âI HAVE NEVERÂ loved a grocery store,â I say, âlike I love this grocery store.â
âI love all grocery stores.â Sabrina wheels our cart around an endcap toward the Crayola-bright produce section.
âHonestly, I have a hard time with grocery stores now,â Cleo says. âOnce you start growing your own fruits and veggies, everything else pales in comparison.â
âOh, is that so?â Sabrina pauses to feel a couple of mangoes. âI wouldnât know.â
Something about the way she says it makes it clear itâs a barb. Or it at least suggests that, and then the way Cleoâs eyes flick up but donât fully roll confirms it.
âIâve told you,â Cleo says. âYou can visit in the winter. Things are too busy now.â She shoots me a look. âOpen invitation, Harry: if you and Wyn want to come up to the farm then too, weâd love to have you.â
I focus on checking a box of strawberries for mold. Because this adorable coastal market has been blessed by angels, there isnât the tiniest bit of fuzz. I check three more boxes, all of them mold-free. âSeriously,â I say. âThis is the best grocery store on the planet.â
âYou like this grocery store because you donât have to make any decisions because youâre always with us, and Iâm good at making lists,â Sabrina says. âAnd you hate every other grocery store because Iâm not there to meal plan for you. If you moved back in with us, we could fix that.â She turns to Cleo. âAnd Parth and I are amazing houseguests, by the way. We always bring chocolate babka from Zabarâs.â
She says it flatly, in her unbothered Sabrina way, but I can tell by Cleoâs expression that the little jabs are landing with some force. âWe didnât cancel your visit because we think youâre bad houseguests,â she says. âThings just got hectic.â
Before Sabrina can reply to that, I jump in: âWell, Iâm so glad you and Kim could still make the trip work. That means a lot.â
Cleoâs mouth softens into a smile. âIâm glad too.â She brushes a hand over Sabrinaâs elbow. âI mean, how often do two of your best friends get married?â
Sabrina grins now too, irritation apparently forgotten. âWell, in this case, at least twice, since weâll still have to do a big family wedding next year. Plus, if Parth has his way, there will probably be three or four more sprinkled in there somewhere.â
âWell, of course,â I say. âYouâve got to make sure it sticks.â
From the far end of the shop, I can hear Kimmy barking orders at Wyn and Parth like sheâs a musher. Their strategy in this pseudo-game is always to go as fast as possible, which means they end up having to circle the whole store like three times, while Cleo, Sabrina, and I lazily meander, testing fruit and sorting through the imported cheese fridge. There are usually even a couple of Cleoâs favorite nut cheeses.
The gameâs gotten more elaborate over the years. We are now to the point where Sabrina makes the list, cuts it into tiny one-line strips, folds the strips, puts them in a bowl, and has each of us take turns pulling random grocery items out until both âteamsâ have an even number.
Another reason I know this is not a real game: Sabrina clearly does not give one single shit about winning, and she is hypercompetitive.
âHold on a sec.â Cleo ducks down the row of fridges and returns with three large coconut waters. She drops two into our cart and pushes the other at me. âYouâre green.â
Sabrina examines me. âMore like chartreuse.â
A flash of memory: Parth shoving green drinks with paper umbrellas into our sweaty hands as we danced around the patio.
I wince. âDonât say that word.â
Sabrina cackles. âWhat about ?â
âPuce is more like a dark red,â Cleo puts in helpfully.
âLike if one were to puke up red wine?â Sabrina asks.
I grab a loose Maine blueberry and throw it at her. At the front of the store, someone is whooping. âWe Are the Championsâ starts to play over phone speakers.
âWow,â Sabrina says, tossing a couple of blueberries into her mouth. âThey win again. Who wouldâve thought?â
âHow is Kimmy even alive,â I ask, âlet alone whooping and cheering?â
âI donât know, dude. Sheâs superhuman,â Cleo says. âPlus, she woke me up to tell me about the body shots, and I took the opportunity to pour three gallons of water into her mouth.â Her brow arches. âKind of surprised Wyn didnât think to do that for you. He was totally sober when I went to bed.â
I busy myself with another package of blueberries. âAha!â I spin back. âSee that? Mold.â
âEvery rose has its thorn,â Sabrina says, angling our cart back toward the front of the shop. âJust like every cowboy sings a sad, sad song.â
Another flash of memory: me, kneeling on the ground, atop the comforter Wynâs dragged to the floor.
, he says gently. He peels the ruined white T-shirt over my head, runs a cool washcloth over my collarbones, collecting whatâs left of my mess. I can barely keep my eyes open.
Iâve been to so many fucking rodeos , he says.
I must not lift them high enough, because his rough palms catch the undersides of my biceps and ease them over my head. Then the butter-soft fabric is being tugged down around me, pooling against the tops of my thighs.
, I grumble.
, he says, sliding my hair out from under the collar.
.
âHar?â Cleo jolts me out of the memory. âYou actually are puce now.â
âThat word.â I press my hand over my mouth and bolt for the bathroom.
â¢Â   â¢Â   â¢
THE INSTANT IÂ step under the jangling bells and into Murder, She Read, I feel five hundred thousand times better.
Which is to say, I still feel like utter shit, but shit ensconced in books and sun-warmed windows. Shit with sugary iced latte flowing through its veins.
Iâve never finished a chapter on one of these trips, let alone a book, but Iâve always loved coming here, picking out my next read.
Wyn and Cleo split off for Nonfiction, and Kimmy darts to Romance. Parth heads for General Fiction, and Sabrina veers toward Horror. I alone head for the black coffin mounted to the wall, door ajar and waiting, painted in gold letters at the top of the box.
I step through it to the room beyond, a space nearly as large as all other genres combined.
Iâd never been a big reader until the summer before I started at Mattingly, when all my high school extracurriculars and AP summer work abruptly ended. My acceptance to (and funding for!) the school of my dreams was already assured, and I was bored for the first time in my life.
I found the dime-store mystery in Eloiseâs old room, now the family office, when I went in to look for packing tape. I sat on the windowsill to read the first page and didnât look up until Iâd finished the book. Afterward, I went straight to the library for another. I probably read twenty cozy mysteries that summer.
I run my fingers along the paperback spines, each title featuring a worse pun than the last. As I pull one out, Cleo appears at my side. âI thought youâd read that one.â
âThis?â I hold it up. âMaybe youâre thinking of The one about the auctioneer murdered at the fundraiser. This oneâs , about a baker who finds a body inside a bag of flour.â
âA whole body?â she says.
âItâs a really big bag,â I say. âOr a really small body, Iâm not sure, but for a mere six dollars and ninety-nine cents, I could find out. Did you find something already?â
She holds up a dictionary-sized tome with a giant illustration of a mushroom on its pale green cover.
âDidnât already read one?â I say.
Her mouth curls. âYouâre thinking of This is .â
âHow silly of me,â I say.
She leans away from me to peer through the doorway to the rest of the store. âSo what do you think about all this?â
âAll what?â
âSabrina and Parth,â she says. âGetting married. In like four days.â
âI guess when you know, you know.â I slide the book back onto the shelf and keep skimming.
âYeah.â A moment later, she says, âI guess things have just felt a little off with her.â
âReally?â I havenât noticed anything, but then again, I havenât been exceptionally present the last few months. Iâve known that the next time we talkedâ
talkedâIâd have to talk about the breakup.
âMaybe Iâm reading into it too much,â Cleo says, swirling her raspberry iced tea. âBut last month, she texts me out of the blue that she and Parth were going to come up for a visit. And I said yes, because she seemed set on it. Only later I realized we were way too swamped, so I asked to reschedule, and Iâve barely heard from her since then. When we got in yesterday, I tried to talk to her about it, but she brushed it off, and then today she seems mad about it again.â
My fingers stop, hooked over a spine:
. âI think sheâs just taking this cottage thing hard,â I say. âI donât think itâs personal.â
Cleo screws up her mouth. âMaybe.â She lifts her braids off her shoulder, shaking them to fan her neck. Thereâs no airflow in here, and the humidity is dense. âI guess Iâll try to talk to her again tonight. I just wanted to see if youâd noticed anything . . . different with her.â
âNope!â I say, probably a bit too chipper. âI think everything seems totally normal.â
Cleoâs head cocks. Iâm fully expecting her to cry at any second. Instead, she tucks her arm through mine and rests her head on my shoulder. âIâm probably just tired,â she says. âI always worry more when Iâm tired.â
I frown. Iâve been so self-absorbed (and/or drunk) that somehow I missed the way her face has thinned, and the faint purple blots beneath her eyes. âHey,â I say. âAre okay?â
âWhy wouldnât I be?â Thatâs a weirdly evasive reply for Cleo.
âBecause you run a whole-ass farm,â I say. âAnd you are but one dainty five-foot-two-inch woman.â
Her smile brightens her whole face. âYes, but you forget: my girlfriend is a five-foot-ten-inch Scandinavian American goddess who can drink four barrels of moonshine and still win a grocery store race.â
âClee,â I say.
She checks over her shoulder, then drops her voice. âOkay, yes, Iâm stressed,â she says. âThe truth is, Kimmy and I went back and forth about bowing out of this yearâs trip for the last three weeks. When I told Sabrina we might have to miss it, it did go well, so we decided weâd come for a couple of days. Only now we canât head back early after all, so weâre scrambling to have neighbors go take care of things for us at home.â
âIâm so sorry,â I say. âHow can I help?â
âItâs okay. Itâs one week of stress. Well, and the full week it will take us to catch up on the time away.â
âHey!â
For some reasonâquite possibly all the subterfuge Iâm currently engaged inâI jump when Sabrina pops her head in between us.
Cleo does too. âDonât sneak up on us.â
âUm, I literally just walked up,â Sabrina says. âDid I catch you two in the middle of a drug deal or something?â She reaches between us to grab Cleoâs book, scrutinizing the cover. âMushrooms? Again?â
Cleoâs lips thin. âTheyâre fascinating.â
âWhat about you, Sab?â I cut in. âDid you find anything?â
âOh my god, yeah,â she says. âThis book is a fictional take on the Donner Party.â
âHow . . . nice,â I say.
She cackles, grabs the book out of my hand. I didnât realize I was holding oneâI mustâve yanked it out when she surprised us. âHarry,â she says, reading the back of it. âThis book is every bit as fucked as mine.â
âI guarantee itâs not,â I say.
âAn interior designer finds a hand behind a wall,â she says.
âYes, but itâs .â I take the book back.
âHow is that cozy,â she asks.
âItâs a cozy mystery,â I say. âItâs hard to explain.â
âOh-kay.â Her voice wrenches up into a wordless yip of surprise as Kimmy appears at her shoulder. Beside me, Cleo grabs for the edge of the bookshelf, as if for support.
âWhy is everyone so jumpy?â Kim asks.
âSabrinaâs reading about the Donners again,â Cleo says.
âItâs fiction,â Sabrina says.
Cleo asks, âWhere are Parth and Wyn? Are they finished?â
Kimmy shrugs. âI passed Parth by the fancy books.â
âWhat are the fancy books?â I ask.
âShe means heâs looking for something the has described as ârevelatory,âââ Sabrina says.
âActually . . .â Parth walks up with a paper bag already in hand. âI picked this because the gave it such a cranky review I needed to read it myself. Itâs by this married couple who usually publish separately. One of them writes literary doorstop novels and the other writes romance.â
âWhat!â Kimmy snatches the book. âI know them!â
âSeriously?â Parth asks.
âI went to college with them in Michigan,â she says. âThey werenât together yet, though. Her books are horny. Is this one horny?â
âThe review didnât touch on the horniness,â Parth says.
âIs Wyn done?â Sabrina asks.
âChecking out now,â Parth confirms âWhatâd he get, a Steinbeck novel?â she asks.
Parth shrugs. âDunno.â
Thereâs no way Wynâs getting a Steinbeck novel. Iâm surprised heâs buying a book, period, since we never have time to read on these trips and heâs cautious with his spending. But if he going to get a book, it wouldnât be about the American West. He wouldâve felt like too much of a caricature.
Parth and Sabrina herd us toward the register. Cleo gets her mushroom book and I buy , and then we step out onto the cobbled street. The sun is high in the sky, no trace of mist left, only dazzling blue. Across the street, Kimmy spots a flower cart in front of the florist and, with a squeal of delight, pulls Cleo after her.
âParth and I are gonna grab more coffee.â Sabrina tilts her head toward the Warm Cup, the café next door with the awning-sheltered walk-up window. Weâve already been twice today. Once before the market, once after.
âWant anything?â she asks.
âIâm good, thanks,â I tell her.
âWyn?â
He shakes his head. As they wander off, we stand in silence, avoiding gazes. âI meant to tell you,â he says finally. âI talked to Parth last night.â
âAnd?â
He clears his throat a little. âYouâre right. Weâll have to tell them after this week.â
Iâm not sure why that floods me with relief. The rest of my week is now guaranteed to be torturous. But at least Parth and Sabrina will get their perfect day.
Wyn gets a text. Heâs not usually so attentive to his phone. While heâs checking it, I lean toward him a little, trying to peer into his paper Murder, She Read bag.
He stuffs his phone back into his pocket. âYou can just ask.â
âAsk what?â I say.
His brow lifts. I stare back at him, impassive. Slowly, he slides his purchase from the bag and holds it out to me. Itâs huge.
.
âThis is a coffee-table book,â I say.
âIs it?â He leans over to look at it. âShit. I thought it was an airplane.â
âSince when do you buy coffee-table books?â I ask.
âIs this some kind of trick question, Harriet?â he says. âYou know these donât require a special license, right?â
âYes, but they require a coffee table,â I say. âAnd Gloriaâs wonât have room for this.â Wynâs mother is a pack rat. Not in a gross way, just in a sentimental one. Or rather his father was, and Gloria hasnât changed much about the Connor family home since her husband passed.
The last time I was there, there was hardly an inch of space on the refrigerator. She had a printout of a group picture weâd all taken at the cottage on our first trip taped up there, right next to a Save the Date for one of Wynâs cousins, whoâd already gotten married, divorced, and remarried since then. His older sister Michaelâs engineering degree sat on the mantel, right next to a framed one-page short story his younger sister, Lou, wrote when she was nine, beside a framed photo of Wynâs high school soccer team.
Aside from the lack of space in his childhood home, this book had to have cost at least sixty dollars, and Wynâs never been one to spend money. Not on himself, and not on anything whose value is primarily aesthetic. In our first apartment together, he used a tower of shoeboxes as a side table until he found a broken one on the street that he could fix.
He slides the coffee-table book out of my hand and drops it back into his bag. Iâm still staring, puzzled, trying to make sense of all the tiny differences between the Wyn of five months ago and the Wyn in front of me, but heâs gone back to checking his phone.
Kimmy comes bounding up with a bundle of sunflowers. âWhere are Parth and Sabrina?â she asks, shielding her eyes against the sun.
âSabrina needed more coffee,â Wyn says. âAnd Parth needed more Sabrina.â
âAwh.â She clutches her heart. âTheyâre so cute. Terrifying, but cute.â
I catch Wyn peeking into the bag again, sort of smiling to himself.
In my chest, a metric ton drops onto the proverbial seesaw.
The beard, the slight softening of his body, the sixty-dollar coffee-table book.
Is he . . .
?
Is he ?
The seesaw jolts back in the other direction. A burst of cold air-conditioning and roasted espresso beans wafts toward us as Sabrina and Parth emerge from the coffee shopâs lesser-used interior. âI donât know about yâall,â Sabrina says after a loud slurp on her paper straw, âbut I could use some popovers.â
Ordinarily, the thought would make my mouth water.
Right now, the idea of dumping fried egg and jam into my seething stomach is worse than hearing a thousand times in rapid succession.
I smile so hard my molars twinge. âSounds great.â
âAwh. Sunflowers. Sab loves those.â Parth leans over to smell them.
Kimmy thrusts the bundle toward him. âThese are for you and Sabrina.â
âTheyâre just a sample,â Cleo puts in. âWe went ahead and ordered some bouquets for Saturday. I know you want it to be simple, but itâs not a wedding without flowers.â
Sabrina goes from eyeing the bouquet like it might be some kind of Trojan horse, sneakily stuffed with tiny mushroom encyclopedias, to clapping her hands together on a gasp. âCleo! You didnât have to do that.â She hooks an arm around Cleoâs head, pulling her in for a hug. âTheyâre gorgeous.â
â
gorgeous,â Cleo says, starting down the street, the rest of us following like baby ducks.
âNo, you guys,â Parth says, â
gorgeous.â
Wyn hangs back beside me, asks tersely, âWhat just happened in there?â
âIn where?â I say.
âYour brain,â he says.
âBody shots,â I say. âMy brain is full of body shots.â
âBoth a surgeon and a medical anomaly,â he says.
âWhat can I say,â I reply flatly. âIâmââ
âI know.â He waves his arm in a circle. â
.â
My stomach lurches at the years-old inside joke. âI was going to say