YOU KNOW WHERE THE CLOROXย WIPES ARE,
RIGHT?
RUE
It was the soft pitter-patter of the rain against the windows thatย woke me up, and the muted swish of a car riding past the house that finally convinced me to open my eyes. There was no disorientation. I immediately knew where
I was, and that the digital clock blinking at me from the nightstand in lime green was Eliโs.
It was ten forty-five in the morning.
The curtains were still drawn. Eli was nowhere to be found. I couldnโt remember the last time Iโd slept so deeply, so uninterruptedly, or so late. Maybe it was the bedโmortuary slabโsolid, just the way I liked. The sex, perhaps. I had no clue, nor did I plan to investigate the matter further. As furtively as I was capable of, I gathered the breadcrumb trail of clothes weโd scattered around the bed, and slipped into the en suite.
It was the same gentle mix of cleanliness and chaos as Eliโs bedroom. I peed, rinsed my mouth with some pilfered Listerine, and snuck down the stairs, stopping when I heard noises coming from the kitchen.
Shit.
Iโd promised Eli Iโd tell him before leaving. Back when I thought
leavingย would happen in the middle of the night. I was going to have to
walk-of-shame this. Embarrassing, but not as embarrassing as Eli knowing how bad I was at sixty-nining.
I headed for the kitchen, ready to keep my goodbyes quick and honest.ย Thank you for last night, Eli. I enjoyed it. I always enjoy it. Itโs starting to feel cruel, the combination of who you are and what you can do to me. Letโs never meet again, okay?ย But when I took a deep breath and made myself step inside, Eli looked different.
Like a tinier, prettier version of himself. Ferocious brown curls falling onto slight shoulders, eerily light blue eyes, and that halfwarm, half- cutthroat grin. A few inches shorter than me. A girl. Briefly slack-jawed, until her surprise morphed into a smile. โWell, well, well. Look who got laid last night.โ
I lifted an eyebrow.
The girl instantly blushed. โSorry! I didnโt meanย you, I would neverโI meant my brother! Hi, Iโm Maya Killgore.โ
The sister. Did she live here? โRue. Siebert.โ
โSo lovely to meet you. I promise I donโt usually comment on random peopleโs recent sexual history, just . . .โ
โYour brotherโs?โ
โPrecisely.โ She finger-gunned me. โHe never tells me shit, so I have to resort to ruthless investigative methods. Is he trying to wife you?โ
โTo . . . what?โ I needed caffeine.
โAre you guys dating, or are you just using his body?โ
โUm. The latter.โ A beat. โItโs more of a reciprocally beneficial agreement.โ
โNice. Good on you guys.โ She seemed sincerely happy. โWhere did you meet?โ
โI work for a company here in Austin. Harkness recently attempted to acquire us.โ And had not succeeded yet. It felt good to remind myself. Softened my guilt, too.
โHoly shit, you work for Kline? You know Florence?โ
The shame at hearing Florence mentioned in Eliโs house was so intense, I had to take a breath before saying, โYes.โ
โWhatโs she like? I picture her as a giant tentacled monster.โ
Why didย sheย know about Florence? โSheโs a five-three redhead. Untentacled. Not particularly monstrous looking.โ To trim the conversation
before it could grow its own appendages, I added, โShe is a close friend of mine.โ
Mayaโs eyes went saucer wide, but a second later her pleasant smile was restored. โWould you like some coffee?โ
โNo, thank you. I was just going home. Is Eli . . . ?โ โHeโll be back soon. I can text him, too.โ
โNo need.โ Iโd asked after him. I wasnโt sneaking out. Iโd text him once I got back to my place and make up a nonexistent Saturday morning engagement.ย I man the arugula booth at the farmersโ market. I AquaGym. Did I mention Iโm a mother of four? Theyโre waiting for breakfast. โThank you, Iโll justโโ
The front doorโagainst which Iโd nearly engaged in public sex the previous nightโopened. The first to come in was the giant dog, who looked even larger and even happier in the daylight. He chose violence, and shook several gallons of rainwater all over the wooden floor, sparing no surface. The second, of course, was Eli. He pulled back the hood of a dark green windbreaker, and when his eyes found me, he said, โI was wondering if youโd still be here.โ He was smiling. Half-pleased, half-challenging, half- all-knowing.
Something hot and cold ran through me. โIโโ
โRude,โ Maya interrupted. โAre you trying to get rid of her?โ
โIf only you knew, Maya,โ he drawled. He draped his jacket over a high- backed chair, gaze never leaving me.
โKnew what?โ Maya petted Tiny, who this morning was supremely uninterested in me.ย Good boy.
โRue was a figure skater with Alec,โ Eli informed her instead of answering.
โFor real? Heโs theย best.โ I nodded. โHe is.โ
โDo you still skate?โ โNot competitively.โ โWhat about for fun?โ โI do.โ
โAt Daveโs rink?โ โFor the most part.โ
โWait.โ Those Eli eyes of hers narrowed. โRue Siebert. I know you!
Didnโt you get a synchro scholarship for some place in Wisconsin?โ
โMichigan. Adrian College.โ
โOh my god. I remember you! We only overlapped for a few months but you wereย so good.โ
โI wasnโt thatโโ
โAt mentoring, I mean. You taught me how to do a backward crossover, remember?โ I didnโt, but she continued anyway, grinning. โI sucked. Four other people tried, and I couldย notย figure it out. Come on, you have to rememberโIโm the girl who burst out crying in the middle of the rink. You brought me to a bench, sat next to me, and neither of us said anything for, like, half an hour. Once I calmed down you asked me if I was ready to start again and then I got the crossover on the first try! It must have been in the spring ofโโ
A car honked right outside. I jolted, and Maya rolled her eyes. โThatโll be Jade.โ She picked up her backpack and an oversized, over-stickered water bottle. โIt was so nice to see you again, Rue! Iโm going to spend the day at the library, so you two should feel free to have morning sex on the table.โ She glanced at Eli from over her shoulder. โYou know where the Clorox wipes are, right?โ She was gone before he could reply, leaving us alone, looking at each other with something that felt a lot like understanding.
Heย knew that I was going to sneak out.
Iย knew that he knew. Andย heย knew that, too.
I lifted my chin with a hint of a challenge, and his lips widened into a grin, as though I was following a script heโd written in his head for me.
โWere you going to leave me a note?โ he asked affably. โOr just text later?โ
I kept my spine straight. โThe latter.โ
โLess time consuming.โ He nodded, entertained, and opened a cupboard. Kibble tinkled into the dogโs metal bowl, and Tiny, whoโd begun circling me looking for the kind of affection that other people seemed to give effortlessly to pets, instantly lost interest in me. On the table above him, I noticed a developed chess board.
โIs that your game?โ
Eli nodded. โAgainst Maya.โ โYou play a lot?โ
โA fair bit. Weโre not Nolan Sawyer level, or anythingโโ
โMallory Greenleaf level, you mean?โ
He just smiled. โDo you really not remember my sister?โ
โI . . .โ I did, actually, if only because of the way sheโd sobbed silently next to me. It had felt heartbreaking and relatable, and Iโd wished there was something I could say. But I was going through the exact same, and I knew that no words existed that would have helped. โIs it okay that she saw me?โ I asked.
โWho?โ
โYour sister.โ
โWhy wouldnโt it be?โ
โMaybe you donโt want to share your hookups with your younger sister, who might very well be a minor.โ She didnโt look it, but the older I got, the more every age under twenty-five blended together.
โSheโs almost twenty-two. Or thirteen, Iโm never sure.โ โYouโre the elder?โ
He nodded. โIs Vincent older?โ
โHeโs three years younger. And itโs just us.โ โI figured, since the cabinโs split in two.โ
โYeah.โ I didnโt want to talk about him. โYour sister seems . . .โ โNice?โ
Actually, what Iโd been thinking was that Maya and Eli looked comfortable together, and I felt irrationally betrayed by that. When we first met, Iโd gotten the impression that their relationship was as fraught as mine was with Vince. โDoes she live here?โ
โYup.โ
โOf her own free will? Or are you kidnappingย her, too?โ
โBelieve it or not, sheย askedย to move in.โ He seemed incredulous, too. โI offered to pay for an apartment near campus, but she wanted to live with her closest surviving blood relative. To keep an eye on her set of spare kidneys, probably.โ
I smiled, and so did he. Like amusing me was a rewarding micro-hobby of his.
โIs this the home where you grew up?โ
โNope. I grew up in South Austin. Riverside. The bank took that home about a decade ago, though. What about you?โ
We never owned a home for the bank to take, my sleep-woolly brain almost responded. โI lived in Salado.โ
His eyebrow rose. โAnd you commuted every day to Daveโs rink?โ โYes.โ
He cocked his head. โHow did you end up skating, anyway?โ
โTishaโs mom used to be an ice dancer. She thought I looked promising, found Alec.โ I didnโt elaborate on the rest. How liberating it had been, pushing through the cold of the ice, being away from my family. How grueling practice had become as the stakes had risen. How impossible it had been to consider quitting with the prospect of waived tuition fees dangling in front of my eyes. Instead, I changed the topic. โDo you bring home lots of women?โ
โI believe you were a first.โ He shrugged. โAlthough my exfiancรฉe used to live here.โ โThe chef.โ
โYup.โ
I tilted my head and watched him lean against the counter, enjoying the way he filled a room. How concrete his presence felt. โHow does that happen?โ
โWhat?โ
โHow do you go from wanting to marry someone to . . . not?โ โSurprisingly quickly. With limited drama, too.โ No cheating, then.
What else, though? Had they fallen out of love? Had she moved away for her fancy chef job? Had she broken his heart? โHave you ever been in a relationship?โ he asked.
โBy relationship, you mean . . . ?โ
โA mutually agreed-upon, medium-or long-term romantic engagement. Dating, if you prefer.โ He smiled the same grin Iโd felt between my legs last night. What weโd done should have helped me metabolize him, but I was no closer to finding him uninteresting than Iโd ever been. The opposite, if anything.
A silver coin refusing to oxidize, thatโs what he was. A compulsive tingle hooked right in my belly.
โItโs none of my business,โ he continued, โbut Iโd still love it if you told me.โ
โNo. Youโre the first person Iโve been with more than once.โ His lip curled. โSex is that good, huh?โ
Itโs because with you I never have to worry about being too odd, too unlikable, too out of tune. You never make me feel anything other than just right. But the sexย wasย the best Iโd ever had, so I simply said, โYes.โ
My soft honesty seemed to disarm him. His face fell, and his eyes darkened. โCome here,โ he beckoned, just a flick of his fingers, and even though it meant betraying Florence, whoโd given me the world, I did go. Let him pull me closer, into his chest.
โI believe,โ he murmured against my ear, โI owe you something.โ โYou can keep my underwear.โ
โNot that.โ โWhat, then?โ
โWe said three times.โ
A buzzing, warm static filled the air between us. โIt doesnโt matter. Itโs not . . .โย Itโs uncountable. You, and the things we do, the things you give me, the things you make me feel, theyโre impossible to quantify. They are good in a way that goes beyond orgasms, and I canโt really keep track, or tick off checkboxes. Itโs confusing. Youย are confusing. โItโs fine.โ
โIs it?โ He filled the space between us. His mouth tasted of toothpaste and rainy mornings, his kiss at once shallow and intense, eager yet lingering. Not aย weโre about to fuckย kiss. Not aย we just fuckedย kiss. Those were the extent of my experiences so far, so I wasnโt certain how to categorize this one.
Goodbye. Maybe it was a goodbye kiss.
He slowly pulled back. โYouย canโtย go out like this, Rue.โ โWhat do you mean?โ
โYouโre filthy. You need a shower, donโt you?โ โIโll have one later.โ
โLater?โ His nose curled in distaste, and I frowned. โIs that a problem?โ
โI was about to take one.โ
I wasnโt sure how to respond.ย How hygienic of you. My fondest congratulations. I hope itโs everything you wish for. โOkay. Iโm going toโโ โJoin me.โ His fingers braided with mine. โYou have to shower at some point, donโt you? Might as well make it fun.โ There was no way this was a good idea, and he must have seen it in my face, because he asked, โWhy
not?โ
Because of Florence. Because youโre a bad person, doing bad things. Because youโre wrong, and against everything I stand for, and people could be hurt if they were to find out. Problem was, I didnโt want to say no. I also didnโt want to say yes, but it didnโt matter.
Judging by Eliโs smile, nodding seemed to suffice.