The smell of booze and fries hit Farrah the second she entered Tavern 14, a happy hour favorite in the heart of the East Village. Per usual, it was packed with people eager to take advantage of half-off drink specials and $2 sliders.
Farrah pushed her way through the crowd and searched for her date. She was about to text and ask if heâd arrived yet when the group of beanie-wearing artist types in front of her parted, and she saw him at a high top in the corner, sipping a beer and scrolling through his phone.
A grin took over her face. It had been too long.
âSammy!â Farrah raised her voice so he could hear her above the noise.
Happiness flooded Sammy Yuâs sculpted features when he saw her. âFarrah!â He stood up and walked around the table to hug her. He smelled like soap and fresh laundry, and the scent was so familiar she choked up. Nostalgia was getting the best of her these days. âItâs so good to see you.â
âLikewise. Itâs been, gosh, two years since we last saw each other?â Farrah and Sammy kept in touch via text and social media, but he lived in San Francisco and in-person meetups were rare. The last time theyâd caught up in person was when she flew to California to work on a boutique hotel project for KBI. Sammy had visited New York a few times since then, but theyâd both been so busy they couldnât align their schedules.
âTwo years too long. Howâve you been?â
âGood. You? Still taking SF by storm?â Farrah teased.
Sammyâs cheeks colored. With his deep brown eyes, chiseled face, and tall, muscular body, he was as gorgeous as ever, but now he had an additional draw: his bakery, Crumble & Bake, had become a major attraction in San Francisco and had garnered him praise from foodies and celebrities alike. It was so popular heâd recently opened a branch in L.A., where the line on opening day wrapped around the block. Farrah saw photos of the spectacle online.
Sammy himself had become a quasi-celebrity among the food crowd, with more than a million Instagram followers and a booming YouTube channel where he posted baking tutorials.
Farrah knew heâd encountered major resistance from his family when he ditched his math degree and a NASA career for baking, but Sammy was crushing it.
âHardly. Iâm just a baker, not Mark Zuckerberg.â
âMark Z. can kiss my ass. Youâre much better.â
Sammy cracked a smile. âThanks. Hey, you want a drink? On me.â
âI got it. Donât argue,â Farrah warned. âYouâre the guest.â
He laughed. âFine. But I got the next round.â
âDeal.â
Once they got their drinks, Farrah and Sammy snagged one of the few booths in the bar right after it opened up and caught each other up on their lives. She told Sammy about quitting KBI, her birthday trip to Jamaica, and the time she accidentally crashed a Met Gala afterparty. Sammy told her about his San Francisco exploits and the ups and downs of running a famous bakeryâincluding hundreds of propositions and NSFW (Not Safe For Work) images from rabid, sugar-crazed fans.
âMust be tough.â Farrah laughed when Sammy punched her in the arm.
âItâs all fun and games until you accidentally open one of the pictures in front of your three-year-old niece,â Sammy grumbled. âMy sister nearly impaled me with her nail file. Besides, I donât like the attention. I just want to bake my croissants in peace. I donât know how Kris deals with this shit.â
âToo late now. Youâre a star, baby,â Farrah sang. âKris deals with it because sheâs Kris. Sheâll clock any paparazzi that comes too close.â
âTrue.â
Kris Carrera, another friend from study abroad, was engaged to Nate Reynolds, one of Hollywoodâs hottest stars and a paparazzi favorite.
âHave you kept in touch with anyone else from FEA?â Farrah stirred her drink, now watered down from the ice.
âPretty much everyone in the group except forââ Sammy stopped short.
Olivia.
The name hung in the air, unspoken, like a guillotine waiting to drop.
Farrah felt a pang in her heart. Thereâd been a time when Sammy and Olivia were the couple. Their relationship made it out of FEA intactâthe only one in their group to do soâonly to implode a few months later. Farrah had been in New York with them, but even now, she wasnât sure what happened. Sammy and Olivia refused to talk about it.
How could two people go from being so in love to hating each otherâs guts so quickly?
Then again, Farrah of all people knew how much things could change in the space of minutes.
âHave you kept in touch with Blake?â The question fell out, unbidden.
Sammyâs eyes flickered with surprise. âYeah, a little. Why?â
âWellâ¦â Farrah debated whether to tell him about her new project. She didnât want discussion of Blake to hijack the night, but she needed a sounding board beyond Olivia, and there werenât many people who knew what had happened between her and Blake in Shanghai. âIâm kind of, um, working for him.â
âWhat?â
Farrah filled Sammy in on the details.
âWow.â He rubbed a hand over his face. âWhat are the odds?â
âYeah. I mean, Iâm over him,â Farrah said quickly. âItâs been five years. Itâs just weird.â
âMmhmm.â Sammy surveyed her with a shrewd eye. âYouâre sure youâre over him?â
Pretty sure.
She chalked the way her heart pounded when she caught sight of the elephant figurine up to surprise. As for the heat that licked at her skin when sheâd imagined all the things she wanted to do to Blake in that big bed of hisâ¦well, that was nothing a night with her battery-operated boyfriend couldnât sort out.
âTotally sure.â
Sammy appeared unconvinced. âMaybe this is a sign,â he mused. âFor you to bury the hatchet and move on. You can be friends again.â
Farrah snorted. âRight.â
They could be civil, but friends? She didnât think so. It was hard to be friends with someone who broke your heart.
âHey, Iâm not making excuses for Blake. He did a shitty thing in Shanghai. But we all make mistakesâsome bigger than othersâand deep down, heâs a good guy. Like you said, itâs been five years. You donât have to marry him; just give him a chance to prove heâs changed. Itâll make your life easier, considering youâll be working together.â
Farrah pondered Sammyâs advice. It sounded similar to what Blake said earlier.
She wasnât angry about what happened in Shanghai anymore. She used to be. God, sheâd been pissed. But the anger had iced over as the years passed, leaving behind a thick wariness no man had been able to penetrate. Her relationship with Blake had proved fairytale love existed in real life, but it also proved that every fairytale had a dark side, that happily ever afters sometimes came with less-than-happy epilogues, and that the One Big Love could crush your heart as easily as they stole it.
Anyway, it wasnât like Farrah was in danger of falling in love again. In lust, maybe. But that was a whole other matter.
âYouâre way too nice. You know that?â
Sammy ruffled her hair, causing her to scowl. âJust dispensing my daily dose of wisdom. Forgiveness makes the world go round and all that.â
âDoes that apply to Olivia?â she asked hopefully, smoothing a hand over her tousled locks. She was opening a can of worms by mentioning her roommateâs name, but she was sick of this cold war between her friends. Sammy thought she and Blake needed to make up? He and Olivia needed to make up. Stat.
Sammyâs smile fell. Tension crowded his shoulders, and a steel edge crept into his voice. âItâs not the same.â
Most of the time, he was the same good-natured, easygoing Sammy from their younger years. But like everyone else in the group, heâd hardened over time. More secrets, more bitterness, more cynicismâespecially when it came to past heartbreaks.
âWhy not?â
Sammy set his jaw. âIt just isnât.â
Farrah knew when she was fighting a losing battle. She changed the subject, not wanting to ruin their reunion. âHow long are you in town for?â
Sheâd been pleasantly surprised when she received Sammyâs text while sheâd been at Blakeâs apartment. She hadnât known he was in New York, but it was a nice distraction from the unsettling chemistry that burned between her and Blake.
Chemistry, like coincidence, was a bitch who couldnât read the room.
Sammy relaxed. âI leave tomorrow morning. Sorry for the late notice today, by the wayâIâm in town for business and didnât think Iâd have time to meet up, but my meeting tonight got canceled.â
âDonât worry about it. Itâs always nice to see you.â
They stayed at the bar and chatted until the happy hour crowd thinned and gave way to the night owl set, but Farrah could tell neither of their hearts was in it. Their conversation had dredged up memories best left forgotten, and every once in a while, their sentences would taper off as they stared at their drinks, both lost in memories of what used to be.