of yourself,” he forced out, his eyes blazing, as if he had any right to be angry with me.
“No.” My eyes still on him, I shook my head. “Don’t do that. You don’t get to act like you’re worried about me, Jack.” I looked to the left and then the right. “There is no one around who knows us, so you can stop the pretending.”
We studied each other in silence. I wasn’t sure if this would be the last time I’d ever see him. He could just wake up the next day and say, The hell with it, she isn’t—or, even worse—she wasn’t worth the trouble anyway. I had my fun with the business deal marriage. Now it’s time to move on. The thought alone scared the bejesus out of me, but I wasn’t ready to ignore everything and act like he hadn’t hurt me either. Therein lay our problem.
“Go home, Jack,” I said quietly. “You have no reason to be here.”
In the great scheme of things, we were nothing more than two people who had passed each other while walking through their lives. Couples broke up every day, and we were not special in that regard either. You cried yourself to sleep then woke up and went to work. When you repeated the cycle enough times, one day you woke up and suddenly it didn’t matter all that much. New people walked alongside you and eventually you forgot the ones you left behind.
When he didn’t deny what I’d said, I let out a long breath, looked at his eyes for a moment longer to remember, and finally turned to leave.
“I don’t have a home to go back to anymore, Rose.”
I stopped, but didn’t look at him.
“You’re my home,” he finished.
My eyes filling with tears, I walked away.
And he let me.
So we ended as we’d begun, nothing but two complete strangers.
Closer to midnight, after Sally had gone to bed and I was getting ready to start another sleepless night, I opened the curtains and the window so I could breathe in the cold air. Someone was walking across the street and for a moment I thought it was Jack, but then he walked under the light and I realized it was just a stranger.
For a moment I was shocked, why would it hurt not to see him? Why would I be disappointed?
During the week, he came to the coffee shop around closing time twice. He leaned against his car, then when Ray left he leaned against the lamp pole. Every time he showed up he made it harder to remember why I was so angry at him. He paced and waited. When I came out with Sally but didn’t stop to talk to him, he left.
Then he disappeared for several days.
It was the eighth day of our break up and we were getting ready to close when he showed up again. All three of us were in the front. Owen and I were clearing out the dishes on the counter and taking them back into the kitchen, and Sally was stacking up clean coffee mugs and the to-go cups next to the espresso machine. We only had two customers in the shop, and both of them were regulars working on their laptops.
The bell rang, and I looked up to see someone bundled up in her coat and scarf walk in and head straight toward one of the customers, so I got back to work.
Sally was the first one to notice Jack.
“Rose.”
I looked at her over my shoulder.
“Yes?”
“He’s here,” she whispered urgently, and I looked around in confusion until my eyes landed on him. My pulse picked up and my heart started to get all excited, but something was wrong. I couldn’t tell what he was thinking from his facial expression, because if there was one thing Jack Hawthorne was good at, it was hiding his emotions. Dread and excitement over seeing him settled over me anyway as my heart betrayed me.
He stood on the other side of the counter and I did nothing but stare at him, my heart pounding in my ears.
I heard Sally clear her throat. “Hi, Jack.”
He didn’t take his eyes off me when he answered. “Hello, Sally. You’re good, I hope.”
“Yes. Great.”
Then it was back to silence again.
Feeling my chest tighten, I swallowed and wiped my hands on my jeans, managing to look away from his eyes.
I saw his hand tighten around a stack of papers he was holding, creating a tube.