Itâs raining even harder when we leave the restaurant. The Garrisons offered to take me out for a late lunch slash early dinner after the game. Since the alternative was going home and staring at my phone, waiting for Conor to reply to any of my messages, I accepted.
Unease joins the spaghetti in my stomach when I check my phone for the hundredth time and still have no messages from him.
âHowâs your marathon training going?â Landon asks me as Hugh drives back toward my house to drop me off. âBecause that meal definitely set mine back a bit.â
I force a smile. âCould be going better.â
Conor has been too busy to run with me lately, and Iâm not very motivated to train by myself.
âWe should do some family runs while youâre both back for winter break,â Hugh says. âAll get in the groove together.â
âThat sounds very lame,â Landon says. âNext youâll be suggesting matching T-shirts.â
âOooh, that could be fun,â Allison says.
Landon snorts.
I donât say what Iâm thinking, that Iâm considering finally accepting my auntsâ invitation and returning to Ireland for the first time without my parents. My original plan was this summer, but I donât have any plans for winter break. And Iâm hoping to graduate with a job lined up, so my time will be more limited.
I wanted to talk to Conor about it first, because at some point he became that person for me. The one I run everything by, the one whose opinion matters most.
The one who walked away, after telling me he wouldnât.
Hugh pulls up alongside the curb outside my house. I unbuckle my seatbelt. âDonât worry about getting out,â I tell them. Itâs still raining steadily.
âTell him he played well,â Allison says softly.
I glance out the window, spotting the figure she already saw.
Well, at least I know heâs not lying in a ditch somewhere. I figured he was ignoring me on purpose.
I swallow. âI will. Thanks for coming.â
I climb out of the car, not bothering to pull up my hood as I approach the front door. Eveâs car isnât in the driveway, and thereâs no sign of his either.
Conor glances up, watching me walk toward him. Stands, shoving his hands into his pockets. Heâs been here for a while, his blue jacket soaked black and his dark hair shedding water.
âIâm sorry about earlier. Walking off.â His voice is hoarse. âI was having a shit day, obviously. I wasnât in the mood to talk.â
âItâs okay. Iâm sorry about the game.â
Rain has saturated my hair too, starting to slide down my face. Ruining Eveâs curls.
âNo. Itâs not okay.â He exhales. âI canât do this, Harlow.â
âThis?â
âUs.â
The pavement Iâm standing on feels like itâs shifting. Like the ground just got pulled out from under me. And all I can think to say is, âOh.â
âI thought I could. I never meant toâ¦We lost today. And it wasnât because Edgewood was the better team. It was because I was distractedâbecause Iâve distracted. We kept winning, and so I told myself it didnât matter. But I just let down every guy on the team, let down my coach, let down myself. And Iâm not blaming you at all. I made my own choices, and I have to live with them.â
The only sound is the patter of raindrops around us.
âYouâve got to be fucking kidding me.â
Conor flinches, and I realize that came from me.
â
of sex and snuggling and sharing, last night you took me to the banquet as your date and asked me if I wanted a relationship, and is how you end things? You lose one game and remember all you care about is hockey? Thatâs , Conor.â
âI donât just care about hockey. I care about you too, Harlow. Thatâs not the issue here. The problem is, whenever Iâm around you, I get sucked in. Nothing was supposed to happen between us at all. Then it was only going to be once. Then once turned into a hundred times! I canât focus on anything else when youâre around, and .â
âYou canât play hockey twenty-four seven, Conor. Itâs not physically possible. No other player on the team isââ
âIâm not another player on the team, Harlow! In the league, in this division! I need to be the . If I want any shot, I have to be the best. I have to work twice as hard, and I need to focus.â
âIf youâd won today, would we be having this conversation?â
He shakes his head. âI donât know. But we didnât. An undefeated season is gone. One fewer game for this season, maybe forever. I wish it were all different. That I didnât get that concussion and miss the combine and draft. That I wanted it a little less. But I want it, more than anything.â
âMore than me.â Iâm not sure if itâs a question or a statement. If thereâs anything I can say to change his mind, or if I even should.
He kicks at a stray pebble, not answering. Although that is an answer, I guess.
Finally, he says, âHow were we going to work, Harlow? Were you going to cut them out of your life, or was I supposed to accept theyâre in yours?â
âI didnât know the Garrisons were coming today,â I tell him. âI didnât them to come. I know how you feel about them, and Iâve tried to respect that. To keep it separate from us.â
âAnd you think itâs a coincidence they showed up right after they found out about us? Hughâs using you to get to me, and I canât deal with that. Canât have him showing up here. At least in Claremont, itâs on my own terms. This is my school. My team.
. Three of my teammates asked me who the people you were standing with were.â
Eveâs car pulls into the driveway. I watch her climb out with a box clutched to her chest. âGot a doughnut cake for you, birthday girl,â she calls out.
I want to hug Eve, because after this conversation all I want is to drink vodka and eat doughnuts all night.
And then I want to clap a hand over her mouth, when I see the look on Conorâs face.
âWhy are you guys out here?â Thereâs a pause, where Eve must notice my expression. âIâll be inside,â she says, then rushes into the house.
âItâs your birthday?â His voice sounds choked. âFuck, Harlow. I didnâtâ¦thatâs why the Garrisons were here?â
âYou should go, Conor.â My tone is sharp, because it hurts. This whole momentâ¦hurts.
âIâm sorry, Hayes.â
I want to snap at him not to call me that, but Iâm striving for indifference at this point. Struggling to stay upright.
âWeâre done, okay? You got your priorities straightened out. Donât text me. Donât talk to me. And donât expect me to wait for you.â
Conor nods once, his expression not even shifting. No reaction at all. Just apathy staring back at me, like he didnât hold me after every time we had sex last night. Like weâre back to being strangers. âHappy Birthday, Harlow.â
Then he turns and starts walking away, down the sidewalk headed toward his street a few blocks over.
I stay standing, inhaling the perfume of fresh rain. Watching the water fall around me and feeling the salty streams roll down my cheeks.
I told myself Iâd never, ever fall in love with Conor Hart.
Famous last words.