โAbsolutely not.โ
โIโm sorry, I didnโt quiteโโ โNo!โ I yell.
โโget that.โ
โSiri, stop,โ I shout at my phone on the passenger seat, which is eavesdropping on my shit-talking. I turn back to the task at hand: trying to exert dominance over the ticket machine at the entrance to San Francisco Internationalโs short-term parking lot. Even though Iโve repeatedly pushed the button, it refuses to cough up a ticket, and now thereโs a restless line of cars snaked behind me.
โYou areย notย going to do this to me,โ I growl at the machine. โPlease take your ticket,โ is its snotty reply.
โIโm trying!โ
Suddenly, an attendant materializes out of the ether. โYou need help?โ
โYou have no idea,โ I mutter, but I temper it with a sunny, grateful smile. โI canโt seem to get a ticket.โ
โLetโs see hereโฆโ She pushes the button and a ticket slides out, middle fingers raised at me.
It takes every iota of self-control not to scream as I take it from her. โThank you so much.โ
โYou enjoy your day,โ she says, and moseys off.
Weโre way past that, I fear. Iโm twenty minutes late, stress-sweating through my seasonally inappropriate sweater, and deeply wishing I could snatch back the โsure!โ I threw at Adamโs request; in mere minutes, Iโm seeing Eli for the first time since Nick and Miriamโs wedding.
โItโs not like I couldโve said no, though,โ I huff, lurching up the ramp.
Arguing out loud with myself is a bad sign, but Iโm right. After yesterdayโs performance, what excuse would I have? The next week is
devoted to catering to Adam and Graceโs every whim. More importantly, Eli and I are great, as far as our mutual best friend is concerned.
But now my plan to survive the next nine days without anyone knowing Iโve labeled itย survivingย has officially gone off the rails. I expected the first time I saw Eli to be at Adamโs house for dinner tonight, with witnesses. Weโd say hello like the old friends we arenโt. Maybe Iโd tease him about somethingโhis hair and clothes being predictably perfect despite a transcontinental flight, or the junk food he inevitably has stuffed in his backpack. Heโs an annoyingly healthy eater except when heโs flying; he used to assure me, with a mouth full of Snickers, that the lawlessness of air travel meant empty calories didnโt count.
After tonight, Iโd spend the week too โbusyโ to be around Eli before floating up to Napa County next Friday for the festivities.
Instead, we have to play Awkward Uber. Eliโs flight gets in at the same time as Adamโs grandparentsโ, but he has a ground-eating stride he adopted in New York to maximize his six a.m. efficiency from apartment door to office. Heโll get to baggage claim way before Adamโs grandparents, which will leave us alone together.
One of the golden rules on my Eli Mora list: we donโt spend time alone together.
โShit.โย I slam my door shut, hustling toward the elevator bay. I think back to the list I dragged out from its hiding spot in a box under my bed at one a.m., reciting it as I hop onto the elevator, and a minute later, rush off of it toward baggage claim.
โDonโt make too much eye contact. Ten seconds, max. Donโt stand too close. Donโt touch. Obviously.โ I snort at the absurdity of the thought. I havenโt felt that manโs hands on me for anything but show in five years.
Baggage claim is a well-choreographed dance of chaos when I rush through the automatic doors. I wipe my hands on my jeans, the material abrading my palms. It brings me back into my body; my heart beats in time with my hurried steps as my eyes dart over the crowd. It would be amazing if Adamโs grandparents suddenly had the need for speed and beat Eli.
โDonโt say anything meaningful,โ I mutter. โDonโt talk about anything more consequential than how great the weather is. Are there clouds in the sky? Well, there arenโt now. The sun is shining, the sky is blue, everything is fine.โ
I repeat my mantra until itโs in a cadence as easy as breathing, until Iโm sure Iโve committed every item to memory. Itโs one thing for me to know I stumbled at Nick and Miriamโs wedding last year; itโs another to know Adam and Grace saw it. If this week is going to go smoothly, that list has to be ingrained in my mind. I have to play it to the letter.
And so does Eli.
I weave through the crowd, keeping my eye out for Adamโs grandparents. Eli can handle himself. The nape of my neck prickles with anxiety when I make another lap and still donโt see them. Am I so late that they think I forgot to pick them up? Did they jump in a cab or something? Do they even know how to do that?
What if Iย loseย Adamโs grandparents?
At least this new spiral is distracting me from my Eli-shaped thoughts, but now Iโm turning in a frantic circle, searching for two septuagenarians whoโve likely peaced out becauseโ
The crowd parts. It sounds ridiculous, but itโs true. Itโs like a dance number in a movie, where everyone spins away to make room for the star to step into the spotlight.
That person is Eli, stepping off the escalator, using those ridiculously long legs to make his way toward me.
The first thing I notice is that heโs gorgeous. A head taller than most people, with wide shoulders, dark hair thatโs slightly overgrown and rumpled, and aggressive stubble thatโs encroaching on beard territory. His jeans and T-shirt, though clearly in love with his body, are as disheveled as his hair.
Thatโs wrong. Eli gets a haircut every six weeks. Eliโs clothes donโt wrinkle, and heโs always clean-shaven because once his managing director stopped dead in his tracks, stared at the two-day growth on his jaw, and scoffed, โCome on.โ I exclusively called that man Luce (short for Lucifer).
Thinking about his boss makes me think about his job, which leads me to the second realization: he has a garment bag slung over his arm, but his hands are empty.
Eli is grind cultureโs poster child, the golden boy of Phillips Preston & Co, an investment bank where heโs a Tech, Media & Telecom (or TMT) Associate. His phone is an appendage. No, his lungsโhe canโt breathe easily if itโs not within reach. He should have it in his hand right now, answering aย plsย ๏ฌxย text from Luce or shooting off an email that canโt wait, because they never can. His eyes should be bouncing to me to track my
location, but then away. The ten-second rule.
That brings me to the third thing I notice, the reason my stomach spirals out of my body.
Eliโs gaze is laser-focused on me. And heโs not looking away.
I never forgot what hisย most concentrated attention felt like, but now as heโs fifty feet away, then forty, then twenty, I feel the full force of it for the first time in years.
Even months before we broke up, we were shutting down, diluting a love that had once been so intense I felt it in every fragile system of my body. We stopped talking, were rarely alone together (thanks, Luce), and at the very end, tried not to touch. Maybe we thought it would be easier to let go of a relationship we knew was dead.
Now, for every second we go beyond the threshold of looking, I feel that old connection in my belly, the secret thread I havenโt been able to cut all the way through.
I blink away from his attention, my gaze snagging on the thin gold chain laying against his skin, a necklace handed down from his dad, Marcus, who acquired it fromย hisย dad after visiting distant relatives in Spain years ago. Marcus used to joke that itโs the most Spanish thing about their family, and Eli always keeps it close. It disappears under his collar now, unadorned because he only wears the St. Christopher medal that goes with it when heโs
with his parents. He doesnโt have the heart to tell them heโs been agnostic since he was seventeen.
My eyes reach the ground just as he comes to a stop in front of me and I watch as the toes of his old black Converse nearly kiss the toes of my Vejas. I last saw them stuffed at the back of our shared closet.
Donโt stand too close.ย Itโs a neon sign in my brain, my handwriting on a piece of paper. Eliโs initials are next to it, a five-year-old silent acceptance.
Now, he slashes a line through it.
Something grips me by the ribsโpanic, confusion, an anger I have to control. I inhale, gathering each emotion in tight fists.
โHey.โ
Eliโs breath is mint and chocolate; it stirs the hairs at my temple. Soap lingers on his skin, layered under recirculated air. Beneath that is the spice of his cologne. I used to spray it on my finger and press it behind his ears, drag the scent down his throat while he watched me with hooded eyes.
โGeorgia.โ That snaps me out of my shock, him saying my name, rare when weโre alone.
My gaze jumps to his face. Iโm so close that I can see his pupils dilate, the intensity of his expression. Itโs the polar opposite of our usual vacant coolness.
โHello,โ I say, spreading a thick layer of unspokenย what the hell are you doingย over the words so I donโt say it, because we donโt say the messy stuff out loud. Itโs what wrecked our relationship, and whatโs saved us since.
If he heard the hidden message, he doesnโt acknowledge it, just lets his eyes roam my face, like heโs drinking me in. โLong time, no see.โ
I know how long, down to the day. โHas it been?โ
โYou lookโฆโ His pause is a millisecond long, interrupted by a catch in his breath, but it feels like forever waiting for him to land on, โGood.โ
What a stupid word. I want to look devastating.
โYou lookโฆโ I try to get out the same word, because he does look good
โdevastatingโbut instead I say, โWrinkled.โ
A shadow of a smile curls his mouth. โYeah, well. A six-hour flight with nothing but my thoughts will do that.โ
My eyes dart around the baggage claim area. Save me from whatever this is. โMustโve been some thoughts.โ
โYou have no idea.โ Our gazes catch again, and my heart flips when he holds me there. โSorry Iโm late. Got caught behind a group of slow walkers.โ
He says it with a curl of familiarity, like he knows I know that slow walkers are to him what battery acid is to skin. Like he isnโt standing too close and looking too long and saying my name.
What the hell are you doing?
It nearly slips out, but I grab my breezy veneer by the neck at the last second. โI was running late, too, so itโs only three percent unforgivable. You still beat Adamโs grandparents. Do you have a bag?โ
This all gets tossed at him rapid-fire while I whirl around, pretending Iโm looking for Mr. and Mrs. Kim.
โI checked a suitcase,โ he says behind me, closer now.
I look at him over my shoulder. Eli is the most efficient packer on earth, but apparently nine daysโ worth of clothes in a carry-on can fell even the most buttoned-up man.
My gaze drifts to a wrinkle in his shirt, right over his stomach. โYou should check which carousel it’s coming out of, then.โ I turn, gesturing toward a row of televisions. โYou can find itโโ
โโover there.โ
โItโs carousel five,โ Eli fires back, taking a small step toward me that feels like a leap. I back away, forcing a distant smile. โListenโโ
No way. Heโs borrowing a line from Nia and Adam, and neither of those conversations ended well for me.
Suddenly, a siren blares. A carousel is starting up. I glance around him. Six. Damn it. โI bet your bagโs coming out soon. Your flight landed, what, twenty minutes ago? Twenty-five? Why donโt you go check while I find Adamโs grandparents? Weโll meet back here.โ
Iโm about to make my escape when I feel his fingers brush my arm. Itโs barely a touch, but it sends a jolt through me, leaving me frozen in place.
When I meet his gaze, my emotions are laid bare: shock, irritation, anxiety. The last one reflects back from Eli’s eyes, mingling with a shadow thatโs always there. But beneath it, I catch a spark of determination.
โCan we talk real quick?โ he asks, his voice low. โThereโs somethingโโ
His words fade into the background noise. We donโt ask to talk. Thereโs so much left unsaid between us, and that silence weighs heavily. Itโs only been hours since Adam laid everything out, and any hint of something between Eli and me could send him spiraling.
Absolutely not, I donโt say. I donโt have to. Like a glorious mirage, Mr. and Mrs. Kim appear in the crowd.
โAh, there they are!โ I push past Eli, but I donโt give myself enough room to pass him and my shoulder clips his arm.
Iโm falling apart. Iโm normally aware of the distance between us, but heโs not being careful and suddenly neither am I.
Itโs the curse, Adamโs voice intones in my head.
โShut up,โ I mutter as I rush over to his grandparents. I refuse to believe this isnโt just a temporary blip.
โAnnyeonghaseyo!โ I embrace Adamโs grandfather, repeating the Korean greeting with the inflection theyโve drilled into our brains over the years.
Mr. Kim laughs. โIt gets better every time we see you.โ
โItโs been so long!โ Mrs. Kim exclaims, pulling me into a LโOccitane- scented hug I sink into as Eli and Mr. Kim exchange a hug, too. โHow many years, do you think?โ
โTwo, if you can believe it.โ
She grips me by the arms, assessing me. โYouโre more beautiful than ever. Isnโt she, Eli?โ
I let out whatโs supposed to be a carefree laugh; it sounds like Iโm choking. โOh, he doesnโtโโ
โYes.โ Eliโs response is immediate. His ear flushes a delicate pink as his gaze flicks to mine, and I swear something raw flashes in his eyes. But then I blink and itโs gone, if it was ever even there. โShe is.โ
A mechanical buzz rips through the air, and a crowd starts moving toward carousel five.
โYour bag,โ I get out.
โYep, my bag,โ he says, one corner of his mouth twitching out, not up. Something like frustration works across his face, but then he blanks it out. It reminds me of the Eli he was those months before we broke up. The Eli heโs been since I left him in New York.
But itโs impossible to feel any momentary relief. He tosses me one last look over his shoulder as he walks away, and I donโt miss the leftover gleam of determination still there.