It Ends with Us: Part 1 – Chapter 1
It Ends with Us: A Novel (1)
As I sit here with one foot on either side of the ledge, looking down from twelve stories above the streets of Boston, I canât help but think about suicide.
Not my own. I like my life enough to want to see it through.
Iâm more focused on other people, and how they ultimately come to the decision to just end their own lives. Do they ever regret it? In the moment after letting go and the second before they make impact, there has to be a little bit of remorse in that brief free fall. Do they look at the ground as it rushes toward them and think, âWell, crap. This was a bad idea.â
Somehow, I think not.
I think about death a lot. Particularly today, considering I justâtwelve hours earlierâgave one of the most epic eulogies the people of Plethora, Maine, have ever witnessed. Okay, maybe it wasnât the most epic. It very well could be considered the most disastrous. I guess that would depend on whether you were asking my mother or me. My mother, who probably wonât speak to me for a solid year after today.
Donât get me wrong; the eulogy I delivered wasnât profound enough to make history, like the one Brooke Shields delivered at Michael Jacksonâs funeral. Or the one delivered by Steve Jobsâs sister. Or Pat Tillmanâs brother. But it was epic in its own way.
I was nervous at first. It was the funeral of the prodigious Andrew Bloom, after all. Adored mayor of my hometown of Plethora, Maine. Owner of the most successful real-estate agency within city limits. Husband of the highly adored Jenny Bloom, the most revered teaching assistant in all of Plethora. And father of Lily Bloomâthat strange girl with the erratic red hair who once fell in love with a homeless guy and brought great shame upon her entire family.
That would be me. Iâm Lily Bloom, and Andrew was my father.
As soon as I finished delivering his eulogy today, I caught a flight straight back to Boston and hijacked the first roof I could find. Again, not because Iâm suicidal. I have no plans to scale off this roof. I just really needed fresh air and silence, and dammit if I canât get that from my third floor apartment with absolutely no rooftop access and a roommate who likes to hear herself sing.
I didnât account for how cold it would be up here, though. Itâs not unbearable, but itâs not comfortable, either. At least I can see the stars. Dead fathers and exasperating roommates and questionable eulogies donât feel so awful when the night sky is clear enough to literally feel the grandeur of the universe.
I love it when the sky makes me feel insignificant.
I like tonight.
Well . . . let me rephrase this so that it more appropriately reflects my feelings in past tense.
I liked tonight.
But unfortunately for me, the door was just shoved open so hard, I expect the stairwell to spit a human out onto the rooftop. The door slams shut again and footsteps move swiftly across the deck. I donât even bother looking up. Whoever it is more than likely wonât even notice me back here straddling the ledge to the left of the door. They came out here in such a hurry, it isnât my fault if they assume theyâre alone.
I sigh quietly, close my eyes and lean my head against the stucco wall behind me, cursing the universe for ripping this peaceful, introspective moment out from under me. The least the universe could do for me today is ensure that itâs a woman and not a man. If Iâm going to have company, Iâd rather it be a female. Iâm tough for my size and can probably hold my own in most cases, but Iâm too comfortable right now to be on a rooftop alone with a strange man in the middle of the night. I might fear for my safety and feel the need to leave, and I really donât want to leave. As I said before . . . Iâm comfortable.
I finally allow my eyes to make the journey to the silhouette leaning over the ledge. As luck would have it, heâs definitely male. Even leaning over the rail, I can tell heâs tall. Broad shoulders create a strong contrast to the fragile way heâs holding his head in his hands. I can barely make out the heavy rise and fall of his back as he drags in deep breaths and forces them back out when heâs done with them.
He appears to be on the verge of a breakdown. I contemplate speaking up to let him know he has company, or clearing my throat, but between thinking it and actually doing it, he spins around and kicks one of the patio chairs behind him.
I flinch as it screeches across the deck, but being as though he isnât even aware he has an audience, the guy doesnât stop with just one kick. He kicks the chair repeatedly, over and over. Rather than give way beneath the blunt force of his foot, all the chair does is scoot farther and farther away from him.
That chair must be made from marine-grade polymer.
I once watched my father back over an outdoor patio table made of marine-grade polymer, and it practically laughed at him. Dented his bumper, but didnât even put a scratch on the table.
This guy must realize heâs no match for such a high-quality material, because he finally stops kicking the chair. Heâs now standing over it, his hands clenched in fists at his sides. To be honest, Iâm a little envious. Here this guy is, taking his aggression out on patio furniture like a champ. Heâs obviously had a shitty day, as have I, but whereas I keep my aggression pent up until it manifests in the form of passive-aggressiveness, this guy actually has an outlet.
My outlet used to be gardening. Any time I was stressed, Iâd just go out to the backyard and pull every single weed I could find. But since the day I moved to Boston two years ago, I havenât had a backyard. Or a patio. I donât even have weeds.
Maybe I need to invest in a marine-grade polymer patio chair.
I stare at the guy a moment longer, wondering if heâs ever going to move. Heâs just standing there, staring down at the chair. His hands arenât in fists anymore. Theyâre resting on his hips, and I notice for the first time how his shirt doesnât fit him very well around his biceps. It fits him everywhere else, but his arms are huge. He begins fishing around in his pockets until he finds what heâs looking for andâin what Iâm sure is probably an effort to release even more of his aggressionâhe lights up a joint.
Iâm twenty-three, Iâve been through college and have done this very same recreational drug a time or two. Iâm not going to judge this guy for feeling the need to toke up in private. But thatâs the thingâheâs not in private. He just doesnât know that yet.
He takes in a long drag of his joint and starts to turn back toward the ledge. He notices me on the exhale. He stops walking the second our eyes meet. His expression holds no shock, nor does it hold amusement when he sees me. Heâs about ten feet away, but thereâs enough light from the stars that I can see his eyes as they slowly drag over my body without revealing a single thought. This guy holds his cards well. His gaze is narrow and his mouth is drawn tight, like a male version of the Mona Lisa.
âWhatâs your name?â he asks.
I feel his voice in my stomach. Thatâs not good. Voices should stop at the ears, but sometimesânot very often at all, actuallyâa voice will penetrate past my ears and reverberate straight down through my body. He has one of those voices. Deep, confident, and a little bit like butter.
When I donât answer him, he brings the joint back to his mouth and takes another hit.
âLily,â I finally say. I hate my voice. It sounds too weak to even reach his ears from here, much less reverberate inside his body.
He lifts his chin a little and nudges his head toward me. âWill you please get down from there, Lily?â
It isnât until he says this that I notice his posture. Heâs standing straight up now, rigid even. Almost as if heâs nervous Iâm going to fall. Iâm not. This ledge is at least a foot wide, and Iâm mostly on the roof side. I could easily catch myself before I fell, not to mention Iâve got the wind in my favor.
I glance down at my legs and then back up at him. âNo, thanks. Iâm quite comfortable where I am.â
He turns a little, like he canât look straight at me. âPlease get down.â Itâs more of a demand now, despite his use of the word please. âThere are seven empty chairs up here.â
âAlmost six,â I correct, reminding him that he just tried to murder one of them. He doesnât find the humor in my response. When I fail to follow his orders, he takes a couple of steps closer.
âYou are a mere three inches from falling to your death. Iâve been around enough of that for one day.â He motions for me to get down again. âYouâre making me nervous. Not to mention ruining my high.â
I roll my eyes and swing my legs over. âHeaven forbid a joint go to waste.â I hop down and wipe my hands across my jeans. âBetter?â I say as I walk toward him.
He lets out a rush of air, as if seeing me on the ledge actually had him holding his breath. I pass him to head for the side of the roof with the better view, and as I do, I canât help but notice how unfortunately cute he is.
No. Cute is an insult.
This guy is beautiful. Well-manicured, smells like money, looks to be several years older than me. His eyes crinkle in the corners as they follow me, and his lips seem to frown, even when they arenât. When I reach the side of the building that overlooks the street, I lean forward and stare down at the cars below, trying not to appear impressed by him. I can tell by his haircut alone that heâs the kind of man people are easily impressed by, and I refuse to feed into his ego. Not that heâs done anything to make me think he even has one. But he is wearing a casual Burberry shirt, and Iâm not sure Iâve ever been on the radar of someone who could casually afford one.
I hear footsteps approaching from behind, and then he leans against the railing next to me. Out of the corner of my eye, I watch as he takes another hit of his joint. When heâs finished, he offers it to me, but I wave it off. The last thing I need is to be under the influence around this guy. His voice is a drug in itself. I kind of want to hear it again, so I throw a question in his direction.
âSo what did that chair do to make you so angry?â
He looks at me. Like really looks at me. His eyes meet mine and he just stares, hard, like all my secrets are right there on my face. Iâve never seen eyes as dark as his. Maybe I have, but they seem darker when theyâre attached to such an intimidating presence. He doesnât answer my question, but my curiosity isnât easily put to rest. If heâs going to force me down from a very peaceful, comfortable ledge, then I expect him to entertain me with answers to my nosy questions.
âWas it a woman?â I inquire. âDid she break your heart?â
He laughs a little with that question. âIf only my issues were as trivial as matters of the heart.â He leans into the wall so that he can face me. âWhat floor do you live on?â He licks his fingers and pinches the end of his joint, then puts it back in his pocket. âIâve never noticed you before.â
âThatâs because I donât live here.â I point in the direction of my apartment. âSee that insurance building?â
He squints as he looks in the direction Iâm pointing. âYeah.â
âI live in the building next to it. Itâs too short to see from here. Itâs only three stories tall.â
Heâs facing me again, resting his elbow on the ledge. âIf you live over there, why are you here? Your boyfriend live here or something?â
His comment somehow makes me feel cheap. It was too easyâan amateurish pickup line. From the looks of this guy, I know he has better skills than that. It makes me think he saves the more difficult pickup lines for the women he deems worthy.
âYou have a nice roof,â I tell him.
He lifts an eyebrow, waiting for more of an explanation.
âI wanted fresh air. Somewhere to think. I pulled up Google Earth and found the closest apartment complex with a decent rooftop patio.â
He regards me with a smile. âAt least youâre economical,â he says. âThatâs a good quality to have.â
At least?
I nod, because I am economical. And it is a good quality to have.
âWhy did you need fresh air?â he asks.
Because I buried my father today and gave an epically disastrous eulogy and now I feel like I canât breathe.
I face forward again and slowly exhale. âCan we just not talk for a little while?â
He seems a bit relieved that I asked for silence. He leans over the ledge and lets an arm dangle as he stares down at the street. He stays like this for a while, and I stare at him the entire time. He probably knows Iâm staring, but he doesnât seem to care.
âA guy fell off this roof last month,â he says.
I would be annoyed at his lack of respect for my request for silence, but Iâm kind of intrigued.
âWas it an accident?â
He shrugs. âNo one knows. It happened late in the evening. His wife said she was cooking dinner and he told her he was coming up here to take some pictures of the sunset. He was a photographer. They think he was leaning over the ledge to get a shot of the skyline, and he slipped.â
I look over the ledge, wondering how someone could possibly put themselves in a situation where they could fall by accident. But then I remember I was just straddling the ledge on the other side of the roof a few minutes ago.
âWhen my sister told me what happened, the only thing I could think about was whether or not he got the shot. I was hoping his camera didnât fall with him, because that would have been a real waste, you know? To die because of your love of photography, but you didnât even get the final shot that cost you your life?â
His thought makes me laugh. Although Iâm not sure I should have laughed at that. âDo you always say exactly whatâs on your mind?â
He shrugs. âNot to most people.â
This makes me smile. I like that he doesnât even know me, but for whatever reason, Iâm not considered most people to him.
He rests his back against the ledge and folds his arms over his chest. âWere you born here?â
I shake my head. âNo. Moved here from Maine after I graduated college.â
He scrunches up his nose, and itâs kind of hot. Watching this guyâdressed in his Burberry shirt with his two-hundred-dollar haircutâmaking silly faces.
âSo youâre in Boston purgatory, huh? Thatâs gotta suck.â
âWhat do you mean?â I ask him.
The corner of his mouth curls up. âThe tourists treat you like a local; the locals treat you like a tourist.â
I laugh. âWow. Thatâs a very accurate description.â
âIâve been here two months. Iâm not even in purgatory yet, so youâre doing better than I am.â
âWhat brought you to Boston?â
âMy residency. And my sister lives here.â He taps his foot and says, âRight beneath us, actually. Married a tech-savvy Bostonian and they bought the entire top floor.â
I look down. âThe entire top floor?â
He nods. âLucky bastard works from home. Doesnât even have to change out of his pajamas and makes seven figures a year.â
Lucky bastard, indeed.
âWhat kind of residency? Are you a doctor?â
He nods. âNeurosurgeon. Less than a year left of my residency and then itâs official.â
Stylish, well spoken, and smart. And smokes pot. If this were an SAT question, I would ask which one didnât belong. âShould doctors be smoking weed?â
He smirks. âProbably not. But if we didnât indulge on occasion, there would be a lot more of us taking the leap over these ledges, I can promise you that.â Heâs facing forward again with his chin resting on his arms. His eyes are closed now, like heâs enjoying the wind against his face. He doesnât look as intimidating like this.
âYou want to know something that only the locals know?â
âOf course,â he says, bringing his attention back to me.
I point to the east. âSee that building? The one with the green roof?â
He nods.
âThereâs a building behind it on Melcher. Thereâs a house on top of the building. Like a legit house, built right on the rooftop. You canât see it from the street, and the building is so tall that not many people even know about it.â
He looks impressed. âReally?â
I nod. âI saw it when I was searching Google Earth, so I looked it up. Apparently a permit was granted for the construction in 1982. How cool would that be? To live in a house on top of a building?â
âYouâd get the whole roof to yourself,â he says.
I hadnât thought of that. If I owned it I could plant gardens up there. Iâd have an outlet.
âWho lives there?â he asks.
âNo one really knows. Itâs one of the great mysteries of Boston.â
He laughs and then looks at me inquisitively. âWhatâs another great mystery of Boston?â
âYour name.â As soon as I say it, I slap my hand against my forehead. It sounded so much like a cheesy pickup line; the only thing I can do is laugh at myself.
He smiles. âItâs Ryle,â he says. âRyle Kincaid.â
I sigh, sinking into myself. âThatâs a really great name.â
âWhy do you sound sad about it?â
âBecause, Iâd give anything for a great name.â
âYou donât like the name Lily?â
I tilt my head and cock an eyebrow. âMy last name . . . is Bloom.â
Heâs quiet. I can feel him trying to hold back his pity.
âI know. Itâs awful. Itâs the name of a two-year-old little girl, not a twenty-three-year-old woman.â
âA two-year-old girl will have the same name no matter how old she gets. Names arenât something we eventually grow out of, Lily Bloom.â
âUnfortunately for me,â I say. âBut what makes it even worse is that I absolutely love gardening. I love flowers. Plants. Growing things. Itâs my passion. Itâs always been my dream to open a florist shop, but Iâm afraid if I did, people wouldnât think my desire was authentic. They would think I was trying to capitalize off my name and that being a florist isnât really my dream job.â
âMaybe so,â he says. âBut whatâs that matter?â
âIt doesnât, I suppose.â I catch myself whispering, âLily Bloomâsâ quietly. I can see him smiling a little bit. âIt really is a great name for a florist. But I have a masterâs degree in business. Iâd be downgrading, donât you think? I work for the biggest marketing firm in Boston.â
âOwning your own business isnât downgrading,â he says.
I raise an eyebrow. âUnless it flops.â
He nods in agreement. âUnless it flops,â he says. âSo whatâs your middle name, Lily Bloom?â
I groan, which makes him perk up.
âYou mean it gets worse?â
I drop my head in my hands and nod.
âRose?â
I shake my head. âWorse.â
âViolet?â
âI wish.â I cringe and then mutter, âBlossom.â
Thereâs a moment of silence. âGoddamn,â he says softly.
âYeah. Blossom is my motherâs maiden name and my parents thought it was fate that their last names were synonyms. So of course when they had me, a flower was their first choice.â
âYour parents must be real assholes.â
One of them is. Was. âMy father died this week.â
He glances at me. âNice try. Iâm not falling for that.â
âIâm serious. Thatâs why I came up here tonight. I think I just needed a good cry.â
He stares at me suspiciously for a moment to make sure Iâm not pulling his leg. He doesnât apologize for the blunder. Instead, his eyes grow a little more curious, like his intrigue is actually authentic. âWere you close?â
Thatâs a hard question. I rest my chin on my arms and look down at the street again. âI donât know,â I say with a shrug. âAs his daughter, I loved him. But as a human, I hated him.â
I can feel him watching me for a moment, and then he says, âI like that. Your honesty.â
He likes my honesty. I think I might be blushing.
Weâre both quiet again for a while, and then he says, âDo you ever wish people were more transparent?â
âHow so?â
He picks at a piece of chipped stucco with his thumb until it breaks loose. He flicks it over the ledge. âI feel like everyone fakes who they really are, when deep down weâre all equal amounts of screwed up. Some of us are just better at hiding it than others.â
Either his high is setting in, or heâs just very introspective. Either way, Iâm okay with it. My favorite conversations are the ones with no real answers.
âI donât think being a little guarded is a negative thing,â I say. âNaked truths arenât always pretty.â
He stares at me for a moment. âNaked truths,â he repeats. âI like that.â He turns around and walks to the middle of the rooftop. He adjusts the back on one of the patio loungers behind me and lowers himself onto it. Itâs the kind you lie on, so he pulls his hands behind his head and looks up at the sky. I claim the one next to him and adjust it until Iâm in the same position as him.
âTell me a naked truth, Lily.â
âPertaining to what?â
He shrugs. âI donât know. Something you arenât proud of. Something that will make me feel a little less screwed up on the inside.â
Heâs staring up at the sky, waiting on me to answer. My eyes follow the line of his jaw, the curve of his cheeks, the outline of his lips. His eyebrows are drawn together in contemplation. I donât understand why, but he seems to need conversation right now. I think about his question and try to find an honest answer. When I come up with one, I look away from him and back up to the sky.
âMy father was abusive. Not to meâto my mother. He would get so angry when they fought that sometimes he would hit her. When that happened, he would spend the next week or two making up for it. He would do things like buy her flowers or take us out to a nice dinner. Sometimes he would buy me stuff because he knew I hated it when they fought. When I was a kid, I found myself looking forward to the nights they would fight. Because I knew if he hit her, the two weeks that followed would be great.â I pause. Iâm not sure Iâve ever admitted that to myself. âOf course if I could, I would have made it to where he never touched her. But the abuse was inevitable with their marriage, and it became our norm. When I got older, I realized that not doing something about it made me just as guilty. I spent most of my life hating him for being such a bad person, but Iâm not so sure Iâm much better. Maybe weâre both bad people.â
Ryle looks over at me with a thoughtful expression. âLily,â he says pointedly. âThere is no such thing as bad people. Weâre all just people who sometimes do bad things.â
I open my mouth to respond, but his words strike me silent. Weâre all just people who sometimes do bad things. I guess thatâs true in a way. No one is exclusively bad, nor is anyone exclusively good. Some are just forced to work harder at suppressing the bad.
âYour turn,â I tell him.
Based on his reaction, I think he might not want to play his own game. He sighs heavily and runs a hand through his hair. He opens his mouth to speak, but then clamps it shut again. He thinks for a bit, and then finally speaks. âI watched a little boy die tonight.â His voice is despondent. âHe was only five years old. He and his little brother found a gun in his parentsâ bedroom. The younger brother was holding it and it went off by accident.â
My stomach flips. I think this may be a little too much truth for me.
âThere was nothing that could be done by the time he made it to the operating table. Everyone aroundânurses, other doctorsâthey all felt so sorry for the family. âThose poor parents,â they said. But when I had to walk into the waiting room and tell those parents that their child didnât make it, I didnât feel an ounce of sorrow for them. I wanted them to suffer. I wanted them to feel the weight of their ignorance for keeping a loaded gun within access of two innocent children. I wanted them to know that not only did they just lose a child, they just ruined the entire life of the one who accidentally pulled the trigger.â
Jesus Christ. I wasnât prepared for something so heavy.
I canât even conceive how a family moves past that. âThat poor boyâs brother,â I say. âI canât imagine what thatâs going to do to himâseeing something like that.â
Ryle flicks something off the knee of his jeans. âItâll destroy him for life, thatâs what itâll do.â
I turn on my side to face him, lifting my head up onto my hand. âIs it hard? Seeing things like that every day?â
He gives his head a slight shake. âIt should be a lot harder, but the more Iâm around death, the more it just becomes a part of life. Iâm not sure how I feel about that.â He makes eye contact with me again. âGive me another one,â he says. âI feel like mine was a little more twisted than yours.â
I disagree, but I tell him about the twisted thing I did a mere twelve hours ago.
âMy mother asked me two days ago if I would deliver the eulogy at my fatherâs funeral today. I told her I didnât feel comfortableâthat I might be crying too hard to speak in front of a crowdâbut that was a lie. I just didnât want to do it because I feel like eulogies should be delivered by those who respected the deceased. And I didnât much respect my father.â
âDid you do it?â
I nod. âYeah. This morning.â I sit up and pull my legs beneath me as I face him. âYou want to hear it?â
He smiles. âAbsolutely.â
I fold my hands in my lap and inhale a breath. âI had no idea what to say. About an hour before the funeral, I told my mother I didnât want to do it. She said it was simple and that my father would have wanted me to do it. She said all I had to do was walk up to the podium and say five great things about my father. So . . . thatâs exactly what I did.â
Ryle lifts up onto his elbow, appearing even more interested. He can tell by the look on my face that it gets worse. âOh, no, Lily. What did you do?â
âHere. Let me just reenact it for you.â I stand up and walk around to the other side of my chair. I stand tall and act like Iâm looking out over the same crowded room I was met with this morning. I clear my throat.
âHello. My name is Lily Bloom, daughter of the late Andrew Bloom. Thank you all for joining us today as we mourn his loss. I wanted to take a moment to honor his life by sharing with you five great things about my father. The first thing . . .â
I look down at Ryle and shrug. âThatâs it.â
He sits up. âWhat do you mean?â
I take a seat on my lounge chair and lie back down. âI stood up there for two solid minutes without saying another word. There wasnât one great thing I could say about that manâso I just stared silently at the crowd until my mother realized what I was doing and had my uncle remove me from the podium.â
Ryle tilts his head. âAre you kidding me? You gave the anti-eulogy at your own fatherâs funeral?â
I nod. âIâm not proud of it. I donât think. I mean, if I had my way, he would have been a much better person and I would have stood up there and talked for an hour.â
Ryle lies back down. âWow,â he says, shaking his head. âYouâre kind of my hero. You just roasted a dead guy.â
âThatâs tacky.â
âYeah, well. Naked truth hurts.â
I laugh. âYour turn.â
âI canât top that,â he says.
âIâm sure you can come close.â
âIâm not sure I can.â
I roll my eyes. âYes you can. Donât make me feel like the worst person out of the two of us. Tell me the most recent thought youâve had that most people wouldnât say out loud.â
He pulls his hands up behind his head and looks me straight in the eye. âI want to fuck you.â
My mouth falls open. Then I clamp it shut again.
I think I might be speechless.
He shoots me a look of innocence. âYou asked for the most recent thought, so I gave it to you. Youâre beautiful. Iâm a guy. If you were into one-night stands, I would take you downstairs to my bedroom and I would fuck you.â
I canât even look at him. His statement makes me feel a multitude of things all at once.
âWell, Iâm not into one-night stands.â
âI figured as much,â he says. âYour turn.â
Heâs so nonchalant; he acts as if he didnât just stun me into silence.
âI need a minute to regroup after that one,â I say with a laugh. I try to think of something with a little shock value, but I canât get over the fact that he just said that. Out loud. Maybe because heâs a neurosurgeon and I never pictured someone so educated throwing around the word fuck so casually.
I gather myself . . . somewhat . . . and then say, âOkay. Since weâre on the subject . . . the first guy I ever had sex with was homeless.â
He perks up and faces me. âOh, Iâm gonna need more of this story.â
I stretch my arm out and rest my head on it. âI grew up in Maine. We lived in a fairly decent neighborhood, but the street behind our house wasnât in the best condition. Our backyard butted up to a condemned house adjacent to two abandoned lots. I became friends with a guy named Atlas who stayed in the condemned house. No one knew he was living there other than me. I used to take him food and clothes and stuff. Until my father found out.â
âWhatâd he do?â
My jaw tightens. I donât know why I brought this up when I still force myself not to think about it on a daily basis. âHe beat him up.â Thatâs as naked as I want to get about that subject. âYour turn.â
He regards me silently for a moment, as if he knows thereâs more to that story. But then he breaks eye contact. âThe thought of marriage repulses me,â he says. âIâm almost thirty years old and I have no desire for a wife. I especially donât want children. The only thing I want out of life is success. Lots of it. But if I admit that out loud to anyone, it makes me sound arrogant.â
âProfessional success? Or social status?â
He says, âBoth. Anyone can have children. Anyone can get married. But not everyone can be a neurosurgeon. I get a lot of pride out of that. And I donât just want to be a great neurosurgeon. I want to be the best in my field.â
âYouâre right. It does make you sound arrogant.â
He smiles. âMy mother fears Iâm wasting my life away because all I do is work.â
âYouâre a neurosurgeon and your mother is disappointed in you?â I laugh. âGood lord, thatâs insane. Are parents ever really happy with their children? Will they ever be good enough?â
He shakes his head. âMy children wouldnât be. Not many people have the drive I do, so Iâd only be setting them up for failure. Thatâs why Iâll never have any.â
âI actually think thatâs respectable, Ryle. A lot of people refuse to admit they might be too selfish to have children.â
He shakes his head. âOh, Iâm way too selfish to have children. And Iâm definitely way too selfish to be in a relationship.â
âSo how do you avoid it? You just donât date?â
He cuts his eyes to me, and thereâs a slight grin affixed to his face. âWhen I have time, there are girls who satisfy those needs. I donât lack for anything in that department, if thatâs what youâre asking. But love has never appealed to me. Itâs always been more of a burden than anything.â
I wish I looked at love like that. It would make my life a hell of a lot easier. âI envy you. I have this idea that thereâs a perfect man out there for me. I tend to become jaded easily, because no one ever meets my standards. I feel like Iâm on an infinite search for the Holy Grail.â
âYou should try my method,â he says.
âWhich is?â
âOne-night stands.â He raises an eyebrow, like itâs an invitation.
Iâm glad itâs dark, because my face is on fire. âI could never sleep with someone if I didnât see it going anywhere.â I say this out loud, but my words lack conviction when I say it to him.
He drags in a long, slow breath, and then rolls onto his back. âNot that kind of girl, huh?â He says this with a trace of disappointment in his voice.
I match his disappointment. Iâm not sure Iâd even want to turn him down if he made a move, but I might have just thwarted that possibility.
âIf you wouldnât sleep with someone you just met . . .â His eyes meet mine again. âExactly how far would you go?â
I donât have an answer for that. I roll onto my back because the way heâs looking at me makes me want to rethink one-night stands. Iâm not necessarily against them, I suppose. Iâve just never been propositioned for one by someone I would consider it with.
Until now. I think. Is he even propositioning me? Iâve always been terrible at flirting.
He reaches out and grabs the edge of my lounge chair. In one swift movement and with very minimal effort, he drags my chair closer to him until it bumps his.
My whole body stiffens. Heâs so close now, I can feel the warmth of his breath cutting through the cold air. If I were to look at him, his face would be mere inches from mine. I refuse to look at him, because heâd probably kiss me and I know absolutely nothing about this guy, other than a couple of naked truths. But that doesnât weigh on my conscience at all when he rests a heavy hand on my stomach.
âHow far would you go, Lily?â His voice is decadent. Smooth. It travels straight to my toes.
âI donât know,â I whisper.
His fingers begin to crawl toward the hem of my shirt. He begins to slowly inch it upward until a slither of my stomach is showing. âOh, Jesus,â I whisper, feeling the warmth from his hand as he slides it up my stomach.
Against my better judgment, I face him again and the look in his eyes completely captivates me. He looks hopeful and hungry and completely confident. He sinks his teeth into his bottom lip as his hand begins to tease its way up my shirt. I know he can feel my heart thrashing around in my chest. Hell, he can probably hear it.
âIs this too far?â he asks.
I donât know where this side of me is coming from, but I shake my head and say, âNot even close.â
With a grin, his fingers brush the underneath of my bra, lightly trickling over my skin that is now covered in chills.
As soon as my eyelids fall shut, the piercing of a ring rips through the air. His hand stiffens when we both realize itâs a phone. His phone.
He drops his forehead to my shoulder. âDammit.â
I frown when his hand slips out from beneath my shirt. He fumbles in his pocket for his phone, standing up and walking several feet away from me to take the call.
âDr. Kincaid,â he says. He listens intently, his hand gripping the back of his neck. âWhat about Roberts? Iâm not even supposed to be on call right now.â More silence is followed with, âYeah, give me ten minutes. On my way.â
He ends the call and slides his phone back in his pocket. When he turns to face me, he looks a little disappointed. He points to the door that leads to the stairwell. âI have to . . .â
I nod. âItâs fine.â
He considers me for a moment, and then holds up a finger. âDonât move,â he says, reaching for his phone again. He walks closer and holds it up as if heâs about to snap a picture of me. I almost object, but I donât even know why. Iâm fully clothed. It just doesnât feel that way for some reason.
He snaps a picture of me lying in the lounge chair, my arms relaxed above my head. I have no idea what he plans to do with that picture, but I like that he took it. I like that he had the urge to remember what I look like, even though he knows heâll never see me again.
He stares at the photo on his screen for a few seconds and smiles. Iâm half-tempted to take a picture of him in return, but Iâm not sure I want a reminder of someone Iâll never see again. The thought of that is a little depressing.
âIt was nice meeting you, Lily Bloom. I hope you defy the odds of most dreams and actually accomplish yours.â
I smile, equally saddened and confused by this guy. Iâm not sure that Iâve ever spent time with someone like him beforeâsomeone of a completely different lifestyle and tax bracket. I probably never will again. But Iâm pleasantly surprised to see that we arenât all that different.
Misconception confirmed.
He looks down at his feet for a moment as he stands in somewhat of an unsure pose. Itâs as if heâs suspended between the desire to say something else to me and the need to leave. He glances at me one last timeâthis time without so much of a poker face. I can see the disappointment in the set of his mouth before he turns and walks in the other direction. He opens the door and I can hear his footsteps fade as he rushes down the stairwell. Iâm alone on the rooftop once again, but to my surprise, Iâm a little saddened by that now.