REAL LIFE
Thursday
WHEN WE GETย back to the cottage, everyone disperses to wash the dayโs grit and sunburn away before dinner. Itโs Taco Thursday, a tradition in which Sabrina makes a much-too-large meal while the rest of us bumble around, acting as her semi-inept sous-chefs.
โTonight,โ Sabrina says, ticking her menu items off as we walk up to the front door, โweโre doing a grapefruit and avocado salad, doused in citrus dressing and fennel. Zucchini fritters and grilled corn. And then fried fish tacos for the meat eaters among us, and pulled jackfruit ones for Kimmy and Cleo.โ
The side dishes change, as do the taco toppings, but Sabrinaโs always been adamant that the worst thing about vacationing in Knottโs Harbor is the absence of a good taco place, and she cannot abide that. I linger downstairs while everyone else goes up, waiting until Wyn comes back with clean clothes, headed to the outdoor shower, as I knew he would be.
โItโs all yours,โ he says, tipping his head back toward the stairs at the front of the house.
โThanks.โ We both root to the spot for a few seconds. He cracks first, heading for the back door.
Upstairs, I rifle through my luggage for something comfy and warm enough to sit out on a cool night like this, and then head toward the
bathroom portion of the suite. My phone lights up on the side table, and I stop to pick it up.
Momโs texted me, and I have no idea what sheโs talking about.
I know youโre scared, but you canโt keep putting this off. The longer you wait, the worse it will be. You have to tell her, Wynnieโ
I drop the phone like itโs a live snake.
Hisย phone, not mine. Mineโs on the other side of the bed.
I step back, heart beating furiously. Iโm unsure if Iโm more afraid of being caught with Wynโs phone or of what else I might see on it. Scratch that, itโs the second one.
For a minute I donโt know what to do. My mind is cycling through all the worst possibilities, the things Gloria might want Wyn to tell me.
Something about her health. Something about his.
Or maybe heโs started introducing the idea of the breakup to her, slowly guiding her toward the expectation that we donโt belong together and that it has nothing to do with the physical distance caring for her requires.
It doesnโt.ย Not anymore. The thought pings through me, a drunken, angry pinball rebounding back and forth between my ribs. Heโs happy. He mightโve gone to Montana for his mom, but heโs there for himself now.
She must see how happy he is. She must know heโs ready to let go of me.
I sink onto the edge of the bed, tears pouring down my cheeks out of nowhere. I donโt know why, but it feels like a whole separate breakup. Accepting, now, the truth: That heโs moved on. That all these moments I cling to, like little mental life rafts, are just memories for him.
The truth is, I donโt know what this text means.
I can talk myself in and out of worrying about it all day, but itโs not my business. Just like I told him my life wasnโtย hisย business.
I wonโt ask. I canโt. If he wants to tell me, he will, but itโs been a long time since Wyn has given me any answers. Much longer than five months.
I take a shuddering breath, square my shoulders, and get into the shower. Where I cry some more.
Stupid, stupid, stupid heart. Donโt you know he hasnโt been yours to cry over for a long time?





