Maybe Once, Maybe Twice

“Come here,” he said, holding me close to his body.

He was wearing a suit and tie, and I realized that he had been in the middle of his workday when I called him. One voicemail, telling him that Cole Wyan had released my song, and he had dropped everything for me. His magnetic blue eyes tilted to the side, narrowed on my pain.

His jaw tightened and a vein pulsed at the side of his neck.

“Cole can do this—just release your song? Legally?”

“Yeah.”

I stared down at my phone, seeing a text from Asher come across my screen. There, in the harsh light of day, was a link to my Spotify song, “Let’s Lie.”


Proud of you, and also…sort of confused. Call me when you have time to chat.



My stomach dropped, guilt and shame swirling like a tornado inside. Guilt that I was sitting here with another man. Pain that I was keeping this from Asher. Shame that this had happened to me. Claws felt like they were inside my throat, and shaking, I turned my phone upside down on my lap, with my hand pressed on the nausea growing in my stomach.

“Maggie, you’re going to figure this out,” Garrett said, leaning forward to meet my eyes.

“How? The song. The recording. It’s just—it’s out there for the world to hear. And it could destroy all that comes next.”

“Have you listened to it yet?”

I shook my head. My insides were burning with an unknown terror. Terror that I knew wouldn’t leave my body until I pressed play. I couldn’t escape my own past, even if I tried.

“Do you want me to listen to it with you?” he asked.

I nodded wordlessly but didn’t move my fingers.

He took out his phone from his pocket, and I put my hand on his wrist, stopping him. I needed to figure out a way to take back this song, and it didn’t start with another person playing it for me. If I could press play on my own hard work, in spite of the monster who stood behind it, then it would be the first step in walking out of the woods. That much I knew.

I brought the heat of my phone up to my face with a sharp inhale, seeing my song right there in front of me, plain as day, on Spotify. And then, my finger shaking, I pressed play, and “Let’s Lie” swelled in the air for the first time in five years, and for the very first time in front of the man I wrote it for.

Brush stroke, blank slate

Our time is due

Right there, right now, burning red and deep blue



I couldn’t look at Garrett, not at all. Instead, I had my head down on my phone, clenching my entire body.

Paint me anew, inside this room

Don’t wipe our slates clean

I quite like this hue

Let’s lie, me and you, like new lovers do



I exhaled a relief, my eyes brimming with tears as the tambourine sounded. There was no gunshot. Tears swelled in my throat with the reality that Cole had kept my song the way I wanted it. The monster recognized that my creative version was worthy, and it was complicated and hellish to feel thankful in this moment for the very man who was trying to steal my moment.

Silk shirt, sweat-soaked

Dancing with you

Right there, right now, our bodies unglued

Paint me anew, inside this room

Don’t wipe our slates clean

I quite like this hue

Let’s lie, me and you, like new lovers do

Your lips, my throat

Don’t think it through

Right there, right now holding me like a muse Paint me anew, inside this room

Don’t wipe our slates clean

I quite like this hue

Let’s lie, me and you, like new lovers do

Is loving you more worth the fight

Don’t answer tonight

You’re a big-picture guy scared of a varnished lifetime Are we worth the fight

Don’t answer tonight

Are we worth the fight

Tell me a lie painted white

Just for tonight

Just for tonight



I swallowed hard, daring my eyes to find Garrett, a quick glance to see if he knew who this song was about. His eyes widened around the lyrics as he stared straight ahead. His lips slightly parted, and my heart beat faster. He knew.

Paint me anew, inside my room Don’t wipe our slates clean

Our bodies in bloom

Let’s lie to ourselves like new lovers do



The airy reverb faded into silence. Garrett sat frozen, staring at the bottom of the spiral staircase, refusing to move. He looked up, slowly letting his eyes narrow onto mine.

“It’s beautiful, Maggie. Is that song…?” He trailed off.

The possibility of the answer was so stifling, that he couldn’t even finish asking the question. He stared at me, waiting as I studied his piercing eyes, his shifting jaw.

“You know it’s about you,” I said.

His gaze softened as he studied me for a long, quiet moment. The air seemed to pound and thicken with the rapid beating of our chests, neither of our bodies moving.

“You were wrong,” he said, his blue eyes looking into mine. “You didn’t love me more.”

Air left my lungs. It took me a moment to find words.

“How do you know that?” I cracked.

I watched the way the setting sun fell on Garrett’s face—how his eyes scanned mine. After a moment, his large hand reached over, linking our fingers together. His skin on my skin, even just fingers, felt like life and death wrapped in one. Garrett leaned toward me, almost nose to nose, setting his other hand on my cheek.

“Because I loved you more than anything,” he said.





49

THIRTY-FOUR




I DIDN’T WANT TO RELIVE the last four years—not for anything. But I needed to. I had been in intensive therapy for over two years, and I owed it to myself to be honest with the guy I was still in love with—the guy who I had pushed away at the very time he was ready to go all in.

The day after I broke down to Summer in Sheep Meadow, she gave me the greatest gift anyone has ever given me, the number to a recommended therapist. Little by little, the only person I started letting down after that was my mom, when I quit my job and picked my guitar back up.

It had been over a year since I had started mending my soul, singing in clubs and venues without having heart palpitations, writing music again, having sex and being able to enjoy it. But the lingering pang of Garrett, of that moment nearly five years ago, it loomed so large—even now. Looming large was also the fact that he was still seeing Cecily, but the regret of not saying what I needed to say felt bigger than respecting what they had. I know that made me selfish. But in therapy I worked to understand that unleashing a very selfish truth might also be life-affirming. Life-affirming was too big a win not to play my hand.

I sat in the little café in Greenwich Village, making blue-inked doodles in my open songwriter notebook around words that had just flowed out of me like lava. I felt a tap on my shoulder.

There he was.

Dressed in a suit with a long wool coat tugged over his broad shoulders. His blond hair damp and wavy from the drizzling rain outside. I hugged Garrett, and he felt stiffer than usual, but slowly he hugged me back, inhaling deeply.

We let each other go, and as we sat down, his eyes looked everywhere but at mine. His usual warm, bright behavior was somewhat on edge. Nervous, even.

“Thanks for coming,” I said, closing my notebook and leaning into the table so I could get a better look at him.

“Of course. I’ve actually—I’ve been meaning to call you. I wanted to…to chat. It’s been a while,” he said with a tiny smile, eyes now on me.

It had been a while. Four months, exactly. One of our longest stretches, but I surmised that Garrett didn’t know what to do with me anymore. I had chaotically disappeared from his life after he got back from San Francisco, then I popped up at birthday parties—his, mine, Summer’s, Valeria’s. And then, the last two years, I had tried to text more and call, but Garrett returned the distance I had shown him. Rightly so. This friendship was broken because of circumstance. I couldn’t blame myself, only what I had been through.

“Can I go first?” I asked, twisting a napkin in my hands.

“Sure.”

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