Chapter no 30

The Ex Vows

I look up at theย darkened cottage from the bottom step. Itโ€™s two a.m. and my feet ache. My back aches. My heart aches. The euphoric sounds of the afterparty drift down the hill and I wrap myself up in it. Itโ€™ll be a memory soon.

I climb up another step of the cottage.ย Ourย cottage. I watched Eli all nightโ€”holding the mic as he gave his wedding speech; chatting with Nick and Miriam, who came up for the wedding; watching me asย Iย chatted with them; out on the dance floor as we circled each other. I told myself not to get too close, but I ended up in his arms anyway during the last song.

We didnโ€™t say anything; the music was astronomically loud, and I said goodbye, watching the tiny hairs rise on his neck. He couldnโ€™t hear me, but maybe his body understood the word. His hold on me tightened, and I swear hours later I can still feel the pressure of his fingertips.

My hand is on the door handle now and Iโ€™m thinking about goodbyes. The one weโ€™ll all have to say tomorrow. The one Iโ€™ll have to say when I leave for Seattle. The one I gave Eli earlier, and the ones we had before that wrecked me equally: when I left for Cal Poly freshman year and it sunk in that I wouldnโ€™t see him every day. The goodbye he ripped out of me the night we called it done, and the one I left him on one of his Post-it notepads when I moved out because he didnโ€™t want to be there to watch me go.

I never want to say goodbye to him is the thing. Thatโ€™s the problem. Itโ€™s why Iโ€™m here, because I donโ€™t want to hear him say it out loud, and yet I have to say goodbye to this weekย somehowโ€”what we did, how weโ€™ve shaped the wordย usย into something that still hurts, but that I can at least touch.

Once inside, I sit on the loveseat and look around, not bothering to turn on the light. I know this place by heart. I see every corner Eli and I have inhabitedโ€”the kitchenette where we nearly kissed after rescuing Adamโ€™s ring, this loveseat where he had his panic attack and let me see it, the bed

where we were messy and real. I go back further, turn over memories from the past five years. Longer than that. I think about hellos and goodbyes, beginnings and endings. I imagine an endless circle that brings me back to one feeling again and again and again: loving him.

Outside, a wood step creaks. My eyes fly open. I donโ€™t know how long Iโ€™ve been thinking about Eli, other than forever, but there are footsteps. Theyโ€™re steady and measured. My heart doesnโ€™t know whether to fly or dive.

Then the door opens and Eliโ€™s there. Tall, beautiful, rumpled. He wears moonlight like a crown; it traces its fingertips down his body, silhouetting him.

Itโ€™s that circle. Time bending back to the last goodbye we had. Heโ€™s still in the doorway, but itโ€™s our Upper West Side apartment. Itโ€™s December five years ago, close to midnight. Iโ€™m wearing a dress, but this one is short and black with long sleeves. Iโ€™m sitting on our couch in the dark, hands folded in my lap. I walked home from my companyโ€™s holiday party at the Empire Hotel because I had to burn off some of my emotions, but my legs arenโ€™t even cold anymore. Thatโ€™s how long Iโ€™ve been waiting.

โ€œWhat are you doing here?โ€ he asks then, breathlessly, with a potent mix of exasperation and fear.

Fear because itโ€™d been fifty-eight days since Iโ€™d asked him to do anything with me other than grocery shop; I counted. My companyโ€™s holiday party was tonight and I finally capitulated two days ago, asked him to find a way to make it because I didnโ€™t want to go alone. Five years ago me loathes my job by this pointโ€”my passive-aggressive boss, the friends who make that word mean something lonely, the sly jokes about how Eli must have a secret second family. I thought all night about how all he wants is one whole one. Itโ€™s what heโ€™s working so hard toward, and itโ€™s what weโ€™re ruining in our pressure cooker of silence and anxiety and disappointment.

Heโ€™s exasperated, probably, because itโ€™s clear by the way his dress shirt is clinging to his chest that he ran to the hotel, or back home when he saw I wasnโ€™t there. But Iโ€™d already been there for nearly three hours, alone in a ballroom full of people, staring at the fake Christmas tree and six-foot-tall

menorah across the way, feeling the same way I did in kindergarten when my dad couldnโ€™t make it to that holiday concert. At six, I looked out into the audience and didnโ€™t have a touchstone. At twenty-three, it was the same. I sat through dinner, endured conversations with people I canโ€™t stand, ignoring those knowing looks, ignoring the single text he sent at 10:07.

I thought about the end until I got up and left without saying goodbye. I drafted my resignation email on the walk home.

And when I got home, I imagined a pile of bricks. Each brick was a time heโ€™d fucked up or I had, a time when either one of us couldโ€™ve said what was on our mind and said nothing instead. It was endless tiny transgressions that didnโ€™t ruin us in the moment but added to the wall we built.

On this night in December five years ago, I see how tall it is. How unclimbable.

Heโ€™s afraid because he sees the wall, too. Heโ€™s exasperated because heโ€™s so tired that he thought today was Thursday, not Friday. He didnโ€™tย notย show up, he says, he just didnโ€™t realize. I never texted to ask where he was, and never responded to the one he sent saying he was coming.

Heโ€™s afraid because I didnโ€™t wait. Because, on this night five years ago, I tell him, โ€œIโ€™m done. I canโ€™t do this anymore.โ€

Five-years-ago Eli stares at me for a long moment. In my dreams sometimes itโ€™s hours. And then he says, devastated, โ€œI know.โ€

Now, as he steps over the threshold of our cottage, closing the door behind him, I think about how I couldโ€™ve yelled that night. I couldโ€™ve laid out every ugly thing that I was feeling. But I still wouldโ€™ve walked away, and it wouldโ€™ve been rubble instead of something that, five years later, can be rebuilt in a different way.

If weโ€™re careful.

โ€œWhat are you doing here?โ€ Eli asks now, but thereโ€™s no fear, just that godforsaken determination.

I donโ€™t want a messy goodbye. Iโ€™m so tired of those. โ€œWhat areย you

doing here?โ€

โ€œI came toโ€”โ€ He cuts himself off with a wave of his hand. Heโ€™s clutching his phone, along with a Post-it notepad and a pen. โ€œYou first.โ€

I nod my chin at him. โ€œConducting some important business that couldnโ€™t wait?โ€

The joke lands flat; heโ€™s been so present here. Nothing has been more important than what weโ€™ve done this week. But Iโ€™m too caught in the web of our past and the fact that this whole thing is about to go pumpkin-shaped. โ€œSorry,โ€ I murmur, wiping my sweating palms down my thighs as I

stand up. โ€œThat wasโ€” Iโ€™m sorry.โ€

He nods. Steps closer. โ€œWhat are you doing here?โ€

โ€œCame to say goodbye.โ€ Itโ€™s the truth wrapped in an innocuous statement. โ€œItโ€™s been quite the week and this cottage deserves a moment of silence, especially since Iโ€™m not sure when Iโ€™ll be back.โ€

โ€œIt has been quite the week.โ€ Another step. Heโ€™s five feet away, close enough that I can smell the rain on his skin. โ€œI hoped youโ€™d be here. I lost you over by the Slip โ€™N Slide.โ€

โ€œKeeping tabs on me?โ€ Itโ€™s an echo of a few nights ago, right before we went swimming. Just before we gave in.

โ€œAlways,โ€ he says quietly, but this time itโ€™s not teasing.

โ€œIf you thought Iโ€™d be here, whyโ€™d you ask what I was doing here?โ€ โ€œJust wanted to hear you say it.โ€

โ€œThatโ€™s very tricky of you,โ€ I get out.

One corner of his mouth picks up, then straightens. I see the resolve there. I see what he wants. โ€œGeorgiaโ€”โ€

โ€œI donโ€™t want to talk,โ€ I interrupt.

He moves closer, and thereโ€”thereโ€™s the exasperation. โ€œYou donโ€™t even know what I want to say.โ€

โ€œYes, I do,โ€ I state, circling the coffee table so Iโ€™m that much closer to the door.

I want to talk about New York. The night you told me you were done. Why we didnโ€™t fight for each other. Nick and Miriamโ€™s wedding. My job. This week and what we did.

Itโ€™s all been sitting at the base of my throat for days, some of it for years, and I feel it rising in me like a wave.

He huffs out a breath. He doesnโ€™t even try to follow me; that lock-click gaze is enough to stop me. โ€œThen just let me say it.โ€

โ€œFirst of all,โ€ I huff back, โ€œyouโ€™re breaking the agreement.โ€

โ€œWith all due respect to the agreement, fuck the agreement. Also, the week is over.โ€ His voice lowers. Itโ€™s nearly a caress. โ€œI told you we were going to have a reckoning, Georgia. That Iโ€™ve spent too long not saying the things I want to say, and Iโ€™m done not saying them.โ€

โ€œGod,ย why?โ€ I burst out. โ€œWhat good will it do?โ€

โ€œA whole hell of a lot more good than not talking has done us.โ€ I shake my head. โ€œNo.โ€

He takes a step.ย โ€œYes.โ€

The wave is growingโ€”need and fear and panic and anger. โ€œWeโ€™re just getting back to a good place after five years of hell. For me, at least.โ€

Something ignites in his eyes and I realize itโ€™s the first time Iโ€™ve ever said anything like that out loud.

โ€œFor me, too,โ€ he says.

โ€œRight,โ€ I implore. โ€œRight, and now it feels okay, doesnโ€™t it? This week has been good, hasnโ€™t it?โ€

โ€œItโ€™s beenโ€”โ€ His voice breaks, and his expression does, too. Under the determination is an emotion Iโ€™ve seen flashes of all week: hunger. โ€œItโ€™s been everything.โ€

โ€œYes, and weโ€™re becoming friends again.โ€

Eli paces away, scrubbing his hands over his face with a wild groan.

I push on, desperate. โ€œI donโ€™t want to wreck that, so why are you pushing this so hard? Why does it matter?โ€

I thought I knew what the reckoning would be, but when he turns on his heel and stalks back to me, Iโ€™m in no way prepared for what he actually says.

He stops just short of me, a flame in his eyes. No, not a flameโ€”a wildfire.

โ€œIt matters,โ€ he says, his voice breaking, โ€œbecause Iโ€™m in love with you.โ€

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