Eve and I are walking across campus when I spot him. Them. My grip tightens on the coffee cup Iâm holding, the whole reason we stopped by campus before leaving for Thanksgiving break, which starts tomorrow. Iâm dropping Eve off at the airport before driving to Claremont.
âHarlow, earth to Harlow!â
âWhat?â I ask Eve.
âWhat are you looking at?â She follows my gaze, then smirks. âOh, look, itâs our third roommate. Letâs go say hi!â
âEve, noââ
Itâs too late. Iâm already being tugged in Conorâs direction. Heâs standing with a woman Iâm certain must be his mom, pointing at the main humanities building.
Iâm about to meet Anna Hart.
I donât know very much about her. I know she and Hugh dated for a long time before she got pregnant. I know Hugh moved on quickly with Allison, who didnât know Anna existed. Thanks to Conorâs little bombshell at the track yesterday, I know the history isnât as ancient as I thought.
And Iâm guessing she views me as guilty by association the same way Conor didâ¦or does. Iâm not really sure how he views me.
I watch the two of them talk.
Itâs obvious theyâre close. Thereâs no awkwardness or unfamiliarity as they chat and smile. I assumed they must be, but itâs different to witness it in person. I canât picture Hugh Garrison as part of the scene in front of me, and itâs strange to think he could have been. And even weirder to realize that, if he was, I would have never met Conor. He would have gone to Brighton or some other school with an amazing hockey program.
âConor!â Eve calls out.
His eyes snap to her, then slide over to me as we approach.
Up close, Anna Hart is stunning. Shoulder-length hair the same dark shade as Conorâs frames a heart-shaped face. And she has his eyes, the shifting shade of bluish gray. Theyâre in my head, even if he inherited hers. Sheâs dressed casually, wearing jeans and an oversize sweater.
âHarlow and I are leaving for break,â Eve is saying. âI just saw you and wanted to say hi.â
I appreciate sheâs making it clear coming over here was her idea, because Conor is giving no indication how he feels about me meeting his mom. He easily could have orchestrated this introduction himself. But he didnât, and that feels purposeful.
Anna looks to me as soon as Eve says my name. Thereâs no malice in her expression, only interest.
I shift under her scrutiny. The deck is stacked against me, but for some reason I donât allow myself to dwell on, I really want her to like me.
âHi, Ms.âuh, Dr. Hart. Iâm Harlow.â
I hold out a hand for her to shake. Her grip is firm.
âAnna is fine,â she tells me.
âItâs very nice to meet you.â
âYou, too.â Anna is still studying me, her expression more curious than anything.
I wonder if Conor has ever mentioned me to her, or if sheâs relying on town gossip the same way I am. Allison and Hugh are very involved in the Claremont community. Iâm sure them taking in an orphan was the gossip equivalent of local headlines.
Based on my eavesdropping over the years, my understanding is that things fell apart between Anna and Hugh before she learned she was pregnant, and Allison entered the picture soon after.
Maybe a moral gray area.
Maybe just terrible timing.
But it resulted in Anna raising a son alone. I kind of want to tell her that she did an amazing job.
âIâm Eve,â Eve says.
Anna smiles. âNice to meet you, Eve.â
I shove my hands into my pockets, avoiding Conorâs gaze.
âWell, we should get going. Good luck tonight, Conor.â
I start walking before anyone can say anything, praying Eve will follow.
She does.
âSheesh. Slow down a little, will you?â
âYou donât meet a fuck buddyâs parents, Eve,â I hiss. âI you pulled me over there!â
âHis mom seemed perfectly nice. And I hate to break it to you, Harlow, but you and Conor Hart are not . You are full-on dating, which is obvious to everyone whoâs been around you two recently. Except you. And maybe him.â
âYouâre wrong,â I tell her, but Iâm not positive she is.
âHayes!â is shouted behind me.
I turn to see Conor jogging toward me.
Eve gives me a , then keeps walking. âIâll meet you at the car.â
âIâm sorry,â I blurt, when he reaches me. âEve saw you and pulled me over before I couldââ
âItâs fine, Harlow. I just, uh, realized I wonât see you until after break. Wanted to say Happy Thanksgiving.â
I raise one eyebrow. âYou do know Iâm Canadian, right? We celebrated weeks ago.â
He snorts. âYeah, I know youâre Canadian. But we go to an American school and live in America and youâre celebrating on Thursday, right?â
âRight.â
âYeah, so, Happy Thanksgiving.â He glances over one shoulder at his mom, whoâs reading a plaque next to the giant elm in front of the library. âI should go. See you.â
Our gazes connect, neither of us moving. For one wild moment, I think heâs going to step forward and kiss me, the way he did at the track on Monday.
But he doesnât. He takes one step back, then two.
âHappy Thanksgiving, Conor.â
He grins. âThanks.â
Then he turns and jogs back toward his mom. I spin and continue walking toward the parking lot and a waiting Eve.
Weâll be in the same town for Thanksgiving. But he made no mention of us seeing each other or hanging out.
And I know that means no matter what changed between us, some things havenât.
Some things .