For once, Henry is early.
Which, he figures, is better than being late, but he doesnโt want to beย tooย early because thatโs even worse, even weirder andโhe needs to stop overthinking it.
He smooths his shirt, checks his hair in the side of a parked car, and goes inside.
The taqueria is bright and bustling, a concrete cavern of a place, with garage door windows and a food truck parked in the corner of the room, and it doesnโt matter if heโs early, because Vanessa is already inside.
Sheโs traded the barista apron for leggings and a print dress, and her blond hair, which heโs only seen pulled up, hangs in loose waves around her face, and when she sees him, she breaks into a smile.
โIโm glad you called,โ she says. And Henry smiles back. โSo am I.โ
They order using slips of paper and those little pencils Henry hasnโt seen since he played mini-golf one time when he was ten, fingers brushing as she points to tacos and he fills them in. Their hands touch again over the chips, legs skimming beneath the metal table, and each time itโs like a tiny burst of light inside his chest.
And for once, he isnโt talking himself in and out of every single line, isnโt chiding himself for each and every move, isnโt convincing himself that he has to say the right thingโthereโs no need to find the right words when there are no wrong ones. He doesnโt have to lie, doesnโt have to try, doesnโt have to be anyone but himself, because he is enough.
The food is great, but the place is noisy, voices echoing off high ceilings, and Henry cringes when someone scrapes their chair back over the concrete floor. โSorry,โ he says. โI know itโs not fancy.โ
He picked the place, knows they probably should have just gone for drinks, but itโs New York, and cocktails cost twice as much as food, and he can barely afford even this on a booksellerโs wages.
โDude,โ she says, stirring an agua fresca, โI work in a coffee shop.โ โAt least you get tips.โ
Vanessa feigns shock. โWhat, they donโt tip booksellers?โ โNope.โ
โNot even when you recommend a good book?โ He shakes his head.
โThatโs a crime,โ she says. โYou should put a jar on the counter.โ
โWhat would I say?โ He raps his fingers on the table. โBooks feed hungry minds. Tips feed the cat?โ
Vanessa laughs, sudden and bright. โYouโre so funny.โ โAm I?โ
She sticks out her tongue. โFishing for compliments, are we?โ โNo,โ he says. โJust curious. What do you see in me?โ
Vanessa smiles, suddenly shy. โYouโre โฆ well, it sounds cheesy, but youโre exactly what Iโve been looking for.โ
โAnd whatโs that?โ he asks.
If she saidย real, sensitive, thoughtful,ย he might have bought it. But she doesnโt.
She uses words likeย outgoing, funny, ambitious,ย and the more she talks about him, the thicker the frost in her eyes, the more it spreads, until he can barely make out the color beneath. And Henry wonders how she can see, but of course, she canโt.
Thatโs the point.
Theyโre at the Merchant a week later, he and Bea and Robbie, three beers and a basket of fries between them.
โHowโs Vanessa?โ she asks, while Robbie looks pointedly into his drink. โSheโs fine,โ says Henry.
And she is. He is. They are. โBeen seeing a lot of her.โ
Henry frowns. โYouโre the one who told me to get Tabitha out of my system.โ
Bea holds up her hands. โI know, I know.โ โItโs new. You know how things are. Sheโsโโ โA carbon copy,โ mumbles Robbie.
Henry turns on him. โWhat was that?โ he asks, annoyed. โSpeak up. I know they taught you how to project.โ
Robbie takes a long swig of beer, looking miserable. โIโm just saying, sheโs a carbon copy of Tabby. Waifish, blondโโ
โFemale?โ
Itโs a long-running sore point between them, the fact that Henry isnโtย gay,ย that heโs attracted to a person first and their gender second. Robbie cringes, but doesnโt apologize.
โBesides,โ says Henry. โI didnโt go after Vanessa. She pickedย me. She likesย me.โ
โDo you likeย her?โ asks Bea.
โOf course,โ he says, a little too fast. He likes her. And sure, he also likes that she likes him (theย himย that she sees) and thereโs a Venn diagram between those two, a place where they overlap. Heโs pretty sure heโs safely in the shaded zone. Heโs not really using her, is he? At least, heโs not the only one being shallowโsheโs using him, too, painting someone else onto the canvas of her life. And if itโs mutual, well then, itโs not his fault โฆ is it? โWe just want you to be happy,โ Beaโs saying. โAfter all thatโs happened,
just โฆ donโt go too fast.โ
But for once, heโs not the one who needs to slow down.
Henry woke up that morning to chocolate-chip pancakes and a glass of OJ, a little handwritten note on the counter beside the plate with a heart and aย V. Sheโs slept over the last three nights, and each time, she left something behind. A blouse. A pair of shoes. A toothbrush in the holder by the sink.
His friends stare at him, pale fog still swirling through their eyes, and he knows that they care, knows they love him, knows they only want the best for him. They have to now, thanks to the deal.
โDonโt worry,โ he says, sipping his beer. โIโll take it slow.โ
โHenryโฆโ
Heโs half-asleep when he feels her run a painted nail down his back. Weak gray light spills through the windows.
โHm?โ he says, rolling over.
Vanessaโs got her head on one hand, blond hair spilling down over the pillow, and he wonders how long she was leaning like that, waiting for him to wake up, before she finally intervened.
โI need to tell you something.โ She gazes at him, eyes frosted with that milky light. He is beginning to dread that shine, the pale smoke that follows him from face to face.
โWhat is it?โ he asks, rising onto one elbow. โWhatโs wrong?โ โNothing. I justโฆโ She breaks into a smile. โI love you.โ
And the scary thing is, she sounds like she means it.
โYou donโt have to say it back. I know itโs soon. I just wanted you to know.โ
She nuzzles against him.
โAre you sure?โ he asks. โI mean, itโs only been a week.โ
โSo what?โ she says. โWhen you know, you know. And I know.โ Henry swallows, kisses her temple. โIโm going to take a shower.โ
He stands under the hot water as long as he can, wondering what heโs supposed to say to that, if and how he can convince Vanessa that it isnโt love, itโs just obsession, but of course, that isnโt really true, either. He made the deal. He made the terms. This is what he wanted.
Isnโt it?
He cuts the water off, wraps the towel around his waist, and smells smoke.
Not the scent of a match lighting a candle, or something boiling over on the stove, but the char-black smell of things that arenโt supposed to be on fire, and are now burning.
Henry surges out into the hall, and sees Vanessa in the kitchen, standing at the counter, a box of matches in one hand, and the cardboard box of Tabithaโs things burning in the sink.
โWhat are you doing?โ he demands.
โYouโre holding on to the past,โ she says, striking another match and tossing it into the box. โLike, literally holding on. Youโve had this box as long as weโve been together.โ
โIโve only known you a week!โ he shouts, but she presses on.
โAnd you deserve better. You deserve to be happy. You deserve to live in the present. This is a good thing. This is closure. This isโโ
He knocks the matches from her hand and pushes her aside, reaching for the tap.
The water hits the box in a sizzle, sending up a plume of smoke as it douses the flames.
โVanessa,โ he says, gritting his teeth, โI need you to go.โ โLike, home?โ
โLike,ย go.โ
โHenry,โ she says, touching his arm. โWhat did I do wrong?โ
And he could point to the smoldering remains in his kitchen sink, or the fact itโs all going way too fast, or the fact that when she looks at him, she sees someone else entirely. But instead, he just says, โItโs not you. Itโs me.โ
โNo, itโs not,โ she says, tears sliding down her face. โI need some space, okay?โ
โIโm sorry,โ she sobs, clinging to him. โIโm sorry. I love you.โ
Her limbs are wrapped around his waist, head buried in his side, and for a second, he thinks he might have to physically pry her off.
โVanessa, let go.โ
He guides her away, and she looks devastated, ruined. She looks the way he felt the night he made the deal, and it breaks his heart at the thought that she will walk out feeling that lost, that alone.
โI care about you,โ he says, gripping her shoulders. โI care about you, I do.โ
She brightens, just a little. A wilting plant fed water. โSo youโre not mad?โ
Of course heโs mad. โNo, Iโm not mad.โ
She buries her face in his front, and he strokes her hair. โYou care about me.โ
โI do.โ He untangles himself. โIโll call you. I promise.โ โYou promise,โ she echoes as he helps her gather her things.
โI promise,โ he says as he leads her down the hall, and out.
The door shuts between them, and Henry sags back against it as the smoke alarm finally begins to ring.