I could wait. I should wait. I shouldn’t be looking over my shoulder at her, shouldn’t be admiring the way her hair falls in front of her shoulders, how she smiles and waves. I hope she’s having fun, and I don’t want to ruin it, but god, I’d like to make this better, and maybe give her an even better experience. Maybe take a risk, to show her what I’d give up for her.
I’m not going to wait.
I drop back and to the side a bit until I’m behind Bronwyn and Wright, and then I come up right beside them. Next to Wright just in case this goes badly.
“Hey, Wright, could I talk to Perry for a minute?”Perrysounds so wrong, and I can see the roll of her eyes. She hates it, too.
Wright looks to Bronwyn, who shrugs and mutters something like “whatever,” and then she’s looking back at me, giving me a gaze that’s heavy on suspicion. “Sure. I’ll be back in a few.”
Then she’s walking off, joining up with Nguyen, Stewart, and Lam. Bronwyn still has that fake smile plastered on her face, and even though I know it’s not for real, she’s still pretty. I take a step closer into her until we’re side-by-side and her arm occasionally brushes against mine. It’s a relief, that brief contact, even if her face is made of stone.
“Bronwyn.” I say it softly, so softly, letting my lips smooth over the sounds and she looks as though her rocky façade might crack even though she’s not looking at me, even though she gives no indication at all that she’s listening. “Bronwyn, I am so, so sorry.”
For a second, she rolls her lips between her teeth and presses. It’s the only sign what I’ve said has had any effect on her, and it’s gone in a flash, back to that smile stretched across her face in a way that looks painful. I want to beg her to stop, heft her in my arms and no matter how painful it would be—and it would be excruciating—carry her someplace safe and quiet where I could apologize for hours, hold her close until she believed me, come up with a plan we could both agree on that would prevent either or both of us from losing our livelihoods. Not an option.
So I do what I can, and continue my near-silent pleas. “You have to know during that interview, I was lying through my teeth. Same goes for my conversation with Madeline. The words coming out of my mouth were the biggest fabrications I’ve ever told in my life. I lied, and tried to do it convincingly, for the both of us. The consequences for me would be . . .”Devastating. Catastrophic. Ruinous.
I shake my head, and swallow the words. “I can’t lose my job. I’ve never wanted to do anything else and if people found out, BU would fire me, I’d never get another shot at coaching the SIG team, and no one would ever touch me again. Ever. I’d hope no one would blame you for what happened at all, that it would all get heaped on me because I’m the older, wiser, more influential person here, with more power and allegedly better judgment, but the world can be a shitty place. I didn’t want people speculating that you’d gotten preferential treatment because we were sleeping together, that it was us sleeping together and not that you’re the best I have that got me to give you that last shot. I don’t want anything to get in the way of you going pro.”
Bronwyn is still looking out at the crowd, the tens of thousands of flashes reflecting in her eyes and off her glossy hair until she looks like she’s made of sequins.
“I had to look dead serious. I had to swear my life on it, because I’d never forgive myself if I ruined anything for you. I’m sorry we didn’t have a chance to talk about what we would do if anyone got wind of it, because we were so caught up in . . . each other. We should’ve come up with a plan, should’ve talked about it, and I understand how it could’ve felt like a slap to the face to see me deny my feelings for you on national television. And I regret leaving you to take that phone call. If I had it to do over again, I would’ve let it go to voicemail and called her back after we’d finished talking. I don’t have much of an excuse except that I panicked. But I swear to you, it was lies. All fucking lies.”
She blinks, waves some more, and smiles big, her jaw flexing because she’s grinding her teeth. It hurts me, and it makes me desperate. Desperate enough to tell her a truth I’m not sure she’s ready for. Under normal circumstances, I’d wait, but this—all the cheering, all the cameras, all the people unwittingly witness to my groveling—this is not normal.
“I love you. I want to be with you. I also want to do that in a way that won’t get either of us in hot water, because I want us to be happy, to not have any resentment between us. If I lost my job, my career, what possible good could I be to you in the long run? Because that’s what I’ve been thinking about. I know we’ve only been together for less than two weeks, but I want it to be for a lot longer than that. I love you and I want to be with you when we get home. I want us to figure out how to do that together.”
At first, she doesn’t say anything, just looks like her eyes might brim over with tears. It’s too late. She doesn’t believe me. I’m going to have to back off, and maybe after we get back to Boston, maybe in a few weeks when the furor over the SIGs has died down, hell, maybe even after she’s graduated, I’ll be able to make a gesture she believes.
I’m about to walk off, leave her to enjoy the closing ceremony in peace, and tell Wright to go back and walk with Bronwyn so she won’t be so godawfully alone, but then there’s a surprising sensation. We’re both wearing gloves, but instead of the incidental brush of her arm against my sleeve, there’s a purposeful press of her mitten against mine, and what feels like a squeeze. Like she’s trying to hold my hand through our mittens, and it about breaks my heart. In a happy way. In a confetti and glitter busting out of it kind of way. Lets me breathe again.
It’s over as soon as it’s begun, but I think I understand what she’s trying to say.It’s okay. I understand. I won’t jeopardize things for either of us either. I was listening, I believe you, and we’ll figure something out.
My lids sink over my eyes where I let them rest for a second, but in this crowd, closing your eyes for any longer than a blink isn’t okay. Which is made readily apparent when I bump into someone’s back, and realize I’ve stepped on the back of French’s shoe, making her heel come out.
“Sorry, sorry.”
Smoothest man in the land, right here. And that was probably caught on camera for all the world to see. Tremendous. But French just shakes her head, shoves her foot back in her shoe and walks a little faster.
What I’d like to do is walk next to Bronwyn for the rest of the tour around the arena, but that’s probably not wise. I let myself indulge in her being next to me for a bit, but after a couple of minutes, I brush her hand much as she had mine, and raise my chin. She looks at me, and in her face, I can see that I still have some repair work to do, but there’s a shade of hope that hadn’t been there before. I’m going to hold onto that and make it grow. Coax it as surely as I would a player with promise who just needed some cultivation, encouragement, nurturing.
Then she’s putting a skip in her step to catch up with Wright, Nguyen, Stewart, and Lam, putting her arms around their shoulders, and they laugh. I can barely hear it for all the noise in the arena, but I can feel it, and that’s all that matters. I’m going to make Bronwyn mine, and I will do everything in my power to make her happy.
Chapter Twenty
Bronwyn
The closing ceremony was incredible, but now that it’s over, the only thing I can think of, the only thing I want, is to find Ash. I want to tell him in words what I tried to tell him with one stupid squeeze of a hand, because I don’t want his nightmares to come true. Hearing him say he lied through his teeth? I’m not proud that our relationship forced him to lie, because that must make him feel just about as twisted up inside as he’d felt when we first went down this path, but that he was so concerned about the effect it coming out would have on the both of us? I could swoon right now, and I’m not the swooning type. Or haven’t been, until Ash came along.
Brody had always just assumed we’d be together, took me for granted. Was so goddamn cocksure when he asked me to marry him. Never had he actually asked me if that was something I wanted—which it wasn’t. But here comes Ash, telling me that he’s all thinking about a future with me. Like that could be a thing that happens, that it’s a thing he’s thought about, and it’s something he wants.
I want to be with him now and I’m getting twitchy because I’m not. With everyone filing out of the arena, there’s about a snowball’s chance in hell of me finding him, but lucky for me, this isn’t hell. It’s the SIGs, and a snowball’s got a damn good shot.
That’s when I see him, walking with the men’s coach. The guys took bronze, which was a bit of an upset, and I swear that’s gotten more coverage than our gold, but whatever. That’s to be ticked off about later. Now’s the time to celebrate and to tell Ash I love him, too, and that I’m sorry for doubting him when he’s never given me a reason to.
We make eye contact across the churning sea of people, and I let the corners of my mouth twitch up. A goofy grin splits his face, and I will take that as the hugest kind of compliment. It’s only a split second before he smothers it, but my disappointment is eased by him excusing himself from Coach Howe. But finally he’s walking up to me, and tips his head so I can hear his quiet words above the crowd.
“Are you going out or heading back to the village?”