Itâs almost 9:30 at night, and I have no missed calls. Emerson has been asleep for an hour and a half, and sheâs usually awake by six in the morning. I go to bed around ten because if I donât get at least eight hours of sleep, I function at the capacity of a zombie. But if Atlas doesnât call before ten, Iâm not sure Iâll be able to sleep at all. Iâll wonder if I should have apologized seventy more times for hiding him in a closet today.
I walk to the bathroom sink to start my nightly skin-care routine, and I take my phone with me. Iâve carried it with me every step since he showed up at lunchtime today and told me heâd call me tonight. I should have clarified what tonight meant.
To Atlas, tonight could mean eleven.
To me, it could mean eight.
We probably have two completely different definitions for what morning and night even mean. Heâs a successful chef who gets home to unwind after midnight, and Iâm in my pajamas by seven in the evening.
My phone makes a noise, but it isnât a ringtone. Itâs making a noise like someone is trying to FaceTime me.
Please donât be Atlas.
I am not prepared for a video chat; I just put face scrub on. I look at the phone and sure enough, itâs him.
I answer it and quickly flip the phone around so that he canât see me. I leave it on my sink while I speed up the cleansing process. âYou asked if you could call me. This is a video chat.â
I hear him laugh. âI canât see you.â
âYeah, because Iâm washing my face and getting ready for bed. You donât need to see me.â
âYes, I do, Lily.â
His voice makes my skin feel tingly. I flip the camera around and hold it up with an I told you so expression. My wet hair is still wrapped in a towel, Iâm wearing a nightgown my grandmother probably used to own, and my face is still covered in green foam.
His smile is fluid and sexy. Heâs sitting up in bed, wearing a white T-shirt, leaning against a black wooden headboard. The one time I went to his house, I never went into his bedroom. His wall is blue, like denim.
âThis was definitely worth the decision to video-chat,â he says.
I set the phone back down, facing me this time, and finish rinsing. âThanks for lunch today.â I donât want to give him too much praise, but it was the best pasta Iâve ever had. And it was two hours old before I even had a chance to take a lunch break and eat it.
âYou liked the why are you avoiding me pasta?â
âYou know it was great.â I walk to my bed once Iâm finished in the bathroom. I prop my phone on a pillow and lie on my side. âHow was your day?â
âIt was good,â he says, but heâs not very convincing with the way his voice drops on the word good.
I make a face to let him know I donât believe him.
He looks away from the screen for a second, like heâs processing a thought. âItâs just one of those weeks, Lily. Itâs better now, though.â His mouth curls into a slight grin, and it makes me smile, too.
I donât even have to make small talk. Iâd be happy just staring at him in complete silence for an hour.
âWhatâs your new restaurant called?â I already know itâs his last name, but I donât want him to know I googled him.
âCorriganâs.â
âIs it the same kind of food as Bibâs?â
âSort of. Itâs fine dining, but with an Italian-inspired menu.â He rolls onto his side, propping his phone on something so that heâs mirroring my position. It feels like old times when weâd stay up late chatting on my bed. âI donât want to talk about me. How are you? Howâs the floral business? Whatâs your daughter like?â
âThatâs a lot of questions.â
âI have a lot more, but letâs start with those.â
âOkay. Well. Iâm good. Exhausted most of the time, but I guess thatâs what I get for being a business owner and a single mother.â
âYou donât look exhausted.â
I laugh. âGood lighting.â
âWhen does Emerson turn one?â
âOn the eleventh. Iâm going to cry; this first year went so fast.â
âI canât get over how much she looks like you.â
âYou think so?â
He nods, and then says, âBut the flower shop is good? Youâre happy there?â
I move my head from side to side and make a face. âItâs okay.â
âWhy just okay?â
âI donât know. I think Iâm tired of it. Or tired in general. Itâs a lot, and itâs tedious work for not very much financial return. I mean, Iâm proud that itâs been successful and that I did it, but sometimes I daydream about working in a factory assembly line.â
âI can relate,â he says. âThe idea of being able to go home and not think about your job is tempting.â
âDo you ever get bored of being a chef?â
âEvery now and then. Itâs why I opened Corriganâs, honestly. I decided to take more of an ownership role and less of a chef role. I still cook several nights a week, but a lot of my time goes to keeping them both running on the business side.â
âDo you work crazy hours?â
âI do. But nothing I canât work a date night around.â
That makes me smile. I fidget with my comforter, avoiding eye contact because I know Iâm blushing. âAre you asking me out?â
âI am. Are you saying yes?â
âI can free up a night.â
Weâre both smiling now. But then Atlas clears his throat, like heâs preparing for a caveat. âCan I ask you a difficult question?â
âOkay.â I try to hide my nerves over what heâs about to ask.
âEarlier today you mentioned your life was complicated. If this⦠us⦠becomes something, is it really going to be an issue for Ryle?â
I donât even hesitate. âYes.â
âWhy?â
âHe doesnât like you.â
âMe specifically or any guy you might potentially date?â
I scrunch up my nose. âYou. Specifically you.â
âBecause of the fight at my restaurant?â
âBecause of a lot of things,â I admit. I roll onto my back and move my phone with me. âHe blames most of our fights on you.â Atlas is clearly confused, so I elaborate without making things too uncomfortable. âRemember when we were teenagers and I used to write in my journal?â
âI do. Even though you never let me read anything.â
âWell, Ryle found the journals. And he read them. And he didnât like what he read.â
Atlas sighs. âLily, we were kids.â
âJealousy doesnât have an expiration date, apparently.â
Atlas presses his lips into a thin line for a moment, like heâs attempting to push down his frustration. âI really hate that youâre stressing over his potential reaction to things that havenât even happened yet. But I get it. Itâs the unfortunate position youâre in.â He looks at me reassuringly. âWeâll take it one step at a time, okay?â
âOne very slow step at a time,â I suggest.
âDeal. Slow steps.â Atlas adjusts the pillow beneath his head. âI used to see you writing in those journals. I always wondered what you wrote about me. If you wrote about me.â
âAlmost everything was about you.â
âDo you still have them?â
âYeah, theyâre in a box in my closet.â
Atlas sits up. âRead me something.â
âNo. God, no.â
âLily.â
He looks so hopeful and excited at the possibility, but I canât read my teenage thoughts out loud to him over FaceTime. Iâm growing red just thinking about it.
âPlease?â
I cover my face with a hand. âNo, donât beg.â Iâll give in to those blue puppy-dog eyes if he doesnât stop looking at me like he is.
He can see heâs wearing me down. âLily, I have ached since I was a teenager to know what you thought of me. One paragraph. Just give me that much.â
How can I say no to that? I groan and toss the phone on the bed in defeat. âGive me two minutes.â I walk to my closet and pull down the box. I carry it over to my bed and begin flipping through the journals to find something that wonât embarrass me too much. âWhat do you want me to read? My retelling of our first kiss?â
âNo, weâre going slow, remember?â He says that teasingly. âStart with something from the beginning.â
Thatâs much easier. I grab the first journal and flip through it until I find something that looks short and not too humiliating. âDo you remember the night I came to you crying because my parents were fighting?â
âI remember,â he says. He settles into his pillow and puts one arm behind his head.
I roll my eyes. âGet comfy while I mortify myself,â I mutter.
âItâs me, Lily. Itâs us. Thereâs nothing to be embarrassed about.â
His voice still has that same calming effect itâs always had. I sit cross-legged and hold the phone with one hand and my journal in the other, and I begin to read.
Atlas isnât smiling when I finish reading. Heâs staring at me with a lot of feeling, and the heaviness in his eyes is making my chest tight.
âWe were so young,â he says. His voice carries a little bit of ache in it.
âI know. Too young to deal with the stuff we dealt with. Especially you.â
Atlas isnât looking at his phone anymore, but heâs moving his head in agreement. The mood has shifted, and I can tell heâs thinking about something else entirely. It brings me back to what he tried to brush off earlier when he said itâs been one of those weeks.
âWhatâs bothering you?â
His eyes return to his phone. He seems like he might brush it off again, but then he just sighs and readjusts himself so that heâs sitting higher up against his headboard. âSomeone vandalized the restaurants.â
âBoth of them?â
He nods. âYeah, it started a few days ago.â
âYou think itâs someone you know?â
âItâs not anyone I recognize, but the security footage wasnât very clear. I havenât reported it to the police yet.â
âWhy havenât you?â
His eyebrows furrow. âWhoever it is seems youngerâmaybe in their teens. I guess Iâm worried they might be in a similar situation to the one I was in back then. Destitute.â The tension in his eyes eases a bit. âAnd what if they donât have a Lily to save them?â
It takes a few seconds for what he says to register. When it does, I donât smile. I swallow the lump in my throat, hoping he canât see my internal reaction to that. Itâs not the first time heâs mentioned I saved him back then, but every time he says it, I want to argue with him. I didnât save him. All I did was fall in love with him.
I can see why I fell in love with him. What owner is more concerned about the situation of the person vandalizing their business than they are with the actual damage being done? âConsiderate Atlas,â I whisper.
âWhat was that?â he says.
I didnât mean to say that out loud. I slide a hand over the heat moving across my neck. âNothing.â
Atlas clears his throat, leaning forward. A subtle smile materializes. âBack to your journal,â he says. âI wondered if you knew I could see into your bedroom window back then, because after that night, you left that light on a hell of a lot.â
I laugh, glad heâs lightening the mood. âYou didnât have a television. I wanted to give you something to watch.â
He groans. âLily, you have to let me read the rest.â
âNo.â
âYou locked me in a closet today. Letting me read your journals would be a good way to apologize for that.â
âI thought you werenât offended.â
âMaybe itâs a delayed offense.â He begins to nod slowly. âYeah⦠starting to feel it now. Iâm really offended.â
Iâm laughing when Emmy begins to work up a cry across the hall. I sigh because I donât want to hang up, but Iâm also not the mom who can let her child cry it out. âEmmyâs waking up. I have to go. But you owe me a date.â
âName the time,â he says.
âIâm off on Sundays, so a Saturday night might be good.â
âTomorrow is Saturday,â he says. âBut weâre going slow.â
âI mean⦠thatâs pretty slow if weâre counting from the first day we met. That puts a lot of years between meeting you and going on a first date with you.â
âSix oâclock?â
I smile. âSix is perfect.â
As soon as I say that, Atlas squeezes his eyes shut for two seconds. âWait. I canât tomorrow. Shit. Weâre hosting an event; they need me at the restaurant. Sunday?â
âI have Emmy Sunday. Iâd rather wait before bringing her around you.â
âI get that,â Atlas says. âNext Saturday?â
âThatâll give me time to line up someone to watch her.â
Atlas grins. âItâs a date, then.â He stands up and begins walking through his bedroom. âYouâre off on Sundays, right? Can I call you this Sunday?â
âWhen you say âcall,â do you mean video chat? I want to be prepared this time.â
âYou couldnât be unprepared if you tried,â he says. âAnd yes, itâll be a FaceTime. Why would I waste time with a phone call when I can look at you?â
I like this flirty side of Atlas. I have to bite my bottom lip for two seconds in order to hold back my grin. âGoodnight, Atlas.â
âââNight, Lily.â
Even the way he makes such intense eye contact while saying goodbye makes my stomach flip. I end the call and press my face into my pillow. I squeal like Iâm sixteen again.