I
stayed up half the night reading old issues ofย The Annihilatorย and paid for it this morning when my eyes had to fight to open at the sound of
my alarm. I donโt have work today, but I should spend a few hours this morning unpacking and settling in before Bo arrives home. Itโs one thing to have boxes or plants piled up in my bedroom, but I donโt want them in the kitchen or living room, taking up too much space and getting in his way.
And just as I load my last mug from the final kitchen box into the dishwasher, the front door beeps and hums as it unlocks, announcing Boโs return.
โHello,โ he calls out, shutting the door behind him.
โHey,โ I reply, filling the dishwasher with detergent, grinning to myself. โIโm in the kitchen,โ I add.
When I shut the dishwasher and turn around, Boโs leaned against the archway, his coat folded over his arm and a canvas duffel bag in his grasp. โHey, roomie,โ he says, his smile wide and downright contagious.
โWelcome home,โ I say, bowing into a stupid little curtsy that I immediately regret. โYou have a great place.โ
Boโs eyes fall over my shoulder, admiring the plants Iโve hung in front of the kitchen window. โI like the plants,โ he says. โOut there too.โ He points to the living room with a thumb over his shoulder.
โNot too many?โ I ask, grimacing.
He shrugs, as if to appear indifferent, but a quick twitch of his lips gives him away. โNot at all,โ he forces out, his pitch wavering.
โOh godโฆ itโs too many.โ
โItโs certainly more than I was expecting, but I like them. Promise.โ
โI did try to warn you,โ I say, grabbing a cup of ice. โAlso, this was a great surprise.โ
โA fridge?โ he asks, switching his bag between hands. I huff out a laugh. โNo, dingus. The ice maker.โ
โDid you just call me aย dingus?โ
โIf the dingus-shoe fits.โ What the fuck am I saying? I shouldnโt try to be funny or flirt on next to no sleep. Not that Iโm attempting to flirt. That would be foolish of meโฆ right? Right.
I look at his luggage, then back at his face, focusing on the dark circles under his eyes. โSorry. Uh, Iโll let you get settled. Did you want some coffee, maybe? If I make some?โ
He hums. โYes, Iโd love one. Thank you. Do you need the bathroom before I take a shower?โ
โNope, go ahead.โ
Twenty minutes later, I finish making Bo aย red eye, with the help of his very fancy espresso machine. And as if he smelled it, he promptly appears from the bathroom, wearing grey basketball shorts, a beige hoodie, and
glasses.ย Black thin-framed glasses that his damp-darkened hair dips below on the right side.
I damn near swallow my tongue.
As if we needed to add glasses to this powder keg of hormones I used to call my body.
โOrder up,โ I say, presenting him with his coffee in a clear glass mug.
โYouโre the best, thank you.โ He takes a long sip, his head falling back as he moans. โEspresso too?โ
โYou looked tired,โ I reply shyly while he hums his appreciation again. โSeriously, you are the best.โ
โWhatโs your plan for the day?โ I ask, pulling some carrot sticks out of the fridge to snack on and dropping them into a bowl.
โI have today off since I was sort of working all weekend. What about you?โ
I cover my mouth to avoid spewing bits of carrot at him as I speak. โThe cafรฉ is closed on Mondays. I was thinking about going for a walk to the beach before I hang out with Sarah later. Did you know you only live a ten- minute walk from one of the prettiest beaches with the most e-coli contaminated water in Southern Ontario?โ I ask.
โThe fish come out with an extra eye, butย man, the view is beautiful,โ Bo replies, turning around to leave the kitchen.
โAlso, I have a confession,โ I say, following him toward the living room, carrying a glass of water and a bowl of carrot sticks in the crook of my wrist. He lowers onto the armchair in the corner, gently moving a leaf of my fern away from his neck and tucking it behind the chair before he settles back into the seat. I take the couch. โI stole your mail.โ
โTheft on day one? Way to come out swinging,โ he says, smirking. โI respect it.โ
โThe Annihilator,โ I say, flaring my hands for dramatic effect. โA
surprisinglyย great read.โ
Boโs smirk turns into a full-fledged, lopsided grin, his eyes dancing around my face. โYouย actuallyย read it?โ
โI did, and then I fell down a rabbit hole and read about a dozen others before passing out last night. Had to download a reading app on my phone to do it. I committed.โ
โTheyโre all in my room. You couldโve saved yourself the money.โ
โAh, well, I-I didnโt want to invade your space. More than I have alreadyโฆโ I say, wincing.
He scowls playfully. โYouโre not invading anything.โ He takes a long sip of his coffee, and I find great satisfaction in watching him sway from side to side as he drinks itโas if heโs never tasted anything so delicious. โBut I suppose if youย didnโtย venture into my room yet, I should warn you that Iโm a bit of aโโ
โMassive nerd?โ I interrupt. โOkay, ouch,โ he laughs out.
โSarah snooped around your room. Caleb and I followed. I tried to get them out, but they were like kids in a toy store. Iโm sorry.โ
โI left my door open on purpose, Win. I knew youโd probably go in there.
I hid all the shit I didnโt want you to see.โ
โSuch as?โ I ask, my nosiness beating out any shred of politeness for time.
โOkay, fine, I only hidย oneย thing.โ โCuriousโฆโ
โIโm allowedย oneย secret,โ he says, smiling into his mug.
Interesting. Whatever it is, it must be juicier than the rope, since he didnโt bother to hide that.ย Donโt say anything about rope, Win. Change the subject before you do.ย โYou know, at first, I was surprised about your nerdom, but then once I started putting the pieces together? It all sort of made sense,โ I say, crossing my legs under me, leaning against the back of the couch.
โI have to know whatย thatย means.โ
โWell, you love math. Youโre far too pretty to be as humble as you are, which means you were either not as hot as a teenager,ย orย you just werenโt in with the cool crowd. Iโm guessing you were like Calebโa late bloomer with a bunch of geeky interests that kept the ladies from knocking down your door.โ
โWell, it worked for him,โ Bo says, one eyebrow raised as he takes a long, thoughtful sip. โSarahโs great.โ
โWell, am I right?โ
โAnnoyingly, yes. I was a band geekย andย a nerd in high school. A winning combination.โ He shakes his head, smiling at his lap. โI have to admit, I thought itโd be aย bitย longer before you read me like a book. I believed I had an air of mystery about me.โ
โYou did. Until I saw the dork cave.โ
โDork caveโฆ okayโฆโ He chews his cheek, mischievousness in his eyes. โSo youโre saying that if, on Halloween, we had come back here instead of Sarahโs guest room, and youโd seen theย very fewย collectibles I own, things may have ended differently?โ
โI didnโt say that.โ I lean back, confidently crossing my arms. โSo what does that make you? A nerd-chaser?โ
โJust horny, I guess.โ
He laughs, his throat bobbing. โWell, Iโm glad our plan of getting to know each other is already working.โ
โI remain a mystery, however.โ I wiggle my brows.
โWeโll work on that,โ he says, his eyes flicking down to my sweater. โStarting withโdid you seriously go to Harvard?โ
I thrifted this sweater so long ago I forgot what it even said across the front. โNo, heh,ย notย Harvard. I went to Lakehead for Outdoor Recreation, Parks, and Tourism, with a concentration in nature-based therapeutic recreation. I have a bachelorโs degree in how to take people canoeing for their mental health, essentially.โ
โDonโt do that,โ Bo says sternly. โWhat?โ I blink at double speed.
โDismiss yourself like that. That sounds really fucking cool and important to me. Donโt trivialise what you accomplished.โ
โOh, uh, wellโฆ thanks.โ
โWhat did you want to do after your degree?โ
โThe dream was to open a summer camp for kids with disabilities. A place built to show them how to adapt the equipment, give them the time and patience to learn that they hadnโt gotten anywhere else. But obviously, that didnโt happen.โ
โWhy?โ โWhy what?โ
โWhy didnโt that happen? It seems to make so much sense.โ
โOh,โ I stutter, reaching for my water to take a sip. โI guess, uh, life just
happenedย instead.โ
Bo waits for me to go on, gently holding eye contact. I start to feel a tightness in my chest, spreading up my throat. But this is what weโre here to
do, right? Get to know each other? Iโll give him the condensed version. He doesnโt need to knowย everything.
โThere was this guyโฆ Jack.โ
โHate him already,โ Bo says, one corner of his mouth raising.
โYeah, well, good instincts.โ I laugh nervously. โWe met in my second- year biology course. He was doing an undergrad in kinesiology. We seemed to have a lot in common, shared a lot of the same friend group, the usual stuff. Eventually, after a few too many beers around a campfire one night, we sort of fell into dating. We finished school together, but he decided to go for his masterโs degree.โ
I shuffle in my seat, looking everywhereย exceptย at Boโs face. โHe asked me to move in with him, and I said yes. Our relationship up until then was mostly fine. But there were definitely some red flags I was choosing to ignore. Anywayโฆ he was going to be a student full time again, and someone had to pay the rent. So I got an office job to get us by and sort of wasted those two years after graduation paying his way. Stupidly, I thought we were a team and that itโd be my turn to go after what I wanted next butโฆ well, you know. When things ended, I moved back here, pretty desperate to get away from it all. I had to start fresh and couldnโt really afford to dream bigger than the cafรฉ and lifeguarding in the summers. Then time sort of moved onโฆ but Iย didnโt, I guess.โ
โHe sounds like a jerk, Win. Iโm sorry.โ โLong time ago now,โ I say, shrugging.
Thereโs a lingering silence. I resist the urge to look back toward him as much as I can, feeling his eyes burning into me. After what feels likeย farย too long, I decide to give in, mostly to set him at ease with a smile. But when I do eventually turn toward him, I donโt smile. Iย canโt.
Not when Boโs looking at me like he heard far more than I was willing to say. Like heโs seeing every invisible scar Iโve tried to cover up.
โHe wasnโt nice to you.โ He states it like fact. Simple. Sad.ย True.
I shake my headย no. Just subtle enough that a part of me can pretend I didnโt answer him at all.
Boโs jaw works, his eyes falling briefly before he shakes his head. โIโm sorry.โ
I inhale a shaky breath, biting the inside of my cheek. โLike I said, it was a long time ago.โ
He nods, then scratches the side of his nose with a bent knuckle. Change the subject, everything inside of me shouts.
โDid, uh, did you go to university?โ
Bo licks his lips, nodding, his usual lightness missing. โYeah, Waterloo for Accounting and Financial Management.โ
โSounds like a party,โ I tease. He rolls his eyes playfully, though his smile is still absent. It seems his thoughts are held elsewhere. I wonderโฆ if maybeโฆ theyโre held onย her.ย โDid you have a Jack too?โ I ask.
Bo breathes into his hand as he wipes his mouth. โHow much has Caleb told you?โ he asks, eyeing me like heโs got my number.
I tsk, hissing in through my teeth. โBusted,โ I say quietly through a nervous, soundless laugh. โCaleb hasnโt said much, though.โ Nothing helpful, at least. โI donโt think he and Cora are particularly close.โ
โListen, things were complicated with Cora. I donโt want to imply that
โโ
โYou should probably know that Sarah and I refer to her as the spawn of Satan,โ I interrupt. โFrequently and in front of Caleb. Sheโs been nothing
but nasty to Sarah. So if youโre trying to be diplomatic for my sake, donโt bother.โ
โYou shouldnโt call her that,โ Bo says gently, leaning forward in his seat, his hands clasped between his knees, wringing. โI meanโฆ sorry. You can call her whatever you want. I justโฆโ His voice trails off.
I feel a twinge of guilt and unease pull my lips askew. โSorry,โ I offer simply. So heโsย notย over his ex, then. The sudden pang of sadness thrumming around my chest is unexpected. Itโs not jealousy, I donโt think. Or at least, not entirely. Itโs more complicated than that. Itโs wondering if during one of the more meaningful sexual experiences of my life, certainly the most pleasurable, my partner was thinking of someone else.ย Wishingย for someone else. If I was justโฆ there. Available. Overly willing, throwing myself at him until he gave in. Itโs the crushing weight of questioning whether he wishes I was her. Them having a baby. Them sharing a home. It makes me feel like a trespasser. Inferior.
โI shouldnโt have called her that.ย Weย shouldnโt call her that. Youโre right.โ
I can tell Boโs choosing his words carefully as he sets his emptied mug down on the coffee table. โIt shouldnโt upset me. It wasnโt exactly a good relationship. She, uh, Coraโฆ things between us were not great.โ
Things are already awkward; I may as well get some answers. โCalebย didย mention that you two were engaged.โ The moment I say it, Boโs hands are all over his faceโanxiously rubbing at his chin and cheeks and forehead.
โYeah,โ he says, his nose scrunching up. โTechnically, yes.โ โTechnically?โ I ask when he looks up at me.
โOkay. Weโre doing this,โ he says, under his breath. โDay one, pulling out the big guns.โ He laughs half-heartedly.
โIโm sorry,โ I say, shaking myself. โWe donโt have toโฆโ
โDid you want to take that walk to the beach? Together? I always find it easier to walk and talk about heavier shit, you know?โ
Iย doย know. Thatโs what I went to school for, at some level.
โYeah, sure.โ I nod and stand from the couch. โGive me a few minutes to change.โ
A little while later, weโre both dressed in warmer layers and halfway to the water. Weโve walked mostly in silence so far, making fleeting comments about cute dogs as they pass us by or how lovely the weather feels after an otherwise moody winter.
When we arrive at the beach, itโs empty. The sand is nearer to mud in colour, wet and partially covered with half-frozen puddles in its valleys. The rocky shore is hidden under snow thatโs already begun melting under todayโs golden sun. The lakeโs ice is thin enough to see through and cracking all over. The sky is a hazy blue with soft, wispy clouds, as if a painter dried their brush against the horizon.
A perfect late-winter day.
A hopeful, spring-is-closer-than-you-think type of day.
I feel it all thawing my weary bones. The sunshine, the birds singing, the breeze that isnโt frigid enough to hurt my skin. A sign of all the good to come when winter ends. When I can spend my days outside, feeling more like myself.
It isnโt until we stop at the shoreline that Bo seems to begin collecting his thoughts once again. This time, I wait patiently for him to offer me whatever he wants. I shouldnโt have pried, considering thereโs a lot Iโm not quite ready to tell him about my last relationship, so I wonโt again.
I collect a few stones from the shore and silently offer them to him with an open palm. He takes one, smiles politely, and tosses it. We both watch as it skates across a patch of ice before sliding into the water. I throw one too. It lands directly in a patch of the lake with no ice at all. I watch the ripples form and fade to nothing.
โI got diagnosed a few months after Cora and I called things off for the third time,โ Bo says, his voice wayward but strong. โShe, uh, she and I were on different wavelengths for most of the relationship. We kept, I kept, trying to fight the inevitable that we just didnโt work. We started dating at twenty- three, and it was simpler when we were just two people focused on our careers who were working in the same field and trying to get ahead. But eventually, we were left constantly trying to figure out how we slotted into each otherโs lives outside of work, reconciling that we werenโt a very good fit.โ He licks his lips, looking at the water with a furrowed brow and stoic concentration.
โGod, itโs pretty fucking pathetic to say out loudโฆ but I think, maybe, she just never loved me as much as I loved her?โ He says it like a question, looking down at me as if I might have the answer. I donโt. Canโt.
I think Iโve maybe already said too much, actually. Reducing Cora to this caricature villain instead of someone Bo sharedย yearsย of his life with. Despite how sheโs treated Sarah or me, I donโt know Cora all that well. Clearly, Bo does. And clearly, heย lovedย her.
โAdmittedly, there were a lot of reasons I shouldnโt have called her the day I found out I was sick, butโฆ I did. I wasย reallyย fucking scared andโฆ lonely. Iโdย neverย felt so alone.โ He laughs without humour, a hand splayed along his jaw as he grinds his back teeth.
I pick up a few more stones and offer one to him. He gives me a curt nod before he takes one and tosses it so far that I have to squint to see it land.
โI had friends I couldโve called, I guess. But I wasnโt sure if any of them would know how to help. I needed company. I needed tough love, which Cora always had in spades.โ I hand him another stone, and he tosses it. This time itโs a shallower, weaker throw. He shoves his hands deep into his pockets, widening his stance slightly as his chest falls on a long breath.
โI wanted to call my dad, but I was worried about burdening him. He lost his wife decades before my diagnosis, and heโd still never really moved on. I didnโt have it in me to tell him that he could be losing his only son too. Cora was there when I didnโt know who else to call, and Iโm always going to be grateful she showed up for me.โ
โIโm glad she was there for you too,โ I say softly. And I mean it. Though it creates an ache in my chest. Perhaps itโs guilt. Could be jealousy. Or, more accurately, both.
โA month into treatment, Cora sort of announced to me that weโd be getting married. I know it makes me sound like an idiot, but I kinda just went along with it. Everything in my life felt unstable and untethered, and suddenly, there was this woman I love telling me she was choosing to stick it out with me. I wanted that stability.โ
I feel a thrum of energy pass through me from head to toe. It hits my chest with a gentle but noticeable blow.ย Love.ย In theย presentย tense.ย Boย lovesย Cora.
โBut when the chemo wasnโt working and the cancer was progressing, amputation became the only option. Andโฆ the odds were looking bleak regardless.โ We naturally fall back into walking at a relaxed pace toward
the pier with a small lighthouse and empty docks where locals keep their boats during warmer months.
โAt that point, I think it got to be too much for her. She stopped coming to appointments. Stopped coming over entirely. Eventually, she stopped answering my calls too. I got the message that she needed to step away from it all, and we havenโt talked since. Not a lot of closure, I know. Butโฆ part of me feels like thatโs for the best, honestly. She was there for me when I needed her, and I think she did me a favourโฆ in the long run.โ
โI donโt think she did you a favour by leaving you when you needed her most. Thatโs a pretty cowardly thing to do. She shouldโve at least told you to your face that she couldnโt handle it. Let you have thatโฆ proper end.โ
Bo shrugs. โSheโd already ended things before, though. I was the one who tried to fix it every timeโwhy we kept getting back together. Maybe she knew that was how it had to play out. She had to hurt me so Iโd let her go. And I doubt many people would stick around when the worst-case scenario seemed inevitable.โ
I would,ย I think. Then immediately berate myself for placing myself morally above Cora, even inside my own thoughts. Ultimately, I donโt know what Iโd do in that situation. I doubt Iโd have left him, though. I donโt really understand how anyone could do such a thing. Even imagining what that would have felt like has me near tears, has me wanting to reach out for his hand or tuck him against my chest and brush my hand over his hair. Protect him from it, shield him, as if I could change the past.
โWhen did you tell your dad?โ I ask.
โAbout six hours before the surgeryโฆโ he says, then trills his lips, looking away from me sheepishly.
I groan. โYikes.โ
โYeahโฆ not my best work.โ โHow did he take it?โ
โUm, not great,โ Bo says in a higher pitch than usual, some humour returning to his features. โHe reverted to his native tongue to call me every name in the book, then got the first flight out. He stayed with me for three months after the surgery. I couldnโt have gone home without his help. I donโt know what I wouldโve done, actually.โ
โHe sounds like a great dad,โ I say as Bo reaches down and pockets something from the sandy shore. โAnd I knew he lived in France, but I didnโt realise heย wasย French.โ
โYeah, my mom was from here, and Dad is from a small town outside of Paris. They met playing in the same orchestra in Toronto and got married ten days after meeting.โ
โYouโre kidding.โ I snort.
โNope, just ten days at nineteen years old. They didnโt have me until ten years later.โ
โThatโsโฆ thatโsย wild,โ I say.
โMy dad says the moment he saw my mom, he just knew. He took one look at her and watched the rest of his life play out.โ Bo stops, a sweet, longing look in his eye as he smiles softly at me. I imagine heโs probably thinking of Cora and what could have been.
โYou must miss her,โ I say, meaning his motherโbut the possibility that it could have meant either Cora or his mother isnโt lost on me. Sometimes the people who haunt us are still alive. I understand that too.
โYeah,โ Bo agrees, turning back toward the path. โBut I was really young when she passed.โ
โIโm sorry,โ I offer, matching his pace. โDo you remember much of her?โ
โNo,โ he says plainly. โBut Dad had a lot of stories and photos. He kept everything of hersโlike her vinyl collection. Most of the records at the house were hers.โ He stops, putting an arm out to block my next step.
I look toward the path ahead, expecting a skunk or something more nefarious to appear out of the bushes. But nothing does.
โDid you hear that?โ he asks me urgently, his voice low. He spins, looking around us frantically.
โNo?โ I whisper-yell, leaning away from his floundering limbs. โWhat
โโ
โShit,ย where is it?โ
โWhat?โ I ask, louder. โI heard a goose.โ
I stop abruptly, my shoes scraping against the stone-covered path. I stare up at him in disbelief, my lips parting into a grin that I have to stifle before it becomes a laugh. โWeโre at a beach in Canada, Bo. Youโre gonna hear geese,โ I say, continuing to whisper forย whateverย absurd reason.
โThey hate me.โ Bo turns his head toward a sound over the water to our left, his shoulders up to his ears.
โThey hate youโฆโ
โThey go for my legย everyย time. I donโt know if itโs because itโs shiny and they like that, or if geese are just little ableist fucks, but theyโre always trying to attack me.โ
I try to hold the laugh in. I really do. But I fail. Miserably. I burst. โSorry,
what?โ
Bo bends to pick up a rock the size of his palm and waits to strike.
โYou cannot use that,โ I say, taking the rock from him and chucking it aside. Our fingers brush briefly, though by the way my heart thuds, youโd
think the guy had pinned me to the nearest tree and ripped off my tights.ย Fucking hormones.ย โNo geese murder today, my guy. Iโm pretty sure itโs Canadaโs most sacred law, and Iโm not bringing the baby to visit you in prison.โ
He hushes me, turning back toward the water and then in a full circle, like a bodyguard on watch.
I laugh at him, harder this time.
โStop!โ he whines, his own laughter breaking free. โItโs not funny!โ
I shake my head, forging back toward Boโs house. โCโmon,โ I call, a few paces ahead of him. โIโll protect you from any possible geese assailants.โ
โI will throw you to them,โ he says. โIf it comes to it.โ โOnly if you can catch me first.โ