A boy and a girl walk arm in arm.
Theyโre heading to the Knitting Factory, and like most things in Williamsburg, it isnโt what it sounds like, not a craft store or a place for yarn, but a concert venue on the northern edge of Brooklyn.
It is Henryโs birthday.
Earlier, when he asked her whenย herย birthday was, and when she told him it was back in March, a shadow crossed his face.
โIโm sorry I missed it.โ
โThatโs the great thing about birthdays,โ she said, leaning against him. โThey happen every year.โ
Sheโd laughed a little then, and so had he, but there was something hollow in his voice, a sadness she mistook for mere distraction.
Henryโs friends have already staked out a table near the stage, small boxes stacked on the table between them.
โHenry!โ shouts Robbie, a pair of bottles already empty in front of him. Bea ruffles his hair. โOur literal sweet summer child.โ
Their attention slides past him, and lands on her. โHi guys,โ he says, โthis is Addie.โ
โFinally!โ says Bea. โWeโve been dying to meet you.โ Of course, they already have.
Theyโve been asking for weeks to meet the new girl in Henryโs life. They keep accusing him of hiding her, but Addie has met them over beers at the Merchant, been for movie nights at Beaโs, crossed paths with them at galleries and parks. And every time, Bea talks ofย dรฉjร vu,ย and then again of
artistic movements, and every time Robbie sulks, despite Addieโs best efforts to placate him.
It seems to bother Henry more than it does her. He must think she has made peace with it, but the truth is, there is none to be found. The endless cycle ofย hello, who is this, nice to meet you, helloย wears at her like water against stoneโthe damage slow, but inevitable. She has simply learned to live with it.
โYou know,โ says Bea, studying her, โyou look so familiar.โ
Robbie rises from the table to get a round of drinks, and Addieโs chest tightens at the thought of him resetting, of having to start it all again, but Henry steps in, touches Robbieโs arm. โIโve got it,โ he says.
โBirthday doesnโt pay!โ protests Bea, but Henry waves her off and wades away through the growing crowd.
And Addie is left alone with his friends. โItโs really great to meet you both,โ she says. โHenry talks about you all the time.โ
Robbieโs eyes narrow in suspicion.
She can feel the wall rising up between them, again, but sheโs no stranger to Robbieโs moods, not anymore, and so she presses on. โYouโre an actor, right? Iโd love to come to one of your performances. Henry says youโre amazing.โ
He picks at the label on his beer. โYeah, sureโฆโ he mumbles, but she catches the edge of a smile when he says it.
And then Bea cuts in. โHenry seems happy. Really happy.โ โI am,โ says Henry, setting down a round of beers.
โTo twenty-nine,โ says Bea, raising her glass.
They proceed to debate the merits of the age, and agree it is a fairly useless year, as far as birthdays go, falling just shy of the monumental thirty.
Bea collars Henry. โBut next year, youโll officially be an adult.โ โIโm pretty sure that was eighteen,โ he says.
โDonโt be ridiculous. Eighteen is old enough to vote, twenty-one is old enough to drink, but thirty is old enough to make decisions.โ
โCloser to a midlife crisis than a quarter-life one,โ teases Robbie.
The microphone flares, whining slightly as a man takes the stage and announces a special opening act.
โHeโs a rising star, Iโm sure youโve heard his name, but if you havenโt you will soon. Give it up for Toby Marsh!โ
Addieโs heart lurches.
The crowd whoops and cheers, and Robbie whistles, and Toby steps onto the stage, that same beautiful, blushing boy, but as he waves to the crowd, his chin lifts, his smile is steady, proud. The difference between the first questing lines of a sketch and the finished drawing.
He sits down at the piano and begins to play, and the first notes hit her like longing. And then he begins to sing.
โIโm in love with a girl Iโve never met.โ
Time slips, and she is in his living room, perched on the piano bench, tea steaming on the windowsill as her absent fingers pick out the notes.
โBut I see her every night, it seemsโฆโ
She is in his bed, his broad hands playing out the melody on skin. Her face flares hot at the memory as he sings.
โAnd Iโm so afraid, afraid that Iโll forget her, even though Iโve only met her in my dreams.โ
She never gave him the words, but he found them anyway.
His voice is clearer, stronger, his tone more confident. He just needed the right song. Something to make the crowd lean in and listen.
Addie squeezes her eyes shut, the past and present tangling together in her head.
All those nights at the Alloway, watching him play. All the times he found her at the bar, and smiled.
All those firsts that were not firsts for her. The palimpsest bleeding up through the paper.
Toby looks up from the piano, and thereโs no way he can see her in a place this big, but she is sure his eyes meet hers, and the room tilts a little, and she doesnโt know if itโs the beers she drank too fast or the vertigo of memory, but then the song ends, replaced by a warm wave of applause, and she is on her feet, moving toward the door.
โAddie, wait,โ says Henry, but she canโt, even though she knows what it means to walk away, knows that Robbie and Bea will forget her, and she will have to start again, and so will Henryโbut in that moment, she doesnโt care.
She cannot breathe.
The door swings open and the night rushes in, and Addie gasps, forcing air into her lungs.
And it should feel good to hear her music, it should feel right. After all, she has gone to visit pieces of her art so many times.
But they were only pieces, stripped of context. Sculptured birds on marble plinths, and paintings behind ropes. Didactic boxes taped to whitewashed walls and glass boxes that keep the present from the past.
It is a different thing when the glass breaks.
It is her mother in the doorway, withered to bone. It is Remy in the Paris salon.
It is Sam, inviting her to stay, every time. It is Toby Marsh, playing their song.
The only way Addie knows how to keep going is to keep going forward. They are Orpheus, she is Eurydice, and every time they turn back, she is ruined.
โAddie?โ Henry is right behind her. โWhatโs wrong?โ
โIโm sorry,โ she says. She wipes the tears away and shakes her head because the story is too long, and too short. โI canโt go back in there, not now.โ
Henry looks over his shoulder, and he must have seen the color drop from her face during the show because he says, โDo you know him? That Toby Marsh guy?โ
She hasnโt told him that storyโthey havenโt gotten there yet.
โI did,โ she says, which isnโt strictly true, because it makes it sound like something in the past, when the past is the one thing Addieโs not entitled to, and Henry must hear the lie buried in the words, because he frowns. He laces his hands behind his head.
โDo you still have feelings for him?โ
And she wants to be honest, to say that of course she does. She never gets closure, never gets to say good-byeโno periods, or exclamations, just a lifetime of ellipses. Everyone else starts over, they get a blank page, but hers are full of text. People talk about carrying torches for old flames, and itโs not a full fire, but Addieโs hands are full of candles. How is she supposed to set them down, or put them out? She has long run out of air.
But it is not love.
It is not love, and that is what heโs asking.
โNo,โ she says. โHe justโit caught me off guard. Iโm sorry.โ
Henry asks if she wants to go home, and Addie doesnโt know if he means both of them, or only her, doesnโt want to find out, so she shakes her head, and they go back in, and the lights have changed, and the stage is empty, the house music filling the air until the main act, and Bea and Robbie are chatting, heads bent just the way they were when they walked in. And Addie does her best to smile as they reach the table.
โThere you are!โ says Robbie.
โWhere did you run off to?โ asks Bea, eyes flicking from Henry to her. โAnd whoโs this?โ
He slides his arm around her waist. โGuys, this is Addie.โ Robbie looks her up and down, but Bea only beams. โFinally!โ she says. โWeโve been dying to meet youโฆโ