The water parts with a light splash as my leg dips beneath the surface. Nicole's eyes open in surprise, wide and brown behind the curves of her eyelashes. I kick the side of her arm gently, the water in the tub swaying from side to side as I do so.
"Scooch over," I say, crawling over the edge of the tub. I can see that Nicole's sad again; she hasn't been crying, because the tell-tale red isn't around the edges of her eyes, but I can tell she's been wanting to. It's in how quickly her brown eyes blink as they focus on me, the slight lines near their corners, the ever so slight tiredness to their cast. Her face softens as she realizes that it's me. The light of the paneled-glass windows spills over the white linoleum of the bathtub and the pulled-back brown of her hair.
"What the hell are you doing?" She asks, the laughter in her voice immediately easing the sadness in her face. It's still there, but further away.
"Scooch!" I repeat, and she slides sideways as I step into the tub beside her. My bare legs squeak on the wet linoleum as I slip beneath the water. One of her hands reaches out and steadies my elbow as I join her. A grey tee-shirt clings to my body, sticking to me beneath the line of the water and dry above it; a strange sensation. My shorts--which are really just high-topped underwear I use as pajamas, soak through immediately. Tucking one arm behind her, around her shoulders, I pull Nicole against me for a moment.
"Sucks, huh?" I press my cheek into the top of her hair as she leans her head against my shoulder.
"I mean--" she hesitates, drawing a deep breath and letting it out slowly, "You know what? Yeah--yeah, it sucks. It really, really sucks."
"Break-ups," I shake my head against the top of hers, which is really just a rolling of my cheek over her damp hair. It's a gesture of sympathy.
"You know what the worst part is?" She asks, raising her head slightly and turning to face me. The movement brings the small flecks of gold out in her otherwise brown eyes, "I didn't even really want to be dating him." She must see something in my eyes, then, because she squints at me, "No--really. I've been thinking about ending things for weeks. I don't care that we broke up. I care that he broke up with me. I mean--come on!"
"Idiot," I give her a small, sympathetic smile. It's easy, to smile like that, because I mean it. Her boyfriend was an idiot; in pretty much every way, but mainly because only an idiot would give up Nicole.
Admittedly, I'm a little bit biased. I've had a crush on Nicole ever since we met in second-year music studies at University of Toronto. I'd never told her; maybe she'd felt the occasional moment, while we lived together. My stare lingering a little bit too long during a pause in the movie, how I didn't breathe quite right when I lay on the couch and watched her dance to violin music in the living-room, how I stood a little bit closer than was maybe necessary on the elevator ride up to our apartment. But I'd been good. If we'd shared that occasional glance, it hadn't gone beyond that. If I'd wanted to brush my fingers against hers when we shared a bowl of popcorn during movie nights; well, you can't judge a person by what they want to do. If there was the occasional night that I'd thought about creeping out of my bedroom and ghosting through the door of hers, if I'd thought maybe one too many times what might follow that--I can at least pretend it was decency, and not cowardice, that stopped me.
"Idiot," Nicole agreed, laying her head back down on my shoulder. She raised it again, about an inch, immediately. One hand came out of the water, plucking at the fabric of my tee-shirt just beneath my shoulder, "Speaking of--what is this?"
"A shirt."
"Why are you wearing it in the bathtub?"
"I figured it would be... decent."
Her glance is telling; slightly teasing, slightly charmed. When the white light of the room touches the brown of her eyes, I find myself held captive by them. I have to stop myself from pulling one of my hands out of the water and running a finger along her cheek. My palms tingle slightly with the impulse.
"Take it off."
"Pardon me?"
Her stare becomes slightly more focused. She leans another inch away, so that her eyes can focus on mine. When Nicole gets her mind set on something, her face goes hilariously stubborn--like it is at the moment. As she moves against the back of the tub, one of her legs slides over mine. I can feel the back of her heel against the top of my ankles; but whether it's intentional or just a happenstance of the movement, I don't know. She plucks at the fabric one more time, just where my shirt meets the water.
"Oh, come on. How many times have we seen one another half naked? Besides--" she slides around the tub, her legs leaving mine and her knees drawing up in front of her. We now sit on opposite ends of the tub, facing one another. Her hands splash quietly as they leave the water, flinging droplets of water against the surface as she gestures with open fingers, one on either side of her body, "it's only fair."
"Alright, alright." I reach up to where my curly hair falls around the back of my neck. It takes me a moment to bring it together in a loose bun, using a loose strand to wrap the bottom and hold it in place. It's a technique that my older sister taught me when I was young--the ability to make a bun without elastics or bobby pins, though it didn't hold nearly as well. Dropping my hands, I pull the wet bottom of my shirt up above the water and over my head. It makes a quiet slap against the linoleum floor as I drop it beside the tub. I can't tell whether it's my imagination or not, the moment before Nicole's eyes close and her head turns back over the edge of the tub, whether they glance downward. Her arms stretch over the white curve of the tub lip, her legs easing down so that they're laying beside mine. I can feel her right ankle pressed to my left thigh.
Before I can think better of it, I reach down and take hold of her closest foot. It pulls back slightly in surprise, but I draw it into my lap, so that her heel is against my stomach and her toes are just above the water line. Her head comes up from the back of the tub, brown eyes blinking at me.
"What--"
"Sshh," I shush her, "Relax. Lay back. I know what I'm doing."
Her head does indeed fall back, as both of my hands go around her foot. My thumbs press into the soft skin of her sole, moving in the opposite direction of my fingers against the back of her foot; pulling upward and then smoothing back down. She exhales deeply, sinking a couple of inches lower into the water. Her eyes are closed, her mouth loose; not quite open anywhere except in the very middle, but I think I can see a smile in the corners. Not a full smile; but like the reflection of one in rippling water. My hands continue to work, almost mindlessly, easing the tension out of her foot. Once again, I can't tell whether it's my imagination playing tricks on me, or whether her breathing is just a little bit quicker than it was a moment previously. As I lower the foot back beneath the water, I'm very conscious that I've placed it on the other side of my body, so that her legs are open across mine. Reaching down, I take hold of her other foot and begin to repeat the motion. I work slowly, unhurried. I'm not watching what my thumbs are doing; I'm too caught up staring at her--how the light from the misted glass of the windows plays over the soft curves of her cheeks, how each breath swells her chest and brings the top of her breasts above the water, how her fingers hang in the empty air on one side of the bathtub and lay against the shelf on the other. In my hands, her foot flexes against my thumbs and then relaxes once more.
"You--" she exhales, opening her eyes and blinking twice, quickly, to bring them back into focus on mine, "need to be careful."
"Do I?" I smooth my thumb under her toes, running my fingers up the side of her foot. Incredibly, this sends a shiver through her body. I can feel it in my hands, and see it in the water around her chest.
"Yes," she laughs through her nose, "definitely. I have a..." her eyes close again; she's not blushing, but I can read a bit of embarrassment in the turned-up corners of her lips, "a thing about my feet."