Naomi
Knox: Look. I know I could have handled things differently. But trust me. Itโs better this way. If you or Waylay need anything, I want to know.
Knox: Liza probably already told you, but the security company is installing the alarm at the cottage Saturday. What time is Waylayโs soccer game?
Knox: Are you okay?
Knox: Just because weโre not together doesnโt mean I donโt still want you and Waylay to be safe.
Knox: You canโt avoid me forever.
Knox: Canโt we be fucking adults about this? Itโs a small fucking town.
Weโre gonna run into each other sooner or later.
I PRIEDย open one bleary eye and peered at my phone screen.
Satisfied it wasnโt a certain dead-to-me Morgan brother, I swiped to answer. โWhat?โ I croaked.
โWakey wakey, Witty,โ came Stefโs cheery voice from half a world away.
I gave a muffled groan in response and rolled over.
I had the covers pulled over my head in a juvenile attempt to block out the entire world. Unfortunately, it had the unintended consequence of also surrounding me with the scent ofย him. Sleeping in a bed weโd shared while Iโd fallen for the farce was not conducive to anything but a downward spiral.
If I was going to survive this, I needed to burn these sheets and buy Liza a new set.
โJudging from your effusive greeting, Iโm guessing you havenโt yet dragged your Definitely Getting Over Him Today Ass out of bed yet,โ Stef surmised.
I grunted.
โYouโre lucky Iโm not on the same continent as you right now because your time is up,โ he chirped.
โWhat time?โ
โYour โwoe is me, I miss my stupid hot fake boyfriendโ time. Itโs been five days. The acceptable mourning period is over. You are officially being reborn as New Naomi.โ
Being reborn sounded like a lot of work.
โCanโt I just wither away as Old Naomi?โ Old Naomi had spent the last few days putting on a fake smile for Waylay and library patrons, then spending a few hours a day half-heartedly trying to clean up the wreckage in the cottage. All while avoiding thinking about Knox.
I was exhausted.
โNot an option. It is six thirty a.m. your time. Your day starts now.โ โWhy are you so mean?โ I groaned.
โIโm your mean fairy godfather. You have a transformation to begin, my little caterpillar.โ
โI donโt want to be a butterfly. I want to smother in my cocoon.โ
โTough shit. If you donโt get out of bed in the next ten seconds, Iโm bringing in the big guns.โ
โIโm out,โ I lied.
He said something derisive in French. โIn case you need a translator, that was French for bullshit. Now, I want you to get your lying ass out of bed and go take a shower because Liza reports that your hair is greasier than the deep fryer at a sports bar on wing night. Then I want you to open that Sephora order I sent you and snap the fuck out of this funk.โ
โI like funks.โ
โYou do not. You like game plans and to do lists. Iโm giving you both.โ โHaving friends who know you really well is overrated,โ I complained
to my pillow.
โOkay. Fine. But I want it on record that you made me do this.โ โDo what?โ
โYou have an eleven-year-old girl looking up to you. Do you really want to teach her that when a boy hurts your feelings, you give up on life?โ
I sat up. โI hate you.โ โNo, you donโt.โ โWhy canโt I wallow?โ
It was more than hurt feelings, and he knew it. Knox had warned me. Heโd told me not to fall for him, not to mistake his actions for real feelings. And Iโdย stillย fallen for him. That made me an idiot. At least with Warner, heโd tried to hide his true self from me.
It was an excuse, not a great one, but an excuse all the same. But there was no such excuse with Knox.
I loved him. For real loved him. Loved him enough that I wasnโt sure I could survive the anguish of being tossed aside.
โBecause all that โIโm such an idiotโ and โhow could I fall for himโ negative self-talk is a waste of time and energy. Itโs also setting a shitty example for Waylay, whoโs had enough shitty examples to last a lifetime. Get your ass out of bed, take a shower, and get ready to show Waylay how to burn an assholeโs life to the ground.โ
My feet hit the floor. โYouโre really good at this pep talk thing.โ
โYou deserve better, Witty. I know somewhere deep down you donโt think so. But you deserve a man whoโs going to put you first.โ
โI love you.โ
โLove you too, babe. I gotta go. But I want a post-shower, makeover selfie. And Iโm emailing you your game plan for the day.โ
FROM:ย Stef
To: Naomi
Subject: New Naomi Day One
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Get your ass out of bed.
-
Shower.
-
Makeup.
-
Hair.
-
Wardrobe. (I know how much you like checking things off your list)
-
Breakfast of champions.
-
Waylayโs soccer practice. Smile. Light up the damn field with your gracious beauty.
-
Host a spontaneous social gathering. Invite friends, family, and Nash (that part is very important). Look amazing (also very important). Have an actual good time (most important) or fake it till you make it.
-
Go to bed smug.
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Rinse. Repeat.
WITH THE SATISFACTIONย of four items already crossed off my to do list, I ventured downstairs. The rest of the house was still silent.
Stef knew me too well. And it really was easier to fake a positive attitude when I looked good on the outside.
There was a fresh pot of coffee waiting for me. I poured generously into a cheery red mug and studied the kitchen while I sipped.
The room had taken on a new life since the first time Iโd been invited inside. It felt like most of the house had. The curtains had not only been opened but washed, ironed, and rehung. Morning sun streamed through clean glass.
Years of dust and grime had been scraped away, cabinets and drawers of junk purged. Bedrooms closed up for nearly two decades were now full of life. The kitchen, dining room, and sun room had become the heart of a home full of people.
Together, weโd breathed life back into the space that had gone far too long without.
I took my coffee into the sun room and stood at the windows, watching the creek catch fallen leaves and usher them downstream.
The loss was still there.
The holes left behind by Lizaโs daughter and husband hadnโt magically been filled. But it felt to me like there was more surrounding those holes
now. Saturday soccer games. Family dinners. Movie nights when everyone talked too much to hear what was happening on-screen. Lazy evenings spent grilling dinner and playing in the creek.
Dogs. Kids. Wine. Dessert. Game nights.
Weโd built something special here around Liza and her loneliness. Around me and my mistakes. This wasnโt the end. Mistakes were meant to be learned from, overcome. They werenโt meant to destroy.
Resilience.
In my opinion, Waylay was already the epitome of resilience. Sheโd dealt with a childhood of instability and insecurity and was learning to trust the adults in her life. Maybe it was a little easier because sheโd never let herself down the way I had. I admired her for that.
I supposed I could learn from her example on that.
I heard the shuffle of slippered feet punctuated by the excited tippy- tapping of dog nails on tile.
โMorning, Aunt Naomi. Whatโs for breakfast?โ Waylay yawned from the kitchen.
I left my morning moping and returned to the kitchen. โMorning. What are you hungry for?โ
She shrugged and settled on a stool at the island. Her blonde hair was standing up on one side of her head and squished down on the other. She was wearing pink camouflage pajamas and fluffy slippers that Randy and Kitty tried to steal and hide in their dog beds at least once a day.
โUm. How about cheesy eggs?โ she said. โWow. You look nice.โ โThanks,โ I said, reaching for a pan.
โWhereโs Knox?โ
Waylayโs question felt like a blade to the heart. โHe moved back to his cabin,โ I said carefully.
Waylay rolled her eyes. โI knowย that. Why? I thought things were good with you guys? You were kissing all the time and laughing a lot.โ
My instinct was to lie. To protect her. After all, she was just a kid. But Iโd done so much protecting already, and it just kept blowing up in my face. โThereโs a couple of things we need to talk about,โ I told her as I
gathered the butter and eggs from the fridge.
โI only told Donnie Pacer that he was a dickwaffle because he pushed Chloe and told her she was a shithead loser,โ Waylay said defensively. โAnd I didnโt use the F word because Iโm not allowed to.โ
I stood up with a carton of eggs in my hand and blinked. โYou know what? Weโll get back to that in a minute.โ
But my niece wasnโt ready to give up her defense. โKnox said itโs good to stand up for people. That itโs up to the strong ones to take care of the ones who need protecting. He said Iโm one of the strong ones.โ
Crap.
I swallowed around the lump in my throat and blinked back the tears that burned my eyes, threatening to ruin my mascara.
This time the grief wasnโt just for me. It was for a little girl with a hero who didnโt want either one of us.
โThatโs true,โ I said. โAnd itโs a good thing youโre one of the strong ones because I have to tell you some hard stuff.โ
โIs my mom coming back?โ Waylay whispered.
I didnโt know how to answer that. So I started somewhere else instead. โThe cottage isnโt infested with bugs,โ I blurted out. Randy the beagle jumped at my legs and peered up at me with soulful brown eyes. I leaned down to ruffle his ears.
โIt isnโt?โ
โNo, honey. I told you that because I didnโt want you to worry. But it turns out itโs better for you to know whatโs going on. Someone broke in. They made a huge mess and took some things. Chief Nash thinks they were looking for something. We donโt know what they were looking for or if they found it.โ
Waylay was staring down at the counter.
โThatโs why we moved in here with Liza and your grandparents.โ โWhat about Knox?โ
I swallowed hard. โWe broke up.โ
The finger she was using to trace the grain in the counter stilled. โWhyโd you break up?โ
Damn kids and their unanswerable questions.
โIโm not sure, honey. Sometimes people just want different things.โ โWell, what did he want? Werenโt we good enough for him?โ
I covered her hand with mine and squeezed. โI think weโre more than good enough for him, and maybe thatโs what scared him.โ
โYou should have told me.โ โI should have,โ I agreed.
โIโm not some baby whoโs going to freak out, you know,โ she said.
โI know. Out of the two of us, Iโm a much bigger baby.โ That earned me the smallest of smiles.
โWas it Mom?โ
โWas what your mom?โ
โDid Mom break in? She does that kind of stuff.โ
This was why I didnโt have honest conversations with people. They asked questions that required even more honesty.
I blew out a breath. โIโm honestly not sure. Itโs possible. Is there anything you can think of that sheโd be looking for?โ
She shrugged those little girl shoulders that had already carried more weight than was fair. โDunno. Maybe something worth a lot of money.โ
โWell, whether it was your mom or not, you donโt have anything to worry about. Lizaโs having a security system installed today.โ
She nodded, fingers back to tracing patterns on the counter.
โYou wanna tell me how youโre feeling about all this?โ I asked.
She leaned down to scratch Kitty on her head. โDunno. Bad, I guess.
And mad.โ
โMe too,โ I agreed.
โKnox left us. I thought he liked us. Really liked us.โ
My heart broke all over again, and I vowed that I would make Knox Morgan pay. I went to her and wrapped an arm around her. โHe did, honey. But sometimes people get scared when they start to care too much.โ
She grunted. โI guess. But I can still be mad at him, right?โ
I brushed her hair out of her eyes. โYes. You can. Your feelings are real and valid. Donโt let anyone tell you you shouldnโt feel the way you feel. Okay?โ
โYeah. Okay.โ
โSo, how do you feel about having a party tonight if Liza says itโs okay?โ I asked, giving her another squeeze.
Waylay perked up. โWhat kind of party?โ
โI was thinking about a bonfire with apple cider and sโmores,โ I said, cracking an egg into a glass mixing bowl.
โThat sounds cool. Can I invite Chloe and Nina?โ
I loved that she had friends and a home that she wanted to share with them.
โOf course. Iโll check in with their parents today.โ
โMaybe we can have Liza pick some of the country music Knox and Nashโs mom liked,โ she suggested.
โThatโs a great idea, Way. Speaking of partiesโฆโ Waylay heaved a sigh and looked up at the ceiling.
โYour birthday is coming up,โ I reminded her. Between Liza, my parents, and me, we already had a closet full of wrapped gifts. Weโd been badgering her about her big day for weeks, but sheโd remained annoyingly noncommittal. โHave you figured out how you want to celebrate?โ
She rolled her eyes. โOh my gosh, Aunt Naomi! I told you nine million times I donโt like birthdays. Theyโre dumb and disappointing and lame.โ
Despite everything, I smiled.
โNot to guilt-trip you, but your grandma will go into hysterics if you donโt at least let her bake you a cake.โ
I saw the calculating look on her face. โWhat kind of cake?โ
I booped her nose with a spatula. โThatโs the best part about birthdays.
You get to pick.โ
โHuh. Iโll think about it.โ โThatโs all I ask.โ
I had just poured the eggs into the skillet when I felt arms around my waist and a face press into my back.
โIโm sorry Knox was a douchewaffle, Aunt Naomi,โ Waylay said, her voice muffled.
My throat tightened as I squeezed her hands with my own. It was such a new, fragile thing, this affection she showed me in moments when I least expected it. I was afraid Iโd do or say the wrong thing and scare her off. โI am too. But weโll be okay. Weโll be better than okay,โ I promised.
She released me. โHey. Those jerks didnโt steal my new jeans with the pink flowers when they broke in, did they?โ
FI:ย I donโt know whatโs going on between you two. But Knox just offered me
$1,000 to put you on the schedule tonight since you called in sick your last two shifts. I can either split it with you or tell him to fuck off. Your call!
Me: Sorry. I canโt. Iโm hosting a bonfire tonight and youโre invited. Fi: Fuck yeah! Can I bring my annoying family?
Me: Iโd be disappointed if you didnโt.