: Chapter 26
The Seven Year Slip
MY AUNT USED TOÂ tell me that summer nights in the city were made to be impossible. They were as brief as you needed them, but never long enough, when the roads stretched into the darkness, the skyscrapers climbed into the stars, and when you tipped your head back, the sky felt infinite.
âSo . . .â I began, because the silence between us was becoming a little awkward, âdid you plan on what to say after you asked me to dinner?â
He flashed me a bashful smile. âNot really. Iâm pretty bad at planning.â
âAh.â
We walked another block silently.
Then, he asked the worst possible questionââHowâs your aunt?â
The question felt like a punch in the gut. I put my hands in my pockets to keep them from shaking, and I steeled myself to answer. âShe passed away. About six months ago.â
âOh.â He rubbed the back of his neck, ashamed. âIâI didnât know.â
âI didnât expect you to.â We stopped at the next intersection, and glanced both ways before we crossed, but there were no cars coming either way. âItâs been seven years.â
âAnd you look like you havenât aged a day.â
I leaned back on my heels, and started walking backward in front of him. âDo you want me to tell you my skincare routine?â Because I doubted heâd believe the truth. âI could give it to you in crystal-clear detail.â
âAre you saying I look old?â
âDistinguished is a much better spin on it.â
His mouth dropped open, and he pressed a hand to his chest with a gasp. âOuch! And here I thought we were trying to get off on the right foot.â
âYou were,â I reminded, unable to bite in a grin. I turned on my heels again and waited for him to catch up with me. âIâm joking, by the way.â
He pressed his hands against his face, as if he could smooth out the crowâs feet around his eyes. âI feel like I need to get Botox now . . .â
âI was joking!â I laughed.
âMaybe plastic surgery.â
âOh, please, and ruin your perfect nose?â
âAm I balding, too? Maybe I can just get a new face altogetherââ
I grabbed him by the arm to stop him. âI like your face,â I told him in good humor, and before I could stop myself, I reached up and cupped his cheek, my thumb tracing over the laughter lines around his mouth. A blush rushed up his throat to his cheeks, but instead of leaning away, he closed his eyes and leaned into the palm of my hand.
My heart stuttered brightly. The skin on his cheek was rough with fine stubble, and as I looked at himâreally lookedâthere was so much the same about this man I didnât really know, that it almost felt like I did. But for everything that was the same, there were small bits that were different. His eyebrows were groomed, his hair trimmed neat. I ran my thumb down his nose, feeling the crooked bump there.
âWhen did you break your nose?â I asked, finally dropping my hand.
His lips twitched into a grin. âItâs not nearly as cool of a story as youâre thinking.â
âSo you didnât break it in a bar fight?â I asked, mock aghast.
âSisterâs wedding about a year ago,â he replied. âShe threw the bouquet. I was standing too close to the people trying to catch it.â
âAnd you got smacked by one of them?â
He shook his head. âBy the bouquet. Had a little silver clasp on it. Smacked me right in the nose.â
I laughed. I couldnât help it. âYouâre kidding! Did you at least catch the flowers?â
He scoffed. âWhat do you take me for? Of course I caught them. My sister and all her friends were livid.â We started walking again, and Washington Square Park was just ahead. There was a food truck on the far side, but I couldnât make out the name of it yet.
âSo, technically,â I realized, âyouâre supposed to get married next.â
âThatâs why they were livid, yes. I havenât been much for commitment.â
âYour Instagram tells me as much.â
He gasped again. âIâm honored that you researched me!â
I pointed to myself. âPublicist. Itâs my job.â
âSure, sure,â he settled, and then gave a one-shouldered shrug. The kind I rememberedâand it still infuriated me the exact same way. âMaybe I just hadnât found who I was looking for yet.â
I glanced over at him. Studied the lines of his face, how the streetlights cut the shadows of his face sharp. âAnd who are you looking for, James?â
âIwan,â he corrected softly, a thoughtful look flickering across his face. âMy friends call me Iwan.â
I inclined my head. âIs that what I am?â
I wasnât sure what kind of answer I wantedâthat, yes, I was a friend? Or that, no, we shouldnât cross professional boundaries? Orâ
Do I want him to say Iâm something more?
That was a silly thought, because Iâd seen the type of women he had dated, and not a single one of them was like meâoverworked nerdy publicists with art history degrees who spent their birthdays drinking wine out of flasks in front of van Gogh paintings.
âWell,â he began, âactuallyââ