The wheels hit the tarmac with a jolt that bounces the entire plane. I exhale, loosening my grip on the armrest.
Iâm home, I guess.
I donât know quite what home is anymore. If itâs Ireland or Somerville or the town where I grew up. Theyâre all some different version of it, none exactly right.
The plane parks at the gate, and everyone starts standing and moving around like theyâll be able to disembark anytime soon. I look out the oval window, down at the orange vests waving lights and the luggage carts driving around. Itâs dark out, but the bustling airport casts so much light itâs hard to tell.
I pull my phone out of my pocket and text Hugh and Allison.
No response from Hugh, which isnât all that surprising. Heâs not a big texter.
Fifteen minutes later, they open the door and passengers start exiting.
The man seated beside me, wearing a tweed jacket that smells like tobacco, helpfully grabs my carry-on out of the overhead compartment when he gets his own. I thank him and then head down the aisle, my steps uneven as my cramped muscles readjust to movement. I pass the flight crew and then head up the enclosed walkway that leads into the main section of the airport, breathing in non-recycled air for the first time in ten plus hours.
I had an amazing trip to Ireland, but it will be a long time before I can talk myself into taking that long of a flight again.
I stop at the first restroom I see so I can use a bathroom bigger than a postage stamp, then continue on to Customs. Thereâs a long line to wait in, then a series of questions about why Iâm a Canadian coming from Ireland planning to remain in the US for the next six months.
Once Iâm past Customs I head to baggage claim, down a long corridor with several security guards lining it. I leave the secure section of the airport, stopping to buy a bottle of water at one of the convenience stores. Iâm tempted to get a coffee as well, but I should go to sleep as soon as I get to the Garrisonsâ.
It takes fifteen minutes to find the right, empty carousel assigned to my flight. I text Allison and Hugh another update on my progress through the airport, then cover a yawn. Itâs just past six p.m. here, and my tired brain canât even do the math for what time that is in Ireland. I donât even know what day it is.
The carousel shudders into movement, bags dropping onto the sheets of silver metal. The tired passengers around me perk up as we all scan the suitcases. Mine is black and generic, and I wish Iâd remembered to tie a ribbon to the handle as lots of black, generic suitcases shuffle by.
Finally, I spot the familiar pink whale tag. Step forward and reach for it, only for another hand to get there first.
âI got it.â
Iâm frozen, all of a sudden. Because I recognize that arm, the body attached to it. That voice, right next to me.
Conorâs amused by my surprise. He studies me gaping at him, carefully setting my suitcase down between us.
âWhat are you doing here?â I choke out.
I canât believe heâs . It seems like I should pinch myself or poke him or do something to confirm this isnât my brain losing it after a long day of travel and little sleep.
âHadnât been to Seattle in a while. Decided to take a quick trip.â
âThere are nicer places to visit than the .â
âYou werenât at any of those places, though.â Heâs holding a colorful bouquet of flowers, which I donât realize until heâs offering them to me. âThese are for you. I tried to get shamrocks. Weirdly, they didnât have any.â
I snort. âThanks.â
âSee any leprechauns?â
I shake my head. âConorâ¦the Garrisons will be here any minute to pick me up andââ
âTheyâre not coming.â
âWhat do you mean, theyâre not coming?â I dig my phone out of my pocket. âThey were supposed toââ
âCome here, Harlow.â
Conor grabs my hand and pulls me toward the wall covered with safety posters, away from the crowd clustered around the carousel. Thanks to a mixture of shock and exhaustion, I let him.
âTheyâre not coming because I told them I was picking you up.â
I stare at him. âYou toââ
âThatâs not important.â For a third time, he cuts me off. âJust let me say this, and then we can go. We donât have to talk on the way home, if you donât want to. Iâll just drop you off at their place and that will beâ¦that.â
âWhat will be that?â Iâm not sure if heâs making no sense because my head is foggy or because heâs making no sense. I never considered heâd be the one waiting for me at the airport, and I havenât fully processed it yet.
Conor sucks in a deep breath. âYou asked me if Iâd play hockey, if Hugh had. Remember?â
My nod is slow.
âDo you remember what my answer was?â
âThat youâd have to decide if you love hockey more than you hate him.â
âYeah. And I decided I do.â
âOkayâ¦â Iâm not sure what else to say. Not sure what it has to do with him being here. I already know he loves hockey.
Conor smiles, noticing my confusion. âAsk me if I love somethingâsomeoneâmore than I love hockey.â
I stare at him.
He rolls his eyes. âFollow through, Hayes.â
God, I missed hearing him call me that. Missed everything about him, actually. And I donât know what Landon was talking about, because Conor does not look like shit. He looks gorgeous, and thereâs a flare of lust low in my stomach as I look at him for the first time.
âDo you love something more than you love hockey?â I ask.
âSomeone. I love , Harlow.â
The ground is shifting again, no longer solid. âNo, you donât.â
Conor nods his head, like he was waiting for that response. âDo you know what Iâve done, since we broke up? Moped around. Ask Aidan and Hunter, theyâll happily bitch about what a moody asshole Iâve been. We keep winning games, and itâs like white noise around me. When we were in Colorado, Aidan brought back a different girl every night. I didnât touch anyone. All Iâve done is sit around and think about how badly I fucked it up with you. How much I wish I could go back and ask you on a date the first time I saw you, freshman year, instead of pretending you didnât exist.â
âWe didnât , Conor. That implies there was something to break.â
âThere was. There . For me, at least.â
âWhat about next week, if you lose against Driscoll?â
âYou memorized my hockey schedule?â
âNot the point, Conor!â Although, yeah, I didnât mean to tell him that. So far, Iâve been unsuccessful at finding another sport to follow.
He blows out a long breath. âI freaked out, okay? Things were getting really serious between usâwhich I was good with. Which I wanted. But it happened right at the same time that hockey stopped going well. I knew you were distracting me. Knew how much I thought about you, how easy it was to get wrapped up in us. But as long as I was winningâ¦it felt like having it all. Then we lost.â
âAnd you still had me, but it felt like nothing.â
â
. Thatâs not what Iâm saying at all. I justâa lot of shit was coming at me at once. The Garrisons were there, and the guys were all disappointed in me, and whenever thatâs happenedâwhenever Iâve been stressed and overwhelmed and upset, about anythingâIâve focused on hockey. Iâve pushed away everything else, because itâs simple when Iâm on the ice. Because itâs my happy place.â
He glances down, shoving his hands into his pockets.
âI panicked, and I should have told you I needed time. We were supposed to go out that night, and I wasnât in the right headspace for it. I felt like I needed to watch every hour of film on our next opponents. Add in extra weight sessions, more ice time.â
âI get why you ended things, Conor. What I donât get is why youâre here, explaining it all over again.â
âBecause I had plans, Harlow Hayes, and you messed them all up. Because I didnât think that I could turn those plans into reality and also be with you. But then, I realizedâ¦â Conor focuses on me, his gaze blue, unwavering steel. âMess up all my plans, Harlow. Because I donât want to be part of any plans unless they include you. I need you in my life, for anything to mean something.
I play in my first pro game, I want you to be behind the bench wearing my jersey. If youâre not, itâll just be another hockey game.â
I can feel the prickling in my eyes. But I donât realize Iâm actually until Conor reaches out and wipes the tears away with his thumbs. Thereâs no rain to hide them this time.
âWhat about the Garrisons?â I whisper. âYou were right, I donât know howââ
âWeâll figure it out. My whole life, Iâve tried to be different from Hugh. But Iâve carried his mistakes around, instead of letting anything go. I let it impact my life, let it affect things with you. I wonât do that anymore, I promise.â
âI love you, Conor.â
It comes out like a scratchy whisper, and I sort of want to uncap my water bottle and take a sip. But that doesnât seem very romantic, and I forget about hydrating after catching the look on his face. I can see itâhow much he loves me. How much he meant every word of what he just told me.
âI love you so much that I memorized your hockey schedule even though I was supposed to stop caring about the sport. So much that Iâve probably run a marathon in the past few weeks, trying to escape thinking about you. So much thatââ I glance away, not sure how heâll take this one. Again, itâs borderline on romanticism. âSo much that I talked Clayton Thomas into pretending to hook up with me so that youâd hate me and I couldnât beg you to change your mind.â
âYou didnât have sex with Thomas?â
I shake my head. âI havenât been with anyoneâ¦since you.â
His exhale is long and relieved.
âYou didnât seem thatâ¦bothered.â
Conor raises one eyebrow. âI punched a hole in my bedroom wall, Hayes.â
âOh. Uh, sorry.â
He laughs, then rubs a palm across his face. âYou ready to go home?â
I nod. âYeah.â
He grabs my suitcase and my hand, and we head toward the automatic doors that lead outside.
.
With him next to me, it feels like it might be.