Gus slid outย of the booth, and I followed, gathering the donut box and my cup of sizzling shit. It had stopped raining, but now heavy fog hung in clumps. Without another word, we got into the car and drove away from DONUTS, the word glowing teal in the rearview mirror.
โItโs the happy endings,โ Gus said suddenly as he pulled onto the main drag.
โWhat?โ My stomach clenched.ย They all live happily ever after. Again.
Gus cleared his throat. โItโs not that I donโt take romance seriously as a genre. And I like reading about women. But I have a hard time with happy endings.โ His eyes cautiously flashed my way, then went back to the road.
โA hard time?โ I repeated, as if that would make the words make sense to me. โYou have a hard time โฆย reading happy endings?โ
He rubbed at the curve of his bicep, an anxious tic I didnโt remember. โI guess.โ
โWhy?โ I asked, more confused than offended now.
โLife is pretty much a series of good and bad moments right up until the moment you die,โ he said stiffly. โWhich is arguably a bad one. Love doesnโt change that. I have a hard time suspending my disbelief. Besides, can you think of a single real-life romance that actually ended like Bridget fucking Jones?โ
There it was, the Gus Everett I knew. The one whoโd thought I was hopelessly naive. And even if I had some evidence heโd been right, I wasnโt
ready to let him trash the thing that had once meant more to me than anything else, the genre that had kept me afloat when Mom relapsed and our whole imagined future disappeared like smoke on a breeze.
โFirstย of all,โ I said, โโBridget fucking Jonesโ is an ongoing series. It is literally theย worstย example you could have chosen to prove that point. Itโs the antithesis of the oversimplified and inaccurate stereotype of the genre. It doesย exactlyย what I aim to: it makes its readers feel known and understood, like their storiesโwomenโs storiesโmatter. And secondly, are you honestly saying you donโt believe in love?โ
I felt a little desperate, like if I let him win this fight, it would be the final straw: thereโd be no getting back to myself, to believing in love and seeing the world and the people in it as pure, beautiful thingsโto loving writing.
Gusโs brow furrowed, his dark eyes flashing from me to the road with that intent, absorbing look Shadi and I had spent so much time trying to put into words. โSure, love happens,โ he said finally. โBut itโs better to be realistic so shitโs not constantly blowing up in your face. And love isย wayย more likely to blow up in your face than to bring eternal happiness. And if it doesnโt hurtย you, then youโre the one hurting someone else.
โEntering a relationship is borderline sadomasochistic. Especially when you can getย everythingย you would from a romantic relationship from a friendship, without destroying anyoneโs life when it inevitably ends.โ
โEverything?โ I said. โSex?โ
He arched an eyebrow. โYou donโt even needย friendshipย to get sex.โ โAnd what, it never turns into more for you?โ I said. โYou can keep
things that detached?โ
โIf youโre realistic,โ he said. โYou need a policy. It doesnโt turn into more if it only happens once.โ
Wow. The shelf life had shortened. โSee?โ I said. โYouย areย coldly horny, Gus.โ
He glanced sidelong at me, smiling. โWhat?โ
โThatโs the second time youโve called me Gus tonight.โ
My cheeks flushed. Right,ย Everettย seemed to be his preference these days. โSo?โ
โCome on, January.โ His eyes went back to the road, the twin spears of the headlights reaching over the asphalt and catching blips of the evergreens
whipping past. โI remember you.โ His gaze settled on me again, his eyes nearly as solid and heavy as if they were hands.
I was grateful for the dark as heat rushed to my face. โFrom?โ โStop. It wasnโt that long ago. And there was that one night.โ
Oh, God. We werenโt going to talk aboutย that one night, were we? The only night weโd talked outside of class. Well, not talked. Weโd been at the same frat party. The theme had been a very vague โClassics.โ
Gus and his friend Parker had come as Ponyboy and Johnny and spent the night getting called โGreased Lightningโ by drunk frat boys. Shadi and I had gone as truck-stop Thelma (her) and Louise (me).
Gusโs girl-of-the-hour, Tessa, had gone home for the weekend. She and I lived in the same student apartments and wound up at a lot of the same parties. She was the latest reason Gus and I had been crossing paths, butย thatย night was different.
It was the beginning of the school year, not quite fall. Shadi and I had been dancing in the basement, whose cement walls were sweating. All night, Iโd been watching Gus, fuming a little because his last short story had been so good and he was still ridiculously attractive and his criticism was still on point and I was tired of him asking to borrow my pens, and furthermore, heโd caught me staring at him, and ever since, Iโd feltโor thought (hoped?) Iโd feltโhim watching me too.
At the makeshift bar in the next room. At the beer pong table upstairs. In the kitchen at the keg. And then he was standing still in the throng of bodies jumping and spastically dancing to โSandstormโ (Shadi had hijacked the iPod, as she was wont to do), only a few yards away from me, and we were both staring at each other, and somehow I felt vindicated by this, sure that all this time, heโd seen me as his competition after all.
I didnโt know if Iโd made my way to him, or if heโd made his way to me, or if weโd met in the middle. All I knew was that weโd ended up dancing with (on?) each other. There were flashes of memory from that night that still made me buzz: his hands on my hips, my hands on his neck, his face against my throat, his arms around my waist.
Coldly horny?ย No, Gus Everett had been all hot breath and sparking touches.
Rivalry or not, it had been palpable how much we wanted each other that night. We had both been ready to make a bad decision.
And then Shadi had saved the day by shaving her head in the bathroom with clippers sheโd found under the sink and getting us both kicked out and banned from that particular fratโs parties for life. Although we hadnโt tried to go back in the last few years and I suspected frats had a rather short memory. Four years, max.
Apparently, I had a much longer memory. โJanuary?โ
I looked up and startled at the dark gaze Iโd been remembering, now here in the car with me. Iโd forgotten the tiny white scar to the right of his Cupidโs bow and now wondered how Iโd managed it.
I cleared my throat. โYou told Pete we just met the other night.โ
โI told her we were neighbors,โ he allowed. Eyes back on the road. Eyes back on me. It felt like a personal attack, the way he kept looking at me then away after just a second too long. His mouth twitched. โI wasnโt sure you remembered me.โ
Something about that made my insides feel like a ribbon being drawn across scissors until it curled. He went on: โBut no one calls me Gus except people I knew before publishing.โ
โBecause?โ I asked.
โBecause I donโt like every whack job next-door neighbor Iโve ever had to be able to Google me and leave me scathing reviews?โ he said. โOr ask me for free books.โ
โOh, I donโt need free books,โ I assured him.
โReally?โ he teased. โYou donโt want to add a fifth level to your shrine?โ โYouโre not going to distract me,โ I said. โIโm not done with this
conversation.โ
โShit. I honestly didnโt mean to offend you,โ he promised. โAgain.โ โYou didnโt offend me,โ I said uncertainly. Or maybe he had, but his
apology had caught me off guard yet again. More so, I was baffled. โI just think youโre being silly.โ
Weโd reached our houses without me even noticing, and Gus parked along the curb and faced me. For the second time I noticed how small the car was, how close we were, how the dark seemed to magnify the intensity of his eyes as they fixed on mine. โJanuary, why did you come here?โ
I laughed, uncomfortable. โInto the car you begged me to get into?โ He shook his head, frustrated. โYouโre different now.โ
I felt the blood rush into my cheeks. โYou mean Iโm not a fairy princess anymore.โ
Confusion rippled across his face.
โThatโs what you called me,โ I said, โback then. You want me to say you were right. I got my wake-up call and things donโt work out like they do in my books, right?โ
His head tilted, the muscle in his jaw leaping. โThatโs not what I was saying.โ
โItโs exactly what you were saying.โ
He shook his head again. โWell, itโs not what I meant,โ he said. โI meant to say โฆ You were always so โฆโ He huffed. โI donโt know, youโre drinking wine out of your purse. Iโm guessing thereโs a reason for that.โ
My mouth jammed shut, and my chest tightened. Probably Gus Everett was the last person Iโd expect to read me like that.
I looked out the window toward the beach house as if it were a glowing red emergency exit sign, a savior from this conversation. I could hear waves breaking on the shore behind the houses, but the fog hung too thick for me to see anything.
โIโm not asking you to tell me,โ Gus said after a second. โI just โฆ I donโt know. Itโs weird to see you like this.โ
I turned toward him and folded my legs up on the seat as I studied him, searching his expression for irony. But his face was serious, his dark eyes narrowed and his brow pinched, his head doing that particular half tilt that made me feel like I was under a microscope. The Sexy, Evil stare that suggested he was reading your mind.
โIโm not writing,โ I said. I wasnโt sure why I was admitting it, least of all to Gus, but better him than Anya or Sandy. โIโm out of money, and my editorโsย desperateย to buy something from meโand all Iโve got is a handful of bad pages and three months to finish a book someone other than my mom will spend US dollars on. Thatโs whatโs going on.โ
I batted away thoughts of my tattered relationship with Mom and the conversation weโd had after the funeral to focus on the lesser evil of my situation.
โIโve done it before,โ I said. โFour books, no problem. And itโs bad enough that I feel like Iโm incapable of doing theย oneย thing Iโm good at,ย theย thing that makes me feel likeย me, and then thereโs the added fact that Iโm totally out of money.โ
Gus nodded thoughtfully. โItโs always harder to write when youย haveย to. Itโs like โฆ the pressure turns it into a job, like anything else, and you might as well be selling insurance. The story suddenly loses any urgency to be told.โ
โExactly,โ I agreed.
โBut youโll figure it out,โ he said coolly after a second. โIโm sure there are a million Happily Ever Afters floating around in that brain.โ
โOkay, A, no, there arenโt,โ I said. โAnd B, itโs not as easy as you think, Gus. Happy endings donโt matter if theย getting thereย sucks.โ
I tipped my head against the window. โAt this point, it honestly might be easier for me to pack it in on the upbeat womenโs fiction and hop aboard the Bleak Literary Fiction train. At least it would give me an excuse to describe boobs in some horrifying new way. Likeย bulbous succulents of flesh and sinew. I never get to sayย bulbous succulents of fleshย in my books.โ
Gus leaned back against the driverโs side door and let out a laugh, which made me feel simultaneously bad for teasing him and ridiculously victorious for having made him laugh yet again. In college, Iโd barely seen him crack a smile. Clearly I wasnโt the only one whoโd changed.
โYou couldย neverย write like that,โ he said. โItโs not your style.โ I crossed my arms. โYou donโt think Iโm capable?โ
Gus rolled his eyes. โIโm just saying itโs not who you are.โ
โItโs not who Iย was,โ I corrected. โBut as youโve pointed out, Iโm different now.โ
โYouโre going through something,โ he said, and again, I felt an uncomfortable prickle at him seeming to x-ray me like that,ย andย at the spark of the old competitive flame Gus always ignited in me. โBut Iโd wager youโre about as likely to churn out something dark and dreary as I am to go allย When Harry Met Sally.โ
โI can write whatever I want,โ I said. โThough I can see how writing a Happily Ever After might be hard for someone whose happy endings usually happen during one-night stands.โ
Gusโs eyes darkened, and his mouth hitched into an uneven smile. โAre you challenging me, Andrews?โ
โIโm just saying,โ I parroted him, โitโs not who you are.โ
Gus scratched his jaw, his eyes clouding as he recessed into thought. His hand dropped to rest over the steering wheel and his focus shifted sharply to me. โOkay,โ he said. โI have an idea.โ
โAย seventhย Pirates of the Caribbean movie?โ I said. โItโs so crazy it might work!โ
โActually,โ Gus said, โI thought we could make a deal.โ โWhat sort of deal, Augustus?โ
He visibly shuddered at the sound of his full name and reached across the car. A spark of anticipationโof what, I wasnโt sureโrushed through me.
But he was only opening the box in my lap and grabbing another donut. Coconut.
He bit into it. โYou try writing bleak literary fiction, see if thatโs who you are now, if youโre capable of being that personโโI rolled my eyes and snatched the last bite of donut from his hand. He went on, unbothered
โโand Iโll write a Happily Ever After.โ
My eyes snapped up to his. The fringes of the porch light were making their way through the fog now, brushing at the car window and catching at the sharp angle of his face and the dark wave that fell across his forehead. โYouโre kidding.โ
โIโm not,โ he said. โYouโre not the only one whoโs been in a rut. I could use a break from what Iโm doingโโ
โBecause writing a romance will beย soย easy it will essentially be a nap for you,โ I teased.
โAndย youย can lean into your bleak new outlook and see how it fits. Ifย thisย is the new January Andrews. And whoever sells their book firstโwith a pen name, if you preferโwins.โ
I opened my mouth to say something, but no words came out. I closed it and tried again. โWinsย what?โ
Gusโs brow lifted. โWell, first of all, youโll have sold a book, so you can pay your bills and keep your purse stocked with wine. Secondly โฆโ He thought for a moment. โThe loser will promote the winnerโs book, write an endorsement for the cover, recommend it in interviews, choose it when guest judging for book clubs, and all that, guaranteeing sales. And thirdly, if you win, youโll be able to rub it in my face forever, which I suspect youโd consider nearly priceless.โ
I couldnโt come close to hiding the smile blooming across my face.ย โTrue.โย Everything he was saying made at leastย someย sense. Wheels were turning in my headโwheels that had been out of order for the past year. I reallyย didย think I could write the kind of book Gus wrote, that I could mimic The Great American Novel.
It was different with love stories. They meant too much to me, and my readers had waited too long for me to give them something I didnโt wholeheartedly believe in.
It was all starting to add up. Everything except one detail. I narrowed my eyes. Gus exaggeratedly narrowed his back. โWhat doย youย stand to gain here?โ I asked.
โOh, all the same things,โ he said. โI want something to lord over you.
And money. Moneyโs always helpful.โ
โUh-oh,โ I said. โIs there trouble in Coldly Horny Paradise?โ
โMy books take a long time to write,โ Gus said. โThe advances have been good, but even with my scholarships, I had a lot of student loans, and some old debt, and then I put a lot into this house. If I can sell something quick, it will help me out.โ
I gasped and clutched my heart. โAnd you would stoop to peddling the sadomasochistic American dream of lasting love?โ
Gus frowned. โIf youโre not into the plan, just forget it.โ
But now I couldnโt forget it. Now I needed to prove to Gus that what I did was harder than it looked, that I was just as capable as he was. Besides, having Augustus Everett promote a book of mine would have benefits I couldnโt afford to pass up.
โIโm in,โ I said.
His eyes bored into me, that evil smile climbing the corner of his top lip. โYou sure? This could be truly humiliating.โ
An involuntary laugh sprang out of me. โOh, Iโm counting on it,โ I said. โBut Iโll make it aย littleย easier on you. Iโll throw in a rom-com crash course.โ
โFine,โ Gus said. โThen Iโll take you through my research process.ย Iโllย help you lean into your latent nihilism, andย youโllย teach me how to sing like no oneโs listening, dance like no oneโs watching, and love like Iโve never been hurt before.โ
His faint grin was contagious, if overconfident. โYou really think you can do this?โ I asked.
He lifted one shoulder. โYou thinkย youย can?โ
I held his gaze as I thought. โAnd youโll endorse the book? If I win and sell the book, youโll write a shiny pull quote to slap on the cover, no matter how bad it is.โ
His eyes were doing the thing again. The sexy/evil thing where they expanded and darkened as he lost himself in thought. โI remember how you wrote when you were twenty-two,โ he said carefully. โIt wonโt be bad.โ
I fought a blush. I didnโt understand how he could do that, bounce between being rude, almost condescending, and disarmingly complimentary.
โBut yes,โ he added, leaning forward. โEven if you give me a novelization of the sequel toย Gigli, if you sell it, I will endorse it.โ
I sat back to put some distance between us. โOkay. So what about this?
We spend our weekdays writing, and leave the end of the week for
education.โ
โEducation,โ he repeated.
โOn Fridays, Iโll go with you to do whatever research you would usually do. Which would include โฆโ I gestured for him to fill in the blank.
He smiled crookedly. It was extremely evil. โOh, all sorts of riveting things,โ he supplied. โAnd then on Saturdays, weโll do whatever you usually do for researchโhot-air balloon trips, sailing lessons, two-person motorcycle rides, candlelit restaurants with patio seating and bad cover bands, andย all thatย shit.โ
Heat spread up my neck. He had just nailed me, again. I mean, I hadnโt done the two-person motorcycle rides (I had no death wish), but Iย hadย taken a hot-air balloon ride to prepare for my third novel,ย Northern Light.
The corner of his mouth twitched, apparently delighted by my expression.
โSo. We have a deal?โ He held out his hand to me.
My mind spun in dizzying circles. It wasnโt like I had anyย otherย ideas. Maybe a depressed writer could only make a depressing book. โOkay.โ I slid my hand into his, pretending not to feel the sparks leaping from his skin straight into my veins.
โJust one more thing,โ he said soberly. โWhat?โ
โPromise not to fall in love with me.โ
โOh myย God!โ I shoved his shoulder and flopped back into my seat, laughing. โAre you slightly misquotingย A Walk to Rememberย at me?โ
Gus cracked another smile. โExcellent movie,โ he said. โSorry,ย film.โ I rolled my eyes, still shivering with laughter.
A half laugh rattled out of him too. โIโm serious. I think I got to second base in the theater during that one.โ
โI refuse to believe anyone would cheapen the greatest love story involving Mandy Moore ever told by letting a teenage Gus Everett cop a feel.โ
โBelieve whatever you want, January Andrews,โ he said. โJack Reacher risks his life every day to guarantee you that freedom.โ