HAPPY PLACE
MATTINGLY, VERMONT
A STREET DOWNTOWNย lined in old redbrick buildings. An apartment over the Maple Bar, our favorite coffee shop, for our junior year. Cleo and I have met our new roommate Parth only once, but Sabrina had a class on international law with him last spring, and when he told her rooms were opening up in his place, we jumped.
Heโs a year ahead of us, a senior, and two of his roommates have already graduated, while the third, a business major, is spending the fall semester abroad in Australia. Iโll takeย hisย room, because in the spring Iโm doing a term in London. The other roommate and I can easily switch places over winter break.
Mattinglyโs a small school, so even though we donโtย knowย Parth Nayak, we know his reputation: the Party King of Paxton Avenue. Called such partly because he throws amazing themed parties but also because he has a habit of showing up atย otherย peopleโs parties with top-shelf liquor, a dozen beautiful friends, and an incredible playlist. He is a Mattingly legend.
And living with him is great. Though he and Sabrinaโboth natural leadersโoccasionally butt heads. The real Parth is better than the myth. Itโs not just that heโs fun. Heย lovesย people. Loves throwing them parties, picking out perfect gifts, making introductions between people he thinks should meet, finding the quietest person in the room and bringing them into the
thick of things. The world has never felt so kind, so positive. Like everyone is a potential friend, with something fascinating and brilliant to offer.
By the time I leave for London, I almost wish I were staying.
The city is gorgeous, of course, all that old stone and ivy blending seamlessly into sleek steel and glass. And thanks to the last semester, Iโm more prepared than ever to socialize with strangers. Most nights, at least a handful of people from the study-abroad program go out for pints in one of Westminsterโs endless supply of pubs, or grab crispy fish-and-chips wrapped in newspaper and eat it as we walk along the Thames. On weekends, there are champagne picnics in sprawling gardens and day trips to art galleries, hours of browsing as many iconic London bookshops as possibleโFoyles and Daunt Books and a whole slew of others on Cecil Court.
As time wears on, people couple off into friendships and relationships. Thatโs how I escape the constant pining for my friends and our corner apartment overlooking Mattinglyโs redbrick downtown: I start spending more and more time with another American, named Hudson, and in those hours when weโre studyingโorย notย studyingโI stop, if only for a while, imagining the seasons passing outside Parth, Cleo, Sabrina, and Mystery Roommateโs bay window, the heaps of snow melting away to reveal a quilt of springy pale green and bursts of trout lily, wild geranium, bishopโs-cap.
The closer summer gets, though, the less of a distraction Hudson offers. Partly because weโre both obsessively studying for exams, and partly because the thing between usโthis romance of necessityโis approaching its sell-by date, and we both know it.
My parents text me roughly five hundred times more than usual as my flight home nears.
Canโt wait to hear all about the London program in a few weeks, Dad says.
Mom writes,ย The ladies at Dr. Sherburgโs office want to take you out to lunch while youโre here. Cindyโs son is considering Mattingly.
Dad says,ย Saved a ten-part documentary on dinosaurs.
Mom says,ย Think youโll have time to help me get the yard cleaned up? Itโs a disaster, and Iโve been so swamped.
Iโd hoped to have a quick trip to see them before flying back to Vermont, but theyโre so excited. I end up spending two months counting down the seconds in Indiana, and then fly directly to Maine to meet my friends for Lobster Fest.
My flight gets in late. Itโs already dark, the heat of the day long since replaced by a cold, damp wind. There are a couple of cars idling in the lot, headlights off, and it takes me a second to find the cherry-red sports car. Sabrina specifically got her driverโs license so we could cruise around in it this summer.
But itโs not Sabrina standing against the hood, face illuminated by the glow of a cell phone. He looks up. A square jaw, narrow waist, messy golden hair pushed up off his forehead except for one lock that falls across his brow the second our eyes meet.
โHarriet?โ His voice is velvety. It sends a zing of surprise down my spine, like a zipper undone.
Iโve seen him in pictures of my friends over the last semester, and before that, on campus, but always from a distance, always on the move. This close, something about him seems different. Less handsome, maybe, but more striking. His eyes look paler in the cell phoneโs glow. There are premature crowโs-feet forming at their corners. He looks like heโs mostly made out of granite, except for his mouth, which is pure quicksand. Soft, full, one side of his Cupidโs bow noticeably higher.
โA whole semester apart,โ I say, โand you look exactly the same, Sabrina.โ
Symmetrical dimples appear on either side of his mouth. โReally?
Because I cut my hair, got colored contacts, and grew four inches.โ I narrow my eyes. โHm. Iโm not seeing it.โ
โSabrina and Cleo had one too many boxes of wine,โ he says. โApiece.โ โOh.โ I shiver as a breeze slips down the collar of my shirt. โSorry you
got stuck with pickup duty. I couldโve scheduled a cab.โ
He shrugs. โI didnโt mind. Been dying to see if the famous Harriet Kilpatrick lives up to the hype.โ
Being the object of his full focus makes me feel like a deer in headlights.
Or maybe like Iโm a deer being stalked by a coyote. If he were an animal, thatโs what heโd be, with those strange flashing eyes and that physical ease. The kind of confidence reserved for those who skipped their awkward phases entirely.
Whereas any confidenceย Iย have is the hard-won spoils from spending the bulk of my childhood with braces and the haircut of an unfortunate poodle.
โSabrina,โ I say, โtends to embellish.โ Weirdly, though, her descriptions ofย himย didnโt come close to capturing the man. Or maybe it was that because I knew she had a crush on him, Iโd expected something different. Someone more polished, suave. Someone more like Parth, his best friend.
The corners of his mouth twitch as he ambles forward. My heart whirs as he reaches out, as if planning to catch my chin and turn it side to side for his inspection to prove that Iโve been oversold.
But heโs only taking my bag from my shoulder. โThey said you were a brunette.โ
My own snort-laugh surprises me. โIโm glad they spoke so highly of me.โ
โThey did,โ he says, โbut the only thing I can corroborate so far is whether youโre a brunette. Which youโre not.โ
โI am definitely a brunette.โ
He tosses my bag into the back seat, then faces me again, his hips sinking against the door. His head tilts thoughtfully. โYour hairโs almost black. In the moonlight it looks blue.โ
โBlue?โ I say. โYou think my hair isย blue?โ
โNot, like, Smurf blue,โ he says. โBlue black. You canโt tell in pictures.
You look different.โ
โItโs true,โ I say. โIn real life, Iโm three-dimensional.โ
โThe painting,โ he says thoughtfully. โThat looks like you.โ
I instantly know which painting he must be referring to. The one of me and Sabrina strewn out like God and Adam: Cleoโs old figure drawing final. It hung in Mattinglyโs art building for weeks, dozens of strangers passing it daily, and I never felt so naked then as I do now.
โVery discreet way of letting me know youโve seen my boobs,โ I say.
โShit.โ He glances away, rubbing the back of his neck. โI sort of forgot it was a nude.โ
โWords most women only ever dream of hearing,โ I say.
โI in no way forgot you were naked in the painting,โ he clarifies. โI just forgot it might be weird to tell someone they look exactly the same as they do in a painting where theyโre not wearing clothes.โ
โThis is going really well,โ I say.
He groans and drags a hand down his face. โI swear Iโm normally better at this.โ
And normally,ย Iย do my best to put people at ease, but thereโs something rewarding about throwing him off-balance. Rewarding and charming.
โBetter at what?โ I say through laughter.
He rakes one hand through his hair. โFirst impressions.โ
โYou should try sending a big-ass nude painting of yourself ahead when youโre going to meet someone new,โ I say. โItโs always worked for me.โ
โIโll take that into consideration,โ he says. โYou donโt look like a Wyndham Connor.โ
His brow arches. โHow am I supposed to look?โ
โI donโt know,โ I say. โNavy-blue jacket with gold buttons. Captainโs hat. A big white beard and a huge cigar?โ
โSo Santa, on a yacht,โ he says. โMr. Monopoly, on vacation,โ I say.
โFor what itโs worth, youโre not the stereotypical image of a Harry Kilpatrick either.โ
โI know,โ I say. โIโm not a Dickensian street orphan in a newsboy hat.โ
His laugh makes his eyes flash again. They look more pale green than gray now, like water under fog rather than the fog itself.
He rounds the front of the car and pulls the passenger door open.
โSo, Harriet.โ He looks up, and my heart stutters from the surprise of his full attention back on me. โYou ready?โ
For some reason, it feels like a lie when I say, โYes.โ
Wyn makes driving the Jaguar along those dark, curving roads seem like a sport or an art form. One corded arm drapes over the wheel, and his right
hand sits loose atop the gearshift, his knee bobbing in a restless rhythm that never disrupts his control over the gas pedal. As we get closer to the water, I crank the window down and breathe in the familiar brine. He follows suit, the wind ruffling his hair against his cut-glass profile. That one chaotic strand always finds its way back to the right side of his forehead, as if connected by an invisible string to the peak of his Cupidโs bow.
When he catches me studying him, his brow lifts in tandem with his lips.ย Quicksand, I think again. An old predator-prey instinct seems to agree, my limbic system sending out marching orders to my muscles:ย Be ready to
flee; if he gets any closer, youโll never get away. โYouโre staring,โ he says. โSuspiciously.โ
โJust calculating the odds that you are in fact my friendsโ roommate and not a murderer who steals his victimsโ cars,โ I tell him.
โAnd then picks their friends up from the airport, exactly on time?โ he asks.
โIโm sure plenty of murderers are punctual.โ
โWhy do you think our entire generation expects everyone to turn out to be a murderer?โ he asks with a laugh. โAs far as I know, Iโve never met a single one.โ
โThat just means youโve never met a bad one,โ I say.
He glances at me as a bar of moonlight passes over him. โSo I hear youโre some kind of genius, Harriet Kilpatrick.โ
โWhat did I tell you about Sabrina and embellishment?โ โSo youโreย notย an aspiring brain surgeon?โ
โAspiringโs the operative word,โ I say. โWhat about you? Whatโs your major?โ
He ignores my question. โI wouldโve assumedย surgeonย was the operative word.โ
This coaxes another snort of laughter out of me. Eyes back on the road, he smiles to himself, and my bones seem to fill up with helium.
I look out the window. โWhat about you?โ
After several seconds of silence, he says, โWhat about me?โ He sounds vaguely displeased by the question.
โIs what Iโve been told aboutย youย accurate?โ I ask.
He checks the mirror again, teeth scraping over his full bottom lip. โDepends what youโve been told.โ
โWhat do you think Iโve been told?โ I say. โIโd rather not guess, Harriet.โ
He uses my name a lot. Every time, itโs like his voice plucks a too-tight string in a piano deep in my stomach.
Whatโs actually happening is my sympathetic nervous system has decided to reroute the path of my blood to my muscles. There are no butterflies fluttering through my gut. Just blood vessels constricting and contracting around my organs.
โWhy not?โ I ask. โDo you think they said something bad?โ
His jaw squares, eyes back on the headlights slicing through the dark. โNever mind. I donโt want to know.โ
Heโs gone back to bouncing his knee, like thereโs too much energy in his body and heโs siphoning it out.
โThey told me it would be impossible to tell whether you were flirting or not.โ
He laughs. โNow youโreย tryingย to embarrass me.โ
โMaybe.โ Definitely. Iโm not sure whatโs come over me. โBut they did say that.โ In actuality, Sabrina had bemoaned not being able to tell, even while adamantly proclaiming that she liked him too much to make any kind of move anyway. It wouldโve disrupted their living situation too much.
โEither way,โ Wyn says, โIโmย muchย better at flirting than that makes me sound.โ
โHave you ever considered,โ I say, leaning over to insert myself into his frame of view, โthat that might be the problem?โ
He smiles. โFlirting never killed anybody, Harriet.โ
โClearly youโre unfamiliar with the concept of the Regency-era duel,โ I say.
โOh, Iโm familiar, but since I rarely find myself flirting with the unwed daughters of powerful dukes, I figure Iโm okay.โ
โYou think weโre just going to skate over you being well versed in Regency customs?โ
โHarriet, I donโt get the feeling you skate overย anything,โ he says.
I give another involuntary snort of laughter, and his dimples deepen. โSpeaking of highborn ladies,โ he says, โthey teach you how to laugh like that at etiquette school?โ
โNo,โ I say, โthat has to be bred into you across centuries.โ โIโm sure,โ he says. โIโm not like that, by the way.โ โGently bred to laugh through your nose?โ
His chin tips, his gaze knowing. โThe impression you have of me. I donโt play with peopleโs feelings. I have rules.โ
โRules?โ I say. โSuch as?โ
โSuch as, never tell the rules to someone youโve just met.โ
โOh, come on,โ I say. โWeโre stepfriends now. You might as well tell me.โ
โWell, for one thing, Parth and I made a pact to never date our friends. Or each otherโs friends.โ He casts me a sidelong glance. โAs for stepfriends, Iโm not sure what the policy is.โ
โWait, wait, wait,โ I say. โYou donโt date yourย friends? Who do you date, Wyn? Enemies? Strangers? Malevolent spirits who died in your apartment building?โ
โItโs a good policy,โ he says. โIt keeps things from getting messy.โ
โItโs dating, Wyn, not an all-you-can-eat barbecue buffet,โ I say. โAlthough, from what Iโve heard, maybe for you theyโre the same thing.โ
He looks at me through his lashes and tuts. โAre you slut-shaming me, Harriet?โ
โNot at all,โ I say. โI love sluts! Some of my best friends are sluts. Iโve dabbled in sluttery myself.โ
Another bar of moonlight briefly lights his eyes, paling them to smoky silver.
โDidnโt suit you?โ he guesses.
โNever got the chance to find out,โ I say. โBecause you fell in love,โ he says.
โBecause men never really picked me up.โ He laughs. โOkay.โ
โIโm not being self-deprecating,โ I say. โOnce men get to know me, theyโre sometimes interested, but Iโm not the one their eyes go to first. Iโve made peace with it.โ
His gaze slides down me and back up. โSo youโre saying youโre slow- release hot.โ
I nod. โThatโs right. Iโm slow-release hot.โ
He considers me for a moment. โYouโre not what I expected.โ โThree-dimensional and blue-haired,โ I say.
โAmong other things,โ he says.
โI expected you to be Parth 2.0,โ I admit.
His eyes narrow. โYou thought Iโd be better dressed.โ โThan a torn sweatshirt and jeans?โ I say. โNo such thing.โ
He doesnโt seem to hear me, instead studying me with a furrowed brow. โYouโre not slow-release hot.โ
I look away, fumble the radio on as heat scintillates across my chest. โYeah, well,โ I say, โmost people donโt start by seeing me naked before weโve spoken.โ
โItโs not about that,โ he says.
Iย feelย the moment his gaze lifts off me and returns to the windshield, but heโs left a mark: from now on, dark cliffs, wind racing through hair, cinnamon paired with clove and pineโall of it will only meanย Wyn Connorย to me. A door has opened, and I know Iโll never get it shut again.
Regency era or not, in a lot of ways, he ruins me.