There was a knock at Julian's front door. He ignored it at first, but it came a second time, harder, louder. He paused his game and listened.
"I know you're in there," came a voice. "No matter how hard you practice you'll never beat me at Halo."
Julian put his controller down but stayed silent.
"Let me in, Jules."
Nothing.
"You know I have a key somewhere. I'll go back to my house and get it if I have to."
Julian was shaking slightly. This was it, he was going to be killed. Breathing deeply in an attempt to calm himself he approached the door slowly, as if it might attack.
"Dude." The voice on the other side was getting impatient.
"Tom," Julian said. "What is it?"
"Open up, come on."
Julian obliged. In the hallway of his building stood Tom Cooper, his oldest friend and Kate's older brother.
"You look like shit," he said.
Julian nodded, stepping aside. "Come in."
"Get some stuff together, you're coming over to my house for the weekend."
"What?"
"There's a blizzard coming tonight, and you haven't spoken to anyone in months, and Jen's stuck at her parents'. You're coming over and we're going to eat a ton of shitty food and drink a ton of beers and I won't take no for an answer."
Julian shook his head. "No, thanks. I'll be fine here."
Tom eyed him. "How have you been," he asked softly.
"Fine."
"Come on."
"I'm fine."
"Any word from Camilla lately?"
"Not since we finalized."
"I'm sorry."
"It's fine, really." How do you tell your best friend that you're not depressed that your wife left you, but that you force fucked his little sister one too many times?
"Have you seen Katie at all?"
The word "no" got caught in Julian's throat.
"I just thought, you two..."
"It didn't work out," he interrupted. "I don't want to talk about it."
"That's fair." Tom looked around. "I'm really not leaving without you, so get your stuff and let's go."
Back at Tom's, the two ordedred take out and settled in to ride out the storm. A loud crack came from outside, and they rushed to the front window to find a huge tree branch had given out under the weight of the snow and had landed in the street.
"Shit," Tom said. "My car'll be next."
His phone rang, and he jumped up to get it. Moments later he returned, looking uneasy. "Katie and Will are coming," he said sheepishly. "They were in the Poconos but they had to get out of there before the storm. The roads are getting bad, they're worried about making it back to her place. I'm sorry -- I hope that's okay."
Julian shrugged, briefly unable to speak. Then, "does she know I'm here?"
"No. I'm really sorry."
They heard the sound of a car door slamming.
"That's them," Tom said, opening the front door.
Julian stood by the window, watching as Kate made her way up the sidewalk with her bag. She didn't see him.
"Hey Katie," Tom said, helping her inside.
"Thank you so much," she gasped, teeth chattering. "We almost died, like, fifty times."
"Here, stand there, keep your boots on." Tom took her coat and hung it over the closet door to dry. "I'm going to get a towel. Give me your bag, I'll put it in the guest room."
When Tom disappeared up the stairs, Julian stepped out. "Hi."
Kate stopped fussing with her hair and looked up, dumbfounded.
"Hey," came Will's voice from the front step. "Do you know where the brush thing is? The ice thing, the, whatever, the car cleaner offer? I can't find it." He stepped in and looked up at Julian, his eyes narrowing into little slits. "What are you doing here."
Julian shrugged. "Riding out the storm."
"Get your coat, Kate, we're leaving."
She looked relieved as she grabbed her coat and started putting it back on again.
Tom thundered down the stairs, towel in hand. "What's going on?"