âHave you decided what youâre doing for Emersonâs birthday?â Allysa asks.
Allysa and Marshall threw a first birthday party for their daughter, Rylee, that was so big, it was worthy of a Sweet Sixteen. âIâm sure Iâll just let her have a smash cake and give her a couple of presents. I donât have room for a big party.â
âWe could do something at our place,â Allysa offers.
âWho would I invite? Sheâll be one; she has no friends. She canât even talk.â
Allysa rolls her eyes. âWe donât throw kidsâ parties for our babies. We throw them to impress our friends.â
âYouâre my only friend, and I donât need to impress you.â I hand Allysa an order from the printer. âAre we doing dinner tonight?â
We get together for dinner at least twice a week at their place. Ryle occasionally pops by, but I purposefully plan my visits on nights heâs on call. I donât know if Allysa has ever noticed. If she has, she probably doesnât blame me. She says itâs painful watching Ryle when Iâm around because she also suspects he still has hope for us. She prefers to spend time with him when Iâm not present.
âMarshallâs parents are coming into town today, remember?â
âOh yeah. Good luck with that.â Allysa likes Marshallâs parents, but I donât think anyone truly looks forward to hosting their in-laws for an entire week.
The front door chimes, and Allysa and I both look up at the same time. I doubt her world starts to spin like mine does, though.
Atlas is walking toward us.
âIs thatâ¦â
âOh, God,â I mutter under my breath.
âYes, he is a god,â Allysa whispers.
What is he doing here?
And why does he look like a god? It makes the decision Iâve been weighing that much more difficult. I canât even find my voice long enough to say hello to him. I just smile and wait for him to reach us, but the walk from the door to the front counter seems like itâs expanded by a mile.
He doesnât take his eyes off me as he makes his way over. When he reaches us, he finally acknowledges Allysa with a smile. Then he looks back at me as he sets a plastic bowl with a lid on the counter. âI brought you lunch,â he says casually, as if he brings me lunch every day and I should have been expecting it.
Ah, that voice. I forgot how far it reaches.
I grab the bowl, but I donât know what to say with Allysa hovering next to me, watching us interact. I glance at her and give her the look. She pretends not to notice, but when I donât stop staring at her, she eventually yields.
âFine. Iâll go flower the⦠flowers.â She walks away, giving us privacy.
I turn my attention back to the lunch Atlas brought. âThank you. What is it?â
âOur weekend special,â Atlas says. âItâs called why are you avoiding me pasta.â
I laugh. Then I cringe. âIâm not avoidâ¦â I shake my head with a quick sigh, knowing I canât lie to him. âI am avoiding you.â I lean my elbows onto the counter and cover my face with my hands. âIâm sorry.â
Atlas is quiet, so I eventually look up at him. He seems sincere when he says, âDo you want me to leave?â
I shake my head, and as soon as I do, his eyes crinkle a little at the corners. Itâs barely a smile, but it causes a warmth to tumble down my chest.
Yesterday morning when I ran into him, I said so much. Now Iâm too confused to speak. I donât know how Iâm supposed to have a full-on conversation with him about everything thatâs been going through my mind over the last twenty-four hours when I feel so tongue-tied around him.
He had the same impact on me when I was younger, but I was more naïve back then. I didnât know how rare men like Atlas were, so I didnât know how lucky I was to have him in my life.
I know now, which is why it terrifies me that I might screw this up. Or that Ryle might screw this up.
I lift the bowl of pasta he brought. âIt smells really good.â
âIt is good. I made it.â
I should laugh at that, or smile, but my reaction doesnât fit the conversation. I set the bowl aside. When I look at him again, he can see the war in my expression. He counters with a reassuring look. Not much is said between us, but the nonverbal cues weâre trading are saying enough. My eyes are apologizing for my silence over the last twenty-four hours, heâs silently telling me itâs okay, and weâre both wondering what comes next.
Atlas slides his hand slowly across the counter, closer to mine. He lifts his index finger and skims it down the length of my pinkie. Itâs the smallest, most tender move, but it makes my heart flip.
He pulls his hand back and clenches his fist as if he might have felt the same thing I did. He clears his throat. âCan I call you tonight?â
Iâm about to nod when Allysa suddenly bursts through the door to the back, wide-eyed. She leans in and whispers, âRyle is almost here.â
My blood feels like it freezes in my veins. âWhat?â I donât say that so sheâll repeat it. I say it because Iâm shocked, but she repeats herself anyway.
âRyle is pulling in. He just texted.â She waves a hand toward Atlas. âYou have ten seconds to hide him.â
Iâm sure Atlas can see the absolute fear in my expression when I look at him, but he very calmly says, âWhere do you want me?â
I point to my office and rush him in that direction. Once weâre in the office, I second-guess myself. âHe might come in here.â I cover my mouth with a shaky hand while I think, and then point to my office supply closet. âCan you hide in there?â
Atlas looks at the closet and then looks at me. He points at the door. âIn the closet?â
I hear the front door chime, and Iâm filled with even more urgency. âPlease?â I open the closet door. It isnât the most ideal place to hide an actual human, but itâs a walk-in closet. Heâll fit just fine.
I canât even look him in the eye when he moves past me and into the closet. I could die right now. This is so mortifying. All I can do is murmur, âIâm so sorry,â as I close the door.
I do my best to compose myself. Allysa is chatting with Ryle when I exit my office. He greets me with a nod, but his attention is back on Allysa. Sheâs digging through her purse for something.
âThey were in here earlier,â she says.
Ryle is tapping his fingers impatiently.
âWhat are you looking for?â I ask her.
âKeys. I accidentally brought them with me, and Marshall needs the SUV to get his parents from the airport.â
Ryle looks irritated. âAre you sure you didnât set them aside when I told you I was coming to get them?â
I tilt my head, focusing on Allysa. âYou knew he was coming?â How could she forget to tell me he was on his way here when Atlas showed up?
She reddens a little. âI got sidetracked by⦠unexpected events.â She holds up her hand in victory. âFound them!â She drops them in Ryleâs palm. âOkay, bye, you can leave now.â
Ryle makes a move like heâs about to go, but then he turns and sniffs the air. âWhat smells so good?â
His and Allysaâs eyes meet the bowl at the same time. Allysa pulls it to her, cradling it. âI cooked lunch for me and Lily,â she lies.
Ryle raises an eyebrow. âYou cooked?â He reaches for the bowl. âI have to see this. What is it?â
Allysa hesitates before handing him the bowl. âYeah, itâs chicken⦠baraba doula⦠meat.â She looks at me and her eyes are wide. She is such a horrible liar.
âChicken what?â Ryle opens the bowl and inspects it. âIt looks like shrimp pasta.â
Allysa clears her throat. âYeah, I cooked the shrimp in⦠chicken stock. Thatâs why itâs called chicken barabadoulameat.â
Ryle puts the lid back on and looks at me with concern as he slides the bowl across the counter back to Allysa. âIâd order pizza if I were you.â
I force a laugh, but so does Allysa. Both of us laughing makes our reaction seem way too compulsory for a joke that wasnât even funny.
Ryleâs expression narrows. He takes a couple of steps back, a suspicious look in his eye. He must be used to the two of us having inside jokes that he isnât a part of, because he doesnât even question us. He spins and walks out of the flower shop in a rush to get the keys to Marshall. Allysa and I both stand as still as statues until weâre sure heâs left the building and is way out of earshot. Then I look at her incredulously.
âChicken barbawhat? Did you just completely make up a new language?â
âI had to say something,â she says defensively. âYou stood there like a lump! Youâre welcome.â
I wait a couple of minutes to make sure Ryle has had time to leave. I walk out front to ensure Ryleâs car is gone. Then I regretfully walk into my office and head to the supply closet to inform Atlas heâs in the clear. I exhale before opening the door.
Atlas is waiting patiently, his arms crossed as he leans against a shelf, as if being hidden in a closet doesnât bother him in the least.
âIâm so sorry.â I donât know how many apologies it will take to make up for what I just asked Atlas to do, but Iâm prepared to say it a thousand more times.
âIs he gone?â
I nod, but rather than exit the closet, Atlas grabs my hand, pulls me in and closes the door.
Now weâre both in the closet.
The dark closet. But not so dark that I canât see the flicker in his eyes that indicates heâs holding back a smile. Maybe he doesnât absolutely hate me for this.
He releases my hand, but itâs so cramped in here for the two of us, parts of him are grazing parts of me. My stomach knots, so I press my back into the shelf behind me in an attempt not to press into him, but it feels like heâs draped over me like a warm blanket. Heâs so close, I can smell his shampoo. I very calmly try to breathe through my nerves.
âWell? Can I?â he asks, his voice a whisper.
I have no idea what heâs asking me, but I want to answer with a confident yes. Rather than blurt out my consent to a question I donât even know, I silently count to three. Then I say, âCan you what?â
âCall you tonight.â
Oh. He jumped right back into the conversation we were having out front, as if Ryle never even interrupted us.
I pull in my bottom lip and bite down on it. I want to say okay because I want Atlas to call me, but I also want Atlas to know that me hiding him from Ryle inside of this closet is probably on par with how the rest of our interactions will go since Ryle is always going to be in the picture, considering we share a child.
âAtlasâ¦â I say his name like something awful is about to follow it up, but he interrupts me.
âLily.â He says my name with a smile, like nothing I could possibly add to his name would be awful.
âMy life is complicated.â I donât intend for it to come out like a warning, but it does.
âI want to help you uncomplicate it.â
âIâm scared your presence is going to complicate it even more.â
He raises an eyebrow. âIâll complicate your life or Ryleâs life?â
âHis complications become my complications. Heâs the father of my child.â
Atlas dips his head ever so slightly. âExactly. Heâs her father. Heâs not your husband, so you shouldnât allow your concern for his feelings to persuade you to give up what could be the second-best thing to ever happen to you.â
He says that with such conviction, my heart feels like itâs tumbling down my rib cage like a Plinko chip. The second-best thing to ever happen to me? I wish his confidence in us were contagious. âWhatâs the first-best thing to ever happen to me?â
He looks at me pointedly. âEmerson.â
Hearing him call my daughter the best thing to ever happen to me makes me damn near melt. I hug myself and hold back my smile. âYouâre going to make this difficult for me, huh?â
Atlas slowly shakes his head. âDifficult is the last thing I want to be for you, Lily.â He moves and the door begins to open, spilling light into the closet. He faces me with one hand on the door and the other on the wall. âWhenâs a good time to call you tonight?â He seems so at ease with this conversation, it makes me want to pull him back into the closet and kiss him so that maybe some of his assurance and patience will seep into me.
My mouth feels like cotton when I say, âWhenever.â
His eyes settle on my lips for a beat, and I feel the look all the way to my toes. But then Atlas closes the door, shutting me alone inside the closet.
I deserved that.
A mixture of embarrassment, nervousness, and maybe even a little bit of desire is flooding my cheeks. I remain unmoving until I hear the faint chime of the front door being opened.
Iâm fanning myself when Allysa opens the closet door moments later. I quickly drop my hands to my hips to hide what Atlasâs presence does to me.
Allysa folds her arms across her chest. âYou hid him in the closet?â
My shoulders fall with my shame. âI know.â
âLily.â She sounds disappointed in me, but what would she rather I have done? Reintroduced them to one another? âI mean, Iâm glad you did it, because Iâm not sure how that would have turned out, but⦠you hid him in the closet. You just shoved him in here like an old coat.â
Her rehashing the moment isnât helping me recover from it. I move toward the front of the store with Allysa on my heels. âI had no choice. Atlas is the one guy on this earth Ryle would never approve of me dating.â
âI hate to break it to you, but thereâs only one guy on this earth Ryle would approve of you dating, and thatâs Ryle.â
I donât respond to that because Iâm terrified that sheâs right.
âWait,â Allysa says. âAre you and Atlas dating?â
âNo.â
âBut you just said heâs the one guy Ryle would never approve of you dating.â
âI said that because if Ryle had seen him here, thatâs what he would have assumed.â
Allysa folds her arms over the counter and looks crestfallen. âIâm feeling very left out right now. Thereâs a huge gap you need to fill in.â
âGap? What do you mean?â I try to look busy by pulling a vase toward me and moving some of the flowers around. Allysa takes the vase from me.
âHe brought you lunch. Why did he bring you lunch if the two of you arenât actively talking? And if youâre actively talking, why didnât you tell me about it?â
I pull the vase back from her. âWe ran into each other yesterday. It was nothing. I havenât even spoken to him since before Emmy was born.â
Allysa grabs the vase again. âI run into old friends every day. They donât bring me lunch.â She slides the vase back to me. Weâre using it like a conch shell, as if we need it for permission to speak.
âYour friends probably arenât chefs. Thatâs what chefs do: They cook people lunch.â I slide the vase back to her, but she says nothing. Sheâs concentrating so hard, itâs like sheâs attempting to read my mind to get past all the lies she thinks Iâm spewing. I pull the vase back from her. âItâs honestly nothing. Yet. Youâll be the first to know if anything changes.â
She looks momentarily satisfied by that response, but thereâs a flicker of something in her face before she looks away. I canât tell if itâs concern or sadness. I donât ask her, because I know this is hard for her. I imagine the idea of any man bringing me lunch who isnât Ryle probably makes her a little sad.
In Allysaâs idea of a perfect world, she would have a brother who never hurt me, and I would still be her sister-in-law.