The Unhoneymooners

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The Unhoneymooners Page 18

by Christina Lauren


  “Olive.”

  I look up in surprise when he says it, but he doesn’t immediately continue. “Yeah?”

  He opens his napkin, sets it on his lap, and leans on his forearms, meeting my eyes directly. “I’m sorry.”

  I can’t tell if it’s an apology for lunch, for the sex, or for about a hundred other things he could probably stand to apologize for. “About . . . ? ”

  “About lunch,” he says gently. “I should have focused only on you.” He pauses and runs a finger over a dark brow. “I wasn’t at all interested in having drinks with Sophie. If I was withdrawn, it was because I was hungry and tired of running into her.”

  “Oh.” Everything in my head seems to come to a standstill, words momentarily on hiatus. That was so much easier than getting a new hotel room. “Okay.”

  He smiles. “I don’t want things to be weird with us.”

  Frowning, I ask, “Wait. Are you apologizing so you can have sex with me again?”

  Ethan looks like he can’t decide if he wants to laugh or throw his fork at me. “I think I’m apologizing because my emotions tell me I need to?”

  “You have emotions besides irritation?”

  Now he laughs. “I don’t think I registered that I seemed to be quietly enjoying her jealousy. I won’t lie and say that it doesn’t bring me some pleasure that she’s jealous, but that’s independent of how I feel about you. I didn’t mean to seem preoccupied with Sophie after we’d just been together.”

  Wow. Did some woman text him that apology? That was fantastic.

  “She texted me earlier, and I replied,” he says, and turns his phone around so I can read it. The text says simply, Gonna pass on drinks. Have a nice trip. “Before you got back to the room. Look at the time stamp,” he says, and points, grinning. “You can’t even say that I did it because you were mad, because I had no idea you were mad. Finally, my cluelessness comes in handy.”

  Our waitress slides our salads down in front of us, and now that things are better between us, I regret not getting a burger. Forking a piece of lettuce, I say, “Okay, cool.”

  “ ‘Okay, cool,’ ” he repeats slowly. “That’s it?”

  I look up at him. “I mean it: that was an impressive apology. We can go back to being rude to each other for fun now.”

  “What if I felt like being nice to each other for fun now?” he asks, and then flags down the waitress.

  I narrow my eyes at him. “I’m trying to imagine ‘nice’ on you.”

  “You were pretty nice on me earlier,” he says in a quiet growl.

  “See? I knew you apologized just to have sex with me again.”

  At the side of the table, a throat clears. We both look up to see that the waitress has returned.

  “Oh. Hi. That was timely.” I wave to her, and Ethan laughs.

  “Can we get a bottle of the Bergstrom Cumberland pinot?” he asks her.

  She leaves and he shakes his head at me.

  “You’re going to loosen me up with alcohol now?” I ask, grinning. “That’s one of my favorite wines.”

  “I know.” He reaches across the table, taking my hand, and my insides turn warm and wavy. “And no, I’m going to loosen you up by refusing to fight with you.”

  “You won’t be able to resist.”

  Bending, he kisses my knuckles. “Wanna bet?”

  chapter thirteen

  As Ethan chatters easily throughout his meal and into dessert, I stare at him, working to not let my jaw fall open too frequently: I don’t think I’ve seen him smile this much, ever.

  Part of me wants to pull my phone back out and take a picture; it’s the same part of me that wants to catalog every one of his features: the dramatic brows and lashes; the contrast of his bright eyes; the straight Roman line of his nose; his full, intelligent mouth. I get the sense that we’re living on a cloud; no matter what I tell my head and my heart, I worry I’m in for a rough crash landing when we fly home to Minnesota in a matter of days. As much as I fight the thought, it keeps returning, uninvited: This can’t last. It’s too good.

  He drags a strawberry through a drizzle of chocolate syrup beside the cheesecake we’re sharing, and holds the fork aloft. “I was thinking we could do Haleakal? at sunrise tomorrow.”

  “What’s that?” I steal the fork and eat the perfect bite he’s crafted. He doesn’t even scowl—he smiles—and I try to not let this throw me. Ethan Thomas is totally fine with me eating off his fork. Olive Torres from two weeks ago is floored.

  “It’s the highest point on the island,” he explains. “According to Carly at the front desk it’s the best view around, but we have to get there pretty early.”

  “Carly at the front desk, eh?”

  He laughs. “I had to find someone to talk to while you were off shopping all afternoon.”

  Only a week ago I would have made a cutting sarcastic remark in response to this, but my brain is full of nothing but heart-eyes and the urge to kiss him.

  So I reach across the table for his hand. He takes mine without any hesitation, like it is the most natural thing in the world.

  “So I think,” I say quietly, “that if we’re going to be up for the sunrise, we should probably get to bed soon.”

  His lips part, eyes drop to my mouth. Ethan Thomas is quick on the uptake: “I think you’re right.”

  • • •

  ETHAN’S ALARM GOES OFF AT four, and we startle awake, mumble into the darkness, and roll in a naked, sheet-tangled tumble from bed and into our layers of clothing. Although we are on a tropical island, Front Desk Carly told Ethan the predawn temperatures at the peak of the mountain are frequently below freezing.

  Despite our best intentions for an early bedtime, the man kept me up for several hours with his hands, and mouth, and a shockingly large vocabulary of dirty words; it feels like a thick sex fog hovers in my brain even when he turns on the lights in the living room. With teeth brushed and kisses given, Ethan brews coffee and I pack a bag with water, fruit, and granola bars.

  “Wanna hear my mountain-climbing story?” I ask.

  “Is bad luck involved?”

  “You know it.”

  “Let’s hear it.”

  “Summer after sophomore year in college,” I begin, “Ami, Jules, Diego, and I took a trip to Yosemite because Jules was on a fitness kick and wanted to climb Half Dome.”

  “Uh-oh.”

  “Yes!” I sing. “It’s a terrible story. So, Ami and Jules were in great shape, but Diego and I were, let’s say, more marathon couch potatoes than runners. Of course, the hike itself is insane and I thought I was going to die at least fifty times—which has nothing to do with luck, just laziness—but then we start the final vertical ascent up the subdome. No one told me to watch out where I put my hands. I reached into a crevice to get a grip and grabbed a rattlesnake.”

  “What!”

  “Yeah, bit by a fucking rattlesnake, and fell like fifteen feet.”

  Ethan gapes at me. “What did you do?”

  “Well, Diego wasn’t going to climb that last stretch, so he was there standing over me, acting like his plan was to pee on my hand. Thankfully the ranger came over and had some antivenin, and it was okay.”

  “See?” Ethan says. “That’s lucky.”

  “To be bitten? To fall?”

  He laughs incredulously. “Lucky that they had the antivenin. You didn’t die on Half Dome.”

  I shrug, dropping a couple of bananas in the backpack. “I see what you’re saying.”

  I can feel him still watching me.

  “You don’t really believe this, though, right?” Off my look, he adds, “That you have some sort of chronically bad luck?”

  “Absolutely. I’ve already shared a couple of winners, but just to keep it recent: I lost my job the day after my roommate moved out. In June, I g
ot some car repairs done and a ticket when a hit-and-run shoved my brand-new car into a no-parking zone. And this summer an old woman fell asleep on my shoulder on the bus, and I only realized she was dead, and not actually asleep, after I’d missed my stop.”

  His eyes go wide.

  “I’m kidding about that last one. I don’t even take the bus.”

  Ethan bends, cupping his hands over his knees. “I don’t know what I would actually do if someone died on me.”

  “I think the odds are pretty slim.” Even half-asleep, I grin as I pour our coffee into two paper cups and slide one in front of Ethan.

  Straightening, he says, “I guess I’m suggesting that you give the idea of luck too much power.”

  “You mean how positivity breeds positivity? Please don’t tell me you think you’re the first one to mention this to me. I realize part of it is outlook, but honestly—it’s luck, too.”

  “Okay, but . . . my lucky penny is just a coin. It doesn’t have any great power, it’s not magic, it’s just something I found before a bunch of awesome things happened. So now I associate it with those awesome things.” He lifts his chin to me. “I had my penny the night we ran into Sophie. Logically, if everything was about luck, that wouldn’t have happened.”

  “Unless my bad luck countered your good luck.”

  His arms come around my waist, and he pulls me into the heat of his chest. I’m still so unaccustomed to the ease of his affection that thrill passes in a shiver down my spine.

  “You’re a menace,” he says into the top of my head.

  “It’s just how I’m built,” I tell him. “Ami and I are like photo negatives.”

  “It’s not a bad thing.” He tilts my chin, kissing me once, slowly. “We’re not supposed to be carbon copies of our siblings . . . even when we are outwardly identical.”

  I think about all this as we move into the hallway. I’ve spent my entire life being compared to Ami; it’s nice having someone like me for me.

  But, of course, this awareness—that he likes me the way I am—trips the following one, and once we’re in the elevator and headed to the lobby, the thought bursts out of me, unattended. “I guess I’m a pretty firm one-eighty from Sophie, too.”

  I immediately want to sift the words out of the air and shove them back into my face.

  “I guess, yeah,” he says.

  I want him to add, “But not in a bad way,” again, or even “I’m glad,” but he just grins down at me, waiting for me to spew some more nonsense.

  I will not indulge him. I bite my lips closed and glare up at him: he knows exactly what he’s doing. What a monster.

  Ethan continues to smile down at me. “Are you jealous?”

  “Should I be?” I ask, and then immediately amend, “I mean, we’re just having a vacation fling, aren’t we?”

  He lets surprise slowly—skeptically—take over his features. “Oh, is that all this is?”

  The way this lands feels like a boulder rolling down my spine. We’re only a couple of days away from hate and into tenderness—it’s way too soon to be talking about this in any serious way.

  Or is it? I mean, technically we’re in-laws now. It’s not like we can leave the island and never see each other again; at some point we’re going to have to deal with what we’re doing . . . and what the fallout will be.

  We step out of the elevator, pass through the lobby, and, in the darkness, get into a cab; I still haven’t answered him. This is one I need to sit with for a little bit, and Ethan is apparently fine with that because he doesn’t prompt me again.

  What’s amazing is that even at four thirty in the morning there is traffic headed up through the national park to the crater’s peak; there are vans with bicycles, hiking groups, and couples like us—we’re a sort of couple—planning to lay down a towel and huddle together in the morning chill.

  It takes an hour to get through the traffic and to the top, where we scrabble up a series of rocks to the peak. Even though the sky is still mostly dark, the view is breathtaking. There are clusters of people standing huddled together in the cold or sitting on the ground with blankets, but it’s oddly quiet, like everyone is respectful enough to keep their voices down when they’re about to witness a 360-degree sunrise.

  Ethan spreads out a couple of beach towels we borrowed from the hotel and beckons me down. He guides me to sit between his long, outstretched legs and pulls me back against his chest. I can’t imagine he’s very comfortable, but I am in heaven, so I give in to it and just let my guard down for a long, quiet stretch.

  I wish I knew what was happening, both between us and inside my heart. It feels like the organ itself has gotten bigger, like it’s demanding to be seen and heard, reminding me that I am a warm-blooded female with wants and needs that go beyond the basics. Being with Ethan increasingly feels like spoiling myself with a perfect new pair of shoes or an extravagant dinner out. I just remain unconvinced that I deserve this daily . . . or that it can last.

  It’s obvious to me that we’ve both fallen into quiet reflection about us, and I’m not at all surprised when he says, “I asked you something earlier.”

  “I know.”

  We’re just having a vacation fling, aren’t we?

  Oh, is that all this is?

  He goes quiet again; obviously he doesn’t have to repeat what he said. But I don’t feel entirely sure where my head is on this particular issue. “I’m . . . thinking.”

  “Think out loud,” he says. “With me.”

  My heart does this tight, twisting maneuver at the way he so easily asks me for what he needs and knows I can give him: transparency.

  “We didn’t even like each other a week ago,” I remind him.

  His mouth comes to a gentle landing on the side of my neck. “I think we should chalk all that up to a silly misunderstanding. Would it help if I treated you to cheese curds when we got home?”

  “Yes.”

  “You’d promise to share them with me?” He kisses me again.

  “Only if you ask very nicely.”

  At this point, I can only attribute my own pre-Maui feelings about Ethan to being reactionary and defensive. When someone doesn’t like us, it’s natural to not like them in return, right? But the memory that Dane told him I was always angry does bring up something Ethan has been hesitant to discuss . . .

  I know I tend to be the pessimist to Ami’s optimist, but I’m not angry. I’m not sharp. I am cautious and wary. The fact that Dane told Ethan that—and that Dane happened to be sleeping with other women when he said it—makes me particularly wary of Dane.

  “I don’t think we can have this conversation without also exploring the possibility that Dane wanted to keep us away from each other.”

  I feel the way he stiffens when I say this, but he doesn’t move away or let me go. “Why would he do that, though?”

  “My theory?” I say. “He let Ami believe he was monogamous, and you knew he wasn’t. If you and I started talking, it would eventually slip out that he was seeing other people. Just like it did, here.”

  Behind me, Ethan shrugs, and I know him well enough now to imagine the expression he’s making: unconvinced, but unconcerned. “It probably just felt weird to him,” he says. “The idea of his big brother dating his girlfriend’s twin sister.”

  “If I agreed to go out with you,” I add.

  “Are you telling me you wouldn’t have?” he counters. “I saw the thirst in your eyes, too, Olivia.”

  “I mean, you’re not horrible to look at.”

  “Neither are you.”

  These words are spoken into the sensitive skin behind my ear; the particular Olive-and-Ethan brand of compliment blows through me, soft and seductive. Ethan’s reaction to me at the wedding gave no indication he thought anything other than that I was a short green satin troll. “I’m still rewiring that
aspect of things.”

  “I always assumed my attraction was obvious. I wanted to translate your frowns and find out what your problem with me was and then bend you over the back of my couch.”

  All of my internal organs turn to goo at his words. I work to remain upright, letting my head fall back into the crook of his neck.

  “You still haven’t answered my question,” he reminds me quietly.

  I bite back a smile at his persistence. “Is this just a fling?”

  “Yeah,” he says. “I’m fine with a fling, I guess, but I want to know so I can figure out how to handle it once we’re home.”

  “You mean whether or not you’ll tell Dane?” I ask carefully.

  “I mean whether I’ll need some time to get over you.”

  This corkscrews an ache through my heart. I turn my head so that I can meet his kiss as he bends to deliver it and let the feeling of relief and hunger wash over me. I try to imagine seeing Ethan at Ami and Dane’s house, keeping my distance, and not wanting to touch him like this.

  I can’t. Even in my imagination it’s impossible.

  “I’m not entirely done with whatever this is,” I admit. “Even if it is a fling, it doesn’t feel—”

  “Don’t say it.”

  “—flung.” I grin up at him and he groans.

  “That was almost as bad as your ‘on the cuff’ line at the wedding.”

  “I knew that would hold a special place in your memory.”

  Ethan bares his teeth on my neck, growling.

  “So, I guess what I’m saying is,” I begin, and then take a deep breath like I’m about to jump off a cliff into a pool of dark water, “if you wanted to keep seeing each other once we’re home, I wouldn’t be totally opposed.”

  His mouth moves up my neck, sucking. His hand slides beneath my jacket and shirt, coming to a warm stop over my breastbone. “Yeah?”

  “What do you think?”

  “I think I like it.” He kisses along my jaw to my mouth. “I think this means I get to do this even after our fake honey­moon is over.”

  I arch into his palm, urging it over with my own hand until he’s cupping my breast. But with a frustrated growl, Ethan pulls his fingers back down to my stomach. “I wish we’d had this conversation back at the room.”

 

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