showed her the brothers' profile images on their site.
"It's that one, right?" she pushes. "He's gorgeous. You've known him how long?"
"I can't remember a time when I didn't know him." I shrug as I place the mug back on the table. "We lived next door to his family when I was growing up."
"So he's like a brother?"
"No," I shake my head fervently. "It's never been like that. We've just been friends."
"Do you want to be more than friends with him?"
My best friend in middle school and a friend in college both asked me the very same question. I've always fallen back on the same answer I'm going to give Ivy now. "I used to have a crush on him but that passed."
The expression on her face makes it clear that she's not buying into a word of what I'm saying. "How old is he?"
"Caleb is thirty."
"Does he want to get married?"
"To me?" I ask without thinking.
She giggles loudly. "Maybe I should be asking if you want to marry him."
"No." I reach for the mug again and this time I take a heavy swallow just to keep my mouth busy.
"Are you attracted to him?" She taps her finger on the checkered tablecloth. "Are you attracted to Caleb?"
Lying would be completely and utterly futile at this point. The mere fact that I got all tongue tied when she asked me whether he wanted to get married is already proof of my confusion regarding him. "He's very attractive, Ivy."
"I'm not going to argue with you about that. Why haven't you just jumped into bed with him?"
It's a question I've asked myself more than once. It definitely hasn't been for lack of opportunity. I know Caleb. I know him well enough to know that there have been moments when he's been open to the idea of sleeping with me. He's never come right out and told me he wants me, but I've seen the same longing I feel for him, reflected back to me. The only problem is that whenever I've gotten up the nerve to think I'll make a move, his interest has waned and my better judgement has kicked in.
"Remember when you first told me about how you met Jax?" I smile across the table at her. "You said he was a ladies' man before that."
"I said he fucked a lot of women before he met me." She tips her chin up. "He never told me how many but it's got to be a pretty high number."
I admire the way she throws out the words without any reservation. She can do that because she's confident in how much Jax loves her now. "Caleb is like that."
"It's normal for men in the city." She gestures towards the crowded coffee shop. "They experiment until they find the right one. Once they do, everything changes and they give that up."
It's a sweet sentiment and expected given the way that Ivy views life. She's convinced that every person has a soul mate they're destined to find. I'm more grounded. I think we're bound to make connections in our lives that fill a need. Sometimes those connections last and other times, they fade. I want a relationship like the one Ivy and Jax have, but I'm clear minded enough to know that I may never find that.
"The right one has to be someone you share the same vision with," I say quietly. "Caleb and I are completely different people and I don't want to risk the friendship we do have even though it's hanging by a thread."
"What does that mean?"
"There was a time when I thought Caleb could do no wrong," I admit sheepishly. "I'm not that naïve anymore. I know that no man is perfect but he does things I don't understand, Ivy. It's not just the stuff with his brothers. It's how he uses women and flaunts his wealth. He's not the same boy who used to share an ice cream cone with me when we were kids."
"That boy is still inside of him somewhere." She pats the top of my hand. "The difference now is that he's lost sight of him. You need to help him find that part of him again."
"I don't need to do that." I sigh heavily as I run my finger over the rim of the mug. "He likes who he is. He's happy with the man he is."
"Then you just have to find a way to accept him the way he is."
"Or," I ready myself to say the words.