I wanted the day to go by faster, so I decided to help out in the kitchen at Bibâs even though I prepared for the night with a full staff. Now I smell like garlic. This is the third time Iâve tried scrubbing the smell off, to no avail. But if I donât leave now, Iâll be late meeting her.
Weâre taking it slow, so Iâm picking her up at her work rather than her apartment. I have no idea where she lives now, or if she still lives in the apartment building I showed up at almost two years ago when she needed help. For whatever reason, where we live is something that hasnât come up in our conversations. She probably doesnât even know I sold my house and moved into the city earlier this year. Iâm curious how far apart we live from each other now.
âI smell cologne,â Darin says after he passes me. He stops walking toward the freezer and turns to give me a once-over. âWhy are you wearing cologne? Why are you dressed up?â
I sniff my hands. âI donât smell like garlic?â
âNo, you smell like youâre going out. Are you leaving?â
âI am leaving. Iâll be back around closing time, though. I think I might stay the night here and see if I can catch whoever is vandalizing the restaurants.â There were several days of a quiet stretch between incidents, but we got hit for a fourth time last night. It wasnât too costly, though. This time they just scattered the trash everywhere again. Thatâs a lot easier to clean up than repainting has been. That may be because Brad keeps bringing Theo to help. I should probably give Theo a heads-up that the more he complains about a chore, the more likely heâs going to be made to do that chore.
I plan to confront whoever is doing the damage tonight and see if I canât figure out their motive and talk them down before I get the police involved. Iâm confident most things can be handled with a simple, honest conversation rather than a dramatic intervention, but I have no idea who Iâm dealing with.
Darin leans in and quietly says, âWho you going out with? Lily?â
I dry my hands on a towel and nod once.
Darin smiles and walks away. I like that my friends like Lily. They brought her up a couple of times after our poker night, but I think they could tell it bothered me. I didnât like discussing Lily when she wasnât a part of my life.
But now it looks like thereâs a possibility sheâs back in the picture. Maybe. This might be why Iâm so nervous: because I know what a huge risk Lily is taking by going out with me tonight. If things progress with us, that could impact her life in negative ways. Which might be why I started to feel the immense pressure two hours ago of making sure this date is worth it for her.
But I smell like Iâm terrified of vampires, so itâs already not going my way.
I pull into the parking lot at five minutes to six. Lily must have been waiting for me, because she exits her store and locks the door behind her before Iâm even out of my car.
As soon as I lay eyes on her, I get even more nervous. She looks incredible. Sheâs wearing a black jumpsuit and heels. She pulls on her jacket and meets me in the middle of the parking lot.
I lean in and greet her with a quick kiss on her cheek. âYou look stunning.â I swear she reddens a little after I say that.
âDo I? I didnât sleep last night. I feel like I look ninety.â
âWhy didnât you sleep?â
âEmmy ran a fever all night. Sheâs better now, butâ¦â Lily yawns. âIâm sorry. I just drank coffee. Itâll hit in a minute.â
âItâs okay. Iâm not tired, but I do smell like garlic.â
âI like garlic.â
âGood thing.â
Lily leans back on her heels and looks down at her outfit. âI wasnât sure what to wear since Iâve never been to this restaurant.â
âIâve never been there, either, so I have no idea. But I have a feeling youâll be fine.â I chose a new restaurant Iâve been wanting to try. Itâs about a forty-five-minute drive, but I figured that would give us time to catch up on the way over.
âI have a present for you,â she says. âItâs in my car. Let me grab it.â
I follow her to her car and watch her retrieve something from the console. When she hands it to me, I canât hold back a smile. âIs this your journal?â She read another quick passage to me last night, but she was so embarrassed reading it out loud, she refused to give me more.
âThatâs one of them. Weâll see how tonight goes before I give you the other one.â
âNo pressure or anything.â I walk her to my car and open the passenger door for her. She starts to yawn again as Iâm closing her door.
I feel bad, like maybe sheâs too exhausted for this date. I have no idea what itâs like to raise a child. I feel kind of selfish that Iâm not offering to reschedule, so before I back out of the parking lot, I speak up. âIf youâd rather go home and sleep, we can do this next weekend.â
âThereâs nothing else Iâd rather do than this, Atlas. Iâll sleep when Iâm dead.â She clicks her seat belt. âYou actually do smell like garlic.â
I think sheâs kidding. Lily used to joke all the time when we were younger. Itâs one of the things I loved most about herâthat she always seemed to be in a good mood despite all the bad things surrounding her. Itâs that same strength I admired in her in the days I was with her after she found out she was pregnant in the emergency room. I know that was one of the lowest points of her life, but she was able to smile through it all, and even spent an entire evening impressing my friends with her humor during a poker night.
Everyone handles stress differently, and none of those ways is necessarily wrong, but Lily handles it with grace. And grace just happens to be the quality I find the most attractive in people.
âHowâd you manage to get away on a Saturday night?â Lily asks.
I hate that Iâm driving because I want to look at her while I respond. Iâve never seen her look this⦠womanly? Is that a compliment? I donât even know. I probably shouldnât say it out loud in case it isnât, but when Lily and I fell in love, neither of us were what we would now consider adults. But itâs different tonight. Weâre grown-ups with careers, and sheâs a mother and a boss and independent. Itâs sexy as hell.
The only other time Iâve spent with her as adults was when she was technically still with Ryle, so it felt wrong thinking of her the way I am now. Like I want her.
I keep my focus on the road and try not to create a lull in our conversation, but I think I might be a little flustered. That surprises me.
âHow did I manage getting away?â I say, pretending like Iâm mulling over the question rather than obsessing about how much I want to stare at her. âI hire dependable people.â
Lily smiles at that. âDo you always work on weekends?â
I nod. âI usually only take off Sundays, when weâre closed. The occasional Monday.â
âWhat do you enjoy the most about your job?â
Sheâs full of questions tonight. I give her a sidelong glance and smile. âReading the reviews.â
She makes a noise like sheâs shocked. âIâm sorry,â she says. âDid you say reviews? You read your restaurant reviews?â
âEvery single one.â
âWhat? Oh my God, you must not have a single insecurity. I make Serena run our social media so I can avoid reviews.â
âYour reviews are great.â
She practically turns her entire body toward me in the seat. âYou read my reviews?â
âI read reviews for anyone I know who owns a business. Is that weird?â
âItâs not not weird.â
I flip on my blinker. âI like reading reviews. I feel like business reviews are a reflection of the owner, and I want to know what people think of my restaurants. The constructive criticism helps. I havenât had the kitchen experience a lot of chefs have, and critics are some of the best teachers.â
âWhat do you get out of reading reviews about other peopleâs businesses?â
âNothing, really. I just find it entertaining.â
âDo I have any bad ones?â Lily looks away from me, half turning so that sheâs facing forward again. âNever mind, donât answer that. Iâm just going to pretend theyâre all good and that everyone loves my flowers.â
âEveryone does love your flowers.â
She presses her lips together in an attempt to suppress her smile. âWhatâs your least-favorite part of your job?â
I love that sheâs asking me such random questions. It reminds me of all the nights we would stay up late, and she would pepper me with questions about myself. âUp until last week, it was health inspections,â I admit. âTheyâre extremely stressful.â
âWhy up until last week? What changed?â
âThe vandalism.â
âDid it happen again?â
âYeah, twice this week.â
âAnd you still have no idea who it is?â
I shake my head. âNo clue.â
âDo you have any angry ex-girlfriends?â
âNah, I doubt it. They donât seem the type.â
Lily kicks off her heels and pulls one of her legs into her seat, making herself more comfortable. âHow many serious relationships have you had?â
Sheâs going there. Okay. âDefine âserious.âââ
âI donât know. More than two months?â
âOne,â I say.
âHow long were you together?â
âA little more than a year. I met her while I was in the military.â
âWhyâd you break up?â
âWe moved in together.â
âThatâs why you broke up?â
âI think living together escalated the realization that we were incompatible. Or maybe we were just at different points in our lives. I was focused on my career, and her focus was on which outfits to wear to the clubs I was too tired to go to with her. When I got out of the military and moved back to Boston, she stayed behind and moved into a loft with two of her friends.â
Lily laughs. âI cannot picture you in a club.â
âYeah. Thatâs why Iâm single, I guess.â My phone rings with an incoming call from Corriganâs, interrupting us before Iâm able to throw her own question back at her. âI have to take this,â I say.
âGo ahead.â
I answer the call over Bluetooth. It ends up being a freezer issue that requires me to make two more phone calls before Iâve got it sorted out and a repair technician on the way there. When Iâm finally able to give my attention back to Lily, I glance over at her and find her asleep, her head limp against her shoulder. I hear a dainty snore coming from her.
The coffee never kicked in, I guess.
I let her sleep all the way to the restaurant. We pull in about ten minutes to seven. Itâs dark, and the restaurant looks crowded, but we have a few minutes before I have to check in for our reservation, so I let her rest.
Her snore is as endearing as she is. Itâs delicate, almost too light to hear. I take a quick video I can use to tease her with later, and then I reach into the backseat and grab her journal. I know she said not to read it in front of her, but technically Iâm not. Sheâs asleep.
I open it to the first page and begin reading.
I read the first entry, completely captivated. I feel like Iâm breaking a rule reading this, but sheâs the one who brought it.
I read the second entry. Then the third. Then I log into my reservation app and cancel our reservation because unless I wake her up this very second, weâre going to be late. Iâd rather our table go to someone else, because Lily looks like sheâs been needing this sleep for a while.
And I want to read another entry. Iâll take her somewhere else for dinner once she wakes up.
Every word she wrote is taking me right back to when we were teenagers. There are so many times I want to laugh at the things she says and how she says them, but I stifle my laughter so that I donât startle her.
I eventually read a passage that Iâm almost positive is leading up to our first kiss. I look at the clock and weâve already been sitting here for half an hour, but Lily is still sound asleep, and I canât stop in the middle of this entry. I keep reading, hoping she stays asleep long enough for me to get to the end of this one.
Wow.
Wow.
I close the journal and look over at Lily. She wrote our first kiss with so much detail, it makes me feel inferior to my teenage self.
Did it actually happen that way?
I remember that night, but I was a hell of a lot more nervous than Lily described me to be. Itâs funny how, when youâre a teenager, you think youâre the only inexperienced, nervous human on the planet. You think almost every other teenager has life figured out way better than you do, but it isnât that way at all. We were both scared. And infatuated. And in love.
I had fallen in love with her long before our first kiss, though. I loved her more than I had ever loved anyone before that moment. I think I loved her more than Iâve ever loved anyone after that moment.
I think I still might.
Thereâs so much Lily doesnât know about that part of my life. So much I want to tell her now that Iâve read her version of some of our time together. Itâs obvious she has no clue how instrumental she was in my life back then. At a time when everyone was turning their backs to me, Lily was the only one who stepped up.
Sheâs still sound asleep, so I pull out my phone and open a blank note. I start typing, detailing what my life was like before she entered it. I donât mean to write as much as I do, but I guess I have a lot I want to say to her.
Itâs another twenty minutes before I finally finish typing everything, and another five minutes before Lily finally begins to rouse.
I set my phone in the cupholder, unsure if Iâm going to allow her to read what I just wrote. I might wait a few days. A few weeks. She wants to take things slow, and Iâm not sure what I said toward the end of that letter matches her idea of âslow.â
Her hand goes up, and she scratches her head. Sheâs facing the window, so I donât see her face when her eyes open, but I can tell when sheâs awake because she sits straight up. She stares out her window for a beat, then swings her head in my direction. A few strands of hair are stuck to her cheek.
Iâm leaning against my door, watching her casually, as if this is completely normal first-date behavior.
âAtlas.â She says my name like itâs an apology and a question at the same time.
âItâs okay. You were tired.â
She grabs her phone and looks at the time. âOh my God.â She leans forward, pressing her elbows into her thighs and her face into her palms. âI canât believe this.â
âLily, itâs fine. Really.â I hold up the journal. âYou kept me company.â
She eyes the journal and then groans. âThis is mortifying.â
I toss the journal into the backseat. âI personally found it enlightening.â
Lily hits me playfully on my shoulder. âStop laughing. I feel too bad for it to be funny.â
âDonât feel bad, youâre exhausted. And probably hungry. We could grab a burger on the drive back.â
Lily falls dramatically against her seat. âLet the fancy chef take the girl for fast food since she slept through her date. Why not?â She flips the visor down and notices the hair stuck to her cheek. âWow, I am such a mom. Is this our last date? It is. Did I ruin this already? I wouldnât blame you.â
I put the car in reverse. âNot even close after everything I just read. Not sure anything could top this date.â
âYou have very low standards, Atlas.â
I find her self-deprecation adorably attractive. âI have a question about your journal.â
âWhat?â Sheâs wiping away a smear of mascara. Everything about her seems so defeated now that she thinks she ruined our date. I canât stop smiling, though.
âThe night of our first kiss⦠did you put the blankets in the washer on purpose? Was that a trick to get me to sleep in your bed?â
She scrunches up her nose. âYou read that far?â
âYou were asleep for a long time.â
She contemplates my question, and then nods an admission. âI wanted you to be my first kiss back then, and that wouldnât have happened if you kept sleeping on the floor.â
Sheâs probably right about that. And it worked.
Itâs still working, because reading her description of our first kiss brought back every feeling she pulled out of me that night. She could sleep the entire way back home, and Iâd still think this was the best date Iâve ever been on.