REAL LIFE
Friday
โI THINK WEย should give you a proper wedding tomorrow,โ I announce over breakfast.
โOh, thank god, someone said it,โ Kimmy says, dropping her spoon into her acai bowl.
Parth casts a quick glance over at Sabrina, who dusts her hands off on her cloth napkin.
Weโre sitting at a white wrought iron table in the Bluebell Innโs overgrown garden, tucked up in one of the hills that overlook the harbor. Our server stops by to drop off fresh cappuccinos, then moves off to another table.
โWe donโt need anything fancy,โ Sabrina says. โThis, the six of us, is all that matters.โ
โIโm not sayingย fancy,โ I reply. Lying awake, late into the night, it became apparent that the only way to make it through these last two days without crumbling was to give my brain something else to focus on. โIโm just saying, like, a cake. A photographer. Maybe something old, new, and blue, or whatever the saying is?โ
Wyn softly snorts beside me.
โCould be nice,โ Parth says, eyeing Sabrina again. โItโs tomorrow,โ she reminds me.
โIt would only take a few hours,โ Cleo says.
โWe can split up tasks and knock it all out,โ I add. A completable chore
andย alone time: the perfect combo.
Sabrinaโs head tilts as she sips the foam from her cappuccino. โOkay.โ She nods to herself. โOkay, sure. You and Wyn handle the cake.โ
I balk. โWouldnโt it be faster if we all divided up? Covered twice as much ground?โ
โNo, it would be chaotic. Weโd end up with six cakes.โ โProbably why Harriet suggested it,โ Wyn says.
I ignore him, regroup, and face Sabrina again. โIf weโre teaming up, then you and I should be on cake duty. I want to be sure I get something you like.โ
Her head slightly cocks, and something flits behind her eyes.
She and I have barely had a second alone together since the ride from the airport, and for the first time, Iโm wondering if thatโs becauseย Iโveย been afraid sheโd find Wyn and me out or ifย sheโsย been avoidingย me.
She gives a little shake of her head. โI donโt care about the cake. If I care about absolutely anything other than the ceremony, itโs the bachelorette- slash-bachelor party, so Iโll figure that out.โ
โIย want to plan that,โ Parth says.
โDuh,โ she says. โWeโll do it together, and Cleo and Kim can try to find a photographer, if theyโre up for it.โ
โWeโd love to,โ Cleo says.
โBut a hard out in two hours, okay?โ Sabrina says. โNo matter what progress you have or havenโt made, in two hours, we meet back at the house.โ
Wynโs gaze darts my way, and I look at the floor.
Itโs only two hours, I think.
What have I done, I think.
โข โข โข
I DONโย T KNOWย if heโs picking up my discomfort and mirroring it back to me or if heโs really in his head. Maybe about the text from Gloria or maybe something else entirely. But as we drive from bakery to bakery, we barely even make small talk.
The afternoon flies by. Weโve reached the ninety-minute mark of our allotted two hours when the fifth local bakery tells us they donโt touch weddings. โNo one gets quite so litigious as the parents of a newlywed,โ the red-faced baker tells us.
โDid we say wedding?โ Wyn laughs, looks at me, and claps a hand to his forehead, shaking himself. He faces the baker again, leaning across the counter with a devastating smile, the kind that looks like a hook has snagged under his lip. โI meantย birthday. Weโve been planning this wedding of ours for, like, four years, so I guess thatโs whyย thatย came out. This cake is for a birthday.โ
The baker narrows her eyes. โAll our birthday cakes sayย Happy Birthday
on them.โ
โOkay, then what about a regular cake,โ I say.
โThose sayย Happy Birthdayย on them too,โ the woman says, determined not to sell us a black market wedding cake, I guess.
โGreat,โ Wyn says. โWeโll do a red velvet one of those.โ The bakerโs lips purse. โWho should it be addressed to?โ
Itโs not enough that sheโs forcing us to buy a cake withย Happy Birthday
on it when sheย knowsย itโs for a wedding.
โHappy birthday, wicked pissah,โ Wyn suggests.
โThatโs not how you useย wicked pissahย in a sentence,โ the baker tells us. The rules surrounding this cake are getting more specific by the second. A smile blossoms from one corner of Wynโs mouth. โInside joke.โ
The baker does not smile, but she turns to inscribe our not-wedding cake all the same.
In the Rover, we fall back into silence. Weโre halfway up the wildflower- covered hill to the cottage when Wyn suddenly pulls over onto the gravel shoulder that overlooks the ocean. โOkay,โ he says, looking at me.
โOkay, what?โ I say.
โWhatโs going on?โ he asks. โNothing,โ I lie.
His head tips back on a frustrated laugh. โPlease donโt do this.โ โDoย what?โ I demand.
โPretend youโre fine,โ he says. โAct like Iโm imagining that youโre pulling away from me.โ
โPulling away?โ The words squeeze out of my tightening windpipe. Iโm suddenly so frustrated it becomes a kind of claustrophobia. I undo my seat belt and throw open my door, stumbling out into the harsh midday sun.
He gets out too, rounding the hood of the car toward me. โThis isnโt fair.โ
I throw my arms out to my sides. โWhatย isnโt fair?โ
โWe were getting along,โ he says. โWe were acting like friends, and now
โโ
โFriends?โ The word tears out of me on a laugh. โI donโt want to be your friend, Wyn!โ
โI donโt want to be yours either!โ he cries.
I turn up the hill, but he catches my hand and pulls me back to face him. I donโt know how it happens: Iโm confident I donโtย tripย into his mouth, but thatโs how it feels, because Iโmย positiveย he didnโt initiate itโWyn wouldย neverโand it makes no sense thatย Iย would do this, but I have.
I am.
My hands are twisted into his shirt, and his are flat against my back, and weโre kissing, hard, hurried, like this is a timed activity and weโre in our final seconds.
โWhat was the text,โ I hiss out as our lips draw apart.
โWhat text,โ he asks, turning me back to the car, the warm metal of the hood meeting my back.
โFrom your mom,โ I say. โI saw a text from your mom.โ โNothing,โ he says, lifting me onto the hood.
โWyn.โ
โItโs about work, Harriet,โ he says, squeezing my thighs, pulling them around his hips.
โThat doesnโt make any sense,โ I say as he kisses his way down my throat, hand curling against my ear.
โI can explain it to you right now,โ he says, โor we can have sex in the car.โ
A plumb line of heat drops through my center, my thighs tightening against him as he kisses me more deeply. โTheย car? Weโre like a mile from the house.โ
โI donโt have a mile in me right now, Harriet.โ
I push against his shoulders even as the rest of my body strains toward him. โTell me,โ I say.
He steps back. A car flies by our spot on the shoulder, and he blinks as if emerging from a trance. Then obvious anxiety torques his brow and mouth, and I am positive I made the right decision, that thereโs something I need to know.
With a resigned sigh, he pulls his phone out of his back pocket and taps on it for several seconds, teeth worrying at his lower lip, while the suspense pummels my nerves.
Finally, he hands the phone to me.
Thereโs a web browser open to some hip minimalistic shop. A white backdrop. Soft serifed headings:ย Gallery,ย Contact,ย Social Media. Beneath them, a photograph of a massive oak pedestal table out in a green-gold meadow. Mismatched wooden chairs line it, wildflowers bursting up around their legs. Behind the meadow, periwinkle mountains jut up into a cloudless sky.
Itโs so beautiful it makes me ache. I feel the same brand of longing I used to get when I rode my bike home at dusk as a kid, past lit kitchen windows, saw the people inside laughing while they set their tables or washed their dishes.
I tap the image. An option to purchase the table pops up. โFifteen thousandย dollars? American dollars?โ
โItโs the cheapest one,โ Wyn says.
I look up, stunned. โWyn. Are you buying aย fifteen-thousand-dollar
table? Here I was freaking out about a coffee-table book, and youโre buying
a millionaireโs table?โ
โWhat?โ He laughs uncomfortably. โNo. Harriet. Itโs notโIโm not buying it . . . I made it.โ
I stare at him. โYou . . .โ I look back down to the table, then up at him. โYouย madeย this? Or you fixed it?โ
Color rises along his cheeks. โI made it. For that home goods store in Bozeman. Juniper and Sage?โ
Juniper and Sage. I went once with Wynโs parents, and Hank joked that we shouldnโt touch any of their vases, because if we broke them, weโd have to mortgage the house.
โTheyโre selling them on consignment,โ Wyn says. โThe first two they bought are already gone. I kind of hate that one, and apparently the Bozeman millionaires agree, because itโs been sitting for weeks. But Iโve started doing commissions too. Mostly for peopleโs summer homes, but Iโve also got this sixty-thousand-dollar order for a resort. Iโm getting requests every few days. Tourists want something locally madeโIโll have to hire someone to help soon if it keeps upโand . . . what?โ
โNothing.โ I look away, toward the water, bat my eyelashes against the welling emotion.
โHarriet?โ
โYouโre . . .โ I shake my head. โYouโre amazing, Wyn. This is amazing.โ
The corner of his mouth twitches, his gaze dropping to the water below us. โYeah, well, turns out that business degree wasnโt a complete waste.โ
I flip through the pictures on the home page, and he watches me out of the corner of his eye, like he canโt bear to see it straight on.
A dark walnut table sitting in a sparkling creek, vases filled with prairie coneflowers and common chokecherry and Rocky Mountain penstemon. And then a cedar table with a live edge, sitting in a pine forest, like an altar in a cathedral made of trees.
The photograph sends an imprecise ache through my limbs. Toย beย there, maybe, or maybe to be standing behind the camera with the man who built that table.
โIn their natural habitat,โ I say.
What I mean is,ย Inย yourย natural habitat.
I think back to those phone calls when he went home to Montana, how even over video, I could see that the colors of Wyn had leached back into him, after months of fading under the fog and drizzle of San Francisco.
โI mean, itโs a table.โ He reaches for the phone, but I hold on to it. โNo table is worth that much.โ
โThis one is,โ I murmur.
I look up and catch him watching me, a look of raw vulnerability, hope. โItโs amazing,โ I force out. โI didnโt know you were building anything.
When did you start?โ
He scratches the back of his head. โI started building in San Francisco.โ โYouย what?โ I say.
โThe second job I had,โ he says. โIt wasnโt upholstery. I was apprenticing for a designer.โ
In the scheme of things, itโs not a salacious reveal, but it is disorienting. To realize the rift between us began even longer ago than I realized. โWhy didnโt you tell me?โ
โI donโt know. I was embarrassed.โ
โEmbarrassed,โ I repeat, like itโs my first introduction to the word. It might as well be. โWhat could possibly be embarrassing about this?โ
โIโve never been like you,โ he says. โI wasnโt brilliant. I wasnโt someone with a ton of goals. Iโve spent my first thirty years tripping through life.โ
โThatโsย notย true,โ I say.
โHarriet.โ He looks at me through his lashes, every variety of green and gray in his eyes on full display in the sunlight reflecting off the water below. โI barely got into college, and I barely graduated. And then I followed you out to San Francisco, and evenย withย a degree, I managed to botch every interview I went to for jobs that would actuallyย pay. If I fucked up the apprenticeship, I didnโt want you to watch it happen. Saying it was another upholstery job took the pressure off, because if I lost it, I could find another.โ
My nose burns. I drop my eyes back to the phone, the screen blurring. โHe actually didnโt think I was any good,โ he says.
I look up.
โThe designer I apprenticed for,โ he says. โHe said I had no instincts.โ
I snort. โWhat, like youโre some kind of birding dog? What an asshole.โ
Wyn smiles faintly. โWhen I left that job and went home, I was pretty sure I was done even trying. Figured Iโd stick with the repairs.โ
โWhat made you change your mind?โ
He eases onto the hot metal of the hood beside me. โItโs hard to explain.โ
Weโre back to the push and pull, the little drips of him and then the droughts that follow.
Iโve never known how to take him in small doses. One taste only ever makes the thirst worse.
โWell, Iโm proud of you,โ I say thickly, folding my arms, barricading myself from him the same way heโs done to me.
His eyes return to mine. โI could make you one, if you want.โ
โA table?โ I ask. He nods. โI donโt have that kind of money, Wyn.โ โI know,โ he says. โThatโs not what I meant.โ
โI couldnโt take something like that for free,โ I say.
โItโs going really well, Harriet,โ he says. โAnd I hardly have any expenses right nowโmaybe youโve heard: I live with my mom?โ
I laugh. โI think I remember reading that on TMZ.โ
He touches my hand against the hood, and god help me, I turn my palm up to his. I need to hold on to him right now, need to feel the calluses Iโve memorized on his palm.
โI would love to make you one,โ he murmurs. โIโve got time, and I donโt need money.โ
Reading my expression, Wyn says, โOr if you donโt want one . . .โ
โItโs not that.โ I shake my head. โItโs amazing. Seeing you like this. So happy.โ
He studies me for a beat before dropping his gaze on a nod. โI am. Iโm really happy.โ
Now my chest is folding over on itself. โIโm so glad.โ โYou too, right?โ He matches my gaze.
That seesaw feeling rocks through me. โYeah,โ I say. โMe too.โ
โGood,โ he says softly.
โWhy was Gloria so worried about you telling me this?โ I ask.
โBecause she thinks weโre still together,โ he says, his gaze dark and steady. โShe thinks youโre still waiting for me to come back.โ
Back to San Francisco. Back to me.
Iโm not waiting. Iโve known for months he wouldnโt be coming back. So why does hearing it hurt so much?
My phone chimes, and I break eye contact, blinking rapidly as I pull it out, read the new message. โSabrina,โ I tell him thickly, sliding off the hood.
His mouth hitches, an unconvincing quarter smile. โLooks like our timeโs up.โ
It already was, I think. But the pain, it still feels fresh.





