don’t have to act on it. You have free will. You can choose to be strong enough to resist or ignore the feelings.”
“Or you can choose to be strong enough to take the risk. But I agree that it sucks when it goes wrong.”
I glanced at him, softened my tone. “Sorry. I wasn’t trying to compare our situations. What you went through was a lot worse.”
“I didn’t think you were comparing. I was just agreeing that losing someone you love hurts like hell. But there isn’t one day with Trisha I’d take back, even knowing how it ended.”
Ashamed, I fell silent, and spent the remainder of the run trying to think of reasons why Cole was wrong and I was right. He didn’t say anything more until we were nearly back at his house again.
“We’ve been friends a long time,” he said. “What, like twenty-five years?”
“Something like that. Yeah.”
“You were the best man at my wedding. You’re my daughter’s godfather. If anything were to happen to me, I trust you to raise her.”
I glanced at him. No matter what was coming, I had a feeling I wasn’t going to like it. “Yeah.”
“So I would expect that if I was fucking something up in a big way, and being a real asshole about it, you’d tell me. Right?”
“Right.”
“So I’m going to tell you this.” He stopped running, so I did too. He put a hand out and grabbed my shoulder, holding me at arm’s length. “You’re fucking something up in a big way, and you’re being a real asshole about it.”
I shoved his arm off my shoulder. “Fuck off, Cole. You don’t know anything about this.”
He parked his hands on his hips. “You think I don’t know you? You think I haven’t picked up a few things in the twenty-five years I’ve been your best friend? You think I can’t see when you really care about something?”
I clenched my jaw. Dug in harder.
“I was there, Griffin. I was there when you came home and Kayla abandoned you. I know what you went through when your dad died. I know you think having control over your life means never needing someone you could potentially lose. But none of those things are reasons to shut out someone you love.”
“I’m not in love with her,” I snapped, although I wasn’t entirely sure about that.
“But you could be.”
I didn’t admit it. Couldn’t. Instead I doubled down on asshole, which I always did when I felt cornered.
“And what about you? I don’t see you putting yourself out there.”
“Our situations are totally different, and you know it. But you can be damn sure that if someone came along who got to me the way Blair gets to you, I wouldn’t push her away.”
I felt my armor cracking. “I can’t undo what I’ve done.”
“Are you sure?”
“I wouldn’t even know what to say to her. She probably hates me. I don’t even think she’d listen.” It was an excuse, and my best friend knew it.
“She’ll listen. If you say the right thing.”
“What’s the right thing?”
“That you were wrong. That you’re sorry. That you said things to her you didn’t mean because you were scared.”
Jesus. Could I say that to her? “It’s not . . . easy for me to admit those things.”
“It’s not easy for anyone, Griff. Every time you step up to the plate, there’s a chance you’ll strike out. But there’s also a chance you’ll knock it out of the park. Don’t blow this by not even taking a swing.”
I exhaled, my shoulders sagging.
“Take the risk, man.” Cole’s voice quieted. His blue eyes were intense. “Do you know how lucky you are? How much you’ll regret doing nothing when you could have had everything? Just . . . take the risk.”
He left me standing there and went in to eat dinner with his family, and I went home alone to eat by myself.
Later that night, I lay awake, thinking about what Cole had said. Was he right? Was I fucking this up? Would I regret not even trying to make things work with Blair?
Maybe I would. Being alone was not the salve on the wound I’d hoped it would be. I missed her too much. I’d had a taste of what life could be like with her in it, and now that she was gone, it was like endless rainy days stretching out in front of me without any chance for sun. Things that I used to enjoy—even baseball—had lost their shine.
I thought about the kind of