SATURDAY, JUNE 22ND
5 6 DAYS UNTIL I CAN LEAVE
UNFORTUNATELY, JULIA WASย serious about Story Hour.
Theyโre late, of course, but just barely. I smell sun-warmed grass and the spicy kick of woodsmoke, and when I look up, theyโre there.
Julia picks her way through the concentric rings of parents, babysitters, and kids, with Miles whispering apologies in her wake.
Heโs shaved his beard. No doubt thanks to Juliaโs badgering, which had peppered our conversation until late into the night when she accepted my fifty-eighth attempt to go to bed.
Some people grow beards to hide or accentuate certain features, the way I switched my hair-part at nineteen and, when I saw how it balanced my slightly crooked nose, never looked back.
The thing, it would seem, Miles has been hiding all along is that heโs diabolically handsome, with angular cheekbones and a jaw that sort of looks like it might cut you if you were to run a hand over it. Or your tongue. You know, whatever.
Fairly cruel timing, for us to have just agreed not to cross the platonic- friends boundary.
His eyes catch mine, and his mouth quirksโthatย part of him is still soft, playful, even with this new look. It makes me feel like I swallowed a swordย insideย of a helium balloon.
Under the best circumstances, surprises areย notย my thing. But if Iย were
going to unexpectedly see the man I hooked up with the night prior, I would
at least prefer it not happen (a) while Iโm reading aloud and (b) on a dayย heย looks better than ever andย Iย decided to walk to work, during which a surprise drizzle frizzed my hair and raccooned my mascara.
I did my best to clean myself up after I clocked in, and of course itย immediatelyย stopped raining, but weโd stuck to an inside Story Hour, just in case, and Iโm sure the buzzing overhead lighting isnโt exactly giving me a heavenly glow.
When I finally reach The End, Julia jumps onto her feet, clapping with extreme enthusiasm. Everyone else breaks into the polite applause Iโm used to. After a chorus of squeaky voices sayingย thank youย at their parentsโ urging, the crowd disperses, and Julia bounds up to me.
โMiles wasnโt kidding,โ she says. โYouโreย reallyย good at the voices.โ
I peek over her shoulder to where her brother has paused to โgive directionsโ to a mom who Iโm pretty sure wasย bornย here. Aย youngย momโit seems he was right about the beardโs effect on the older ladies, becauseย theyโreย not the ones eyeing him this time.
Julia follows my gaze and guffaws. โOh, look, he made a new friend.
How novel.โ
โHas he always been like this?โ I ask.
โAs long as Iโve been around, yes,โ she replies. โGod knows where he got it from. Definitely not our asshole parents.โ
Iโm jarred by the casual mention of their parents. Itโs like turning over a locked box, only to realize there was a crack in the bottom all along.
โMiles once bumped into the high school band teacher at the grocery store and left with an invitation to her wedding,โ she tells me. โHe wasnโt evenย inย band.โ
An image of crisp stationery, elegant typeface slanting across it, blossoms in my mind.
Juliaโs face softens. โShit, sorry. He told me about the invitation thing.โ โItโs fine,โ I say.
Julia cocks her head, curious. โReally?ย Fine?โ โNo,โ I say. โBut Iโm trying to complain less.โ
She catches me glancing toward Miles and snorts. โIf youโre trying to emulate my brother, I wish you the best of luck. No one can repress negative emotions like him. Heโs had too much practice.โ
He looks, as ever, like human sunshine, totally engaged, completely interested in this stranger, and it makes my chest pinch. โIโd assumed the sunny disposition came naturally.โ
โI mean,โ she says, โwe had the same upbringing andย Iย didnโt turn out Chronically Fine, so I guess in a way, itโs natural. When I was a kid, and heโd moved to the city, he used to come back and pick me up every Saturday for breakfast at McDonaldโs. Iโd spend the whole time trying to get under his skin, because I was the worst. But I could never get a rise out of him. Heโs excellent at ignoring the bad stuff.โ
โWhat about you?โ I ask.
Julia chokes over a laugh. โOh, I invite the bad stuff to try to fuck with me.โ
Having finally extricated himself from Hot Mom, Miles joins us. โWhat did I miss?โ
โNothing,โ Julia says innocently, right as I say, โYour sister wants to get into a knife fight.โ
โIโll call Gill,โ Miles says. โWe can get her a kitten at the same time.โ โAm I missing something?โ Julia asks.
Ashleigh sidles up then too. โJust one of their adorableย best friend
jokes,โ she tells Julia. โYou must be the sister.โ
โYou must be the friend Iโm either going to love or hate,โ Julia says. Ashleighโs shoulders wiggle, half shiver. โIntriguing.โ
โShould be fun either way,โ Julia says. โSo should we all head to Cherry Hill, throw tiny pretzels at Miles while heโs working?โ
โWe donโtย serveย pretzels,โ Miles says, audibly offended.
โAs amazing as that sounds,โ I say, โI need to get some promotional stuff finished for the Read-a-thon.โ
โAnd I was thinking Iโd do meal prep tonight, so I can be worry-free tomorrowโโ Ashleigh interrupts herself with a gasp, looking to Miles. โI just figured out where we should go. We should take them to Barn.โ
โBarn?โ I say. โAs in . . . a building on a farm?โ โAs in a bar, in a barn,โ Miles says. โOn a farm.โ
โThere is no place on this earth,โ I say, โlike Waning Bay.โ
โBarn has goats,โ Ashleigh offers, peeling away from us to help a couple of patrons check out before we close for the day. โYouโll love it.โ
Juliaโs phone pings and she checks it. โWerenโt you supposed to be at work by four forty-five?โ she asks Miles.
โShit!โ He moves toward the doors, Julia still texting as she shuffles after him. He turns over his shoulder and calls, โSunrise is before six. Be ready at five thirty.โ
โFive,โ I counter. โAre you coming, Julia?โ
โAt five in the morning?โ she says sunnily. โIโd rather eat aluminum foil. But you two have a blast.โ
I CREEP OUTย of my bedroom at four fifty-eight a.m., tiptoe past Julia, snoring on the sofa, to the kitchen, sandals in hand. I flick on the light beneath the mounted microwave and drink a glass of water while I wait for Miles to emerge from his room.
Five oโclock comes and goes. Then five oh five.
Five eleven.
Iโm trying not to be unreasonably grumpy, but this is fuck-everything early, even for me, and if thereโs one thing I truly hate, itโs waiting on people.
Several dozen unhappy memories cycle through me, aย worst-ofย film reel, and Iโm too tired to adequately bat them away.
So while Iโm yawning so hard my jaw pops, Iโm also back in Momโs and my first apartment without Dad, waiting by the front window, looking up every time a junker sputters past.
Waiting on the snowy curb outside my elementary school, dragging my boot toes through blackened slush, telling myself that if I count to one
hundred, Dad will be here. And if not, then by the time I reach two hundred and fifty. Counting and waiting until my mom pulled up, stressed out and still in her work heels, apologizing through the open car window, on his behalf:ย Sorry, sorry, something came up, I guess.
Waiting at the mailbox for birthday cards to show up. Waiting for a phone call on Christmas.
Waiting.
Waiting.
Waiting, for someone who rarely came, feeling worse every time, until finally, I realized that the feelings wouldnโt stop until the waiting did.
You canโt force a person to show up, but you can learn a lesson when they donโt.
Trust peopleโs actions, not their words.
Donโt love anyone who isnโt ready to love you back. Let go of the people who donโt hold on to you.
Donโt wait on anyone whoโs in no rush to get to you.
I consider crawling back into bed and finishing a polish on the upcoming Read-a-thon publicity blast. Then the front door clanks open, a slice of light pouring from the hall.
โHey,โ Miles whispers, lifting the thermoses in his hands. โYou ready?โ โBeen ready since five,โ I tell him.
He leans forward and peers around the cupboard to see the oven clock. โShit.โ He passes me one of the thermoses. โI gave myself an extra fifteen minutes, and there was no line, but then I got caught up talking to the barista and . . . anyway, Iโm sorry, Daphne.โ
I shake my head, the grumpiness clearing. Miles is doing me the favor here. โItโs fine.โ I slip my feet into my sandals. โLetโs go.โ
Itโs cooler outside than in our apartment, the nip in the air making my arms and legs tingle. I can feel my leg hair growing and wonder why I bothered shaving last night.
Because you have a crush on your roommate, my inner dialogue provides helpfully,ย and you want him to look at and touch and probably even lick your legs.
No, I argue with myself.ย Itโs because I want to wear a skirt to work tomorrow.
Iโm not buying it, though: the last time I wore a skirt at work, Handsy Stanley told me I was going to give him a heart attack.
The hem reached midcalf.
Luckily, Ashleigh walked past the desk at that exact moment, and a three-month ban was issued.
Iโm so tired Iโd be willing to drink jet fuel mixed with espresso, but to my surprise, when I sip from the thermos Miles gave me, itโs spicy, sweet, creamy perfection. โThis is chai,โ I say.
He unlocks the door and climbs in. โI thought thatโs what you wanted.โ I get in too. โNo, it is, I justโthank you.โ
โNo problem.โ He jams the key in the ignition, and the engine grumbles, but the car doesnโt start. He tries twice more before it catches, and then weโre cruising away from our silent street, the sleeping city black and blue as a bruise.
At the kayak rental place, thereโs one other couple there alreadyโboth blond but comically disproportionate in heightโand judging by the bright, chipper, full-volume conversation sheโs maintaining with the sleepy-eyed man, theyโre on a first date. Which also mightย somehowย be an actual vacation?
She keeps up a steady line of questions that he parries swiftly about each otherโs jobs (finance and theme park management, respectively) and each otherโs pets (three cats, two German shepherds) from the register to the transport van to the boat launch.
Without discussing it, Miles and I both hang back and let them launch their kayaks, pretending to busy ourselves with packing the provided dry bags and getting our life vests on until theyโre a ways out.
โRemember when you said that I like everyone?โ he asks me as we drag the first of our kayaks into the water.
โYes,โ I say.
โI donโt like them.โ He tips his chin toward our vanmatesโ backs, shrinking as they rapidly pump their paddles back and forth.
in.
I suppress a smile. โDo youย knowย them?โ
โAfter that seven-hour van ride, I know enough,โ he says. I chortle. โIt took us six minutes to get here.โ
โTheyโre my enemies.โ He steadies the kayak and gestures for me to get
โSo all I need to do to stay in your good graces isย notย snort twenty-five
Adderall before six a.m. Good to know.โ
โOr get three cats and name all of them The Goddess,โ he adds. โReally? That was actually my favorite thing about Keith.โ
โMy favorite thing was when Gladys had that coughing fit and couldnโt talk for like eleven seconds.โ
โItโs fun when youโre sassy,โ I tell him, climbing into the kayak and dropping into the wet, slippery seat.
โEnjoy it,โ he says. โI donโt plan on getting up this early ever again. I hate to admit it, but Petra was right.โ
I lean over the side of the kayak and splash him, his eyes snapping wide. โWhat the fuck!โ
โThatโs your Petra tax,โ I say. โTalk about her again, and Iโll call Gladys and Keith back here and make this a kayak caravan situation.โ
โFine, fine,โ he agrees, walking back up the shore to pull his own kayak into the water. โBut if you mention Peter, Iโm tipping you over.โ
โWho?โ I say innocently.
The truth is, within five minutes of pushing away from the shore, Peter has made his way to the forefront of my mind, because my arms and shoulders are already burning from exertion, and Miles can only paddle about twice before he has to pause and wait for me to catch up.
The dark horizon has only just started to soften as light bleeds along the top of the water, and I already know this was a huge mistake.
Weโd been planning to do a six-mile loop around a small island in the bay, where the more adventurous localsโpeople like Miles and Petra probablyโlike to camp.
Tucked back in the bay like this, thereโs no real current or waves to contend with, not like there would be in the lake proper, but Iโm still
woefully underprepared.
โYou can go ahead,โ I call across the water. Miles laughs. โWhy would I do that?โ
โBecause Iโm pretty sure Iโm actually moving backwards,โ I say.
โItโs water,โ he points out. โIn every direction. Thereโs nowhere to be.
Unless youโre serious about catching up with Keith and Gladys.โ
โI have neither the intention, nor the emotional capacity, to do that,โ I say.
โThen letโs chill,โ he says. โThereโs no rush.โ โWell, if that changes, feel free to ditch me.โ
โYes, Daphne, if something changes, and I need to escape a freshwater shark, Iโll paddle my little heart out and leave you for dead.โ
โAre there really sharks in the lake?โ I ask. โIโm offended youโd even ask that,โ he says.
โSomeoneโs got to defend Lake Michiganโs honor, I guess,โ I say. โWhy not me?โ he agrees.
We paddle slowly, parallel to one another, the gradually lifting sun painting everything in pinks and golds.
โI know itโs a clichรฉ,โ he says after a minute, โbut being on the water always does feel like what I imagine church is for some people.โ
โI get that,โ I say. โOut here, youโre small and thereโs no one else around, but youโre not lonely. Itโs like youโre connected to everyone and everything.โ
โExactly,โ he says. โAnd you remember to marvel. Itโs so easy to forget how incredible this planet is.โ
I throw a glance his way. โI think youโre pretty good at the daily marvel.โ
โSometimes,โ he says, then, โYou are too.โ
I snort. โIโm more of a cranky pessimist and we both know it.โ
โYou moan every time you eat,โ he says. โI donโt think youโre as pessimistic as you think.โ
I flush, reroute the conversation neatly: โI think as a kid, the library was the thing that made meย marvel. I never felt lonely there. I felt so connected
to everyone. Honestly, I think it also made me feel connected to my dad.โ
There it is, a hideously embarrassing truth dropped right into the middle of a conversation. A fact Iโve never admitted aloud.
It might be an oversimplification, but itโs the truth: โHeโs why I love libraries.โ
โBig reader?โ Miles guesses.
I laugh. โNo. He just never planned his visits ahead or had any money, so heโd blow into town and take me there to check out some books, or do an activity or whatever. So when I was little, I really associated them with him. It felt like โour thing.โ โ
โAre you close?โ he asks.
โNot at all,โ I tell him. โHeโs lived in California for a long time now, and his visits are unpredictable. Doesnโt come when he says he will, shows up when youโre not expecting him. But he was a reallyย funย dad when I was a kid. And the library trips felt like this amazing gift, specifically from him to me, you know?โ
Like he alone had the key to anything I wanted to read.
โMy mom never had time to get over there, and I was kind of terrified of the school librarian, so once I got old enough, Iโd just walk over to the local branch after class and Mom would pick me up when she got off work.โ
He grins. โA good librarian makesย allย the difference.โ I angle myself toward him. โYou joke, but itโs true.โ
โIโmย notย joking,โ he says. โIf youโd been my librarian, I wouldโve read a lot more.โ
โBecause I wouldโve told you audiobooks count?โ I say.
โFor starters,โ he says. โAlso I wouldโve wanted to impress you.โ My face tingles. โJuliaโs great,โ I say.
โShe is,โ he agrees. โSheโs the best.โ โHave you always been close?โ I ask.
โPretty much,โ he says. โI mean, I was, like, thirteen when she was born, so I was out of the house a lot, but when I was home, she followed me like a puppy. Like literally just crawled around after me.โ
I grin, picturing it. A brown-eyed, dark-haired baby Julia scooting along after a scrawny brown-eyed teenage Miles.
โShe was only five when I moved to the city,โ he says. โBut I tried to make it back to see her as much as I could.โ
โShe said you visited every Saturday, took her out.โ
I catch a subtle grimace. โJust needed to get her out of the house every once in a while.โ
There it is again, that crack in the box. Just as quickly, though, itโs flipped over, its contents hidden.
We fall back into silent paddling. Sweat rises along my hairline, drips down the seam of my rib cage and the ridge between my shoulder blades. โYou can talk about it, you know,โ I finally tell him.
โTalk about what?โ he says.
โAnything,โ I say. โWhateverโs bothering you. Iโm actually a better listener than talker.โ
โYouโre a great talker,โ he says. โBut nothingโs bothering me. Iโm fine. I just need to figure out what sheโs running away from.โ
โDid she say sheโsย runningย from something?โ Iโve only just met her, but itโs hard to imagine Julia running fromย anything. โEven if she stumbled upon that black bear who was addicted to cocaine, I picture her fighting back and faring pretty well.โ
โShe keeps insisting sheโs here to โbe thereโ for me,โ he says. โWell,โ I say, โmaybe she is.โ
He gives me a look. โShe never tells me when things are bad, but sheโs not good at hiding it either.โ He looks away, out toward the island, and shakes it off. โIโll figure it out. Itโs fine.โ
When he looks back, heโs grinning, seemingly unbothered, though this time Iโm not totally convinced. โYou still good, or you want to turn back?โ he asks, clearly done with the topic of Julia.
So I let it go. โIโm good.โ
When the sun is high enough for the water to settle into its usual brilliant crystal green, Miles stops paddling and takes off his sweatshirt and shirt in one move, dropping them into his lap. I hold out for another twenty minutes
until I can no longer stand the way my tank top sticks to me, then relent and peel it away from my bathing suit.
โItโs pretty amazing,โ Miles says.
I pull my shirt off and glance over at him as I slip my life vest back on. Heโs gazing toward the forested island, the last morning remnants of mist clinging to it, his kayak bumping into mine.
โIt is,โ I say, feeling the need to whisper it, for some reason. He looks. โThanks for coming with me.โ
โThanks for inviting me,โ I say.
He tucks his chin, a teasing curve to his lips. โEven though you hate it?โ โI donโt hate it,โ I say.
He seems unconvinced.
โI actually think I like it,โ I say. โIโm just not good at it, and it stresses me out feeling like Iโm making someone wait on me.โ
โWhy?โ he says.
I shrug. โI donโt know.โ โBut I donโt mind,โ he says. โYouย sayย that,โ I reply.
โIโm not training for the Olympics, Daphne,โ he says. โWhy would I give a shit?โ
โWhen we used to try to hike together, Iโd get out of breath and Peter wouldโโ I realize my mistake too late.
Miles probably wouldโve missed the slipup, if not for the way my sentence screeches to a halt.
The corner of his mouth quirks as he reaches toward my kayak. I shake my head, but he doesnโt slow his progress.
โNo!โ I shriek as he knocks me to one side. โI didnโt say it!โ โYou one-hundred-percent said it,โ he argues.
โDifferent Peter!โ I cry, laughing as we struggle against each other for a minute. โDifferent Peter!โ
โShouldโve called him Pete, then,โ Miles says.
He gives the kayak one more hard shove, tipping me over into the cold water. It sloshes over my face for just a second before my life vest pops me
above the surface. โAre you kidding me?โ I shriek, swimming toward him, grabbing the side of his boat now.
โI didnโt break the rule,โ he argues.
โYou dumped me in the lake,โ I say, trying and failing to tip him in. โThatโs so much worse.โ
โFine, fine,โ he says. โIโm getting in.โ But as he says it, heโs grabbing his paddle, slicing it into the water, trying to get away.
I grab hold of one side and yank as hard as I can.
It takes a few seconds of struggle, but in the end, I manage it.
Miles crashes into the lake. He resurfaces, soaked and sputtering, and slicks his hair out of his face, eyes crinkled against the sun. โDidnโt even check if I could swim or not,โ he tuts, pretending to be aghast.
โI wouldโve saved you,โ I say.
โYou?โ he says. โIโm, like, forty pounds heavier than you.โ
โFirst of all,โ I say, โyouโre absolutely not. And second of all, I have a life vest. We wouldโve been fine.โ
He swims toward me, loops an arm around my back, my stomach lifting into my chest at the feeling of his skin on mine, his weight pulling us downward as my heart buoys into the back of my throat. โYour physics are off, Daphne,โ he says against my ear as we start to sink.
I wriggle around to face him, pushing away before anything can keep me there. โI knew you could swim, Miles.โ
โHow?โ he asks.
โOne, everything about you,โ I say. โTwo, Iโve seen pictures.โ โWhen you and Ashleigh were snooping?โ he teases.
โYes, when we were snooping,โ I admit.
He nods, treading water in front of me. โThought so.โ โHave you ever snooped?โ I ask.
โNo,โ he says.
I study him until he laughs, glances toward the island again, then meets my eyes. โFine, a couple of times when youโve left your door open, Iโveย peekedย in. But itโs not like Iโm digging through your drawers.โ
โExcuse me,โ I say. โI did notย digย through your drawers. Not that I would have needed to, since they were all open.โ
โYou looked in them.โ He swims closer. โI didnโt,โ I say.
โIn case you were wondering,โ he says, โyour drawers have never been open while your door was.โ
โI wasnโt wondering,โ I say.
โItโs been spotless,โ he says. โNot a single hint as to who you are.โ โPretty boring of me,โ I say.
โMysterious,โ he counters. โLike a puzzle.โ โOr a highly organized silverware tray,โ I say.
Under the water, our calves brush against one another. A thrum travels straight up my thigh into my abdomen. โThe same way you dress.โ
โLike a silverware tray?โ I say.
He shakes his head. Another graze of our legs, a little higher this time. โLike a secret.โ
A heady rush of tension. To defuse it, I say, โLike Iโm hiding an extra set of arms.โ
โThink I wouldโve noticed that,โ he says.
Our hands brush under the water. The second time, our fingers slip together, knuckles briefly sliding against each other before we pull away.
I backstroke away from him, turning my face up toward the sun. When my pulse has settled, I ask, โShould we paddle a little longer?โ
โIf you want to,โ he says.
I stare across the glistening turquoise water toward the shore of the island. Itโs not as far as I thought. It feels possible now, that we could make it.
โI want to,โ I tell him.