The way ass whole is misspelled in red spray paint across the back door of Bibâs makes me think of my mother.
She would always insert a brief pause between syllables, making it sound like two separate words. I wanted to laugh every time I heard it, but it was hard to find the humor in it as a child when I was always the recipient of the hurled insult.
âAss⦠whole,â Darin mutters. âHad to be a kid. Most adults know how to spell that word.â
âYouâd be surprised.â I touch the paint, but it doesnât stick to my fingers. Whoever did this must have done it right after we closed last night.
âDo you think the misspelling was intentional?â he asks. âAre they suggesting youâre so much of an asshole that youâre a whole entire ass?â
âWhy do you assume they were targeting me? They could have been targeting you or Brad.â
âItâs your restaurant.â Darin takes off his jacket and uses it to pry a large shard of exposed broken glass out of the window. âMaybe it was a disgruntled employee.â
âDo I have disgruntled employees?â I canât think of a single person on payroll who would do something like this. The last person Iâd had quit was five months ago, and she left on good terms after getting a college degree.
âThere was that guy who did the dishes before you hired Brad. What was his name? He was named after some kind of mineral or somethingâit was super weird.â
âQuartz,â I say. âIt was a nickname.â I havenât thought about that guy in so long. I doubt heâs holding a grudge against me after all this time. I fired him right after we opened because I found out he wasnât washing the dishes unless he could actually see food on them. Glasses, plates, silverwareâanything that came back to the kitchen from a table looking fairly clean, heâd just put it straight on the drying rack.
If I wouldnât have fired him, he would have gotten us shut down by the health department.
âYou should call the police,â Darin says. âWeâll have to file a report for insurance.â
Before I object, Brad appears at the back door, his shoes crunching the broken glass beneath his feet. Brad has been inside taking inventory in order to see if anything was stolen.
He scratches the stubble on his jaw. âThey took the croutons.â
Thereâs a confused pause.
âDid you say âcroutonsâ?â Darin asks.
âYeah. They took the whole thing of croutons that were prepared last night. Nothing else seems to be missing, though.â
That wasnât at all what I was expecting him to say. If someone broke into a restaurant and didnât take appliances or anything else of value, they probably broke in because they were hungry. I know that kind of desperation firsthand. âIâm not reporting this.â
Darin turns to me. âWhy not?â
âThey might catch whoever did it.â
âThatâs the point.â
I grab an empty box out of the dumpster and start picking up shards of glass. âI broke into a restaurant once. Stole a turkey sandwich.â
Brad and Darin are both staring at me now. âWere you drunk?â Darin asks.
âNo. I was hungry. I donât want anyone arrested for stealing croutons.â
âOkay, but maybe food was only the beginning. What if they come back for appliances next time?â Darin says. âIs the security camera still broken?â
Heâs been on me to get that repaired for months now. âIâve been busy.â
Darin takes the box of glass from me and starts to pick up the remaining pieces. âYou should go work on that before they come back. Heck, they might even try to hit up Corriganâs tonight since Bibâs was such an easy target.â
âCorriganâs has working security. And I doubt whoever it was will vandalize my new restaurant. It was a matter of convenience, not a targeted break-in.â
âYou hope,â Darin says.
I open my mouth to respond, but Iâm interrupted by an incoming text message. I donât think Iâve ever reached for my phone faster. When I see the text isnât from Lily, I deflate a little.
I ran into her this morning while I was running errands. It was the first time weâve seen each other in a year and a half, but she was late for work and I had just received the text from Darin informing me we had a break-in. We parted somewhat awkwardly on the promise that she would text me once she got to work.
Itâs been an hour and a half since then, and I still havenât heard from her. An hour and a half is nothing, but I canât ignore the nagging in my chest thatâs trying to convince me sheâs having doubts about everything that was said between us in that five-minute exchange on the sidewalk.
Iâm definitely not having doubts about what I said. I might have gotten caught up in the momentâin seeing how happy she looked and finding out sheâs no longer married. But I meant every word I said to her.
Iâm ready for this. More than ready.
I pull up her contact info in my phone. Iâve wanted to text her so many times over the last year and a half, but the last time I spoke to her, I left the ball in her court. She had so much going on, I didnât want to complicate her life even more.
Sheâs single now, though, and she made it sound like she was finally ready to give whatever could be between us a chance. However, sheâs had an hour and a half to think about our conversation, and an hour and a half is plenty of time to form regrets. Every minute that passes without a text is going to feel like a whole damn day.
Sheâs still listed as Lily Kincaid in my phone, so I edit her contact info and change her last name back to Bloom.
I feel Darin hovering, looking over my shoulder at my phone screen. âIs that our Lily?â
Brad perks up. âHeâs texting Lily?â
âââOur Lilyâ?â I ask, confused. âYou guys met her once.â
âIs she still married?â Darin asks.
I shake my head.
âGood for her,â he says. âShe was pregnant, right? What did she end up having? A boy or a girl?â
I donât want to discuss Lily because thereâs nothing to discuss yet. I donât want to make it more than what it might be. âA girl, and thatâs the last question Iâm answering.â I focus on Brad. âTheo coming in today?â
âItâs Thursday. Heâll be here.â
I head inside the restaurant. If Iâm going to discuss Lily with anyone, itâll be Theo.