I nearly forgot how hotย Eli being ultra-competent is, a misstep on my part because heโs the most competent person I know.
Heโs already gathered tools and turned off the water supply, and is now crouched in front of the sink, eyeing the pipes underneath.
โIt probably got stuck in the P trap. I have to loosen these connectors and remove the pipe.โ He looks over his shoulder at me, a solid six feet away. I donโt trust myself to be closer. โDo you mind shining a light in here so I can see?โ
There goes that idea. โNo problem.โ
I reach for my phone, stopping when I see the chaos-causing paper ring on the counter.ย Shit.ย Did Eli see it?
Picking up my phone with one hand, I flick the ring with the other, trying to scoot it behind Graceโs ring box.
Instead, it ricochets against the backsplash, careening off the counter like Thelma and Louiseโs car. It swan dives onto Eliโs naked back, then arcs away, landing on the floor next to his knee.
Eli looks down at it. I look down at it. Then we look at each other and the thirteen years of memories that silly little paper ring holds settle between us.
โCole threw it at me yesterday,โ I explain, like he wasnโt there to see it.
Like thatโs an excuse for why I kept it afterward. โHeโs an asshole.โ โYeah, well,โ he says, โwe all have our strengths.โ
Eli grins when I laugh, a full one that shoots heat through me, but it fades as he looks back at the ring.
He could ask questions. This version of Eli might, a realization that makes my heart skip. But instead he picks it up, pinching it between his fingers. He sits back on his haunches, not quite on his knees, but the effect makes my stomach freefall anyway. At one point, I wished for this.
His gaze flicks up to me. โI think this is my best work yet.โ
My breath leaves in a soft huff. โGive your medium some credit. That paper is much more luxurious than a straw wrapper.โ
โNot as good as a gum wrapper, though,โ he muses. โLess flexibility.โ โYouโve always been passionate about your craft.โ
โSure have,โ he murmurs. He looks at it for a beat longer before placing it on the counter. Then he clears his throat and rubs the back of his neck, turning to the sink. โDid you have the water running when the ring fell?โ
โOh,โ I stutter, disoriented by the shift in conversation. โUm, for a minute. Thatโs how I got wet.โ
His eyes dart to my drying shirt. โOkay. It still shouldโve stopped in the P trap.โ
I kneel at his hip, close enough to feel the heat from his skin. With my flashlight shining, he takes the tool and starts loosening the connector. I try to keep my attention on his work, but soon enough Iโm following the trail of undulating muscles in his forearms up to the bunch and release of his biceps, the shift of his shoulders and the flex of his back.
Then, torturously, he lets out a soft grunt of exertion. My body recognizes it immediately as the sound heโd make when heโd watch me take him inside, and every erogenous zone I have lights up like a pinball machine.
Iโm not going to survive this.
โI forgot how good you are at fixing random things.โ My voice is loud and wild in the quiet of the room, and Eli looks over, his eyebrows jumping. โGuess I absorbed all that handiwork my dad did after he got laid off,โ
he says, setting aside the wrench so he can shimmy the pipe. It wiggles, but doesnโt separate, and he picks up the wrench again. โI liked going on jobs with him sometimes to keep him company.โ
An old ache is threaded through his voice. I know how it hurt him to watch his parentsโ previously solid marriage fall apart, how out of control it made eldest, responsible Eli feel to see everyone in his family suffer, himself included. His adult belief system grew from that disaster: financial stability thatย heย controlled meant heโd never have to feel that way again.
No matter what other feelings I had, I never judged him for falling victim to the wounds of his adolescence. God knows I did the same thing. But while he was trying to fix what was broken in his past, he was breaking something that was right in front of him.
That thought is a splash of cold water. An addition to the list of reasons I need to keep my distance.
Itโs just hard when he keeps gettingย closer. Like now, as his shoulder presses into mine.
I scooch over. โHowโs your dad doing?โ
โHeโs great,โ he says, pride rumbling through his voice. โHe just bought a house in Pasadena, and heโs got a carpentry business going.โ
I know. I follow him on Instagram, press a little heart onto every picture he posts of his workโbeautiful furniture made of reclaimed wood that gets hundreds of likes and dozens of comments.
A few months ago, Marcus DMed me, said he appreciated every post I liked, and that he hoped I was doing well. He signed off with,ย miss you, kiddo.
I cried for three days, read it obsessively until I forced myself to delete
it.
โAnd your mom and sisters are good?โ I ask. Nina and Zoe are as
ghostlike on social media as Eli, so they donโt have accounts I can stealthily stalk, but I know via his dadโs account that theyโre about to start their junior and senior years of college, respectively. Eliโs mom texts me happy birthday every year, though I doubt he knows it.
I miss them all, but Kelly especially; I used to dream about calling her Mom someday. Now I keep my distance, but Iโve never been able to let go completely.
โYep, theyโre all good. Momโs in Denver,โ Eli says, breaking that thought apart. โHer partner proposed a few months ago.โ
โThatโs amazing.โ
โYeah. It was a long time coming. Everything falling into place like that, I mean.โ He pauses, darting a quick glance at me before returning to loosening the pipe. โFor a long time I thought if my family didnโt look like
it did before all our shit went down, then how could we ever be happy like that again?โ His attention shifts back to me, and this time his gaze is a lingering trace. โThey really are, though. Itโs different, but thatโs okay.โ
I donโt miss that heโs talking about them, not himself, and I have the urge to ask him ifย heโsย happy. But itโs not my place to ask. Softly, I say, โWell, that makes me happy, too.โ
Something warm and sad passes through his eyes. โWhat about your dad? Heโs good? Slowing down, I hope?โ
โNo, still working hard.โ I shrug. โProbably until the day he dies.โ
For a moment heโs quiet, jaw flexing. And then he says, โHeโll regret that someday. Having a daughter like you and not taking advantage of every minute.โ
My throat clogs. โItโsโโ
โDonโt say itโs fine.โ His eyes are locked on me, his voice strangely hoarse. โItโs not.โ
It isnโt, but it doesnโt change the reality of it, and talking about it now wonโt either. Itโs too tender, and weโre too close, and Eliโs looking at me too fiercely. I could dissolve under his attention, but Iย canโt.
I look away. โAdamโs ring is probably screaming for us in that pipe.โ
I canย feelย his appraisal. His desire to push. Finally, he murmurs, โOkay.โ The room quiets as Eli lays the wrench down again and wiggles the pipe. This time it pulls off, and he empties the standing water into the
bucket.
โHmm.โ
โWhat?โ
โItโs not here. Itโs either stuck in the pipe above, or it couldโve moved further this way.โ He leans in, squinting at the opening of the pipe that goes into the wall. I crawl closer, shining my light. Weโre basically under the sink together now, bodies connected from knee to shoulder. Itโs torture where our bare skin grazes.
His breath hitches, echoing around us. He tips his chin, the barest movement that still brings our mouths within inches of each other.
โIf it moved further, weโre going to have to call someone,โ he says.
โFuck,โ I whisper.
His eyes flare, even as his tone turns soothing. โLetโs try the other way first. Have you seen anything made of wire around here? A hanger, maybe?โ
The conversation is neutral, but the air between us is thick. I can smell the mint toothpaste on his breath, see the beating pulse in his neck. โMy dress is still on its dry-cleaning hanger.โ
โAll right, go get that, please.โ
Itโs a quiet demand that lights me up, reminds me of the way heโd sometimes get bossy and greedy during sex, this same man who I feared didnโt need me in the secret, desperate way I craved. It made our connection strip itself to the bones, turned it honest and real in a way I wouldnโt fully allow in the rest of our life.
Everything is suddenly too muchโthe past, the present, Eliโand I lurch back. His hand curls around the back of my head just before it smashes against the cabinet.
โCareful,โ he rumbles, fingers tightening in my hair. God, Iโm trying to be.
โIโll be right back,โ I babble, scrambling out of our tight space.
After three hundred cleansing breaths and a stern, whispered lecture to myself, I return from the bedroom with the wire hanger. Eli molds it straight, then hands it back to me.
โStick that down the drain and wiggle it. Iโll stay down here in case it falls.โ
He crawls under the sink while I wiggle the hanger as directed. I have no idea what Iโm doing, and my heart starts beating fast at the thought of having to call a plumber in.
As if he hears me spiraling, Eli says, โYouโre doing great.โ โPlease,โ I whisper, peering down into the drain.
And then a triumphant, โI got it.โ
โYou got it?โ I throw the hanger to the side as he scoots out. The ring is on his middle finger, sitting above his knuckle. โOh my god, you got it!โ
Itโs like someoneโs plucked me by the back of the shirt and dropped me over the edge of a cliff. The relief is that visceral. Itโs the excuse Iโll use later for why, when Eli stands, I throw my arms around his neck.
I donโt know the last time Eli and I hugged for real, because of a shared happiness. If I could pinpoint that moment, I probably wouldโve spent the last five years torturing myself with it, so maybe itโs for the best. I just know that when Eli wraps his arms around my waist following a brief hesitation, it feels like coming home after the longest time away.
He lets out a shattered breath, pulling me closer, crushing my breasts against his chest. His heart hammers with mine. Through the thin material of my T-shirt, I feel the cold metal of Adamโs wedding band and I close my eyes, trying to remember itโs about him and Grace, not this. Trying to remember Iโm supposed to keep my distance.
But, fuck it. If this is the actual last time we hug like thisโfor real, in happinessโthen Iโm going to revel in it. I have enough memories that hurt; whatโs one more?
I should say something. Instead, I press my face into the curve where his shoulder and neck meet, biting my lip so I wonโt put my mouth on him. Itโs how I rationalize it:ย at least Iโm not going that far. Itโs just this. Just for a minute.
Eliโs nose brushes against my cheek, his stubble scratching at my skin. An accident the first time, I think, until he does it again. I pull back until the corners of our mouths are nearly aligned.
This is a bad, very horrible idea, my brain screams, but my body presses closer. Eliโs arms tighten, fingers digging into the small of my back.
โGeorgia,โ he whispers, and I hate my past self for writing on our list that we should avoid saying each otherโs names. I hate that I forced myself to be so careful, even as I recognize that I need it right now more than ever.
I scrawl out all the reasons in my mind: that Eli and I didnโt work the first time. That trying again would hurt, likely in the same ways. It would ruin whatever modicum of ability we have to keep things bearable for the sake of our friendship with Adam. That this new Eli, who looks so much like the old one I loved, canโt be here to stay. That I donโt want this. Canโt
have it, or else itโll ruin me again, and this time Iโll become the mess I refused to be before.
Iโll remember all that in a second.
I pull back another millimeter. Two, until Iโm looking at the deep, warm starburst of his eyes, filled with gold and sparking heat. His nose grazes mine and his lashes flutter down, press hard against his skin.
His hands drop to my hips. Shape them, and then grip them. โYouโre not going to want this,โ he whispers.
I told myself the same thing seconds ago, but hearing him say it out loud scrambles my brain. โWhat?โ
โIn thirty seconds, youโre not going to want this, and I canโt pull away, so youโre the one who has to.โ
My arms drop like his skin is on fire and I stumble back, my hip connecting with the tiny island behind me. With a ragged exhale, he turns around, snagging the ring box. I watch him press it back into the velvet. Shut the box. Lower his head and rub a hand over his face.
โIโm sorry,โ I croak out. โItโs okay,โ he says.
โI was excited.โ โMe, too.โ
โAbout the ring, I mean.โ
He huffs out a laugh. โYeah.โ
This was just us remembering. The memories of our last summer and what came after are everywhere, too easy to step into, and we both slipped like I feared. But with as much history as Eli and I have and how physically close we got after years of distance, it would actually be weirder if weย hadnโt.
Itโs a paper-thin excuse, but I grab it anyway.
โThat wasโฆโ I scramble for a description that wonโt throw us right back into danger. โSurprisingly good teamwork.โ
He gives me an incredulous look over his shoulder. โTheย ring, Eli.โ
Amusement replaces the heat in his eyes. โItโs almost like we work really well toward a common goal when weโre not fighting each other.โ
โIs that passive aggressive commentary about the bakery?โ He turns. โAnd the split-up list.โ
โThat was equally your idea.โ โI did it for you.โ
โWhat do you mean?โ
He lifts a shoulder, leaning against the counter. โYou clearly want as little to do with me as possible. I know youโd rather be alone here, or with Jamie or something.โ
Of course Iโd love to be with Jamie. But if Jamie were here, Blake would be, too, and while I adore Blake and love hanging out with them, sometimes listening to the couple shorthand they developed while I was in Seattle makes me feel lonely. Less belonged to by Jamie. Itโs not something Iโd ever admit out loud, though.
And itโs easier to be alone, but that doesnโt mean itโs what I want. Thatโs not something Iโd admit out loud either.
โItโs not as awkward as I thought itโd be.โย Awkwardย is now my emotional support word for this, apparently.
Something passes over his face, a shadow of the way I felt when he said it. โGreat.โ
โAnd you just saved the day, so I canโt exactly say I donโt want you here.โ
โHey,โ he admonishes. โWe did that together.โ
We let the realization sink in. Itโs a warm thing, familiar and foreign. โWhat if we tackle the big stuff together?โ he asks. โItโll make Adam
happy and get Cole to stop heckling us.โ
โWhatโs up with him, anyway? He was being so weird yesterday.โ
His gaze bounces away. โMaybe he just canโt fathom having any interactions with his exes because they all hate him.โ
I laugh. โA solid theory.โ
โAnyway,โ he says, meeting my eyes again, โmost importantly, weโre clearly better at mitigating disasters when weโre not doing it separately.โ
Heโs rightโwhen we actually cooperate with one another, shit gets done. Itโs exactly what we need as we get down to the wire. Adam will get up here on Friday and be blown away.
But it means that Iโll be living alongside Eli and this rebuilding awareness. Iโll have to be so careful.
Eli braces his hands behind him. Watching me. Waiting.
โAdam did inform me he set up a DJ appointment for tomorrow, so we could try the teamwork thing out then.โ His gaze warms and so does my chest. Ugh. โHe wants to FaceTime in anyway, so itโs a good idea to go together.โ
โDone. And weโll do the bakery appointment on Tuesday together, too?โ โYes, on our best behavior.โ
He draws an X over his chest with a somber, โCross my heart.โ
I roll my eyes, but canโt fully bite back a smile. He grins softly in return and for a second we get caught in it. He looks like twenty-year-old Eli, the summer version of himself when that spark was heating inside me, the version of him in subsequent years when I was fully in love.
Oh my god, stop, the peanut-sized logic in my brain sighs.
He shakes his head as if rousing himself and pushes off the counter. โI should go. Iโm helping with the deck this morning.โ
โRight, yes, I need to get ready, too,โ I say. โIโm helping unload a bunch of stuff into the shed to hold for the reception.โ
I trail him to the door after we put the tools away, feeling an unsettling reluctance to let him go.
โThanks again for digging me out of that mess,โ I say, leaning against the door as he strides down the steps.
He turns, shielding his eyes against the quickly rising sun. โAnytime.โ โWell, hopefully never again.โ I say it lightly, but Iโm not joking.
โAnytime,โ he repeats, with emphasis.
Itโs not until heโs gone and Iโm in the shower, replaying our charged moment, that I realize he told me I wasnโt going to want this.
But he didnโt say thatย heย wouldnโt.