âCome on, Lyric. Weâre going to get lunch.â I reach out to her, but she doesnât take my hand. Sheâs way too engrossed with an orange and black caterpillar thatâs creeping along the edge of the sidewalk. âIâm sure Mr. Caterpillar has somewhere to be, too.â She stares up at me, her big blue eyes full of curiosity and⦠contemplation. Always thinking, debating, and wondering, this little one.
I wave my outstretched fingers. âCome on, sweetie. You can have a smoothie when we get there.â
âStoreberry?â
âYes, strawberry.â
Bribery is usually my last tactic to motivate her, but my stomach is growling and I have a pile of work waiting for me at home that I need to review for a meeting scheduled on Monday. Lyric hums happily to herself for the remainder of the walk from the parking lot to the café. A breeze blows our hair across our faces and I breathe in the warm air, welcoming the first signs of spring. I enjoy all the seasons, but Iâve had enough of winter. I can only handle so much snow, sweater-weather, and slush.
The bell hanging on the café door chimes as we enter and I wave to Robbie, whoâs worked here for as long as I can remember.
âHow are you two doing today?â he asks.
âWeâre good. Busy today?â Almost all the tables are occupied this afternoon.
âYeah. The nice weather brings everyone out. You having the usual?â
âYes, please.â
He leans over the counter and smiles at Lyric. âStrawberry or orange today?â
Gripping my hand tighter, she leans against my leg and answers him with a shy smile âStoreberry.â
He winks at her. âThatâs my favorite, too.â
We step to the side to wait while he makes our lunch, and I bump into someone with his nose in a magazine.
âIâm sorry, I didnât see you,â I say, maneuvering around him to wait near the candy display.
âPiper?â
I pull the candy bar out of Lyricâs hand and put it back before looking up into a vaguely familiar handsome face.
It takes a few seconds for my mouth to move. âJosh. Hi⦠I didnât even recognize you.â
How is it possible for someone to change so much? The last time I saw Josh he was wiry thin, his brown hair trimmed in a military cut, and he wore silver-rimmed glasses that always had fingerprints on the lenses. He was sort of a nerd. A cute one, but still a nerd. Not anymore. He must have taken up working out because his arms and shoulders are double the size they used to be. His hair, longer and lighter, hangs just past his eyebrows in a messy but sexy way. The glasses are gone, along with the oversized sweatshirts, jeans, and old sneakers he used to live in. Now, he looks incredibly trendy and put together in black pants, a gray sweater, and black leather loafers.
âItâs been a long time,â he says. The unsure smile I remember is now relaxed and confident.
âYeah, it has.â
âYou look great, Piper.â
I wish I did, but I donât. In fact, Iâm pretty sure Iâm still wearing yesterdayâs makeup. The only thing different about me is the toddler hanging on to my hand trying to steal candy.
âThanksâ¦this is my daughter, Lyric.â
A brief flash of shock widens his eyes. âWow. Sheâs adorable. How old is she?â
âSheâs three.â
âDamn. She has your smile.â
Everyone says that, but I donât see it. All I see are Blueâs eyes and smile. I quickly shove him out of my mind and focus on Josh.
âSo, what are you doing here?â I ask. âAre you visiting your parents?â
He shakes his head. âNo. I meant to call you but time kept slipping away. I moved back here last year. Landed a great career, bought a house, went through a bad breakup, spent all my time fixing up said house, and here I am. What about you?â
âSimilar. Got a great job, got an apartment, got my heart broken, got pregnant, and spend my time chasing her around.â I glance toward the register when Robbie calls my name. âThatâs my order.â
âI gotta run, too. But hey, you want to grab dinner tomorrow night? We can catch up and shoot the shit.â
I havenât had dinner with a man in years. Everyone said being a single mom wouldnât prevent me from dating, but it has. Meeting guys is hard. And when I do meet one, either I donât think theyâre good enough to bring into our lives, or they donât want anything to do with a woman with a child. Or they just want sex. On rare occasion, Iâve met one whoâs actually looking for love, which is just as much a hard no for me as sex is. So, guess I canât put all the blame on the men, because I come with my own set of dysfunctions.
But this is Josh, and he doesnât come with any strings or expectations.
âOkay. Iâd like that.â
If Josh senses my slight hesitation, he doesnât show it. âGive me your number and Iâll call you tomorrow to get your address.â
We exchange numbers. After we go our separate ways, I head home to immerse myself in work while Lyric plays with her dolls on the floor. Sheâs placed a toy teacup and saucer in front of Acorn and is chattering on endlessly. Lyric is an incredibly sweet, undemanding child who keeps herself occupied for hours. She doesnât throw tantrums, and while she sometimes debates with me, she doesnât argue or defy. Acorn is a wonderful fur-sibling, always patient and attentive with Lyric and her imaginary adventures. Although we had a rocky start, I feel very blessed to have such a happy, content little family.
Content. The wordâthe thingâthat took away the only missing piece in our life. I turned fear, unexpected hurdles, and chaos into contentment. Into my form of contentment. Would Blue have been able to do the same? Would he have found what he wanted and needed in me and in our child if he had stayed and given us a chance?
Iâll probably never know. And sadly, neither will he.
âI canât believe youâre going out with Josh. We havenât seen him in forever.â
I glare at her reflection in my bedroom mirror as I put my earrings on. âDonât get crazy, Dee. Itâs only dinner as friends.â
âThatâs what it is today, but that doesnât mean in the future you wonât be getting it on. Maybe now that heâs hot heâs got some alpha vibes.â
âAlpha vibes? Maybe you two should hook up, then.â
âDo you really think I came over here just to babysit? Itâs the perfect excuse for me to check him out,â she teases.
The doorbell rings and I face her. âWell, heâs here, so you can. You still have to babysit, though. Do I look okay?â
She stands and looks me up and down. âYou look gorgeous as always. Why canât we be the same size so I can borrow your clothes?â
âTrust me, Iâd much rather be the same size as you.â Nobody understands how hard it is for me to find pants that arenât a mile too long or shoes that actually stay on my feet.
She follows me to the living room and sits on the couch with Lyric while I answer the door.
âSorry, Iâm early,â he says.
âThatâs okay, come on in. Someone wants to gawk at you.â
His eyebrow tweaks up and he steps inside. âHoly shit, Ditra!â He laughs when he sees her and she jumps up to hug him. âHow the hell have you been? I thought youâd be married to some rich guy by now and living in Paris.â
âIâm working on it. Did you bring your W-2?â
He grins. âI see you havenât changed.â
âNever. But you on the other handâ¦.â She eyes him like lunch. âIf Iâd known youâd end up looking like this I would have snagged you in high school myself.â
I wish I could flirt as effortlessly as Ditra does. Iâm not good at it and always end up saying something awkward or realize after the fact that I had something stuck in my teeth the entire time.
âDitra is babysitting for me.â I open the hall closet door and take out my coat. âBut sheâs admitted she only agreed to so she could check you out.â
âThatâs flattering and disturbing. You sure itâs safe to leave your daughter with her?â He smiles playfully at Ditra. âYou have any experience taking care of kids?â
âYes, lots. Iâve been dating them for years.â
âThat was a good one,â I say, leaning down to kiss Lyricâs forehead. âMommyâs going out for a little while and Aunt Dee is going to stay and play with you, okay?â
She nods without looking up from her favorite picture book thatâs open on her lap. Iâm not sure if I should be grateful or disappointed that sheâs not a little bit upset. I never go out at night, so this is new for her. I expected questions or brief pouting, but sheâs unconcerned.
âPiper, sheâll be fine. Go out and have fun for once.â She glances over at Josh. âAll this girl does is work. Iâm surprised youâre getting her out of the house.â
âWeâre leaving.â I grab Joshâs arm before Ditra can reveal more embarrassing facts about me. âDonât eat too much junk and donât forget to take Acorn out.â
âYes, Mom.â
Iâve never been to the steakhouse Josh is taking me to, and Iâm relieved he made a reservation because thereâs a line of people out the door when we pull into the parking lot. Iâm not one of those people who love food enough to wait forty minutes or longer for it with a pager in my hand. Iâd rather hit a drive-thru and grab a burger and fries and just be done with it.
From the moment we get in the car we fall into easy, relaxed conversation. Weâve run into each other and talked on the phone sporadically since we officially broke up, but that stopped years ago when I met Blue, and I have a hunch thatâs the same time Josh got involved, too. Being friends first and foremost has prevented time or distance from affecting us. Josh and I could probably go ten years without seeing each other and still be just as comfortable with each other as we were when we last saw each other. Right now, thatâs stability I could use in my life.
âAre you still working for the same company?â Josh asks as we open our menus.
The menu has a brown leather cover and is printed on parchment paper. It feels heavy and foreign in my hands and I long for the plastic laminated menus that my favorite diner has. I feel out of place sitting in this dim room with white tablecloth-covered tables and flickering candles. The piano music drifting from hidden speakers is probably meant to be romantic but I find it annoying, almost mocking.
I donât want to be in this fancy restaurant with Josh. I want to be in the diner with Blue eating hamburgers and drinking cherry soda.
âI am,â I reply. âBut now Iâm in marketing and ad campaigns. I love it, Iâm never bored.â
âThatâs better than answering phones, huh?â Years ago, he used to call the office and ask me strange questions in a fake accent just to break up the boredom of my day.
âDefinitely. So, what about you? Are you still in accounting?â
He puts his menu off to the side. âYeah, but only part time.â
I glance at him with budding curiosity. âOh? What are you doing with the other part of your time?â
âModeling and acting,â he says with a big smile.
I stare at him, waiting for him to say heâs just kidding. But heâs serious. âModeling and acting?â I repeat. âReally?â
He grabs a roll from the basket on the center of the table and takes a bite out of it. He chews and swallows before he answers. âYeah.â
âJosh! Thatâs so freakinâ amazing! What kind of work have you done?â
âNothing memorable or overly exciting yet. Fashion shoots, and a couple walk-on parts for television and a cable movie. Itâs a lot of fun. I never thought in a million years Iâd be doing anything like this.â
âIâm blown away. And so proud of you. I never even knew you wanted to model or act.â
âMe either. I just kind of fell into it. I met a photographer at the gym who asked if Iâd be interested in modeling and he hooked me up from there.â
âThatâs incredible. Can you show me any of it? Do you have pictures or the movies you were in? Iâd love to see.â
âYeah, I have some of the pictures and magazines at home. You should come by and Iâll show you.â
âOf course I will.â
Ditra will lose her mind when I tell her about this, and I wonder if Josh might be interested in taking her out as more than just friends. She could use a good, normal man in her life now that sheâs put her sexual escapades behind her.
I could use a normal man, too, but I donât want one. Thereâs only one man for me.
âYour daughter is adorable,â Josh says after the waiter comes to take our order. âAre you involved with her father?â
The mere mention of Blue gives me a small twitch in my chest. I sip my ice water, then shake my head. âNo. We broke up before I knew I was pregnant. He doesnât even know she exists.â
âDamn, thatâs harsh.â
âIâm not keeping her from him, Josh. I would never do that. I have no way to get in touch with him. I wish I did.â
âWas it serious? You and him?â
If the definition of serious is feeling like my heart was ripped out of my chest and abducted, then yes, it was serious.
âFor me it was, and I felt like it was for him, too.â I meet his hazel eyes. âItâs a really complicated situation.â
He nods with acceptance. âEnough said. Iâll make a deal with you. I wonât ask about your ex if you donât ask about mine. If you want to talk about him, go for it. If not, no big deal. None of my business.â
Relief ebbs through me, dissipating the anxiety and heartache that always comes when I think about Blue. âDeal. And same for you, if you want to talk, Iâm here.â
If I can hide my heartache and savor my memories in peace, then Iâm fine with Josh doing the same.
We share stories about our jobs and families over dinner, filling each other in on what we missed over the past few years. Itâs odd how so much is the same, but so much has changed, too.
âYou should take Ditra out,â I suggest when dessert arrives. âShe hasnât had much luck dating. Sheâs a little crazy, but I think sheâs ready for something serious.â
An odd smile touches his lips and he scoops up a spoonful of crème brûlée. âI think sheâs a little more than I can handle,â he admits. âAnd I gotta be honest, Iâm not ready to get involved with someone. My last relationship messed me up.â
Iâm all too familiar with the flash of pain in his eyes and the invisible wall his words build between us. Honestly, itâs all a welcome relief. Not because I want him to be hurt, but because he understands exactly how I feel.
Weâre on the same page.