I DONâT KNOWÂ why Iâm racing through the airport. Thereâs no plane to catch, no deadline to slide under.
This isnât my to tell Wyn how I feel.
Instead, itâs the earliest moment I can possibly get to him. I donât want to miss another minute. So I barrel down the hallway, through the security exit, my bag scraping along behind me. I almost smack into the sliding glass doors as theyâre opening, then trip out onto the curb, blinking against the sun, shivering at the chill.
Not a single cab idles in the pickup/drop-off lane. I pull out my phone and hammer out a search for car services in Knottâs Harbor. The first number I dial gives me a busy signal.
I didnât know busy signals still existed. I let out a wordless, angry grunt and end the call, scanning the parking lot helplessly, as if hitchhiking might be a viable option.
Then I see it. A flash of red that makes my heart stop.
A car pulling into a space. A man jumping out, wind batting his sun-streaked hair around.
My lungs spasm from the shock of him, his presence always a bit more solid than anything else around me.
When our eyes lock, he freezes, the car door still ajar behind him. I seem to be floating across the lane until a car lays on its horn, letting me know Iâve cut it off.
I break into a jog. Wyn drifts forward too. We meet in an empty spot in the craggy lot.
âYouâre here,â he says, out of breath.
Iâm still working on regaining the power of speech.
âYou didnât say goodbye,â he says.
The best I can do in that moment is âI couldnât.â
His brows pinch. The moment holds.
âIs that all?â I ask.
âWhat?â
âDid you drive all the way here to say goodbye?â I say.
He scratches the back of his head, glances sidelong toward the thicket of trees at the edge of the lot, then back to me. The corners of his mouth twist, and my heart mimics the motion, wringing every last bit of love into my veins.
âWhy arenât you on the plane?â he says.
âItâs going in the wrong direction.â
His brow tenses on a slight shake of his head.
âYou said I need to figure out what I want,â I say. âThat I canât keep doing what other people think is right for me.â
âI meant it.â His voice rattles.
âDoes that include you?â I ask.
âWhat do you mean?â he says.
âI mean . . .â I move close enough to breathe him in, my shoulders melting with relief at his nearness. âDo get to tell me what or make me happy?â
His brow furrows. âI wasnât trying to do that.â
âYou were,â I say. âAnd I get why. I could come out to Montana, and maybe someday I realize I want toâI donât knowâget into or something.â
One side of his mouth quirks. âClowning?â
âOr marine biology,â I say. âI have to leave to study whales, or octopi.â
âCloser,â he allows.
âAnd everything could implode again,â I say. âWorse than last time. So badly we couldnât find our way back to each other.â
His chin dips once, his voice abrading. âIt could.â
âYouâre right that I donât know what I want to do next,â I admit. âIâm going to have to find some other job that I hate a little less and chip away at my loans while I figure it out. But I know what I donât want.
âI donât want to be tired all the time. I donât want to be on opposite schedules from everyone I love, or on call during dates. I donât want to be on my feet for eight hours at a time and have my knuckles bleed in the winter from overwashing my hands. I donât want to feel like I donât have time or energy to try anything new because everything I have is getting poured into a job I donât even . I donât want to live my life like itâs a triathlon and all that matters is getting to some imaginary ribbon. I want my life to be likeâlike making . I want to enjoy it while itâs happening, not just for where it might get me eventually.
âAnd I donât want to be across the country from you.
your family. I donât want to miss a single holiday with them. I donât want to go to sleep without being able to put my feet on your calves to warm them up, and I donât want to say goodbye to your rodeo shirt, and I donât want to let you leave here without understanding that I myself on this. And you can tell me to go right now, and I will, but you donât get to think itâs noble. You donât get to think youâre right.â
His eyes widen. âRight about ?â
âAbout all of it!â I cry. âThat I donât want you! That you canât make me happy! That if I go back to California right now it has to do with what want. That the lucky one in this relationship when itâs obviously always been me. That Grocery Gladiators is a real game, and that it makes sense to put glasses on the bottom rack of the dishwasher. You can tell me no, Wyn, but you canât tell yourself itâs what want. If youâre too afraid, if you canât have faith in me, then tell me to go, but donât convince yourself itâs what I wanted.â
â
,â he says coarsely.
My heart teeter-totters in my chest, readying itself to fly skyward or plummet.
Wyn takes hold of my face. âI scared.â
A beat of quiet. Nothing but our breath and the icy wind fluttering a curl across my face.
âOh,â I breathe out.
His slight smile unzips me, vertebra by vertebra. His fingers slip back into my hair. His jaw works as he swallows. âWhen I woke up this morning, the bed was already cold where youâre supposed to be.â
His gaze lifts, so light and clear, hardly any fog.
âI wouldâve done anything to bring you back to me for one last minute,â he says. âBut I couldnât, so I followed you. And if you hadnât come out here, I wouldâve bought a ticket. And if I got inside and you were already boarded, I wouldâve gotten on the plane. I wouldâve waited until we landed in Boston to talk to you. And if somehow I missed you in deboarding, I wouldâve found your next gate to talk. And as I was driving here, watching this stupid fucking plan form for how I would get to you and say goodbye in person, I realized why we can do this.â
My heart whirs, lifts toward him as if pulled by a magnet. âWhy?â
He smiles down at me, and it feels like a fist on my heart, a tight hug that verges on a heart attack. âBecause thereâs nowhere I wouldnât go for you. And if you get out to Montana and realize thereâs somewhere else you need to be, thereâs nothing Iâm not willing to do to make it work. Iâd rather have you five days a year than anyone else all the time. Iâd rather argue with you than not talk, and whether weâre together or weâre not, Iâm yours, so letâs be together, Harriet. As much as we can. As long as we can. As soon as we can. Everything else, weâll figure out later.â
âWyn,â I whisper shakily. His fingers twitch, tightening through my curls. âAre you saying I can come home?â
âIâm saying,â he murmurs softly, âitâs not unless youâre there.â
My arms twine around him, my heart speeding wildly as the wind batters us. âI love you,â I tell him.
âIn every universe.â He kisses me then, a windblown curl caught between our lips. Like itâs a first and a last. The end of one era and the beginning of another.
, I know,