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FIRST BLUSH
The thirty-piece band was playing the first song I recognized since I got here: It Had To Be You. It was Memorial Day, and I was standing in the corner at a 400 guest wedding. It was definitely the most grandiose event I'd ever been attended. I decided I didn't like grandiose events. Which I guess makes sense because I'm more comfortable with my nose buried in a textbook than at a party. I would have stayed in my back yard reviewing math proofs and getting ready for next fall if I could have.
But an 18-year-old distant cousin of mine was getting married, and my father decreed that I had to come, so I here I was. I was wishing for a simple picnic and fireworks in the gorgeous holiday sunshine instead of getting lost in the throng of the well dressed.
A brunette in a fancy, low-cut red dress stepped in front of me. I recognized her immediately.
"Hi," she said and smiled a mega-watt smile. "You're obviously one of Joe and Marsha's sons, but I'm not positive which one. "
"Eli," I said.
At the same time she said, "Eli?"
I nodded.
"I thought so."
It was easy to see how she could be unsure. I had three younger brothers, and we were all very close in age. We all had the same fair coloring with flaming red hair and a smattering of freckles.
"I'm Dawn," she said, touching her chest.
"I know," I said. "You like exactly the same."
I hadn't seen her in about nine years. She was ten years older than me, which would make her 32.
"You don't. Look at you, all grown up. The last time I saw you, you were like a shy colt. Those amazing, piercing baby blues are exactly the same though."
I felt a slight blush run to the top of my cheeks at the compliment.
"Thanks," I said.
She came and stood beside me, so we were shoulder to shoulder.
"Happy Memorial Day," she said with a good dose of sarcasm as she looked out at the crowd.
I tried not to roll my eyes.
"You know what would make this shindig even better?" she asked.
"What?"
"Three hundred and twenty-five less people."
I smiled. I'd always liked her.
"I heard you graduated from college."
She lived on the East Coast; I lived on the West Coast. But her mom and my mom kept up with each other. Still, it surprised me she knew.
"Yeah, last year."
"And you majored in math, something specific, ah, data analytics or something."
The way she said data analytics I could tell she had no idea what that meant.
"Yup."
She was an artist. I tried to remember what she did for a minute. Scarfs? "You still making those batik scarfs?" Whatever the hell batik was.
"Yeah," she said. She turned to me and her face let up. "A chain of gift shops associated with international museums picked them up, so I'm really busy with orders."
"That's great."
"Mmn-hmn."
We were silent for a minute watching the people dance, drink, and cavort.
"Gay?" she said.
WHAT?
"Excuse me?" Heat flooded my cheeks. My ears tingled the blood rushed there so fast. Damn. The top of my ears were probably beet red.
"I didn't mean to step all in your business. If you don't want to talk about it or anything, that's okay."
"Um, ah."
"I was just curious, you know, if you had a boyfriend."
I blushed harder. I gulped. "Kah."
"Never mind."
Jeez. No one had ever asked me that. But I didn't want to be in the closet or anything.
"Um, yeah, I am. What, do you have super gaydar or something?"
"Pretty much. And it can run in families. Of course there are the other two."
"What? Who?"
She looked at me like I was nuts. Her expression said, 'How could you not know?' But she didn't answer me.
"Anyway," I said. "Yes, I'm gay. No, I don't have a boyfriend."
"Well," she said. "I don't have a boyfriend right now either."
The bride and groom danced by leading a long conga line. The bride had on a plastic tiara that read 'bride', the groom had on a hat that read 'groom'. The bridesmaid had on a hat that said 'Memorial', and the best man had on a hat that said 'Day'.
"Oh dear," Dawn said.
When the conga line passed Dawn said, "I have someone who you have to meet." She grabbed my bicep and pulled me across the dance floor. I thought perhaps she meant another cousin or something until we were almost to the big French doors. A shaft of light highlighted a very handsome man standing in profile to us.
I started to pull back as I tensed into full alert. My heart sped up. Dawn tightened her grip on my arm.
"Hey Greg," Dawn called.
He turned to face us and I thought,
when novelists write 'they saw each other across a crowded room and he felt an instant attraction', this is what they're talking about.
Then we were next to him. Dawn was speaking, and I had to work to concentrate.
"...Is a math genius specializing in data analytics. Greg is the Dean of Astrophysics."
Still holding my arm, she put her other hand on Greg's arm and pulled us both so we stood closer together.
"Oh, I see somebody I have to talk to. Bye." She scurried off. I looked at her retreating back. What?
Greg stuck his hand out. "Greg Stricklane."
I reached out to shake it, on automatic reaction. "Eli Karkowski."
"Pleased to meet you."
"Likewise," I said.
"Data analytics," he said.
I nodded.
"How do you apply it?"
That's what people ask when they mean, 'What the fuck would you use that for?' or 'Where could you possible use that?' or 'I have no idea what that is?' I stifled an inner sigh.
Maybe he saw my expression because he said, "Noooo, I mean do