9
WHEN I GET back to his table with my jacket and bag, Haydenโs put his computer away and moved his salad and water directly in front of himself.
Itโs not until I slide into my seat that I remember the dilemma. Our dilemma, Haydenโs and mine.
We canโt sit in cramped spaces like this without a great deal of careful arranging of our legs. โSorry,โ I say, my left knee bumping his and then finding itself tucked between both of his thighs, interlaced. โI think weโre too tall for this booth.โ
โItโs not your fault,โ he says. โIโm too tall for most booths. You should see me on an airplane.โ
I laugh. โIโd love to. Next time youโre on one, send me a picture?โ
โI donโt have your number,โ he points out, which is not quite the same as asking for my number, but still sends a surprising and surprisingly pleasant zing down the front of my rib cage.
I could offer it to him. Normally, I probably would.
But I actually have no idea if heโs trying to set me up to offer it. With Theo, I can always tell what he wants. Thereโs a comfort in that.
โHowโd your first day go?โ I ask.
He shakes his head. โWeโre not talking about Margaret Ives.โ
โNo, youโre not talking about her.โ I lean forward and feel his legs tense slightly around mine. โI have no problem telling you that my first day was weird.โ
โYou shouldnโt be telling me this,โ he says.
โMaybe not,โ I allow, โbut since weโve both signed ironclad NDAs, Iโm pretty sure youโre the only person I can tell about this. I think she lied to me.โ
Hayden Andersonโs face might not have the full range of emotions that Iโm accustomed to, but it turns out he can definitely show surprise.
And something else, like a quick flare of understanding, before he schools his face into neutrality again.
โHayden,โ I say, leaning even farther forward to peer intently into his
eyes.
โAlice,โ he replies, a bit stiff.
โWhat was that face for?โ I ask.
He looks away, scratching his jaw.
โOh, come on,โ I say. โWhat if I promise not to use anything you give me?โ
His eyes snap back to mine. In this warm lighting, they look almost gold. Like honey. He leans in closer too, his knee sliding in almost to my crotch in the process, the heat of him palpable against my bare thighs. โIโm not giving you anything,โ he says.
โBut she lied to you too,โ I say. โOr youโre at least wondering if she did.โ
Again, that lift in his brow and slackening of his mouth. Quickly, his features return to a scowl. โThis is why I never go out with journalists.โ
Another flush, this one much more intense, rockets through me. Is the implication that this counts as going out or is he just run-of-the-mill insulting me?
Heโs rubbing his jaw again, his eyes distant, until the second they rebound to me, hyperfocused. He slumps back against his seat on a sigh.
โThere have been someโฆโ He chooses his next words carefully.
โDiscrepancies I canโt account for yet.โ
I frown. โIs she fucking with us?โ
A server is walking past right then, and she slows when he lifts his chin in greeting toward her. โI think my friend wanted to order.โ
Friend! Thatโs progress.
After a cursory look at the menu, I order a vegan hot dog and something called a Queenโs Park Swizzle.
โAnything else for you?โ the server asks Hayden, and he shakes his head.
As soon as she disappears, he faces me again, hunching forward, his forearms resting on the table. โIt is weird. That she suddenly wants to do this. I mean, why now?โ
His gaze is sharp, meaningful. It takes me a second to figure out what heโs hinting at. I can tell he doesnโt want to say it, but heโs hoping Iโll guess anyway. Like this is a work-around to his โno sharing our Margaret Ives stuffโ policy.
What would make someone suddenly consider a tell-all memoir when theyโd been virtually in hiding for three decades? I can only think of two
obvious reasons.
Maybe sheโs dying. Or maybeโฆ
โMemory problems?โ I say.
Our server drops my drink off as she sweeps past us. I thank her and face Hayden again.
โMaybe Iโm just seeing things that arenโt there.โ He shrugs. โEver since Len, Iโve been a littleโฆโ He shakes his head. โI donโt know, every time I visit my parents and one of them misplaces the remote, a little part of me is asking if itโs normal forgetfulness, or something else.โ
He shakes his head again as if to ward off the thought.
โYou were really close to him,โ I say. โLen.โ Itโs not a question.
Obviously Hayden was close to the man. He spent years with Len Stirling, with his family and friends. Of course theyโd bonded. But somehow it hadnโt occurred to me how painful that must have been.
To form a bond with someone on the very precipice of them slipping away. His book hadnโt delved into the aftermath of Lenโs death. Hayden was on the page, but only in small glimpses. He was good at writing more as a porthole than a narrating character.
But now I can see the Hayden who was really there. Who knew the man he was writing about. Loved him, probably.
โIโm not sure thatโs whatโs going on here,โ he says suddenly, his tone distracted. โMost likely she just doesnโt trust us yet.โ
He runs his fingertips thoughtfully over his mouth now. The motion distracts me. Hypnotizes me, really. I hadnโt noticed how attractive he was before. Iโm not totally sure what it is that makes him so. Heโs nowhere near symmetrical. His eyes are small and his mouth is wide, and his nose looks like itโs been broken at least once and not properly set.
I mean, obviously his body is incredible, so when I catch myself inadvertently checking him out, thatโs not all that surprising. The way that watching his large fingers skating over his mouth affects me, however, catches me off guard.
Iโm sure thereโs something biological to it. My body likes his pheromones, or my legs like the feeling of his in between them.
God, maybe I really should have invited Theo down. This is the last thing I should be spending precious brain cells on right now.
His hand falls back down to the table and our eyes connect, a feeling like a live wire touched a metal point in the center of my chest. โIโm just not sure,โ he says.
โHm?โ Iโve totally lost track of what we were talking about.
โIโm not sure why sheโd invite us down here, pay us to work, and then punch holes in her own story.โ He shifts in his seat, our thighs grazing again.
Our server stops by to drop off my hot dog and refill Haydenโs water.
โYou sure thereโs nothing else I can get you?โ she asks him.
โNo, thanks,โ he says.
She leaves us to attend to one of her other tables, and Hayden catches me staring at him. Thinking at him, really.
โWhat?โ he asks, one eyebrow cocked.
โDo you only eat salad?โ I ask.
His lips part, a divot forming between his eyebrows. Then his mouth presses shut again. โI try to stay in shape when Iโm traveling for work. If I lose my rhythms, itโs hard to get back on them once Iโm home.โ
โSo is that a yes?โ I ask.
A slow tug at one side of his mouth turns into a smile, an actual, recognizable smile. โNo, Alice, I donโt only eat salad. The other day I actually had an amazing croissant.โ
โOh my god, it was so good, wasnโt it?โ I say, right before biting into my vegan dog.
โSo good,โ he agrees, lifting his fork to pick at his salad. โI could feel my arteries clogging, and I didnโt even care.โ
I snort. โI think the green teaโdrinking, morning running, salad-noshing wonder of the East Coast can have one croissant without having a cardiac event. Not even my sister eats like you, and sheโs had like fourteen heart surgeries.โ
His brow tightens, his smile vanishing. โYour Peace Corps sister?โ
โI only have the one,โ I tell him.
He sets his fork back down, jaw tense. โIs she okay?โ
โYes!โ I say quickly. โSorry! I buried the lede there. Sheโs fine. Healthy as a horse. Or, you know, a human with a healthy heart. This all happened when we were kids.โ
โShit.โ His frown returns. โWhat happened?โ
โIt was an issue she had at birth,โ I say. โSo she was in and out of hospitals a lot when we were small. But sheโs been doing really well since, like, high school. That was my whole point. You eat like a bird compared to
her.โ
โIs she older or younger,โ he asks.
โOlder,โ I say. โThree years. What about your brother? The perfect doctor one?โ
His mouth twists wryly, but I wouldnโt quite call it a smile. โI only have the one,โ he says, repeating my words back to me. โTwo years older. Did I mention he was the captain of our high school football team?โ
โYou didnโt have to,โ I tease. โIt was implied.โ
He lets out a snort. It sounds like an angry bull, but Iโm pretty sure itโs
his laugh.
โWhat position did you play?โ
Now he outright scoffs, rolls his eyes as he sits forward again, forearms once more pressing into the table. โNone.โ
โBasketball?โ I say.
โDespite my dadโs greatest wishes,โ he says, โno.โ
โHayden,โ I say. โYouโre like six seven and pure muscle. You could be a millionaire right now.โ
โI donโt think thatโs how sports work,โ he says. โI think you also have to have โtalentโ or โcoordination.โ โ He puts both basketball prerequisites in half-formed finger quotes against the table. โAnd also Iโm six three.โ
โHm.โ I nod thoughtfully. โThatโs like a basketball five eight.โ
โNow Iโm wondering,โ he drawls, โwhy you didnโt become a mathematician.โ
โWell, if youโd like, I can get you my momโs phone number and the two of you can compare notes about all the more impressive jobs I couldโve had, and then I can reach out to your dad and let him know I agree you shouldโve played basketball in high school.โ
โNo, donโt give him the satisfaction,โ he says. โI already know youโre both right. If I could do it again, maybe I wouldโve tried it, just to see. But at that point there was basically nothing I wanted to do more than the opposite of whatever he and my mom wanted me to do.โ
โSo you didnโt get along?โ I ask.
His huge shoulders lift and slump again. โNo, I mean, we do now.
Theyโre actually pretty great. I just wasnโt a kid who did well with the kind of expectations people had for my family. Itโs better, now that I live somewhere else. Itโs not like every little thing I do reflects on them
anymore.โ
โI get that,โ I say.
โYou do?โ he asks, the rest of his question hanging there, unsaid: How?
I donโt talk about all this a lot, but I also get the feeling this isnโt Haydenโs usual conversational fare either, and it feels good, almost like he trusts me.
โMy parents were kind ofโฆโ I search for a word that encompasses all of it. Of course there isnโt one. Thatโs the deal with people. Theyโre always
more than one thing, and a lot of times theyโre even a collection of contradictory traits. โTheyโre eccentric,โ I say. โSuper idealistic and passionate andโฆcapable, I guess? Before my sister and I were born, they were actually part of this farming commune, so they knew how to do everything. And thanks to them, I know how to do a lot of things too.โ
โSuch as?โ he asks.
I shrug. โDarning socks. Altering clothes. Cooking. Canning fruit and veggies. Gardening. That kind of thing.โ
โWow,โ he says. โPretty impressive.โ
โNow, sure,โ I agree. โBut when I was a kid, it was mortifying. We lived in this really small, homogenous town, and my parents were hippie journalists who literally chained themselves to trees in the seventies.
Growing up, my sister and I both got bullied pretty badly, because everyone thought my parents were weird. And it didnโt help that we were homeschooled until high school, because of my sisterโs health problems. Or that we wore homemade clothes. Or that I was seven inches taller than every other girl in my grade. Frankly, there was a lot working against us.โ
Another sliver of smile.
โBut the thing is, none of those kids knew what was going on at home.
What Audrey was dealing with. Just like I didnโt know what they were dealing with. Most people arenโt mean for no reason, you know? Stuffโs going on with them too.โ
โAlice,โ he says, softly chiding. โSome people are just assholes.โ
โI know,โ I say. โSome. Not most.โ
This time, his amusement takes the form of a quiet huff.
โWhat?โ I say.
โI justโฆโ I can see the wheels turning as he considers his next words.
โYou might be the least cynical person Iโve ever met. Iโm not sure Iโve ever
known anyone like you.โ
I narrow my eyes. โYou mean Iโm naive.โ
โNo, Alice,โ he replies. โIf thatโs what I meant, then thatโs what I wouldโve said.โ





