AS SOON ASÂ we step into the house, I know somethingâs wrong. Itâs too quiet, still. Wyn and I make our way to the kitchen without seeing or hearing anyone.
âWhere do you think they are?â he asks, checking the time over the stove. âThey should be back by now.â
âIâll see if Kimmy and Cleo are in the guesthouse,â I say. âYou want to see if Parth and Sabrina are upstairs?â
Wyn nods, and I let myself out onto the patio, heading through the gate at the side.
Thereâs no sign of life in the guesthouse, but I knock on the door anyway. Where is everyone? I type into the group text as I make my way back to the patio. On a whim, I go to the top of the stairs down to the shore.
Parth sits on the rocks below, sun gleaming off his dark hair and wind rippling through his jacket. I pick my way down, calling his name as I go. He glances over his shoulder at me, then goes back to staring out at the water.
âWhereâs Sabrina?â I ask.
A shrug in response. It triggers a sinking sensation in my gut. I lower myself onto the rock beside him, stretching my clay-streaked legs out toward the water. âFor what itâs worth,â I say, âWyn and I, weâre really sorry we didnât tell you.â
He looks up. âYou shouldâve. But I shouldâve come straight to you when I saw Wynâs text too.â
I follow his gaze out to a white boat drifting toward one of the small islands off the coast. âI hope eventually you can forgive us.â
His gaze flickers to me. âForgive you? Harriet, youâre already forgiven. Youâre like a sister to me, you know that? Iâll always forgive you. Youâre family.â
My heart pangs. âI thought being family just meant you have limitless time to hold grudges.â
Parth scoffs and tucks an arm over my shoulders. âMaybe for some people. Not for us.â
âIf youâre not out here contemplating how weâve failed you,â I say, âthen why all the forlorn gazing into the sea?â
He smiles, but it fades fast. âSabrina and I got into a fight. She walked out.â
âOh my god, Parth. Iâm so sorry. This is my fault,â I say. âIâll call her andââ
His arm slides clear of me, and he angles toward me. âItâs not,â he says. âHonestly, a part of me has been waiting for her to back out ever since we got engaged. I mean, she only agreed to get married because her world was falling apart. No matter what she said, I knew she wanted an anchor. And a part of me always expected her to run. Last night we argued, and she went downstairs to cool down, and when I woke up she was gone. Hasnât answered her phone all day.â
âSheâs scared, Parth,â I say.
He scoffs. âWeâre talking about Sabrina. She isnât scared of anything.â
I puzzle for a minute over how to explain it. âYou know what you just said to me? That weâre family?â
He nods.
âWell, for you and Cleo and Wyn and Kimmy, that means one thing,â I say. âFor Sabrina and me, itâs different. In our families, there was no coming back from fights. Her dad would rather divorce than apologize, and in my house, arguments always ended with everyone leaving. Things never got resolved; they calloused over.â
âWhat are you saying?â Parth asks.
âSabrina didnât run because she doesnât want you,â I say. âShe ran because sheâs scared that, in the end, she wonât be worth chasing.â
Parthâs eyes lock onto mine, his face slackening as he takes it in. âShit.â He scrambles to his feet. âWe need to find her.â
âWe will,â I promise.
â¢Â   â¢Â   â¢
CLEO AND KIMMYÂ have just gotten back from their massages when we reach the house. They havenât heard from Sabrina either, and after we all take turns calling and texting her to no avail, we accept that weâre going to have to look for her.
âYou two were supposed to spend the morning together,â Cleo points out. âWhat were you going to do?â
âI donât know,â Parth says. âSheâd planned it all, and there were no details on the itinerary.â
âNo address?â Wyn asks.
Parth stares at him. âOh, yeah, there was an , but how could that possibly benefit us?â he deadpans. âNo, nothing! For all I know, she left in the middle of the night. For all I know, sheâs lying in a hospital bed right now!â
âWeâll find her,â Wyn says. âDonât assume the worst.â
âThis is my fault,â Parth says. âI was upset about how everything went down last night, and I blamed her. Like I hadnât been totally on board. I was, completely, and when it blew up, I turned it around like Iâd had nothing to do with it, and now sheâs .â
Cleoâs eyes go distant as she retreats into thought. âWe need to be logical here.â
âYouâre gonna hate this,â Wyn says, facing Parth, âbut what if we called her family?â
âThereâs no way sheâd go to them,â Parth says. âShe hardly tells them anything. I mean, my familyâs already planning a blowout wedding, and hers doesnât even know weâre engaged yet.â
âThen weâll look around town,â Cleo says.
âWeâll find her,â Kimmy promises, rubbing Parthâs shoulder.
âWe should split up,â I say.
Wyn and Parth take the Land Rover. Cleo and I use her station wagon. Kimmy hangs back in case Sabrina shows up at the house.
Most of the places we frequent on these trips are downtown, but there are also some beaches and parks worth checking, along with a couple of other towns we occasionally visit.
But when we reach Bernieâsâpacked, thanks to the sunshine and the fact that itâs Lobster Fest weekendâI realize a part of me was banking on finding her here, sipping coffee and watching seagulls fight over hash browns on the patio.
âWe should ask the host,â Cleo says, âin case theyâve seen her.â
But they havenât. Though, to be fair, the streets are so packed with face-painted, ice-cream-cone-eating tourists that, for once, itâs actually feasible that Sabrina could blend in with a crowd.
We check the Roxy Theater, ask the ticket agent (today in a porkpie hat) whether heâs seen her, and when he refuses to answer with anything other than a shrug, we each buy a ticket and split up inside to check both theaters. Not there either.
We check Murder, She Read; the wharf; and the Lobster Hut, as well as the Lobster Hutâs heavily graffitied bathrooms. We even check the tattoo shop on the very off chance that sheâs enacting some small rebellion and getting her own tattoo. Sheâs nowhere to be found, and our next call goes straight to voicemail.
âShe mustâve let her phone die,â Cleo says.
âThatâs not like her,â I say.
âYou think she was lying about hotels being booked up?â Cleo says. âCould she have checked in somewhere?â
I pull up a search for available rooms in the area. Nary a hotel, motel, bed-and-breakfast, or hostel available in sight.
The group text chimes with a text, and we both jump.
Itâs only Wyn, whose number Iâd unblocked again. Any luck? he writes.
None. You? I ask.
Parthâs really worried, Wyn replies. Heâs going to call hospitals. Just to be sure.
My stomach flips. Keep us posted.
You too, he says.
Cleoâs nose wrinkles as she scans our list. âThatâs all the usual spots. She wouldnât . . . be reckless enough to sail off by herself, would she?â
The blood rushes out of my stomach. âSheâs a pretty confident sailor,â I say. âAnd I think sailing is sort of her happy place. It makes her think of her mom and when . . .â
âHarry?â Cleo says. âWhat is it?â
âHer mom,â I say.
âWhat about her?â Cleo asks.
âIt might be nothing,â I say. âBut Iâve got one more place for us to check.â
â¢Â   â¢Â   â¢
I shriek, with such conviction that Cleo instantly obeys, right in the middle of the road.
Although is a fairly aspirational title for the wooded lane the GPS has directed us onto. One has to assume that thereâs a parking lot somewhere ahead, but parking no longer matters because (1) the little open-air chapel is visible through the trees on our right, and (2) a cherry-red Jaguar sits parked on the dirt shoulder.
Cleo hits the gas again and pulls over. We check the car firstâemptyâthen scramble over the short stone retaining wall to hike up the hillside toward the chapel.
The damp green woods give way to a manicured garden. In its center, a pavilion of gray stone stands, ivy crawling up its left side. Butterflies move in dizzy spirals through the flowering bushes hugging the steps, the distant crash of waves the only sound.
No wonder Sabrinaâs parentsâ wedding made such an impression on her. This place is beautiful. It feels like nothing could go wrong here, nothing bad could happen.
When I start forward, Cleo hangs back. Her mouth opens and closes a couple of times. âWhat if she wants to be alone?â
She has a point. Itâs possible.
But people donât run or hide only when they want to be alone.
âWhat if,â I say, âshe needs to know she isnât?â
Cleo takes my hand. We climb the steps to the back of the pavilion.
There are a handful of timeworn pews, a flagstone floor, and a few wooden arcades on either side. Straight ahead, a stone arch frames a slice of pure Maine blue water in the distance.
Sabrina sits cross-legged before it, staring out. The whole scene is serene, down to the faint chirp of birds overhead. Then she looks over her shoulder at the sound of our approach.
Iâd braced myself for some measure of awkwardness after everything, but the second we see her drawn face, puffy and red-rimmed eyes, last nightâs fight stops mattering.
Both Cleo and I run to her, kneel on the ground, sling our arms around her.
âYou scared us,â Cleo says.
âI didnât mean to,â Sabrina whispers.
We peel apart, sitting in a triangle, the same way we did so many nights in our musty freshman dorm room.
âMy phone died a couple hours ago,â Sabrina says finally. âAnd . . . I guess I wanted to put off the inevitable.â
âThe inevitable?â Cleo says.
Sabrina draws her knees into her chest, wrapping her willowy arms around them. âThe end of the trip? Goodbye? Everythingâs changing, and Iâm not ready.â
Itâs like someone has taken an ice cream scoop to my chest, hollowed me out.
âI wanted to put it off, but Cleoâs right,â she says. âWeâve been growing apart for years.â
âSabrina,â I say. âYou have no idea how sorry I am I didnât tell you what was going on.â
âItâs not just that.â Sabrina lifts her chin. âWhen I found out about the breakup, I was hurt, and then after a while, I was mad, but thenâI donât know. I realized itâs been the six of us for so long. And the five of us for even longer, and the three of before that. And itâs not only that you kept this huge thing from us. Itâs that . . . it felt like if you and Wyn werenât together, then you didnât want us either. Like youâve been phasing us out.â
âSabrina, ,â I say. âI promise I wasnât. Iâm not.â
âMaybe not consciously,â she says. âBut thatâs why you didnât tell us, right? Because weâre friends with Wyn. Because our whole friendship is tangled up with your relationship, and if you two grew apart . . .â
âWyn and I didnât grow apart.â I canât get it out any louder than a whisper. âI pushed him away the same way I did to the rest of you. And it was always about me, not you or anyone else.â
âBut itâs just you, Harriet,â Sabrina says.
Cleo touches her hand. âThings have been . . . complicated for me, Sabrina. Thatâs all.â
âYou know,â Sabrina says, watching a butterfly pirouette past, âI was really, really happy when I was a kid. My parents were happy. And then they werenât. And when they separated and moved on . . . it took a while, but they both found happiness again. Or, you know, their semi-twisted versions of that.
âWith new partners and new kids. Everyone got this fresh start. But I wasnât a part of either one. I was part of relationship. And once that was over, I bounced back and forth likeâlike a memento or something. The only thing that ever felt permanent to me, like it belonged to me, was this place.â Her voice pitches higher. âUntil I met you two.â
Sheâs always been so tough, and it breaks something in me to hear the vulnerability in her voice.
âI met you,â she says, âand I finally belonged somewhere again.â
âI felt that way too, Sab.â I scoot closer.
âMe too,â Cleo says. âHigh school was for me. I mean, I chose Mattingly because I didnât know anyone going there, and the best social situation I could dream up for myself was total anonymity. Those first few weeks of hanging out were, like, this weird out-of-body experience. Iâd never had friends like that, the kind you do everything with and talk to about everything. Honestly, I kept waiting for you both to find new people and move on.
âAnd then one dayâit was right before fall break, and we were hugging goodbye, and I realized Iâd stopped waiting. Without even realizing it. I knew you were my for-lifes then. Thatâs what my parents call each other. Because no matter what, theyâre always going to be family. And thatâs you both. The relationship can change shape a thousand times, but youâre always going to be in my life. Or at least, thatâs what I want.â
âSame,â I say. âNo matter what happens with Wyn, Iâm always going to belong with you. Iâm not going anywhere. I love you, Sabrina, and Iâm so sorry I made you feel like you were just a part of my relationship with Wyn. Youâre a part of . Youâre so deep in my heart that I couldnât get you out if I tried, and I donât want to. I know how lucky I am to have you. To have people who love me enough to hold on even when Iâm scared to let them close.â
Cleo and Sabrina each grab one of my hands, their fingers lacing into mine.
âGod, Iâve been crying a lot this week,â Sabrina manages tearily.
âMe too,â I say. âThe magic of the cottage, I guess.â
âSame,â Cleo says. âExcept in my case, I think itâs pregnancy hormones orââ
âWHAT!â Sabrina whirls on her, her hands jerking clear of ours to clamp onto the sides of her face in a perfect imitation of Macaulay Culkinâs big moment.
âShit!â Cleo says. âI was going to tell you in a speech!â
âYouâre fucking serious?â Sabrina shouts.
âWeâre in a chapel,â Cleo says.
âOh, please. Godâs heard it all. But me! Iâve only once ever heard one of my best friends say sheâs motherfucking pregnant!â
âWell,â Cleo says, âIâm motherfucking pregnant. Surprise.â
Sabrina cackles, her feet kicking against the floor.
âAnd before you ask,â Cleo says, âyes, I told Harry first, but not on purpose. She ambushed me this morning, and it happened a lot like this.â
âWell, as long as Harry ambushed you,â Sabrina says through more breathless, shrieking laughter. âHonestly, anything else you both want to get off your chests, nowâs the time! Iâm incapable of anger right now, I think.â
âI broke your straightener in college,â I tell her.
âOnce I had a girl stay over who used your toothbrush, thinking it was mine,â Cleo says.
âOkay, gross,â Sabrina says. âI couldâve gone to my grave without that second one.â
âIâm the one who lost those vintage Ray-Bans we used to share,â I admit. âGod, thatâs actually a huge load off.â
âOh!â Cleo chirps. âI told that one shitty poet you dated that I was a witch, and that if he ever contacted you again, Iâd hex him so his dick fell off.â
Sabrina touches her chest, evidently moved. âSee, this is why youâre going to be a great mother.â
âI didnât know you did that,â I tell Cleo. âIf I had, I probably wouldnât have told the same guy that my dad was in the mob.â
A laugh cracks out of Sabrina. âI have the best friends.â
âBest ,â Cleo says.
The ache in my heart is almost pleasant. It spreads through my limbs into my hands and feet, a heaviness, like love has its own mass and weight. âYou know,â I say, âParthâs not going anywhere either.â
Her gaze averts. âIf you and Wyn couldnât even make it work . . .â
I grab her face in my hands. âYouâre not us,â I say. âYou are so, so, so much braver than me, Sabrina.â
She rolls her eyes.
âIâm serious,â I say. âYou can do this, if you want to.â
Her voice is a wisp. âI do want to. Heâs the love of my life. I want to marry him.â
âThen letâs get you home,â Cleo says.
Sabrina swipes the tears out from under her eyes. âLetâs go home,â she says with an air of relief. As if, now that sheâs made the decision, sheâs unafraid.
On our way to the cars, Sabrina throws one last look back at the chapel, the trees below, the water out ahead.
She smiles. Like when she looks back at it, all she sees is the happiness of that day she spent here with her parents, rather than the pain of what came after.
Like even when something beautiful breaks, the making of it still matters.