: Chapter 32
Delilah Green Doesn’t Care
RIVER WILD BOOKS didnât open until ten, but Claire always arrived around nine, ready for her workday to begin. Some days, she was already perched at her desk by eight, sifting through invoices or perusing online catalogs, making schedules and trying to figure out how to work some e-commerce into the storeâs services. Especially this week, with Ruby staying at Joshâs new cabin in Winter Lake, she needed a distraction. Iris did her best to be available, but she had her own life, her own relationship to stress over, and god knew Astrid had enough on her plate lately.
Now, three days after what Claire knew was Delilahâs show at the Whitney, she unlocked the storeâs door and stepped into the fairy lightâilluminated space at eight forty-seven. She left the main lights off, like she always did until they opened, and flicked on the two computers behind the front counter, listening as they whirred to life and booted up the shopâs systems.
Her thoughts strayed as she waited, wandering without permission to Delilah, to how her show went, if sheâd gotten an agent. In the past few days, sheâd reached for her phone more than once, itching to text Delilah and ask about it, ask about her, ask anything. But she always stopped herself. There was no point, and as Delilah hadnât reached out to her either in the more than fourteen days since sheâd left Bright Falls, Claire had to assume the other woman agreed.
She rubbed her forehead, exhaustion making her eyes swim. She hadnât been sleeping great lately, which made absolutely no sense, but there it was, nonetheless. Sheâd even bought brand-new sheets and a new coverlet, new pillows and a new quilt to fold at the end of the bed. Nothing helped. It was like Delilahâs scent, the feel of her, was impressed into the walls, the mattress itself, and Claireâs bed was damned expensive. No way she was replacing that.
The point-of-sale program bloomed onto the computer screens, and Claire logged in to both registers. She had just come around the counter and was starting to weave through the shelves to her office when she saw them.
Claire had been trying to decide what to hang on the walls for a while now. She wanted some local art, a way to bring the community together, but thus far, no one had expressed real interest in selling their work in River Wild. Either that, or the artistâs style didnât fit with the bookstoreâs aesthetic, which Claire wanted to keep clean and simple. Over a year ago, sheâd taken down her motherâs choices, plastic-framed images of book covers, most of which were written by dead white dudes, and the walls had been blank ever since.
Until today.
She stood near the counter, her eyes roaming over the black-and-white photographs that now hung on her storeâs walls, all of them in distressed wooden frames the colors of a desert sunsetâterra-cotta and sage green, the palest dusky blue. The images were large, at least twenty by forty, and Claire saw familiar faces behind the glass of each one.
Her and Ruby at Vivianâs, Claireâs face pressed into her daughterâs hair.
Claire, Iris, and Astrid at the vineyard, Astrid in between the other two women, wineglasses in their hands, their mouths open in laughter, rolling rows of grapes blurred behind them.
Firelight in the darkness, Iris and Claire huddled on a log bench, Irisâs mouth near Claireâs ear as though sharing a secret.
Ruby on Joshâs shoulders in the hot springs, her arms spread and the most beautiful, euphoric smile on her face.
Image after image, Claireâs life surrounded her. Her friends, her family, her town. There was even a photo of the outside of Stellaâs, all rough wood and brass. She felt her throat thicken, and she was just about to call Iris and Astrid and ask them what the hell was going on when she saw one more photo.
A black-and-white image of one woman.
Claire. All alone.
Wading into Bright River five years ago in a lace dress.
She gasped, and her hand flew to her mouth. She spun around, eyes searching through the dim lighting. Astrid couldâve had access to all the other photos. She knew Delilah had sent her a file with the images sheâd taken during her time in Bright Falls. And this was the sort of thing Iris would do for herâorganize some amazing display of the exact kind of art and photographs Claire would want to populate her store.
But this photo, only one person couldâve hung it here. Only one person had it in their possession, and there was no reason sheâd ever give it to Astrid or Iris. No reason Claire could think of anyway. She walked swiftly through the store, hope and dread mingling in her gut. She angled around a freestanding shelf that held reference books, the reading area sheâd set up with soft brown leather chairs coming into view.
And in one of the chairs, Delilah Green sat with her elbows resting on her knees.
Everything in Claire frozeâher body, her breath, her heart. Thatâs what it felt like, her pulse pausing to see what was going to happen next.
âHi,â Delilah said.
Claire didnât say hi back. She couldnât. She just blinked, her mouth hanging wide open.
âIâm really here. Youâre not hallucinating,â Delilah said with a little smile. She had on a pair of gray skinny jeans and a fitted black V-neck tee, her lovely tattoos on display.
Claire snapped her mouth shut.
Delilahâs smile fell, and when she spoke again, her voice was soft. âSay something. Please.â
Claire finally got a good breath into her lungs. Her brain worked hard, trying to process all of this. She noticed one other pale green wooden frame resting on the coffee table in front of Delilah. It was far smaller than the ones on the walls, maybe a five by seven, and it was facedown so Claire couldnât see the image.
âHow . . . how was your show at the Whitney?â she finally said.
Delilah looked surprised. âIs that really what you want to ask me right now?â
âI . . . I donât know. I just . . . Iâve wondered.â
Delilahâs eyes lit up. âIt went well. Really well.â
Claire smiled. She couldnât help it. She wanted good things for Delilah, even if those good things didnât include Claire. But then again, Delilah was here. She was in Bright Falls, in Claireâs store. Curiosity and confusion warred in her mind.
âWhat are you doing here?â she asked.
Delilah laughed, the sound small and a little nervous. âI thought youâd never ask.â
Claire took a step forward, then another and another until she found herself sinking into the chair across from Delilah, the coffee table in between them.
âSo?â she asked when Delilah didnât continue.
Delilah swallowed and nodded, then scooted to the edge of her chair, lacing her hands together. âFirst, I wanted to bring you these photos.â
âYou couldâve mailed them.â Her tone came out harsher than she intended. Or maybe not. She felt her defenses rising, and maybe they needed to. She didnât think sheâd even admitted it to herself yet, but this woman broke her heart when she left two weeks ago. She wouldnât go through that again. Sheâd already been there so many times with her dad, with Josh. So whatever Delilahâs game was here, Claire wasnât playing it.
Delilah took a deep breath. âI could have, but that brings me to my other reason for coming here.â
âAnd whatâs that?â
âYou.â
Such a tiny word, but it landed like a bomb. âMe.â
âYou.â
âWhat about me?â
Delilah looked down at her boots as though gathering her thoughts. She chewed on her lower lip like she did when she was nervous, and Claire had to force herself to stay put, to not go to Delilah and touch her face, tell her it was going to be okay. She needed to hear whatever Delilah was going to say, and she needed Delilah to tell her on her own. Claire couldnât help her with this one.
âWhat about me, Delilah?â
Delilah reached for the frame on the table, sliding it into her hands and staring down at whatever image there was behind the glass.
âAfter I left,â she said, âI didnât have much time to think about anything. The show at the Whitney was coming up, and I knew I couldnât blow it. I worked night and day getting photos ready, and then, when it was time for the show, time for everything I ever wanted, it didnât feel like I thought it would.â
Claire frowned. âWhat do you mean?â
Delilah glanced up at her, eyes clear and bright, almost feverish, like maybe she hadnât slept very well in a couple of weeks either. âThe night of the show was everything I dreamed. But it also wasnât, because I was . . . I was doing it all alone.â
Claire felt something in her chest start to crack, but she rolled her shoulders back, lifted her chin. âIâm sure you couldâve found a date.â
âOh, Iâm sure I couldâve too.â
Claire pressed her mouth flat.
âBut I didnât want a date,â Delilah said. âI wanted you.â
Claire shook her head, but she could feel those all-important defenses crumbling one by one, her eyes already starting to sting. âYou left,â she said, because it was all she could think to say. âYou left without a single word of explanation.â
Delilah nodded. âI did. And it was a mistake and Iâm sorry.â
Again, so simple, those words, but the way her voice curled around them, Claire found herself believing them, which was dangerous.
âAnd the bet?â she asked. âDid you really try to get close to me to annoy Astrid?â
Delilah watched her, and Claire held her breath.
âYes,â Delilah said after a second. âIt was a shitty thing to do, and I wonât make excuses for it. But I swear to you, Claire, after we kissed that first time at Blue Lily, it was only about you. About us. Probably even before that. You were so beautiful and sweet, but I was never very good with beautiful and sweet. I didnât know how to . . . I donât know. Accept it. Treat it well.â
Claireâs eyes filled, and she shook her head. She appreciated the honesty, but it still stung that this whole thing had started out as a game to Delilah.
But it hadnât ended that way, had it? It hadnât even progressed that way. Claire knew that was also true, because she felt it, because Delilah was sitting in her bookstore. Sheâd come back. Sheâd come back for Claire.
Delilah got up, photo frame still in her hands, and rounded the coffee table until she was right in front of Claire. She sat on the table, their knees barely touching, and leaned into Claireâs space, just a little. Just enough that Claire leaned too, her body instinctively wanting to be closer.
When she was settled, Delilah flipped the frame around so Claire could see the image. It was in full color, a selfie of two women lying on their backs in a bed, dark hair a mess against the white and lavender linens, smiles on their faces, cheeks pressed to cheeks.
Claire and Delilah.
Delilah and Claire.
Claire remembered this photo, that last time they spent in bed before everything went pear-shaped, after their roller skating date and Delilah had spent the night. The next morning, theyâd made love and then slipped on tank tops and underwear and eaten bagels in bed. Afterward, Delilah had grabbed her phone and taken photo after photo of the two of them, tickling Claire to get her to laugh, kissing her senseless to get her to be serious.
It was the perfect morning. The perfect way to wake up. The perfect everything.
âThis is what I want,â Delilah said. âMy whole life, this is what Iâve wanted. A best friend. Someone who gets me, who accepts me. Someone who fights like hell to get me to see that they love me. Someone who lets me love them back. Someone whoâs so goddamn beautiful, she makes my toes curl. Someone who calls me on my bullshit. Someone who makes me laugh. Someone who makes me look at her like this and looks at me the same way. Someone who . . . whoâs my home.â
Tears spilled freely and silently down Claireâs cheeks. âBut . . . New York. Your art. Youââ
âI can take photos anywhere. I can take trips when I need to. You can come with me. Weâll figure it out.â
âYou hate Bright Falls.â
Delilahâs shoulders fell a bit, but she shook her head. âI hated who I was here. How I felt here. But you changed all that. Ruby changed all that. Iris. Hell, even Astrid changed all that.â
Claire frowned. âAstrid? Have you . . . have you talked to her?â
Delilahâs smile was small, a little sad. âShe came to New York. To the Whitney.â
âShe did?â
Delilah nodded. âAnd we talked. A lot. She stayed a couple daysânot with me, hell noâand we had dinner and worked through a lot. Weâve still got a long way to go, but itâs a start. Itâs what I want. She helped me get these photos shipped out so theyâd arrive yesterday, and we actually flew back together last night. She let me into the store at the crack of dawn this morning.â
Claire knew that Astrid hadnât been around for the past few days, but she always responded to Claireâs and Irisâs texts that she was fine, giving nothing away as to where she was or what she was doing.
Claire took the photo from Delilahâs hands. In the image, she was so happy. God, she was happy. She was . . . she was in love. She could admit it now. More than sheâd ever been in love with anyone in her whole life. But . . .
âIâm a lot, Delilah,â she said softly, looking down at the photo. âIâve got a kid, an ex who will always, always be in my life. I canât just fly off to New York at a momentâs notice, and youâre used to this wild kind of life. Iâm a small-town girl. I always will be. Josh built a houseââ
âI know. Astrid told me.â
âThen you know Iâm here to stay. Ruby comes first. Always, and I canâtââ
âIâm not asking you to put her second. I would never do that.â Delilah took the frame from Claireâs hands and set it on the table. Then she twined their fingers together and pressed her forehead to Claireâs. âIâm putting you first, Claire. In case you couldnât tell, thatâs whatâs happening here.â
Claire laughed, more tears spilling over. âReally?â
âReally. I want to try this. I adore Ruby, you know I do. And Iâll follow your lead for how you want to handle us when it comes to her. Iâll do whatever you want. Astridâs already looking into a place for me to rent in downtown andââ
âBut your art.â Claire leaned back so she could see Delilah clearly. âYou need to be in New York. If you get an agent, youââ
âIâve got an agent.â Delilah smiled. âHer name is Julia Vasquez and sheâs a goddamn shark and Iâve already told her Iâll be spending a lot of time in a little Oregon town for the foreseeable future.â
Claire squeezed Delilahâs hands. âThatâs so amazing. I knew you could do it. Congratulations.â
âThank you, yes, itâs all amazing, but did you hear the part where I said Iâd be spending a lot of time here? Apartment? You? Me? A life?â
Claire grinned. This was happening. Delilah had left, but sheâd come back.
For her.
For good.
Claire had no idea how it would work, if it would work. All she knew was that she wanted this. She wanted Delilah Green. And for once, goddammit, she was going to let herself have exactly what she wanted.
âClaire?â Delilah tilted her head to meet Claireâs eyes.
âCan we stop talking now?â
Delilah frowned. âUm, I guess, but are youââ
Claire didnât let her finish. She closed the space between them and pressed her mouth to Delilahâs, framing the other womanâs face like it was a precious work of art. God, sheâd missed her. And from the way Delilah gasped a little, then slid her hands to Claireâs hips and pulled her to the edge of her chair, both of their thighs parting to fit together like puzzle pieces, Delilah felt the same.
âIs that a yes?â Delilah asked between kisses.
Claire pulled back. âTo which part?â
âAll of it. You. Me. Us.â
âItâs a yes,â Claire whispered against her mouth. âYes to all of it.â