“Sorry. I guess I’m still a little shaken up from last night.”

“I know, right? I can’t believe you guys got robbed. What’s worse is that we’re open the very next day and there’s not even any security here.” At least Hugo’s the cook tonight. It feels good having a guy around.

“Are you out of here?” I ask her.

We keep a second waitress until 1:00 a.m. tonight. After that, it’s just me.

“I am. Have a good night!” she says, and then Lisa is gone, the hostess, too, leaving Hugo and me.

Glancing at Adrian’s table, I decide I should check on him. It’s my job, after all. My feet feel like they’re made of lead as I make my way to the table.

His plate is cleared away by now, leaving only a cup of coffee in front of him.

“Need a refill?” I ask, and then realize I’m an idiot and left the carafe behind the counter.

“From your invisible pot?” A small smile tugs at his lips.

I cross my arms. “I didn’t plan to come over here and stopped on my way.”

“Sure.” He shrugs, surprising me. I expected something more, so I’m a little taken off guard.

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“Oh… okay. I’ll be right back.”

I grab the carafe and then head back to his table, filling his empty cup. I’m about to walk away when the question I try to bite back climbs from my mouth. “What are you doing here, Adrian?”

His name strikes me for a second. This is Adrian. I’ve known his name for four years. My father killed a member of his family and now he’s sitting in front of me and his name is rolling off my lips. It’s strange and confusing and something I thought was a good thing, but then… why haven’t I told him? Why are we playing this back-and-forth game while I’m wearing this façade he knows nothing about?

“Now? I’m drinking coffee. Earlier I was eating pancakes. Have you ever had the pancakes here?”

I don’t know why his words make me smile. “I’m serious.”

He takes a drink of his coffee and I cringe. Yuck. He drinks it black with no sugar. Finally, he replies, “Trying to get in your pants.”

I know that’s partially true. He’s a guy and I’m a girl and he’s made it obvious what he wants, but there’s more to it. It turns me inside out, amps up the guilt until I feel like it’s frying my heart—I know he’s also here because in his way, he’s keeping me safe. I’m not stupid enough to believe it’s me specifically. I’m just a girl he tried to hit on, who he ran into again and later happened to be in the right place at the right time.

And now… well, maybe he’s a good guy. My brother would do something like this. He’d never admit it, but I could see him sitting in a restaurant keeping vigil for a girl. Thinking that it was somehow his job to keep her safe. Or to make her feel safe, even if she didn’t want to admit her fear.

“Thank you,” I tell him.

And when he studies me, looks at me like he’s working out a puzzle in his mind, I know that he understands what I’m saying. That he realizes I know what he’s doing too.

“You better get back to work.” Adrian nods and I look over my shoulder to see Hugo standing in the kitchen doorway watching.

Without another word, I top off his cup again and walk away.

* * *

All night my eyes find him. As I’m helping customers or serving food or filling up saltshakers. As people come and go, I’m always aware of Adrian. He pulls out his notebook and writes sometimes. Pulls out his book and reads. Every time I walk to the table, he’ll cover whatever he’s doing. I wonder if it’s the same book or if he moved on to something else. If reading is something he does often or if he’s passing hour after hour with whatever he can find.

He stopped drinking coffee for a while and ordered a piece of apple pie. Around four he asked for another cup and I wonder if he’s getting tired again. I should probably tell him he can go. The words play on my tongue, but I never let them free. I like watching him, trying to figure out who he is, because I’ve wondered for so long.

Hugo asked who he was and I lied and said a friend of my brother’s. That Maddox was nervous because of what happened last night, and he seemed to take that as a good excuse.

Hugo also falls asleep between customers, so I guess he figures Adrian being here lets him off the hook.

With each minute that ticks by, I tell myself we need to talk. That I should tell him who I am. That’s what I came here to do, so why not just get it done? But I can’t really do that while I’m working, and anyway, I’m not sure if I should. I doubt he’ll keep coming here and I can always go home and never see him again.

The thought of going home sits heavy in my stomach and I want to stick my finger down my throat as though purging will make it all go away.

When six rolls around, my relief comes. When we’re done going over the night, I go to the back to grab my purse, and when I come out, Adrian’s gone. Disappointment rolls through me. When I go outside, I see him leaning against a car. I should walk away. Or walk to him and tell him everything, but I know I won’t. Not the telling him part at least. It’s as though the words are trapped inside me.

Maddox might have been right. What if it is the wrong thing to do and I dredge up something he’s found a way to put behind him? How can I risk hurting him on the off chance that karma will work in favor of my family?

“Hey.” I look at the ground. Kick a pebble, nervous to meet his eyes.

“Hey.”

“I thought you left.”

“Nope.” There’s a hint of humor in his voice that makes me look up. He doesn’t look away from me when he continues. “How am I supposed to get in your pants if I leave before you get off?”

I’m slightly disgusted, but there’s another part of me that blushes. Who feels tingly at the thought of him being where he wants to be. “Do you get a lot of girls that way?”

Adrian shrugs. “At least I’m honest.”

I shake my head. “I guess there’s that…”

He steps toward me and I know I should walk away. Back up! I tell myself, but my feet refuse to move.

“I can see you’re still skeptical.” His voice is low… seductive. “Here… let me try something.”

It’s as though he has me in a trance, hypnotized the ghosts I didn’t know about until him. I nod as Adrian puts a finger under my chin and tilts my head up.

“Your lips are so sexy,” he says as he rubs his thumb over the bottom one. His mouth comes down much slower than the first time, like he’s trying to keep me in suspense. I’ve never been so excited to find out where a story was going until this moment.

He starts the kiss out slowly, brushing his lips against mine. His tongue slips inside, pulls back out like he’s teasing me, playing a game of hide-and-seek, and I suddenly want to find him.

He pushes a hand through my hair and he’s still titling my head back as his mouth comes down harder on mine. He’s really exploring now, and he tastes like coffee as I swallow the little moan that fights to climb up my throat.

This is wrong. So wrong. I have no right to enjoy this. No right to want it, but as his mouth moves against mine and his other hand goes to the small of my back, easing me against him, I don’t remember ever wanting anything more. Needing anything more.

God, I used to be such a romantic. All the girls at school with boyfriends and I imagined someone swooping in and taking me away from the hell my life had become. That person isn’t Adrian. He’s living in hell, too, but when he’s kissing me, I can almost pretend.

His mouth slides down my neck and it doesn’t matter that we’re standing in the middle of a parking lot. I can almost forget that I’m me and he’s him and that it’s not okay to let this invisible thread tie us together even more tightly.

When he gets to my ear, I jump when his teeth bite gently into my lobe. “Come home with me, Casper.”

I put my hand on his chest, feel his heart beat against my hand. “I can’t…”

“Then let me go home with you. I want you.”

I shake my head and make myself take a step backward. “I can’t.” I send up a silent prayer that he hears it in my voice. Not that I don’t want to, even though it would be scary as hell. Not that I wouldn’t like to be swept away if only for a night, but I really can’t. It’s not right. I know in his way he wants to use me as a distraction to the pain he’s feeling. For a split second I consider doing the same thing. Maybe forgetting would help us both, but I can’t.

“Are you sure? I won’t ask again,” he says.

No. “Yes.”

Adrian pulls away. I want to knot my hands in his shirt and tug him back to me. Tell him everything and see if it chases our ghosts away.

“I’ll see you later.” He gets in his car and I notice the window is down. He looks nonchalant, as though it doesn’t matter at all that I turned him down. Maybe it doesn’t.

“Where are you going?” I ask, not really sure why since it’s not my business.

“I’ve been up all night, so I’ll probably go home, smoke a joint, and go to bed.”

“You shouldn’t smoke like that. Or at least not tell the whole world. You don’t know me.”

He grabs a pair of sunglasses off the visor and puts them on before looking at me. “It’s who I am.”

Adrian starts the car, and I blurt out, “Are you a writer?” A tick forms in his jaw and I wonder if he’s going to pull away. If I shouldn’t have let myself ask him that.

Instead he says, “Do you want me to tell you a story?” He doesn’t wait for me to reply before he starts talking again. “Once upon a time, there was a guy. Not a real good guy. Some would probably call him the villain. He didn’t care, though. He knew it was true. Knew he used people and other shit to forget. He didn’t plan on changing either. Knew he couldn’t. That was who he was, so he might as well acknowledge it, right?”

“How did he know he couldn’t change?” I ask, my heart chipping away, bit by bit, the pieces falling into oblivion.

Adrian pauses and I’m not sure he’s going to answer. “Because,” he finally says, “real life isn’t made of happily-ever-afters.”

As Adrian pulls away, I vow to do everything to make a liar out of him. To find a way for us to all have some kind of happily-ever-after, regardless of what we’ve been through. Maybe if I tell him, we’ll all discover some sort of peace.

* * *

I feel like a stalker. I’ve never done something like this. Never found a roundabout way into someone’s life, but I figure our chance at a little bit of peace is worth it.

Half of my day has been spent outside cleaning my car, the inside only because it’s cold outside. Telling Maddox I’ll take out the trash, check the mail. Whatever excuse I can come up with I use. If it’s not that, I’m watching the window. I’ve seen Adrian’s friends come and go, though I didn’t realize who they were until he introduced us.

I’m hoping they’ll be able to help me.

I’m hoping I run into only the girl.

See? I’m a total stalker.

It’s for a good cause. It’s for a good cause.

I’m taking a walk right now, bundled up in my jacket and gloves.

“A little cold for a walk, don’t ya think?”

I jump, grab at my heart and turn around. “Jesus, Maddy. You scared the crap out of me.”

He’s smoking a cigarette. I hate the habit and wish he wouldn’t do it. I know our parents hate it, too, and wonder if that’s why he started.

“I’m not ten anymore, Laney. You need to stop calling me that.”




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