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Chapter no 12 – The Olive Garden

Beach Read

There was noย montage. It was a slow night on the warm asphalt, under the neon glow and screeching metal of cheap rides. Hours of eating deep-fried food and drinking lime-infused beer from sticky cans between visits to each of the seven rides. There was no dragging in and out of lines. There was just wandering. Telling stories.

Gus pointed at a pregnant girl with a barbed wire tattoo. โ€œShe joins the cult.โ€

โ€œShe does not,โ€ I disagreed.

โ€œShe does. She loses the baby. Itโ€™s awful. The only thing that starts to bring her back to life is this rising YouTube star she follows. She finds out about New Eden from him, then goes for a weekend-long seminar and never leaves.โ€

โ€œSheโ€™s there for two years,โ€ I countered. โ€œBut then her little brother comes to get her. She doesnโ€™t want to see him, and securityโ€™s trying to get him out of there, but then he pulls out a sonogram. His girlfriend, May, is pregnant. A little boy. Due in a month. She doesnโ€™t leave with him, but that nightโ€”โ€

โ€œShe tries to leave,โ€ Gus took over. โ€œThey wonโ€™t let her. They lock her in a white room to decontaminate her. Her exposure to her brotherโ€™s energy, they say, has temporarily altered her brain chemistry. She has to complete the five purification steps. If she still wants to leave after that, theyโ€™ll let her.โ€

โ€œShe completes them,โ€ I said. โ€œThe reader thinks theyโ€™ve lost her. That sheโ€™s stuck. But the last line of the book is some clue. Something she and her brother used to say. Some sign that she kept a secret part of herself safe, and the only reason sheโ€™s not leaving yet is because there are people trapped there she wants to help.โ€

We went back and forth like that all night, and when we finally stopped, it was only because riding the scrambler left me so nauseated I ran from it to the nearest trash can and vomited heartily.

Even as the recently eaten chili dog was rushing back up, I had to think the night had been some kind of success. After all, Gus grabbed my hair and pulled it away from my face as I retched.

At least until he grumbled, โ€œShit, I hate vomit,โ€ and ran off gagging.

Hate, I found out on the ride home, was a less embarrassing way to say

fear.

National Book Award nominee Augustus Everett was vomit-phobic, and had been ever since a girl named Ashley in his fourth grade class puked on the back of his head.

โ€œI havenโ€™t puked in easily fifteen years,โ€ he told me. โ€œAnd Iโ€™ve had the stomach flu twice in that time.โ€

I was fighting giggles as I drove. In general, I didnโ€™t find phobias funny, but Gus was a former gravedigger turned suicide-cult investigator. Nothing Grace said in our interview had made him bat an eye, and yet cheap rides and puke had nearly bested him.

โ€œGod, Iโ€™m sorry,โ€ I said, regaining control of myself. I glanced over to him, slumped back in my passenger seat with one arm folded behind his head. โ€œI canโ€™t believe my first lesson in love stories actually just unearthed multiple traumas for you. At least you didnโ€™t end up also โ€ฆ you-know- what-ing โ€ฆโ€ I didnโ€™t say the word, just in case.

His eyes flashed over to me and the corner of his mouth curled. โ€œTrust me, I got out in the nick of time. One more second andย youย wouldโ€™ve gotten Ashley Phillipsโ€™ed.โ€

โ€œWow,โ€ I said. โ€œAnd yet you held my hair. So noble. So brave. So selfless.โ€ I was teasing, but it actually was pretty sweet.

โ€œYeah, well, if you didnโ€™t have such nice hair, I wouldnโ€™t have bothered.โ€ Gusโ€™s eyes went back to the road. โ€œBut I learned my lesson. Never again will I try to be a hero.โ€

โ€œMy parents met at a carnival.โ€ I hadnโ€™t meant to say it; it had just slipped out.

Gus looked at me, his expression inscrutable. โ€œYeah?โ€

I nodded. I fully intended to drop the subject, but the last few days had loosened something in me, and the words came pouring out. โ€œTheir freshman year, at Ohio State.โ€

โ€œOh, notย Theย Ohio State University,โ€ he teased. Michiganders and Ohioans had a major rivalry I often forgot about due to my total ignorance of sports. Dadโ€™s brothers had lovingly referred to him as theย Great Defector, and heโ€™d teased me with the same nickname when I chose U of M.

โ€œYes, the very one,โ€ I played along.

We fell into silence for a few seconds. โ€œSo,โ€ Gus prompted, โ€œtell me about it.โ€

โ€œNo,โ€ I said, giving him a suspicious smile. โ€œYou donโ€™t want to hear that.โ€

โ€œIโ€™m legally obligated to,โ€ he said. โ€œHow else am I going to learn about love?โ€

An ache speared through my chest. โ€œMaybe not from them. He cheated on her. A lot. While she had cancer.โ€

โ€œDamn,โ€ Gus said. โ€œThatโ€™s shitty.โ€

โ€œSays the man who doesnโ€™t believe in dating.โ€

He ran a hand through his already messy hair, leaving it ravaged. His eyes flickered to me, then back to the road. โ€œFidelity was never my issue.โ€

โ€œFidelity across a two-week span isnโ€™t exactly impressive,โ€ I pointed out. โ€œIโ€™ll have you know I dated Tessa Armstrong for a month,โ€ he said. โ€œMonogamously? Because I seem to remember a sordid night in a frat

house that would suggest otherwise.โ€

Surprise splashed across his face. โ€œIโ€™d broken up with her when that happened.โ€

โ€œI saw you with her that morning,โ€ I said. It probably should have been embarrassing to admit I remembered all this, but Gus didnโ€™t seem to notice that. In fact, he just seemed a little insulted by the observation.

He mussed his hair again and said irritably, โ€œI broke up with her at the party.โ€

โ€œShe wasnโ€™t at the party,โ€ I said.

โ€œNo. But since it wasnโ€™t the seventeenth century, I had a phone.โ€

โ€œYou called from a party and dumped your girlfriend?โ€ I cried. โ€œWhy would you do that?โ€

He looked my way, eyes narrowed. โ€œWhy do you think, January?โ€

I was grateful for the dark. My face was suddenly on fire. My stomach felt like molten lava was pouring down it. Was I misunderstanding? Should I ask? Did itย matter? That was almost a decade ago, and even if thingsย hadย gone differently that night, it wouldnโ€™t have amounted to anything in the long run.

Still, I was burning up.

โ€œWell, shit,โ€ I said. I couldnโ€™t get anything else out.

He laughed. โ€œAnyway, your parents,โ€ he said. โ€œIt couldnโ€™t have been all bad.โ€

I cleared my throat. It could not have sounded any less natural. I might as well have just screamedย I DONโ€™T WANT TO TALK ABOUT MY SAD PARENTS WHILE Iโ€™M THINKING FIERY THOUGHTS ABOUT YOUย and

gotten it over with.

โ€œIt wasnโ€™t,โ€ I said, focusing on the road. โ€œI donโ€™t think.โ€ โ€œAnd the night they met?โ€ he pressed.

Again, the words came gushing out of me, like Iโ€™d needed to say them all yearโ€”or maybe they were just a welcome diversion from the other conversation weโ€™d been having. โ€œThey went to this carnival at a local Catholic church,โ€ I said. โ€œNot together. Like, they went separately to the same carnival. And then they ended up standing in line next to each other for that Esmeralda thing. You know, the animatronic psychic-in-a-box?โ€

โ€œOh, I know her well,โ€ Gus said. โ€œShe was one of my first crushes.โ€

There was no reason that shouldโ€™ve sent new fireworks of heat across my cheeks, and yet, here we were. โ€œSo anyway,โ€ I went on. โ€œMy mom was the fifth wheel on this, like, blatant double date trying to disguise itself as a Casual Hang. So when the others went off to go through the Tunnel-o-Love, she went to get her fortune. My dad saidย heย leftย hisย group when he spotted this beautiful red-haired girl in a blue polka-dot dress.โ€

โ€œBetty Crocker?โ€ Gus guessed.

โ€œSheโ€™s a brunette. Get your eyes checked,โ€ I said.

A smile quirked Gusโ€™s lips. โ€œSorry for interrupting. Go on. Your dadโ€™s just spotted your mom.โ€

I nodded. โ€œAnyway, he spent the whole time he was in line trying to figure out how to strike up a conversation with her, and finally, when she

paid for her prediction, she started cussing like a sailor.โ€

Gus laughed. โ€œI love seeing where you get your admirable qualities from.โ€

I flipped him off and went on. โ€œHer prediction had gotten stuck halfway out of the machine. So Dad steps up to save the day. He manages to rip the top half of the ticket out, but the rest is still stuck in the machine, so Mom canโ€™t make sense of the words. So then he told her sheโ€™d better stick around and see if her fortune came out with his.โ€

โ€œOh,ย thatย old line,โ€ Gus said, grinning.

โ€œWorks every time,โ€ I agreed. โ€œAnyway, he put in his nickel and the two tickets came out. Hers said,ย You will meet a handsome stranger, and his said,ย Your storyโ€™s about to begin.โ€ They still had them framed in the living room. Or at least, when I was home for Christmas, they were still up.

That deep ache passed through me. It felt like a metal cheese slicer, pulled right through my center, left there midway through my body. Iโ€™d thought missing my dad would be the hardest thing Iโ€™d ever do. But the worst thing, the hardest thing, had turned out to be being angry with someone you couldnโ€™t fight it out with.

Someone you loved enough that you desperatelyย wantedย to push through the shit and find a way to make a new normal. I would never get a real explanation from Dad. Mom would never get an apology. Weโ€™d never be able to see things โ€œfrom his point of viewโ€ or actively choose not to. He was gone, and everything of him weโ€™d planned to hold on to was obliterated.

โ€œThey were married three months later,โ€ I told Gus. โ€œSome twenty-five years after that, their only daughterโ€™s first book,ย Kiss Kiss, Wish Wishย came out with Sandy Lowe Books, with a dedication that readโ€”โ€

โ€œโ€˜To my parents,โ€™โ€ Gus said. โ€œโ€˜Who are proof of fateโ€™s strong, if animatronic, hand.โ€™โ€

My mouth fell open. Iโ€™d almost forgotten what he had told me at the gas station, that heโ€™d read my books. Or maybe I hadnโ€™t let myself think about it, because I was worried that meant heโ€™d hated them, and somehow I was still competing with him, needing him to recognize me as his rival and equal.

โ€œYou remember that?โ€ It came out as a whisper.

His eyes leapt toward me, and my heart rose in my throat. โ€œItโ€™s why I asked about them,โ€ he said. โ€œI thought it was the nicest dedication Iโ€™d ever

read.โ€

I made a face. Coming from him, that might not have been a compliment. โ€œโ€˜Nicest.โ€™โ€

โ€œFine, January,โ€ he said in a low voice. โ€œI thought it was beautiful. Is that what you want me to admit?โ€

Again my heart buoyed through my chest. โ€œYes.โ€

โ€œI thought it was beautiful,โ€ he said immediately, sincerely.

I turned my face to the window. โ€œYeah, well. It turned out to be a lie. But I guess Mom thought it was a nice enough one. She knew he was cheating on her and she stayed with him.โ€

โ€œIโ€™m sorry.โ€ For several minutes, neither of us spoke. Finally, Gus cleared his throat. He made it sound so natural. โ€œYou asked why New Eden. Why I wanted to write about it?โ€

I nodded, glad for the topic change, though surprised by his segue.

โ€œI guess โ€ฆโ€ He tugged at his hair anxiously. โ€œWell, my mom died when I was a kid. Donโ€™t know if you knew that.โ€

I wasnโ€™t sure how I would have, but even if I didnโ€™t outright know it, it fit with the image of him Iโ€™d had in college. โ€œI donโ€™t think so.โ€

โ€œYeah,โ€ he said. โ€œSo, my dad was garbage, but my momโ€”she was amazing. And when I was a kid, I just thought, like,ย Okay, itโ€™s us against the world. Weโ€™re stuck in this situation, but itโ€™s not forever. And I kept waiting for her to leave him. I meanโ€”I kept a bag packed with a bunch of comic books and some socks and granola bars. I had this vision of us hopping on a train, riding to the end of the line, you know?โ€ When his eyes flashed toward me, the corner of his mouth was curled, but the smile wasnโ€™t real.

It said,ย Isnโ€™t that ridiculous? Wasnโ€™t I ridiculous?ย And I knew how to read it because it was a smile Iโ€™d been practicing for a year:ย Can you believe I was so stupid? Donโ€™t worry. I know better now.

A weight pressed low in my stomach at the image: Gus, before he was the Gus I knew. A Gus who daydreamed about escape, who believed someone would rescue him.

โ€œWhere were you going to go?โ€ I asked. It came out as little more than a whisper.

His eyes leapt back to the road and the muscle in his jaw pulsed, then relaxed, his face serene once more. โ€œThe redwoods,โ€ he said. โ€œPretty sure I thought we could build a tree house there.โ€

โ€œA tree house in the redwoods,โ€ I repeated quietly, like it was a prayer, a secret. In a way, it was. It was a tiny piece of a Gus Iโ€™d never imagined, one with romantic notions and hope for the unlikely. โ€œBut what does that have to do with New Eden?โ€

He coughed, checked his rearview mirror, went back to staring down the road. โ€œI guess โ€ฆ a few years ago, I just sort of realized my mom wasnโ€™t a kid.โ€ He shrugged. โ€œIโ€™d thought we were waiting for the perfect time to leave, but she was never going to. Sheโ€™d never said she was. She could have taken us out of there, and she didnโ€™t.โ€

I shook my head. โ€œI doubt it was that simple.โ€

โ€œThatโ€™s why,โ€ he murmured. โ€œI know it wasnโ€™t simple, and when I talk about this book, I tell people itโ€™s because I want to โ€˜explore the reasons people stay, no matter the cost,โ€™ but the truth is I just want to understandย herย reasons. I know that doesnโ€™t make sense. This cult thing has nothing to do with her.โ€

No matter the cost.ย What had staying cost his mother? What had it cost Gus? The weight in my stomach had spread, was pressing against the insides of my chest and palms. Iโ€™d started publishing romance because I wanted to dwell in my happiest moments, in the safe place my parentsโ€™ love had always been. Iโ€™d been so comforted by books with the promise of a happy ending, and Iโ€™d wanted to give someone else that same gift.

Gus was writing to try to understand something horrible that had happened to him. No wonder what we wrote was so different.

โ€œIt does make sense,โ€ I said finally. โ€œNo one gets โ€˜looking for postmortem parental answersโ€™ like I do. If I watched the movieย 300ย right now, Iโ€™d probably find a way to make it about my dad.โ€

He gave me a faint smile. โ€œGreat cinema.โ€ It was so obviously aย Thank youย and aย Letโ€™s move on now. As different as Iโ€™d thought we were, it felt a little bit like Gus and I were two aliens whoโ€™d stumbled into each other on Earth only to discover we shared a native language.

โ€œWe should have a film club,โ€ I said. โ€œWeโ€™re always on the same page about this stuff.โ€

He was quiet for a moment, thoughtful. โ€œIt really was a beautiful dedication,โ€ he said. โ€œIt didnโ€™t feel like a lie. Maybe a complicated truth, but not a lie.โ€

The warmth filled me up until I felt like a teakettle trying hard not to whistle.

When I got home, I turned on my computer and ordered my own copy of

The Revelatories.

AND HERE CAMEย the true montage.

I did surgery on the book. I ripped it up and stored the pieces in separate files. Ellie became Eleanor. She went from being a down-on-her-luck real estate agent to a down-on-her-luck tightrope walker with a port-wine stain the shape of a butterfly on her cheek, because Absurdly Specific Details.

Her father became a sword swallower, her mother a bearded lady.

They moved from the twenty-first century to the early twentieth. They were part of a traveling circus. That was their family: a tight-knit group who ended every night smoking hand-rolled cigarettes around a fire. It was the only world sheโ€™d ever known.

They spent every moment with each other, but somehow told each other very little. There wasnโ€™t much time for talking in their line of work.

I renamed the file, fromย BEACH_BOOK.docxย to

FAMILY_SECRETS.docx.

I wanted to know whether you could ever fully know someone. If knowingย howย they wereโ€”how they moved and spoke and the faces they made and the things they tried not to look atโ€”amounted to knowing them. Or if knowing things about themโ€”where theyโ€™d been born, all the people theyโ€™d been, who theyโ€™d loved, the worlds theyโ€™d come fromโ€”added up to anything.

I gave them each a secret. That part was the easiest.

Eleanorโ€™s mother was dying but she didnโ€™t want anyone to know. The clowns everyone believed to be brothers were actually lovers. The sword swallower was still mailing checks to a family back in Oklahoma.

They became less and less like the people I knew, but somehow, their problems and secrets became more personal. I couldnโ€™t put my father or mother down on paper. I could never get that right. But these characters carried the truth of the people Iโ€™d loved.

I was particularly fond of writing a mechanic named Nick. I loved knowing that no one except me would ever recognize the skeleton of Augustus Everett Iโ€™d built the character around.

Gus and I made a habit of writing at our respective kitchen tables around noon, and most days we took turns holding up notes. They became more and more elaborate. It was obvious that while some were spontaneous,

others were plannedโ€”written out earlier in the day, or even the night before. Whenever inspiration struck. Those written in the moment especially became nonsensical as writing-madness took us over. Sometimes I would laugh so hard Iโ€™d lose muscle control in my hands and be unable to write any more notes. Weโ€™d laugh until we both laid our heads down on our tables. Heโ€™d snort into his coffee. Iโ€™d nearly choke on mine.

It started with platitudes likeย IT IS BETTER TO HAVE LOVED AND LOST THAN TO HAVE NEVER LOVED AT ALLย (me) andย THE UNIVERSE SEEMS NEITHER BENIGN

NOR HOSTILE, MERELY INDIFFERENTย (him) but usually ended with things likeย FUCK WRITINGย (me) andย SHOULD WE JUST DITCH THIS AND BECOME COAL MINERS?ย (him).

Once he wrote to tell me thatย LIFE IS LIKE A BOX OF CHOCOLATES. YOU REALLY DONโ€™T KNOW WHAT YOUโ€™RE EATING AND THE CHOCOLATE MAP IN THE LID IS FUCKING ALWAYS WRONG.

I wrote to tell him thatย IF YOUโ€™RE A BIRD, Iโ€™M A BIRD.

He let me know thatย IN SPACE, NO ONE CAN HEAR YOU SCREAM, and I wrote back,ย NOT ALL WHO WANDER ARE LOST.

Going through Dadโ€™s stuff fell to the back burner, but I didnโ€™t mind procrastinating. For the first time in months, I wasnโ€™t flinching every time my phone or laptop pinged. I was making progress. Of course, a lot of that progress was research, but for every new factoid I gleaned about twentieth- century circus culture, it seemed like a new plot light bulb illuminated over my head.

At night, Gus and I sat on our separate decks, having a drink and watching the sun slide into the lake. Most nights weโ€™d talk from across the gap, mostly about how productive we had or hadnโ€™t been, about the people we could see from our decks and the stories we could imagine for them.

Weโ€™d talk about the books (and movies) weโ€™d loved (and hated), the people weโ€™d gone to school with (both together at U of M and before that: Sara Tulane, who used to pull my hair in kindergarten; Mariah Sjogren, who broke up with sixteen-year-old Gusโ€”a full three months into their relationship, he was way too proud to tell meโ€”because he smoked a cigarette in the car with her and โ€œkissing a smoker is like licking an ashtrayโ€).

We talked about our terrible jobs (my part-time car wash position in high school, where I regularly got sexually harassed by customers and had to scrub down the tunnel before I could go home at night; his call-center job at

a uniform manufacturer, where he got yelled at for incorrect embroideries and delayed shipments). We talked about the most embarrassing albums weโ€™d owned and concerts weโ€™d been to (redacted for the sake of dignity).

And other times, weโ€™d sit in silence, not quite together but definitely not alone.

โ€œSo what do you think?โ€ I asked him one night. โ€œAre romance and happiness harder than they look?โ€

After a moment, he said, โ€œI never said that they were easy.โ€ โ€œYou implied it,โ€ I pointed out.

โ€œI implied they were easy forย you,โ€ he said. โ€œFor me, theyโ€™re about as challenging as Iโ€™m sure youโ€™re imagining.โ€

The possibility hung in the air: at any time, one of us could have invited the other over, and either of us would have accepted. But neither of us asked, and so things went on as theyโ€™d been.

On Friday, we left for our research excursion a bit earlier than we had the week prior and headed east, inland.

โ€œWho are we meeting this time?โ€ I asked. Gus answered only, โ€œDave.โ€

โ€œAh, yes, Dave. Iโ€™m a big fan of his restaurant, Wendyโ€™s.โ€

โ€œBelieve it or not, different Dave,โ€ Gus said. He was lost in thought, barely playing along with our usual banter.

I waited for him to go on but he didnโ€™t. โ€œGus?โ€

His gaze flinched toward me, as if heโ€™d forgotten I was there and my presence had startled him. He scratched at his jaw. His usual five-oโ€™clock shadow had stretched closer toward a seven-oโ€™clock dusk.

โ€œEverything okay?โ€ I asked.

His eyes bounced between me and the road three times before he nodded.

I could almost see itโ€”him swallowing down whatever heโ€™d been considering saying. โ€œDave was part of New Eden,โ€ he said instead. โ€œHe was just a kid back then. His mother took him out of there a few months before the fire. His dad stayed behind. He was in too deep.โ€

โ€œSo his father โ€ฆโ€

Gus nodded. โ€œDied in the fire.โ€

We were meeting Dave at an Olive Garden, and on the way in, Gus warned me that Dave was a recovering alcoholic. โ€œThree years sober,โ€ Gus said as we waited at the host stand. โ€œI told him we wouldnโ€™t be drinking anything.โ€

Weโ€™d beaten Dave to the table and put in an order for a couple of sodas.

Weโ€™d had no problem talking in the car, but sitting across from each other in an Olive Garden booth was a different story.

โ€œDo you feel like your mom just dropped us off here before homecoming?โ€ I asked.

โ€œI never went to homecoming,โ€ he said.

I pretended to play a violin, at which point I realized I had no idea how a person actually held a violin.

โ€œWhatโ€™s that,โ€ Gus said flatly. โ€œWhat are you doing?โ€ โ€œI think Iโ€™m holding a violin,โ€ I answered.

โ€œNo,โ€ he said. โ€œNo, I can safely say you are not.โ€ โ€œSeriously?โ€

โ€œYes, seriously. Why is your left arm straight out like that? Is the violin supposed to balance atop it? You need that hand on the neck.โ€

โ€œYouโ€™re just trying to distract me from the tragedy of your missed homecoming.โ€

He laughed, rolled his eyes, scooted forward on his bench. โ€œSomehow, I survived, tender human heart intact,โ€ he said, repeating my words from the carnival.

Nowย Iย rolled my eyes. Gus smiled and bumped my knee with his under the table. I bumped his back. We sat there for a minute, grinning at each other over a basket of Olive Garden breadsticks. I felt a little bit like there was water boiling in my chest. At once, I could feel his calloused hands gathering my hair off my neck as I puked into a carnival trash can. I could feel them on my hips and waist, pressing me closer as we danced in the sweaty frat house basement. I could feel the side of his jaw scrape my temple.

He broke eye contact first, checked his phone. โ€œTwenty minutes late,โ€ he said without looking at me. โ€œIโ€™ll give him ten more before I call.โ€

But Dave didnโ€™t answer Gusโ€™s call. And he didnโ€™t answer Gusโ€™s texts, or his voice mail, and soon we were an hour and twenty minutes into the bottomless breadsticks, and our server, Vanessa, had started seriously avoiding our table.

โ€œSometimes this happens,โ€ Gus said. โ€œThey get spooked. Change their minds. Think theyโ€™re ready to talk about something when theyโ€™re really not.โ€

โ€œWhat do we do?โ€ I asked. โ€œShould we keep waiting?โ€

Gus opened one of the menus on the table. He flipped through it for a minute, then pointed to a picture of a frozen blue drink with a pink umbrella sprouting out of it. โ€œThat,โ€ he said. โ€œI think thatโ€™s what we do.โ€

โ€œWell, shit,โ€ I said. โ€œIf we drink our frozen blue thingsย nowย then Iโ€™ll have to totally rethink my plan for tomorrow night.โ€

Gus lifted an eyebrow. โ€œWow, I was living the lifestyle of a romance writer all along and I didnโ€™t even know it.โ€

โ€œSee? You were born for this, Augustus Everett.โ€ He shuddered.

โ€œWhy do you do that?โ€ โ€œWhat?โ€ he said.

I repeated, โ€œAugustus Everett.โ€ His shoulders lifted, although a bit more discreetly this time.ย โ€œThat.โ€

Gus raised the menu as Vanessa was trying to bound past and she screeched to a stop like Wile E. Coyote at the edge of a cliff. โ€œCould we get two of these blue things?โ€ he asked.

His eyes were doing the sexy, intimidating X-ray thing. Color rushed into her cheeks. Or maybe I was projecting what was happening to me onto her. โ€œSure thing.โ€ She sped away, and Gus looked back at the menu.

โ€œAugustus,โ€ I said.

โ€œShit,โ€ he said, flinching again.

โ€œYou really donโ€™t like sharing things about yourself with other people, do you?โ€

โ€œNot particularly,โ€ he said. โ€œYou already know about the vomit-phobia.

Anything more than that and youโ€™ll have to sign a nondisclosure.โ€ โ€œHappily,โ€ I said.

Gus sighed and leaned forward, forearms resting on the table. His knee grazed mine beneath the table, but neither of us moved away, and all the heat in my body seemed to focus there. โ€œThe only person who called me that was my father.โ€ He shrugged. โ€œThat name was usually said with a disapproving tone. Or screamed in a rage.โ€

My stomach twisted and a sour taste crept across the back of my mouth as I grasped for something to say. I couldnโ€™t help searching his pupils for signs of the history heโ€™d been piecing together for days. His mother had stayed with his father,ย no matter the cost, and part of that had been her son learning to hate his own name.

Gusโ€™s gaze lifted from the menu. He looked calm, serious. But it was a practiced look, unlike the alluring openness that sometimes overtook his face when he was deep in thought, working to understand some new information.

โ€œIโ€™m sorry,โ€ I said helplessly. โ€œThat your dad was an asshole.โ€

Gus gave a breathless laugh. โ€œWhy do people always say that? You donโ€™t need to be sorry. Itโ€™s in the past. I didnโ€™t tell you so youโ€™d be sorry.โ€

โ€œWell, you told me because I asked. So at least let me be sorry for that.โ€ He shrugged. โ€œItโ€™s fine.โ€

โ€œGus,โ€ I said.

He looked me in the eye again. It felt like a warm tide rushing over me, feet to head. His expression had shifted to open curiosity. โ€œWhat wereย youย like?โ€ he said.

โ€œWhat?โ€

โ€œYou know enough about my childhood. I want to know about baby January.โ€

โ€œOh, God,โ€ I said. โ€œShe was a lot.โ€

His laugh vibrated through the table, and my insides started fizzing like champagne. โ€œLet me guess. Loud. Precocious. Room full of books, organized in a way that only you understood. Close with your family and a couple of tight-knit friends, all of whom you probably still talk to regularly, but casual friends with anyone else with a pulse. A secret overachiever, who had to be the best at something even if no one else knew. Oh, and prone to juggling or tap-dancing for attention in any crowd.โ€

โ€œWow,โ€ I said a little stunned. โ€œYou both nailedย andย roasted meโ€”though the tap lessons were my momโ€™s idea. I just wanted the shoes. Anyway, you missed that I briefly had a shrine to Sinรฉad Oโ€™Connor, because I thought it made me seem Interesting.โ€

He laughed and shook his head. โ€œI bet you were an adorable little freak.โ€ โ€œIย wasย a freak,โ€ I said. โ€œI think being an only child did that. My parents

treated me like a living TV. Like I was just this hilarious, interesting baby genius. I seriously spent most of my life delusively confident in myself and my future.โ€

And that no matter what else, home would always be a safe place, where all three of us belonged. A burning sensation flared in my chest. When I looked up and met Gusโ€™s eyes, I remembered where I was, who I was talking to, and half expected him to gloat. The bright-eyed ingenue with all

the happy endings had finally gotten chewed up, the rose-colored glasses ground to dust.

Instead, he said, โ€œThere are worse things to be than delusively confident.โ€

I studied his dark, focused eyes and lax, crooked mouth: a look of complete sincerity. I was more convinced than ever that I wasnโ€™t the only one whoโ€™d changed since college, and I wasnโ€™t sure what to say to this new Gus Everett.

At some point the frozen blue cocktails had appeared on the table, as if by magic. I cleared my throat and lifted my glass. โ€œTo Dave.โ€

โ€œTo Dave,โ€ Gus agreed, clinking his plastic cup to mine.

โ€œThe greatest disappointment of this evening by far,โ€ I said, โ€œis that they didnโ€™t actually include the paper umbrellas.โ€

โ€œSee,โ€ Gus said. โ€œItโ€™s shit like this that makes it impossible for me to believe in happy endings. You never get the paper umbrellas you were promised in this world.โ€

โ€œGus,โ€ I said. โ€œYou mustย beย the paper umbrellas you wish to see in this world.โ€

โ€œGandhi was a wise man.โ€

โ€œActually, I was quoting my favorite poet, Jewel.โ€

His knee pressed into mine, and heat pooled between my legs. I pressed back. His rough fingertips tentatively touched my knee, slid up until he found my hand. Slowly, I turned my palm up to him, and his thumb drew heavy circles on it for a minute.

When I slid it closer, he folded his fingers into mine, and we sat there, holding hands under the table, pretending we werenโ€™t. Pretending we werenโ€™t acting sixteen years old and a little bit obsessed with each other.

God, what was happening? What was I doing and why couldnโ€™t I make myself stop? What wasย heย doing?

When the check came, Gus jerked back from me and pulled his wallet out. โ€œI got it,โ€ he said, without looking at me.

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