for that not to happen. I thought that if I did my best, if I made you happy in some way, you wouldnât stop loving me.â
I take a deep breath. I donât know when I got so close to her; when I could start to smell the wine on her tongue, but I did. She looks at me for a moment, as if contemplating which direction to take. She avoids my eyes when she speaks next.
âYouâre starting to sound bratty and selfish, Amelia. You seem to be forgetting who paid for all your skating outfits and who pays for half of your rent. Yet you and that boy were so quick to take that vacation, knowing you were lying to me.â
âDoes that even matter anymore? Austin is happy. Canât that be enough?â I huff. âListen, weâre grateful for the trip but we didnât ask you to do that. Youâre the one who got us that hotel so you could try to make me forget about how much you hated my performance. Like you do every time. The same thing with the flowers. In some pathetic way for you to apologise and make yourself feel better.â
âIt Iâve never seen her get this bad before and itâs starting to make me feel sick. My heart beats loudly in my ear as I try and keep my cool.
âI canât listen to this anymore.â
I turn out of the door as the sun starts to set. The days are short here and the nights are long and dark during the winter. Regardless, I kick my jog up into a sprint as I try to get out of her neighbourhood. I donât know where exactly Iâm going.
I could have got back in my car, but I donât think Iâm able to sit still with all this adrenaline rushing through me. I must have been running for almost an hour by the time I can see my apartment from where Iâm stood panting. Instead, I turn left down towards the houses near campus.
I run up into the cul de sac and I see his house. I run up the steps and knock the door.