I BARREL OUTย of the bathroom and smash into Miles, whoโs been waiting in the hallway like a nervous first-time father pacing the hospital floors.
โYouโre still in it,โ he says.
โItโs stuck,โ I say. โI think I broke the zipper, and the dress is too tight, and I canโt breathe, and itโsย stuck.โ
โItโs okay.โ
โOh, is it?โ I say. โThen I feel better.โ
Heโs turning me by the elbow. โIโll get it. Just try to breathe.โ He gathers my hair off my neck so carefully his fingers never brush skin. โCan you hold this out of the way?โ
I pin my hair against the back of my head, shoulders and arms throbbing as my heart pumps too much blood to my extremities.
Miles pinches the two sides of the fabric and wiggles the zipper until it gives. At midback, it catches. โShit. Hold on.โ
More pinching, wiggling, straining. I close my eyes and focus on my breath.
The zipper goes up and glides down to the same snag. โTry to stay still,โ he says.
โYou keep pulling me off balance,โ I say. โDo you have any ChapStick?โ he asks.
โCan your mouth moisturization wait a minute?โ I cry. โNah, not reallyโitโs for theย zipper, Daphne.โ
โIn the medicine cabinet,โ I tell him. We shuffle together into the cramped bathroom, him holding up the back of my dress as we go. I hand
the tube to him and he does whatever it is he thinks heโs going to do with it, then goes back to wrestling the zipper.
He loses purchase and smacks an elbow into the wall behind me with a grunt of pain. โItโs too cramped in here.โ
We shuffle-stepย backย into the hall. He tries again, his frustrated huff turning into a laugh.
โWhat?โ I ask over my shoulder.
โNow I canโt see anything.โ He drags me by the skirt through his bedroom door, bumping the lights on.
โCan you lean over the dresser?โ he asks. โSeriously?โ I say.
โI need more leverage,โ he says, โand every time I pull, you come with me.โ
Dear god, what did I do to deserve this?
Oh, right. I lied about being in a relationship with this man, then jumped his bones at a lavender farm to upset my ex-fiancรฉ. That couldโve done it.
I brace my hands against the top of his dresser. He sets one palm to my hip, holding me steady while he pulls again, gets the zipper to move for several blissful millimeters before it catches again, his grip on me tightening.
โDistract me,โ I say under my breath.
โI promise weโll get this off of you,โ he says. Wrong kind of distraction.
โIโm feeling unbearably stupid right now, Miles, so youโre going to have to do better than that. Tell me something awful.โ
He laughs. โOkay. What about this: when Petra and I got your save-the- date in the mail, she told me she didnโt want to get married, and I was like,ย Cool, no worries. Because I thought she meantย in general, not specifically that she didnโt want to marry me.โ
I drop my face toward the dresser. My pained groan gives way to something more forceful, the emotion shaking through my shoulders.
โShit,โ he says. โIโm sorry. Not helpful.โ Miles takes hold of both my hips. โHey.โ
I straighten up, shaking my head as the laughter racks me, tears leaking from my eyes.
โDaphne,โ he murmurs behind me, still tender and sweet, pulling me in, my back to his chest, and coiling his arms around my waist.
โMiles,โ I finally manage, spinning in his grip. โWhat was the ChapStick for?โ Another fit of laughter throttles my voice.
He registers it. His mouth opens and closes. โI thought it might smooth the track.โ
โYou lubed my zipper,โ I say.
โActually,โ he says, โI veryย specificallyย asked about ChapStick so that neither of us would have to say that sentence.โ
My forehead hits his collarbone as the giggles double me over. His hand slides up my back, goose bumps trailing along behind his touch, to rest at the base of my neck. His laugh hums through me too.
โYou were justย readyย for that,โ I say. โHow many roommates have you had to do this for?โ
โDozens.โ His arms loosen and he turns me again. โBut youโre the first who had ChapStick.โ He pinches the zipper and gives a soft tug.
After all that huffing and struggling and bracing, the zipper glides down to the small of my back, Milesโs knuckles dragging along my skin all the way.
I shiver at the sensation, prickle with full-body awareness of him.
He doesnโt pull away immediately, and I catch my weight shifting back into his touch. His fingers unfurl, his palm flattening against my low back.
The bodice of the dress is gaping loose, gravity pulling the straps down my arms as the weight of the skirt draws everything toward the ground.
I catch the bust against my chest, pinning it to me as I turn toward him. โThanks.โ
โHere.โ He flinches away from me, avoids my eyes as he snatches a loose gray T-shirt from his open top drawer. When he pulls it over my head, his gingersnap smell engulfs me, and he tugs it down over the dress.
When I let go of the bust, the whole lacy concoction pools at my feet. I get my arms through the T-shirt sleeves, and Miles helps me step out of the
skirt, gently untucking my hair from the collar.
His eyes lift back to mine, and the room thrums. โThank you,โ I say again, this time a whisper.
โIโm going to need this back,โ he teases quietly. โThatโs been my favorite shirt since I was ten.โ
I register the front of it for the first time: a crackly vinyl cartoon camel smoking a gigantic cigarette. Chortling, I meet his gaze. โThis is your favorite shirt from childhood? A walking nicotine advertisement?โ
His smile widens. His fingers move absently to my chin, and I feel myself being drawn into him, our stomachs connecting, his heart pattering through me. โItโs aย camel, Daphne,โ he says wryly. โInย sunglasses.โ
โIโll change immediately,โ I say, playing along.
โNo, no,โ he says. โKeep it as long as you want. Whatโs mine is yours.โ
I suppress a grin. โSee, this is why all these locals have added you to their wills.โ
He frowns. โSometimes you make it sound like Iโm a snake-oil salesman.โ
I grab his arm. โThatโs not what I mean atย all.โ โThen what do you mean,โ he asks.
โI mean that youโre nice,โ I say. He laughs. โThis again.โ
โI mean,โ I say, more fervently, โyouโre probably the only person Iโve ever met whoโs genuinely curious about everyone he meets. And makes them feel interesting and welcome, and likeโlike they should be confident in what they do. You make them feel like growing corn or making cherry salsa or recommending books is a superpower.โ
โIf youโre good at those things,โ he says, โit is.โ โExactly,โ I murmur. โThatโs how youย actuallyย feel.โ
The only other person Iโve ever known with that particular skill wields it like a shield. Or a tax heโs paying you, a cut of him just big and bright enough to guarantee you wonโt ask for more.
โI just think,โ I say to Miles, โyou like people almost as much as they like you. And it makes being around you feel likeโlike standing in
sunlight.โ
His mouth softens. Briefly, he studies the space between our feet. โYou feel like sunlight too.โ
I snort. โNo, I donโt.โ
โNo,โ he agrees. โYou donโt. Youโre more like Lake Michigan.โ โCold and bracing,โ I say.
His voice drops: โCool and refreshing.โ โShocking and painful,โ I say.
โSurprising and exciting,โ he counters, now close enough that I smell the postshift glass of red wine on his breath. Close enough that I become the moth to his irresistible glow, trying to resist the pull to move closer.
I tip my head toward the living room, the mess, mine and Juliaโs. I seize the opportunity for a distraction from this heady feeling. โHave you managed to talk to her? About what sheโs really doing here?โ
He exhales heavily with a half step back. โIโve tried. Sheโs still pretending thereโs no big reason other than scraping me up off the floor.โ He forces a smile that makes my heart feel like itโs folding in half. โYou ready to kick her out?โ
โI like having her here,โ I promise. He nods.
โCan I do anything?โ I ask.
Now his smile softens. He touches my chin again. โNah,โ he says. โThis is enough.โ
โIโm not doing anything,โ I point out.
The corner of his mouth twitches. โThen why do I feel better?โ
The moment swells. Nowย Iย step back, the floor chilly beneath my soles. โThanks again,โ I say, โfor lubing my zipper.โ
โAnytime,โ he says.





