One day I noticed Dadâs face was no longer the same pale shade as the bathroom wall.
He was going through something called adoptive cell transfer therapy. The treatments were invasive and uncomfortable, but every time he came back home, he smiled bigger than the last time. He was still weak. He was still gray. But he no longer spoke like he was ready to die but too ashamed to let go of life because he knew how much I needed him, and that made my heart soar.
We spent more and more time out of the houseâshort trips around the block, arm in arm, admiring the festival of colors as New York burst into full-blown summer. Green leaves rustled above our heads and barefoot children ran around the neighborhood pointing hoses at each other and spreading wild laughter like confetti. Flowers unfurled in their sleepy beds on the edges of our neighborhoodâs sidewalks.
I still hadnât told Dad I knew about Célian, and I intended to keep it that way. Even though we were cautiously optimistic, there was a good chance the treatment wouldnât work. In which case, I would forever blame myself for confronting him about lying to me and trying to save both of us when really, I shouldâve been cherishing every moment with him. So I chose to do that instead of picking a fight.
âAre you going to the library today?â Dad asked.
âYeah, I need to catch up on some reading material for work. Why?â
âOh, we got an invitation from Mrs. Hawthorne to come watch that new Jack Nicholson movie. Sheâs making Irish stew. But of course, you donât have to come.â
âIâll take a pass. I think youâll have a good time by yourselves, anyway.â I knocked my shoulder against his, smiling brightly.
âItâs not what you think.â
âYou donât know what I think.â
Dad had never dated after Mom died, and not for my lack of trying to fix him up with people. Iâd spent the majority of my college years trying to get him to sign up on dating sitesâbefore he got sick. I was desperate for him to be happy, and never wanted him to think he shouldnât be on my account.
âItâs really just a movie and dinner.â
âDinner? I thought it was a lunch thing.â
We stopped by the grocery store on the corner of our street, and he blushed. Actually blushed. I was almost giddy with excitement. Such a natural human reaction, but on his pale, ill skin, it looked like a glorious sunrise.
âDonât worry, I have other plans for the afternoon. Howâs Milton?â He scratched his head.
Right. Milton. Itâd been several weeks since Iâd mentioned him to Dad. Then again, heâd very rarely dragged his butt to Brooklyn even when we were dating. Dad wasnât too suspicious, because I worked insane hoursâit still felt like I was barely at home to spend time with him. I didnât want to explicitly lie to him, but this lie had gotten so big, it felt almost criminal to come clean at this point. Especially on this beautiful, sunny day, when we were both happy and smiling.
âHeâs good, Dad.â I pulled him into a hug. âTaking names and kicking ass at .â Not technically a lie. Our mutual so-called friends had been happy to break the news that Milton had recently been promoted to junior editor. For them, it was more reason for me to get down from the ego tree Iâd climbed up and take him back. For me, it was yet more proof of the fact that he was still sleeping with his boss.
Of course, I wasnât big enough a hypocrite to point that out.
âMy cell is broken at the moment, so Iâm going to call you when I get to the library from the public phone. Iâll try you here, and at Mrs. Hawthorneâs, so please be available.â
Two hours later, I was walking to the subway on my way to the library. Iâd dressed down, embracing the fact that it wasnât a workday. I felt juvenile and reckless in skull-themed Chucks. The world felt lighter when you wore flannel shirts, ripped jeans, and a messenger bag. I adjusted the strap over my shoulder, about to enter the station when someone honked their horn behind me.
Rolling my eyes, I proceeded.
âJudith.â The commanding tone found its way straight to my core, making my stomach swirl with delicious heat. Jesus Christ, what was he doing here?
I turned around slowly, feigning annoyance, because the alternative was showing him how much I cared, how much it affected me to see him here. In Brooklyn. On a Sunday.
Célian sat in his silver Mercedes-Benz in a navy, short-sleeved sport shirt, his Ray-Bans tipped down to examine me.
âWhat are you doing here?â I narrowed my eyes. I hadnât spoken to him since the phone incident. Weâd talked business in the office, but every time heâd tried to pretend like that night hadnât happenedâlike he hadnât broken my phone just because Iâd exchanged numbers with some random guy at a dinerâI turned around and walked away.
He lifted his hand, waving a brand new cellphone. It was the new model that had just come out a hot minute ago and was already out of stock.
âWith twelve cases in different colors to suit your mood.â He shot me his devastatingly charming smirk. âTruce?â
âNever. But I do need a phone.â
This was a gift I was willing to accept solely because he was responsible for the untimely death of my previous phone. Itâd been a rough few days without one, but I wasnât exactly swimming in money to buy a replacement. Iâd had to arrive at work even earlier and leave slightly later to make sure I wasnât needed or MIA, and at home, I checked my email every half hour.
He clutched the new device to his chest, and mine tightened in response.
âCome get it, Chucks.â
He was blocking the traffic, and someone honked behind him. Three, long beeps.
âYou want to get her number, park like a goddamn man and let us through!â someone yelled behind him.
Célian ignored the guy completely, ruthlessly entitled to the bone.
âNo, thanks,â I resumed my walk to the subway.
He began to drive slowly beside me. Not unlike a creeper. I rolled my eyes, but couldnât help but feel a little satisfaction at the way heâd been chasing me the last few days. Heâd even come down to the fifth floor to fetch me from lunch with Ava and Grayson, muttering an excuse about an urgent meeting, when really, all heâd wanted was to ask if we could see each other that night.
The answer, by the way, had been a big, fat .
âI want to show you something.â His car was blocking a long line of vehicles now.
âYou already showed me plenty,â I muttered, secretly liking that people were still honking at him, and that for the first time in our relationship, he was the one out of sorts.
âGet your mind out of the gutter. I mean geographically.â
âWould you like to dazzle me with your rich-boy Hamptons house? Show me another glitzy hotel you own?â I made grand, hoity-toity gestures with my hands as I walked.
. That wasnât Jesus speaking. Just me.
âIn the fucking car, Chucks.â
âSay the magic word.â
âMy cock.â
I made a gagging sound.
âI agree. It is abnormally big, but I havenât heard any complaints.â
âThe magic word,â I repeated.
â
.â The word rolled off his tongue like it was in a foreign language.
âWhoops. Still a no.â
My determined stroll slowed when his catcalling stopped. Had he given up on me? I took a few more steps before a hand grabbed my wrist. I looked up. He was smirking darkly, his thick eyebrows drawn together.
âGrayson was right. This kidnappingâ¦â I said as Célian yanked me toward his car.
Heâd parked in the middle of the street, blocking approximately thirteen cars now, all of them honking. Some had tried to reverse and slip out of the road. To say Célian didnât give a crap wouldnât be a stretch. I got into his car and buckled up, mainly because I didnât want anyone to put a bullet in his head for his behavior. He started driving and strapped in as he did, not wasting any time.
âWhere are we going?â I asked.
âYouâll see.â
âYou never apologized for the phone.â
âI do. I am. It wasnât my finest moment. I would say I didnât mean it, but lying on top of breaking your shit would really be rude. You shouldnât have exchanged numbers with another man. Iâve been dutifully faithful to you from the moment my tongue touched your crack.â
I threw my hands in the air. âYouâre engaged, psycho!â
âItâs not real.â
âIt is to me.â
âBullshit. You wouldnât touch a taken man, and we both know it. We arenât cheaters.â
âDoes that mean weâre in some sort of a relationship in your weird mind?â
âNot a relationship, but an arrangement. Yes. Do you think you can handle that?â
I laughed bitterly. âI canât fall in love, Célian. Iâm broken.â
âGood. Letâs be broken together, then.â
He threw the phone into my hands. It was fully charged and ready to be used. It should have made me happy, but it didnât. I enjoyed having sex with him, and butting heads with him in the newsroom, but what was the point of all this? Love might not be in the cards for me, but I was getting more attached, setting myself up to get hurt more than I already was.
âOpen the glove compartment,â he said, still staring at the busy road ahead.
And yet again, I had the feeling he knew exactly what I was thinking. I opened the glove compartment. âWhat am I looking for?â
âMorrissey.â
I patted the mostly empty space, my hand coming to rest on the familiar shape of my iPod. I yanked it out and squeaked. My precious iPod, with the thousands of songs Iâd collected over the years, was back in my hand, and it felt glorious.
âDid someone find it at the hotel?â I turned to him.
âYes. I did. The night you bailed on me.â
I frowned. âWhy did you never give it back?â
He shot me a look I couldnât decodeâmaybe bewildered verging on annoyed. âYou stole something from me, so I stole something from you.â
I sat back, considering this. He rubbed his jaw.
âWhoâs Kipling?â
Kipling was my notebook. But of course, I didnât miss an opportunity to mess with him.
âA friend.â
âA good friend?â
I nodded. âVery.â
âHow long have you known him?â
I grinned at this. I didnât know if Célian was aware he was jealous, but I saw it from the outside. âLong enough.â
We drove into Manhattan and parked at his building. He rounded the car, took a duffel bag from the trunk, and we went up to the ground floor and out to the street.
âWhere are we going?â I asked as he flung the duffel bag over his shoulder, looking royally pissed and completely disturbed by what we were doing.
âOn a date.â He sighed, like I was forcing him to hang out with me at gunpoint.
âHuh?â I laughed. Iâd ignored him for just over four days, and he was taking me on a date now? Imagine what would happen if I actually went through with what my brain told me I should do on a daily basis and cut things off with him completely.
âIâm taking you on a date. Whatâs not to understand?â
âWhatâs with the duffel bag? Is that in case youâre bad at romancing and have to kill me before I tell anyone?â
We rounded the corner to Central Park West and headed straight to the meadow. He scoffed. âI can charm the panties off of a nun.â
âCharming your way into underwear and into hearts are two different skills.â
âIâm a good multitasker.â
âNot to mention I havenât agreed to date you. You never even asked,â I pointed out.
âI thought it was a given.â
âWhy?â
âYou gave me backdoor accessâa womanâs version of expensive jewelry.â
âAnyone ever told you youâre a delusional piece of work?â
He smirked. âIs that an actual question? I can count on one hand the number of people I know who called me that.â
âJust because I like it when you boss me in bed doesnât mean I want to be with you.â I blushed, fighting the urge to look down and break eye contact. He stopped at the John Lennon memorial, where the word looked back up at us.
He laced his fingers in mine, turned me around to face him, and tapped my nose, his lips tilted up arrogantly. âYou have skulls on your shoes.â
âYou have skulls in your eyes.â
âAre we feeling morbid today, Chucks?â
âNo. Just deadly.â
The park was swarming with people. Clusters of tourists, couples, cyclists, parents, and children. Even though Célian wasnât clad in his usual expensive suit, we still looked so different. For one thing, he was ten inches taller, ten years older, and reeked of a privileged air I lacked in every way. I had dressed like a teenager. Heâd dressed like a millionaire. And the way he stood, tall and proud, made people stop and stare.
He put his mouth on mine and kissed me in front of everyoneâsoft and slow and seductive. Kissed me like no one was around, like we were alone in this city, this park, this planet. He pressed a possessive hand over the small of my back and jerked me to his body.
Then he caressed my cheek. His lips dragged from my lips to my ear and he whispered, âThis is where I went every time my parents foughtâevery time Mathias blamed me for being the little snitch whoâd killed his marriage. This is where I went when we started fighting physically. And this is where I went when I knew he would have his staff driving around looking for me. They never came into Central Park. This was my place.â
My heart fluttered inside my ribcage and I saw Célian not only as the man he wanted people to see, but also as the person he really was. Not completely broken, but definitely cracked enough for pain to spill through the fissures.
We unpacked the duffel bag under a huge tree. Célian was surprisingly organized for our picnic. We spread a blanket, and he took out grapes, cheese, crackers, wine, and fancy chocolate. I told him there was no way heâd done this himself, and he admitted heâd given his housekeeper pot in exchange for these goodies. I laughed, and he threw a grape at my face. It made me laugh harder.
The sun was glorious, and I laid on the blanket and stared back at the sky, munching on almond chocolate that melted between my fingers. He sat next to me, staring at me intently, like he expected me to get up and run away any second, like I could evaporate into thin air, like sharing this place with me meant something to him.
âHow was your relationship with Camille?â I asked.
Iâd always wanted a sibling. Unfortunately, my mom got sick shortly after I was born. She won the first round of breast cancer. The second one, too. By the third, her body was too exhausted to fight, but I knew my parents had always wanted more kids.
He smirked at the blue sky like the clouds had cleared up especially for us.
âWe were a team. Maybe because Maman was busy running around with her lovers and Mathias made a point of sticking his dick into everything with a pulse, we figured out early on that we had to have each otherâs backs to survive.â
I nodded. âYou must miss her very much.â
âLosing someone close defines you. I trust you know that by now. Iâm sorry about your mother,â he said. And he meant it. I appreciated him not extending his condolences to my dad. Some people did when they heard about the cancer.
I looked down and stared at a chocolate cube slowly melting in my hand, gluing my forefinger and thumb together. âI think I wanted to marry Milton just so Iâd have someone to catch me in case I fall. You know?â
He stuck his hand in my hair and leaned down to kiss my forehead. âI do. But falling into the wrong hands is just as bad as crashing into nothing.â
His phone, sitting between us, buzzed, and I looked down at it. The name Lily Davis flashed, making my heart sink. He hit ignore and tossed the phone to the other side of the blanket.
âYou can answer it if you need to.â
âI donât need to.â
âI will never understand your relationship with her.â
âThat makes the two of us.â
I wanted to scream. His phone started dancing on the blanket again. I rose on my forearms, as he sent the call to voicemail once again.
âI want to go home.â
âChucksâ¦â
His phone began to vibrate for the third time. Célian muttered, âJesus Christ and shoved it in the duffel bag, zipping it shut and throwing it against the tree.
He sucked his bottom lip into his mouth. âHey, heyâ¦â
I stood and began to clean everything up. He didnât say anything else until weâd arrived at his building. I continued toward the train station, and he groaned, easily catching up with my steps.
âLet me get your ass home.â
âLeave me alone, Célian.â I stopped. Hot anger bubbled and sizzled behind my ribcage. âHuh? How about that? How about stop doing this thing where you treat me like I mean something, only to go and marry someone else? Because it doesnât matter that you donât love her, or touch her. If anything, it is much, much worse. Youâre not giving up on usâwhatever areâfor some great love. Youâre canceling it for some sick need to get back at your father. And yes, falling into Miltonâs arms would have been wrong, but wrapping your arms around Lily is nothing short of disastrous. So donât you dare lecture me.â
âThe asshole fucked my fiââ
âYes. I heard. Many, many times. So what if he did?â I cut him off, balling my hands into fists. âHim doing something wrong doesnât give you the right to do something even worse.â I pushed his chest. Jesus Christâwhat was I doing?
â
was the one who sent Phoenix to Syria. He was the one who insisted we keep it from her and keep them apart. But somehow her death is my fault?â he yelled in my face, as if I was the one accusing him. âFuck. That.â
âStop the blame game, Célian. Every relationship you touch wilts. Every connection you make perishes. I donât want to burn. I want to flourish. I to bloom.â
I turned around again, heading for the station. This time he grabbed my wrist so hard I thought he was going to yank my arm off. I think he realized it, too, by the way he withdrew his hand quickly and gathered me into a hugâa hug I wanted to reject but chose to drown in, a hug I knew would catch me the right way if I ever fell, from a man whoâd made no promises to be there when I needed him.
I wrapped my arms around his body, he buried his face in my hair, and for a few long seconds, we didnât say anything. Every bad feeling was crushed between our pressing chests.
âWerenât you the one who said you canât fall in love?â he sneered after a few beats, cocking his head sideways. âWhat happened to that?â
âDoesnât mean I donât care.â
âI .â He took a step back, slapping his fist over his chest. âI should have been spending time with your father today. Instead, I took you on a goddamn ,â he spat the word out like it was poisonous.
I couldnât even deal with the idea of him hanging out with my dad on a regular basis. When did that start happening?
âKnow when the last time I took someone on a date was? Sixteen. Pretty sure I did that for a hand job. Since then, I donât have to try. Iâve never tried.â
I snorted, too aware of the fact that an audience had gathered around us. âShould I feel special right now?â
His jaw locked, and his eyes darkened, like heâd remembered who he was. Who was. âAt least have the decency to be honest with yourself, Chucks. You donât want me to care. You want me, period.â
I turned around and gave him the one thing he did not unrightfully yet claim.
My back.
âAll Iâm saying is heâs like a half-priced facelift in an unregistered clinic in Eastern Europe. I would still do it, even knowing itâs deadly.â Grayson tossed a piece of Romaine lettuce into his mouth and chewed loudly.
We were sitting at Le Coq Tail on our lunch breakâme, him, Ava, and Phoenix. It had been a few days since my failed dateâor whatever that wasâwith Célian, and in a moment of weakness Iâd decided to confide in my close friends about the affair. Although, suffice it to say, theyâd already had a pretty good idea.
âTrust me, girl, we can all see Célianâs appeal.â Ava sucked hard on the straw swimming in her glass of Diet Coke. âBut consider it your official intervention. After we got a first-row seat to the shitshow called your relationship, I can honestly say you need to put a lid on that thing before your crazy starts to simmer.â
I bumped my fists together twice, Friends-style. âIâm not crazy.â
I was seventy-percent sure of that statement.
Ava clucked her tongue. âNeither was Lily. I think itâs something about the Laurent dick. They make their women unbalanced. I heard Célianâs mother is not the sanest, either.â
âWeâre casual.â I tried another tactic.
Gray pouted and rolled his eyes. âIs that why he claimed your ass a la Khal Drogo saving his princess from an army of savages when you had lunch on our floor last week? Admit it. You got your boss pussy-spelled.â
âThatâs not a word,â Phoenix pointed out, pointing his sandwich at Grayson. âBut it damn straight should be.â
âWhat do you think?â I turned to Phoenix.
I knew Célian had paid him a visit the other day, and I knew heâd ordered him to stay away from me, beyond platonically. A part of me was furious with Célian, and another hoped what I thought he couldnât admit to himself: that I wasnât the only person falling around here, and he, too, didnât have a parachute to save him from the plunge.
Phoenix bit the inside of his cheek.
âAre you high?â Ava asked. âPhoenix and Célian hate each other.â
But Phoenix looked up and told me point blank, âI think youâre his atonement. He wants to save you, but youâre the one who needs to save him.â
I did a double take, placing my roast beef sandwich on my plate.
He looked serious. âIâve known Célian for a few years nowâsince before I started working at LBC. Iâve seen him and Lily togetherâeven when they were together.â He lifted his chin, his voice cracking. âCélian looks at you the way I looked at Camille, like he would burn the world for you. Just because he doesnât want to recognize it doesnât make it any less true. If the rumors surrounding him and his family are correctâ¦â He averted his gaze to Ava and Gray, and thatâs when I knew knew about Lily and Célianâs father, probably through James Townley, who had his hand and ears everywhere in the LBC building. âThen Célianâs trust in people is nonexistent, and rightly so. He is calloused, distrustful, and hardened, but he is also screwed, and he knows it.â
âHeâs never going to leave Lily, is he?â I rubbed my forehead, feeling a looming headache pushing at the back of my nose.
âHe might.â âNo.â âYes.â The three of them spoke in unison.
And thatâs when I chose to laugh, instead of cry.
That day I made sure I avoided Célian in the newsroom. He was business as usual, taking Elijah and a few other men to lunch and then disappearing in and out of the sixtieth floor for meetings all day. When I got back home, I threw some chicken nuggets in the oven and took a box of mac and cheese out of the cupboard. I was in no mood to fix myself something fresh. Dad, however, had been eating a lot healthier since the experimental program had begun. They sent him special meals to complement his treatment. I untied my rain jacket and threw it on the couch after I started hot water on the stovetop, kicking my shoes into the hallway.
âDad?â I called.
I checked the living room, bathroom, and then his bedroom. He wasnât there. Groaning in frustration, I texted him:
I inwardly bit out. Having Dad around was convenient. I could coddle him all I liked, essentially forgetting about Célian and his looming wedding. My phone flashed with a text message immediately.
Dad: Sorry! At Mrs. Hawthorneâs. Please feel free to come upstairs. She made cherry pie.
I shook my head, laughing to myself. Could my father be falling in love at the same time I was falling apart?
Could his sick body experience something my healthy one couldnât feel?
Have fun, and send her my love.
Dad: Will do, sweetie. Maybe she can make some more pie this weekend and we can invite Milton?
I decided that there was enough heartbreak to go around between all of us, so I kept the lie alive, though it nearly killed me.
Iâd like that, Dad. A lot.