“Barely got a look at him,” I lie through my teeth.
Ian sits back, arms folded, certain about something. It bothers me how quickly he picks up on some things and is slow about nearly everything else. “We’ve had this talk before—” he starts.
“I’m not secretly seein’ someone, damn it.”
“—and I guess we’re having it again.” Despite the noise of the bar, his voice becomes nothing but hisses and air. “Relationships are out of the cards. All your horny fans want yousingle. And you know why. We want them all to fantasize their lives with you with every heart-aching song you sing up there, like it’s meant just for them. Menandwomen. You’re the broken, tortured heart throb. Everyone wants to fix you. They’re dying to be your one and only. Let themallbe your one and only. The second that illusion breaks, your career goespoof!” He accentuates that last word with a funny wiggling of his fingers in the air. Then he returns to speaking. “We all gotta make sacrifices while we’re climbing up this mountain.” His eyes go off, probably thinking of his own wife and daughter. “You, most of all. But once we’ve hit it, once we’vefinallyhit it and you’re all the way up there, sitting on top of that mountain,that’swhen you have time for love.”
“You done?” I ask sweetly.
He actually, seriously, literally thinks it over, eyes wandering. “Yeah,” he decides with a nod, going for his drink.Then just as I’m about to speak, he sets his glass back down. “Oh, one more thing. Next time you want to take a fieldtrip, maybe let me know? Just to save me from having a coronary before I turn forty? I’d appreciate being alive for my daughter’s fifth birthday, and hopefully many, many more.” Then he goes for his drink at last, and I forget what I was going to say. Probably just repeating in one way or another that there ain’t no special guy in my life.
And it’s true. Timothy is just someone I’m getting to know.
Someone who still hasn’t called.
Or texted.
Or hit me up at all since our adventure in his ice cream shop.
And what do I do with that? Assume he’s not interested?Don’treturn to Spruce? Maybe I creeped him out by running into him in his hometown. Crossed a boundary I should’ve known was there.
Guess I lost my mind.
Too much touring. Too much isolation.
Feels like cabin fever. Except I’m not in a cabin, always on the move, never technically trapped, yet suffocating still.
But something was definitely happening between us in that ice cream shop. I’m not imagining it. I saw the way he was looking back at me—and sometimes tryingnotto look at me. It was twenty times more intense than what we shared in that hallway where we first met, when something unexpectedly intimate happened, how he was vulnerable and split right open in front of me, and I was on my own, lurking in shadows, trying to offer some part of myself to the venue before we played.
Didn’t expect the venue to offer something first.
We both felt it. I know that for certain. And if I’m right, he’s craving that closeness again about as much as I am.
It’s about three in the morning when I’m pretty sure everyone else is asleep and, no surprise, I’m wide awake and wandering the lobby of the hotel, as if it’s just another venueI’m looking to offer something to. I brought my guitar with me. Played a few chords in the stairwell. Played a tune by the swimming pool in the back. The front desk clerk is gone, probably watching TV in the back office bored out of their mind. I don’t blame them.
I step outside and into the night, where I find myself a spot on a picnic table and sit on top of it, feet on the bench, with Glorious hugged to my chest. “Sorry, pal,” I tell him sweetly, “but if my ass can’t sleep, neither can yours.”
Few minutes later, I’m lying back on the picnic table, Glorious on my chest, and I keep dancing back and forth between A major and C major. I love how major chords a third apart play off each other. They share just one note, the rest of them strangers. The C# settles to C, like a tiny sigh of the heart, then brightening again when I switch back to A. There’s never really a resolution, either. I trade chords with a parallel world every strum, but there’s no telling which world each chord calls home. A bittersweet lift, a hopeful drop, over and over. Maybe it’s the stars I have something to offer to tonight. I start threading a melody between the chords, as if stitching those parallel worlds together somehow.
Is it my world and Timothy’s I’m trying to unite?
Which one of us is A major?
Which one of us C?
Does it matter?
Both chords are beautiful on their own. But the moment you play them at the same time, together, they clash, fight each other, sound wrong, fall apart.
I stop strumming, bothered by that.
Maybe I shouldn’t pursue Timothy at all. I’m doing nothing but chasing dreams when I think of him. I’m pretending I know a star just because I can see it in the night sky, because it seems right there within reach, as close as an eyelash.
But it’s not close at all. It’s light years away.
None of those stars out there belong to me. The night can’t lend its treasures any more than Spruce can let go a guy like him.
A cow moos in my ear. I turn my head, confused.