I WAKE BEFOREÂ my alarm and turn it off before it makes a peep. Wyn is fast asleep, naked and beautiful in the deep blue of early morning.
He would want me to wake him.
But I canât stand for our last moment together to be a goodbye. I want to remember him like this, while heâs still mine and Iâm his.
I finish packing quietly and tiptoe downstairs.
Cleo and Sabrina are already sipping tea and coffee, respectively, in the kitchen. âI told you I could take a cab to the airport,â I whisper, joining them as Sabrina fills a mug for me.
âNo way,â she says, âare your last few minutes in Knottâs Harbor going to be with a stranger.â
âActually,â I say, âmy last few minutes in Knottâs Harbor will be spent with Ray.â
âAll the more reason to give you a ride. These could be the last minutes of your life, period,â Sabrina says.
Cleo spits a mouthful of tea into her mug. âSabrina.â
âKidding!â she says. âIs Wyn coming?â
âI let him sleep,â I say.
She and Cleo exchange a look.
âI know,â I say, heading them off. âBut itâs what I need.â
Sabrina slings an arm over my shoulder. âThen thatâs what you get, my girl.â
We drive to the airport in the Rover, and Sabrina and Cleo insist on parking and walking me inside. We linger by the security gate for a whileâweâre too early for an airport this tinyâbut I canât stand long goodbyes. Every second gets harder.
I make it through our tight group hug without crying. I keep my stiff upper lip as we take turns promising weâll see each other soon. And when Sabrina reminds me that thereâs room on her couch in New York anytime.
I still donât know what Iâm going to do when I get back to San Francisco, and when I came clean with them about how Iâd been feeling at work, theyâd both been adamant that they couldnât tell me what to do either. I need to figure out what I want.
As if reading my mind, Cleo touches my elbow and says, âThereâs no wrong answer.â
One last hug apiece, and then we put our index fingers, with their matching little burn scars from our first trip to the cottage, together in a silent promise. Without another word, I join the two-person security line.
I tell myself I wonât look back. But I do.
My best friends are crying, which makes me start crying, which makes all three of us start laughing.
âMaâam,â the TSA agent says, waving me forward, and Iâm still laugh-crying in the body scanner and as I make my way down the hallway beyond it, looking back every few feet to see them wave from the far end of the airport, until finally the hall curves to the right and Iâm forced to give one final wave goodbye and round the corner.
By the time I reach my gate, Iâve gotten it together. The seating area is empty. Any reasonable person wouldâve shown up to this particular airport twenty minutes before takeoff, but Iâve left the standard two-hour window, and now I have hours to sit with my thoughts.
I pull out the book I got from Murder, She Read and stare at the first page for probably twenty minutes without taking anything in other than the words .
I stuff the book into my bag and pull my phone out.
My heart stutters at the image on-screen. The website I had Wyn type in for me last night is still pulled up. An oak table in a field of yellow green, wildflowers snaking up its legs, and a jagged range of purple mountains behind it.
It knocks the breath out of me. Not the image itself but the longing, the it shoots out from my core.
, I think.
A zing of adrenaline goes down my spine.
My pulse speeds. Shivers spread, wildfire fast, across my skin.
I stand, almost laughing from the blunt force of the realization.
Wyn might be happier and healthier than he was six months ago, and I might be a little more honest about my feelings, but I him, every inch. Iâve memorized the rhythm of his breathing when he sleeps and the smell of his skin when heâs been out in the sun, and I know when heâs afraid.
Maybe I didnât see it right away because Iâm so unused to trusting myself. Iâve spent too long following everyone elseâs lead, placing everyone elseâs judgment above my own. But I see it.
Heâs .
He still doesnât trust that I can love him forever. Some part of him is waiting for me to choose something else. Believes that if I were given every option, he wouldnât be my pick. He might think heâs protecting me, but heâs protecting himself too.
He was right about one thing, though. He canât tell me what I want.
All my life, Iâve let other voices creep in, and theyâve drowned out my own.
Now my mind is strangely quiet. For the first time in so long, I hear myself clearly.
One word. All it takes to answer the only question that canât wait.
I stand and grab my bag, heading back the way I came. But it doesnât feel like Iâm moving backward.
It feels like the first step toward someplace new.