HALF AN HOUR LATER,ย Iโm following her along the Vancouver seawall, dodging strollers and joggers as we run. Gray clouds stretch across the sky, but it isnโt raining, and thatโs a win for November in Vancouver. Weโre making our way to Stanley Park, the big emerald forest at the edge of downtown. I check my heart rate on my watch.
โLetโs speed up,โ I tell her. โI want to keep my heart rate above one- twenty.โ
She thrusts her hand out toward me, palm up. โGive me that.โ She points at my watch. โYour watch. Hand it over.โ Sheโs breathing hard, face flushed, looking goddamned gorgeous in the morning light. โYou keep checking it.โ
โWhat else should I be doing?โ
She waves her arms at our surroundings. Looking at the ocean, the glass towers, the trees. โThis. All of this.โ
There are a few people sitting on the logs on English Bay Beach, gazing out at the ships in the water.
I point at a seagull eating pizza out of the trash and gasp with overexaggerated awe. โOh my god. Look at this majestic nature, Hazel!โ
She slaps my shoulder, but sheโs laughing. โMiller, shut the fuck up.โ
I grin down at her before squinting at a building weโre passing. โI just saw a rat. Letโs go take a closer look.โ
โUnbelievable.โ She shakes her head, flattening her lips, but thereโs laughter in her eyes. โYou know why I like running and yoga and swimming? Because all the other shit in life just disappears. Iโm just trying to breathe and not collapse, and nothing else matters. No family shit, no
hockey, no McKinnon. Just this.โ She looks out across the water. โJust trees and water.โ She tilts her head behind us. โAnd that seagull eating pizza.โ
We enter Stanley Park, and the noise of the city dies down as we run down the sidewalk between enormous fir trees. The air feels cleaner, crisper in here, and itโs the perfect temperature for running.
โAlright, fire-breather. Iโll do it your way.โ
That nickname makes her glare at me. โCall me that again and Iโm going to bully you.โ
โYou know what happens when you bully me.โ
A huge grin spreads across her face and her chest shakes as she laughs, and the same feeling floods my body as when we were sprinting up the stairs at the team dinner. The feeling I was chasing when I tried playing pickup hockey. And last night, when I flipped the puck to Owens and watched him score.
We run around the park, and I stop caring about my pace or my heart rate. I just run with Hazel. Everything falls away, and itโs just us, right here. โCome on,โ I goad her later as the entrance of the park comes into sight again. Sheโs lagging a bit, but her pride would never allow her to ask me to
slow down. โIs that all you got, Hartley? I thought you were strong.โ โIย amย strong,โ she tosses back, picking up her pace.
I match her speed, and by the time we reach the entrance, weโre sprinting. Sheโs not wrong, sheย isย strong. Sheโs a lot faster than I would have predicted, but Iโm a lot taller.
My mind wanders, and Iโm back in that forest with my mom fifteen years ago. My heart squeezes. Worthy, I think Hazel calls moments like these.
I sprint past the entrance sign, two feet ahead of her, and whirl on her with a gloating, victorious smile. โI win.โ I poke her side. โA little more running and a little less napping on your yoga mat, okay?โ
She laughs. โPrick.โ
โSore loser.โ I loop my arm around her shoulders and pull her close as we walk. Iโm sweaty, sheโs sweaty, but neither of us seems to care as we work to catch our breath. โItโs okay. I have longer legs.โ
Her elbow digs into my side. โDonโt patronize me.โ
โItโs true.โ I laugh. โIf you were my height, youโd probably win.โ
โNext time you sleep over at my place,โ she says, โIโm going to test how long you can hold your breath with a pillow over your face.โ
My head tips back as I laugh and laugh. โNext time, huh?โ
โWhatever.โ She rolls her eyes, still smiling. โHow come we never go to your place? Is it something embarrassing?โ Her expression stills. โYou donโtย actuallyย have a sex doll, right?โ
I snort. โNo, Hartley, I donโt.โ I think of my apartmentโso cold and empty and soulless compared to Hartleyโs cluttered, lively shoebox. โMy place sucks.โ
โWorse than mine?โ
โCome on.โ I tighten my arm around her neck, jostling her. โNo place is worse than yours, baby.โ
Her elbow lodges in my ribs again, and I laugh. She didnโt tell me not to call her baby, though.
โYou remind me of my mom sometimes,โ I tell her later as we walk home, coffees in hand, my arm back around her shoulder. She must be tired from our run because she isnโt pushing me off.
Under my arm, she stills, but she turns to me with a curious expression. My focus goes to where her hand touches my side, arm wrapped around my waist, and itโs just like that day in the forest when I was a kid, when my mom threw her arm around me and told me she loved me.
When was the last time we talked? Last Christmas, I think. She sent me an email and I didnโt respond because I didnโt know what to say.
God, I fucking miss her.
โShe loves doing stuff like this. Running, hiking, yoga even.โ I look down at Hazel and wiggle my eyebrows. Sheโs watching me closely. โSheโd be all over your woo-woo worthy shit, Hartley.โ
I wonder what my mom would think of me playing pickup games. I wonder if she ever watches my games on TV.
โDo you see her often?โ Hazel asks. I shake my head. โNot really.โ โWhy not?โ
I bite the inside of my cheek, unsure of what to say. โShe left us.โ Hazelโs gaze flares with fury and compassion, so I quickly add, โI mean, she asked me if I wanted to go with her.โ
My throatโs tight as I fight to stay here with Hazel and not go back there to that house, listening as the door closes behind her.
โAnd I said no. She didnโt like how hard my dad pushed me at hockey. Said he was obsessed and making me obsessed.โ I clear my throat. โAnd I wanted to make him proud, so I told her I didnโt want to go with her. They tried to do split custody but it was hard with my hockey schedule.โ My chest tightens. โAnd I didnโt make things easy,โ I admit. โWhen I was with her, Iโd ignore her or go play hockey until it was time for bed, and eventually I told her I didnโt want to live with her anymore.โ
Nausea rolls through me, working its way up my throat. I was so hurt that she didnโt want me and my dad that I made things so much worse.
โThings are kind of different between us now.โ Thatโs my fault, and I hate myself for it.
โHow old were you?โ โTwelve.โ
Sheโs quiet for a second. โYou were just a kid.โ
The gentle emotion in her voice pierces a hole in my heart, so I force a laugh and give her a wry, self-deprecating smile so everything doesnโt come spilling out. โHartley, Iโm okay.โ
Am I okay? Sometimes it feels like everythingโs falling apart.
โIโm one of the best athletes in the world,โ I continue. โIโm rich as fuck, and Iโm very, very good-looking.โ I wink down at her, but she doesnโt smile.
โDo you ever think about what it would be like if youโd gone with her?โ โI try not to.โ
She frowns.
โI donโt want to have regrets.โ So I try not to think about that moment when maybe I should have gone with her.
She doesnโt say anything, just sips her coffee as I walk her back to her place.
โWhyโd you do this?โ I ask as we turn onto her street. โTake me on a run.โ
โBecause weโre friends now.โ Her eyes meet mine, so bright and blue in the daylight, and she hesitates like sheโs choosing her words with care. โAnd because youโre good and kind,โ she says, looking up at me with the most open and sincere expression Iโve ever seen on her pretty face.
This is who Hazel really is, under all the sharp barbs. I bet she doesnโt let anyone except Pippa see this part of her. Itโs too valuable and precious for someone like me to have.
โAnd you deserve good things in your life, Rory.โ