âI canât believe you let me sleep for that long.â Itâs been ten minutes, and my stomach is still rolling from embarrassment. âDid you finish reading the whole journal?â
âI stopped after I read about our first kiss.â
Thatâs good. Thatâs not too embarrassing. But if he would have read about the first time we had sex while I was sleeping in the seat next to him, Iâm not sure I could have recovered.
âThis is so not fair,â I mutter. âYou have to do something mortifying so the scales even out, because right now I feel like Iâve completely ruined our night.â
Atlas laughs. âYou think me doing something to mortify myself will make you feel better about tonight?â
I nod. âYes, thatâs the law of the universe. Eye for an eye, humiliation for humiliation.â
Atlas taps his thumb on his steering wheel as he massages his jaw with his free hand. Then he nudges his head toward his phone, which is sitting in the cupholder. âOpen the Notes app on my phone. Read the first one.â
Oh, wow. I was kidding, but I snatch up his phone so fast. âWhatâs your password?â
âNine five nine five.â
I enter the numbers and then glance over his home screen while I have it open. Every app is tucked neatly into a folder. He has zero unread texts and one unread email. âYouâre a neat freak. Who has one unread email?â
âI donât like clutter,â he says. âSide effect of the military. How many unread emails do you have?â
âThousands.â I open the Notes app and click on the most recent one. As soon as I see the two words at the top, I drop the phone, pressing it facedown on my thigh. âAtlas.â
âLily.â
I can feel my embarrassment being swallowed up by a warm wave of anticipation falling over me. âYou wrote me a Dear Lily letter?â
He nods slowly. âYou were asleep for quite a while.â When he glances at me, his smile falters, like heâs worried about whatever it is he wrote. He faces forward again, and I can see the roll of his throat.
I lean my head against the passenger window and begin to read silently.
My throat is so thick with burgeoning tears, I canât even verbally respond to what I just read. I set the phone on my leg and wipe at my eyes. I hate that heâs driving right now, because if we were parked, Iâd throw my arms around him and hug him tighter than heâs ever been hugged. Iâd probably kiss him, too, and pull him into the backseat, because no one has ever said such heartbreakingly sad things in such a sweet way to me before.
Atlas reaches across the seat and grabs his phone. He drops it back into the cupholder, but then he reaches for my hand. He threads his fingers through mine and squeezes my hand while staring straight ahead. That move causes a commotion in my chest. I wrap my other hand over the top of his, and holding hands like this reminds me of all the bus rides when weâd just sit in silence, sad and cold, holding on to each other.
I stare out the window, and he stares straight ahead, and neither of us says a word on our drive back to the city.
We stop and grab to-go burgers just two miles from my flower shop. Atlas knows I donât want Emerson to be up too far past her bedtime, so we eat in the parking lot of Lily Bloomâs. Our conversation since getting back into the city and ordering burgers has been much lighter. It isnât lost on me that Iâm not mortified anymore. Him being vulnerable with me seemed to be the reset button I needed for our date to get back on track.
Weâve been discussing all the places weâve traveled. He has me beat by a long shot, considering the time he spent in the Marines. Heâs been to five different countries, and the only place Iâve been outside of the country is Canada.
âYouâve never even been to Mexico?â Atlas asks.
I wipe my mouth with a napkin. âNever.â
âDid you and Ryle not have a honeymoon?â
Ugh. I hate the sound of his name in the middle of this date. âNo, we eloped in Vegas. Didnât have time for a honeymoon.â
Atlas takes a sip of his drink. When he looks at me, his eyes are piercing, like heâs hoping to unpack the thoughts Iâm not saying. âDid you want a wedding?â
I shrug. âI donât know. I knew Ryle never wanted to get married, so when he said we should go to Vegas and get married, I saw it as a window of opportunity that might close. I guess I felt like eloping was better than not marrying him at all.â
âWhat if you get married again? You think youâll do it differently?â
I laugh at that question, and nod immediately. âAbsolutely. I want it all. Flowers and bridesmaids and shit.â I pop a fry into my mouth. âAnd romantic vows, and an even more romantic honeymoon.â
âWhere would you go?â
âParis. Rome. London. I have no desire to sit on a hot beach somewhere. I want to see all the romantic places in Europe and make love in every city and take pictures kissing in front of the Eiffel Tower. I want to eat croissants and hold hands on trains.â I drop my empty container of fries into the sack. âWhat about you?â
Atlas reaches for my free hand, and he holds it. He doesnât answer me. He just smiles at me and squeezes my hand, like what he wants is a secret thatâs too soon to spill.
Holding his hand feels like such a natural thing. Maybe because we used to do this so much as teenagers, but sitting in this car with him and not holding his hand feels more out of place than holding hands does.
Even with the hitch I put into our date by falling asleep, the entire night has felt easy and comfortable. Being near him is second nature. I trace a finger over the top of his wrist. âI need to go.â
âI know,â he says, rubbing his thumb over mine. Atlasâs phone pings, so he reaches for it with his free hand and reads the incoming text. He sighs quietly, and the way he drops his phone back into the cupholder makes me think heâs irritated with whoever just texted him.
âEverything okay?â
Atlas forces a smile, but itâs a pathetic attempt. I see right through it, and he knows it. He breaks eye contact and looks down at our hands. He flips mine over until itâs faceup, and he begins to trace the lines in my palm. His finger feels like a lightning rod, zapping electricity from my hand throughout the rest of my body. âMy mother called me last week.â
That confession takes me aback. âWhat did she want?â
âI donât know, I ended the call before she could tell me, but Iâm pretty sure she needs money.â
I thread our hands together again. I donât know what to say to him. That has to be hard, not hearing from your mother for almost fifteen years, and then she finally reaches out when she needs something. It makes me so grateful that my mother is a huge part of my life.
âI didnât mean to drop that on you when youâre in a hurry. We should save some conversation for our second date.â He smiles at me, and it instantly flips the mood. Itâs remarkable how his smile can dictate the feelings occurring inside my own chest. âCome on, Iâll walk you to your car.â
I laugh because my car is literally two feet away. But Atlas rushes around the front of his car and opens my door, then helps me out. And then, with one step each, weâre at my car.
âFun walk,â I tease.
He flashes a brief smile, and I donât know if he means for it to be seductive, but Iâm suddenly warm all over, despite the cold weather. Atlas peeks over my shoulder, nudging his head toward my car. âDo you have more journals in there?â
âJust had the one on me.â
âShame,â he says. He leans a shoulder against my car, so I do the same, facing him.
I have no idea if weâre about to kiss. I wouldnât object, but I also just ate onions after sleeping for over an hour, so I doubt my mouth is at its most appealing right now.
âDo I get a redo?â I ask.
âA redo of what?â
âThis date. Iâd like to be awake for the next one.â
Atlas laughs, but then his laugh dissipates. He stares at me for a beat. âI forgot how fun it is being around you.â
His words confuse me because fun is not what I would call our time together back then. It was sad, at best. âYou think those times were fun?â
He lifts a shoulder in a half shrug. âI mean, it was the lowest point of my life, sure. But my memories with you from back then are still some of my favorites.â
His compliment makes me blush. Iâm glad itâs dark.
But heâs right. It was a low point in both of our lives, but being with him was still somehow the highlight of my teenage years. I guess fun is the perfect way to describe what we made of it. And if we somehow had fun together at such a low point in both of our lives, it makes me wonder what we could be like at our highest.
Itâs the exact opposite of the thoughts I had about Ryle last week. Iâve experienced the lowest of lows with Atlas, and he has never been anything but incredible and respectful to me. Yet, the man I chose to be my husband somehow disrespected me in ways no one deserves⦠all while we were at such a high point in our lives.
Iâm grateful for Atlas because I know heâs the standard I now hold people to. Heâs the standard I should have held Ryle to from the very beginning.
Thereâs a convenient gust of cold air that sweeps between us. It would be the perfect excuse for Atlas to pull me to him, but he doesnât. Instead, the quietness builds between us until thereâs only one thing left to do. Either kiss or say goodnight.
Atlas brushes a strand of my hair from my forehead. âIâm not going to kiss you yet.â
I hope my disappointment isnât obvious, but I know it is. I practically deflate in front of him. âIs it my punishment for falling asleep?â
âOf course not. Iâm just feeling inferior after reading about our first kiss.â
I sputter laughter. âInferior to who? Yourself?â
He nods. âTeenage Atlas through your eyes was quite the charmer.â
âSo is adult Atlas.â
He groans a little, like he already wants to change his mind about the kiss. The groan makes things feel a little more serious. He moves fluidly away from the car until heâs standing right in front of me. I press my back against my car door and look up at him, hoping heâs about to kiss the hell out of me.
âAlso, you asked me to take things slow, soâ¦â
Dammit. I did do that. I said very slow, if I remember correctly. I hate myself.
Atlas leans forward, and I close my eyes. I feel his breath scattering across my cheek right before he presses a quick kiss against the side of my head. âGoodnight, Lily.â
âOkay.â
Okay? Why did I say âokayâ? Iâm so flustered.
Atlas laughs softly. When I open my eyes, heâs backing away from me, heading to the driverâs side of his car. Before he leaves, he rests his arm on the roof of the car and says, âI hope you get some sleep tonight.â
I nod, but I donât know if thatâs going to be possible. I feel like every bit of caffeine Iâve consumed today has just kicked in all at once. I wonât be able to sleep after this date. Iâm going to be thinking about the letter he let me read. And when Iâm not thinking about that, Iâm going to be replaying our first kiss in my head all night long, wondering what part two is going to feel like.
âJust keep swimming, swimming, swimmingâ¦â
The familiar sounds of Finding Nemo are coming from Allysa and Marshallâs living room when I open the door to their apartment.
When I pass by the kitchen, Marshall is standing in front of the refrigerator with both doors wide open. He nods a greeting, and I wave, but I donât make small talk with him because Iâm aching to hug Emerson.
When I enter the living room, Iâm shocked to find Ryle on the sofa. He didnât mention he would be off work tonight. Emerson is asleep on his chest, and Allysa is nowhere around.
âHey.â
Ryle doesnât look up to greet me, but he doesnât have to look up for me to know something is bothering him. I can see the firm set of his jawâa dead giveaway that heâs angry. I want to pick up Emerson, but she looks peaceful, so I leave her on Ryleâs chest. âHow long has she been asleep?â
Ryle is still staring at the television, one of his hands protectively on Emmyâs back, the other behind his head. âSince this movie started.â
I recognize the scene, which lets me know itâs been about an hour.
Allysa finally walks into the room, breathing life into it. âHey, Lily. Iâm sorry sheâs asleep; we tried so hard to keep her awake.â We give each other a two-second glance. She silently apologizes that Ryle is here. I silently tell her itâs okay. Theyâre siblingsâI canât expect him not to show up when he knows sheâs babysitting his daughter.
Ryle motions for Allysa. âCan you put Emerson on her pallet? I need to talk to Lily.â
The curtness in his voice alarms both me and Allysa. We give each other another look as she pries Emerson off Ryleâs chest. The ache to hold her only grows wider as Allysa lays her on the pallet.
Ryle stands up, and for the first time since I walked in, he makes eye contact with me. He gives me a once-over, noticing the outfit and the heels Iâm wearing. I can see the slow roll of his throat. He nudges his head upward, indicating he wants to speak to me on the rooftop balcony.
Whatever conversation this is, he wants complete privacy.
He exits the apartment to head to the roof, and I look toward Allysa for guidance. Once Ryle is out of earshot, she says, âI told him you had an event tonight.â
âThanks.â Allysa swore she wouldnât tell Ryle about my date, but I canât figure out why heâs so angry if he doesnât know where Iâve been. âWhy is he upset?â
Allysa shrugs. âNo idea. He seemed fine when he showed up an hour ago.â
I know better than anyone how Ryle can seem fine one second and absolutely the opposite of fine the next. But I usually know whatâs setting him off.
Did he find out I went on a date? Did he find out it was with Atlas?
Once Iâm on the roof, I locate Ryle leaning over the ledge, looking down. My stomach is already in knots. My heels click against the floor as I make my way over to him.
Ryle glances at me briefly. âYou look⦠nice.â He says it in a way that makes it seem like an insult rather than a compliment. Or maybe thatâs just my guilt.
âThank you.â I lean against the ledge, waiting for him to speak up about whatever is bothering him.
âDid you just get back from a date?â
âI had an event.â I go along with Allysaâs lie. Thereâs no point in being honest with him, because itâs too soon to know if this thing with Atlas is going anywhere yet, and the truth would only upset Ryle more. I press my back against the ledge and fold my arms over my chest. âWhat is it, Ryle?â
He waits a beat before he finally speaks. âIâve never seen that cartoon before tonight.â
Is he just trying to make small talk or is he angry about something? Iâm confused by this whole conversation.
Until Iâm not.
I swear, I can be such an idiot sometimes. Of course heâs upset. He once read all my journal entries. He knows how much that movie means to me after having read everything I wrote about it, but I guess now that heâs finally seen it, heâs connected the dots. And by the looks of it, heâs added some dots of his own.
He turns now, facing me with an expression full of betrayal. âYou named our daughter Dory?â He takes a step closer. âYou chose my daughterâs middle name because of your connection with that man?â
I feel an immediate pulsing in my temples. That man. I break eye contact with him while I think of how to properly communicate this. When I chose the name Dory as Emersonâs middle name, I didnât do it for Atlas. That movie meant something to me long before Atlas came into the picture, but I probably should have thought twice about it before going through with naming her that.
I clear my throat, making room for the truth. âI chose that name because the character inspired me when I was younger. It had nothing to do with anyone else.â
Ryle releases an exasperated, disappointed laugh. âYouâre a real piece of work, Lily.â
I want to argue with him, to further prove my point, but Iâm getting nervous. His demeanor is bringing back every fear of him Iâve ever held. I try to defuse the situation by escaping it.
âIâm going home now.â I start to head toward the stairs, but heâs faster than me. He moves past me, and then heâs in between me and the door to the stairwell. I take a nervous step back. I slip my hand in my pocket in search of my phone in case I need to use it.
âWeâre changing her middle name,â he says.
I keep my voice firm and steady when I respond. âWe named her Emerson after your brother. Thatâs your connection to her name. Her middle name is my connection. Itâs only fair. Youâre reading too much into it.â
I try to sidestep around him, but he moves with me.
I glance over my shoulder to measure the distance between myself and the ledge. Not that I feel like heâd throw me over it, but I also didnât think heâd be capable of shoving me down a flight of stairs.
âDoes he know?â Ryle asks.
He doesnât have to say Atlasâs name for me to know exactly who heâs talking about. I feel the guilt swallowing me, and Iâm worried Ryle can sense it.
Atlas does know Emersonâs middle name is Dory, because I made it a point to tell him. But I honestly didnât name my daughter for Atlas. I named her for me. Dory was my favorite character before I even knew Atlas Corrigan existed. I admired her strength, and I only named her that because strength is the one trait I hope my daughter has more than anything else.
But Ryleâs reaction is making me want to apologize, because Finding Nemo does mean something to both Atlas and me, and I knew it when I ran after Atlas on the street to tell him about her middle name.
Maybe Ryle deserves to be angry.
Therein lies our issue, though. Ryle can be angry, but that doesnât mean I deserve everything that accompanies his anger. Iâm falling back into that same trap of forgetting that nothing I could do would warrant his extreme past reactions.
I may not be perfect, but I donât deserve to fear for my life every time I make a mistake. And this may have been a mistake that deserves more discussion, but I donât feel comfortable having a conversation about it with Ryle on a rooftop without witnesses.
âYouâre making me nervous. Can we please go back downstairs?â
Ryleâs entire demeanor changes as soon as I say that. Itâs like he punctures against the sharp insult. âLily, come on.â He moves away from the door and walks all the way to the other side of the balcony. âWeâre arguing. People argue. Christ.â He spins away from me, giving me his back now.
Here comes the gaslighting. Heâs attempting to make me feel crazy for being scared, even though my fear is more than warranted. I stare at him for a moment, wondering if the argument is over or if he has more to say. I want it to be over, so I open the door to the stairwell.
âLily, wait.â
I pause because his voice is much calmer, which leads me to believe he might be capable of a verbal disagreement rather than an explosive fight tonight. He walks back over to me with a pained expression. âIâm sorry. You know how I feel about anything related to him.â
I do know, which is precisely why Iâve had such conflicting feelings about Atlas potentially being a part of my life again. The simple idea of having to confront Ryle with that information makes me want to vomit. Especially now.
âIt upset me to find out that our daughterâs middle name might have been something you chose to deliberately hurt me. You canât expect something like that not to affect me.â
I lean against the wall and fold my arms over my chest. âIt had nothing to do with you or Atlas and everything to do with me. I swear.â Just mentioning Atlasâs name out loud seems to get it stuck in the air between us, like itâs a tangible thing Ryle can reach out and punch.
Ryle nods once with a tight expression, but it appears that he accepts that answer. I honestly donât know if he should. Maybe I did do it subconsciously to hurt him. I donât even know at this point. His anger is making me question my intentions.
This all feels so grossly familiar.
Weâre both quiet for a while. I just want to go to Emerson, but Ryle seems to have more to say, because he moves closer, placing a hand on the wall beside my head. Iâm relieved that he doesnât look angry anymore, but Iâm not sure I like the look in his eye that has replaced the anger. Itâs not the first time heâs looked at me this way since our separation.
I feel my entire body stiffen at his gradual change in demeanor. He moves a couple of inches closer, too close, and dips his head.
âLily,â he says, his voice a scratchy whisper. âWhat are we doing?â
I donât respond to him because Iâm not sure why heâs asking that. Weâre having a conversation. One he started.
He lifts a hand, fingering the collar of my jumpsuit, which is peeking out beneath my coat. When he sighs, his breath moves through my hair. âEverything would be so much easier if we could justâ¦â Ryle pauses, maybe to think about the words heâs about to say. The words I donât want to hear.
âStop,â I whisper, preventing him from finishing.
He doesnât complete his thought, but he also doesnât back away. If anything, it feels like he moves even closer. Iâve done nothing in the past that would make him think itâs okay to move in on me like this. I do nothing that gives him hope for us other than foster a civil coparenting relationship. Heâs the one always trying to push my boundaries and straddle the line of what Iâm okay with, and Iâm honestly tired of it.
âWhat if Iâve changed?â he asks. âReally changed?â His eyes are full of a mixture of sincerity and sorrow.
It does nothing for me. Absolutely nothing. âI donât care if youâve changed, Ryle. I hope you have. But itâs not my responsibility to test that theory.â
Those words hit him hard. I see it when he has to take a moment to swallow whatever unkind response he knows he shouldnât give me right now. He stops talking, stops looking at me, stops hovering.
He huffs, frustrated, and then backs away and makes his way toward the stairs, hopefully to his own apartment. He slams the door shut behind him.
I donât immediately follow, for obvious reasons. I need space. I need to process.
This isnât the first time heâs asked me what weâre doingâlike our divorce is some long game Iâm playing. Sometimes heâll say it in passing, sometimes in a text. Sometimes he makes it a joke. But every time he suggests how senseless our divorce is, I recognize it for what it is. A manipulation tactic. He thinks if he treats our divorce like weâre being silly, Iâll eventually agree with him and take him back.
His life would be easier if I took him back. Allysaâs and Marshallâs lives might even be made easier by it, because they wouldnât have to dance around our divorce and their relationship with him.
But my life wouldnât be easier. Thereâs nothing easy about fearing for your safety any time you make a misstep.
Emersonâs life wouldnât be easier. Iâve lived her life. Thereâs nothing easy about living in that kind of household.
I wait for my anger to dissipate before heading back downstairs, but it doesnât. It just builds and builds with every step I descend. I feel like the reaction Iâm having is too big for what just happened, or maybe thatâs just how Iâve conditioned myself to feel when Iâm around Ryle. Maybe itâs a combination of that and my lack of sleep. Maybe itâs the date with Atlas that I almost ruined. Whatever it is thatâs making me react so intensely catches up with me right outside of Allysaâs apartment door.
I need a moment to collect my emotions before being near my daughter, so I sit on the floor of the hallway to cry it out. I like to shed tears in private. Happens quite regularly, unfortunately, but Iâve been finding myself getting overwhelmed a lot. Divorce is overwhelming; being a single mother is overwhelming; running a business is overwhelming; dealing with an ex-husband who still scares you is overwhelming.
And then thereâs that splinter of fear that creeps into my conscience when Ryle says something to suggest our divorce was a mistake. Because sometimes I do wonder if my life wouldnât be so overwhelming if I still had a husband who shared some of the burdens of raising his child. And sometimes I wonder if Iâm overreacting by not allowing my daughter to have overnights with her own father. Relationships and custody agreements donât come with a blueprint, unfortunately.
I donât know if every move I make is the right one, but Iâm doing my best. I donât need his manipulation and gaslighting on top of that.
I wish I were at home; I would walk straight to my jewelry box and pull out the list of reminders. I should take a picture of it so I always have it on my phone in the future. I definitely underestimate how difficult and confusing interactions with Ryle can be.
How do people leave these cycles when they donât have the resources I had or the support from their friends and family? How do they possibly stay strong enough every second of the day? I feel like all it takes is one weak, insecure moment in the presence of your ex to convince yourself you made the wrong decision.
Anyone who has ever left a manipulative, abusive spouse and somehow stayed that course deserves a medal. A statue. A freaking superhero movie.
Society has obviously been worshipping the wrong heroes this whole time because Iâm convinced it takes less strength to pick up a building than it does to permanently leave an abusive situation.
Iâm still crying a few minutes later when I hear Allysaâs door open. I look up to find Marshall exiting the apartment carrying two bags of trash. He pauses when he sees me sitting on the floor.
âOh.â His eyes dart around, as if heâs hoping someone else will help me. Not that I need help. I just needed a moment of respite.
Marshall sets the bags on the floor and walks over. He takes a seat across from me and stretches out his legs. He scratches uncomfortably at his knee. âIâm not sure what to say. Iâm not good at this.â
His discomfort makes me laugh through my tears. I toss up a frustrated hand. âIâm fine. I just need to cry sometimes when Ryle and I fight.â
Marshall pulls up a leg like heâs about to stand up and go after Ryle. âDid he hurt you?â
âNo. No, he was fairly calm.â
Marshall relaxes back to the floor, and I donât know why, maybe itâs because heâs the unlucky one in front of me right now, but I unload all my thoughts on him.
âI think thatâs the problemâthat he actually had a right to be mad at me this time, and he was relatively calm about it. Sometimes we can argue, and it doesnât lead to anything more than a disagreement. And when that happens, I start to question whether I overreacted by asking for a divorce. I mean, I know I didnât overreact. I know I didnât. But he has this way of planting seeds of doubt in me, like maybe things could have gotten better if I just gave him more time to work on himself.â I feel bad that Iâm laying all this on Marshall. Itâs not fair to him because Ryle is his best friend. âIâm sorry. This isnât your issue.â
âAllysa cheated on me.â
Marshallâs words stun me silent for a good five seconds. âWh-what?â
âIt was a long time ago. We worked through it, but dammit, it hurt like hell. She broke my heart.â
Iâm shaking my head in an attempt to process this information. He keeps talking, though, so I try to keep up.
âWe werenât in a good place. We were going to different colleges and trying to make long distance work, and we were young. And it wasnât even anything big. She had a drunk make-out with some guy at a party before she remembered how amazing I am. But when she told me⦠Iâve never been so angry in my life. Nothing had ever cut me like that did. I wanted to retaliate: I wanted to cheat on her, so sheâd know how it felt; I wanted to slash her tires and max out her credit cards and burn all her clothes. But no matter how mad I was, when she was standing right in front of me, I never, not for one second, thought about physically hurting her. If anything, I just wanted to hug her and cry on her shoulder.â
Marshall looks at me with sincerity. âWhen I think about Ryle hitting you⦠I get absurdly angry. Because I love him. I do. Heâs been my best friend since we were kids. But I also hate him for not being better. Nothing you have done and nothing you could do would excuse any manâs hands on you out of anger. Remember that, Lily. You made the right choice by leaving that situation. You should never feel guilty for that. Pride is the only thing you should feel.â
I had no idea how heavily any of this was weighing on me, but Marshallâs words lift so much weight off me, I feel like I could float.
Iâm not sure those words could mean more coming from anyone else. Thereâs something about getting validation from someone who loves Ryle like a brother thatâs reaffirming. Empowering.
âYouâre wrong, Marshall. Youâre pretty damn good at this.â
Marshall smiles and then helps me to my feet. He picks up his trash bags and I head back inside their apartment to find my daughter and hug her so tight.