âYOU KNEW?â IÂ say.
She doesnât reply.
â
,â I snap.
She throws her arms out to her sides. âOf course I knew! Not that I heard it from you. Not like my best friends tell me a single thing about their lives these days.â
Itâs like missing the top step, only to realize the stairs lead directly to the edge of a cliff.
I get out, â
â
âParth visited Wyn a few weeks ago.â
The harbor starts to swirl around me. âDid he . . . tell him?â
âNo.â She crosses her arms. âWyn went to the bathroom, and Parth was going to send you a picture of himself or something from Wynâs phone. Only when he opened your text thread, there was nothing new for . And I guess Wyn had this whole long message drafted, apologizing for how things ended.â
âSo he read it,â I say, the words bitter on the back of my tongue.
âIt wasnât intentional,â Sabrina says. âAnd not the whole thing. But enough to know what happened.â
âWhy didnât you say anything?â I say.
âMe? Youâre the one who hid this, Harry. For months youâve told me almost nothing about your life, and meanwhile Cleo cancels every set of plans she makes, and Wyn wasnât even going to this week until I begged, andââ
âWait.â I close my eyes, shake my head.
It canât be.
It has to be.
âThatâs what this is all about?â I open my eyes, lungs compressing. âThis whole trip?â
Sabrinaâs shoulders square, her chin rising.
I think of all the moments Sabrina shoved Wyn and me together. I think of all the times she weaseled out of even a few minutes alone with me. Even on the drive from the airport, she had the music blasting and windows down so that even if wanted to tell her about Wyn, could plausibly deny hearing it.
The anger floods me now. Anger like Iâve never felt. âThis trip down memory lane? The bathroom with no fucking door? This was allâall some game to you?â
âA ?â she says. âHarriet, we were trying to you. You and Wyn belong together.â
âHow could you put us through all of this?â My vocal cords are shivering from anger.
Sabrinaâs eyes flare, but her mouth jams shut.
âYou made us bend over backward all week. You us,â I say. âHow could you all do this?â
âWe didnât know,â comes a quiet voice.
Cleo has followed us, the light from the Hound & Thistle limning her in red gold. âDidnât know you and Wyn broke up,â she says. âDidnât know this whole week was a sham.â
âItâs not a ,â Sabrina says. âWe were them.â
âHelping us do ?â I say raggedly.
âGet back together!â she replies.
âIf we wanted to be together,â I say, âweâd be together!â
âOh, please,â she says. âYou donât know you want, Harriet! Youâre the love of your life because youâre too indecisive to just pick a wedding date and a venue.â
White-hot hurt blazes out from my chest. âWeâre not together because we donât want to be, Sabrina! Because we canât make each other happy, no matter how badly we want to.â
âReally?â she says. âBecause Parth what Wyn wrote, and it sure sounds like, once again, you sat there and let your life happen to you instead of fighting for what you want.â
âYou donât get to decide whatâs best for everyone,â Cleo says. âIt doesnât matter how good you think your intentions were. You manipulated us. You how stressed out I was about this week, and you why Wyn wasnât coming, and you forced us all into it anyway.â
âI did what I had to,â Sabrina says. âJust like I always do, because no one makes even the tiniest bit of effort anymore. If I waited on all of you, this friendship would already be over, and you know it. I send the first text. I make the phone calls. I leave the voicemails. I schedule the trips, and when you cancel on them, I pitch other dates, and when you canât give me an immediate yes or no, guess what?
the one to check back in a couple days later.â
âWe have other things going on in our lives,â Cleo says. âWe canât always drop everything to relive the glory days with you.â
Instantly, I can tell from Sabrinaâs expression that Cleoâs hit a nerve, a deep one.
All my virulent anger breaks, a fog clearing enough to reveal a steep drop-off ahead. The angerâs still there, but the fear is heavier, rooting through me, yelling, .
âLetâs all cool off for a second,â I choke out.
Cleoâs eyes lock on to me. âIâm not angry,â she says evenly.
She means it. Thereâs no fire behind her gaze, only exhaustion, only disappointment. âIâm just not pretending anymore.â
The sidewalk seems to crack underneath me, the world splitting. If I donât do something, the gap will yawn wider and wider until I canât reach them. Until Iâm all alone.
âNot pretending ?â Sabrina asks.
âThat these the glory days,â Cleo says. âThat weâre as close as we used to be, when the truth is, itâs different.
different.â
â
,â I say, quiet, pleading.
âOur lives are total opposites,â she goes on, âand our schedules are totally different, and we donât like spending our free time the same way anymore, and Wynâs out in Montana, and Harrietâs all but cut us out of her life, and you and Parth still want everything to be one big party, but itâs not! Thereâs real shit going on in our lives, and we never talk about any of it.â
âI havenât cut you out of my life,â I say. âWe kept something from you that was so painful I havenât been able to make myself tell about it. I can still hardly think about itâabout âwithout feeling like . . . like the worldâs coming apart at the seams.â
Cleoâs eyes are dark and glossy. âWeâre exactly who youâre supposed to come to when you feel like that, and instead you stop talking to us, and then when things are . . . are hard for us, what are we supposed to do?â
âOh, come on, Cleo,â Sabrina says. âDonât act like youâre any better. Youâve been dodging plans with me for . As far as can tell, the only one trying to hold all this together, while everyone else would be totally fine never seeing one another.â
âWeâve seen one another all ,â Cleo says, âand youâre just now telling us this was all some kind of Machiavellian scheme, and Harrietâs just confessing she and Wyn arenât even together, and weâve had , and it hasnât even mattered. Because youâd rather sit in a theater for five hours, just because we , than adjust to the fact that maybe weâd all rather do something different! Weâre not in the same place anymore. Weâre growing up.â
Her voice wavers. âAnd in different directions. And there are things we canât talk to one another about anymore, and maybe weâve all been fighting it, or pretending we donât notice, when we should accept it. Weâre not what we used to be for one another. And thatâs fine.â
âItâs fine?â Sabrina repeats emptily.
âThings are changing. They already have. And Iâve never been this person who just goes along with things she doesnât want to do, but youâve made it so I have to. It all has to be on your terms.â
âNo oneâs forcing you to stay!â Sabrina says. âIf you want to go, go!â
Cleo looks down at her feet, a tiny fern growing up between the cracks in the sidewalk there, right between her sandals. âFine,â she says. âKimmy and I will find a hotel for the night.â
Another cold laugh from Sabrina. âSo, what, youâre going to from our friendship?â
âIâm going to take some ,â Cleo says.
âThis is ridiculous,â Sabrina replies. âYou wonât find anywhere to stay on this entire coast.â
Cleoâs lips press tighter. âThen weâll sleep in the guesthouse tonight.â
âAnd then what?â Sabrina says.
âI donât know yet,â Cleo said. âMaybe leave.â
I have no idea how to argue with her, or if I even want to. My head throbs. Everything is all wrong.
Finally, Sabrina says, âIâll get the car.â She turns and stalks down the street. I look back the way we came. Even in silhouette, Kimmy, Wyn, and Parth look rigid. They heard everything.
In a way, I tell myself, itâs a relief, to have everything out in the open.
But the truth is, if I could take it all back, I would. Iâd do anything to go back to that happy place, outside of time, where nothing from real life can touch us.