âSHEâS GOING TOÂ be upset that I told you first,â Cleo says.
âI can pretend not to know,â I offer.
She gives me a look.
âOr,â I say, âwe can be up-front about it and talk it out.â
She gives me another hug. âYou sure you donât want a ride back?â She checks the time on her phone. She called Kimmy for a ride a couple of minutes ago. Sheâll be down to the Warm Cup any second.
âIâll meet you in a bit,â I say.
First I need to find something for Sabrina. We wonât be leaving this trip with matching tattoosâas it turns out, most artists wonât tattoo a pregnant person, thus Cleoâs true resistance to the ideaâbut that doesnât mean we canât find to hold on to from this place.
After Kimmy picks Cleo up, I grab a second caramel latte, iced this time, and wander past shop windows. I have no idea where to begin. Iâm hoping Iâll know it when I see it. So far, the best option seems to be matching T-shirts that say on them, or matching T-shirts that say over a lobster wearing aviators.
I follow a window display filled with lamps and cutesy tea towels around the corner, right to a window display filled with colorful buoys that have been turned into all manner of yard ornaments. I pause to let a grimy Subaru breeze through a stop sign at the next cross street, and thatâs when I realize where I am.
Easy Lane. The backdrop to our fight last night. Up ahead, I spot the tattoo shop on the left. My first inclination is to get away from the scene of the crime. Then I notice the glossy gold shop number over the door on my right: 125.
Number 125, on Easy Lane.
It takes me a second to figure out whatâs so familiar about that. When I do, I backtrack and check the number of the buoy store. 127. Wrong direction.
Iâm looking for 123.
I wait for another car to pass through the intersection, and then jog across.
123 Easy Lane. The site of my On the door, a decal reads , along with some hours of operation, but in the glare of bright sunlight, I canât make out much through the windows.
I check the time on my phone: 9:16 a.m. If I remember correctly, the itinerary said Sabrinaâs âpersonalized surpriseâ for me would start at nine. I waffle for a moment about going in, then bite the bullet and push the door open.
A gust of warm air meets me.
âHarriet?â a womanâs voice says.
I blink as I wait out my pupillary dilation from the sudden change in light. âYes, hi!â
I turn toward the voice, wondering if she can tell I canât see her, or anything at all, yet.
âYour space is all ready in the back,â she says.
âGreat.â For some reason it doesnât occur to me until a half second too late that I could tell her I have no idea why Iâm here. Or where here is.
My vision resolves as she leads me to the back of the shop, the floating oak shelves that line the walls coming into focus along with all the kitchenware for sale on them. Bowls, plates, cups, all in candy-colored tones that pop against the gallery-white walls.
The shopâs attendantâa woman with blunt fringe, flared pants, and hoop earrings, all of which look plucked from the seventiesâleads me down a hall to a room twice the size of the first one.
I pull up short, no less shocked than when I walked into the cottage and saw Wyn there.
âFeel free to take whichever wheel you want,â the woman says. âNo one else has space booked until four.â
I still havenât managed a syllable when the bells over the shop doors ring behind us, and the seventies demigoddess says, âLet me know if you need help finding anything,â and excuses herself to greet the new customer.
I stand there, computing.
The back wall is all windows, looking out onto the next street. Wooden shelves, like the ones in the front of the shop, stretch from one wall to the other, laden with bowls and vases and mugs. On the right, clay-streaked, pastel-toned aprons hang on hooks, and down the middle of the polished concrete floor sits a long wooden table, potterâs wheels atop it at even intervals, stools pushed up to each of them. On the left wall, thereâs a long counter with a sink and a bunch of cabinets and drawers, and from the ceiling, pothos and philodendrons hang like living streamers, catching the light as the pots twirl one way, then back the other.
A lump is rising in my throat.
I couldnât have mentioned my pottery class to Sabrina any more than three times. I know this, because in general, I find talking about the class embarrassing.
Afraid people will take me too seriously, then be disappointed when they find out how mediocre I am at it. And somehow, nearly as afraid that they take it seriously, that theyâd brush it off with a mild when it feels like so much more.
Not a careerâIâm not at it. Something else. The place I go when I feel trapped inside myself. When Iâm terrified that all my happiest moments belong to the past. When my body is humming with too much of something, or aching from too little, and life stretches out ahead of me like a threat.
In our few phone calls since Iâd started the class, Sabrina asked a couple of blunt follow-up questions about it, and I gave succinct answers, then turned the conversation in another direction. It was one more piece of my life I hadnât felt ready to share before this week, and yet Sabrina it, saw more fully than I realized.
Because this week about torturing Wyn and me, and it wasnât just about preserving our delicately balanced found family either. Everything she did, misguided or not, was out of love. Out of us and that weâre happy.
I go to the wall of hooks and choose a blush-pink apron, looping it over my neck. Then I go to the drawers on the far side of the room and begin gathering supplies.
I fill a bowl with water and set it on the table along with a couple of tools, a sponge, a hunk of clay.
Not having a distinct plan before I start a project rarely turns out well for me, but I donât care right now. It doesnât matter what I make, only that I appreciate the time spent making it. It will feel good to dip my hands in mud, curve over the wheel until my back aches.
I take the stool closest to the windows and pound the clay into a ball. Then I plop it onto the wheel and flatten it with the heels of my hands.
The moment I slip my fingers into the water to start coning the clay up, calm floods me. My thoughts fritter away. I press the foot pedal, maneuvering the lump of muck upward as it centers on the spinning wheel.
I lose myself in the rhythm of it.
Coning it up. Coning down.
I wonât have time to glaze it before I leave Knottâs Harbor, wonât have room to take it home in my luggage once itâs fired. I donât think about any of that.
Throwing makes my mind feel like the sea on a clear day, all my thoughts pleasantly diffused beneath light, rolling along over the back of an ever-moving swell.
My meditation app often tells me to picture my thoughts and feelings as clouds, myself as the mountain theyâre drifting past.
At the wheel, I never have to try. I become a body, a sequence of organs and veins and muscles working in concert.
I ease off the pedal, opening the clay. My elbows lock against my sides, thumbs dipping into the center, and as the clay whips past, a mouth widens within it. My thumbs curve under, thinning the walls beneath the lip.
The earthy smell is everywhere. Sweat pricks the nape of my neck. Iâm dimly aware of an ache in my upper spine, but itâs only an observation, a fact requiring no action. There is no need to fix it, to change it.
Just another cloud drifting past.
The loose shape of a bowl appears within my hands. I take the yellow sponge from the table, pressing it lightly against the bottom of the bowl, smoothing the rings. Sweat beads on my forehead now. The ache in my spine snakes through my shoulders.
I take hold of the bowlâs thick lip and draw it upward, stretching the clay, coaxing it higher. When itâs risen as high as it safely can, I bring my hands back to the base, funneling them, collaring the piece upward.
This is my favorite part: when Iâve worked the clay into a stable cylinder, when the slightest touch can shift and shape it. I love the way that everything can so easily fall apart, and the ecstasy of finding a groove in which I know it wonât, without understanding the physics, the . The clay becomes an extension of me, like it and I are working together.
It reminds me of something Hank told me a long time ago, about growing up on a ranch, training new horses.
Heâd been good at it, apparently, and attributed that to his patience. He could wait out any bad mood. The anger of an animal didnât make angry.
, he told me.
.
And while there were a lot of things heâd hated about working at a ranch, heâd loved the feeling of coming to an agreement with another living thing, of understanding each otherâs needs, giving space when it was time for it, and pulling close when it was needed.
, he told me.
At first, I mistake the sting for sweat catching in my lashes. Only when I feel the warm trails cutting down my cheeks do I realize Iâm crying.
A different kind of crying from the wide variety of it Iâve done this week.
Not sobs. Not tears quaking out of me. A slow, quiet overflow of feeling.
I give a sniffly laugh but keep my hands where they are, shaping this beautiful, delicate thing for no reason other than my own joy.
When I look up and see him standing in the doorway, my stomach buoys, and my heart says, Like itâs summoned him here just by beating.
I rise from the stool, hands smeared with watery clay. âWhat are you doing here?â
The right side of his mouth rises. âCame to reenact that scene from .â
At my apparent lack of comprehension, he says, âI woke up and you were gone.â
I wipe my hands on the apron. âI went to get coffee and then I remembered the surprises Sabrina planned. Seemed like a shame to let them go to waste.â
âI figured,â he says. âI went to mine too.â
I check the clock over the door. Iâve been here a lot longer than I realized. Two hours with the same vase. âHowâd you find me?â
His head tilts. âYou donât forget an address like 123 Easy Lane.â
âBecause of the missed opportunity,â I say.
His smile faintly spreads. âShouldâve been Easy Street.â
âAll these Mainers,â I say, âtrying their damnedest not to make their towns adorable.â
He comes closer, peering at the wheel. âWhat are you making?â
âHonestly,â I say, âIâve barely been paying attention.â
âLooks like a vase.â
âYou might need glasses,â I say.
His gaze lifts. âIs it hard?â
âI think whatâs hard about it,â I say, âis that you need to do less than you realize. And overthinking it and trying too hard to control it messes it up. At least in my experience.â
He gives a half-hearted smile. âLife.â
âDo you want to try?â I ask.
He very nearly rears back. âI wouldnât want to ruin it.â
âWhy not?â I say.
âBecause,â he says, âit looks so nice. Youâve worked so hard.â
I snort as I cross toward the apron hooks and choose a pale yellow one for him. âItâs wet clay,â I say, handing the apron over. âItâs not breakable.â
âIt breakable,â he says.
âI mean, you could knock it over or collapse it, but nothingâs going to shatter. And Iâm not going to have time to finish it anyway, so if we put the clay back when weâre done, itâs no big deal.â
âIs that sad?â His brows peak up in the middle. âWorking on something you wonât get to finish?â
âIâve had a nice time.â
Wynâs smile grows. âShe did good, then.â
âShe did,â I agree. âWhat was your surprise?â
âKayaking,â he says.
I laugh. âI love that yours was exercise and mine was sitting very still and playing with mud.â
âCare to guess what Cleoâs and Kimmyâs were?â he asks.
âDid they go?â I say, wondering if Cleo had a chance to talk to Sabrina yet.
He nods.
âCleo,â I say, considering, âwent to an agricultural museum, and Kimmy went to a hallucinogenic swap meet.â
âSo close. They got a couplesâ massage.â At my expression, he adds, âYou look surprised.â
âI am surprised,â I say.
âWhy?â
âI guess now that I know couplesâ massages were on the table, Iâm surprised she didnât send us to one too.â
âIâm not,â he says. âYou hate being touched by strangers.â
My heart keens. Another little reminder of how well these people know me against all odds, all the pieces of me Iâve come to see as difficult or unpleasant, the parts I never voluntarily share but have sneaked out here and there across years.
I swallow the building emotion and tip my head toward my stool. âSit down.â
Wyn slips the apron over his neck and perches, his face etched with consternation.
âRelax.â I shake his shoulders as I cross to the next stool. I drag it up to his and sit. âItâs like driving. Get your hands a little damp.â
âOh, I never drive with damp hands,â he says.
âWell, thatâs your first mistake,â I say. âItâs illegal to drive with dry hands.â
He says, âI think the laws are different in Montana.â
âDonât be ridiculous,â I say. âThere are no laws in Montana. If you have a big enough hat, you can just claim whatever you want, and itâs yours.â
âTrue,â he says. âI once owned a slew of Walmarts that way.â
âUntil a guy with a bigger hat came along,â I say. âIâm not going to you do this, Wyn. I thought you wanted to.â
âI do,â he says. âIâm stalling because Iâm afraid Iâm going to ruin it.â
âI already told you,â I say. âYou canât ruin it. That is the whole point. Now get your hands damp.â I lean forward to drag the bowl of water closer, and with a slight grimace, he dips his hands into it.
âGood,â I say. âNow use your left hand to give slight pressure to the side of the vase. Your right is more for balance, to keep it upright.â
He sets his palms against the structureâs sides. âNow what?â
âEase onto the pedal,â I say.
He does, and because heâs Wyn, he does so beautifully. But as soon as he reaches full speed, he pushes too hard, and I dive to catch his right hand, steadying it before the would-be vase can topple. âTold you Iâd ruin it.â
âSo dramatic,â I tease, brushing my nose against his neck. âYou didnât ruin it. Weâre just changing the shape of it.â
I lean across him to put my other palm on the outside of his left hand, matching the pressure, the vase narrowing and funneling upward.
âNow we really are doing the thing,â he says.
âNot quite,â I say, âbut I donât think my arms are long enough that I could sit behind you and do this.â
âDefinitely not,â he says. âBut youâre welcome to sit in my lap.â
âExcuse me,â I say. âIâm the one in charge here. Everyone knows the person sitting in the lap is the amateur.â
âSo you want me to sit in your lap,â he says.
âI donât have a death wish,â I say.
âGlad to hear it.â His gaze flickers back to the clay. Somehow, weâre keeping it from collapsing or tipping over. It flares out, narrows, and flares again, wonky but standing.
I catch myself staring at him, without any intention of replying.
When he looks up, my heart trips.
His mouth curls. âWhat?â
âI have to tell you something,â I whisper.
His foot lifts off the pedal, his smile falling. âOkay.â
I try to steel myself. I feel like Jell-O. I wish we were in the dark, on opposite sides of the kidsâ room. Itâs so much harder to say things in the light of day.
I close my eyes so I wonât have to see his reaction, wonât see if the world suddenly ruptures at the words: âI think I hate my job.â
I wait.
Nothing.
No eardrum-destroying groan as the earth splits in two. My parents and coworkers donât come barreling into the room with pitchforks. My phone doesnât ring with the calls of every teacher, tutor, and coach who ever wrote me a recommendation letter or gave me a research position or sent a congratulations email.
But all of those things were, arguably, a long shot.
The only thing that matters right now, the only thing Iâm afraid of, is Wynâs reaction.
All those sensations that tend to precede a panic attack bubble up in me: itchy heat, a tight throat, a sudden drop in my stomach.
âHarriet,â he says softly. âWill you look at me?â
On a deep breath, I open my eyes.
His brow is grooved, his eyes and mouth soft.
.
âDid something happen at the hospital?â he asks.
My stomach sinks a little lower. I wish it were that simple, a concrete moment when everything went wrong. I shake my head.
Wynâs clay-covered hands gingerly catch my wrists. âThen what?â
âItâs hard to explain.â
âWill you try?â he asks.
I swallow. âItâs not supposed to be about me. Iâm supposed to be helping people.â
âIt is about you,â Wyn says.
How do I sum it up? There isnât any one thing I would change. Itâs that for some reason, I spend ninety percent of my time excruciatingly unhappy, and the more I try to tamp it down, the more the unhappiness grows, swells, pushes up against my edges.
Itâs that when Iâm not here, I feel like a ghost. Like my skin isnât solid enough to hold the sunlight, and my hair isnât there to dance on the breeze.
âIâm not good at it, Wyn,â I choke out.
He jogs my hands. âYouâre brilliant.â
âBut what if Iâm ,â I say. âWhat if Iâve put everything I have, all my time and energy, into this, and money.
, the money. Hundreds of thousands of dollars in loans, some of which my parents had to cosign because I donât have good credit, and IâIâve built a life where all I do is wait. Wait for the surgery to be over. For the day to end. Wait to be , where I feel . . .â
Wynâs lips part, his eyes painfully soft.
âLike myself. Like Iâm in the right place.â
, I think.
âI loved school,â I say. âBut I hate being in hospitals. I hate the smell of the antiseptic. The lighting gives me headaches, and my shoulders hurt because I canât relax, because everything feels soâso . And every day, when I go home, I donât even feel relieved, because I know I have to go back. And I . . . I keep waiting for it to change, for something to and to feel how I thought it would, but it hasnât. I get better at what Iâm doing, but the way I about doing it doesnât change.â
Wynâs hands tense, his eyes dropping as his voice frays. âWhy wouldnât you tell me this?â he asks.
âI telling you.â
âNo,â he says roughly. âWhen I was there. When you needed me, and I couldnât get to you no matter how hard I tried. Why wouldnât you let me in?â
âBecause I was ,â I say. âYouâd followed me across the country, and things were so hard, for you and for us. I was terrified of making them worse. I wanted to be who youâwho âthinks I am, but I canât. Iâm not. I never wanted to let you down.â
He stares at me for three seconds, then lets out a gruff, frustrated laugh.
âIâm not joking, Wyn.â
He scoots forward, and my knees slot in between his, both my wrists still cradled in his muddy hands, his thumbs sweeping back and forth, a slight tremor in them. âIâm not laughing at you. I just feel so stupid.â
âYou?
the one who devoted the last ten years of her life, and a lot of imaginary money, to something she hates.â
âI . . .â He darts a glance at our hands. âYou were in pain, and I didnât even notice, Harriet. Or I did, but I thought it was about me. I fucked up, and I lost you for it.â
I shake my head ferociously. âYou had bigger things going on.â
âThere was nothing bigger than you,â he says raggedly. âNot to me. Not ever.â
Blood rises to my cheeks, my throat, my chest. Itâs painful to swallow. âMaybe thatâs what made it so hard. You built your whole life around my plans. You left our friends and missed time with your familyâwith âand now I canât hack it. You did all of that for me, and Iâm not even the person you thought I was.â
âHarriet.â The tenderness in his voice, his hands, rips open all those hastily stitched sutures in my heart. âI know exactly who you are.â
I look up, voice shrinking. âReally? Because I donât.â
âI knew who you were before we even met,â he says. âBecause everything our friends told me was true.â
âYou mean you saw a naked drawing of me,â I say.
He smiles, his hands moving to touch my jaw, neither of us bothered by the clay. âI mean that you have the weirdest laugh of anyone Iâve ever met, Harriet,â he says softly. âAnd it feels like taking a shot of tequila every time I hear it. Like I could get drunk on the sound of you. Or hungover when I go too long without you.
âYou see the best in everyone, and you make the people you love feel like even their flaws are worth appreciating. You love learning. You love sharing what you learn. You try to be fair, to see things from other peopleâs points of view, and sometimes that makes it hard for you to see them from your own, but you have one. And even when youâre mad at me, I want to be close to you. None of itânone of my favorite things about you, none of what makes you youâhas anything to do with a job. Thatâs not why I love you. Itâs not why anyone loves you.â
âMaybe not,â I manage, âbut itâs why theyâre proud of me. Itâs the thing about me that makes them happiest.â
He studies me. âYour parents?â
I dip my chin.
âCome here,â Wyn says.
âWhy?â I ask.
âBecause I want you to,â he says.
âWhat happened to your Montana manners?â
âCome here, ,â he says.
I let him drag me across his lap, one of his arms roped around my back, his other hand resting on my knee, clay smudging into my jeans. âYour parents love you,â he says. âAnd everything they doâand push you to doâis because they want you to be happy. But that doesnât mean theyâre automatically right about whatâs best for you. Especially when you havenât told them how you feel.â
âI feel so selfish even talking about this,â I admit. âLike everything they did for me doesnât even matter.â
âItâs not selfish to want to be happy, Harriet.â
âWhen I could be a surgeon instead?â I say. âYeah, Wyn, I think it might be selfish.â
â
that,â he says. âA happy potterâs better for this world than a miserable surgeon.â
Warmth spills across the bridge of my nose. âIâm not a potter, Wyn. This isnât something Iâm making money on.â
âMaybe not. And it doesnât ever have to be, if you donât want that,â he says. âBut thatâs the point. Your job doesnât have to be your identity. It can just be a place you go, that doesnât define you or make you miserable. You deserve to be happy, Harriet.â He brushes a strand of hair away from the curve of my jaw. âEverythingâs better when youâre happy.â
âFor me,â I say.
âFor me,â he says, vehement. âFor Cleo and Sabrina and Parth and Kimmy, and your parents. For anyone who cares about you. The worldâs always going to need surgeons, but itâs going to need bowls too. Forget what you think anyone else wants. What do want?â
I try to laugh. The back of my nose stings too badly to let out a full-blown snort. âCanât you just tell me what to do?â
His arms close around me. I burrow into his chest, breathe him in, and feel my body calm. âWhat if . . .â I brace myself, grab hold of every last scrap of courage, and frankly, itâs not all that much. I pull back enough to look up into his face, my voice whittling down to filament. âWhat if I came to Montana?â
His gaze drops, his lashes splaying across his cheeks. âHarriet,â he says, so thickly, like my name hurts to say, and my own heart flutters painfully. Because I know him.
I know what an apology sounds like in Wyn Connorâs voice.
His eyes rise, the green of them mossy and warm. The heaviness that presses into my chest threatens to crack my ribs, puncture my heart. My eyes fill up, but somehow, I find the strength to whisper, âWhy not?â
âBecause you canât keep doing what other people want,â he says, voice gravelly. âYou canât follow me, like I followed you. I wonât be enough.â
âBut I love you,â I choke out.
âI love you too,â he croaks, his hands moving restlessly over me. âI love you so much.â He kisses a damp spot on my cheek, then lets our foreheads lean together. âBut you canât follow me. I did that, and it tore us up, Harriet. I canât let you build your life around me. It would break us all over again, and I . You have to figure out what you really want.â
My heart feels like itâs being stretched on a medieval rack, pulling apart bit by bit. âWhat if all I really want is you?â
âRight now,â he murmurs. âWhat about later? When you wake up and realize Iâve let you give everything up for me. I canât do that.â
Those months of watching him drown, thrash against a life that didnât fit him, surge back to the forefront of my mind. Heâd built his life around me, and it almost crushed us. Starved our love until it was unrecognizable.
I loop my arms around his neck and breathe him in, one last sip to tide me over for years to come. âI donât want to keep feeling like this.â
âItâll get easier,â he promises hoarsely, his hand brushing my hair behind my ear. âSomeday youâll hardly remember this.â
The thought is searing. I donât want that. I want any universe but that one. All the rest, where itâs him and me, scattered across time and space, finding our way to each other again and again, the one constant, the only essential.
I canât bear to let him go yet. But itâs like he said.
Weâre out of time.
âWe should get back,â I whisper.
Wyn lifts his chin toward the vase, asks damply, âShould we scrap it?â
I shake my head. âMaybe they can ship it once itâs been fired.â
âYou really want it?â he says.
I study it in all its wavy, wonky glory, my rib cage so tight I canât get a good breath, a firm beat of my heart. âDesperately.â