It Ends with Us: Part 1 – Chapter 12
It Ends with Us: A Novel (1)
âWhat are you doing to those poor flowers?â Allysa asks from behind me.
I clamp another silver washer closed and slide it down the stem. âSteampunk.â
We both stand back and admire the bouquet. At least . . . I hope sheâs looking at it with admiration. It turned out better than I thought it would. I used florist dip dye to turn some white roses a deep purple. Then I decorated the stems with different steampunk elements, like tiny metal washers and gears, and even super-glued a small clock to the brown leather strap thatâs holding the bouquet together.
âSteampunk?â
âItâs a trend. Kind of a subgenre of fiction, but itâs catching on in other areas. Art. Music.â I turn around and smile, holding up the bouquet. âAnd now . . . flowers.â
Allysa takes the flowers from me and holds them up in front of her. âTheyâre so . . . weird. I love them so much.â She hugs them. âCan I have them?â
I pull them away from her. âNo, theyâre our grand opening display. Not for sale.â I take the flowers from her and grab the vase I made yesterday. I found a pair of old button-up womenâs boots at a flea market last week. They reminded me of the steampunk style, and the boots are actually where I got the idea for the flowers. I washed the boots last week, dried them, and then super-glued pieces of metal to them. Once I brushed them with Mod Podge, I was able to line the inside with a vase to hold water for the flowers.
âAllysa?â I place the flowers on the center display table. âIâm pretty sure this is exactly what I was supposed to do with my life.â
âSteampunk?â she asks.
I laugh and spin around. âCreate!â I say. And then I flip the sign to open, fifteen minutes early.
We both spend the day busier than we thought weâd be. Between phone orders, Internet orders, and walk-ins, neither of us even has time to take a lunch break.
âYou need more employees,â Allysa says as she passes me, holding two bouquets of flowers. That is at one oâclock.
âYou need more employees,â she says to me at two oâclock, holding the phone to her ear and writing down an order while ringing someone up at the register.
Marshall stops by after three oâclock and asks how itâs going. Allysa says, âShe needs more employees.â
I help a woman take a bouquet to her car at four oâclock, and as Iâm walking back inside, Allysa is walking out, holding another bouquet. âYou need more employees,â she says, exasperated.
At six oâclock, she locks the door and flips the sign. She falls against the door and slides to the floor, looking up at me.
âI know,â I tell her. âI need more employees.â
She just nods.
And then we laugh. I walk over to where sheâs seated and I sit next to her. We lean our heads together and look at the store. The steampunk flowers are front and center, and although I refused to sell this particular bouquet, we had eight preorders for more of them.
âIâm proud of you, Lily,â she says.
I smile. âI couldnât have done it without you, Issa.â
We sit there for several minutes, enjoying the rest weâre finally giving our feet. This was honestly one of the best days Iâve ever had, but I canât help but feel a nagging sadness that Ryle never stopped by. He also never texted.
âHave you heard from your brother today?â I ask.
She shakes her head. âNo, but Iâm sure heâs just busy.â
I nod. I know heâs busy.
We both look up when someone knocks on the door. I smile when I see him cupping his hands around his eyes with his face pressed to the window. He finally looks down and sees us sitting on the floor.
âSpeak of the devil,â Allysa says.
I jump up and unlock the door to let him in. As soon as I open it, heâs pushing his way inside. âI missed it? I did. I missed it.â He hugs me. âIâm sorry, I tried to get here as soon as I could.â
I hug him back and say, âItâs fine. Youâre here. It was perfect.â Iâm giddy with excitement that he made it at all.
âYouâre perfect,â he says, kissing me.
Allysa brushes past us. âYouâre perfect,â she mimics. âHey Ryle, guess what?â
Ryle releases me. âWhat?â
Allysa grabs the trash can and drops it on the counter. âLily needs to hire more employees.â
I laugh at her constant repetition. Ryle squeezes my hand and says, âSounds like business was good.â
I shrug. âI canât complain. I mean . . . Iâm no brain surgeon, but Iâm pretty good at what I do.â
Ryle laughs. âYou guys need any help cleaning up?â
Allysa and I put him to work, helping us clean up after the big day. We get everything finished and prepped for tomorrow, and then Marshall arrives just as weâre finishing up. Heâs carrying a bag when he walks inside and drops it on the counter. He begins to pull out huge lumps of some kind of material and tosses them at each of us. I catch mine and unfold it.
Itâs a onesie.
With kittens all over it.
âBruins game. Free beer. Suit up, team!â
Allysa groans and says, âMarshall, you made six million dollars this year. Do we really need free beer?â
He shoves a finger against her lips, pushing them in opposite directions. âShh! Donât speak like a rich girl, Issa. Blasphemy.â
She laughs and Marshall grabs the onesie out of her hand. He unzips it and helps her into it. Once weâre all suited up, we lock the door and head to the bar.
Iâve never in my life seen so many men in onesies. Allysa and I are the only women wearing them, but I kind of like that. Itâs loud. So loud, and each time the Bruins make a good play, Allysa and I have to cover our ears from the screams. After about half an hour, a booth on the top floor opens up and we all run upstairs to claim it.
âMuch better,â Allysa says as we slide in. Itâs much quieter up here, although still loud compared to normal standards.
A waitress comes over to take our drink order. I order red wine, and as soon as I do, Marshall practically jumps out of his seat. âWine?â he yells. âYouâre in a onesie! You donât get free wine with a onesie!â
He tells the waitress to bring me a beer, instead. Ryle tells her to bring me wine. Allysa wants water, and this upsets Marshall even more. He tells the waitress to bring four bottles of beer and then Ryle says, âTwo beers, red wine, and a water.â The waitress is very confused by the time she leaves our table.
Marshall throws his arm around Allysa and kisses her. âHow am I supposed to try and knock you up tonight if you arenât a little wasted?â
The look on Allysaâs face changes, and I feel instantly bad for her. I know Marshall only said that in fun, but it has to bother her. She was just telling me a few days ago how depressed she is that she canât get pregnant.
âI canât have beer, Marshall.â
âThen drink wine, at least. You like me more when youâre tipsy.â He laughs at himself, but Allysa doesnât.
âI canât have wine, either. I canât have any alcohol, actually.â
Marshall stops laughing.
My heart does a flip-flop.
Marshall turns in the booth and grabs her shoulders, making her face him straight-on. âAllysa?â
She just starts nodding and I donât know who starts crying first. Me or Marshall or Allysa. âIâm gonna be a dad?â he yells.
Sheâs still nodding, and Iâm just bawling like an idiot. Marshall jumps up in the booth and yells, âIâm gonna be a dad!â
I canât even explain what this moment is like. A grown man in a onesie, standing up in a booth at a bar, yelling to whoever will listen that heâs gonna be a dad. He pulls her up and theyâre both standing in the booth now. He kisses her and itâs the sweetest thing Iâve ever seen.
Until I look at Ryle and catch him chewing on his bottom lip like heâs trying to blink back a potential tear. He glances at me and sees me staring, so he looks away. âShut up,â he says. âSheâs my sister.â
I smile and lean over and kiss him on the cheek. âCongratulations, Uncle Ryle.â
Once the parents-to-be stop making out in the booth, Ryle and I both stand up and congratulate them. Allysa said sheâs been feeling sick for a while, but just took a test this morning before our grand opening. She was going to wait and tell Marshall tonight when they got home, but she couldnât hold it in for another second.
Our drinks come and we order food. Once the waitress walks away, I look at Marshall. âHow did you two meet?â
He says, âAllysa tells the story better than I do.â
Allysa perks up and leans forward. âI hated him,â she says. âHe was Ryleâs best friend and he was always at the house. I thought he was so annoying. He had just moved to Ohio from Boston and he had that Boston accent. He thought it made him so cool but I just wanted to slap him every time he spoke.â
âSheâs so sweet,â Marshall says, sarcastically.
âYou were an idiot,â Allysa replies, rolling her eyes. âAnyway, one day Ryle and I had a few friends over. Nothing big, but our parents were out of town, so of course we had a little get-together.â
âThere were thirty people there,â Ryle says. âIt was a party.â
âOkay, a party,â Allysa says. âI walked into the kitchen and Marshall was standing there pressed up against some floozy.â
âShe wasnât a floozy,â he says. âShe was a nice girl. Tasted like Cheetos, but . . .â
Allysa glares at him so he shuts up. She turns back to me. âI lost it,â she says. âI started yelling at him to take his whores to his own house. The girl was literally so terrified of me, she ran for the door and didnât come back.â
âCock blocker,â Marshall says.
Allysa punches him in the shoulder. âAnyway. After I cock blocked him, I ran to my room, embarrassed that I did that. It was out of pure jealousy, and I didnât even realize I liked him that way until I saw his hands on some other girlâs ass. I threw myself on my bed and started crying. A few minutes later, he walked into my room and asked me if I was okay. I rolled over and yelled, âI like you, you stupid fuck-face!âââ
âAnd the rest is history . . .â Marshall says.
I laugh. âAwe. Stupid fuck-face. How sweet.â
Ryle holds up a finger and says, âYouâre leaving out the best part.â
Allysa shrugs. âOh yeah. So Marshall walked over to me, pulled me off the bed, kissed me with the same mouth he was just kissing the floozy with, and we made out for half an hour. Ryle walked in on us and started screaming at Marshall. Then Marshall pushed Ryle out of my bedroom, locked the door, and made out with me for another hour.â
Ryle is shaking his head. âBetrayed by my best friend.â
Marshall pulls Allysa to him. âI like her, you stupid fuck-face.â
I laugh, but Ryle turns to me with a serious look on his face. âI didnât speak to him for an entire month, I was so mad. I eventually got over it. We were eighteen, she was seventeen. Wasnât much I could do in the way of keeping them apart.â
âWow,â I say. âI sometimes forget how close in age you two are.â
Allysa smiles and says, âThree kids in three years. I feel so sorry for my parents.â
The table grows quiet. I see an apologetic look pass from Allysa to Ryle.
âThree?â I ask. âYou have another sibling?â
Ryle straightens up and takes a sip of his beer. He sets it back down on the table and says, âWe had an older brother. He passed away when we were kids.â
Such a great night, ruined by a simple question. Luckily, Marshall redirects the conversation like a pro.
I spend the rest of the evening listening to stories about them growing up. Iâm not sure Iâve ever laughed as hard as I have tonight.
When the game is over, we all walk back to the shop to retrieve our cars. Ryle said he caught an Uber over earlier, so heâll just ride with me. Before Allysa and Marshall leave, I tell her to hold on. I run inside the store and grab the steampunk flowers and run them back to their car. Her face lights up when I hand them to her.
âIâm happy youâre pregnant but thatâs not why Iâm giving you these flowers. I just want you to have them. Because youâre my best friend.â
Allysa squeezes me and whispers in my ear. âI hope he marries you someday. Weâll be even better sisters.â
She climbs inside the car and they leave, and I just stand there watching them because I donât know that Iâve ever had a friend like her in my whole life. Maybe itâs the wine. I donât know, but I love today. Everything about it. I especially love how Ryle looks, leaning against my car, watching me.
âYouâre really beautiful when youâre happy.â
Ugh! This day! Perfect!
⢠⢠â¢
Weâre making our way up the stairs to my apartment when Ryle grabs my waist and pushes me against the wall. He just starts kissing me, right there in the stairwell.
âImpatient,â I mutter.
He laughs and cups my ass with both of his hands. âNope. Itâs this onesie. You really should consider making this your business attire.â He kisses me again and doesnât stop kissing me until someone passes us, heading down the stairs.
The guy mumbles, âNice onesies,â as he squeezes past us. âDid the Bruins win?â
Ryle nods. âThree to one,â he responds, without looking up at the guy.
âNice,â the guy says.
Once heâs gone, I step away from Ryle. âWhat is this onesie thing? Does every male in Boston know about this?â
He laughs and says, âFree beer, Lily. Itâs free beer.â He pulls me up the stairs, and when we walk in the door, Lucy is standing at the kitchen table taping up a box of her stuff. Thereâs another box she hasnât taped up yet and I could swear I see a bowl that I bought at HomeGoods sticking out of the top. She said sheâd have all her stuff out by next week, but I have a feeling sheâll conveniently have some of my stuff out, too.
âWho are you?â she asks, looking Ryle up and down.
âRyle Kincaid. Iâm Lilyâs boyfriend.â
Lilyâs boyfriend.
Did you hear that?
Boyfriend.
Itâs the first time heâs confirmed it, and he said it so confidently. âMy boyfriend, huh?â I walk into the kitchen and grab a bottle of wine and two wineglasses.
Ryle comes up behind me as Iâm pouring the wine and snakes his arms around my waist. âYep. Your boyfriend.â
I hand him a glass of wine and say, âSo Iâm a girlfriend?â
He holds up his glass and clinks it against mine. âTo the end of trial runs and the beginning of sure things.â
Weâre both smiling as we take a drink of our wine.
Lucy stacks the boxes together and walks toward the front door. âLooks like I got out right in time,â she says.
The door closes behind her and Ryle raises an eyebrow. âI donât think your roommate likes me very much.â
âYouâd be surprised. I didnât think she liked me, either, but yesterday she asked me to be a bridesmaid in her wedding. I think sheâs just hoping for free flowers, though. Sheâs very opportunistic.â
Ryle laughs and leans against the refrigerator. His eyes fall to a magnet that says âBostonâ on it. He pulls it off the refrigerator and raises an eyebrow. âYouâll never get out of Boston purgatory if you keep souvenirs of Boston on your fridge like a tourist.â
I laugh and grab the magnet, slapping it back on the fridge. I like that he remembers so much about the first night we met. âIt was a gift. It only counts as touristy if I bought it myself.â
He steps over to me and takes my glass of wine from my hands. He sets both of our glasses on the countertop, and then leans in and gives me a deep, passionate, drunken kiss. I can taste the tart fruitiness of the wine on his tongue and I like it. His hands go to the zipper on my onesie. âLetâs get you out of these clothes.â
He pulls me toward the bedroom, kissing me while we both struggle out of our clothes. By the time we make it to my bedroom, Iâm down to my bra and panties.
He shoves me against the door, and I gasp at the unexpectedness of it.
âDonât move,â he says. He presses his lips to my chest, then begins to kiss me slowly as he makes his way down my body.
Oh, Lord. Can this day seriously get any better?
I run my hands through his hair, but he grabs my wrists and presses them against the door. He climbs back up my body, squeezing my wrists tightly. He raises an eyebrow in warning. âI said . . . donât move.â
I try not to smile, but itâs hard to disguise. He drags his mouth back down my body. He slowly lowers my panties to my ankles, but he told me not to move, so I donât kick them off.
His mouth slides up my thigh until . . .
Yeah.
Best.
Day.
Ever.