“Not real food, I mean. They use the parts of the chicken you don’t want to eat, grind it up, add some filler, and freeze it for years. By the time it gets to your oven, it’s more freezer burn than chicken.”

“Microwave,” I say, and finally turn around. “These are going in my microwave.”

He looks good in the worst way, muscly and tan, and his hair is a little wet like he just showered, but I’m not going to stare at him. I slide the box into my basket and wait for him to say something so I’ll know how this is going to go. Angry, awkward, or fake-fine—those seem like the most likely options, but it’s definitely his choice, given the way things ended. The polite smile I hadn’t even realized I was giving him is starting to hurt, so I let it fade. I have no business smiling at him anyway. I’m the lying, cheating ho of an ex-barely-girlfriend.

“So, how are you?” he asks finally.

“Fine. You?”

He stares like it’s the dumbest question in the world. I’ve missed his eyes, brown and warm behind those stupid, adorable glasses. I look back down at the contents of my basket.

“Not that great,” he says.

“I’m sorry.” That should cover it: I’m sorry he’s not that great, I’m sorry for hurting him, I’m sorry I can’t make it better, and I’m a sorry individual. Also, now, as the silence stretches beyond uncomfortable into excruciating, I’m sorry to be having the most miserable social encounter of my life. I need an excuse to pull myself away, but my mind is numb with him still looking at me like that.

“Do you want to get some coffee?” he asks.

“What?”

“You’re probably busy.”

“No.”

I’m not busy, but I don’t know if I want to get coffee. Except I do. But I don’t want to sit close to him and talk with him and feel his eyes on me and let myself pretend for one second that things are different. I don’t have room for more hurting right now.

But I’m not busy. Myrna asked me to stay late and help rearrange the yarn bins, so it’s too late now for bridal portraits, which means I’m going to have to pretend to forget to bring the dress back tomorrow. Mo is at home, most likely watching SportsCenter. Or staring at Duchess.

Reed’s waiting. I can feel my cheeks turning red. “I mean I’m not busy,” I say. “Coffee sounds nice.”

“Are you almost done?”

I look at my basket, barely recognizing the food I put in there. My mental grocery list vanished about thirty seconds ago, so I don’t know what I’m missing. “Yeah.”

“I’ve got a few more things to get,” he says. “You want to walk with me?”

I follow him zombie-like from frozen foods to produce to checkout, barely saying a word. I wonder if he’s heard that Mo and I are married. Probably. E-town is too small to hide from gossip that big. But if he knows, why would he invite me to coffee? He has to hate me.

“So you’re really getting those,” he says, eyeing the Dino-Nuggets as we stand in line.

“They’re not for me.”

“Oh.”

His face. I look away.

Why, oh why, oh why, oh why did I say that? Cringing, I stare at the magazine in front of me, focusing on the beep of the grocery scanner and the smack of the teller’s gum. I want to bite my whole tongue off.

“Right. Not for you,” he repeats flatly. “And the magazine—are you getting that? But that would mostly be for someone else too, I guess.”

My eyes finally focus on what I’ve been staring at. Cosmo. Glossy lips and a mile of cleavage, splattered with sex advice I don’t even understand. I don’t respond, just start loading my groceries onto the belt.

“Sorry,” he mutters. I wish he hadn’t. Apparently he’s too nice to enjoy embarrassing me—not like I haven’t earned it.

He turns to the candy rack, grabs a pack of gum, and throws it in his cart. I’m still bracing to implode from shame, but I can’t not think about that gum. I know that gum. I know what it tastes like in his mouth.

I should have gone straight home after my shift.

I pay for my groceries and wait awkwardly by the customer service desk while he pays for his, though I’m not sure why. We can’t possibly still be going for coffee. Maybe I should save him the hassle of trying to make up an excuse and just tell him I’m not feeling well, which would be 100 percent true. Stupid Dino-Nuggets. I can’t believe I said They’re not for me. I may as well have followed it up with They’re for the guy I’m sleeping with instead of you, the one I cheated on you with. And the Cosmo. Of course, I couldn’t have zoned out in front of Southern Living.

“My car or yours?” he asks.

I almost drop my bags. There’s no logical explanation for any of this. “Yours.”

“Mine’s sort of a mess,” he says.

“I don’t care.” He has no idea what a messy car is. In Mo’s car right now there are at least ten Taco Bell bags that I’m refusing to throw out for him, not to mention a giant puffball of a wedding dress taking up the entire backseat. And just thinking about coming up with a lie as to why I’m not driving my Explorer makes me tired.

We walk from the fluorescent-lit store into the night. It’s post-rain black and steamy, and the puddles look like pools of ink when the moon reflects. Warm water spills over the edge of my flips and wets my toes.

“Piper was doing that the other day, and it reminded me of you.”

“What?”

“Walking through every puddle possible,” he says.

“It’s a compulsion,” I say, and veer left to wade through the next one. “I can’t not do it.”

“I noticed.”

In the car, the smell of him is so familiar, like rain and night, it feels like I should be allowed to reach out and touch his forearm. I still don’t know why I’m here, but I don’t care anymore, and that’s scary.

Starbucks is empty, except for a few middle-aged types staring into laptops—thank goodness, nobody I know. And the barista looks vaguely familiar, but I think it’s because she used to come into Mr. Twister. I don’t think she recognizes me.

Reed insists on buying my coffee. I don’t want him to, but I don’t want to insult him either, so I let him and take mine with an extra packet of guilt.

“You get to choose the table,” he says to me, as if getting to pay for coffee is a perk, and hands the barista a ten.

“That one,” I say, pointing to the corner booth farthest from the window.

It isn’t until we’re several sips in that the awkwardness begins to lift.

“So, work is pretty lame now,” he says. “Flora isn’t as much fun as you were.”

“Thanks, I guess.”

“You didn’t have to quit, you know.”

I smile, but it’s barely lip-deep. We both know I had to quit. I take another sip for something to hide behind.

“So, you’re working at Myrna’s Country Craft?” he asks.

“Yeah. How did you know that?”

“This is a small town, Annie.”

My lungs stop pulling air midbreath. The sound of my name wrapped in his voice—it’s amazing and terrible. Mostly terrible. I want him to say it again.

“I may not be from here, but I’ve got family in the grapevine,” he says. “Vicky and my grandma report gossip like it’s their job.”

Report gossip. I have to say it. He wants me to say it. “So you know I’m married, then.”

“Yeah,” he says softly. He’s peeling the cardboard sleeve off his cup, smoothing it out over the table. It’s one of those pointless, fidgety things to do when you need your hands to be busy. I start doing the same to mine.

He’s trying to press the ridges in the cardboard flat, but it wants to curl. I love his painter’s hands, red from turpentine and speckled with cream. I could watch him fidget all night.

At least neither of us say the stupid things that shouldn’t be said. He doesn’t say congratulations. I don’t say I’m sorry. Not again.

“And I know about your sister.”

I can’t think. My heart is in my throat.

“Why did you tell me you were an only child?” he asks.

“Well . . .” I falter. Well, what? “I am now,” I finish lamely.

He stares at me and I look away. I want to ask him if he knew when we were together and was just waiting for me to tell him, or if someone told him after we broke up. Not that it matters. Either way, he thinks I’m a liar.

“People treat me differently when they find out,” I say.

“I wouldn’t have.”

I know. I should tell him that I know, but I can’t. Just thinking it hurts. “Never mind,” he says. “It doesn’t matter.”

We settle back into silence, but this time my mind is racing to come up with a question, anything to keep him from asking about Lena or Mo or other prod-able wounds. “So, how’s Soup?”

“Good. I have a new niece.”

“I was wondering if Vicky had the baby yet. Did everything go okay?”

“Yeah. They named her Candace, and she never cries except when I’m holding her. Then she screams like a maniac.” He grins, forgetting himself, forgetting me, for a moment.

I picture him holding a screaming infant, remember Piper throwing her croquet mallet into the woods, and have to laugh. “Keep up the good work, Uncle Idiot.”

“I will.” His smile is rueful. “I seem to be having a hard time pleasing the women in my life lately.”

Too much. It’s meant to be a joke, but I feel like something pierced my skin, sliced through breast and muscle and rib cage, right through my heart. I’m a monster. “No,” I say, but my voice is weak when I want it to be firm. “You did—”

“Forget it,” he interrupts. “I don’t want you to.”

“But I mean it. No. No, you didn’t not . . . please me.” The word is wrong. Old-fashioned or sexual, and I didn’t mean it either way. He’s abandoned the dream of flattening the dismantled cup sleeve and is tearing it into thin strips, like I didn’t say anything.