The Time Of Our Lives || Art Donaldson X Original Female Character, Patrick Zweig X Original Female Character
The time of our lives || Art Donaldson x Original Female Character, Patrick Zweig x Original Female Character
Hey guys. So I'm currently obsessed with challengers and after reading every fiction that's out there, I've decided to write one on my own. It's important to say that English is not my first language, and I really am trying. It's going to have multiple chapters, and we're just getting to know the characters at the first one. Hope you'll enjoy it. Know that Tashi will be there but not as much as the boys (sorry). All the warnings are for future chapters basicly. The Time Of Our Lives

Summary: This is the journey of Liana, Art, and Patrick. The happiest moments and the hardest ones. How they managed to be each other's anchor and how fate bound them together forever, even when they couldn't see it. Warnings: 18+ MDNI, cursing, cheating, manipulative characters, alchohol abuse, future Smut. Part 1
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More Posts from Ysuftmikey
PRIORITIES : chapter 2
Red Hood x Black Maskâs assistant!Reader
authors note: WSG YALL its been a hot second and im back with the shortest chapter known to mankind but dw im gonna have a new one out shortly prolly
wc: 711âŠ
.
âWhat do you want?â You sigh, Red Hood has made his home on your couch, feet up on the coffee table like the impolite shit he is. You drop your briefcase on the kitchen counter next to your door, taking off your jacket and folding it in your arms.
This is the fourth time heâs shown up at your apartment for a report on Black Maskâs plans and sales, but this is the only time you have anything for him and the first time heâs shown up without warning.
He stretches his arms out with a groan, resting them on the back of your couch. It was unnecessarily attractive. You roll your eyes, hoping the assassins that you sent to kill him succeed.
âI was just dropping by,â He says, tilting his head in your direction, âIn the neighborhood, you know?â You can hear the smile under his mask, making you work your jaw. What this man finds enjoyable about driving you up the wall, you will never know. You level him with a disinterested gaze.
Deciding not to give him anything else he wants to hear, you avoid his gaze, âWell, you already know I put a hit on you from the bugs I planted for you,â You start, walking to the fridge and pulling out a container of leftover something, âSo I donât know what other information you need,â Opening the container, you wrinkle your nose and then shut it immediately. If it smells that horrible, you donât need to see how it looks and lose your appetite entirely.
âI want to know which assassins you sent to kill me,â Red Hood retorts as you dump the leftovers in the trash with a distasteful look on your face, and you roll your eyes.
âWhat? Scared youâre going to lose?â You pout, the most emotion youâve allowed yourself to express today. You toss your jacket on the kitchen countertop. Youâll pick it up later, after Red Hood leaves, and toss your shoes off as well. Youâll pick them up later too.
Red Hood scoffs, âNo, itâs called being prepared, but looking at the way Black Mask is dealing with me, I donât think you would know much about that,â He drawls, and you glare at him as you flop onto your comfiest chair next to the couch, having made your way into the living room.
âWhatever. I sent the Fearsome Hand of Four,â You say, enunciating their name dramatically, âDumbass name,â You whisper under your breath, stretching to reach for the TV remote on the couch armrest. Red Hood decides not to help despite the remote being in his grasp.
âSo you do dislike people other than me?â Red Hood laughs as you switch on the news, a low droning in the background of your conversation.
âNo, no,â You correct, waving your hand in Red Hoodâs general direction, âI donât dislike them, but I do hate you.â Flashing him an unenthusiastic smile, you kick your feet up on the coffee table next to his boots, turning your attention to the news.
Youâre not sure what happened between your first time meeting Red Hood and this, but watching the news together in your living room was not what you expected when you first started working for him. Thereâs a comfortable silence between you two, which makes you uncomfortable, âSo,â You say casually, trying to keep the tense edge out of your voice, âYou leaving anytime soon, or are you just going to leech off my cable the entire night?â
âWanting me gone so soon?â Red Hood teases, and you raise your eyebrows at him. He chuckles, pulling himself off the couch, âA guy knows how to take a hint,â He says as he makes his way over to your fire escape, his boots thunking on your wood floors. Sorry, downstairs neighbors.
He climbs out of your window, disappearing silently into the night.
The banter between you two had become playful instead of biting, your insults used to rile each other up, not to hurt. It was almost friendship, you thought, sighing frustratedly.
If you werenât both on opposite sides of a power struggle, you wouldnât mind talking to Red Hood regularly. But thatâs the thing, you donât even know his name.
another one !
đđđđđđ đđ đđđ? | chapter one

đ©đđąđ«đąđ§đ : art donaldson x female!reader x patrick zweig đŹđźđŠđŠđđ«đČ: youâve always been content being second place to your best friend tashi duncan, waiting for the day you can quit tennis. your world is upended when you meet art and patrick, and youâre forced to embrace a life in the sport youâve been too afraid to claim for yourself. đ°đđ«đ§đąđ§đ (đŹ): challengers content warnings, descriptions of anxiety, swearing, allusions to controlling mother, use of y/n đ°đšđ«đ đđšđźđ§đ: 3.4k đ§đšđđ: y/i means your initial of your first name. i hope you enjoy the first chapter!! đ©đ«đđŻ | đ§đđ±đ

đđđđđđ đđ đđđđ đđđđđâ đđđđđđđ đ đđđđ â đđđđđđđđđ đ, đđđđ
Waiting in the entrance corridor that led to the USTA Billie Jean King National Tennis Center, you nervously fiddled with the homemade friendship bracelet on your wrist, an anxious habit you picked up over the years. The snapping of the elastic band on your skin distracted you from your spiralling thoughts.
You were a whirlwind of nerves and compulsive overthinking.
Even though you knew with certainty how the match would go that day, you couldnât shake the anxiety that pulsed through your body before every game.
MOTHER:Â Duncanâs backhand is going to win her the whole damn Championship if you donât get your act together.
DADÂ đ©”: I love you, win or lose. Have fun with Tashi and call me when itâs over! Best of luck. Hugs, Dad.
Making friendship bracelets before big tournaments was a tradition your dad started when you were eleven. It let you relax before nerve-wracking events and allowed you to spend time with your dad amidst your busy schedules. Surprisingly, it ended up being a fun, creative outlet as well. You enjoyed focusing on the details of something other than tennis, and sharing it with your dad only made it more special. Given how many years you had to practise, you were good at creating intricate patterns and now had a vast collection of bracelets. Most of them had your name, Tashiâs name, âDad,â and the year and location of your favourite tournaments and memories on them.Â
The bracelets were your good luck charms, and you were comforted by the weight of the beads on your wrist.Â
The one you wore that day had a T and Y/I interwoven amongst pretty beads, creating deep pink and white flower shapes. They represented the stargazer lily, your favourite flower. You made the same bracelet for Tashi to wear during the US Open Junior Championships, and her beads were light and dark purple to represent her favourite flower, the sword lily. The meanings behind your favourite flowers were accurate for your roles in the friendship, given that Tashiâs sword lily â technically not a lily at all but an iris â represented strength, victory, and pride. Your stargazer lily represented innocence, purity, and prosperity. She was the heated tennis champion, while you were her gentle, equally successful friend.
The two of you thought it was perfect. Having your favourite flowers be lilies was just one of the many invisible strings that tied the two of you together.
Your father used to say that you and Tashi were the sun and the moon, and you had to agree. Tashi was fiery and outgoing, dominating the tennis world, just as the sun dominated the sky. Passionate and intense. You strived out of the spotlight and were introspective in a way that added serenity to your friendship. Warm-hearted and gentle. âThe most important part is the balance,â your father would say when you grumbled how Tashiâs attributes sounded better. âThe sun and the moon represent harmony. Together, they are day and night. Work and rest, visibility and mystery, rationality and emotion. Beginnings and endings.â
Perhaps that was why your life felt bookended by meeting and falling out with Tashi. It was the beginning and end of your adolescent life and the reason you made such drastic changes when your friendship ended. You couldnât be the same person without her.
In the corridor, you could hear the crowd getting restless. Each shallow breath you took caught in your throat, and your anxious thoughts swirled like a tornado in your mind. The spectators were rightfully excited for the beautiful game of tennis they were promised if Tashi Duncan was playing. The fact that you, her talented best friend, were playing in the finals against her had them lapping up the match like they were starved for entertainment. In many ways, you supposed they were. The Junior Championships were dull without you and Tashi bringing the heat, and your matches turned the traditional game into a glittering spectacle of excellence.
Somewhere in the stands, Art Donaldson and Patrick Zweig nursed disposable soda cups and waited for the match to start.
âDonât you want to meet Tashi Duncan and Y/N Y/L/N?â Patrick wondered, shocked by Artâs indifference to attending the Adidas party that evening. While Art went to the Junior Girlsâ Final to see fresh talent in their sport, Patrick knew something far more exceptional awaited them. Art burped, and Patrick stared in disbelief. âYou donât get it, man. Youâve never seen them in person. Theyâre in another league,â he insisted.
Art glanced down at where Patrickâs knee pressed against his thigh. âYou mean their game?â he asked sarcastically. Knowing Patrick as well as he did, Art was aware of the reason for his best friendâs obsession with Tashi Duncan and Y/N Y/L/N.
âNo, I mean theyâre the hottest women Iâve ever seen,â Patrick proclaimed. He was buzzing with an excitement Art rarely saw; Patrick was glowing. A devilish grin painted his lips, and his eyes darted across the court regularly in hopes of catching a glimpse of you and Tashi.
Answering your nervous prayers, Tashi finally joined you in the entrance corridor. âHey!â She smiled, carefree and confident, like you werenât about to play in the Junior Championship Final. The sun, you thought. Sheâs the sun. You wondered what it was like to shine so brightly and effortlessly. âAre you ready?â Tashi wondered, linking hands with you. Your friendship bracelets touched.
You sighed, squeezing her hand as you calmed your nerves. The crowdâs cheers faded in and out, interrupted by intermittent ringing in your ears. Your heart pounded, and you tried not to hyperventilate. âAs ready as Iâll ever be,â you replied reluctantly. Your doubts and fears were a suppressive weight, glueing you to the spot.
Tashi nodded encouragingly at you. She knew you werenât as scared about playing the match as incurring your motherâs wrath afterwards. Her eyes scanned your expression as if it were the map to the inner workings of your mind. She had a sixth sense when it came to reading your emotions. âYouâve got this, Y/I. Youâre a fucking tennis player, and youâre going to kill it,â Tashi declared, squeezing your hand back. âDonât let anybody tell you otherwise.âÂ
She inhaled deeply, motioning for you to follow her with her free hand. You complied, following Tashi as she exhaled slowly. âIâm a fucking tennis player,â you agreed when you caught your breath, trying to keep your voice from wavering. For now, a voice in the back of your head reminded you. Itâll all be over soon.
âAnd weâre going to play some fucking tennis,â Tashi added.Â
You chuckled. âThanks, T.â
âLetâs go.â
As you entered the court, the umpire introduced the two of you, âWinner of the Junior Australian Open, Tashi Duncan!â The crowd cheered as you and Tashi stepped onto the blue hard court with intertwined hands. âLocal star and runner up of the Junior Australian Open, Y/N Y/L/N!âÂ
You let the adrenaline rush take over and smiled, waving at your audience as you approached the benches. The applause for you wasnât quite as blaring as for Tashi, but your home base of New Yorkers was pleased and proud to have you representing them.
From his seat, Art watched with wide eyes as his breath hitched. He watched your lips curve into a grin and felt his cheeks and ears heat up. Seeing you had ignited an insatiable fire in his chest, spreading south quickly. You were like a masterpiece come to life, sending a jolt of electricity through his veins and his senses into overdrive. Patrick glanced sideways at him, empathising with the lovestruck expression on his face.
âSee you out there,â you told Tashi, grinning before parting ways and setting your bag down. She pointed two fingers at her eyes before turning her hand and pointing to you, reminding you to stay focused on the game and not let anyone ruin it for you.Â
It was an appreciated gesture. Tashi had known you long enough to notice when your mind wandered anxiously. You were reminded that your mother was in the crowd examining your every move; each step you made was deliberately catered to appease her. As long as you did what she said and got through the tournament, you could breathe easy. You took a few sips of electrolyte water, stretched your body, took deep breaths, and practised the visualisation methods your dad taught you.Â
Art leaned forward in his seat, eyes trained on you and periodically flickering to Tashi as you both stretched. âHoly shit,â he murmured appreciatively as the flouncy skirt of your white Nike tennis dress revealed the curve of your ass when you bent over to touch your toes. Forget a moth to the flame. Art was like a starving, panting dog waiting for his next meal. He and Patrick had been silent since you and Tashi walked out, blatantly staring with parted lips, too entranced to clap with the crowd.
âLadies and gentlemen, this final round match will be the best of three tie-break sets,â the umpire declared for the audience to hear. âTo the left of the chair, from the United States, Y/N Y/L/N. To the right of the chair, also from the United States, Tashi Duncan. Duncan won the toss and elected to serve.â
At the umpireâs cue, you grabbed your racket and walked behind the baseline. Artâs eyes trailed you, admiring how your hips moved as you sauntered across the court. âFuck,â he remarked. He didnât think heâd ever looked at someone and thought they had a sexy walk, yet there he was, helplessly looking to Patrick for an explanation. What was it about you that made you so perfectly captivating? âPatrickâŠâ Art trailed off, powerless to your elegant charisma.
His best friend only laughed. âJust wait until you see them play,â Patrick warned Art eagerly.
Behind the baseline, you closed your eyes and took a deep breath. You envisioned yourself flawlessly executing aces and volleys, being deliberate with your movements and not getting hurt. Positive visualisation was something you started doing recently when your anxiety got the best of you, but you never pictured yourself winning. Not when you played against Tashi.
For a moment, right before the match started, it was just you and your best friend smiling at each other from across the court with an unspoken understanding. No matter how it went, you had unwavering love and support for each other. You were beyond rivalry, and tennis connected you rather than drawing a line between you. This was one of your favourite moments in tennis: the calm before the storm, the moment of anticipation when nobody knew how the match would play out.Â
Not you, though. You always knew.Â
âFirst set, Duncan to serve.â The umpire motioned to Tashi. âReady? Play.â
Nothing could have prepared Art and Patrick for the match they were about to watch.Â
You crouched, waiting for your best friend to serve. Just as it had the day you first met Tashi, her backhand was like a sledgehammer strike each time she vaulted the ball over the net.
âLook at that fucking backhand,â Art groaned appreciatively at Tashiâs powerful two-handed backhand. Patrick merely shook his head like he couldnât believe it.
At one point in the rally you hit wide, and the ball flew out. The umpire called, â15âlove, Duncan.â Everyone applauded the point.Â
You gained the next point when Tashi hit the net. 15âall. Even though Tashi had that lightning-fast backhand, your rallies were thrilling and beautiful. Tashi took the first game, and then it was your turn to serve.
This was where you thrived.
You bounced the ball on the ground a few times before taking a deep breath, tossing it in the air, and firing it over the net so quickly that Tashi and the audience barely saw it coming. Your serve was quick as a whip, and Tashi couldnât return it. An ace. A murmur rang through the crowd as the monitor displayed the speed of your serve: 120 miles per hour.
Art nearly whimpered, âHoly fuck!â Heâd never seen a girl his age fire a serve that powerful, precise, and fast. Art shifted in his seat.
Patrick sighed reverently. âI think I just came,â he quipped.Â
You took the first set, 6-4 in your favour. Tashi took the next. The final set had everyone in the stands on the edge of their seats, waiting to see how things went. You and Tashi were stuck in a 6-6 tiebreaker, and this next point would decide the game. If you won this point, you would play another set to determine the winner of the match. If Tashi won, she would win the US Open Junior Girlsâ Singles Championship Final.
There was an electric energy in the air, and Art and Patrick could hear their heartbeats hammering in their ears. The game unfolded remarkably. Everyone held their breaths in anticipation as Tashi served. You returned each stroke with precision and power, allowing the thud of the ball to echo through the court intermixed with your grunts.Â
It was a moment of pure bliss.
For once, you werenât thinking of your mother or her overbearing expectations of you. All you could focus on was you, Tashi, and the ball floating between you. The tension was palpable and thick; nobody in the audience knew how they wanted it to go. Tashi was the clear fan favourite, but her losing this point would mean at least another half-hour of watching the two of you play. Nobody could deny that would be a gripping end to the match.
As if ignited by a rush of raw determination, Tashi struck the ball and sent it soaring across the court, kissing your baseline and winning her the entire match.
With a primal, reverberating roar of passion, Tashi crouched, clenched her fists, and screamed, âCome on!â Her voice echoed through the court, thundering above the crowd cheering for her.
Everyone present knew theyâd seen something phenomenal, and they werenât sure what to do now that it was over.
"Game, set, and match, Duncan. Seven games to six in the final tie break,â the umpire said over the clamour.
You laughed, dropped your racket, and shrieked when Tashi leapt over the tennis court to pull you into a hug. Breathless and sweaty, you wrapped your arms around your best friend and giggled deliriously. All your matches with Tashi were fantastic, but this was one of the most riveting. You pulled away enough to exchange bright smiles, heart pounding with exhilaration from the intense match. Your spirits were high, mirroring Tashiâs excitement and revelling in the knowledge that you had fun and entertained the crowd. For you, that transcended the outcome of the game.
âNow thatâs tennis,â Patrick commented, giggling giddily.Â
Art got to his feet and clapped, speechless.
âCongrats, T! You just won the goddamn Junior US Open,â you exclaimed, lightheaded from the adrenaline rush. After the gruelling match, you felt your muscles twitching from the exertion. Your body was drenched in sweat, physically and emotionally exhausted by the demands of the sport you and Tashi dedicated your lives to.
Tashi chuckled, beads of sweat dripping from her temples. âWho cares? You just showed me that youâre not ready to give up on tennis yet,â she retorted, smirking triumphantly. You opened your mouth to argue, but Tashi shook her head. âI know you think you want to quit but you havenât even given yourself a chance yet! Think about it, your mom isnât going to be riding your ass when weâre at Stanford. You might just fall back in love with it,â she pointed out.
You rolled your eyes and smiled fondly at her. She meant well by encouraging you to keep up with tennis, but nobody could convince you to keep going.
When you and Tashi turned to bow and wave at the crowd, Patrick stood beside Art. âWhat time did you say the Adidas party was?â Art asked, wonderstruck.Â
Patrickâs lips curled into a brazen smirk, like a cat that had just caught the canary, and his eyes sparkled with a knowing gleam. âI knew youâd come around.â

đđđđđđđ đđđđ, đđđđđđđ â đđđđ đđ, đđđđ
âWe need to get you some more match time, then,â Tashi decided. She and Art were sitting in their hotel room in Atlanta after his crushing defeat by a French teenager. Grabbing her phone, she checked what other tournaments were happening before the US Open.
âI can play Cincinnati,â Art protested, not wanting Tashi to pull him out.Â
âNo. No, you cannot. Not like this,â Tashi disagreed. It wasnât that she would be embarrassed if Art lost; she loved and respected him more than his wins. It was the fact that she knew he had more in him. More fight and more passion. Tashi just needed to find a way to reignite the flames. âOkay, how about--â she paused. New Rochelle, New York. Around the corner from where Y/N Y/L/N grew up and currently resided. Speaking of reigniting old flames⊠âHow about New Rochelle?â Tashi proposed.Â
Artâs shoulders tensed. He exhaled shakily, mind immediately going to you. Tashi wasnât oblivious to how her husband had a visceral, physical reaction whenever you were brought up. The last time either of them saw you â really saw you up close â was three years ago at the French Open, the year you and Art took home the Singles titles. Art and Tashi were invited to the Nike afterparty celebrating your second French Open Singles win in 2016. Tashi thought Art would faint at the rate he held his breath each time he saw you. His hands clutched the table whenever you laughed; it was like his hands itched to reach for you, like a bee drawn to the sweetest flower.
âThatâs a Challenger,â Art stammered, trying to change the subject.
Even though he tried to keep his mind off you, his thumb subconsciously traced the friendship bracelet on Tashiâs wrist. It was one of the many bracelets Lily made for her, a skill their daughter learned from her father.
Tashi recalled when you were teenagers, and you tried to get her to make bracelets with you. You must have convinced her to do it a handful of times, but she never had the patience to focus on anything except tennis and gave up every time.Â
The only person who ever took the time and care to make you a bracelet was Art Donaldson.
Tashi ignored his obvious shift in topic. âYeah, I know that. Itâs in a couple of days. Maybe we can get you a wildcard,â she suggested. Art scoffed quietly, averting his eyes and fiddling with the colourful beads on her bracelet. âArt?â He hummed nonchalantly. âYou need to start winning,â Tashi told him firmly. Moments like these made it hard to walk the line between spouse and coach. âRight now, youâre getting crushed by guys like Du Maurier. So we need to go somewhere, where thereâs absolutely nobody on the other side of the net who can shake your fucking confidence. Okay?â Tashi underscored the importance of the Challenger. âThatâs why weâre going to--â she glanced at her phone-- âPhilâs Tire Town Challenger.â
Art chuckled. Even when he first started in the professional tennis world, heâd never gone to a Challenger with a name like that. âThatâs the only reason weâre going to New Rochelle?â Art asked, smiling knowingly at Tashi.Â
She didnât care that heâd caught on to her scheme. âYouâre telling me you donât want to see her?â Tashi retorted, raising an eyebrow at her husband. âIf she was right in front of you, youâd just turn around and walk away?â Their silent exchange of glances spoke volumes, acknowledging the unspoken truth that he loved you. Amidst the tension, there was a quiet understanding between them. Tashi knew what it was like to have loved and lost you. Perhaps not in the same way as Art, but in your friendship that once meant everything to her. âBecause I think youâd hold on and never let go of her again,â Tashi argued.
Art couldnât disagree with her. After all, a man never forgets his first love.Â

đ§đšđđ: how are we feeling after this chapter?? i hope you enjoyed the way i incorporated the friendship bracelets and lilies (yes art and tashi named their daughter after the fact that your favourite flower is a lily asdfghjhkhl) thank you for reading xx
30s art donaldson tired af from tashi working him to the bone. so tired that he just wants to lay down but is also very horny cuz when is that man not and he asks reader âcan you please just sit on my faceâ in a really quiet whimper or smth idk (i really just want to read about sitting on artâs face lol)
when art showed up at your door, sweaty and tired and flushed all over, you knew that you wouldn't be able to resist his pleas for attention. the exhausted, slightly defeated look in his gem-like blue eyes had you weak all over. it was just no use.
he looked like a kicked puppy.
or maybe just a really over-worked man.
but that was beside the point.
you ushered him inside, cupping his face and cooing at him in all the ways you knew that he needed you to. he pouted. he whined. you could practically imagine a tail tucked between his legs. his coach must have really chewed him out during practice. he had been on a downward spiral in terms of his ability to win for the last few months. it had been rough, to say the least.
he kicked off his shoes and stumbled over to your living room floor, sitting down on the carpet where he opted to stretch his hamstrings. you sat in front of him and ran a hand through his damp hair. he leaned into your touch instinctually, and then buried his face into your neck as his hands slid to hold your lower back.
you embraced him and rubbed his back, hearing him let out little noises of contentment as your palms caressed circles over his aching body. you pressed a kiss to his neck. he tasted like salt and self-doubt, which was not unusual for him after he had just freshly come back from the courts.
he moaned softly against you and then his lips were on yours with a tender ferocity that he always carried. his tongue was eagerly slipping past your teeth to lick at yours, and then he was pulling you closer and furrowing his brows.
"Please," he whispered against your lips as he tilted his head to change angles. his dick was already hard. that's how easy it was for you to get him worked up.
"What-" you pause, kissing him deeper, "What is it?"
his hands gripped your hips.
"Can you please just sit on my face?"
you felt your body warm up instantly at the sound of his whimpered plea, like a bucket of hot spring water had been dumped over you, and you nod slowly against his lips.
within thirty seconds, he was laying flat on his back on your floor, and the clothing on the lower half of your body had been removed and tossed aside to unknown places.
you crawled up his form, and he watched your every move with bated breath, letting his fingers ghost over your body as you inched your way up to his mouth.
when you finally hovered above him on your bent knees, pussy just inches away from his desperate tongue, he immediately shuddered underneath you and looked up to your eyes with a look that begged you before he could even get the right words out.
"C'mon, please.." he moaned pathetically, hands now grasping at your torso and trying to pull you down to him.
you smile, biting your bottom lip.
"Ask me again."
his hips lifted up from the carpet, bucking into the air and affectively jolting the both of you. it was an accident; he didn't mean to. it was just that his mouth was watering and he was too fucking aroused to think properly.
"Will you sit on my face? Please?"
and with that, you lowered your wet core down to his mouth and relished in the way that he immediately groaned into you. his hands tightly held the back of your thighs as his lips suckled on your clit and his tongue lathed sloppily over your slick folds. his tongue darted in and out slowly from your hole, trying with everything in him to taste all that he possibly could.
you rocked your hips over his face, smearing his chin and the tip of his nose with your slimy arousal, but he couldn't have asked for anything better. he loved this. he craved this with everything in him. he wanted you to sit on him like this for however long you could stand it. he could die like this and be happy.
your orgasm built quickly thanks to his expert knowledge on what and where you liked to be kissed and tongued, and he let you gush over his face until you were shaking like a leaf.
at the tail end of your climax, you felt his body shake below you, his eyes rolled back into his head as he gasped and murmured muffled words into your sopping cunt. you arch your back and pivot your body to look down at his form, and your eyes were instantly drawn to the wet patch soaking and growing over the fabric of his gym shorts.
he made you cum a second time after that. and then a third. and a fourth. your hands stayed tangled in his hair through each one, and you called out his name every time the waves of pleasure rushed through you.
even though you wanted art to feel better about himself in terms of his tennis career, there were certain.. perks to him feeling down about it. making you cum let him feel like a winner again, so you were going to ride this low-point of his for as long as you could. you knew he wouldn't mind.
-
(note, im gonna pretend that tashi + art were never a thing and that he and reader were always together:)
off the beaten path

pairing: patrick zweig x reader
summary: what could go wrong with a non-refundable honeymoon and a broken engagement?
warnings: MATURE (mentions of sex but no sex scenes), exes to lovers, idiots to lovers angst, fluff, there was only one bed MULTIPLE times, jealousy!! (like a lot), slow burn, no use of y/n, so much use of the word fuck, a little toxicity, some facts about landmarks are inaccurate for the plot, lots of arguing and making up, miscommunication, seasickness, patrick & reader kinda have no social awareness, a lot of hotels and buses, alcohol, hurt/comfort, happy ending.
word count: 18.4k
authorâs note: this was so much longer than i expected it to be, but i loved writing it so so much and i'm gonna be sad to see this pairing go! also, a special thank you to the tour website whose itinerary i used for their trip. i hope you enjoy!
JFK AIRPORT
You scrolled endlessly on your phone as you sat at your gate, trying your hardest to fight off the combination of sleepiness and anxiety that had been slowly creeping up on you for the past hour. Â
You should be happyâexcited to spend the next month of your life traveling throughout Europe on the trip that you had dreamt about since you were a child. Instead, you were filled with dread at the prospect of your quickly approaching trip, leaving your leg bouncing and your eyes flitting between the device in your hands and the entrance of the gate, anxiously anticipating the arrival of a man that you really really did not want to see.Â
Once it was announced that first class was boarding, you quickly hopped out of your uncomfortable seat, hoping that if you boarded quick enough, you might be able to miss your unwanted companion. As you stood in line, you tried your best to be casual about your endlessly swiveling head and wondered if it was too late to simply call the whole thing off.Â
Boarding had gone smoothly enough, and as you settled into your seat, you still hadnât seen any sign of your former fiancĂ©. For a second, a spark of hope lit up in you. Maybe youâd get to experience Europe without that pest in your ear after all. Maybe you could even arrange a friend to come fly out and be with you for a few days, or find someone to have a romantic summer fling with.Â
But just as soon as your hope arrived, it departed with the sound of a familiar voice walking down the aisle and directly towards you.
âThey wouldnât let me switch my seat.â
You couldnât believe that those were the choice of words the man youâd intended to spend the rest of your life with had decided to start with. After months of radio silence. No apologies, no awkward small talk, no sugar-coated words about your situation, just a complaint about the conditions the two of you would be in for the next eight hours. Classic Patrick.Â
âThatâs too bad,â you replied, already annoyed by his presence. You had underestimated how much of a challenge this trip was going to be, solely based on the speed at which your negative feelings had come to the surface.Â
âYeah, no shit,â he muttered under his own breath, putting some luggage into the overhead bin above your seats.Â
âYouâre the one who insisted we still go,â you argued, not wanting him to get the last wordâeven if his last words were meant to be a snarky comment to himself more than anything else.Â
âThe hotels, tours, and all the other tickets were non-refundable!â he argued right back to you.Â
âSo?â you shot back like a petulant child.Â
âSo I didnât want to waste your money.â
âOh, how considerate,â you scoffed sarcastically before beginning once more. âYouâre rich! You donât even have to be here!âÂ
âJust because my family is comfortable doesnât mean I want to waste my money.â
You openly rolled your eyes at his words. Comfortable was the understatement of the century. âSo you didnât actually want to waste my money. You didnât want to waste your own.â
âWhy canât it be both?â he asked, sounding exasperated by your line of thinking. You hated when he did that. You kind of hated most things he did now. Maybe you just hated him.Â
âI never said it canât be both, I just think you should stop trying to act like youâre so charitable for doing me a favor. As if our relationship wasnât filled with me doing you favors.â
âDo you really want to be having this conversation right now?â he asked.Â
âSorry, youâre right. We have the next thirty-five days to talk about it.â
The two of you sighed in a synchronized breath at the mention of the amount of time you had to spend together. You hated that the two of you were still in rhythm after everything youâd been through. Or maybe you just hated Patrick.Â
âWho plans a thirty-five day honeymoon anyway?â he huffed.Â
âUs, apparently. I mean, you were all for it, what? A few months ago?â
âOnly because you wanted it.
âOh, how could I forget. The ever-charitable Patrick Zweig. Taking a month-long break from hitting balls to be with me. Iâm forever in your debt,â you mocked with a dramatic hand to your forehead. âAt this rate, youâre gonna send me a list of all of the nice things youâve ever done for me. What do you want me to say? Thank you for doing the bare minimum as a boyfriend?â
âFiancĂ©,â he corrected you, earning a very nasty side eye from you in the process of doing so.Â
You were beginning to get dirty looks from your fellow first class passengers, which temporarily shut the both of you up. It was never a good idea to piss off people on a plane. You didnât want to end up on the no-fly list just because you couldnât bite your tongue around your ex.Â
âRemember when you said we could still be friends after this?â Patrick spoke once more after your moment of silence.Â
âOf course I remember, but you stopped that from happening when youâŠâ your voice trailed off as you made eye contact with a very displeased looking middle aged woman âWhatever. Letâs just⊠try to get through this flight. And try not to make any more of a scene.â
âFine,â he replied, shrugging in your peripheral vision.Â
âFine,â you said back, not wanting him to have the last word.
âDonât do that.â
âDo what?â
âThat thing where you think you win every argument just because you said the last thing.â
âIâm not doing that,â you lied. âYou think you know me so well.â
A familiar agitated smile broke out on his face, something that you unfortunately missed seeing. âI do know you well, though. I see right through you.â
âYou actually donât, though.â
âI do,â he insisted, the smirk creeping onto his face telling you that he knew you were actively proving his point.Â
âNot really,â you dismissed and attempted to casually pull the headphones that were currently sitting on your neck up to cover your ears. You were always grateful to have noise-canceling headphones when you were traveling, but they were coming particularly in handy for you to win this argument. You tried to hide your self-satisfied smirk as you pressed play on your phone, but you could instantly tell that you were failing.Â
When you looked back up, Patrick was clearly saying words to you that you werenât able to hear. Knowing him, he was probably saying something along the lines of, âReal mature.âÂ
The truth was that he wanted the last word more than you didâwhich made it particularly rewarding when you gestured to your headphones before throwing your hands out in a shrug to indicate to him that you couldnât hear him.
Your vacation was already off to a chaotic start. You couldnât help but fear what the next thirty-five days would be like.Â
BARCELONA, SPAIN
Despite the flight only being eight hours long, you were absolutely exhausted by the time that you checked into your hotel room. So exhausted that you failed to remember to request to switch rooms to one with two beds rather than one.
This predicament only came to the forefront of your mind once you and Patrick had already swiped into the room, suitcases lying on the floor and one king-sized mattress presented in front of you.Â
âShould I go back down to the front desk?â he asked as he looked from you to the bed.Â
âIâm too tired to get a new room,â you replied. You could handle one night next to your ex. Youâd slept in a bed together for years. Granted, during those years you were also sleeping together, but this wasnât all that different.Â
âFine. Donât complain if I hog blankets, then.â
âFine,â you replied. âJust stay on your side of the bed.â
You shucked your backpack from your shoulders and walked over to what was typically the side of the bed where you slept when the two of you had been a couple. Not wasting any time to get ready for bed, you began to take off your clothes and search for your pajamas. Once you glanced over your shoulder, you were quite displeased to find Patrick rather openly ogling at you.Â
âStop looking at me,â you demanded.
âWhat? Itâs nothing I havenât seen before.â He said with a smirk.Â
âYouâre such a creep,â you muttered, throwing on an old shirt and crawling into bed.Â
As you laid in bed and texted your friends and family that youâd arrived at your hotel safely, you took a peek of your own at your former partner as he got ready for bed. He seemed to be going with his classic bedtime attire of just boxers. Bold move.Â
Your eyes were momentarily stuck on his abs and enticing happy trail. Youâd planned your trip during Patrickâs off season while he was training for his upcoming season, so you were pleasantly unsurprised that he was in such good shape. Your breath caught for a second as you thought about the rest of him, and you desperately tried to repress the low, fiery feeling rising in your stomach.Â
âAnd Iâm the creep?â he asked with a laugh, pulling you away from your objectification as he got into bed next to you.Â
âYeah,â you replied, as if you hadnât just given him the same treatment heâd given you.Â
âWell⊠like what you see?â
You scoffed at his audacity, though you did like what you saw. âIâm not fucking you. Goodnight.â
You hit the light on your nightstand and you swore you heard a quiet sound of disappointment come from Patrick. Bastard.
You turned your back to him and closed your eyes, finding that sleep took you under surprisingly easily.
When you woke up in the morning, you were greeted by a far too familiar feeling. Despite your request for Patrick to stay on his side of the bed, the slow, steady breaths being breathed into your ear and the solid wall of body behind you indicated that he had not only traveled into your space over the course of the night, but was actively spooning you.Â
You were shocked to find that you didnât necessarily mind it. Yes, you were mad at Patrick for everything that had gone down between you, and because he was such a pain in the ass, but you also hadnât realized just how much you missed being held. Particularly, how much you missed being held by him.Â
The more alert you became, the more you realized that you couldnât really move. Despite that, you found that you didnât really want to move. Sure, you were beginning to get uncomfortably hot, and yes, you could feel Patrickâs morning wood pressing against your ass, but none of it was particularly unpleasant.Â
Part of you wondered if your trip would go differently than you expected. Regardless of how you acted towards one another, you clearly both missed each other.Â
Your shrill phone alarm suddenly went off, startling Patrick awake behind you.Â
âMmm, fuck, sorry,â he sleepily slurred as he rolled away from you. You turned over to look at his tired face, eyes still lidded and speckled face looking far softer than you remembered.Â
Out of the blue, he opened his eyes, catching you in the act of looking at him with barely-concealed affection. Before he could make some sort of snarky comment, he shot out of bed, adjusted his boxers, and made an urgent beeline towards the bathroom. All of which wouldâve been far funnier if his actions hadnât been disrupted by the loud message ping of his cellphone.Â
You weighed out your options. You were curious about what was waiting for him on his phone, but you werenât sure that youâd have time to properly snoop. As if the universe was listening to your thoughts, the sound of the shower began, telling you that you had all the time that you needed to do some adequate investigation.Â
You wondered who was texting Patrick so early in the morning. Knowing him, it was probably his mother, checking in to make sure he made it to his destination safely. You were sure that whatever message she left would also be inquiring about you. Sheâd always had a bit of a soft spot for you, especially compared to some of the other people that Patrick had brought home. That, of course, was an observation shared to you from Patrick, so you couldnât be sure how much of it was flattery compared to truth.Â
Regardless, her fondness for you had carried into the end of your relationship, with her occasionally messaging or calling you to make sure that you were still doing well, and more importantly, to check in on the status of your relationship.Â
Much like you and your friends, sheâd been holding out hope that your relationship may repair itself. With you and Patrick being as passionate as the two of you were, you were no strangers to seemingly serious arguments that resolved themselves in a matter of days. While calling off a wedding was far more drastic than any of your other disputes had been, after being together for years, it was hard to imagine a world where the two of you werenât a couple.Â
But his call never came. You didnât hear an apology or explanation or even an excuse from Patrickâjust a suggestion of when you should pick up the items youâd left at his place.
You hated to admit it, but there was a naĂŻve part of you that was still holding out hope that this trip would be exactly what you needed to reconcile. And maybe that naĂŻeve part of you was less delusional than you mightâve originally thought. Surely cuddling into the morning and Patrickâs poorly hidden morning wood were signs that this vacation was already going in the right direction. Maybe being in such close proximity was exactly the push you needed to get your relationship back on track.Â
After a halfhearted internal debate, you grabbed his phone from the night stand on his side of the bed. Attempting the passcode heâd been using while you were togetherâthe digits of your birthdayâyou were pleased to find that the password hadnât changed and that you were granted access into his phone. What you werenât expecting to see was Tinder on the homepage of his cracked device.Â
You paused for a moment and attempted to reason with yourself. Your former fiancĂ© probably didnât even use the app. Heâd likely been pressured by his rebound-obsessed friends to download it, and hadnât even opened the app since setting up his profile. Besides, you didnât get on his phone to see what new apps heâd downloaded, you were snooping to see what his mom had to say about you.Â
When you opened his messages app, your mouth promptly fell open in shock. Patrick had always been loyal to youâat least to your knowledgeâwhile the two of you were together. Seeing him be so openly flirtatious and suggestive with an attractive woman that you hadnât ever heard of was more than jarring.Â
Your stomach churned as you scrolled through the conversation, flirty messages and images from both sides that left little to the imagination disturbing you in a way that you hadnât ever realized was possible.Â
In the midst of your distraught state, you nearly missed the background noise of the shower coming to a halt, informing you that your time snooping had come to an end.Â
You set his phone back down where youâd found it and desperately tried to push down the bile in your throat that was tasting more and more like jealousy and anger by the second.Â
You knew it was irrational for you to be feeling this way, considering that the two of you had been broken up for a few months. Nothing legally or morally tied the two of you together anymore, but that didnât make you feel any less unsettled by what youâd just seen.Â
It was just that⊠you werenât sure youâd ever be able to fully move on from Patrick. Heâd been part of your life for so long, and the way things ended had been so abrupt that it almost didnât feel real. Even if you did move on, it was going to take you more than three months to do so. It wasnât fair that Patrickâs name seemed to pop up every week in your therapy sessions, while he was sending pictures of himself in gray sweatpants to random hot women.Â
You wanted to shrink into the mattress and never come back up. You wanted to yell at Patrick the moment he stepped out of the bathroom. You wanted to turn on your side and wail dramatically, at least until all of your big feelings felt a little smaller.Â
But you were in Europe on vacation. You were on vacation, damnit, and you werenât going to let one mildly disturbing text thread ruin your entire experience. Better yet, if Patrick was already moving on, there was no reason that you shouldnât do the same.
You told yourself this as you rolled out of bed and dug in your suitcase, pulling out a sundress that had driven Patrick wild in the past. While you may have packed it with less than realistic expectations, your goal was far more grounded now.Â
Both of you could play this game.Â
You stepped out of the bathroom fully dressed after a shower of your own and instantly registered the almost cartoonish look he was giving you. You guessed that some things never changed, even when the two of you had decided to actively pursue other people.Â
âThe tour guide said to meet in the lobby soon, so Iâm gonna head down,â you explained, not giving him a second look as you began to search for your purse.Â
âThe tour doesnât start for another half hour?â he replied, sitting up from where he was laying on the bed.Â
âWell I wanna socialize with the people weâre gonna be traveling through Europe with,â you said a little snappily, still a little perturbed about what youâd found on his phone earlier. You conveniently left out the fact that you wanted to scope out any potential summer flings.Â
âIâll come with you,â he insisted.
âYou really donât have to. Remember, this isnât actually a honeymoon,â you slipped on some comfortable shoes and headed to the door. âIâll see you around.â
You were probably being far more rude than you really needed to be, but your anger had only intensified as you showered and put on makeup. At this point, you were fully pissedâeven if you didnât have the right to be.Â
You made small talk with the people you met in the lobby as they began to filter into the room, and tried your absolute best to dispel the anger that was flowing through your veins. That proved harder than you anticipated, as Patrick was one of the last people to join you all in the lobby, and for the life of you, you couldnât stop imagining him sitting in your shared hotel room and sexting his mystery girl.Â
Luckily, you couldnât dwell on that ugly thought for too long, as your tour began soon after. Your friendly guide took your group around the city, explaining rather riveting information about the landmarks you visited and the city itself.
After being dismissed for a quick break, you found yourself sitting on a bench and chatting with a man in your group. He wasnât really your type, but he was extremely conventionally attractive, and from the peripheral glances you caught of Patrick, you could tell that he wasnât exactly pleased with what was going on.
While making him jealous, or annoyed, or whatever it was that he was feeling, wasnât your expressed goal, it did feel nice to give him a taste of his own medicine. What felt less nice was glancing over and catching him typing on his phone furiously. You could only imagine whose boobs were on the other end of the line.Â
Reacting out of a bit of desperation and frustration, you began to play things up. You leaned over more to show off more cleavage, laughed a little harder at jokes that werenât all that funny, and set a scandalous hand on his arm. You were determined to have that vacation fling now, and you were going to get it by any means necessary.Â
You laid it on thick for the rest of the afternoon, sitting next to him during lunch and flirting casually with him as your group walked through Park GĂŒell.Â
You wondered if he noticed you throwing glances in Patrickâs direction after every interaction. You hoped that he didnât.Â
It felt good to be getting even with Patrickâbut not as good as you expected it to feel. The realization sunk in as a portion of your group visited a bar that was apparently very popular with the locals. Or at least, thatâs what a very handsome man purred into your ear after sitting down next to you at the bar.
Youâd been keeping an eye on Patrick as he socialized with a couple that heâd been talking to for the majority of your day, but you almost instantly lost track of him as you became consumed with this handsome stranger.Â
Everything happened in a bit of a blurâone moment youâd been nursing a Marianito, and the next you were holding the hand of a man whose name you couldnât remember as he led you to his apartment.Â
By the time youâd left his apartment, you were nothing short of a mess. You were pretty sure that the only way you couldâve been more obvious about what had just happened to you was if you had the words âJUST HAD SEXâ written across your foreheadâand with the way the people in your hotel elevator were looking at you, you couldnât be completely sure that those words werenât on your face.Â
You made it back to your room safely, quietly opening the door and doing your best not to make too much noise, since at this hour, Patrick was surely asleep.Â
It did feel weird to be going back to his bed less than an hour after youâd been with another man, but you couldnât necessarily say you felt bad. Patrick had started it, and you simply finished it off. If he didnât have any issues with seeing other people, there was no reason for you to have an issue with it either.Â
Your efforts to be quiet had proved themselves to be for naught, as Patrick was very clearly wide awake, sitting up in bed and already looking at you disapprovingly.Â
You werenât sure what possessed you to speak, rather than ignoring his presence and heading straight to the shower, but your mouth was open before you could stop yourself.Â
âWere you just gonna wait here until I got back, like Iâm a kid who just snuck out or something?â you asked in disbelief, partially annoyed because of his action, but more ashamed to have been caught in such a state. It couldnât have been more obvious to Patrick what youâd just done, considering that heâd seen you in a similar state hundreds of times.Â
âBaby, we are on a whole different, unfamiliar continent,â his tone was condescending and cold and it made you want to crawl out of your skin. âWhy wouldnât I wait to make sure you got back safely?â
âDonât call me pet names. And I wouldâve been fine. We were just at the bar,â you lied. Going to the apartment of a random man you just met probably wasnât your brightest idea, but you made it out alive, and that was what mattered.Â
âHuh. The bar?â he smirked at you in a way that screamed that he was pissed, without really having to say a word.Â
âYes, I- what does it matter to you anyway?â you hoped that the question would be enough to get you out of the situation. If you were going to argue, you at least wanted to argue after you were showered and in pajamas.
âWhat does it matter to me if you fucked someone else?â he asked, sounding like he was in complete disbelief.Â
âYeah, Patrick. Why does it matter if I fucked someone else? Weâre not together anymore. Did you forget? I mean, it seemed pretty obvious to you when you stopped speaking to me completely a few months ago.â
âPlease, enlighten me. What did I have to speak to you about?âÂ
âI donât know! Maybe an âare you okay?â wouldâve been nice. Or something. Anything, really. We were together for six fucking years and you just dropped me like I was dirt!â
âIâŠâ he trailed off, catching you by surprise. He almost always had a quick clever response that managed to piss you off in a way no one else ever could, so seeing him not knowing what to say next caught you off guard. âIf our relationship meant that much to you, why were you all over that guy? I mean, seriously. Iâve never seen anything so desperate. You were practically rubbing yourself on him in the park like a bitch in heat.â
Contempt dripped from his words. You had never been so enraged.
âAre you joking?â you laughed out of sheer anger. âPatrick, you started it! How many Tinder girls have you seen since we broke up? And donât you dare fucking lie to me. I saw everything youâve been sending to Amelia. Amelia, Iâm so lonely. Amelia, Iâm so horny. Amelia, I love you so much,â you mocked.
âYou went through my phone?â he asked in disbelief, not even bothering to address the rest of your statement. âFuck. Youâre unbelievable.â
âIâm unbelievable? How long did it even take you before we split for you to start seeing other people? I mean, knowing you, you were probably just waiting for the day we broke up to go get your dick wet.â
âThatâs not true, and you know it,â for a second, he looked genuinely woundedâsomething you were only able to recognize after years of being in a relationship with the man. You didnât like that you were actively hurting him, but heâd been inflicting pain on you from the moment you broke up.
âFine,â you conceded on that front, knowing that he was right. It wasnât completely true. If you hadnât gone through his phone, you never wouldâve guessed that he had already moved on. âBut youâve still been seeing other people.â
âWeâve been broken up for months now,â he replied, as if that was supposed to make things any better or more reasonable.Â
âThen why do you care so much about me having sex with someone else? Itâs fine when you do it, but suddenly itâs an issue for me?âÂ
Patrickâs face immediately paled. âYou really fucked him?â
âWell, yeah,â you paused. âWell, not who youâre thinking of.â
âYou fucked someone else?!â The hurt and disbelief buried under his words made your stomach churn. âYou were flirting with that other douchebag all day, I donât-â
âYouâre acting like Iâm some whore for reacting to something that you did first!â you cut him off.Â
âAnd youâre acting like I wanted to get rid of you this whole time!â he shot back out at you.Â
âClearly you fucking did,â you hissed.Â
âFuck you,â he huffed.Â
âFuck you,â you shot right back. âIâm leaving.â
âGood,â Patrick replied with a shrug as if he didnât care, although you were very sure that he cared. âGo run back to your little fuck buddy.â
âYeah, maybe I will,â you replied as you gathered your items back into your suitcase. âHe was better than you, by the way.â
âYeah, I bet,â he said snarkily as he watched you pack up your items. Luckily, you didnât have much to pack up and were already heading towards the door.Â
âHe had a bigger dick, too,â you said as you swung open the hotel room door, fully satisfied with a lie that you knew would bother Patrick.Â
While leaving your hotel room seemed like a wonderful idea in the moment, as you went down the elevator, you started to realize that you really did not have many options for where youâd sleep that night.Â
You figured your best bet was the hotel lobby. Maybe you could pretend to be someone whoâd drank too much and passed out on the first floor before you made it up to your room. You sat down in a comfortable looking chair and grabbed your keycardâin case anyone asked you to verify who you wereâthen set a floppy hat on your head to cover your face from the bright hotel lobby lights while you attempted to sleep.Â
Sleep was already going to be difficult to accomplish, thanks to the argument that you were certainly going to be ruminating on for days to come. That was only made more difficult by the uncomfortable seating and position youâd found yourself in. Somehow, you managed to fall asleep, being woken up by a hotel employee and a friend youâd made from your tour group.
âLong night, huh?â she asked you with a playful smirk.Â
âMm, something like that,â you mumbled sleepily.Â
âWell, you can sleep on the coach. It just got here, so weâll have the best pick of seats. Câmon,â she extended her hand out to you and you gladly took it, in desperate need of something grounding.Â
You dozed off on the coach once youâd gotten settled, headphones securely on your ears and sunglasses covering your closed eyes. You were vaguely aware of people boarding the vehicle around you, but didnât pay much mind to anything. Eventually, you heard the faint sound of someone taking attendance of the people on the bus, followed by the commotion of someone getting on the bus late.Â
Something compelled you to open up your eyes, and when you did, you were displeased to find that Patrick was the source of all of the drama. Likely thing for him to be. He scrambled down the aisle, looking desperately for empty seats. To your own horror, you realized that the seat next to you was vacant, and perhaps the only vacant seat on the entire coach.Â
As if your minds were connected, you watched Patrick face that very same dilemma as he eventually decided to sit down in the only empty seat, right next to you.Â
Neither of you said anything at first, not addressing your blowout argument the previous night, or your awkward current situation.Â
âYou look like shit,â Patrick finally said as the bus took off.Â
âThanks,â you replied, mentally preparing yourself for a continuation of the argument youâd had just a few hours ago. It was only a matter of time before he brought up your promiscuity or started blatantly texting his Tinderella.Â
But none of that ever came. In fact, he just looked a little sad. It was weird to see Patrick so openly defeated. He was always one to put on a smirk or a challenging smile when you argued, letting the façade fall once he was alone, or once the two of you finally discussed what the issue was like adults.
You werenât sure that you liked it. You preferred annoying asshole Patrick to sad, moping Patrick.Â
âYou look like shit, too,â you added. âWhich is crazy, since you had access to a shower and I didnât.â
âAnd whose fault is that?â he asked, looking at you with the slightest hint of that devious smile. You had to fight the slightest inkling of a smile on your own face.Â
You felt ridiculous knowing that your mood was still being influenced by your former partner. Even when he was insulting you. Even after heâd spent the night arguing with you. Even after youâd slept with someone else. Even after the two of you had a messy split.Â
You still loved him.Â
âYours, mostly,â you shrugged and put your headphones back on.Â
PARIS, FRANCE
Despite your brief conversation on the bus, you and Patrick didnât speak to each other for the entirety of your commute. Although you clearly cared about him, it didnât change the fact that he had upset and hurt you deeply. And even as upset as you were, you knew that youâd hurt him just as badly.Â
You had a particular dread for what awaited you in France, knowing that this part of the tour was very couples-activity heavy. When youâd scheduled your trip, this aspect of the tour felt like a major selling point. The two of you always seemed to be falling more in love with each other, and having a candlelit dinner by the Eiffel Tower felt like an exciting way to kick off your marriage.Â
Now, you just felt like an idiot.
The two of you did your absolute best to avoid getting paired up with each other for all of the activities that you could. You found yourself spending most of your time with a solo traveler who was close in age to you. She made a surprisingly fun companion to your cheese and wine taste test, popping cubes of fragrant cheese into your mouth and making a competition out of who could detect the most accurate notes in your wine.Â
While you found luck in your first few activities, you werenât so lucky when it came to an evening ride of the Roue de Paris. Whether it was fate or just bad luck, after the pair in front of you had dipped out of line for reasons unknown to you, you had the shocking realization that Patrick had been in between them the whole time. So much for meeting new people on the massive ferris wheel.Â
You tried to look busy so he wouldnât notice that you noticed, and did your best to think of some sort of game plan. Although youâd essentially been giving each other the silent treatment in the hours leading up to this moment, youâd caught Patrick looking at you multiple times throughout the dayâsomething you only noticed because youâd been looking at him as well.Â
After a moment, the two of you were let into an empty passenger car. Sitting across from one another, it was hard to ignore the very obvious elephants in the room, but that didnât mean you wouldnât try.Â
At first, you simply looked out the window, not saying a single word as the ferris wheel began to move.Â
âYou should put that safety belt on, just in case,â Patrick commented from his side of the car, pulling his eyes away from the window to look at you.Â
âI doubt anything will happen,â you shrugged. âItâs fine.â
He eyed you suspiciously for a moment, before leaning over and strapping you in anyway. Your breath caught in your throat, his simple action putting you into serious psychological pain. It wasnât lost on you how much Patrick liked to take care of you. It was far more obvious when the two of you were dating, with him covering the bills for dates and doing your laundry for you. It had been so ironic to you at the time, how a man who could barely take care of himself always went out of his way to make sure that you were going to be okay.Â
Now, his small act of kindness just made your stomach turn. But it wasnât like you could express any of those feelings.Â
âThanks,â was all that you managed before looking out of the window once more.Â
An awkward, heavy silence filled the passenger car once more as the ride began to take the two of you higher.Â
âThe view is so beautiful,â you commented, unable to remain silent anymore and hoping that your words were neutral enough not to stir any pots.Â
âYeah, itâs really nice,â his gaze remained fixed out the window, before he looked at you once more as if there were words on the tip of his tongue.Â
âI honestly donât know how we managed to get in line in time to see the sunset,â you continued with your boring, neutral small talk.Â
âIâm glad we did. This is the perfect spot to watch it.â
âYeah,â you agreed, continuing to look out the window instead of at the man across from you. âItâs so pretty tonight, too.â
âIt is,â he agreed.Â
The two of you sat in silence again, only the sound of a soft whirring filling your ears. Then suddenly, all at once, the whirring stoppedâand so did your passenger car.Â
âAre we stuck?â you asked, looking out nervously at the very tall height that the two of you were currently definitely stuck at.Â
âWe canât be. Itâll probably start back up in a second.â
It didnât start back up in a second. In fact, after a series of announcements in French, an announcement in English suddenly declared that it would be at least an hour before the ride could be fixed.Â
At the sound of the announcement, both you and Patrick sighed aloud, still synchronized even after everything youâd been through.Â
âMaybe this is a sign,â Patrick piped up.Â
âWhat are you talking about?â you laughed at him, hoping desperately that this didnât mean that he wanted to continue arguing with you. You genuinely did not have it in you to do so again. You also didnât have it in you to sleep in another hotel lobby.Â
âWell, Iâve been wanting to talk to you all day,â he confessed.Â
âIs that why you were staring at me all day?â you teased, a weak, slightly hopeful smile creeping onto your face.Â
âI was looking at you because I could feel you staring at me,â he clarified, as if he was setting the record straight. âI donât want things to be like this between us anymore.â
âYeah?â you asked, the pit of nerves in your stomach tightening at wherever he was going with his spiel. The anticipation of his words alone made you nauseous.Â
âSo I think that we should talk about last night,â he suggested.Â
That was exactly what you didnât want to hear him say. You had barely processed the argument yourself, let alone think about anything else that you had to say to Patrick that didnât involve trying to hurt him as much as he hurt you.Â
âWe donât have to. Itâs fine. The past is in the past,â you dismissed.Â
âItâs not fine, though. Not really,â he countered, all earnestness. You didnât detect any harshness to his words or any blood in the water that indicated to you that he wanted to do anything more than have an honest conversation with you. âI was so out of line. I canât- I donât want you to think that I really believe the things I said about you.â
âPatrick, pleaseâŠâ you trailed off, hoping that he would understand that you didnât really want to talk about this. Though, you were relieved to learn that heâd only said those things out of the heat of the moment.Â
âNo,â he stood his ground. âWe need to talk about this if we ever want our relationship to improve.â
âFine,â you gave in. âBut you start, so I can collect my thoughts.â
âOf course,â he leaned forward so he could get a better look at you, and you were immediately drawn into some intense eye contact with him. âIâm sorry for acting like a dick yesterday. I shouldnât have treated you the way I did, and I really shouldnât have let you leave our hotel room. That was really stupid of me. I worried about you for the rest of the night and spent the morning looking for you.â
This was surprising information to you. While you did find it to be a bit of a dick move that Patrick would just let you leave like that after lecturing you about being unsafe in a new country, you hadnât realized that heâd been late to boarding the coach because heâd been searching for you. You could only imagine the sick feeling he had as he realized he couldnât find you anywhere.Â
âIâm sorry for what I said, too. Insulting you for trying to move on was really unfair of me. I was just⊠hurt, I guess. When I donât even have the right to be.â
âYou do, a little. We were together for a really long time, so itâs gonna feel weird that weâre starting to see other people,â you shrugged. âThat was an excellent apology, that I accept, by the way.â
âThank you. I really got a chance to practice my apology skills with the last woman I was with,â he explained. You tried to repress the feeling of jealousy that was already bubbling up in your stomach at the mention of another woman.Â
âYeah?â you asked, hoping that he didnât notice the brief twitch of your eye.
âYeah. Sheâs super opinionated and outspoken, so we would butt heads a lot. But that was always something I really liked about her. That, and her magnificent ass.â
Finally, it occurred to you that he was talking about you. You rolled your eyes and shook your head, despite the fact that you were secretly very flattered by the way he was speaking about you. âEw. Shut up,â you laughed.Â
âWell, if youâre done objectifying me, I would love to apologize to you too.â
âAll done objectifying you. For now, at least. Go ahead.â
You were a little nervous about the words that were about to come out of your mouth. You just had so much to say, and you werenât sure that it was all going to come out correctly.Â
âIâm sorry for the things I said last night. I genuinely did not mean what I said, I just got caught up in the moment. And Iâm really sorry for going through your phone, because thatâs seriously none of my business. It was such an unnecessary violation of trust, and I understand if youâre still pissed at me for that. And it was really ridiculous for me to overreact the way that I did over you seeing someone else, because again, itâs really not my business. I feel like Iâm kinda the worst,â you confessed.Â
âYouâre not the worst,â he countered.Â
âFine, I guess. Maybe you just bring the worst out in me,â you joked, trying to lighten the mood slightly.Â
âThat sounds more accurate. We bring out the worst in each other.â
âRight. Thatâs why weâre such a good pair,â you paused, then corrected yourself. âOf friends.â
âIs that what we are now?â
âI never said we were good friends.â
âFrenemies?â
âSomething like that,â you said, before the familiar whirring sound of the ferris wheel began once more.Â
âHuh. Who wouldâve thought that the only thing the wheel needed to function was an apology to each other?â
âYouâre so annoying,â you laughed and shook your head. âHow are we gonna make it through the rest of this trip?â
LONDON, ENGLAND
Your final few days in France had been made far less awkward by your conversation on the ferris wheel. Deciding to fully embrace the couples activities the tour had reserved for you, the two of you were having a good time re-establishing your friendship.Â
Your trip to London had gone mostly without a hitch, with your group arriving in the city in the evening and immediately checking in to your hotel. At this point, you had given up on even attempting to get separate beds. It seemed like every morning now you woke up cuddling with Patrick, but you werenât necessarily mad at the unintentional intimacy.Â
In some ways, your relationship was beginning to feel similar to how it felt before the two of you broke up. While you were sure that things wouldnât be exactly the sameâespecially since you still hadnât addressed the elephant in the room that was your breakupâit was nice to return to the comfort youâd found in your relationship with Patrick.Â
Like clockwork, the morning after your arrival in London, you woke up with Patrick pressed up against your back, nose buried in your hair. As he woke up, he pressed a gentle kiss to your hairline out of what you were sure was just habit rather than genuine affection.Â
âMorning,â he greeted you groggily, rolling away from your side.Â
âMorning,â you replied, turning to face him. You ran a hand through his messy morning hair and looked at him fondly. It was taking far more self control than you had to not lean over and kiss him. âWhat time is it?â you asked, in part to distract yourself, but also because the digital clock was on his side of the bed.Â
âItâsâŠâ he trailed off as he went to read the time. âOh shit, weâre gonna be late.â
âWhat?â you asked, shooting up from your relaxed position.Â
âItâs 8:25,â he explained, already rolling out of bed.Â
In a rush, the two of you got dressed in record time, making it down to the lobby in the five minutes that you had to make it on time. You shared a high-five in the lobby, and tried your best not to dwell on how the simple action felt far more domestic than it needed to.Â
Your tour began not too long after that, getting your day off to a strong start. Your day of exploring London was by far your busiest. You were sure that youâd accumulated thousands of steps as you went between large museums, beautiful parks, and massive landmarks. By the time that you returned to your hotel room, you were pretty sure that your legs were mush.Â
You returned earlier than Patrick, who had gone out to a gastropub with a group of tourists in your group that he got along well with. You took this as an opportunity to have some alone time, taking a long and steaming hot shower, frolicking around the room in a soft hotel robe, and watching a movie while you waited for your room service to arrive.Â
After youâd thoroughly enjoyed your alone time, finishing off your room service and opting to scroll on your phone, the door cracked open and Patrick strolled in.Â
âLooks like you made yourself right at home,â he observed.Â
âI had to after todayâs tour. So much walking,â you groaned.Â
âIt wasnât all that bad,â he shrugged, sitting down next to you in bed.Â
âWell, not all of us are professional athletes,â you laughed. âHow was the pub?â
âFun. Itâd be better if you came.â
âIâm sorry, I was exhausted,â you sighed. âYou couldâve stayed in with me and had a spa day.â
âWe can have a spa day anywhere. We can have a spa day right now.â
âMm, Iâm all spaâd out. But the water pressure in the shower is excellent, so you should definitely check that out.â
âI will in a little bit,â he said. âDid you try out the actual spa here?â
âThey were closed when I checked, which really sucks, since I was in desperate need of a massage.â
âDo you still want one?â Patrick asked.Â
âYeah. Iâll probably try to stop by when theyâre open tomorrow and get one.â
âNo, I mean, do you want a massage now?â he added.Â
It had been a long time since Patrick had offered you a massageâor to put his hands on you in any capacityâbut you remembered him being criminally talented at giving them. You also remembered his massages usually making for great foreplay that left your knees weak and your brain a pile of jelly, but that clearly wouldnât be the case now, and you needed to get your head out of the gutter.Â
âI mean, sure. That would be nice,â you tried not to sound too excited, though the prospect of a massage from him sounded very, very nice.Â
While the prospect of a massage sounded nice, the actual massage was heavenly. You were sure that years of having personal trainers and physical therapists work knots out of his body had made him an expert at finding knots and kinks in your own, which was now leaving you sighing happily as he ran his hands over your back.Â
You tried your best to ignore the dull, fiery feeling growing in your lower stomach that was surely a result of experiencing a type of intimacy that you hadnât in quite some time. As you let out an involuntary soft sound at a particular knot being rubbed out of your shoulder, you wondered if this massage was affecting him nearly as much as it was affecting you.
You promptly received an answer to this question when something hard and phallic brushed up against your leg. You turned your head to glance back at Patrick, and his face immediately grew red.Â
âSorry. I can stop, if you want. It just happened because of the noises youâre making and- whatever. I donât want to make you uncomfortable.â
Part of you felt a little satisfied knowing that you still had that type of impact on him. It gave you a tiny glimmer of hope to know that you were still, at the least, physically attracted to one another.Â
âItâs fine. Iâll shut up.â
âYou donât have to. I want this to be as relaxing as possible for you.â
âWell youâre doing a great job, if you couldnât tell from all of the moaning and groaning on my end.â
You both somehow made it through the rest of the massage without spilling all over the bed, but as you melted into the bed, feeling every muscle in your body relaxed from your excellent massage, you couldnât help but note the suspiciously long time Patrick was spending in the shower. And maybe it was just your imagination, but if you listened hard enough, you swore you could hear the sound of a soft chanting of your name coming from the other side of the bathroom door.Â
While part of you regretted not suggesting that the two of you help each other out with your mutual problems, you were pretty sure that it was for the best. You genuinely didnât know where the two of you stood, as far as your relationship went. Hooking up would surely further complicate an already complicated situation, since you were pretty sure that ex-fiancĂ©s didnât typically sleep together. But then again, ex-fiancĂ©s also didnât usually go on a honeymoon despite not being together. Your complicated feelings on the matter only further proved to you that you made the right choice by not giving in to your baser desires.Â
By the time Patrick joined you in bed, you were already half asleep. Yet, even in your delirious state, you didnât miss the way he came up behind you, pulling you into a loving embrace. It brought warmth to your chest to know that he couldnât even wait for your automatic sleep routine to hold you, and that he felt the need to take matters into his own hands.Â
You were pretty sure that exes didnât do that either.Â
AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDSÂ
You didnât know what you expected from your first ferry ride, but being face deep in a barf bag while soothing circles were rubbed into your back was certainly not it.Â
Given that you werenât a frequent rider of large vessels on bodies of water, you had no clue going into the ride that things would go so sideways so quickly for you. If anything, you thought you might have the opportunity to stare peacefully out into the water, or to force Patrick to take a few cute pictures of you. Unfortunately, you were currently doing neither of those thingsâand it didnât seem like youâd be doing them any time soon.Â
You heaved once more, now almost totally sure that you had nothing left to give. Patrick continued to hold your hair out of your face with one hand and use his other to comfortingly rub your back, not at all fazed by your sickness. If you werenât currently fighting off another wave of nausea and didnât have the taste of bile lingering in your mouth, you probably couldâve kissed the man.Â
Once your brain finally told you the coast was clear, you leaned your head back and took several deep, gasping breaths of air.Â
âYou alright, honey?â he asked you, and you didnât even have the strengthâphysical or mentalâto correct his use of a pet name.Â
âI could be better,â you replied, pinching the bridge of your nose as you tilted your head back. âThereâs medicine for this, right?â
âYeah. Let me go see if I can find some.â
As you fought off a war of nausea and headache that was currently beating you on all fronts, you could faintly hear the sound of Patrick asking the people around you if they had any medicine for motion sickness. He eventually returned after what felt like a lifetime, but was probably more like a few minutes, carrying a bottle of Dramamine.Â
He helped you take the pill, putting it in your mouth then holding a bottle of water up to your lips to help you swallow it. The action felt oddly romantic, though it was more of a matter of practicality compared to anything else. You were clearly not in a stable enough space to get the pill down on your own, so his assistance wasnât really anything for you to be over analyzing.Â
âLook at you, keeping that down,â he teased, running his hand up and down your arm. The motion was soothing, a bit of bodily comfort amongst a plethora of other awful physical pains you were experiencing. âYouâre doing great.â
His soft caresses turned into a full-blown hug, with Patrick pulling you into a tight embrace. While the action itself was rather cuteâespecially since it seemed to be completely impulsive on his partâit instantly brought on a new wave of nausea.Â
âPat?â you squeaked.Â
âYeah?â he asked.Â
âYouâre sweet. But if we stay like this, I am going to be sick all over you.â
He pulled away from you with concern, careful not to move too quickly to set off another bout of sickness. While he let go of your body, he continued to hold your hand, as if he were attempting to ground you. With how anxious he was looking, he mightâve been trying to ground himself as well.Â
It was cute seeing him so worried about you. You tried your best not to read too much into it, and luckily, your slowly fading nausea was the perfect distraction from doing so.Â
âThank you for the drugs. It was fun watching you scramble all around asking people for help. Youâre such a goodâŠâ you paused, not really knowing what you were or what to say. âEx.â
Now wasnât exactly the ideal time to have the, âwhat are we?â conversation, but Patrick didnât seem to mind. And if he did mind, he was doing a damn good job at hiding it.Â
âOnly the best for my ex.â Maybe youâd just been imaging it, but you swore you sensed a bit of hesitation on his end as he called you his ex. Admittedly, it would be significantly easier for both of you to be calling each other spouses, or even partners. But alas, you werenât either of those things to each other anymore.Â
As if youâd read each other's minds, the two of you quickly moved on from that conversation.Â
After youâd arrived and gotten settled into Amsterdam, you set off to explore the city. When presented with a few options of things to do, Patrick insisted that the two of you go on a bike tour, much to your own chagrin. As much as you werenât sure your legs could handle any more strenuous physical activity, youâd known that Patrick had wanted to take this bike tour since your trip was an actual honeymoon. Who were you to deny him of that?
As the two of you toured the very beautiful city, Patrick made sure to make a show out of his biking skills. While he was no professional cyclist, he certainly had the ego of oneâwhich translated to him going a little too hard at times and nearly falling off of his bike more than once.Â
Each time he almost fell, you found yourself also almost falling, the onset of laughter at the ridiculous man riding next to you nearly being too much to handle. Without fail, every time the two of you did your almost falling, then break into a howling laughter routine, you were given dirty looks by your fellow tour mates. Unfortunately, that only made the situation funnier to you and Patrick.Â
By the time the tour had wrapped, it was clear that everyone was sick and tired of you. But at least this time, the people around you were sick of the girlish giggles Patrick pulled from you, rather than the rude words he provoked you into saying, like heâd done on the plane.Â
It was refreshing to be spending time with him like this. In the time that youâd been so upset about your break up, you forgot about just how good it felt to be around Patrick when your relationship was going well.Â
It was also nice to be spending some alone time with him, away from the rest of your tour group. As the two of you looked at strange knick-knacks in an antique store, you realized just how much you missed being alone with him. While it was nice that the two of you had made friends within your group, your dynamic as a duo was obviously something really special. Maybe thatâs why the two of you had been together for so long.Â
You spent the majority of the afternoon doubled over in laughter, playfully teasing Patrick, or being on the receiving end of subtle, gentle touches. As you really began to think about it, this day of travel had been your favoriteâby a long shot. It also happened to be the day that felt most like one from a honeymoon.
Although it had already been clear to you for some time that you still had feelings for Patrick, the day you had spent together had completely sealed the deal. Once Patrick had surprised you with a beautiful bouquet of flowers over dinner, youâd only been more sure that you were sick with love for your ex.
It was a small miracle that youâd rounded out the day without confessing your feelings, particularly since you ended the evening with a movie playing on the television of your hotel room that the two of you barely paid attention to, as Patrick held you and talked about some of the things youâd missed while the two of you were separated.Â
In the morning, you woke up to the soft sound of chatter, rather than your loud alarm clock or the sound of deep breaths in the shell of your ear.Â
From what you could faintly make out from the words and the lack of a warm body beside you, Patrick was on the phone with his mother. You wanted to feel bad for eavesdropping, especially since youâd just had an argument with Patrick over your snooping habit just over a week ago, but it was far too difficult not to listen in.Â
âIâm glad you liked the picture,â you made out from the muffled words behind the doorway. You were sure he was referencing the selfie the two of you took in front of Big Ben a few days ago. You also liked the photo a lot, with the two of you looking particularly good and particularly happy. Youâd also taken a more baity photo of him kissing your cheek, specifically to send to his mother who he knew would be overjoyed to see you. While Patrick had explained the idea behind the picture as his mom simply wanting to see you, you knew the more accurate statement is that his mom wanted to see the two of you together.Â
After a beat, there was a soft chuckle. âNo, weâre not back together. No mom, thereâs no âyet.â I know. Iâm an idiot, I know- arenât you supposed to take your childâs side? Well, I donât know if you know this, but we never ended up getting married, so no, sheâs not your daughter. How could she possibly be your favorite child! We just talked about this. Iâm gonna hang up. Iâm serious. Alright. Love you, bye.â
When Patrick returned, you were already sitting up in bed.Â
âCan you tell your mom I say hi next time?â you asked with a cheeky grin on your face, still coming off of the high that was the romantic outing youâd had the day prior.Â
âIâm sure sheâd love to hear that,â he replied, getting back into bed beside you. âShe probably wants to hear from you more than she wants to hear from me.â
You laughed and shook your head, not bothering to argue with his words since you both knew they were pretty accurate.Â
âI mean, Iâm sure sheâll be inviting you to Thanksgiving and Christmas long after weâve moved on with other people and have our own families.â
Your heart dropped to your stomach. You were sure of it. You thought you could genuinely feel the movement of your most vital organ slowly sinking into a pit of stomach acid.Â
You tried not to let your smile falter, considering that Patrick was looking right at you with a sweet look of his own plastered on his face. You wondered if this was some sort of test, to gauge how you felt after a day of rekindling the love the two of you thought had burnt out.Â
Or maybe, more realistically, heâd already come to accept the reality that youâd been stalling on accepting: your relationship was truly over. One fun day wouldnât change the fact that your wedding had been called off, and that the two of you said things to each other that would alter the foundations of any solid relationship for years to come.Â
Your heart was such a traitor. She refused to accept the simple fact that Patrick wanted to move on, and that your relationship was a thing of the past. Maybe, if you couldnât convince your heart to accept that truth, you might be able to force your brain to.Â
âAnd Iâll still be accepting that invitation, thank you very much,â you stated, trying to sound confident in your words. âIn the meantime, letâs get ready before we miss this bus. You can tell me what your momâs menu is gonna look like this year on our ride over.â
SOMEWHERE IN CENTRAL GERMANY
It was stupid for you to be torn up the way that you were over just a few simple words, but the more you thought about it, the worse you felt.Â
In reality, it wasnât just what Patrick had said to you in the hotel room. It was the fact that heâd been actively trying to move on with other people since who knew when, and the way he seemed to frequently verbally reiterate the fact that your relationship was over. By holding out hope that you might somehow be able to repair your relationship, you were being much more naĂŻve than you even realized.Â
You felt stupid. But you also felt confused, because as much as Patrick swore he was over you, and pursued other people, he was also far too comfortable acting like nothing had changed between you two. After all, he was the one flirting with you, and trying to attach himself at the hip to you as you traveled. He was the one who always managed to end up spooning you over the course of the night and woke up kissing whatever part of your body he was closest to. For god's sake, heâd just told you yesterday about how heâd searched high and low to find a bouquet of flowers that he thought you would genuinely like. And most damningly, you hadnât forgotten the look of hurt on his face when he found out that you had slept with someone else. That wasnât the behavior of someone who was over their partner.
To say you were receiving mixed messages was a complete understatement. You couldnât understand how it was possible that the man who was currently leaning against you very affectionately, despite being on a cramped bus, was also totally over you and wanted to move on.
You didnât know what you wanted to do about the situation, but you were sure that you couldnât keep going like this.Â
Your bus stopped somewhere in Germany for the evening, letting you all out to have dinner and do some light sightseeing before regrouping in the morning and heading to Prague. Somehow, that translated to going to a bar to try out German beer for you, Patrick, and a few of the friends youâd made while traveling.Â
After a brief intermission of checking into your hotel room, your small group met up in the lobby, then set off to find a bar.Â
Drinking while you were feeling a little upset probably wasnât your brightest idea. The speed and volume at which you were consuming alcohol was a little concerning, but not nearly as concerning as how much Patrick was drinking. Eventually, even in your drunken state, you realized that you should probably slow downâif nothing else, to take care of him.Â
But the two of you continued on, going from bar to bar, getting drunk at a level that probably wouldâve been acceptable when you were younger, but was certainly going to take a major toll on you now.Â
Forgetting about the repercussions of the future, you two were having a great time. Despite you being out with a group, it felt a little bit like the two of you were in your own little bubble. Nothing else in the world seemed to matter as the two of you took shots and danced together. Not the people around you, not the fact that you had to be up early the next morning to make it onto your coach, not even the fact that Patrick had implied that the two of you would move on and have families with other people only a few days ago.Â
By the time that the rest of your group had called it quits, explaining that they wanted to be up and functional in time for your ride the next morning, you and Patrick were still in your own little world. It was only after youâd shared a few drunk cigarettes that the two of you decided that the fun should end, and that it was time to head back to your hotel.Â
Unfortunately for you, midway through your trek back home, your drinking buddy had given up on walking, leaving you tasked with literally dragging him all the way back to your hotel. While a sober version of yourself wouldâve been annoyed by the inconvenience, all you could really think about was how nice it was to have his body so close to yours.
After a tumultuous journey back, the two of you finally made it back to your hotel room. You had only been in the room for a matter of seconds before Patrick collapsed onto the bed and let out a loud sigh of relief, followed by an even louder yawn, as if he was the one who had just carried you down the road.
It was annoyingly endearing.Â
You had half the mind to at least get somewhat ready before getting into bed, shedding your outermost layer of clothing before joining Patrick in bed.Â
âThank you,â he said to you once you laid down next to him.Â
âMhm,â you hummed, your head still pleasantly buzzing from the alcohol. âBut Iâm never doing that again.â
âAww, why? We had so much fun,â he practically whined. âI always have so much fun when weâre together.â
âI had fun, but youâre so heavy. Youâd never guess it. All those muscles,â in the midst of your complaining, you reached over to grab his bicep to demonstrate his point.Â
He laughed, which made you laugh, though you didnât exactly know what you were laughing at. Then, out of the blue, he randomly said your name in a very serious tone.Â
âCan you help me with something?â he asked, sounding very genuine and giving you a look that you couldnât quite place in your drunken state.Â
âAnything,â you replied earnestly and meant it. You would probably do literally anything that he asked you to do at that moment. Move a mountain? Youâd start pushing. Marry him? Youâd wake up an officiant and come up with vows on the spot. Help him hide a body? You were sure you could find a shovel somewhere.
âCan you help me get my shoes off?â he lifted a foot as he spoke to demonstrate his point, a little pout on his lips. You were a little disappointed that he hadnât asked you for anything else, but you also werenât quite sure what it was that you wanted him to ask you for.Â
You groaned playfully, a long and drawn out sound that you hoped would communicate that you were exhausted after dragging him through the city and comfortable where you were laying. Still, you leaned over and untied his shoes before gently slipping them off. When you looked back up at Patrick, his pants were newly half undone and halfway off, but it looked as if he had given up fully taking his pants off.Â
âNeed help with that too?â you asked, though you were already working on slipping the article of clothing off of his legs.
Though you tried to push the thought out of your mind, you couldnât help but recall a similar night the two of you shared several years ago. Your relationship was still relatively new, but you were already very obviously in love. So in love that youâd gone out of your way to set up a surprise party to celebrate a particularly successful tennis match, decorating your apartment with photos of him with trophies and other tennis paraphernalia and inviting as many of his close friends that you could track down. Still riding the high of winning and his all-consuming adoration of you, Patrick had partied a little too hard, leaving you in charge of tucking him in at the end of the night.Â
After bringing him a glass of water, the man snuggled into your sheets and slurred out a comment about how they smelled like you. You felt your cheeks warm as he continued on in a disjointed ramble, talking about how much he appreciated you and how no one had ever gone out of their way to make him feel like that before. He ended his monologue with a request for you to help him take his clothes off, and you happily obliged. It was tender and far more intimate than youâd expected, and ended in a drawn out kiss that left you giggling as you told Patrick that he tasted like Smirnoff Ice.Â
Even as inebriated as you currently were, the nostalgia made you feel a little dizzy.Â
By the time youâd finished helping him get his pants off, Patrick had clearly given up on getting his shirt off, too. Once again, you moved your hands up his body and helped him out with the piece of fabric.Â
âLook at that. All ready for bed,â you commented, setting a hand on his bare chest. The small action made your heart soar, and you promptly decided that it was probably better for you to avoid touching him altogether.Â
âMy watch?â Patrick asked, lifting his wrist up to show you the accessory.Â
âYou can take your watch off yourself,â you replied, leaning back into bed and finally laying down.Â
âFine.â
âNight, Patty,â you said, reaching over to turn out the bedside lamp.Â
âWait,â he paused pensively, as if he was digging deep in the recesses of his mind to conjure up what he was about to say. âA kiss?â
âPatrick!â you gasped, sounding far more scandalized by the proposition than you actually were. Of course you would give him a kiss, you just werenât sure you were ready to open up that can of worms, especially after youâd had a minor crisis at the realization that he genuinely wanted to move on.
âNo goodnight kiss? Câmon. Fully commit to tucking me in,â Patrick insisted, as if it was the most logical thing ever. As if either of you had the self control to not let something as simple as a kiss spiral out of control.Â
âFine,â you sighed before pressing a gentle peck to his forehead, figuring that was the safest place to do so. A forehead kiss was about as platonic as it got with you. âSweet dreams.â
âThank you,â he said, rather sweetly as his eyes shut. âLove you.â
Those words instantly gave you pause, causing you to suddenly feel very alert and very sober.
âSorry, what did you just say?â
âI said I love you?â Patrick repeated, looking at you with confusion. âWhat?â
âNothing,â though it was very much not nothing. In fact, if his confession was true, it would change everything. âGo to bed.â
âWait, what?â Patrick grabbed your arm, looking very worried in the low light of the room. âYouâre mad. Youâre mad that I love you?â
You didnât even know how you were supposed to react to that admission. While it had been exactly what youâd been dying to hear from him for months, it only further complicated your already very complicated situation.
âIâm not mad, Iâm⊠Iâm just tired. Letâs go to sleep, okay?â
Your explanation seemed to placate Patrick enough to let it go and go to sleep. He shuffled around to get comfortable behind you, before pulling you in to hold you as heâd done for the entirety of the trip. Except, tonight, it didnât feel quite right. The mixture of his frequent rejections of you, paired with his casual confession that he still loved you made your head spin.Â
The following morning, you woke up with a pounding in your head and a gross taste in your mouthâonly one of which, you could fully attribute to the drinking youâd done last night. You clumsily reached for your phone, and found yourself pleasantly surprised to find an announcement about the delay of the next bus you would be getting on.Â
You got out of bed with a grunt, your entire body aching with the reminder of having to drag Patrick through the city last night. Somehow, the sore muscles didnât hurt nearly as much compared to the memory of being told that Patrick still loved you.Â
You slowly paced back and forth around your hotel room, desperately trying to organize your racing thoughts. Did Patrick actually mean what he said last night? Or had been caught up in the heat of the moment? If anything, the latter seemed more likely, since heâd been very obviously trying to distance himself from you. But had he really been distancing himself from you, or just talking about distancing himself from you? If his care for you on the ferry had been any indication of how he really felt about you, it was possible that his drunken words were more honest than you were trying to convince yourself that they were.Â
Finally, you decided to stop annoying the person staying in the room under you with your increasingly frantic pacing, and to go outside to walk. Some fresh air would be good for you anyway.Â
âWhereâre you going?â a muffled voice, heavy with sleep asked. You paused the tying of your shoes to look over at the bed, where Patrick was currently squinting at you. Â
âIâm just going for a walk,â you told him. âGo back to sleep. The coach is coming late.â
âWait for me. Iâll come with you.â
That was probably the last thing you needed or wanted. After all, the whole purpose of your walk was to help you sort out your thoughts about Patrick. To say he wasnât a welcome addition to your trip was an understatement.
âOkay,â you said anyway, against your better judgment. It seemed like you hadnât been using much of your judgment at all on this trip. What was one more poor decision on top of a series of poor decisions?
You watched him get ready from where you were sitting, quietly impressed with his ability to get up and be functional despite surely being just as hungoverâif not moreâthan you. He also seemed wholly unaffected by the conversation youâd had last night, which was something that you certainly couldnât say for yourself.Â
With sunglasses perched on your nose and the weight of your entire relationship placed on your shoulders, the two of you headed out into the city, walking on the same sidewalks that youâd practically carried Patrick down the previous night.Â
âLast night was fun,â Patrick commented, making small talk with you as you began to head down the street.Â
âSome parts,â you agreed, hoping that heâd recall you grunting as you lugged him down the street, rather than your shock when he told you that he still loved you.Â
âI honestly donât remember most of the night,â Patrick said with a chuckle that almost sounded a little forced. You couldnât be sure if he was being honest or searching for a cop out for the things heâd told you before you went to sleep, but you werenât sure that it really mattered.
âUnfortunately, I do,â you replied.Â
âOh no. I hope I wasnât too much of a pain.â
âYou were like, slightly above average in terms of being a pain. Nothing Iâm not used to.â You figured that maybe you could banter your way out of this situation. Perhaps if you just pretended that everything was okay, things would magically become okay.
But that didnât feel alright. In fact, it wasnât alright. If you ever wanted to improve your relationship with Patrick, you had to stop beating around the bush with him. You were both adults. Youâd been together for years, yet you felt like you wasted far too much time not being straightforward with your thoughts and feelings. If there was going to be a next time for the two of you, you wanted things to be different.Â
âYou did say something kinda interesting last night, though.â While it had been easy to talk up a big game in your head, you immediately regretted the words that came out of your mouth. Regardless, it was too late for you to back out.Â
Patrick laughed nervously before asking, âwhat?â
âYou just⊠you kinda told me you still have feelings for me, or whatever. I just think, maybe we should talk about it. Or at least talk about us.â
The man next to you paled at your words. Your regret for bringing the topic up immediately grew exponentially.Â
âI donât think thereâs anything to talk about,â Patrick said, though he was lying through his teeth and both of you knew it. You wanted to approach this topic with civility and an open mind, but his blatant lie was making that a rather difficult task.
âAre you kidding? Weâve been tip-toeing around it this entire trip.â
âWeâre broken up. You called off our wedding. I donât think it gets any more straightforward than that,â he dismissed with a gross simplification of the state of your relationship.
âThatâs not what Iâm talking about, and you know it. And even if it was, all I said was that I didn't think I was ready to get married. You put the final nail in the coffin when you told me you fell out of love with me. But I donât know how Iâm supposed to interpret you not being in love with me anymore when you still act the way that you act with me.â
You could tell the direction this conversation was going, your discussion quickly veering into argument territory as Patrick began to invade your space as he always did when you argued.Â
âAnd how exactly do I act with you?â he challenged, though you were sure he knew exactly what you were talking about. Â
âDo you want me to give you a list or something?â you asked, his anger becoming contagious.
âSure, why not,â he said drily.Â
âFine. Letâs start with the cuddling, then. Please enlighten me, do you know any exes who spoon regularly? I mean, I certainly donât. I donât even touch my friends like that. So I donât know what that really makes us. Or maybe how jealous you got when you saw me with someone else. I really canât think of any sort of platonic explanation for that, and trust me, Iâve tried. And while weâre at it, I guess I should mention those showers. I respect the hell out of your faith in the thickness of these hotel walls, but I actually can hear you moaning my name while youâre in there. Iâm honestly a little flattered, but Iâm mostly confused.â
âLike youâre not doing the same,â Patrick scoffed. You knew him well enough to recognize that he was masking his true feelings with hostility, and though you wanted to engage in an actual conversation with him, you werenât sure you would be able to take the high road in this conversation.
âSure, but Iâm not the one in denial of whatâs going on here!â
âIâm not in denial. Have you ever considered that maybe I want to move on?â
âDo you, though?â you asked, pausing on the sidewalk.
âClearly, I do,â he stopped right along with you, now really getting in your face.
âClearly,â you repeated with a laugh. âMaybe you should start acting like it.â
âMaybe you should stop clinging to the past.â
His piercing gaze was unwavering as he waited to read your reaction. You knew how he liked to play this game, looking for an indication of any sort of weakness from you. You refused to give him that, though his words cut deep.Â
âOkay,â you said calmly, though you were very much not feeling calm on the inside. âWell, thanks for letting me know how you really feel. Or how you think you feel. I donât really know anymore. And I donât think you know either.â
PRAGUE, CZECH REPUBLIC
If you had known that telling Patrick that he drunkenly confessed to loving you wouldâve broken the already very delicate relationship the two of you had built back up, you never wouldâve said anything at all. As it turned out, having some of Patrick was better than not having him at all.
The contempt he now felt for you had become so strong that he didnât even seem to be able to look at you. He sat next to a different person on the bus to Prague, not even sparing you a glance. When you arrived at the hotel, he made it a point to ask for separate roomsâsomething the two of you hadnât done the entirety of your trip. As your tour began, he seemed to make a strong effort to separate himself from you, standing in the back of your group when you were in the front and vice versa.Â
Usually, even after your worst arguments, youâd been able to find the time to talk out your feelings, but now it seemed like Patrick couldnât even find it in himself to give you that.
You wanted to be mad at Patrick too. You were mad at him. But you missed him more than you were angry with him, and you yearned to be with him, no matter how crazy his constant antics drove you.Â
Part of you felt frustrated that your relationship had become so cyclical since your breakup. You werenât sure you could handle another cycle of fighting to the point of real anger, then making up with your relationship still a little more strained than it was in the past. You just wanted Patrick. Why did things have to be any more complicated than that?Â
You desperately clung on to any bits of hope that your relationship might persist, coming out of this argument altered, but still existing. You snuck peeks at Patrick while you toured a beautiful castle and tried to bite your tongue until you stopped thinking of how badly you wanted to grab him and joke about his home looking like that castle. You wondered if he wanted to put your initials on a lock and put it on a bridge as much as you did. You wished you could ask him if he missed the warm body in bed beside him the way you did.Â
But every time you looked at him, he was pointedly not looking at you. As your group paused on the bridge to allow couples the time to make their own locks, Patrick didnât even spare a glance in your direction. You were sure that even if he did miss you in bed, or wherever else, he would never tell you about it.Â
You didnât want it to be overâbut you couldnât keep clinging to hope that it wasnât.Â
GENEVA, SWITZERLAND
Getting to view the breathtaking scenery of the Swiss Alps as you sat on a cable car had been a dream of yours for years. What wasnât included in that dream was dodging the glare of your ex-fiancĂ© as the two of you sat in silence on that very gondola.Â
Unluckily for the two of you, you were stuck together for the afternoon. Private skiing lessons in the Swiss Alps sounded like a great, even romantic, idea while you were planning the trip, but it was far from romantic now.Â
The two of you stood on opposite sides of your instructor, the tension between you so thick that in the midst of his safety spiel, he paused to ask if everything was okay between you. After a stilted reply of yes, your instructor looked at you both skeptically before carrying on.Â
Seeing as Patrick was an athlete who spent his childhood school breaks in Aspen, he was pretty decent at skiing already. Far better than you, a novice who was moving a little bit like a giraffe standing on its feet for the first time.Â
While it wasnât your first time skiingâthat had been on a family vacation youâd tagged along on with the Zweigsâyou certainly were not experienced enough to be keeping up with Patrick, who had the experience and the ego to give even your instructor a run for his money.Â
It was entertaining to watch him in his element, his competitive side coming out despite the fact there was no competition anywhere to be found. He was significantly faster than you wherever you went, and skied with a confidence that you doubted you would ever be able to exhibit. In the past, this behavior may have been slightly endearing to you, but right now, it was mostly a little annoying.Â
You and your instructor stood above Patrick, watching him effortlessly glide down the mountain in front of you. If you werenât so agitated, you might actually have been impressed. As if your instructor was actively reading your mind, he leaned over to say something to you.Â
âI think heâs trying to impress you,â he said quietly, though the subject of your conversation was an entire slope away.Â
You nearly choked on your own saliva at the observation. âNo way.â
âWhat do you mean no way?â he laughed. âTrust me, Iâve been doing this for years, and Iâve seen it all. Couples, crushes, friends, coworkers. I know posturing when I see it.â
âTrust me, he could care less.â
He looked at you with a doubting squint. âWhy donât we go down there and ask him?â
âAbsolutely not,â you laughed. The thought of asking Patrick anything after the interactions youâd had seemed absolutely ridiculous. At this point, you wouldnât even ask him what time it was.Â
âSorry. Let me rephrase that. That was me telling you that itâs time for you to go down the slope.â
You looked downhill at where you needed to go, noting that it was far steeper than what youâd been practicing on leading up to this point. You had been looking for an excuse to stall going down it, but now that your instructor had said something about that, you couldnât not go.
After taking a deep breath, you began to go down. Gaining a bit of speed, you also found yourself growing slightly more confident, closing your eyes and feeling the cold air press against your body. While you were enjoying your speed at first, it was quickly growing out of hand, and you began to panic as you realized just how fast you were going. Desperately trying to pull your skis into a V shape to slow down, you were horrified at the realization that you were far too late, and actively heading towards a cluster of trees. You didnât know what to do other than to accept your fate, and everything had happened so fast anyway that you found yourself tumbling into a tree, a searing pain on your ankle and tailbone as you laid out on the rocky ground.
Everything felt like it was moving slowly and quickly at the same time. One second, you were alone in the snow, and the next, Patrick and your ski instructor were hovering over you, goggles on their foreheads as they looked at you with concern.
âAre you okay?â you were finally able to make out once the slight ringing in your ears had ceased.Â
âDid you see how hard she crashed? Of course she isnât fucking okay,â Patrickâs voice huffed, though slightly muffled from your helmet covering your ears.
âMy ankle,â you said, as if that gave them enough context. You wondered if they could see the tears beginning to pool under your goggles. The pair looked at your limb, though with your snowsuit covering it, they really couldnât see much.Â
âCan you walk?â your instructor asked you.Â
âI havenât tried, but Iâm gonna go with no.â
âWeâre gonna have someone check you out. Donât worry, theyâll be here soon,â your ski instructor told you. You blinked a few times and mustered all the strength you could to nod.Â
The longer you sat, the more you began to realize how badly everything hurt. From your head down to your surely swollen ankle, you werenât feeling too hot. You closed your eyes, suddenly feeling very exhausted. Maybe a quick little nap was exactly what you needed to feel a little better.
âHey, donât do that. You hit your head pretty hard when you fell, so you might have a concussion.â
âI donât, Iâm just tired,â you explained, though you didnât know for a fact that it was true. In fact, with the pounding in your head, you more likely than not had a mild concussion.Â
âWell, you kinda have to stay awake,â Patrick told you, though he surely knew it was easier said than done. You were surprised when you felt his gloved hand take yours and squeezed your hand softly. âHey, why donât you tell us a story?â he suggested, clearly just trying to keep you awake.
âDo you wanna hear the story about how he proposed to me?â you asked the instructor. You werenât sure why that was the first thing to pop into your head, but it was a long enough story to keep you awake until help arrived. You wished your goggles were slightly less tinted, so you could at least see the scandalized expression Patrick was probably making. You loved when you made him react like that, since the roles were usually reversed.Â
âWell, yeah. Of course,â your instructor responded with a hint of a laugh. âYou guys are engaged?â he directed towards Patrick.
âThis is our honeymoon,â you replied before Patrick had an opportunity to respond. You wished you could see the confused look that your instructor was surely making.
âSo what happened?â
âWhen he proposed?â you asked to clarify.Â
â...Sure.â
âWell, for a little context, Patrick here is a professional tennis player. Heâs really good too. So given my athletic ability, as you got to see today, I never really played with him. Like, he would always ask me to just play a fun, quick little round and I would always tell him no. Mostly because I knew he would crush me. I did play a little bit back in the day, but I was nowhere near his level. I mostly preferred to be on the sideline while we dated. I mean, I came to every single one of his games. Iâm pretty sure my office introduced remote work to us because of me, since I was traveling all the time to see him.
âAnyway, one day, after a day of buttering me up, and I mean, he was really laying it on thick. I donât know how I didnât think something was up,â you laughed as you recalled the day, how Patrick had scheduled a nail appointment for you, then wined and dined you during a very romantic midday picnic. âBut he asked me to play a little bit of tennis with him. I think I just thought he spent the day buttering me up so that I would play tennis with him, not that I would agree to marry him, but I digress.Â
âWe get to the tennis court and Patrickâs nervous like Iâve never seen him. He was a little jittery all day, but this was a different beast. Looking back, I really donât understand why. He shouldâve known I was going to say yes. Anyway, weâre playing, and somehow I win, even though Iâm extremely rusty and have absolutely awful form. Obviously I knew Patrick threw the match for me, but that didnât mean I wasnât gonna gloat at him.Â
âSo Iâm doing my victory spiel and I walk over to his side of the court, where heâs digging in his bag. Heâs so quiet, which shouldâve been a sign that something was up, and Iâm thinking heâs about to pull out more tennis balls and tell me weâre doing a rematch, so he can really crush me. Instead, he pulls out a box and gets down on one knee. He gives me a speech about how he didnât care if he never won another game of tennis in his life, because as long as we were together, he was a winner. It was really sweet. Obviously I said yes.â
You finally looked over at Patrick, though you couldnât perfectly read his expression through the darkened lens of your goggles. You wondered if he felt any of the same feelings that were currently simmering in your own chest. Though, you didnât get to stew too long, as help arrived just as your story came to a close.Â
You were taken to an infirmary and given a series of tests, some to see the state of your head and other to see how the rest of your body was doing. Surprisingly, you made it out without too much serious damage. Your ankle was sprained, but nothing that would make it take too long to heal. You had a concussion, which surprised you, given your ability to recall so many details earlier in the day, but it was a very mild one. At least youâd made it back into your hotel in one piece.Â
You really just wanted to relax for the rest of the evening, and you had plans to do exactly that, when there was suddenly a soft rapping at your door.Â
You got up, and with help from the crutches you were provided, you hobbled to the door and opened it. On the other side was Patrick, who you were both surprised and unsurprised to see.Â
âHey. I got your room number from the front desk,â Patrick told you. âDo you mind if I come in?â
âSure, but Iâm probably going to sleep soon,â with some effort, you sidestepped the doorway to let him in.
âDo you need anything? Want anything?â he asked as he made himself at home in your room, evaluating what you already had.Â
âIâm good, I think.â
âHowâre you feeling? They wouldnât let me see you at the infirmary.â
âIâve been better,â you shrugged, sitting down on the foot of your bed to take some pressure off of your aching ankle.Â
âI bet. Are you icing that?â he asked, gesturing to your most obvious injury.Â
âI havenât been able to make it out to the ice machine,â you confessed, though the doctor had suggested ice for the inflammation.Â
âLet me go grab some for you,â he said before disappearing out into the hallway. Once he left, you laid back in bed, letting out a sigh of relief at how much better being flat felt.Â
Youâd be lying if you said you didnât like being taken care of this way. It seemed like no matter how bad things got between the two of you, you would always care for one another in some capacity. You wondered what had gone through Patrickâs mind when he saw you hurt yourself. You wondered if that changed anything in the way he felt about you.Â
He knocked on the door once more to tell you he was back, though the door was already unlocked.Â
âIf thereâs anything else you need, I mean anything at all, just call me. Iâm just down the hall from you,â he told you as he bagged up the ice he retrieved.Â
He sat down on the foot of the bed, where youâd previously been sitting, and tenderly set the bag of ice on your ankle, clearly not wanting to hurt you any more than you were already hurt. He looked at you a little sadly before standing back up, not wanting to linger in your presence too long.Â
âIâll let you get some sleep,â he explained, already turning to head towards the door.Â
âThanks, Patrick,â you paused, looking for any other words you had for him. âGood night.â
âNight.â
SOMEWHERE IN ITALY
The next few days in Switzerland had been extremely boring. Due to doctorâs orders, you mainly stayed in bed, avoiding screens by reading books, and looking out the window to view the mountains that you were currently missing.Â
Although you had to miss a lot of the fun your tour was going on, like a cheese and chocolate tour, you somehow still received an anonymous delivery of cheeses and chocolatesâthough, you were pretty sure you knew who was responsible for that.Â
Patrick didnât seem like he wanted to overstep any boundaries, which you respected, though you really couldâve used some company whose ear you could talk off. Hell, youâd even take another nasty argument over the resounding silence of your room.Â
Luckily for you, by the time your group was traveling once again, you were starting to feel slightly better, concussion and ankle-wise. Though, your head was starting to hurt from listening to a person at the front of the bus go on about how much they needed the bus to pull over somewhere.Â
After a period of incessant complaining from someone on your bus, the vehicle finally came to a stop at a small rest stop in the middle of the Italian countryside.Â
Not willing to pass up an opportunity to stretch your legs, you got off at the stop, briefly stopping inside the building to look at what they had to offer before stepping behind the building, watching the wind blow through the overgrown weeds.Â
Your attempt at enjoying the quiet, idyllic countryside was disturbed when you were joined by a smoking companion.Â
âIâve been meaning to talk to you,â he said.Â
Before you could stop it, a sad smile appeared on your face. The two of you hadnât spoken since your brief conversation in your hotel room, despite the mystery snack deliveries and the promise of coming if you called.
âIâve been worried about you,â he said plainly.
âThereâs nothing to worry about,â you dismissed.Â
âYouâve spent the last few days all alone in a room with a concussion.â
âItâs mild.â
âYou fucked up your ankle.â
âItâs healing. Itâs not all that bad.â
âWell, Iâve been worried anyway,â he passed you his partially smoked cigarette and you took a drag from it, though you were sure that was one of the things you shouldnât be doing with a concussion.Â
âThanks, I guess.â you said. âSo is this just a wellness check, orâŠ?â
âNo, well, yes. Obviously I was worried about you physically, but I also was wondering about how you were in general.â
It was strange to see him clumsily mince his words, given how bold he usually was.
âOh? What changed between here and Germany?â
âWhat changed? What changed was that I watched you almost die.â
You laughed aloud at his over dramatization of the event. âPatrick, I did not almost die.â
âHow would I have known that? I just saw you flying downhill out of control and crashing and it terrified me. I couldnât imagine a world without you in it.â
You werenât sure how you were supposed to interpret his words, especially after the wild ride youâd been on throughout the trip. You werenât sure you could handle another emotional bait and switch.Â
âPat, maybe we should talk about this later. The bus is probably taking off soon.â
âNo,â he stopped you with a hand on your arm, calling you back with a desperation you hadnât seen in him in a long time. âI donât want to waste another second without you.â
âOkay,â you said, though you werenât sure that you should buy into it yet. âGo ahead, then.â
âI canât keep pretending that I donât want you or donât want to be with you,â he confessed, which genuinely took you by surprise. With the way heâd been dodging your attempts at building a connection, you certainly didnât think heâd tell you something like that.Â
âThen why have you been pretending?â you asked, hoping that your somewhat harsh words didnât betray your genuine curiosity behind his behavior.Â
âI donât know,â he said. It was a terrible, unsatisfying answer. One that didnât explain a single reason behind his behavior. âI guess I just canât wrap my head around the idea that anyone would want to keep me around long-term.â
You looked at him with shock in your eyes, your mouth slightly agape at the confession. You couldnât imagine Patrick, overconfident, bold, and self-assured, who youâd been dating for years, not feeling secure in your relationshipâto the point where heâd been actively trying to push you away out of anticipating how youâd feel about him.
âWhen you told me you werenât ready to be with me, it just confirmed everything Iâd been worried aboutâthat one day you would wake up next to me and realize that I wasnât the guy you wanted. I guess it just happened sooner than I anticipated.â
You almost couldnât believe what you were hearing. âIf you felt like that, then whyâd you tell me you werenât in love with me anymore?â
âI thought if you were gonna leave me anyway, I might as well beat you to the punch.â
You were giving it your all to keep it together at this point, feeling slightly vindicated to know that Patrick was lying about no longer loving you, but mostly devastated that your whole relationship had been uprooted over an assumption that Patrick had made about you.Â
âI⊠I donât even know what to say,â you looked out into the grass, then back at Patrick. âI wish youâd stop assuming that you know what I want all the time.â
âHey you two, last call for the coach,â your tour guide suddenly interrupted, looking very obviously annoyed that the two of you were holding the bus up.Â
âSorry. Weâll head back now,â you apologized to the guide. âWeâll continue this conversation later?â you directed towards Patrick.Â
âYeah,â he agreed.Â
VENICE, ITALY
Putting a hold on your conversation probably wasnât the wisest idea youâd ever had, considering that your next few days in Italy were set to be your busiest this far.Â
Between gondola rides on different boats and exploring historic palaces, the two of you didnât have much time to stop and have as serious of a talk as you wanted to have. Even if you did somehow manage to pick up where youâd left off, there were so many people around you that it didnât even feel worth it.Â
Luckily for you, your hotel had a private beach attached to it, and as you spent your evening by the beach, watching the sun go down, you were pleased to find that you were joined by familiar company.Â
At first, Patrick didnât say anything as he sat down on the same chair next to you. The two of you enjoyed the serene sunset and privacy that the beach afforded you in silence, though you were sure that things wouldnât stay that way for long.Â
âI love you, you know?â he finally piped up, breaking the silence with a very bold declaration.Â
You looked at him calmly, though you werenât feeling very calm on the inside. Youâd been waiting to hear those words from him from the moment that the two of you broke up. You werenât sure how you were supposed to react to it now, though the confession was better late than never.Â
âI love you too. I never stopped,â you told him simply, as if the realization that you were stuck on him hadnât been haunting you for months now.
âI never did, either. It was cruel of me to ever tell you that I did.â
You nodded in agreement, wondering if Patrick would ever understand the full extent of the damage his words had done to you. âIt was, but I understand where you were coming from. If I had known that you didnât think I was going to stick around, I wouldâve gone about what I did differently,â you began to explain. âI think it came across as me not wanting to marry you at all. Of course I wanted to marry you. There was just so much else going on in my life then that the timing didnât feel right.â
âBut the timing might be right someday?â Patrick asked, a hopeful lilt in his voice.Â
âThe timing will be right someday. Maybe sooner than either of us know,â you shot him a wink, then broke into a grin as he pulled you into a firm, loving embrace.Â
ATHENS, GREECEÂ
The rest of your time in Italy mainly consisted of making up for lost time, with the two of you partaking in far more PDA than what was ever necessary and thoroughly documenting your time abroad together as a couple.Â
Thanks to your injury, you were slightly slower than the rest of your group. But that certainly didnât stop Patrick from lagging along with you, letting you lean on him for support when you needed it and pausing to sit and take breaks with you whenever you noticed that walking was taking too much of a toll on you.
It was nice to be back with him, to not have to feel stupid for feeling what you felt or feel the pressure of knowing that you should probably be trying to move on. The only unfortunate part was how little time the two of you had left on vacation, with you heading home after spending a few days in Athens. If only the two of you had been upfront about your feelings earlier, then you couldâve been having as great of a time as you were having now during your entire trip.Â
The two of you briefly floated the idea of having somewhat of a shotgun wedding, but scrapped it after realizing that you would prefer to have your family and friends there to celebrate with you. After all, many of them had been on the emotional rollercoaster that was your relationship right along with you.Â
For the time being, the two of you were perfectly content with being together, and knowing that neither of you had any intentions of leaving.Â
Somehow, that made your last few days of vacation feel infinitely better.Â
ATHENS INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT
You scrolled endlessly on your phone, sending out a few messages to friends and family to let them know that you were heading back home. While you typically felt a few nerves before boarding a plane anywhere, you couldnât help but feel a renewed sense of excitement, both at the thought of being able to go back home and sleep in your own bed, and at the potential your newly reformed relationship had.Â
Your scrolling was interrupted by Patrickâs presence, carrying a coffee and a breakfast sandwich in his hands with a slightly goofy look on his face.Â
âSorry for taking so long. I think everyone and their mother wanted coffee today,â he explained as he sat down, passing you your items as he got comfortable next to you.Â
âNo worries. Iâm just glad you were running late to grab us breakfast, instead of trying to switch our seats like last time.â
The two of you shared a laugh before Patrick said, âThat feels like a lifetime ago.â
âIt basically was,â you dismissed.Â
Once it was announced that your group was boarding, the two of you stood up quickly, attempting to gather your bearings before getting on the plane.Â
ââTill next time, Europe,â you bid the country goodbye as the two of you made your way to the line.Â
âShould we come back to Europe? I was thinking our next honeymoon should be somewhere else. Maybe Bali.â
âOooh, Bali sounds nice. I think anywhere warm and with a beach is good,â you explained, though you really didnât care where you went, as long as Patrick was there by your side.