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Chapter no 17

The Invisible Life of Addie LaRue

It is a better day.

The sun is out, the air is not so cold, and there is so much to love about a city like New York.

The food, the art, the constant offerings of cultureโ€”though Addieโ€™s favorite thing is its scale. Towns and villages are easily conquered. A week in Villon was enough to walk every path, to learn every face. But with cities like Paris, London, Chicago, New York, she doesnโ€™t have to pace herself, doesnโ€™t have to take small bites to make the newness last. A city she can consume as hungrily as she likes, devour it every day and never run out of things to eat.

It is the kind of place that takes years to visit, and still there always seems to be another alley, another set of steps, another door.

Perhaps thatโ€™s why she hasnโ€™t noticed it before.

Set off from the curb, and down a short flight of steps, there is a shop half-hidden by the line of the street. The awning was clearly once purple, but has long faded toward gray, though the shopโ€™s name is still legible, picked out in white lettering.

The Last Word.

A used bookstore, judging by the name, and the windows brimming with stacked spines. Addieโ€™s pulse thrills a little. She was certain sheโ€™d found them all. But that is the brilliant thing about New York. Addie has wandered a fair portion of the five boroughs, and still the city has its secrets, some tucked in cornersโ€”basement bars, speakeasies, members-only clubsโ€”and others sitting in plain sight. Like Easter eggs in a movie, the ones you donโ€™t notice until the second or third viewing. And not like Easter eggs at all,

because no matter how many times she walks these blocks, no matter how many hours, or days, or years she spends learning the contours of New York, as soon as she turns her back it seems to shift again, reassemble. Buildings go up and come down, businesses open and close, people arrive and depart and the deck shuffles itself again and again and again.

Of course, she goes in.

A faint bell announces her arrival, the sound quickly smothered by the crush of books in various conditions. Some bookstores are organized, more gallery than shop. Some are sterile, reserved for only the new and untouched.

But not this one.

This shop is a labyrinth of stacks and shelves, texts stacked two, even three deep, leather beside paper beside board. Her favorite kind of store, one thatโ€™s easy to get lost in.

There is a checkout counter by the door, but it is empty, and she wanders, unmolested, through the aisles, picking her way along the well- loved shelves. The bookshop seems fairly empty, save for an older white man studying a row of thrillers, a gorgeous Black girl sitting cross-legged in a leather chair at the end of a row, silver shining on her fingers and in her ears, a giant art book open in her lap.

Addie wanders past a placard markedย POETRY, and the darkness whispers against her skin. Teeth skimming like a blade along a bare shoulder.

Come live with me and be my love.

Addieโ€™s refrain, worn smooth with repetition.

You do not know what love is.

She doesnโ€™t stop, but turns the corner, fingers trailing now alongย THEOLOGY. She has read the Bible, the Upanishads, the Quran, after a spiritual bender of sorts a century ago. She passes Shakespeare, too, a religion all his own.

She pauses atย MEMOIR, studying the titles on the spines, so manyย Iโ€™s andย Meโ€™s andย Myโ€™s, possessive words for possessive lives. What a luxury, to tell oneโ€™s story. To be read, remembered.

Something knocks against Addieโ€™s elbow, and she looks down to see a pair of amber eyes peering over her sleeve, surrounded by a mass of orange fur. The cat looks as old as the book in her hand. It opens its mouth, and lets out something between a yawn and a meow, a hollow, whistling sound.

โ€œHello.โ€ She scratches the cat between the ears, eliciting a low rumble of pleasure.

โ€œWow,โ€ says a male voice behind her. โ€œBook doesnโ€™t usually bother with people.โ€

Addie turns, about to comment on the catโ€™s name, but loses her train of thought when she sees him, because for a moment, only a moment, before the face comes into focus, she is certain it isโ€”

But it is not him. Of course it is not.

The boyโ€™s hair, though black, falls in loose curls around his face, and his eyes, behind their thick-frame glasses, are closer to gray than green. There is something fragile to them, more like glass than stone, and when he speaks, his voice is gentle, warm, undeniably human. โ€œHelp you find anything?โ€

Addie shakes her head. โ€œNo,โ€ she says, clearing her throat. โ€œJust browsing.โ€

โ€œWell then,โ€ he says with a smile. โ€œCarry on.โ€

She watches him go, black curls vanishing into the maze of titles, before dragging her gaze back to the cat.

But the cat is gone, too.

Addie returns the memoir to the shelf and continues browsing, attention wandering overย ARTย andย WORLD HISTORY, all the while waiting for the boy to reappear, to start the cycle over, wondering what sheโ€™ll say when he does. She should have asked for help, let him lead her through the shelvesโ€”but he doesnโ€™t come back.

The shop bell chimes again, announcing a new customer as Addie reaches the Classics.ย Beowulf. Antigone.ย The Odyssey.ย There are a dozen versions of this last, and sheโ€™s just drawing one out when thereโ€™s a sudden burst of laughter, high and light, and she glances through a gap in the shelves and sees a blond girl leaning on the counter. The boy stands on the other side, cleaning his glasses on the edge of his shirt.

He bows his head, dark lashes skimming his cheeks.

He isnโ€™t even looking at the girl, whoโ€™s rising on her toes to get closer to him. She reaches out and runs one hand along his sleeve the way Addie just did along the shelves, and he smiles, then, a quiet, bashful grin that erases the last of his resemblance to the dark.

Addie tucks the book under her arm and heads for the door, and out, taking advantage of his distraction.

โ€œHey!โ€ calls a voiceโ€”his voiceโ€”but she continues up the steps onto the street. In a moment, he will forget. In a moment, his mind will trail off, and heโ€™llโ€”

A hand lands on her shoulder. โ€œYou have to pay for that.โ€

She turns, and thereโ€™s the boy from the shop, a little breathless, and very annoyed. Her eyes flick past him to the steps, the open door. It must have been ajar. He must have been right behind her. But still. He followed her out.

โ€œWell?โ€ he demands, hand dropping from her shoulder and coming to rest, palm open, in the space between them. She could run, of course, but itโ€™s not worth it. She checks the cost on the back of the book. It isnโ€™t much, but itโ€™s more than she has on her.

โ€œSorry,โ€ she says, handing it back.

He frowns, then, a furrow too deep for his face. The kind of line carved by years of repetition, even though he canโ€™t be more than thirty. He looks down at the book, and a dark brow lifts behind his glasses.

โ€œA shop full of antique books, and you steal a battered paperback ofย The Odyssey? You know this wonโ€™t fetch anything, right?โ€

Addie holds his gaze. โ€œWho says I wanted to resell it?โ€ โ€œItโ€™s also in Greek.โ€

That, she hadnโ€™t noticed. Not that it matters. She learned the classics in Latin first, but in the decades since, sheโ€™s picked up Greek.

โ€œSilly me,โ€ she says dryly, โ€œI should have stolen it in English.โ€

He almostโ€”almostโ€”smiles, then, but itโ€™s a bemused, misshapen thing. Instead, he shakes his head. โ€œJust take it,โ€ he says, holding out the book. โ€œI think the shop can spare it.โ€

She has to fight the sudden urge to push it back. The gesture feels too much like charity.

โ€œHenry!โ€ calls the pretty Black girl from the doorway. โ€œShould I call the cops?โ€

โ€œNo,โ€ he calls back, still looking at Addie. โ€œItโ€™s fine.โ€ He narrows his eyes, as if studying her. โ€œHonest mistake.โ€

She stares at this boyโ€”atย Henry. Then she reaches out and takes back the book, cradling it against her as the bookseller vanishes back into the shop.

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