WE SIT WITHÂ our toes in the icy water and eat the cheese, fruit, and bread we brought from home. We doze in the sun and watch the clouds drift. Afterward we hike along the pine-needle-dusted trail in the woods, moss and ferns all glistening with dew, the ground soft and hollow.
Cleo seems to have entirely let the moment of tension go, but Sabrinaâs uncommonly quiet and keeps stalling toward the back of the pack as we walk. Every time I slow down to walk with her, though, she seems to speed up and chime in on whatever conversation the others are having.
When we get back to the shore, weâre not ready to leave, so we stretch out along the red-brown rocks, watching birds dive toward the whitecaps in the distance.
âWhatâs one tiny thing youâll miss about these trips?â Cleo asks.
âThe Warm Cup,â Parth says. âI love walking down to get coffee while itâs still cool and gray out and the streets are empty. And Sab and I are both totally silent because we havenât had caffeine yet, but itâs nice. At home weâre always rushing in the morning.â
âIâll miss that too,â Kimmy says. âAnd sitting on the bench next to the walk-up window, petting all the dogs that come past. And all the junk shops and yard sales. Every time I come here, I end up trying to convince Cleo to rent a U-Haul to drive back.â
âA garden filled with lobster traps has a different aesthetic effect in upstate New York,â Cleo says.
âYeah, but we could at cover our walls with wood-burned signs that say .â
âWell, now we know what to get you for your birthday,â I say.
âShould we all get tattoos?â Parth jokes.
âWe can do better than that,â Sabrina says.
âGiant lobsters,â Wyn puts in.
âMermaids that look like Bratz dolls,â I suggest.
âIâll come up with something.â Sabrina props her chin in one hand, the other fluttering through the shallow water.
âWhatâs something youâll miss, Harry?â Cleo asks. âSomething small.â
I say, âSeeing everyone so happy together.â
Cleo bats her hand against my leg. âSomething for you.â
I think some more. âI guess . . . going to sleep.â
Parth bursts into laughter.
âIâm serious!â I cry.
âYour favorite part,â Sabrina says, âof this amazing trip I planned for us . . . is going to sleep.â
âNo.â I toss a seashell shard toward the sparkling lip of the tide. âItâs going to sleep so tired, in a good way. Feeling content and exhausted and relaxed, but also excited to wake up and still be here.â
I catch Wynâs eyes and look away. âIt feels like nothing can go too wrong here. At least once youâre off Rayâs airplane.â
Sabrina grabs my hand a little too hard, then lets go on a sigh. âIâll miss that too. Hell, Iâll even miss Ray.â
âIâll miss Bernieâs,â Cleo says.
âEven though it gave you a phantom hangover?â Wyn asks.
âFor all I know,â Cleo says, âthat was the last hangover Iâll ever have. The least I can do is appreciate it.â
We get back onto the boat as the sun is beginning its descent. The water is diamond edged, the air cooling and the spray lifting off the sides of the boat positively freezing, despite the sun beating against the crowns of our heads.
At the helm, Sabrina glows. Sheâs where sheâs meant to be, doing what she was born to do, and no matter how complicated this week has been, I now realize how worth it it all was.
Parth passes out a round of Coronas with lime wedgesâand soda for Cleoâand Sabrina cranks up the radio, Bruce Springsteenâs âDancing in the Darkâ crackling out. It feels like time has been canceled, thrown out, suspended indefinitely.
As long as we stay out here on the water, salt spray flecking our skin, nothing else exists.
Kimmy wrangles Cleo into a slow dance, and Parth and I heckle them from our benches until the combination of the setting sun and beer has me heavy eyed and yawning.
Beside me, Wyn lifts his arm in invitation, and either because everyoneâs watching or because I simply want to, I curl against his side, his warm arm settling over me, his sweat and detergent and deodorant and toothpaste knitting together to cloak me in my favorite smell.
Even now, Iâd buy Wyn-scented candles in bulk if I could, keep them long after the wicks had burned down, until every last vapor faded from the glass.
At a particularly cold gust, I turn my face into his chest to hide from the chill, let myself breathe him in and feel the rush of dopamine it brings.
Iâve only drunk half my beer, but I feel very nearly intoxicated. His hand slides from my stomach to my hip and lightly squeezes, and my breath rushes out against his neck, a coil of heat dropping from my low belly to the point between my thighs.
âThis would be the song for our first dance,â Kimmy says dreamily to Cleo, âif we ever got married.â
.
My muscles go taut. I Wynâs heart speed, his hand slackening against me. Ahead, the harbor draws closer, and with it, reality.
Through laughter, Cleo says, âBased on , Kimmy?â
âThis magical moment weâre having!â Kimmy says. âDo we need a better reason?â
âI guess not,â Cleo allows. âSince this wedding is entirely hypothetical, why donât we have Bruce Springsteen the reception?â
âYou really donât want to get married?â Parth asks her, clearly unconvinced.
âCleo has conflicting feelings about the institution of marriage,â Kimmy says, âand I donât care that much either way as long as weâre in it for the long haul. But I think a wedding could be fun. Itâs just a big-ass expensive party. No offense.â
I sit up, pulling away and keeping my eyes fixed on a gaggle of circling gulls.
âNo, youâre right,â Parth says. âItâs an excuse for the best party youâll ever throw, with everyone you love in one place.â
âAll six of us,â Wyn says.
Sabrina shrugs, steering us nearer to the harbor. âThatâs how it was with my parents, and it was perfect.â
âI didnât realize you were there,â I say. I know a decent amount about her parentsâ relationship, but mostly concerning the end of it. Like my own parents, hers were barely together when Sabrinaâs mother got pregnant. Unlike my own parents, once their initial happiness faded, they quickly divorced.
Sabrinaâs mom was a wreck after that, largely because Mr. Armas wasted no time before marrying a Norwegian model. Sabrina quickly became her momâs confidante, support system, and therapist all in one, until the former Mrs. Armas started dating herself.
From what I could tell, Sabrinaâs summers in Knottâs Harbor were the lone bright spot in a lonely childhood, the only place either of her parents truly had time for her.
âI was four when they got married,â she says. âWe were here for the summer, and weâd driven down the coast a bit.â A sliver of her perfect white smile appears, as if even after everything, this memory has been guarded deep in her heart, where nothing could mar it.
âThereâs this big farm,â she says. âAnd it has a chapel, down a trail in the woods. I mean, maybe isnât the right word. Itâs outside, looks out toward the coast. You can see the water through the trees. Anyway, it was a random Tuesday, and my parents decided they were going to get married. So they found a priest, and it was him, them, and me, out in the woods. For all I know, that guy wasnât even a real priest. He couldâve been a very somber stripper Dad found in the Yellow Pages. But whatever. We were happy. For three years, anyway.â
She lets out a half-formed Sabrina cackle, and Parth joins her at the wheel, winding an arm around her waist.
âHave you two figured out your perfect wedding yet?â Cleo asks me, and my pulse spikes from the guilt.
But Wyn says easily, âThe courthouse.â
âNo way.â Kimmy shakes her head. âYouâre too much of a romantic. You have some perfect time and place picked out. Probably the exact minute you first told Harry you loved her, in a field full of her favorite flower.â
âNah,â Wyn says. âMaybe I used to think thereâd be a perfect time or place. But now I think, if you really want to be with someone, you donât wait for things to be perfect.â His eyes come to mine. âI would have married Harriet at a drive-through chapel in Vegas the day after I proposed, if she wanted.â
His eyes look dark in the dying daylight, the kind of gaze that falls like a heavy curtain, shutting out everything else.
. The past tense of it slices through me.
âThen shit,â Parth says, âwhatâs stopping you? Iâll find you an Elvis online . We can have this whole thing taken care of in forty-five minutes. Back-to-back weddings.â
Wyn casts his eyes back to the dock. âBecause. Thatâs not what she wants.â
, my heart cries.
We pull into the harbor.