WYN LEFT THEÂ drapes and windows open last night, and now the room is cold and bright, salt wafting in on the breeze, and bringing with it the distant squawk of herring gulls. My body feels like melted ice cream, in the best way. Bits of last night glance over my mind: hands fisting into bedding and hair and skin, ragged whispers and pleas.
And then everything that came before.
The fight. The rest of the week. Everything with Wyn.
That today is the last day of our trip.
The pleasant soreness gives way. Now I feel like Iâve been hit by a bus, then backed over and hit one more time at an angle. Wyn is fast asleep, one arm still draped over my ribs and one corner of his mouth lifted. My chest aches at the sight.
Usually, heâs a back sleeper. We used to fall asleep curled up like this, but weâd never get any rest until he shifted onto his back. If we were fitted together like spoons, heâd always start moving restlessly in his sleep, and weâd find our way to each other in a heady, lust-crazed blur. Which was great until the morning, when we both had to get up for work or school.
Heâs made it through the whole night beside me, but the whole night, for us, was no more than a couple of hours.
He doesnât so much as stir as I slide out from under him. He always looks younger when heâs asleep. I wonder if thatâs some evolutionary trait: What animal could stand attacking someone who looks so peaceful and innocent?
Okay, could, but the thing would be to let him sleep.
I pull on a pair of jeans and a sweater and sneak out of the room, making my way through the silent house. As eager as I am to fix what happened last night, everyoneâs either still asleep or in hiding.
After a couple of minutes of aimlessly wandering the kitchen, I decide to walk into town and get everyone drinks from the Warm Cup as a peace offering.
Iâve often thought that the world saves its very best weather for days when you feel like everythingâs gone wrong, and today is no different. Itâs gloriously sunny, with a refreshing breeze. When the sun reaches its high point, Knottâs Harbor will no doubt be sweltering. Or sweltering for the midcoast anyway, which is to say extremely comfortable when compared to the swampy summers of southern Indiana or the burning-under-a-microscope heat of July in New York City.
A midcoast summer day is the exact day you pine for in the dead of winter.
Still, after ten minutes of following the curving road, past overflowing rhododendron bushes and graying wood-shingled inns being scraped and repainted for the hundredth time, Iâm wishing Iâd put a tank top on under my sweater.
Iâll have to find a cab back, easier said than done in a tiny village like this. Usually, Sabrina schedules our transportation, and Iâm not sure how far ahead she has to do it.
, she said. Sheâs not entirely wrong. Friendship with Sabrina, with this whole group, has always felt like a current I could toss myself bodily into. And thatâs what Iâm most used to: coasting along on other peopleâs whims and feelings.
It had never occurred to me that that could be read as apathy. That they might think I just donât care. Guilt twinges through me.
The cracked sidewalk turns and deposits me in town in front of the coffee shop. Under the faded awning over its walk-up window, collecting a recycled drink carrier, is Cleo.
She stiffens at the sight of me, slowly lifts one hand.
I do the same.
For a moment, neither of us moves. Then the barista calls out, âDoug!â and the only other waiting customer nudges Cleo aside to pick up an order.
She ambles toward me with her carrier, and I meet her halfway, in front of the cheerily painted bench in front of the Italian restaurant. In between rows of cutesy red cartoon lobsters, in cutesy font, are the words âHi,â she says.
âHi,â I say.
She lifts the drink carrier. âCoffee?â
âThen youâd only have three left,â I say.
She cracks a half-hearted smile. âThe salted-caramel latte is for you.â
I look down at the carrier. Three very average-sized drinks, and one thatâs the coffee shop equivalent of a Big Gulp. âSo they were out of 5-Hour Energies and Adderall, I see.â
Her smile widens. âI couldnât carry five drinks. So I got one big-ass Americano for Sabrina and Parth to split, a black coffee for Wyn, and a matcha for Kim.â
My chest stings. âYou have our drink orders memorized.â
She lifts one shoulder. âI know you.â
Another beat of silence.
âYou want to walk for a minute?â she asks.
I nod.
âHere.â She balances the carrier on the bench and pries my paper cup out of it.
âIâll Venmo you,â I say.
She winces a little. âPlease donât.â
We meander down toward the water, the brine in the air thickening.
After a second, I tell her, âI never learned how to fight.â
She glances sidelong at me.
âEspecially not with people I care about,â I say. âI mean, not with anyone. But especially not with the people I love. In fact, I specifically only know how to avoid fights. Or, usually I do.â
She watches me with a divot between her eyebrows.
âI donât know how fights are supposed to end when you love the person youâre fighting with,â I go on. âIn my family, everyone always left when things got bad. Eloise would storm out, or my parents would send her to her room and then go shut themselves in opposite sides of the house, and things never got better afterward. They always felt a little worse.
âAnd I guess I thought . . . if I kept us from ever fighting, then everyone would stay. I was never trying to cut anyone out. It was the exact opposite. I havenât been fun to be around in a long time, Cleo.â
Her brows knit tighter, an air of utter mystification to her expression. I wonder if I accidentally said the whole sentence backward.
âThe point is,â I say, âIâm sorry. I should have told you about Wyn and me. I shouldâve called more.â
After a moment, she looks back over the water. âI wasnât totally fair last night,â she says. âI understand why you wouldnât tell us.â
âYou do?â I say.
She looks back at me, nods once.
âLucky,â I say. âCan you explain it to me like Iâm five years old?â
She doesnât crack a smile this time. âYou were in denial,â she says. âAnd telling us wouldâve made it all feel real. And even if it is real, even if itâs what you chose, you still know itâs going to change everything, and thatâs scary. Because you need us. Weâre your family.â
I stare at her. âDamn.â
âWas I close?â she asks.
I set my drink down on one of the posts that line the water here, thick rope strung between them. âMore like, â I say.
She lets out a little breathless laugh and looks back to the water sloshing against the bank. Tears glint in the corners of her eyes. âIâm pregnant,â she says.
I know there must be sounds all around meâthe water, the low horn of boats leaving the harbor, the lobstermen across the bay shouting back and forth, ribbing one another as they load and unload traps.
But itâs like someoneâs clipped the wires to my ears.
When it rushes back in, I hear myself burst into tears, which makes Cleo burst into tears.
I grab the drink carrier from her hands and deposit it on the next post over. Then I pull her into a hug.
âWhy are crying?â she asks wetly, arms twining around me. âYouâre not the one whoâs going to have to push a squash out of her body.â
âI know!â I say. âIâm just so happy.â
Cleo laughs. âMe too. And fucking terrified. I mean, I chose this. I knew what it meantâitâs not like I tripped through the door of a sperm bank. We spent choosing the right donor. But . . . I think I expected it to take longer. To have longer to wrap my head around the idea of being a mom.
âBut thatâs not how it happened. And I . . . Iâm so scared Iâll be bad at it.â
I pull back to look into her eyes as she wipes away her tears. âAre you kidding?â I say. âYouâre going to be a perfect mom. Youâre going to be , andâwait a second! How far along are you? How long have you known you were doing this?â
She ducks her head. âLike I said,â she murmurs, âit wasnât entirely fair to be so upset about your secret.â
âApparently,â I say.
âAnd thatâs why Iâve been hesitant to have Sabrina and Parth visit the farm,â she goes on. âWe already have a ton of baby shit. Kimmyâs dad mails us something new every day, and I havenât felt ready to explain why we have four separate bassinets.â
âBecause Kimmyâs dad is a baby-obsessed hoarder?â I say.
âHeâs going to be an amazing grandpa,â she says wistfully. âI didnât even want to tell him yet, but Kimmy accidentally blurted it out. Iâm only a couple months along. So many things could still go wrong.â
I jog her by the elbows. âSo many things could go right too.â
She gives a wan smile. âI donât know what it means for us.â
âIt means youâre going to be moms,â I say.
She shakes her head. âWhat it means for of us, Harry. If my Google searches are anything to go on, Iâm going to be tired all the time and a worried wreck whenever Iâm conscious. Iâm already not the âfun oneâ in the groupââ
I snatch her hands. âCleo! Thatâs completely ridiculous. You are fun.â
â
is fun,â she says, skeptical. âAnd I mean, itâs why I fell in love with her. But sometimes itâs hard not to feel like . . . like everyone already likes my girlfriend more than me. Even my best friends. And the more I grow into myself, the less room there might be for me.â
âHow long have you felt like this?â
âI donât know,â she says. âProbably since I stopped drinking.â
âI wish you wouldâve said something.â
âItâs embarrassing!â she says. âBeing jealous of your own partner? I didnât even tell Kimmy until a few months ago.â
âI Kimmy,â I say, âand you know that. She has a lot of amazing qualities, and sheâs become one of my best friends. But you know what my favorite thing about her is?â
The corners of Cleoâs mouth turn up. âHer banging body?â
âThatâs number two. Number one is how happy she makes you. When you two started dating, it felt like the final missing puzzle piece to . . . all this. Our family. But that doesnât make you any less essential. You and Sabrina are my best friends. Always. And Iâm so sorry I ever gave you reason to doubt that.â
Her eyes gloss, and her voice quivers. âBut what if having a baby changes me? What if the gulf gets wider and wider until we donât have anything in common?â
âI donât need you to stay the same, Cleo,â I say. âAnd itâs not âhaving things in commonâ that makes me love you. Weâre so different, Clee. All of us. And I wouldnât change anything about you. Like I said, you are a missing piece of my heart, and Sabrina is too. If your schedule has to change, or you start singing Barney songs to yourself, or become one of those people who post about their kidsâ diaper blowouts on social mediaââ
âYouâll put me out of my misery?â she asks quietly.
âGod, yes. Iâll take your phone and feed it to the sea. But Iâll also still love you. Youâre family to me. You and Sab both.â
Cleoâs smile fades. âI shouldnât have been so hard on her either.â
âThere mightâve been a better way to say it,â I admit, âbut I think you needed to get some of that off your chest. And we probably needed to hear it.â
âMaybe.â Cleo chews her lip. âSabrinaâs pretty loyal, but when she feels wronged . . .â
âIâm not telling you to your pregnancy as a bargaining chip,â I say, âbut I think when she finds out what youâve been dealing with, sheâs going to understand. And then sheâs going to plan you a very over-the-top party, with a photorealistic baby cake and actual live storks flapping around your house.â
Cleo devolves into laughter, letting her head fall against my shoulder. âI canât wait.â
She laces her fingers through mine, and we stay there a little longer, watching the boats glide in and out, listening to full conversations held over megaphones as people pass one another in the water.
Everything is changing. It has to. You canât stop time.
All you can do is point yourself in a direction and hope the wind will let you get there.
Another maritime metaphor. I am truly a localâs worst nightmare. But the point stands: change happens.
A near-painful joy flares through me. âOh my god.â
Cleo looks up. âHm?â
âI just realized,â I say, âIâm going to be an .â
She snorts a laugh. âHarry,â she says. âYouâre going to be a co-godmother.â