Chapter no 12

Happy Place

REAL LIFE

Tuesday

BEFORE DINNER, WYNย โ€œgoes for a run.โ€ Iโ€™m reasonably certain this is an excuse for him to use the outdoor shower by the guesthouse, so I take the opportunity to fume while I lather up in the shower in our bedroom. Afterward, I riffle through my assortment of T-shirts, tanks, jeans, and sundresses. Basically I packed a blob of white, black, and blue.

And then thereโ€™s the lone splash of red, which Iโ€™d thrown in more to please Sabrina than because I actually planned to wear it. Sheโ€™d sent the dress to me on my last birthday, without even knowing my sizeโ€”sheโ€™d always had an eye for that sort of thingโ€”and Iโ€™d tentatively thought of it as my Getting Back Out There Dress, though in my few depressing attempts to Get Back Out There, I hadnโ€™t been able to bring myself to wear it.

Now it strikes me more as the kind of too-short, too-tight, too-red dress youโ€™d wear to the wedding of a man who jilted you, with plans to tip over his cake and set his tie on fire.

In brief, itโ€™s perfect. I stuff myself into it, twist my hair into a clip, slip the one pair of hoops I brought through my ears, and grab my heels on my way out the door.

Downstairs, Sabrinaโ€™s watching the progress of our approaching cab on the phone while plying everyone with water. Well, everyone except Wyn, who isnโ€™t in the kitchen.

โ€œHydrate, hydrate, hydrate,โ€ she chants. โ€œTonight, weโ€™re going full twenty-one-year-olds on spring break.โ€

Kimmy guffaws, her strawberry blond waves jouncing with the motion. โ€œYou all should be very glad you didnโ€™t know me when we were twenty- one. Four Loko still had caffeine in it then.โ€

โ€œI got great pictures of the body shots, by the way,โ€ Parth says. โ€œThose will be perfect for the photo wall.โ€

โ€œPhoto wall?โ€ I repeat.

The back of my neck tingles in the second before I hear his voice: โ€œFor the wedding.โ€

I turn toward the patio door heโ€™s stepped through, his hair damp and that one lock curled toward his brow.

Heโ€™s wearing a gray T-shirt, half tucked into slate-blue chinos, and the color combination brings out all the green in his eyes as they rove over what I now must rename my Vengeance Dress. He misses a half step in the process but recovers quickly, averting his eyes as he heads to the fridge and starts filling his water bottle.

I wonder if my cheeks are nearing the color of the skintight chiffon yet. It takes me a second to retrace the conversation to where we left off. โ€œSo whatโ€™s this about a photo wall for Saturday?โ€ I manage. โ€œSomething I can help with?โ€

โ€œNo, itโ€™s not forย ourย wedding,โ€ Sabrina says. โ€œThe photo wall is for yours.โ€

โ€œRemember?โ€ Parth says. โ€œWe got your parentsโ€™ contact info so we could get your baby pictures? Weโ€™ve been slowly accumulating a wall of humiliation for years.โ€

The flush in my face is downright itchy now. โ€œThis isnโ€™t ringing any bells whatsoever.โ€

โ€œYou werenโ€™t part of the conversation. You were TAing that semester,โ€ Wyn says, without looking over.

Sabrina glances up from her phone and clocks the dress for the first time, her face lighting up. โ€œHarry! Va-va-voom. Iย toldย you red was your color.โ€

I force a smile. โ€œYou were right. This has become my go-to Date Night Dress.โ€

The sound of water splatting against the floor draws all of our attention to the fridge. โ€œShit!โ€ Wynโ€™s gaze snaps away from me like a whip to the water spilling out over his full water bottle onto the floor.

Cleo yelps as she lurches off her stool at the marble island, out of the waterโ€™s path. Her new mushroom book (or maybe her old one) goes flying out of her hand.

โ€œSorry,โ€ Wyn says under his breath, grabbing a lobster-print tea towel off the dishwasher handle so Cleo can sop up some of the water that hit her clingy black midi dress and boots. In this outfit, she could easily be the gorgeous front woman of a famous nineties grunge band.

As Wyn stands from soaking up the rest of the water on the floor, Parth claps a hand on his shoulder. โ€œYou okay, man? You seem kind of out of it.โ€

โ€œFine,โ€ Wyn says, tossing the now drenched towel onto the counter. โ€œFine.โ€

The secondย fineย sounds even less convincing than the first. Now weโ€™re getting somewhere. I slide past the marble island to pull his water bottle from his hand, holding eye contact as I take a long sip.

โ€œThirsty?โ€ he says dryly.

I shove the bottle back toward him. โ€œNot anymore.โ€

โ€œCabโ€™s here!โ€ Sabrina announces, jumping up from her own stool. โ€œBook down, Cleo. Finish that water, Kimberly. Weโ€™re out of here.โ€

โ€ข โ€ข โ€ข

AS Iโ€™M CLIMBINGย into the passenger van, I take zero care to keep my barely covered ass out of Wynโ€™s face. I feel aย smidgeย less bold once Iโ€™m smooshed into the back seat between him and Sabrina, but at least Iโ€™m spared from small talk by the early 2000s Pump Up playlist that Parth blasts from the front passenger seat. Plus, Wynโ€™s on his phone the entire ride over anyway.

A handful of minutes later, we pull up in front of our old haunt, the Lobster Hut. Itโ€™s a ramshackle dive with no sign and no indicator of its

moniker on either its cocktail napkins or its sticky laminated menus, though somehow everyone knows what to call it.

The first time I came here, I was nineteen years old, fresh off my first breakup. Sabrina knew they didnโ€™t card, and that was back when Cleo could knock back six tequila shots and still be on her feet, fending off frat boy advances with diatribes about Modigliani paintings.

We sang, we danced, we downed the steady stream of Fireball that kept appearing at our high-top in the corner, and I finally stopped checking my phone compulsively for some word from Bryant. When we got home, and Sabrina and Cleo both flounced off to shower, the loneliness crept back in, and the booze had filed down all my defenses.

I beelined toward the powder room no one ever used, nudged on the faucet, sat atop the toilet, and cried.

Not about Bryant. From the loneliness, from the fear that I would never escape it. Because feelings were changeable, and people were unpredictable. You couldnโ€™t hold on to them through the force of will.

Cleo and Sabrina found me there, and Sab insisted sheโ€™d break down the door if I didnโ€™t let them in.ย Then Iโ€™ll have to, like, go to a polo match with my dad as an apology, she said,ย and I wonโ€™t let you forget that until one of us dies.

As soon as I unlocked the door, the tears dried up, but the knot in my throat made it hard to speak. I tried to apologize, to convince them I was fine, just embarrassed, as they wrapped their arms around me.

You donโ€™t have to be fine, Cleo said.

Or embarrassed, Sabrina said.

I stood in that tiny bathroom, letting them hold me until the heavy feeling, the unbearable weight of loneliness, eased.

Weโ€™re here, they promised. And the loneliness never found such a foothold again. No matter what, Iโ€™d always have the two of them. At least I used to think that.

After this week, things will change between all of us. Theyโ€™ll have to.

Donโ€™t think about it, I tell myself.ย Donโ€™t go there yet.ย Be here, on the sidewalk in front of your favorite dive ever.ย Sabrina, Parth, Cleo, and

Kimmy are already at the front door.

I take one step to follow them, only for my heel to catch in a crack between two cobblestones. Wyn appears at my side, dutifully steadying me by the elbow before I can break my ankle. โ€œCareful,โ€ he says in a low murmur. โ€œYouโ€™re not used to wearing shoes like that.โ€

Anger shoots through me like an emergency flare, the only thing bright and hot enough to be seen through the fog of nostalgia.

โ€œAt this point, Wyn,โ€ I say, jerking my arm free, โ€œyou have no idea what I am or am not used to.โ€

I stalk off through the portholed front doors into the dark bar, a karaoke version of โ€œLove Is a Battlefieldโ€ folding around me at full volume. The smell of fried haddock and paprika-dusted potato wedges hangs thick in the air, right alongside the tang of beer and vinegar, and the year-round Christmas lights strung back and forth over the ceiling dust the crowd in every color of glitter.

As I catch up with Cleo, she looks over, the lights accentuating the bits of gold in her eyes and the matching gold undertones in her deep brown skin. Leaning in, she says, โ€œThis place never changes, does it?โ€

โ€œEverything changes eventually,โ€ I say, and then, at her odd expression, force a smile and thread my arm through hers. โ€œRemember when the lobster rolls here used to be like six dollars?โ€

Sheโ€™s not falling for the false cheeriness. A divot forms between her winged brows. โ€œYou okay?โ€

โ€œHard to breathe in this dress without worrying about the seams splitting,โ€ I say, โ€œbut otherwise good.โ€

She still looks unconvinced. Cleoโ€™s always been able to see through me. When we lived together, I used to watch her paint for hours and think,ย How does she always see things so clearly?ย She knew what colors to start with and where, and none of it made sense to me until, suddenly, it all looked exactly right.

Wyn brushes past us, swims through the crowd toward the too-small table Sabrinaโ€™s already claimed at the back of the room. Cleo catches me watching him.

โ€œWe had a little argument,โ€ I admit, surprised by the relief I feel at sharing this tiny sliver of truth with her.

โ€œYou want to talk about it?โ€ she asks. โ€œLet me rephrase that: maybe you should talk about it.โ€

โ€œItโ€™s fine,โ€ I say. โ€œI donโ€™t even know what it was about, really.โ€

โ€œOh, yeah.โ€ Cleo nods. โ€œTheย am I hungry/tired/stressed or are you actually being the worstย fight. I know it well.โ€

I snort. โ€œYou and Kimmy donโ€™t fight.โ€

She drops her head against my shoulder. โ€œHarriet. Iโ€™m a sober introvert homebody, and my girlfriend is a human party bus, complete with flashing lights and spinning dance poles. Of course we fight.โ€

Across the bar, Sabrina waves us over.

โ€œWell, whateverโ€™s going on between you and Wyn,โ€ Cleo says as we start across the packed bar together, โ€œyouโ€™ll figure it out. You always do.โ€

My stomach sinks guiltily. โ€œAnyway, how are you? I feel like we havenโ€™t had a single second to talk yet.โ€

โ€œIโ€™m good,โ€ she says. โ€œTired. Not used to this schedule. Kim and I usually get up between four thirty and five.โ€

โ€œExcuse me,โ€ I say. โ€œThat just brought my hangover back.โ€

She laughs. โ€œItโ€™s not that bad. I actually mostly love it. I love being up before anyone else and seeing the sunrise every day, being outside with the vegetables and the sunshine.โ€

โ€œSometimes I still canโ€™t believe youโ€™re a farmer,โ€ I say. โ€œI mean, itโ€™s so cool, donโ€™t get me wrong. I just really did think youโ€™d have art in the Met someday.โ€

She shrugs. โ€œIt could still happen. Lifeโ€™s long.โ€

That makes me snort with laughter. โ€œI donโ€™t think anyone says that.โ€

โ€œMaybe not,โ€ she says, โ€œbut if they were truly present, maybe they would.โ€

โ€œSo wise,โ€ I say. โ€œSo deep.โ€

โ€œRead it on the inside of a Dove chocolate wrapper,โ€ she jokes. โ€œWhat about you, Har? Howโ€™s the residency?โ€

โ€œGood!โ€ I know Iโ€™ve said it too brightly from the way her brow lifts. I forge ahead anyway, with the spiel I give my parents every time we talk. โ€œItโ€™s busy. Long hours and a lot of work that has nothing to do with surgery. But the other interns are nice, and one of the fifth-years has kind of taken me under her wing. It could be a lot worse. I mean, Iโ€™m helping people.โ€

Thinking of the hospital always floods my body with adrenaline as if Iโ€™m there, scrubbed in, someoneโ€™s skull open on a table in front of me.

Happy place, I remind myself.ย Thatโ€™s where you are. The Lobster Hut.

Knottโ€™s Harbor.

โ€œI always knew our girl was going to save the world,โ€ Cleo says. โ€œIโ€™m so proud of you, Harry. We all are.โ€

I glance away, chest cramping. โ€œSame goes for you,โ€ I say. โ€œA whole-ass farm.โ€

โ€œAnd we maxed out our CSA.โ€ She clarifies, โ€œThe crop-sharing subscription we do for locals? We officially canโ€™t grow enough for everyone who wants in.โ€

โ€œIn three years!โ€ I cry. โ€œYouโ€™re incredible.โ€

โ€œAnd to think,โ€ she says, โ€œa mere decade ago, we were dancing on these tables to that one MGMT song that played every fifteen minutes.โ€

โ€œYou,โ€ I say, โ€œneverย danced on those tables. I distinctly remember Sabrina commanding us to get up on them, and you calmly saying,ย No thanks.โ€

Cleo laughs. โ€œThere is nothing my parents drilled into me like good boundaries.โ€

โ€œGod, that must be terrible,โ€ I say. โ€œMiles and Deandra must lie awake every night, in their matching houses, wishing they could do it all over again.โ€

โ€œOh, Iโ€™m sure,โ€ she agrees. โ€œIt probably kills them, knowing how many baby showers Iโ€™ve had to miss, simply because I had no interest in going to them.โ€

โ€œBrave,โ€ I say. โ€œI spent my last day off at my new hairdresserโ€™s daughterโ€™s bat mitzvah, so I donโ€™t relate.โ€

โ€œOh, Harry,โ€ she says, wincing. โ€œYou deserve to honor yourself.โ€

โ€œWell, I toasted myself at the bat mitzvah,โ€ I say.

She grins, but her brow remains lifted skeptically. I donโ€™t think sheโ€™s ever totally understood why I find it easier to fulfill other peopleโ€™s expectations than to set my own.

Underneath her tiny frame and button nose, Cleoโ€™s always had a spine of steel. Back in college, she could drink the better part of a bottle of Tanqueray, and you still wouldnโ€™t convince her to do anything stupider than continuing an in-depth conversation about nihilism with a wasted field hockey player.

And then one day, she decided she didnโ€™t like how she felt when she drank, so she just stopped. It was the same way when she changed her mind about going to an MFA program and announced she found a job on an urban farm instead.

When Cleo knows her mind, she knows her mind.

As we reach the table, I ask Sabrina, โ€œDid you know Cleo and Kimmyโ€™s co-op maxed out?โ€

โ€œI did,โ€ she says. โ€œNot that Iโ€™ve been able to see it in action.โ€

Cleo slides onto a chair beside Kimmy. โ€œWeโ€™ll find a time this winter.โ€ โ€œYou name the date,โ€ Sabrina replies, almost like a challenge.

โ€œWe live too close to each other to go this long without hanging out,โ€ Parth puts in. Cleo doesnโ€™t reply, and Kimmy casts her a quick sidelong look, the kind of temperature check that passes between two people who know each other inside and out. Cleoโ€™s getting irritated.

โ€œRemember coming here with Kimmy for the first time?โ€ I pipe up. Cleo lifts her girlfriendโ€™s hand to kiss the back of it.

โ€œThatโ€™s right,โ€ Sabrina says. โ€œThis is where we fell in love with you, Kimberly.โ€

โ€œTo be clear,โ€ Cleo tells Kimmy, โ€œIย was in love with you well before that.โ€

โ€œAwwh! You guys!โ€ Kimmyย instantlyย tears up. โ€œYouโ€™ve always made me feel like I belong.โ€

โ€œOfย courseย you belong,โ€ I say.

โ€œYou were our missing link.โ€ Parth settles into the chair beside Sabrinaโ€™s. โ€œWe needed a redhead to round us out.โ€

โ€œKeep your eye on those blue-haired ladies, by the way,โ€ Sabrina says, looking toward the women nursing sodas at the next table over. โ€œWhen they go, weโ€™ll grab one of their chairs.โ€

โ€œIโ€™m fine to stand,โ€ Wyn says, pulling the final available chair out for me. He meets my eyes. โ€œGo ahead, honey. Give yourself a break from those heels.โ€

I wonder if my fake smile is doing anything to soften my very real glare. โ€œWell,ย someoneย sit,โ€ Parth says. โ€œYouโ€™re making me nervous.โ€

โ€œYou know what?โ€ I touch Wynโ€™s bicep. โ€œIโ€™ll sit in your lap.โ€

He balks, and I push him toward the chair. With the air of one resigned to his grisly fate, Wyn sinks into it, and I drape myself across his thighs like a living toga.

His arm comes around my back, a highly impersonal touch, but itโ€™s all it takes for my body to remember, replay, relive that moment in the cellar.

A server stops by, and Sabrina puts in an order for a pitcher of margaritas, a truckload of fries, and Cleoโ€™s usual soda with lime.

โ€œCould I get one of those as well?โ€ I call as heโ€™s walking away. As badly as I want some alcohol to disrupt the electrical impulses firing through my neurons, I need to stay clearheaded.

The memory of Wynโ€™s velvety murmur:ย Arms up, baby.

My drunken warble:ย Did you get me the shirt about the rodeos?

My spine prickles. The backs of my thighs warm.

The crowd is roaring along to Shania Twain now, a bachelorette party tipsily leading the charge from the karaoke stage at the back wall.

Before Kimmy, Cleo mostly dated ultrahip people who were completely uninterested in hanging out with us. Laura, who rode a motorcycle and had the bridge of her nose pierced. Giselle, who always wore red lipstick and never laughed. Trace, who joined a punk band that got huge, and then dumped Cleo for the famous model daughter of another famous model.

Then Cleo met Kimmy, a gorgeous and affectionate goofball who never stopped laughing, while working on an organic farm in Quebec.

The first time she came on the trip, Kimmy, Sabrina, and I smoked the best joint of our lives in the Lobster Hut bathroom, then performed โ€œGoodbye Earlโ€ together.

From the beginning, sheย belonged. With Cleo. With us.

An uneasiness needles between my ribs. Again, I find myself wondering whatย weโ€™llย be, exactly, after this week, when the trip is over and the cottage is sold. When Wyn and I come clean.

Sabrina has started filling salt-rimmed glasses from the margarita pitcher, and I fight the urge to throw one back. Instead, I lean across the table to grab one of the sodas the server dropped off and, in so doing, inadvertently shove my ass back into Wynโ€™s crotch.

Wyn shifts uncomfortably. What did he call it? Vindictive grinding?

I drain my soda like itโ€™s my last shot of moonshine before an 1800s doctor pries a bullet from my arm, and then lean forward exaggeratedly again to return my glass to the table.

While the others are busy pouring their drinks, Wyn drops his lips beside my ear. โ€œCan we step outside for a minute?โ€ he asks stiffly. โ€œI need to speak with you.โ€

So did I, I think.ย Five months ago.

Itโ€™s too late to talk. Itโ€™s too late for him to ask if Iโ€™m happy, or how my residencyโ€™s going, or whether Iโ€™m dating the man he pinned our breakup on. I didnโ€™t sign up for that. I signed up to play this game, and now Iโ€™m going to play it.

I sift my hand through his hair, winding the ends around my knuckles. โ€œDonโ€™t you justย loveย Wynโ€™s hair like this?โ€ I shout to the others over the music.

Over the sweating lip of his margarita glass, Parth says, โ€œHe looks like heโ€™s the tormented leader of a motorcycle gang.โ€

Wyn clenches my hips, a warning that Iโ€™m playing with fire. โ€œJust havenโ€™t had time to cut it,ย honey.โ€

โ€œI think it looks great, Wynnie,โ€ Kimmy says. โ€œAnd the beard.โ€ โ€œIโ€™m going to shave that too,โ€ he says.

I turn into him with an exaggerated pout, slinging an arm around his neck. โ€œBut I like it.โ€

The skin above his collar prickles, and our gazes lock in a game of chicken, his hand sliding across my stomach, his palm almost preternaturally warm.

On a laugh, Parth says, โ€œHey, remember when we swore this would never become a couplesโ€™ trip?โ€

Sabrina takes a sip. โ€œPretty sure you were the only one who cared.โ€ โ€œPretty sure you only said it because you didnโ€™t want Sabrina to bring

her boyfriend,โ€ Cleo puts in.

โ€œThat was just an added bonus,โ€ Parth says. โ€œThe main thing was, I wanted to stay young forever. Couplesโ€™ trips seemed like such an old- person thing. My parents would go to Florida with my aunties and uncles all the time, and then theyโ€™d make us look through one hundred separate pictures of them inside a Margaritaville.โ€

As long as Iโ€™ve known him, Parthโ€™s been morally opposed to chain restaurants. Probably because, like me, he grew up in the suburban Midwest and those were the only offerings at hand. Personally, I find chains comforting. You know exactly what to expect, no huge surprises. Chain restaurants are theย Murder, She Wroteย reruns of the food industry.

Wyn leans past me to plop his half-downed margarita onto the table. โ€œYouโ€™ll have to excuse us,โ€ he says, hoisting me out of his lap. โ€œThis is Harrietโ€™s and my song.โ€

Iโ€™m sure I look baffled. Our friends certainly do.

He gives me no chance to argue, just grabs my hand and pulls me into the crowd, Sabrinaโ€™s voice trailing after us, โ€œHow the fuck is Vitamin Cโ€™s โ€˜Graduationโ€™ their song?โ€

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