Addie lingers on the bookstore steps for an hour until it closes.
Henry locks up, and turns to see her sitting there, and Addie braces again for the blankness in his gaze, the confirmation that their earlier encounter was only some strange glitch, a slipped stitch in the centuries of her curse.
But when he looks at her, he knows her. She is certain he knows her.
His brows go up beneath his tangled curls, as if heโs surprised that sheโs still there. But his annoyance has given way to something elseโsomething that confuses her even more. Itโs less hostile than suspicion, more guarded than relief, and it is still wonderful, because of the knowing in it. Not a first meeting, but a secondโor rather, a thirdโand for once she is not the only one who knows.
โWell?โ he says, holding out his hand, not for her to take, but for her to lead the way, and she does. They walk a few blocks in awkward silence, Addie stealing glances that tell her nothing but the line of his nose, the angle of his jaw.
He has a starved look, wolfish and lean, and even though heโs not unnaturally tall, he hunches his shoulders as if to make himself shorter, smaller, less obtrusive. Perhaps, in the right clothes, perhaps, with the right air, perhaps, perhaps; but the longer she looks at him, the weaker the resemblance to that other stranger.
And yet.
There is something about him that keeps catching her attention, snagging it the way a nail snags a sweater.
Twice he catches her looking at him, and frowns.
Once she catches him stealing his own glance, and smiles.
At the coffee shop, she tells him to grab a table while she buys the drinks, and he hesitates, as if torn between the urge to pay and the fear of being poisoned, before retreating to a corner booth. She orders him a latte.
โThree eighty,โ says the girl behind the counter.
Addie cringes at the cost. She pulls a few bills from her pocket, the last of what she took from James St. Clair. She doesnโt have the cash for two drinks, and she canโt just walk out with them, because thereโs a boy waiting. And he remembers.
Addie glances toward the table, where he sits, arms folded, staring out the window.
โEve!โ calls the barista. โEve!โ
Addie startles, realizing that means her.
โSo,โ says the boy when she sits down. โEve?โย No,ย she thinks. โYeah,โ she says. โAnd youโreโฆโย Henry,ย she thinks just before he says it.
โHenry.โ It fits him, like a coat. Henry: soft, poetic. Henry: quiet, strong. The black curls, the pale eyes behind their heavy frames. She has known a dozen Henrys, in London, Paris, Boston, and L.A., but he is not like any of them.
His gaze drops to the table, his cup, her empty hands. โYou didnโt get anything.โ
She waves it away. โIโm not really thirsty,โ she lies. โIt feels weird.โ
โWhy?โ She shrugs. โI said Iโd buy you a coffee. Besides,โ she hesitates, โI lost my wallet. I didnโt have enough for two.โ
Henry frowns. โIs that why you stole the book?โ
โI didnโtย stealย it. I wanted to trade. And I said sorry.โ โDid you?โ
โWith the coffee.โ
โSpeaking of,โ he says, standing. โHow do you take it?โ โWhat?โ
โThe coffee. I canโt sit here and drink alone, it makes me feel like an asshole.โ
She smiles. โHot chocolate. Dark.โ
Those brows quirk up again. He walks away to order, says something that makes the barista laugh and lean forward, like a flower to the sun. He returns with a second cup and a croissant, and sets them both in front of her before taking his seat, and now they are uneven again. Balance tipped, restored, and tipped again, and it is the kind of game sheโs played a hundred times, a sparring match made of small gestures, the stranger smiling across the table.
But this is not her stranger, and he is not smiling.
โSo,โ says Henry, โwhatย wasย all that today, with the book?โ
โHonestly?โ Addie wraps her hands around the coffee cup. โI didnโt think youโd remember.โ
The question rattles like loose change in her chest, like pebbles in a porcelain bowl; it shakes inside her, threatening to spill out.
How did you remember? How? How?
โThe Last Word doesnโt getย thatย many customers,โ Henry says. โAnd even fewer try to leave without paying. I guess you made an impression.โ
An impression.
An impression is like a mark.
Addie runs her fingers through the foam on her hot chocolate, watches the milk smooth again in her wake. Henry doesnโt notice, but he noticed her, he remembered.
What is happening?
โSo,โ he says, but the sentence goes nowhere.
โSo,โ she echoes, because she cannot say what she wants. โTell me about yourself.โ
Who are you? Why are you? What is happening?ย Henry bites his lip and says, โNot much to tell.โ โDid you always want to work in a bookshop?โ
Henryโs face turns wistful. โIโm not sure itโs the job that people dream of, but I like it.โ Heโs lifting the latte to his mouth when someone shuffles past, knocking against his chair. Henry rights the cup in time, but the man begins to apologize. And doesnโt stop.
โHey, Iโm so sorry.โ His face twists with guilt. โItโs fine.โ
โDid I make you spill?โ asks the man with genuine concern. โNope,โ says Henry. โYouโre good.โ
If he registers the manโs intensity, he gives no sign. His focus stays firmly on Addie, as if he can will the man away.
โThat was weird,โ she says, when heโs finally gone. Henry only shrugs. โAccidents happen.โ
That isnโt what she meant. But the thoughts are passing trains, and she canโt afford to be derailed.
โSo,โ she says, โthe bookshop. Is it yours?โ
Henry shakes his head. โNo. I mean, it might as well be, Iโm the only employee, but it belongs to a woman named Meredith, who spends most of her time on cruises. I just work there. What about you? What do you do when youโre not stealing books?โ
Addie weighs the question, the many possible answers, all of them lies, and settles for something closer to the truth.
โIโm a talent scout,โ she says. โMusic, mostly, but also art.โ Henryโs face hardens. โYou should meet my sister.โ
โOh?โ asks Addie, wishing sheโd lied. โIs she an artist?โ
โI think sheโd say sheย fostersย art, that itโs a type of artist, maybe. She likes toโโhe makes a flourishโโnurture the raw potential, shape the narrative of the creative future.โ
Addie thinks sheย wouldย like to meet his sister, but she doesnโt say it. โDo you have siblings?โ he asks.
She shakes her head, tearing a corner off the croissant because he hasnโt touched it, and her stomachโs growling.
โLucky,โ he says. โLonely,โ she counters.
โWell, youโre welcome to mine. Thereโs David, whoโs a doctor, a scholar, and a pretentious asshole, and Muriel whoโs, wellโMuriel.โ
He looks at her, and there it is again, that strange intensity, and maybe itโs just that so few people make eye contact in the city, but she canโt shake the feeling heโs looking for something in her face.
โWhat is it?โ she asks, and he starts to say one thing, but changes course. โYour freckles look like stars.โ
Addie smiles. โIโve heard. My own little constellation. Itโs the first thing everyone sees.โ
Henry shifts in his seat. โWhat do you see,โ he says, โwhen you look at
me?โ
His voice is light enough, but there is something in the question, a weight, like a stone buried in a snowball. Heโs been waiting to ask. The answer matters.
โI see a boy with dark hair and kind eyes and an open face.โ He frowns a little. โIs that all?โ
โOf course not,โ she says. โBut I donโt know you yet.โ
โYet,โ he echoes, and thereโs something like a smile in his voice. She purses her lips, considers him again.
For a moment, they are the only silent spot in the bustling cafรฉ.
Live long enough, and you learn how to read a person. To ease them open like a book, some passages underlined and others hidden between the lines.
Addie scans his face, the slight furrow where his brows go in and up, the set of his lips, the way he rubs one palm as if working out an ache, even as he leans forward, and in, his attention wholly on her.
โI see someone who cares,โ she says slowly. โPerhaps too much. Who feels too much. I see someone lost, and hungry. The kind of person who feels like theyโre wasting away in a world full of food, because they canโt decide what they want.โ
Henry stares at her, all the humor gone out of his face, and she knows sheโs gotten too close to the truth.
Addie laughs nervously, and the sound rushes back in around them. โSorry,โ she says, shaking her head. โToo deep. I probably should have just said you were good-looking.โ
Henryโs mouth quirks, but the smile doesnโt reach his eyes. โAt least you think Iโm good-looking.โ
โWhat about me?โ she asks, trying to break the sudden tension.
But for the first time, Henry wonโt look her in the eyes. โIโve never been good at reading people.โ He nudges the cup away, and stands, and Addie thinks sheโs ruined it. Heโs leaving.
But then he looks down at her and says, โIโm hungry. Are you hungry?โ And the air rushes back into her lungs.
โAlways,โ she says.
And this time, when he holds out his hand, she knows heโs inviting her to take it.