โHe just left you there?โ says Henry, aghast.
Addie takes a fry, turning it between her fingers. โThere are worse places to be left.โ
Theyโre sitting at a high-top table in a so-called pubโwhat passes for a pub outside of Britainโsharing an order of vinegary fish-and-chips and a pint of warm beer.
A waiter passes by, and smiles at Henry.
A pair of girls heading for the bathroom slow as they come into his orbit, and stare as they leave again.
A stream of words drifts over from a nearby table, the low, rapid staccato of German, and Addieโs mouth twitches in a smile.
โWhat is it?โ asks Henry.
She leans in. โThe couple over there.โ She tilts her head in their direction. โTheyโre having a fight. Apparently the guy slept with his secretary. And his assistant. And his Pilates instructor. The woman knew about the first two, but sheโs mad about the third, because they both take Pilates at the same studio.โ
Henry stares at her, marveling. โHow many languages do you know?โ โEnough,โ she says, but he clearly wants to know, so she ticks them off
on her fingers. โFrench, of course. And English. Greek and Latin. German, Italian, Spanish, Swiss, some Portuguese, though itโs not perfect.โ
โYou would have made an amazing spy.โ
She raises a brow behind her pint. โWho says I havenโt been one?โ
The plates are empty when she looks around, sees the waiter duck into the kitchen. โCome on,โ she says, grabbing his hand.
Henry frowns. โWe havenโt paid.โ
โI know,โ she says, hopping down from the stool, โbut if we go now, heโll think he just forgot to clear the table. He wonโt remember.โ
This is the problem with a life like Addieโs.
She has gone so long without roots, she doesnโt know how to grow them anymore.
So used to losing things, she isnโt sure how to hold them. How to make space in a world the size of herself.
โNo,โ says Henry. โHe wonโt rememberย you. But heโll remember me.
Iโm not invisible, Addie. Iโm the exact opposite of invisible.โ
Invisible.ย The word scrapes over her skin. โIโm not invisible either,โ she says.
โYou know what I mean. I canโt just come and go. And even if I could,โ he says, reaching for his wallet, โit would still beย wrong.โ
The word hits like a blow, and she is back in Paris, doubled over with hunger. She is at the marquisโs house, dining in stolen clothes, stomach twisting as Luc points out that someone will pay for every bite she takes.
Her face burns with shame.
โFine,โ she says, pulling a handful of twenties from her pocket. She drops two on the table. โBetter?โ But when she looks at Henry, his frown has only deepened.
โWhere did you get that money?โ
She doesnโt want to tell him that she walked out of a designer store and into a pawn shop, moving pieces from one hand to the other. Doesnโt want to explain that everything she hasโeverything besidesย himโis stolen. And that in some ways, so is he. Addie doesnโt want to see the judgment on his face, doesnโt want to think about how merited it might be.
โDoes it matter?โ she asks.
And Henry says,ย โYes,โย with so much conviction, she flushes crimson. โDo you think I want to live like this?โ Addie grits her teeth. โNo job, no
ties, no way to hold on to anyone or anything? Do you think I like being so alone?โ
Henry looks pained. โYou arenโt alone,โ he says. โYou have me.โ โI know, but you shouldnโt have to do everythingโbe everything.โ โI donโt mindโโ
โButย Iย do!โ she snaps, thrown by the anger in her own voice. โIโm a person, not a pet, Henry, and I donโt need you looking down at me, or coddling me either. I do what I have to, and itโs not always nice, and itโs not always fair, but itโs how I survive. Iโm sorry you disapprove. But this is who I am. This is what works for me.โ
Henry shakes his head. โBut it wonโt work forย us.โ
Addie pulls back as if struck. Suddenly the pub is too loud, too full, and she canโt stand there, canโt stand still, so she turns, and storms out.
The moment the night air hits her, she feels ill.
The world rocks, re-steadies โฆ and somewhere between one step and the next, the anger evaporates, and she just feels tired, and sad.
She doesnโt understand how the night went sideways.
Doesnโt understand the sudden weight on her chest until she realizes what it isโfear. Fear that sheโs messed up, thrown away the one thing sheโs always wanted. Fear that it was that fragile, that it came apart so easily.
But then she hears footsteps, feels Henry coming up beside her.
He doesnโt say anything, only walks, half a step behind, and this is a new kind of silence. The silent aftermath of storms, the damage not yet tallied.
Addie swipes a tear from her cheek. โDid I ruin it?โ โRuin what?โ he asks.
โUs.โ
โAddie.โ He grabs her shoulder. She turns, expecting to see his face streaked with anger, but itโs steady, smooth. โIt was just a fight. Itโs not the end of the world. Itโs certainly not the end of us.โ
Three hundred years sheโs dreamed of this. She always thought it would be easy.
The opposite of Luc.
โI donโt know how to be with someone,โ she whispers. โI donโt know how to be a normal person.โ
His mouth quirks into a crooked grin. โYouโre incredible, and strong, and stubborn, and brilliant. But I think itโs safe to say youโre never going to be normal.โ
They walk, arm in arm, through the cool night air. โDid you go back to Paris?โ asks Henry.
It is an olive branch, a bridge built, and she is grateful for it. โEventually,โ she says.
It had taken far longer to get back there, without Lucโs help, or her naรฏve drive to reach the city, and sheโs embarrassed to say she did not hurry back. That even if Luc meant to abandon her, stranding her there in Florence, in doing so he broke a kind of seal. In yet another, maddening way, he forced her free.
Until that moment, Addie had never conceived of leaving France. Itโs absurd to think of now, but the world felt so much smaller then. And then, suddenly, it was not.
Perhaps he meant to cast her into chaos.
Perhaps he thought she was getting too comfortable, growing too stubborn.
Perhaps he wanted her to call for him again. To beg him to come back. Perhaps perhaps perhapsโbut she will never know.