realize I should be mortified that Past Hazel was so dramatically inappropriate, but it’s not like I’m that much better now, and regret isn’t really my speed anyway. For the count of three quick breaths, Josh and I grin at each other in intense shared amusement. Our eyes are cartoon-spiral wild.
But then his smile straightens as he seems to remember that I am ridiculous.
“I promise to not proposition you at your sister’s party,” I tell him, pseudo–sotto voce.
Josh mumbles an awkward “Thanks.”
Dave asks, “Hazel propositioned you?”
Josh nods, holding eye contact with me for a couple more seconds before looking over to his brother-in-law—my new boss. “She did.”
“I did,” I agree. “In college. Just before vomiting on his shoes. It was one of my more undatable moments.”
“She’s had a few.” Josh blinks down when his phone buzzes, pulling it out of his pocket. He reads a text with absolutely no reaction and then puts the phone away.
There must be some male pheromone thing happening, because Dave has extracted something from this moment that I have not. “Bad news?” he asks, brows drawn, voice all low, like Josh is a sheet of fragile glass.
Josh shrugs, expression even. A muscle ticks in his jaw and I resist reaching out and pressing it like I’m playing Simon. “Tabitha isn’t going to make it up for the weekend.”
I feel my own jaw creak open. “There are real people named Tabitha?”
Both men turn to look at me like they don’t know what I mean.
But come on.
“I just—” I continue, haltingly. “Tabitha seems like what you’d name someone if you expect them to be really, really . . . evil. Like, living in a lair and hoarding spotted puppies.”
Dave clears his throat and lifts his glass to his mouth, drinking deeply. Josh stares at me. “Tabby is my girlfriend.”
“Tabby?”
Swallowing back a strangled laugh, Dave puts a gentle hand on my shoulder. “Hazel. Shut up.”
“HR file?” I look up at his familiar face, all bearded and calm. It’s dark out now, and he’s backlit by a few strings of outdoor lights.
“The party doesn’t count,” he assures me, “but you’re a maniac. Ease Josh in a little.”
“I think the fact that I’m a maniac is partly why I’m your favorite.”
Dave nearly breaks, but he manages to turn and walk away before I can tell. I am now alone with Josh Im. He studies me like he’s looking at something infectious through a microscope.
“I always thought I caught you in . . . a phase.” His left eyebrow makes a fancy arch. “Apparently you’re just like this.”
“I feel like I have a lot to apologize for,” I admit, “but I can’t be sure I won’t be constantly exasperating you, so maybe I’ll just wait until we’re elderly.”
Half of his mouth turns up. “I can say without question I’ve honestly never known anyone else like you.”
“So completely undatable?”
“Something like that.”
TWO
* * *
JOSH
Hazel Bradford. Wow.
Pretty much everyone we went to college with has a Hazel Bradford story. Of course, my old roommate Mike has many—mostly of the wild sexual variety—but others have ones more similar to mine: Hazel Bradford doing a mud run half marathon and coming to her night lab before showering because she didn’t want to be late. Hazel Bradford getting more than a thousand signatures of support to enter a local hot dog eating contest/fund-raiser before remembering, onstage and while televised, that she was trying to be a vegetarian. Hazel Bradford holding a yard sale of her ex-boyfriend’s clothes while he was still asleep at the party where she found him naked with someone else (incidentally, another guy from his terrible garage band). And—my personal favorite—Hazel Bradford giving an oral presentation on the anatomy and function of the penis in Human Anatomy.
I could never quite tell whether she was oblivious or just didn’t care what people thought, but no matter how chaotic she was, she always managed to give off an innocent, unintentionally wild vibe. And here she is in the flesh—all five foot four of her, a hundred and ten pounds soaking wet, huge brown eyes, with her hair in an enormous brown bun—and I don’t think anything has changed.
“Can I call you Jimin?” she asks.
“No.”
Confusion flickers across her face. “You should be proud of your heritage, Josh.”
“I am,” I say, fighting a smile. “But you just said it ‘Jee-Min.’ ”
I’m given a blank stare.
“It’s not the same,” I explain, and say it again: “Jimin.”
She takes on a dramatic, seductive expression. “Jeee-minnnn?”
“No.”
Giving up, Hazel straightens and sips her margarita,