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Chapter no 17 – The Dance

Beach Read

TUX TONIGHT? GUS wrote at noon on Saturday.

Anxiety crept up every time I thought about being alone in the car with him, but Iโ€™d also had tonight planned since last Saturday, and I wasnโ€™t ready to bow out of our deal, not when I was finally writing for the first time in months. OH, DEFINITELY, I wrote back.

SERIOUSLY? Gus asked.

NO, I wrote. DO YOU HAVE COWBOY BOOTS?

WHAT DO YOU THINK? Gus said. FROM EVERYTHING YOU KNOW ABOUT ME, TAKE A WILD GUESS WHETHER I OWN COWBOY BOOTS.

I stared at the blank page then went for it: YOUโ€™RE A MAN OF MANY

SECRETS. YOU COULD HAVE A WHOLE CLOSET FULL OF TEN-GALLON HATS. AND IF YOU DO, WEAR ONE. 6 PM.

When Gus appeared at my door that night, he was wearing his usual

uniform, plus a wrinkly black button-up. His hair was swept up his forehead in a way that suggested it had been forced there via him anxiously running his hand through it while he wrote. โ€œNo hat?โ€ I said.

โ€œNo hat.โ€ He pulled his other hand from behind his back. He was holding two flasks, the thin, foldable kind you could tuck under your clothes. โ€œBut I brought these in case youโ€™re taking me to a Texan church service.โ€

I crouched by the front door, tugging my embroidered ankle boots on. โ€œAnd once again, you reveal that you know much more about romance than youโ€™ve previously let on.โ€

Even as I said it, my stomach clenched.

Gus has been married. Gus is divorced.

That was why he was so sure love could never last, and heโ€™d told me none of these key details, because he hadnโ€™t really let me in.

If my comment reminded him of any of that, he didnโ€™t let on. โ€œJust so you know,โ€ he said, โ€œif I actually have to wear a cowboy hat at some point tonight, I will probably die.โ€

โ€œCowboy hat allergy.โ€ I grabbed my keys from the table. โ€œGot it. Letโ€™s go.โ€

This date wouldโ€™ve been perfect, if it had been a date.

The parking lot of the Black Cat Saloon was jammed and the rough-hewn interior was just as packed. โ€œA lot of flannel,โ€ Gus mused as we made our way in.

โ€œWhat do you expect on line-dancing night, Gus?โ€

โ€œYouโ€™re kidding, right?โ€ Gus said, freezing. I shook my head. โ€œThis has been an exact recurring nightmare Iโ€™m only just realizing was actually a premonition.โ€

On the low stage at the front of the barnlike room, the band picked up again, and a crush of bodies moved past on our left, knocking me into him. He caught me around the rib cage and righted me as the group pushed toward the dance floor. โ€œYou good?โ€ he shouted over the music, his hands still on my ribs.

My face was hot, my stomach flipping traitorously. โ€œFine.โ€

He leaned in so I could hear him. โ€œThis seems like a dangerous environment for someone your size. Maybe we should leave and go โ€ฆ literally anywhere else.โ€

As he eased back to look me in the face, I grinned and shook my head. โ€œNo way. The lesson doesnโ€™t even start for another ten minutes.โ€

His hands slid off me, leaving pulsing points behind on my skin. โ€œI guess I survived Meg Ryan.โ€

โ€œBarely,โ€ I teased, then blushed as flashes of memory seared across my mind. Gusโ€™s mouth tipping mine open. Gusโ€™s teeth on my clavicle. Gusโ€™s hands tightening against my hips, his thumb scraping over the jut of bone.

The moment stretched out between us. Or rather, it seemed to tighten between us, and since we didnโ€™t move any closer, the air grew taut. The song was winding down now and a lanky man with a horsey face bounded

onto the stage with a microphone, summoning beginners to the floor for the next song.

I grabbed Gusโ€™s wrist and cut a path through the crowd to the dance floor.

For once, his cheeks were flushed, his forehead dented with worried wrinkles. โ€œYou honestly have to write me into your will for this,โ€ he said.

โ€œYou might not want to talk through the instructions,โ€ I replied, tipping my head toward the horse-faced caller, who was using a volunteer from the crowd to demonstrate a few key moves, all while talking with the speed of an auctioneer. โ€œI have a feeling this guy wonโ€™t be repeating much.โ€

โ€œYour last will and testament, January,โ€ Gus whispered fiercely. โ€œAnd to Gus Everett,โ€ I whispered back, โ€œa closet full of ten-gallon

hats!โ€

His laugh crackled like popping oil. I thought of its sound against my ear that night at the party. We hadnโ€™t said anything as we danced in that slick basement, not a single word, but heโ€™d laughed against my ear and Iโ€™d known, or at least suspected, that it was because he was dimly aware that we should have been embarrassed to be all over each other like that. We should have been but there were more pressing feelings to be felt that night. Just like at the drive-in.

Heat filled my abdomen and I suppressed the thought.

Onstage, the fiddle started up, and soon the whole band was bouncing through the notes. The experts swarmed the floor, filling in the gaps between the anxiously waiting beginners, of whom we made up at least 20 percent. Gus pushed in close at my side, unwilling to be separated from the sentient safety blanket Iโ€™d become as soon as weโ€™d walked through the metal double doors, and the caller shouted into the microphone, โ€œYou all ready? Here we go!โ€

At his first command, the crowd jostled to the right, carrying Gus and me with it. He snatched my hand as the mass of boots and heels reversed direction. I squealed as Gus jerked me out of the path of a man on a mission to grapevine whether it meant stomping on my foot or not.

There were no sung lyrics, just the callerโ€™s instructions with their strange, auctioneer rhythm and the sound of shoes scuffing along the floor. I erupted into laughter as Gus went forward instead of back, eliciting a nasty glare from the hair-sprayed blonde he collided with. โ€œSorry,โ€ he shouted over the music, holding up his hands in surrender, only to get bumped into her pink laceโ€“covered chest as the crowd shifted once more.

โ€œOh, God,โ€ he said, stumbling back. โ€œSorry, Iโ€”โ€

โ€œGod has nothing to do with it!โ€ the woman snapped, digging her hands into her hips.

โ€œSorry,โ€ I interceded, grabbing Gus by the hand. โ€œCanโ€™t take him anywhere.โ€

โ€œMe?โ€ he cried, half laughing. โ€œYou knocked me intoโ€”โ€

I pulled him through the crowd to the far side of the dance floor. When I looked over my shoulder, the woman had resumed her boot-scoot- boogying, face as stony as a sarcophagusโ€™s.

โ€œShould I give her my number?โ€ Gus teased, mouth close to my ear. โ€œI think sheโ€™d rather have your insurance card.โ€

โ€œOr a good police sketch.โ€ โ€œOr a crowbar,โ€ I shot back.

โ€œOkay.โ€ Gusโ€™s smile spread enough for a laugh to slip out. โ€œThatโ€™s enough from you. Youโ€™re just looking for an excuse not to dance.โ€

โ€œIโ€™m just looking for an excuse?โ€ I said. โ€œYou grabbed that womanโ€™s boobs to try to get kicked out of here.โ€

โ€œNo way.โ€ He shook his head, caught my arm, and tugged me along as he clumsily fell back into the steps. โ€œIโ€™m in this for the long haul now. Youโ€™d better clear your Saturday schedules from here until eternity.โ€

I laughed, tripping along with him, but my stomach was fighting a series of concurrent rises and dips. I didnโ€™t want to feel these things. It wasnโ€™t fun anymore, now that I was thinking it all through, where it would end upโ€” with me attached and jealous and him having shared about as much about his life with me as you might with a hairdresser.

But then he would say things like that, Clear your Saturday schedules from here until eternity. He would grab me around the waist to keep me from smashing into a support beam I hadnโ€™t noticed in my dancing fugue state. Laughing, he would twirl me into him, and spin me around while the rest of the crowd was walking their feet into their bodies and back out, far wider than their hips, thumbs hooked into real and imagined belt loops.

This was a different Gus than Iโ€™d seen (The one whoโ€™d played soccer?

The Gus who answered one third of his auntโ€™s phone calls? The Gus whoโ€™d been married and divorced?), and I wasnโ€™t sure what to make of it or its sudden appearance.

Something had changed in him, again, and he was (whether intentionally or not) letting it show. He seemed somehow lighter than he had, less tired.

He was being winsome and flirty, which only made me more frustrated after the past week.

โ€œWe need a shot,โ€ he said.

โ€œOkay,โ€ I agreed. Maybe a shot would take the strange edge I was feeling off. We swam back to the bar and he nudged aside a pool of peanuts still in their shells to order two doubles of whiskey. โ€œCheers,โ€ he said, lifting his.

โ€œTo what?โ€ I asked.

He smirked. โ€œTo your happy endings.โ€

Iโ€™d thought we were friends, that he respected me, and now I felt like he was calling me a fairy princess all over again, laughing to himself about how naive and silly my worldview was, holding his failed marriage like a secret trump card that proved, once again, he knew more than me. A fierce, angry fuse lit in my stomach, and I threw back the whiskey without meeting his lifted shot. Gus seemed to think it was an oversight. He was still downing his whiskey as I headed back out to the dance floor.

I had to admit there was something singularly hilarious about line dancing angrily, but that didnโ€™t stop me from doing it. We finished two more songs, took two more shots.

When we went back out for the fourth songโ€”a more complex dance for the proficient to enjoy while the caller used the toilet and rested his vocal cordsโ€”we had no hope of keeping up with the choreography, even if we hadnโ€™t been tipsy by then. During a double turn to the right, my shoe caught on an uneven floorboard and Gus grabbed me by the waist to keep me from going down. His laughter faded when he saw my face, and he leaned (of course) against the support beam, my nemesis from earlier, drawing me in toward him by my hips. His hand burned through my jeans into my skin and I fought to keep a clear head as he held me like that. โ€œHey,โ€ he murmured, dropping his mouth toward my ear so I could hear him over the music. โ€œWhatโ€™s wrong?โ€

What was wrong was his thumbs twirling circles on my hips, his whiskey breath against the corner of my mouth, and how stupid I felt for its effect on me. I was naive.

Iโ€™d always trusted my parents, never sensed the missing pieces between Jacques and me, and now Iโ€™d started getting emotionally attached to someone whoโ€™d done everything he could to convince me not to.

I stepped back from him. I meant to say, I think I need to go home, or maybe Iโ€™m not feeling well.

But Iโ€™d never been good at hiding how I was feeling, especially this past year.

I didnโ€™t say anything. I just ran for the door.

I burst into the cool air of the parking lot and beelined toward the Kia. I could hear him shouting my name as he followed, but I was too embarrassed, frustrated, and I didnโ€™t know what else, to turn around.

โ€œJanuary?โ€ Gus said again, jogging toward me.

โ€œIโ€™m fine.โ€ I dug for my keys in my pocket. โ€œI justโ€”I need to go home.

Iโ€™m notโ€”I donโ€™t โ€ฆโ€ I trailed off, fumbling the key against the lock. โ€œWe canโ€™t go anywhere until weโ€™ve sobered up,โ€ he pointed out.

โ€œThen Iโ€™ll just sit in the car until then.โ€ My hands were shaking and the key glanced off the lock again.

โ€œHere. Let me.โ€ Gus took it from me and slipped it in, unlocking the driverโ€™s side door, but he didnโ€™t step away to let me open it.

โ€œThanks,โ€ I said without looking at him.

I flinched as his hand brushed at my face, swiping hair from my cheek.

He tucked it behind my ear. โ€œWhatever it is, you can tell me.โ€

Now I looked up at him, ignoring the heavy flip-flop of my stomach as I met his eyes. โ€œWhy?โ€

His eyebrows lifted. โ€œWhy what?โ€

โ€œWhy can I tell you?โ€ I said. โ€œWhy would I tell you anything?โ€

His mouth pressed closed. The muscle in his jaw leapt. โ€œWhat is this?

What did I do?โ€

โ€œNothing.โ€ I turned toward the car, but Gusโ€™s body still blocked the door. โ€œMove, Gus.โ€

โ€œThis isnโ€™t fair,โ€ he said. โ€œYouโ€™re mad at me and I canโ€™t even try to fix it?

What could I have possiblyโ€”โ€ โ€œIโ€™m not mad at you,โ€ I said.

โ€œYou are,โ€ he argued. I tried again to open the door. This time he moved aside to let me. โ€œPlease tell me, January.โ€

โ€œIโ€™m not,โ€ I insisted, voice shaking dangerously. โ€œIโ€™m not mad at you.

Weโ€™re not even close enough for that. Iโ€™m just your casual acquaintance. Itโ€™s not like weโ€™re friends.โ€

Twin grooves rose from the insides of his eyebrows and his crooked mouth twisted. โ€œPlease,โ€ he said, almost out of breath. โ€œDonโ€™t do this.โ€

โ€œDo what?โ€ I demanded.

He threw his arms out to his sides. โ€œI donโ€™t know!โ€ he said. โ€œWhatever

this is.โ€

โ€œHow stupid do you think I am?โ€

โ€œWhat are you talking about?โ€ he demanded.

โ€œI guess I shouldnโ€™t be surprised you donโ€™t tell me anything,โ€ I said. โ€œItโ€™s not like you respect me or my opinions.โ€

โ€œOf course I respect you.โ€

โ€œI know you were married,โ€ I blurted. โ€œI know you were married and that you split up on your birthday, and not only did you not tell me any of that, but you listened to me spill my guts about why I do what I do and what it all means to me, andโ€”and talk about my dad and what he didโ€”and you sat there, on your smug little high horseโ€”โ€

Gus gave an exasperated laugh. โ€œโ€˜Little high horseโ€™?โ€ โ€œโ€”thinking I was stupid or naiveโ€”โ€

โ€œOf course I donโ€™tโ€”โ€

โ€œโ€”keeping your own failed marriage a secret, just like everything else in your life, so you can look down on all the clichรฉ people like me who still believeโ€”โ€

โ€œStop,โ€ he snapped. โ€œโ€”while youโ€”โ€

โ€œStop.โ€ He jerked back from me, walked down the length of the car, then turned back, face angry. โ€œYou donโ€™t know me, January.โ€

I laughed humorlessly. โ€œIโ€™m aware.โ€

โ€œNo.โ€ He shook his head, stormed back toward me, and stopped no more than six inches away. โ€œYou think my marriage is a joke to me? I was married two years. Two years before my wife left me for the best man at our wedding. Howโ€™s that for clichรฉ? I know goldfish that lived longer than that. I didnโ€™t even want the divorce. I wouldโ€™ve stayed with her, even after the affair, but guess what, January? Happy endings donโ€™t happen to everyone.

Thereโ€™s nothing you can do to make someone keep loving you.

โ€œBelieve it or not, I donโ€™t just sit through hours of conversations with you silently judging you. And if it takes me a while to tell you things like โ€˜Hey, my wife left me for my college roommate,โ€™ maybe it has nothing to do with you, okay? Maybe itโ€™s because I donโ€™t like saying that sentence aloud. I mean, your mom didnโ€™t leave when your dad cheated on her, and my mom didnโ€™t leave my dad when he broke my fucking arm, and yet I couldnโ€™t do anything to make my wife stay.โ€

My stomach bottomed out. My throat clenched. Pain stabbed through my chest. It all made sense at once: the hesitancy and deflection, the mistrust of people, the fear of commitment.

No one had chosen Gus. From the time he was a kid, no one had chosen him, and he was embarrassed by that, like it meant something about him. I wanted to tell him it didnโ€™t. That it wasnโ€™t because he was broken, but because everyone else was. But I couldnโ€™t get any words out. I couldnโ€™t do anything but stare at himโ€”standing there, out of steam, his chest rising and falling with heavy breathsโ€”and ache for him and hate the world a little for chewing him up.

Right then, I honestly didnโ€™t care why heโ€™d disappeared or where heโ€™d gone.

The hard glint had left his eyes and his chin dropped as he rubbed at his forehead.

There were millions of things I wanted to say to him, but what came out was, โ€œParker?โ€

He looked up again, eyes wide and mouth ajar. โ€œWhat?โ€

โ€œYour college roommate,โ€ I murmured. โ€œDo you mean Parker?โ€

Gusโ€™s mouth closed, the muscles along his jaw leaping. โ€œYeah,โ€ he barely said. โ€œParker.โ€

Parker, the art student with the eccentric clothes. Parker, whoโ€™d picked most of his left eyebrow away. Heโ€™d had pretty blue eyes and a certain zaniness that my friends and I had always imagined translated to a golden- retriever-esque excitability when it came to sex. Which we were all fairly sure he was getting a lot of.

Gus wasnโ€™t looking at me. He was rubbing his forehead again, looking as broken and embarrassed as Iโ€™d felt thirty seconds ago.

โ€œOn your birthday. What an asshole.โ€

I didnโ€™t realize Iโ€™d said it aloud until he responded: โ€œI mean, that wasnโ€™t her plan.โ€ He looked away, staring vaguely through the parking lot. โ€œI sort of dragged it out of her. I could tell something was wrong and โ€ฆ anyway.โ€

Still an asshole, I thought. I shook my head. I had no idea what else to say. I stepped forward and wrapped my arms around him, pressing my face into his neck, feeling his deep breaths push against me. After a moment, his arms lifted around me and we stood there, just out of reach of the parking lotโ€™s lone floodlight, holding on to each other.

โ€œIโ€™m sorry,โ€ I whispered into his skin. โ€œShe should have picked you.โ€ And I meant it, even if I wasnโ€™t sure exactly which she I was talking about.

His arms tightened around my back. His mouth and nose pressed against the crown of my head, and inside, a mournful Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young cover picked up, guitar twanging like its strings were crying. Gus rocked me side to side. โ€œI want to know you,โ€ I told him.

โ€œI want that,โ€ he murmured into my hair. We stood there for another moment before he spoke again. โ€œItโ€™s late. We should grab some coffee inside so we can get home.โ€

I didnโ€™t want to go home. I didnโ€™t want to pull away from Gus. โ€œSure.โ€

He eased back from me and his hand ran down my throat, resting on the crook between my neck and shoulder, his rough thumb catching the edge of my collarbone. He shook his head once. โ€œIโ€™ve never thought you were stupid.โ€

I nodded. I wasnโ€™t sure what to say, and even if I had been, I wasnโ€™t sure if my voice would come out thick and heavy, like my blood felt, or shaky and high, like my stomach did.

Gusโ€™s eyes dipped to my mouth, then rose to my eyes. โ€œI thoughtโ€”think itโ€™s brave to believe in love. I mean, the lasting kind. To try for that, even knowing it can hurt you.โ€

โ€œAnd what about you?โ€

โ€œWhat about me?โ€ he murmured.

I needed to clear my throat but I didnโ€™t. It would be too obvious, what I was thinking, how I was feeling. โ€œYou donโ€™t think you ever will again?โ€

Gus stepped back, shoes crackling against the gravel. โ€œIt doesnโ€™t matter if I believe it can work or not,โ€ he said. โ€œNot believing in something doesnโ€™t stop you from wanting it. If youโ€™re not careful.โ€

His gaze sent heat unfurling over me, the cold snapping painfully back into place against my skin when he finally turned back toward the bar. โ€œCome on,โ€ he said. โ€œLetโ€™s get that coffee.โ€

Careful. Caution was something I had little of when it came to Gus Everett.

Case in point: my hangover the next morning. I awoke to my first text from him.

It said only Ow.

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