I TAKE MYÂ time in the movie theaterâs neon green bathroom.
I wash my hands, then wipe down the sink area and wash my hands again.
On my way back through the burgundy-carpeted arcade in which the bathrooms are tucked, I nearly collide with Wyn.
âSorry,â we both huff, stopping short.
My eyes drop to the smorgasbord of paper cartons heâs carrying: Twizzlers, Nerds, Red Hots, Whoppers, and Milk Duds.
âGoing to a slumber party?â I ask.
âI was thirsty,â he says.
âWhich explains the cup of water and nothing else,â I say. âYou think shortbreadâs too sweet.â
âThought you might want something,â he says.
His eyes look more green than gray right now. Iâm finding it hard to look at them, so I train my gaze on the candy. âIt looks like you thought I might want .â
His eyes flash. âWas I wrong?â
âNo,â I say, âbut you didnât have to do that.â
âTrust me, it wasnât intentional,â he says. âI walked up for the water, and next thing I know Iâve got a wagon filled with corn syrup.â
âWell, thatâs the Connor family thriftiness. If you buy a wagon, refills are free.â
His laugh turns into a groan. He runs the back of his hand up his forehead. âIâm so hungover.â
âDidnât you have drink last night?â
âIf weâre ignoring the half bottle I drank in the cellar,â he says.
âWe should probably ignore everything that happened in the cellar,â I say.
He studies me for a second. âAnyway, I have no tolerance anymore. I drink less than ever these days.â
âWow, ,â I say.
He laughs. âActually, itâs just that Iâve been using edibles.â
At my surprise, he says, âTheyâve been really helping my mom, but she gets kind of embarrassed. About taking them on her own. So a couple times a week, Iâll split a brownie with her. Sheâs funny. Sheâd never even tried weed before, and she gets super giggly. I sort of think itâs a placebo effect, but it doesnât matter.â
I suppress a grin. âMoved back in with your mom and get high with her twice a week.â
âLiving the dream,â he says.
âYou are, though,â I say. âIâm actually jealous.â
âIt is fun,â he says. âBut she gets so munchy. Iâve probably gained like fifteen pounds.â
âIt suits you.â I quickly add, âHow is she, really?â
He glances at me askance. âYou havenât talked to her?â
Iâm sure he knows I still text regularly with Gloria. I even field the odd text or two from his sisters. Mostly when his little sister, Lou, wants my opinion on a potential present for Wyn, invariably a gag gift that requires no special insight whatsoever, or when his older sister, Michael, wants an opinion on a medical ailment that invariably has nothing to do with neurosurgery. As far as his family knows, he and I are still engaged.
âI do talk to her,â I say. âBut I figure sheâs mostly lying.â
Wynâs laugh is low. âIâm sure she is.â
His gaze drops. I let mine linger on the dark fringe of his lashes, the curve of his full upper lip, until his eyes lift. âIt really does help. The weed. Just . . . not enough.â
Emotions tangle in my esophagus.
, my mind supplies, as if naming it will take away the ache. It doesnât. âIâm glad youâre there with her,â I say.
His lips part, come together, part again. âI, um . . .â He sets the boxes of candy and cup atop the air hockey table beside us and shifts between his feet. He takes a deep breath. âI know you donât want to talk about it all,â he says in a low, husky voice, âand I respect that. But you said something yesterday, and . . .â
Heat creeps all the way up my neck to my ears. âI was having a bad day, Wyn.â
âNo, noâitâs not . . .â He shakes his head, then tries again. âSomething you said in the cellar made me realize you thought he was why I ended it.â
It lands with a violent impact.
Wyn swallows. âThat you thought I you for what happened with him.â
âOf course you blamed me.â My spine stiffens as I will myself not to crack, or rather not to let the cracks show. The truth is, theyâre already there.
âI didnât,â he says roughly. âAnd I donât. I swear. Okay?â
My chest pinches. âSo sheer coincidence that I told you about him and you immediately dumped me.â
I have no idea what to make of his look of surprise and hurt. I have no idea what to make of any of this. I went into the bathroom in one universe and walked out into another.
âHarriet,â he rasps, shaking his head. âIt was more complicated than that.â
than thinking Iâd betrayed him. It wasnât that he was angry. It wasnât that he didnât trust me.
He just didnât want me anymore. It feels like my body is turning to sand, like in a minute Iâll be nothing but a shapeless heap on the floor.
âI was in a dark place,â he goes on.
I turn from him because I feel the cracks spreading, my eyes stinging. âI know.â
I know. Every second of every day. âI just didnât know how to fix it,â I choke out.
âYou couldnât have,â he says.
I close my eyes as I try to gather myself, stuff all these messy feelings back down.
The truth is, I knew he hated San Francisco. I felt guilty that heâd followed me there. Guilty about keeping him there, even as it was killing me not being able to make him happy.
His hand slides through mine, tentatively lacing our fingers and tugging me back to him.
âIt wasnât just that,â he says. âMy dad . . .â
I nod, the ache in my throat too severe to speak.
Hankâs passing was so sudden. I donât know if that made it any worse. There never would have been an okay time to lose him. Not for Wyn. Not for anyone who knew Hank.
Everything combusted at once, and somehow I still thought weâd make it. When he promised to love me forever, I believed him. That was what made me the angriest, with both of us.
âI didnât think that I . . .â His eyes hold mine, his jaw muscles working. âI never wanted to hurt you.â
âI know.â But it changes nothing.
âAll I want,â he says, âis for you to be happy.â
There it is again, that word.
âThatâs what I was trying to say, down in the cellar,â he goes on. âThat I donât want to do anything this week that messes anything else up for you. And Iâm sorry I almost did.â
The pieces click together.
âIâm not with him,â I say. âThereâs nothing to mess up.â
His lips part.
I wish I could roll the words back into my mouth and down my throat. âIf thatâs what you were getting at.â
âOkay,â he says.
Okay? What kind of response is that?
After a beat of awkward silence, he says, âIâm not either.â
I suppress a smile. âYouâre not in a long-distance relationship with my coworker youâve met once?â
An irresistible blush hits the tops of his cheekbones. He knocks his foot against the leg of the air hockey table. âI can hardly believe it myself. The chemistry was undeniable, but it wasnât enough.â
I swallow the second half of a laugh, and he looks up at me from under that one lock of his. âThereâs no one else,â he says.
, I tell myself.
I him fade from me, bit by bit, day by day, a mirage receding into nothingness.
But the way heâs looking at me threatens to obliterate logic, to erase history. If heâs a black hole, Iâve reached his event horizon.
My chest aches, but I donât want it to stop. I want to lean into the feeling, this wholeness. My heart and body and mind are all finally in the same time and place. Here, with him.
I donât want to go back into the theater, but something has to give. We canât keep walking out along this tightrope, or someoneâs going to get hurt.
going to get hurt.
I clear my throat. âHowâs the furniture repair business?â
His Cupidâs bow twitches. âStill a furniture repair business.â
âOh?â I say. âNot using it to run drugs and host illegal gambling nights yet?â
His lips split into a smile. âStill in the same apartment?â
It still manages to hold traces of him. Or maybe thatâs me, carrying his ghost around wherever I go. âMhm.â
âHowâs your sister?â he asks.
âGood, I think,â I say. âShe and her hairdresser friend went into business together. They mostly do weddings and dances. Still FaceTimes me twice a month, makes about five minutes of small talk, then says goodbye.â
His teeth skate over his bottom lip. âIâm sorry.â
Heâs the only person who knows how much it bothers me that I barely know Eloise, that despite having a sister, I always felt acutely alone in our childhood home. Between our six-year age gap and her constant disagreements with our parents, we didnât have much time to bond.
I shrug. âSome things never change, and the best thing is to stop hoping they will.â
âOther things do, though,â he says.
I break eye contact. âWhat about your sisters? How are they?â
âGood,â he replies, half smiling. âLouâs with my mom this week. Said to tell you hi.â
I smile despite the twinge in my chest. âAnd Michael? Still in Colorado?â
He nods. âSheâs dating another aerospace engineer, who works for a competing company. They moved in together, but theyâre both under NDAs, so neither of them even lets the other into their home office.â
I laugh. âThat,â I say, âis so unbelievably on-brand.â
âI know,â he says. âAnd Lou finished at the Iowa Writersâ Workshop in May.â
âThatâs amazing,â I say.
Together, the three of them could be loud and rude and competitive. They argued over everythingâwhat to have for dinner, who got first use of the shower, who really understood the rules of dominoes and who was totally offâas if as soon as a thought or feeling occurred to them, it spewed out.
But nothing ever blew up. Little arguments flared and extinguished; small insults casually faded. And everyone went back to joking, hugging, kicking, acting like siblings do in movies.
I wonder but donât ask whether his younger sister, Lou, is just visiting their mom or if she ended up moving home after grad school like sheâd been planning, back when Wynâs stay out there was supposed to be temporary. She was going to take over Gloriaâs care.
âI miss them,â I admit.
âThey miss you too,â he says.
I ask, âDo they wonder why I never visit?â
âI go out of town sometimes,â he says. âFor work stuff.â
âWork stuff?â I ask.
He nods but doesnât clarify. âThey think weâre seeing each other then.â
I nod. I donât have anything to say to that.
He clears his throat. âMy mom said you were taking a pottery class.â
âOh,â I say. âYeah.â
âI pretended I already knew about it,â he says.
âRight. Thatâs good.â
âBut she mentioned that she thinks youâre getting better. And your newest bowl looked way less like a butt.â
The laugh rockets out of me as if shot from a cannon. âThatâs funny, because you should have the rapturous text she sent me about that butt-bowl. She pretended it was good.â
âNah.â He grins. âShe wasnât pretending. She told me it really good. It just also looked like a butt. You know how she is.â
âRemember how nice she was about that painting we gave her as a joke?â I ask. âThe fucked-up Velvet Elvis that looked more like Biff from ?â
His smile widens. âShe kept saying how unique it was.â
âBut fully making sound like a good thing. So much nuance to Gloriaâs opinions.â
âThe nuance being that she can know somethingâs objectively terrible,â he says, âbut if itâs even loosely connected to one of her family members, then itâs got to also be groundbreakingly special.â
The idea of being one of Gloriaâs family members, of being special, pricks at my heart.
âItâs been weirdly fun, living with her,â he says.
âNothing weird about it,â I say. âGloriaâs a blast.â
He smiles to himself. âItâs just funny. I spent all those years convincing myself I needed to get away. I saw my sisters finding their things and talking about leaving, and my parents being so proud of how they were going to make something of themselves, chart their own path or whatever. And I thought I needed to do that too.â
I think back all those years to the day the five of us, sans Kimmy, lay on the Armasesâ dock, charting our alternative paths, how even then, Wyn used his hypothetical to go back to the one heâd left behind. A part of him knew he belonged there.
Once I went home with him for the first time, met Hank and Gloria and Lou and Michael, saw the woodshop and the childhood bedroom filled with proof of a happy, love-filled childhood, a part of knew he belonged there too.
I tried to hold on to him anyway. Watched, those months in San Francisco, as the walls closed in around himâand it killed me to see him so broken, so hunted, but I hadnât been brave enough to cut him loose. Maybe that was part of the anger that burned in me too: disappointment that I hadnât loved him well enough to make him happy nor well enough to let him go.
âAnyway,â he says, âif someone had told me, at twenty-two, that Iâd end up living in my childhood bedroom and doing crosswords with my mom over breakfast every morning, I have believed them, but Iâd be shocked to hear Iâm actually happy in this scenario.â
âYou do crosswords?â I say. âYou wanted to do crosswords when we lived together. I used to try to get you to, every time it rained.â
âAnd I always said yes,â he says.
âAnd we finished them,â I say.
âHarriet.â His eyes settle on mine, a knowing glint in them. âThatâs because I could never sit still that long across from you without touching you.â
Blood rises to my cheeks and chest, thrums down into my thighs.
Without my realizing it, weâve moved closer together. Maybe itâs like Cleoâs Bernieâs-induced hangover: a Pavlovian response that will always draw us together.
I say, âAnd here I thought it was the crosswords themselves getting you riled up.â
âAs it turns out,â he replies, âitâs not writing letters in tiny boxes that gets me .â
âThatâs good,â I manage. âThat would make breakfast with Gloria pretty awkward.â
The fan blows a wisp of hair across my face, and he catches it, twisting it between his calloused fingertips. My heart pounds, my every cell tugging toward him.
Behind us, the door to the theater swings open. Our friends stream out in a flurry of chatter and laughter. Intermission has begun.
I start toward them, but Wyn catches my wrist.
âI like the bowl,â he says. âShe showed me a picture. I thought it was beautiful.â