EVERYONE IS INÂ their respective corners of the house, getting ready for the bachelorette-slash-bachelor-party night Parth and Sabrina have planned.
I should be getting ready too. Instead, my mind keeps wandering back to that dark ledge Iâve spent months turning away from.
. The pain is too much. It will suck me into itself, and Iâll never get back out.
, I tell myself.
It doesnât matter that I never got concrete answers about what broke us. What matters is that we broke. What matters is that Wynâs happy with his new life.
Weâll make it through tomorrow, then go our separate ways. When we tell everyone weâve broken up, weâll be able to say it was amicable, that it wonât cost them anything.
But I let it go.
Iâve been trying for months, and Iâm no closer to peace. Hereâs my opportunityâmy chance. It might be a mistake to get answers, but if I donât, Iâll spend my life regretting it.
is what I need from this week, the thing that will justify the torture.
I leave the bedroom, march down the hall past the hiss of running showers and old pipes creaking in the walls.
Everything feels strange, dreamlike: the time-smoothed wooden stairs soft against my soles, the prickle of cool air as I step out back, the rushing sound of the tide sliding over the rocks beneath the bluff. I cross the patio to the side gate, still open from Cleoâs sudden flight of fancy the other night, and follow the path beyond it, into the dense evergreens beyond.
The sun hasnât fully set, but the foliage overhead coats the footbridge in shadow, pinpricks of mounted solar lights illuminating the path to the guesthouse.
Itâs like Iâm moving through jelly, every step slow and heavy. Then the wood-shingled guesthouse appears, and I round the corner toward the cedarwood shower.
When I see him, it surprises me. As if I didnât come here expressly for him.
Only the back of his head, neck, and shoulders peek over the top of the cedar walls, the breeze pulling steam out in silver wisps. A feeling of loss, heavy as a sandbag, hits me in the gut.
, I think.
I turn. My sleeve catches on a low-hanging branch, and all the moisture accumulated there spatters to the hollow forest floor.
Wyn turns, his brow arching with amusement. âCan I help you?â He looks and sounds happy to see me. Somehow itâs another blow.
I waver. âI doubt it.â
â
I help you,â he amends.
âI just wanted to talk!â I step back. âBut it can wait. Until youâre less . . .â
âBusy?â he guesses.
âNaked,â I say.
âOne and the same,â he says.
âFor you, I guess,â I say.
His brow scrunches. âWhatâs that mean?â
âI honestly donât know,â I say.
He rests his forearms atop the wall, waiting. For me to come closer or to bolt.
Now that the opportunityâs in front of me, having an answer I donât like seems eminently worse than never having an answer at all.
âItâs nothing,â I say. âForget it.â
âI wonât.â He wipes water from his eye. âBut if you want me to pretend, I can try.â
I take another half step back. His gaze stays pinned on me.
As always, something about his face coaxes the words out of me before my brain has decided to say them: âItâs killing me not knowing.â
His brow softens, his lips parting in the half-light.
âEven though itâs been months,â I say. âItâs killing me, being here, acting like everythingâs the same between us, and whatâs even worse is sometimes itâs not acting. Because . . .â My voice cracks, but now thereâs much momentum. I stop talking.
No matter how fragile, needy, broken I might sound, itâs the truth, and itâs coming out.
âBecause you just , Wyn,â I say. âI never got an explanation. I got a four-minute phone call and a box of my stuff shipped to my door, and Iâve never even known what I did. And I told myself it was all about what happened with Martin. That you didnât trust me.â
He winces at the name, but I donât back down.
âIâve spent months trying to make myself mad at you,â I go on hoarsely, âfor blaming me and judging me for something I didnât even do. And then I come here, and you act like you blame me. Like you hate me or, worse, feel nothing at all for me. Until suddenly you act like nothingâs changed. And you tell me you thought I cheated on you, and you kiss me like you me.â
âYou kissed me too, Harriet,â he says, voice low, strained.
âI know,â I say. âI know I did, and I donât even understand how, after everything, I still let myself do that. But I did, and itâs killing me. This is killing me. Every second of every day, I feel like Iâm living with a piece of me torn out, and I didnât even see it happen.
âI have this gaping wound, and no idea how it got there. Itâs killing me hearing how happy you are, without even understanding how Iâhow Iââ My voice quavers, my breath coming in spurts. âI donât know what I did to make you so miserable.â
His mouth judders open. âHarriet.â
I drop my face into my hands as the tears build across my vision, my spine aching with the force of it when they start to fall.
The shower door unlatches and whines open. I hear the rasp of a towel being pulled from a hook and wrapped against skin. Heat billows toward me in a damp wall, and I flinch at the sudden warmth of Wynâs hands taking hold of my upper arms. I canât bring myself to look at him, not while Iâm falling apart. Not after baring all the rawest parts of myself.
âHey,â he says in a quiet rasp, his wet palms scraping up my arms. âCome here.â
He tucks me against his chest, the water from his skin sluicing down my arms and back. His mouth burrows into my hair. âIt wasnât you,â he says. âI promise it was never you. I was in such a fucking dark place, Harriet. After I lost my dad. I was drowning.â
He presses me closer.
âIâm sorry,â I say, voice crackling. âI wanted to help you. I didnât know how. Iâve never known what to do with pain, Wyn. All Iâve ever done is hide from it.â
His hand furls against my ear. âYou couldnât have done anything else, Harriet. It was never you. I just . . . I lost the best man I knew, and it was like I stopped knowing how to exist. Like the world didnât make any sense anymore. And you had this new life, this thing youâd been dreaming of for so long, and all these new friends, andâand I was greedy for your time, and I hated myself for not being happy for you. I hated myself for not being good enough or smart enough or driven enough for you.â
â
that.â I try to push back from him.
He holds me fast, doesnât let me go, and it makes me so angry, how heâs holding on now, when itâs too late. âListen,â he murmurs, âplease let me say this.â
I lift my gaze to his. I think of the first time I ever saw his face up close, how his features had struck me as contradictory, a rare mix of magnetism and standoffishness:
Now heâs quicksand. No stoniness. Wide open.
âI was lost,â he says. âAs much as I loved my parentsâas much as I always knew they loved meâI grew up thinking I was a letdown. I had these two incredible sisters, who came out of fucking left field and were nothing like my parents or anyone else in our town, and as early as I can remember, everyone knew they were going to do something amazing. I mean, when I was twelve and Lou was nine, people were already talking about how sheâd win a Pulitzer someday. No one was giving me imaginary awards.â
â
.â Weâd been down this path too many times.
âIâm not saying anyone thought I was stupid,â he says. âBut thatâs how it felt. Like I was the one who didnât have anything going for him except that Iâm nice.â
âNice?â I canât help but scoff.
Generous, thoughtful, endlessly curious, painfully empathetic, funny, Not .
was the mask Wyn Connor led with.
âI wanted to be special, Harriet,â he says. âAnd since I wasnât, I settled for trying to make everyone love me. I know how ridiculous that sounds, but itâs true. I spent my whole life chasing things and people who could make me feel like I mattered.â
That stings, somewhere deep beneath my breastbone. I try again, feebly, to draw back. Wynâs hand moves to the back of my neck, light, careful. âAnd then I met you, and I didnât feel so lost or aimless. Because even if there was nothing else for me, it felt like loving you was what I was made for. And it didnât matter what anyone thought of me. It didnât matter if I didnât have any other big plans for myself, as long as I got to love you.â
âSo thatâs it?â I say raggedly. âI took up all the oxygen, and you didnât tell me until Iâd suffocated you. Until you didnât love me anymore, and there was nothing I could do.â
âI will love you,â he says fiercely. âThatâs the point, Harriet. Itâs the only thing thatâs ever come naturally to me. The thing I donât have to work at. I loved you all the way across the fucking country, and at my darkest, on my worst days, I still love you more than Iâve ever loved anything else.
âBut I wasnât happy after my dad died, and I kept waiting for things to feel even the tiniest bit better, and I couldnât. I didnât. And I was making you unhappy too.â
I open my mouth, but he cuts across me softly, his hands gentling in my hair: âPlease donât lie, Harriet. I was drowning, and I was taking you down too.â
I try to swallow. The emotion grips my throat too tightly.
Wyn drops his gaze, his voice cracking. âWhen I went back to Montana, I could feel him.â
âWyn.â My hands go to his jaw, and his forehead dips to mine.
His eyes close, a deep breath pressing us closer. âAnd I felt so stupid for running away from all that. For trying so hard to be different from him when he was the best man Iâve ever known.â
âYouâve always been like him,â I say, âin all the ways that matter.â
The corner of his mouth turns up, but itâs a tense expression, a wrought one. Heâs shaking, from the cold or adrenaline.
âI just . . .â He takes a breath. âI felt like I was failing him, and my mom, and you. I wanted you to be happy, Harriet, and the Martin thingâmaybe it was an excuse, but I was so low then that I genuinely convinced myself that was the kind of guy you wanted to be with. And you kept pushing the wedding off. You never wanted to talk about it. You never wanted to talk about anything, and when I saw you with all of your new friends, I thought . . . I thought you be with someone as brilliant as you, who could fit into this world you spent your whole fighting for.â
âThatâs not , Wyn,â I cry.
âWhat was I supposed to think, Harriet?â he asks, voice fraying. âWhen Iâd have to cancel a visit, you didnât care. When I missed a phone call, you didnât care. You were never mad at me. You never fought with me. It felt like you didnât even miss me.â
I break into sobs again as the reality of it hits me. That all that time and energy Iâd spent trying to be fine for him, to not crack under the weight of my job, to not need anything he couldnât giveâall it had done was drive him away from me faster.
âI knew youâd never leave me,â he goes on, his voice like sandpaper. âNot when I was such a fucking wreck. But I didnât want to trap you. I didnât want you to wake up one day and realize you were living the wrong life, and Iâd let you do it.
â
why the phone call was so short. Because I couldnât have time to change my mind.
why I mailed your stuff back so fast. Why I couldnât stand to have a single piece of you left where I could see it.
âBecause Iâm always going to love you. Because more than anything, I want you to be happy. And now you are,â he says. âAnd I am too. Not all the time, but Iâm so much better than I was, and when Sabrina called and asked me to come here, I thought I could handle it.
âI genuinely thought I would show up, and Iâd see you, and Iâd know you were happier. Iâd know I did the right thing letting you go.
âIâve worked so fucking hard on myself these last five months, Harriet, and Iâm doing . Iâm with my family, and Iâm doing work Iâm proud of, and Iâm on medicine.â
âMedicine?â
âYou asked what changed my mind about the job earlier,â he says. âThatâs what did it. Medicine. For depression.â
My throat squeezes. Just one more huge thing I didnât know about him. âFrom losing your dad?â
He shakes his head. âI thought it was just that. But once I started taking it, I realized that had just made things worse. But itâs always been there. Making everything harder than it should be. Itâs like . . .â He scratches his temple. âIn high school, I had this friend on the soccer team. And one day, after a game, he collapsed. His chest hurt and he couldnât get his shirt off, but he wanted to because he couldnât breathe, and we all thought he was having a heart attack. Turned out it was asthma.
âSpent like seventeen years operating on fifty-five percent lung capacity without realizing breathing just wasnât supposed to be that hard. Starting antidepressants was like that for me. I felt like shit all the time, and then suddenly I didnât. And all this stuff seemed possible for the first time. My mind felt . . . quieter, maybe. Lighter.â
I dash away the tears pricking my eyes. âI had no idea,â I croak.
âI didnât either,â he says. âI spent a lot of energy trying to be fine, andâthe point is, things are finally good for me. And I thought if I came here and saw you, it would prove we were both exactly where we were supposed to be. And instead, I showed up and you were furious at me. And you know what I felt?â
âI know youâre angry with me too, Wyn,â I force out.
He gives a sharp shake of his head. âRelief. I felt . Because it finally felt like you cared. If you were mad at me, it meant your heart really was as fucking broken as mine is. I thought when I found a way to be happy, Iâd think about you less. But instead, itâs like . . . like now that the grief isnât strangling me, thereâs all this extra room to love you.
âBut we canât go back, so I donât know what to do with any of this. I donât even know if you feel the same way, and itâs killing me too. I go back and forth every thirty seconds thinking Iâm hurting you just by being here, and then thinking you couldnât possibly still love me after all this time, and even if itâs not real, a part of me wants to pretend I have you, but another part thinks Iâll die if you donât tell me you love me, even if it doesnât change anything. Even if itâs just getting to hear it one more time.
âEverythingâs different and nothingâs changed, Harriet,â he says. âI tried so fucking hard to let you go, to let you be happy, and when I see you, I still feel likeâlike youâre . Like Iâm . I got rid of every single piece of you, like that would make a difference, like I could cut you out of me, and instead, I just see everywhere youâre supposed to be.â
I stare at him, heart cracking open under the weight of what Iâm feeling.
âPlease say something,â he whispers.
My eyes fill. My throat fills. I drop my face into my hands again. âI thought you didnât want me,â I choke out, âso I tried. I tried to love somebody else. I tried to even somebody else. I kissed someone else. I slept with someone else, but I couldnât stop feeling like I was yours.â My eyes tighten against another wave of tears. âLike youâre mine.â
âHarriet.â He tilts my face up. âLook at me.â
He waits. âPlease, Harriet.â
It takes a few seconds to force my eyes open. Water droplets still cling to his brows. Rivulets race down his jaw and throat. His thumb grazes my cheekbone.
âI am,â he says. âI am still yours.â
The nail that has been driving closer and closer to my heart all week sinks home.
The pads of his fingers slide across my bottom lip. His eyes are so soft, every ginger touch pushing back another layer from my heart.
But does it even matter that we belong each other when we canât be each other? Our lives are immovably separate. Everything may look different than it did ten minutes ago, but nothingâs changed. Heâs mine, but I canât have him.
My hands tangle in his wet hair, as if that can keep him here with me. His do the same to mine.
âWhat is this?â he whispers.
I want it to be an and an and a and a million other words I canât say.
Wynâs finally happy. He has the life that was meant for him. He has a career heâs proud of, one predicated on his being in Montana, and even if he didnât, thereâs Gloria, who needs him. The time with her that needs, time he missed with Hank. And Iâm in California for at least a few more years, too deep in to back out but not so far into the tunnel as to see the light at its end.
Maybe, in another life, things could be different. In this one, this can be only one thing.
âI think,â I say, âitâs one last .â
His fingers tighten on me, his breath stilling. And then, like heâs answering a question, his lungs expand on an inhale and his lips meet mine.
When I let out a shaky breath, his tongue slips into my mouth. The taste of him reaches deep and loosens something Iâve spent months tying into knots. Need stretches out in every direction, waking up my skin, nerves, blood. Wyn angles my face up, deepening the kiss, and his tongue sweeps mine, hungry, tender. A whimper rises out of me.
His hand spreads across my stomach, finding its way several inches up beneath my shirt, and my spine arcs into him, every muscle in my stomach trying to draw closer to his.
He locks an arm around me and walks us backward. His shoulder collides with the shower stallâs door as he hauls me inside and knocks it shut again.
My clothes are already wet from being held by him, sticking to my skin in places, but he shields me from the water anyway as he peels my shirt over my shoulders and drapes it over the wall along with his towel. I lean back against the wall, catching my breath, as he methodically undoes the buttons on my shorts. He takes his time easing them down my legs with my bikini bottoms, and I stand there, skin prickling, breath uneven, and mind on fire. He hangs those too, without taking his eyes off me.
âIs this real?â I ask.
He reaches for my waist. âWhat else would it be?â
âA dream,â I say.
He pulls me in against him, his warm, damp stomach sliding against mine. âCanât be,â he says. âIn my dreams, youâre always on top.â
My laugh catches as his thumb sweeps up the outside curve of my breast.
I wind my arms around his neck, and he lifts me against the wall in a smooth motion, my thighs wrapping around his waist.
I gasp into his mouth at the sudden sensation of so much of him on so much of me. The bands of muscle across his stomach tighten. My lips part hungrily under his. His hands untie my bathing suit top, peel it away, and my heart pounds into his urgent touch.
He whispers my name at the hinge of my jaw, the water spraying over his shoulders, wrapping us in its heat.
He groans, palming me in slow, intense circles as my breath quickens. His mouth glides down my throat. âAre you sure about this?â he murmurs.
I hold him tighter. He draws back to ask again, but I pull him close, my tongue slipping into his mouth, finding the bitter, bready taste of Corona and sharp tang of lime.
I reach between us and thrill at the feeling of him in my hand. His head bows into my shoulder, one of his hands coming to grip the top of the wall behind me.
âI didnât bring condoms here,â he says, but neither of us has stopped moving, looking for more friction, for release. The muscles all down his back and stomach and arms and ass are rigid with tension as our hips roll together.
His hands slide roughly behind my hips, canting them up to him. âWe shouldnât do this while youâre upset anyway,â he says.
I move my hand down him. âIâll be less upset once youâre inside me.â
He wraps a hand over mine, holding me still for a second, our hearts slamming together, hot water racing down us. âWe donât have a condom,â he says again.
Some kind of pathetic sound of dissent squeaks out of me, and he seems to forget what he was saying, pushes me back into the wall, our hips grinding together, nails skating over wet skin. He lifts me a half inch so heâs right against me now. Itâs not enough. He grabs the top of the wall again for support as we move together.
âHarriet,â he rasps against my ear. âYouâre so fucking soft.â
âThanks,â I say, breathless, âI donât work out.â
âDonât joke right now,â he says. âWe can joke later. Right now, tell me what you want.â
âI already told you,â I say.
âWe canât,â he says. âIâll find a way to get some while weâre out for dinner.â
I laugh into his throat, catch a rivulet on my tongue. âAre you going to hang out in alleyways and wave twenties at strangers who look like theyâre packing condoms?â
âI was thinking Iâd go to a drugstore,â he says, âbut I like your way better.â
He draws back, his hands slowing my descent until my feet meet the wet cedar planks. Everything in me rises in protest until he turns me, lifts my hands to the edge of the wall, and lets his own slide down the backs of my arms, down my sides. One slips around my hip and between my thighs as he presses in behind me.
For a second, I canât breathe. Even my organs are too busy to do anything else, every last brain wave occupied with the sensation of his hand. His other arm winds around me, pulling me flush against him, his mouth on the spot between my neck and shoulder.
âWas this your goal for the week?â I ask.
He bites the side of my neck. âActually, it was to make it through the rest of the week as a perfect gentleman.â
âOccasional failureâs good for a person,â I say.
âIs it?â he teases. âGood for you?â
I push myself back into him, pleading. â
.â
Wyn swears, grabs my hips, and turns me again, pinning me back against the wall and kneeling in front of me.
My joints seem to liquefy as he kisses the inside of my thigh, moves up to my center. My hips lift into the pressure of his mouth. His left palm skims up my stomach, the right moving around to cup my ass, angling me up to him.
I try to urge him back up me, but he stays where he is, the insistent heat of his mouth edging me closer to unraveling.
âWyn,â I beg.
Goose bumps erupt over his neck. He murmurs, âCome for me, Harriet.â
I try to resist, to ask for more of him, but my body bows up. His name rushes out of me in a breathless plea. He drives me into a wave so heavy and dark that, for several seconds, thereâs nothing but sensation. No woods, no cedar shower, nothing but his mouth.
When it recedes, I slump back against the wall, knees weak. Wyn rises and gathers me into him so that my chin rests on his shoulder. The hot water pours down us as he leaves a string of kisses down my throat.
âThank you,â I say through the dreamy haze.
His smile blooms against my neck. âSo polite.â He sways me gently back and forth beneath the water. âThe others are waiting.â
âIâm not feeling polite anymore.â I tip my chin back to meet his eyes. âThey can wait.â
âThe air horn will start going any minute now,â he says.
âWaiting never killed anyone,â I say.
âI donât know,â Wyn says. âIâve felt pretty close to death this week.â
âGood point,â I say. âWaiting can be dangerous. We probably shouldnât.â
His laugh melts into another groan. âLater. Let me buy you dinner first.â
âIâm a modern woman, Wyn,â I say. âIâll buy dinner. I mean, if I can your dinner now that youâre fancy.â
âYou get me a gas station hot dog, Harriet Kilpatrick,â he says, kissing the corner of my mouth, âand Iâll give you the best night of your life.â
I close my eyes, try to hold the moment still. Itâs already slipping away.