Dark Wild Night

“Fine?” he asks. “A week ago, she walked in and climbed you like a tree, and today she acts like you’re the resident librarian.”


“Things are . . . complicated,” I sigh. I love her, but I don’t want to be with her just now. I want her to do better.

“She’s still into you, you know.”

Shutting the register, I give him an exasperated this-isn’t-your-business look. “I know, Joe.”

But Joe is undeterred. “And?”

“And I’m beginning to wonder if she was right to worry that we’d screw everything up,” I tell him. “Maybe we were better at being friends.”

I greet a customer who walks up to the counter and Joe steps aside while I ring him up. With his purchase paid for and in a bag, I smile and hand it over to him. Joe is still watching me, expression disapproving.

“Maybe you’re forgetting the part where you’re in love with her,” he says.

I lean against the counter and scrub my hands over my face. “I haven’t forgotten.”

“Then what the fuck are you doing over here when she’s back there?”

I shake my head and stare with tired eyes to where she’s flipping through a comic, listening to someone on the phone. “Joe, it isn’t your business, and it isn’t that simple.”

“Are you going to go out with Allison again?” he asks.

My stomach recoils. “It was just dinner.”

He nods in understanding. “It’s like how you grow up eating Hershey’s chocolate, and think, ‘This is delicious chocolate.’ And then you have Sprüngli and are like, “Dude, Hershey’s is shit.’?”

I glance at him. “Sprüngli?”

“Swiss chocolate place,” he says with a vague wave of his hand. “My folks have a place in the Swiss Alps.”

Now I turn and fully stare at him. “Who the fuck are you?”

Laughing he says, “I’m definitely not a guy named Joe.”

“Don’t tell me,” I say, holding up a hand. “It’ll ruin the mystery.”

With a little shrug, he walks back toward the office. The bell over the door rings and I see Finn and Ansel walk in.

“G’day, Finnigan,” I say. “I didn’t know you were sticking around today.”

He throws me an aggressively patient look at this nickname while he takes off his jacket. “I’ve got the rest of the week off.”

Ansel cuts into the small talk. “Are we going to lunch? I’m starving.” Finn and I exchange amused looks: Hungry Ansel is the only version of our friend who is ever sharp.

“Yeah, just let me—” I start to say, but Lola picks that moment to wander up from the back of the store.

“Hey,” she says to each of them, before finally looking to me. Her cheeks grow pink, smile widens. “Hi.”

“Hi,” I say, heart beating, throat constricting, muscles tight.

I fucking love you.

Finn turns to Lola. “You wouldn’t by chance have spoken to my wife in the past hour, would you?”

“It will never stop being strange hearing you call her that,” Lola says, shaking her head. “Mia is someone’s wife. Harlow is someone’s wife.”

And Lola was mine, for twelve hours. Then she was something else, something even better, for only a matter of days.

Finn stares at her, mouth pressed in a straight line while he waits for her to answer his question.

“And actually yes,” she says, reaching up to pat his head. He slides his eyes to me as if I’ve somehow put her up to this. “She was driving up to Del Mar to get some signatures from . . . someone . . . and you know how bad the reception is up there.”

Finn nods, reaching over the counter to grab a snack-size Snickers from my secret stash under the register.

Ansel sees and practically knocks him over to get one for himself.

“Lola,” Finn says, tearing into the packet. “Let me ask you something.”

Her eyebrows rise expectantly and the expression is so sweet, I have to look away before I step closer.

“I’m planning to take Harlow up to Sequoia for the weekend. Camping, quiet, you know. Do you happen to know if she’s working?”

Lola smirks up at Finn at the same time I feel my own eyes widen. “You’re driving?” she asks.