It Ends with Us: Part 1 – Chapter 7
It Ends with Us: A Novel (1)
âStop fidgeting,â Devin says.
âIâm not fidgeting.â
He loops his arm through mine as he walks me toward the elevator. âYes, you are. And if you pull that top up over your cleavage one more time, itâll defeat the whole purpose of your little black dress.â He grabs my top and yanks it back down, and then proceeds to reach inside to adjust my bra.
âDevin!â I slap his hand away and he laughs.
âRelax, Lily. Iâve touched way better boobs than yours and Iâm still gay.â
âYeah, but I bet those boobs were attached to people you probably hang out with more than once every six months.â
Devin laughs. âTrue, but thatâs half your fault. Youâre the one who left us high and dry to play with flowers.â
Devin was one of my favorite people at the marketing firm I worked at, but we werenât close enough to where we actively became friends outside of work. He stopped by the floral shop this afternoon and Allysa took to him almost immediately. She begged him to come to the party with me and since I didnât really want to show up alone, I ended up begging him to come, too.
I smooth my hands over my hair and try to catch a glimpse of my reflection in the elevator walls.
âWhy are you so nervous?â he asks.
âIâm not nervous. I just hate showing up to places where I donât know anyone.â
Devin smirks knowingly and then says, âWhatâs his name?â
I release a pent-up breath. Am I that transparent? âRyle. Heâs a neurosurgeon. And he wants to have sex with me really, really bad.â
âHow do you know he wants to have sex with you?â
âBecause he literally got down on his knees and said, âPlease, Lily. Please have sex with me.âââ
Devin raises an eyebrow. âHe begged?â
I nod. âIt wasnât as pathetic as it sounds. Heâs usually more composed.â
The elevator dings and the doors begin to open. I can hear music pouring from down the hallway. Devin takes both of my hands in his and says, âSo whatâs the plan? Do I need to make this guy jealous?â
âNo,â I say, shaking my head. âThat wouldnât be right.â But . . . Ryle does make it a point every time he sees me to tell me he hopes he never sees me again. âMaybe just a little?â I say, scrunching up my nose. âA smidge?â
Devin pops his jaw and says, âConsider it done.â He puts his hand on my lower back as he walks me out of the elevator. Thereâs only one visible door in the hallway, so we make our way over and ring the doorbell.
âWhy is there only one door?â he says.
âShe owns the whole top floor.â
He chuckles. âAnd she works for you? Damn, your life just keeps getting more and more interesting.â
The door begins to open, and Iâm extremely relieved to see Allysa standing in front of me. Thereâs music and laughter pouring out of the apartment behind her. Sheâs holding a champagne glass in one hand and a riding crop in the other. She sees me staring at the riding crop with a confused look on my face, so she tosses it over her shoulder and grabs my hand. âItâs a long story,â she says, laughing. âCome in, come in!â
She pulls me in and I squeeze Devinâs hand and drag him behind me. She continues pulling us through a crowd of people until we reach the other side of the living room. âHey!â she says, tugging on Marshallâs arm. He turns around and smiles at me, then pulls me in for a hug. I glance behind him, and around us, but thereâs no sign of Ryle. Maybe I got lucky and he got called in to work tonight.
Marshall reaches out for Devinâs hand and shakes it. âHey, man! Good to meet you!â
Devin wraps an arm around my waist. âIâm Devin!â he yells over the music. âIâm Lilyâs sexual partner!â
I laugh and elbow him, then lean in to his ear. âThatâs Marshall. Wrong guy, but nice effort.â
Allysa grabs my arm and starts to pull me away from Devin. Marshall begins speaking to him, and my hand is reaching out behind me as Iâm being pulled in the opposite direction.
âYouâll be fine!â Devin yells.
I follow Allysa into the kitchen, where she shoves a glass of champagne in my hand. âDrink,â she says. âYou deserve it!â
I take a sip of the champagne, but I canât even appreciate it now that Iâm getting a look at her industrial-sized kitchen with two full stovetops and a fridge bigger than my apartment. âHoly shit,â I whisper. âYou actually live here?â
She giggles. âI know,â she says. âAnd to think, I didnât even have to marry him for money. Marshall had seven bucks and drove a Ford Pinto when I fell in love with him.â
âDoesnât he still drive a Ford Pinto?â
She sighs. âYeah, but we have a lot of good memories in that car.â
âGross.â
She wiggles her eyebrows. âSo . . . Devin is cute.â
âAnd probably more into Marshall than me.â
âAh, man,â she says. âThatâs a bummer. I thought I was playing matchmaker when I invited him to the party tonight.â
The kitchen door opens and Devin walks in. âYour husband is looking for you,â he says to Allysa. She twirls her way out of the kitchen, giggling the whole time. âI really like her,â Devin says.
âSheâs great, huh?â
He leans against the island and says, âSo. I think I just met The Beggar.â
My heart flutters down my chest. I think The Neurosurgeon has a better ring to it. I take another sip of my champagne. âHow do you know it was him? Did he introduce himself?â
He shakes his head. âNah, but he overheard Marshall introducing me to someone as âLilyâs date.â I thought the look he gave me was going to set me on fire. Thatâs why I came in here. I like you, but Iâm not willing to die for you.â
I laugh. âDonât worry, Iâm sure that death glare he gave you was really his smile. Theyâre superimposed most of the time.â
The door swings open again and I immediately stiffen, but itâs only a caterer. I sigh with relief. Devin says, âLily,â like my name is a disappointment.
âWhat?â
âYou look like youâre about to puke,â he says, accusingly. âYou really like him.â
I roll my eyes. But then I let my shoulders drop and I fake cry. âI do, Devin. I do, I just donât want to.â
He takes my glass of champagne and downs the remainder of it, then locks his arm in mine again. âLetâs go mingle,â he says, pulling me out of the kitchen against my will.
The room is even more crowded now. There have to be more than a hundred people here. Iâm not even sure I know that many people.
We walk around and work the room. I stand back while Devin does most of the talking. He knows someone in common with every person heâs met so far, and after about half an hour of following him around, Iâm convinced heâs made it a personal game to find someone in common with everyone here. The whole time I mingle with him, my attention is half on him and half on the room, searching for traces of Ryle. I donât see him anywhere and I begin to wonder if the guy Devin saw was even Ryle to begin with.
âWell, thatâs odd,â a woman says. âWhat do you suppose it is?â
I look up and see that sheâs staring at a piece of art on the wall. It looks like a photograph blown up on canvas. I tilt my head to inspect it. The woman turns her nose up and says, âI donât know why anyone would bother turning that photograph into wall art. Itâs awful. Itâs so blurry, you canât even tell what it is.â She walks away in a huff, and Iâm relieved. I mean . . . itâs a bit weird, but who am I to judge Allysaâs taste?
âWhat do you think?â
His voice is low, deep, and right behind me. I close my eyes briefly and inhale a steadying breath before quietly exhaling, hoping he doesnât notice his voice has any effect on me whatsoever. âI like it. Iâm not quite sure what it is, but itâs interesting. Your sister has good taste.â
He steps around me so that heâs at my side, facing me. He takes a step closer until heâs so close, he brushes my arm. âYou brought a date?â
Heâs asking it like itâs a casual question, but I know it isnât. When I fail to respond, he leans in until heâs whispering in my ear. He repeats himself, but this time it isnât a question. âYou brought a date.â
I find the courage to look over at him and instantly wish I hadnât. Heâs in a black suit that makes the scrubs look like childâs play. First I swallow the unexpected lump in my throat and then I say, âIs it a problem that I brought a date?â I look away from him and back at the photograph hanging on the wall. âI was trying to make things easier on you. You know. Just trying to make it stop.â
He smirks and then downs the rest of his wine. âHow thoughtful of you, Lily.â He tosses his empty wineglass toward a trash can in the corner of the room. He makes the shot, but the glass shatters when it hits the bottom of the empty container. I glance around me, but no one saw what just happened. When I look back at Ryle, heâs halfway down a hallway. He disappears into a room and I stand here, looking at the picture again.
Thatâs when I see it.
The picture is blurred, so it was hard to make out at first. But I can recognize that hair from anywhere. Thatâs my hair. Itâs hard to miss, along with the marine-grade polymer lounge chair Iâm lying on. This is the picture he took on the rooftop the first night we met. He must have had it blown up and distorted so no one would notice what it was. I bring my hand to my neck, because my blood feels like itâs bubbling. Itâs really warm in here.
Allysa appears at my side. âItâs weird, huh?â she says, looking at the picture.
I scratch at my chest. âItâs really hot in here,â I say. âDonât you think?â
She glances around the room. âIs it? I hadnât noticed, but Iâm a little drunk. Iâll tell Marshall to turn on the air.â
She disappears again, and the more I stare at the picture, the angrier I get. The man has a picture of me hanging in the apartment. He bought me flowers. Heâs giving me attitude because I brought a date to his sisterâs party. Heâs acting like thereâs actually something between us, and weâve never even kissed!
It all hits me at once. The anger . . . the irritation . . . the half glass of champagne I had in the kitchen. Iâm so mad, I canât even think straight. If the guy wants to have sex with me so bad . . . he shouldnât have fallen asleep! If he doesnât want me to swoon, he shouldnât buy me flowers! He shouldnât hang cryptic pictures of me where he lives!
All I want is fresh air. I need fresh air. Luckily, I know just where to find it.
Moments later, I burst through the door to the rooftop. There are stragglers from the party up here. Three of them, seated on the patio furniture. I ignore them and walk to the ledge with the good view and lean over it. I suck in several deep breaths and try to calm myself down. I want to go downstairs and tell him to make up his damn mind, but I know I need to have a clear head before I do that.
The air is cold, and for some reason, I blame that on Ryle. Everything is his fault tonight. All of it. Wars, famine, gun violenceâit all somehow links back to Ryle.
âCan we have a few minutes alone?â
I spin around, and Ryle is standing near the other guests. Immediately, all three of them nod and begin to stand up to give us privacy. I hold up my hands and say, âWait,â but none of them look at me. âItâs not necessary. Really, you donât have to leave.â
Ryle stands stoically with his hands in his pockets while one of the guests mutters, âItâs fine, we donât mind.â They begin to file back down the stairwell. I roll my eyes and spin back toward the ledge once Iâm alone with him.
âDoes everyone always do what you say?â I ask, irritated.
He doesnât respond. His footsteps are slow and deliberate as he closes in on me. My heart begins to beat like itâs on a speed-date, and I start scratching at my chest again.
âLily,â he says from behind me.
I turn around and grip the ledge behind me with both hands. His eyes journey down to my cleavage. As soon as they do, I yank at the top of my dress so he canât see it, and then I grip the ledge again. He laughs and takes another step closer. Weâre almost touching now, and my brain is mush. Itâs pathetic. Iâm pathetic.
âI feel like you have a lot to say,â he says. âSo Iâd like to give you the opportunity to speak your naked truth.â
âHah!â I say with a laugh. âAre you sure about that?â
He nods, so I prepare to let him have it. I push against his chest and make my way around him so that heâs the one leaning against the ledge now.
âI canât tell what you want, Ryle! And every time I get to the point where I start to not give a shit, you show up again out of the blue! You show up at my work, you show up at my apartment door, you show up at parties, you . . .â
âI live here,â he says, excusing the last one. That pisses me off even more. I clench my fists.
âUgh! Youâre driving me crazy! Do you want me or do you not?â
He stands up straight and takes a step toward me. âOh, I want you, Lily. Make no mistake about that. I just donât want to want you.â
My whole body sighs at that comment. Partly out of frustration and partly because everything he says makes me shiver and I hate that I allow him to make me feel like this.
I shake my head. âYou donât get it, do you?â I say, softening my voice. I feel too defeated right now to keep yelling at him. âI like you, Ryle. And knowing that you only want me for one night makes me really, really sad. And maybe if this were a few months ago, we could have had sex and it would have been fine. You would have walked away and I could have easily moved on with my life. But itâs not a few months ago. You waited too long, and too many pieces of me are invested in you now, so please. Stop flirting with me. Stop hanging pictures of me in your apartment. And stop sending me flowers. Because when you do those things, it doesnât feel good, Ryle. It actually kind of hurts.â
I feel deflated and exhausted and Iâm ready to leave. He regards me silently, and I respectfully give him time to make his rebuttal. But he doesnât. He just turns around, leans over the ledge, and stares down at the street like he didnât hear a single word I said.
I walk across the roof and open the door, half expecting him to call out my name or ask me not to leave. I get all the way back to the apartment before I finally lose all hope of that happening. I push through the crowd and make it through three different rooms before I spot Devin. When he sees the look on my face, he just nods and begins to make his way across the room toward me.
âReady to go?â he asks, looping his arm through mine.
I nod. âYes. So ready.â
We find Allysa in the main living room. I tell her and Marshall goodnight, using the excuse that Iâm just exhausted from opening week and Iâd like to get some sleep before work tomorrow. Allysa gives me a hug and walks us to the front door.
âIâll be back on Monday,â she says to me, kissing me on the cheek.
âHappy birthday,â I say to her. Devin opens the door, but right before we step into the hallway, I hear someone yell my name.
I turn around and Ryle is pushing through the crowd on the other side of the room. âLily, wait!â he yells, still trying to make his way over to me. My heart is erratic. Heâs walking quickly, stepping around people, growing more frustrated with every person in his way. He finally reaches a break in the crowd and makes eye contact with me again. He holds my gaze as he marches toward me. He doesnât slow down. Allysa has to step out of his way as he walks straight up to me. At first, I think he might kiss me, or at least give a rebuttal to everything I said to him upstairs. But instead, he does something Iâm not at all prepared for. He scoops me up into his arms.
âRyle!â I yell, gripping him around the neck, afraid he might drop me. âPut me down!â He has an arm wrapped under my legs and one under my back.
âI need to borrow Lily for the night,â he says to Devin. âThat okay?â
I look at Devin and shake my head, wide-eyed. Devin just smirks and says, âBe my guest.â
Traitor!
Ryle starts to turn and walk back toward the living room. I look at Allysa as I pass her. Her eyes are wide with confusion. âIâm going to kill your brother!â I yell at her.
Everyone in the entire room is staring now. Iâm so embarrassed, I just press my face against Ryleâs chest as he walks me down the hallway and into his bedroom. Once the door is shut behind us, he slowly lowers my feet back to the floor. I immediately start to yell at him and try to push him out of the way of the bedroom door, but he spins me and shoves me against the door, grabbing both of my wrists. He presses them against the wall above my head and says, âLily?â
Heâs looking at me so intently, I stop trying to fight him off of me and I hold my breath. His chest is pressing against mine, my back is pressed to the door. And then his mouth is on mine. Warm pressure against my lips.
Despite the strength behind them, his lips are like silk. Iâm shocked at the moan that rushes through me, and even more shocked when I part my lips and want more. His tongue slides against mine and he releases my wrists to grab my face. His kiss grows deeper and I grasp at his hair, pulling him closer, feeling the kiss in my entire body.
Both of us become a medley of moans and gasps as the kiss brings us over the edge, our bodies wanting more than our mouths can deliver. I feel his hands as he reaches down and grabs my legs, lifting me up and hooking them around his waist.
My God, this man can kiss. Itâs as if he takes kissing as seriously as he takes his profession. He begins to pull me away from the door when Iâm hit with the realization that yes, his mouth is capable of a lot. But what his mouth has failed to do is respond to everything I told him upstairs.
For all I know, Iâve just given in. Iâm giving him what he wants: a one-night stand. And thatâs the last thing he deserves right now.
I pull my mouth from his and push on his shoulders. âPut me down.â
He keeps walking toward his bed, so I say it again. âRyle, put me down right now.â
He stops walking and lowers me to the floor. I have to back away and face the other direction to gather my thoughts. Looking at him while I still feel his lips on mine is more than I can deal with right now.
I feel his arms go around my waist, and he rests his head on my shoulder. âIâm sorry,â he whispers. He turns me around and brings a hand up to my face and brushes his thumb across my cheek. âItâs my turn now, okay?â
I donât respond to his touch. I keep my arms folded across my chest and wait to hear what he has to say before I allow myself to respond to his touch.
âI had that picture made the day after I took it,â he says. âItâs been in my apartment for months now, because you were the most beautiful thing Iâd ever seen and I wanted to look at it every single day.â
Oh.
âAnd that night I showed up at your door? I went searching for you because no one in the history of my life has ever crawled under my skin and refused to leave like you did. I didnât know how to handle it. And the reason I sent you flowers this week is because I am really, really proud of you for following your dream. But if I sent you flowers every time Iâve had the urge to send you flowers, you wouldnât even be able to fit inside your apartment. Because thatâs how much I think about you. And yes, Lily. Youâre right. Iâm hurting you, but Iâm hurting, too. And until tonight . . . I didnât know why.â
I have no idea how I even possibly find the strength to speak after that. âWhy are you hurting?â
He drops his forehead to mine and says, âBecause. I have no idea what Iâm doing. You make me want to be a different person, but what if I donât know how to be what you need? This is all new to me and I want to prove to you that I want you for so much more than just one night.â
He looks so vulnerable right now. I want to believe the genuine look in his eye, but heâs been so adamant since the day that I met him that he wants the exact opposite of what I want. And it terrifies me that Iâll give in to him and heâll walk away.
âHow do I prove myself to you, Lily? Tell me and Iâll do it.â
I donât know. I barely know the guy. I know him enough to know that sex with him wonât be enough for me, though. But how do I know sex wonât be the only thing he wants?
My eyes instantly lock with his. âDonât have sex with me.â
He stares at me for a moment, completely unreadable. But then he starts to nod his head like heâs finally getting it. âOkay,â he says, still nodding. âOkay. I will not have sex with you, Lily Bloom.â
He walks around me to his bedroom door and he locks it. He flips off the light, leaving only a lamp on, and then takes off his shirt as he walks toward me.
âWhat are you doing?â
He tosses his shirt on a chair and then slips off his shoes. âWeâre going to sleep.â
I glance at his bed. Then at him. âRight now?â
He nods and walks over to me. In one swift movement, he lifts my dress up and over my head, until Iâm standing in the middle of his bedroom floor in my bra and panties. I cover myself, but he doesnât even look twice. He pulls me toward the bed and lifts the covers for me to crawl in. As heâs walking over to his side of the bed he says, âItâs not like we havenât slept together before without having sex. Piece of cake.â
I laugh. He reaches his dresser and plugs his phone in to a charger. I take a moment to skim his bedroom. This certainly isnât the type of spare bedroom Iâm used to. Three of my bedrooms could fit in here. Thereâs a couch against the other wall, a chair facing a television and a full office off the bedroom that looks complete with a floor-to-ceiling library. Iâm still trying to see everything around me when the lamp goes off.
âYour sister is really rich,â I say as I feel him pull the covers over both of us. âWhat the hell does she do with the ten bucks an hour I pay her? Wipe her ass with it?â
He laughs and grabs my hand, sliding his fingers through mine. âShe probably doesnât even cash the checks,â he says. âHave you ever checked?â
I havenât. Now Iâm curious.
âGoodnight, Lily,â he says.
I canât stop smiling, because this is kind of ridiculous. And so great.
âGoodnight, Ryle.â
⢠⢠â¢
I think I might be lost.
Everything is so white and so clean, itâs blinding. I shuffle through one of the living rooms and try to find my way to the kitchen. I have no idea where my dress ended up last night, so I pulled on one of Ryleâs shirts. It falls past my knees, and I wonder if he has to buy shirts that are too big for him just so theyâll fit his arms.
There are too many windows and way too much sun, so Iâm forced to shield my eyes as I go in search of coffee.
I push through the kitchen doors and find a coffeemaker.
Thank you, Jesus.
I set it to brew and then go in search for a mug when the kitchen door opens behind me. I spin around and Iâm relieved to see that Allysa isnât always a perfect concoction of makeup and jewelry. Her hair is in a messy topknot and mascara is smeared down her cheeks. She points at the coffeemaker. âIâm gonna need me some of that,â she says. She pulls herself up on the island and then slouches forward.
âCan I ask you a question?â I say.
She barely has the energy to nod.
I wave my hand around the kitchen. âHow did this happen? How in the hell did your entire house become spotless between the party last night and me waking up just now? Did you stay up and clean?â
She laughs. âWe have people for that,â she says.
âPeople?â
She nods. âYep. There are people for everything,â she says. âYouâd be surprised. Think of something. Anything. We probably have people for it.â
âGroceries?â
âPeople,â she says.
âChristmas décor?â
She nods. âPeople for that, too.â
âWhat about birthday gifts? Like for family members?â
She grins. âYep. People. Everyone in my family receives a gift and a card for every occasion and I never have to lift a finger.â
I shake my head. âWow. How long have you been this rich?â
âThree years,â she says. âMarshall sold a few apps he developed to Apple for a lot of money. Every six months, he creates updates and sells those, too.â
The coffee transitions into a slow drip, so I grab a mug and fill it up. âYou want anything in yours?â I ask. âOr do you have people for that?â
She laughs. âYes. I have you, and Iâd like sugar, please.â
I stir some sugar into her cup and walk it over to her, then pour myself a cup. It grows quiet for a while as I mix in creamer, waiting for her to say something about me and Ryle. The conversation is inevitable.
âCan we just get the awkwardness out of the way?â she says.
I sigh, relieved. âPlease. I hate this.â I face her and take a sip of my coffee. She sets hers down beside her and then grips the countertop.
âHow did that even happen?â
I shake my head, trying my best not to smile like Iâm love-struck. I donât want her to think Iâm weak, or a fool for giving in to him. âWe met before I knew you.â
She tilts her head. âWait,â she says. âBefore we got to know each other better or before we knew each other at all?â
âAt all,â I say. âWe had a moment one night, about six months before I met you.â
âA moment?â she says. âAs in . . . a one-night stand?â
âNo,â I say. âNo, we never even kissed until last night. I donât know, I canât explain it. We just had this sort of flirtation thing going on for a really long time and it finally came to a head last night. Thatâs all.â
She picks up her coffee again and takes a slow drink from it. She stares down at the floor for a while and I canât help but notice she looks a little sad.
âAllysa? Youâre not mad at me, are you?â
She immediately shakes her head. âNo, Lily. I just . . .â She sets down her coffee cup again. âI just know my brother. And I love him. I really do. But . . .â
âBut what?â
Allysa and I both look in the direction of the voice. Ryle is standing in the doorway with his arms folded across his chest. Heâs wearing a pair of gray jogging pants that are barely hanging on to his hips. No shirt. Iâll be adding this outfit to all the other ones Iâve catalogued in my head.
Ryle pushes off the door and makes his way into the kitchen. He walks over to me and takes my cup of coffee out of my hands. He leans in and kisses me on the forehead, then takes a drink as he leans against the counter.
âI didnât mean to interrupt,â he says to Allysa. âBy all means, continue your conversation.â
Allysa rolls her eyes and says, âStop.â
He hands me back my cup of coffee and turns around to grab his own mug. He begins to pour from the pot. âIt sounded to me like you were about to give Lily a warning. Iâm just curious as to what you have to say.â
Allysa hops off the counter and carries her mug to the sink. âSheâs my friend, Ryle. You donât have the best track record when it comes to relationships.â She washes out the mug and then leans her hip into the sink, facing us. âAs her friend, I have the right to give her my opinion when it comes to the guys she dates. Thatâs what friends do.â
Iâm suddenly feeling uncomfortable as the tension grows thicker between the two of them. Ryle doesnât even take a drink of his coffee. He walks toward Allysa and pours it out in the sink. Heâs standing right in front of her, but she wonât even look at him. âWell, as your brother, I would hope you had a little more faith in me than you do. Thatâs what siblings do.â
He walks out of the kitchen, shoving the door open. When heâs gone, Allysa takes a deep breath. She shakes her head and pulls her hands up to her face. âSorry about that,â she says, forcing a smile. âI need to shower.â
âYou donât have people for that?â
She laughs as she exits the kitchen. I wash my mug in the sink and head back to Ryleâs bedroom. When I open the door, heâs sitting on the couch, scrolling through his phone. He doesnât look up at me when I walk in and for a second, I think he might be mad at me, too. But then he tosses his phone aside and leans back into the couch.
âCome here,â he says.
He grabs my hand and pulls me down on top of him so that Iâm straddling him. He brings my mouth to his and kisses me so hard, it makes me wonder if heâs trying to prove his sister wrong.
Ryle pulls away from my mouth and slowly rakes his eyes down my body. âI like you in my clothes.â
I smile. âWell I have to get to work, so unfortunately, I canât keep them on.â
He brushes the hair from my face and says, âI have a really important surgery coming up that I need to prepare for. Which means I probably wonât see you for a few days.â
I try to hide my disappointment, but I have to get used to it if he really wants to try and make something work between us. Heâs already warned me that he works too much. âIâm busy, too. Grand opening is on Friday.â
He says, âOh, Iâll see you before Friday. Promise.â
I donât hide my grin this time. âOkay.â
He kisses me again, this time for a solid minute. He starts to lower me to the couch, but then he shoves away from me and says. âNope. I like you too much to make out with you.â
I lie down on the couch and watch him get dressed for work.
To my enjoyment, he puts on scrubs.