SATURDAY, AUGUST 3RD
1 4 DAYS UNTIL THE READ- A -THON
TWO THINGS HAPPENย Saturday morning.
First, Ashleigh calls out sick and Landon has to fill in for her. Second, a storm rolls in, driving everyone in Waning Bay inside, and most, it would seem, of the under-eight crowd into the library.
Iโm kept running right up until itโs time to start gathering Story Hour supplies, at which point the automatic doors whoosh open, carrying a distant rumble of thunder and a sideways sheet of rain inside, along with Miles Nowak.
He stops on the mat inside the doors to rustle his wet hair, like a dog shaking out postbath, and I suppress a deeply charmed grin.
When he looks up and catches me watching him, though, he doesnโt return the smile. Mine dissipates as he approaches and sets a cup on my desk. โBrought you tea.โ
โThanks.โ
I can tell heโs waiting, so I take a sip, the spicy sweetness zinging from the back of my tongue to the base of my spine.
โDelicious,โ I confirm. โDid you come all the way here to bring me this?โ
He gives a flimsy grin. โI came all the way here to hear a story.โ
I lean around him, half expecting to see an ostrich-feather-clad Starfire and my Canadian-tuxedoed Dad in tow.
Miles glances down at his hands braced against the desk and clears his throat. โAh. So.โ
โTheyโre not coming,โ I say. โAre they?โ
He inhales slowly. My stomachโs sinking. I do my best to intercept it.
Itโs not a big deal. If anything, itโs a relief. I always feel awkward beingย observedย by nonlibrary people during Story Hour. Now I can finish my workday in peace and meet Dad and Starfire at the axe-throwing bar she was so excited about.
Miles is still looking at me like Iโm a puppy whose paw heโs just accidentally stomped on.
โItโs fine,โ I assure him. โIโm reading a book aloud to some kids. Itโs not my Broadway debut.โ
โNo, I know, itโs . . .โ His gaze cuts over my shoulder and back to me again. โYou should probably go get set up, right?โ
The way he says it, I canย feelย the gap where somethingย unsaidย hovers. My heart speeds. โWhat is it?โ
โNothing,โ he says. โIt can wait.โ โYouโre freaking me out,โ I say.
โThatโs not what Iโm trying to do,โ he says.
โBut itโs what youโre doing,โ I say. โJust tell me whatโs going on, or I wonโt be able to concentrate.โ
He leans away from the desk, hands gripping the edge, and blows out a breath. โI didnโt think this through.โ
โMiles.โ
โThey left, Daphne.โ โLeft?โ I say. โWho?โ
โYour parents,โ he says. โYour dad and Starfire. They got a last-minute invitation to meet some friends up in Mackinac.โ
I glance toward my phone. Itโs on the desk, face up. No new messages.
No explanation.
Of course there isnโt. There never is. The explanation is implied: something better came along.
There is no reason for me to feel surprised. There is every reason to feel nothing. This is what I should have expected.
Last-minute invitation, Miles said.
To meet some friends up in Mackinac.
The โfriendโ he made yesterday, no doubt. Some guy who owns a hotel and likes the Grateful Dead. At least, thatโs my guess, if I have to make one. And I do. Because Dad didnโt tell me himself.
Miles murmurs, โHe left you a note.โ
I flip my phone face down, searching for todayโs Story Hour books among the mess, but my hands feel clumsy, like my brainโs just learning how to operate them.
โI told him to call,โ Miles says.
I find the books, the smallest bit of relief seeping into me at the feeling of something solid in my grip. โNot his style.โ
Miles reaches across the desk and curls one hand around my wrist, running his thumb over my veins. โIโm sorry. I shouldโve waited to tell you.โ
I canโt help a snort. โNo, really, Miles. Itโs better that I know now.โ Otherwise I wouldโve kept waiting for him to show up.
Waiting, waiting, waiting.
โYou should get to work,โ I say. I donโt want to be seen like this.
I want to be left alone with my embarrassment and hurt.
In the end, it was relatively easy to let go of Peter, to accept his actions as proof of the truth: that our relationship, our life together, his feelings for me were never quite what Iโd thought they were.
And I stopped longing for him when I accepted this, because how could I miss someone who didnโt exist?
So why canโt I seem to do the same thing with my father? Why canโt I stop missing the dad I never had?
Why is he this constant dull ache in my heart?
Iย knewย he wouldnโt change. But a part of me kept hopingย Iย had changed enough that he couldnโt hurt me, or that this new iteration of me would be
the one worth sticking around for.
That Iโd fixed whateverโs so broken in me that I canโt be loved. I clear my throat. โGo to work, Miles. Iโm okay.โ
Fine. Fine. Fine.
You can be fine.
His fingers loosen. He steps back. โI called off. I thought youโd . . .โ he trails off.
โI donโt need you to babysit me,โ I snap, then try to soften my voice: โTrust me, this isnโt anything new. Please go.โ
He studies me for a long beat. Then he leans back from the desk, letting his hands slide clear of it. โYeah. Got it.โ
And then heโs gone.
At least this time, I was the one to say goodbye first.
WHEN I GETย home, Miles is in his room on the phone, his voice raised in frustration, almost brittle.
โI donโt care,โ he says. โYou shouldnโt have done that.โ
His voice drops to an indistinct murmur, then falls silent. I realize Iโve been stalled in the hallway, eavesdropping, only when his bedroom door swings open and Iโm busted.
He draws up short.
My chest aches at the sight of him, so scruffy, so messy, so familiar. I want to hide from him, and I want to be held by him. I want to apologize for earlier and I want to never talk about it again.
โHi,โ I scrape out. โHi,โ he says.
A laden moment passes.
โI still donโt want to talk,โ I say. He nods.
โI donโt even want to think,โ I go on. What is there to think about? My dad is exactly who heโs always been, and Iโm who Iโve always been too.
For just one night, Iโd like to pretend. Iโd like to be someone else. Not the uptight one, or the damaged one, or the one who gets left.
Not the one waiting, or poring over Dadโs note like itโs an old treasure map and if I can just interpret the faded scribbles, everything will make sense.
I swallow hard. โWill you take me somewhere?โ
Milesโs brow lifts in surprise. โWhere do you want to go?โ I swallow hard. โJust . . . somewhere Iโve never been.โ
Somewhere that wonโt remind me of Peter or my father or any other time that I wasnโt enough.
I say, โIf youโre busyโโ
Miles cuts across me: โIโll get my keys.โ
For the first few minutes in his truck, he takes my request not to talk literally.
I break first, my voice thick. โIโm sorry I was rude. It was nice of you, to rearrange your night to try to make me feel better.โ
At a red light, he looks over. He takes a breath, then closes his mouth, like heโs just decided against saying something.
โWhat?โ I ask.
โNothing,โ he lies.
โCome on,โ I urge him. โTell me.โ
โItโs just . . .โ He shakes his head. โYou always assume Iโm being so selfless. Like it hasnโt occurred to you I mightย wantย to hang out with you. So when you turn me down, I have to figure out if you just donโt feel the same way, or ifย youย think youโre doing me some kind of favor. And I never can.โ
My heart feels rug-burned. My throat is full. Iโm not sure what to say.
Behind us, someone honks, and Milesโs eyes return to the road. The lightโs green. He drives through.
WE PULL OVER,ย a bend in the road shielding us from view, and forest hemming us in on the left and right. โWhere are we?โ
He opens his door. โSomewhere new.โ
I climb out, try opening my map app on my phone. I donโt have service. โThis way.โ Miles leads me into the woods, the ground sandy and pine-
dusted. Itโs a long walk, half an hour at least, before the trees give way and blue-green water appears ahead of us, stretching farther than I can see, a thin band of darker blue where the sky melts into the water at the horizon.
The sun hangs low and fiercely bright. I turn my head into the wind to look up the shore. In the distance, a pale outcropping of rock juts into the water, blocking this cove from view. Scraggly trees twist up from the stone at odd, whimsical angles, all of it as white as sand.
โWow,โ I breathe.
Miles hums agreement.
I turn the other way, my gaze following the beach until the woods curve out and cut anything else off from view on our right too.
No one. Just us, and a couple of time-bleached, hollowed-out pieces of driftwood strewn down the shore.
โThis,โ he says, โis my favorite beach.โ
I touch my collarbone, a lump rising through my throat. The wind riffles his hair, his beard thick again, and the light catching his dark eyes makes them spark.
My heartย thrashes, like itโs trying to get itself up above a wave. Like I could drown in the sight of him.
I look away and start toward the gleaming water.
I undo the buttons on my top, step out of my shoes, and peel off my pants, leaving it all behind in a trail on the damp sand.
I step into the water, braced for cold, but after this morningโs storm moved off, the day was hot and itโs left the lake balmy. The tide rocks into my shins. I want to submerge myself completely, but thereโs a sandbar here, so I break into a jog, the water slowing my progress, my thighs burning.
Miles stands at the waterโs edge, shielding his eyes against the light. โAre you coming?โ I shout back over the waterโs roar.
I see him laugh but canโt hear it, and I feelย robbedย of the sound.
He takes off his shirt and pants, and comes toward me in easy, lazy strides.
He picks up speed as he reaches me, water splashing up to my thighs and stomach as he catches me around the waist, hoists me off my feet. I shriek with surprised laughter, and he carries me deeper, my arms locked over his.
โDonโt drop me,โ I say, voice fading into the crashing of the water.
He swings me into his arms, carrying me outright instead of simply hauling me along. โNever,โ he says.
With every step, the water splashes against us, and then weโre in so deep that itโs lapping at me, pouring over Milesโs arms to thread across my stomach. He stops and sways me back and forth, my toes trailing over the warm surface.
I close my eyes, and every sensation amplifies: the sunbeams drenching my face, Milesโs arms crooked beneath my back and knees, the way his breath presses his stomach against my side on every inhale, the lazy squawk of seagulls in the distance, and the grit of the sand on my feet, and a complete kind of safety.
Like being in a womb. Like lying on a quilt in the yard of our old house, the one we shared with Dad, on a summer day, legs tickling as a roly-poly climbed over the back of my calf. Like being tucked back in the library stacks with no one around and a good selection.
I let my eyes open, and now the sight of himโthat messy hair, his sun- freckled face and scruffy jaw, those chocolate-brown eyesโit cuts through my veins, a thousand wakes from a thousand little boats with Miles on their sails, headed straight toward my heart. โThanks for bringing me here,โ I murmur.
His eyes settle softly on me. โI already told you. I didnโt do it to be nice.โ