Read Slip of the Tongue Online

Authors: Jessica Hawkins

Tags: #domestic, #forbidden love, #new york city, #cheating, #love triangle, #books for women in their 30s, #domestic husband and wife romance, #forbidden romance, #taboo romance, #unfaithful, #steamy love triangle, #alpha male, #love triangle romance, #marriage, #angst husband and wife romance, #adultery, #infidelity, #affair romance, #romance books with infidelity

Slip of the Tongue (29 page)

“That’s inspirational, right?”

“Something like that.” He touches my cheek. “Soul searching when I should’ve been soul
mate
searching.”

My cheeks flush like a schoolgirl’s.

“What’re you reading?” he asks.

“Nothing at the moment. I don’t read as much as I should. I keep meaning to.”

“Then why’d you ask?”

“Well, wouldn’t that give me some insight to you?” I ask.

“A little. A better one would be
when
I read.”

“Why?”

“I read before bed,” he says. “That’s when my mind is most active, and for me, that isn’t necessarily a good thing. So, I read to calm myself, about three or four times a week. That’s just fiction. I research my craft in the mornings. It gets my juices flowing.”

My eyebrows are halfway up my forehead. I forget sometimes that Finn is dealing with a move, a new job, and the women in his life. “Okay, then. I feel like I just learned some stuff.”

“You said you think you
should
read, but you don’t. That gives me some insight into you that I’ll probably sit and think about later.”

This statement alone shows me even more about who Finn is. He listens to little things I say and thinks about them when I’m not around.

“When do you eat?” he asks next.

I tilt my head with a smile. “That’s pretty standard across the board, isn’t it? Morning, noon, and night . . .”

“Touché. What’s something you consider a special treat?”

“I don’t know. Hot chocolate?” I tease, glancing at the half-drunken mug. He waits, unconvinced. I can see he’s determined to get somewhere, so I go with it. “I love smoothies.”

“When was the last time you had one?”

“Um.” I pick at nothing on my jeans. “This summer. August twentieth, actually.”

“I see.”

I look up. He
sees
. Obviously, he’s intrigued by the fact that I know the date. “It was a comfort smoothie,” I say.

“How come?”

I think back. “I got a prescription for birth control.”

“And you were sad, so you got it to cheer yourself up.”

“Nathan did,” I say. “He took me there after, six blocks out of his way. We were both late getting back to work.”

To Finn’s credit, he doesn’t pull away when I reminisce.

“Maybe I should’ve been treating him, though,” I say, “now that I think about it.”

Finn squeezes my hand. “It’s okay to not want children, Sadie. It doesn’t make you a criminal.”

“Nathan definitely wants a baby.” I lower my eyes to the table. I did too, up until I went back on birth control. Now, if we choose that path again, all I see is a future of disappointment, shame, and sadness. And I let myself remember, just a little, that my whole marriage hasn’t been perfect. There’s been pain this last year. But at least I had Nathan to lean on then. The more I think about the likelihood of infertility, the more fear beats down my maternal urges. “What if we can’t figure it out?” I ask, more to myself. “What if we just want different things?”

Finn slides his thumb over the nook of my thumb and index finger. “I’m fine with not having more children.”

The comment catches me off guard. I look at him for what feels like the first time in a while, as if I’ve been off in another world. His eyes are somber, but it’s hard to feel any darkness in their honey-flecked green. “Really?”

“Really. I have Marissa. She’s all I need.”

It’s the first time children have actually been taken off the table for me. I’ve considered not having a baby a lot over the last year. Especially these last few months. Part of me can’t envision a life without one. The other part sees the sacrifice and heartbreak that children can be, even when they don’t exist. Finn is offering me an out. “You don’t want kids?” I ask. “Definitely?”

He cocks his head. “I said I’d be fine with not having them. I’d also be open to it, if that’s what . . . the other person wanted.”

“You and Kendra don’t talk about it?”

“We do. She wants another one. I don’t—not with her.”

He says it so definitively that my heart aches a little for her. And just as suddenly, I’m embarrassed. Not in a bad way, necessarily—it just makes me more aware of what we’re doing. Finn would consider having a baby with me.

“I know that sounds harsh,” he continues. “She’s just so hard to deal with sometimes. I learned years ago that if I’m not explicit, she’ll twist my words into something else. To her, maybe means yes. For instance, she said she wanted to get Marissa a dog. I said I’d think about it. I come home from work that same day, and guess what I find? ‘But you said yes,’ was her defense.”

“You have a dog?” I ask.

It’s his turn to look uncomfortable. He takes his hand out of mine and wipes it on his jeans. “If she got pregnant, I’d just feel more hopeless than I do now. I think it’s supposed to be the other way around.”

As much as what he’s saying puts me off, because as a woman, I can relate better to Kendra, I also admire him. It isn’t always easy to tell your partner what you
don’t
want. “It’d be easier for you to just give in to her.”

“You have no idea. We have to have the discussion every few months, and it’s never pretty.”

“So you don’t have sex?” My tongue gets looser the more time I spend with Finn. I think that means I’m comfortable, but I’m not sure. I’m not this way with many people. “You don’t have to answer that.”

“Why not? Don’t you think you have a right to know?”

“I don’t know that I have any rights . . .”

“You and I are sleeping together, so, yes, you do.”

“And Kendra and Nathan don’t have a right to know?”

He frowns. “I can’t exactly just tell Kendra about you. I’d have to divorce her first.”

He says
divorce
casually, as if it’d take no more than a phone call. I wonder how long he’s been thinking about leaving her. It might not have as much to do with me as I think, and that gives me some comfort. “Is that what you want?” I ask.

“I . . .” When he moves, the gummy bench grunts like some kind of sea mammal. “We’ve talked about a lot today. I don’t want to overwhelm you.”

“Overwhelm me.”

We’re both surprised by my challenge. We’ve been circling this topic all afternoon, though. I don’t think it’ll help anything to go home tonight with more questions than answers.

“All right,” he accepts. “If you told me you were ready, I’d have the first of many difficult conversations with Kendra. My ideal situation would be to end things with her, share custody of Marissa, and be with you.”

He moves back a little. I’m grateful for the space. I asked to be overwhelmed, and I think I might be. I can’t tell if I’m feeling butterflies or barbed wire in my stomach. He’s serious about me. Is that a surprise, though? This has never been a fling. We aren’t take-it-or-leave-it fucking. I might, on some level, use Finn to escape my situation with Nathan, but when Finn’s inside me, I’m not thinking of anything else.

“You want me to love you,” I state.

“I do. I don’t expect it now, and maybe I shouldn’t expect it at all. I want it, though.”

This must be what it feels like to free-fall without a net. We’re moving fast, but it might be up or down, left or right, right or wrong. I don’t know. I can see myself with Finn. I’m not sure I can see myself without Nathan.

Finn blows out a breath. “Heavy, huh?”

“A little.”

“I think you get it, though. What we could be. I see it in your eyes.”

What do I really know about Finn? I take stock. First, the green couch would have to go. The record player could stay. I don’t have any vinyl, but I like music. I can make him dinner with his cast iron skillet. Marissa would have her own bedroom that I could help decorate. Ginger has claimed nooks and crannies in our apartment, but Finn has the same ones. They’re just on the other side of the hall. What becomes of Ginger, though? What becomes of Nathan?

“I just need some time to adjust to the idea,” I say. I don’t want to hurt his feelings, but I feel I need to be explicit. “More time than this.”

“Believe me, Sadie, I get it.” He looks earnest, almost happy. Not like I expected. “We’re not seriously talking about this. You know that, right?” He covers my hand again. “I just have a hard time keeping my feelings inside. And I can’t stand to see you living like a zombie, doing your best not to set him off.”

I raise my eyebrows. My marriage has been a drain lately, but my heart still beats strongly. For Nathan, and now, for Finn too. “Do I seem like a zombie to you?”

“Not right
now
,” he teases, smiling warmly. “Right now, you’re alive. You’re radiant.” He chuckles. “And now, you’re blushing. You don’t know what that does to me, seeing you get shy.” He kisses my cheek, my temple. “See? I know you so much better, just from one simple, not-so-simple question.”

I can barely remember what the question was, especially with Finn’s lips on me. It wouldn’t be such a bad life, fucking in movie theaters, warming each other up with hot chocolate, kisses, and dreams. What girl wouldn’t want to be told she’s radiant, to have a handsome photographer make her feel undeniably sexy, to have had a romantic moment in her past so powerful, it remapped her life? It wouldn’t be such a bad life.

But, I can’t help feeling it would never move above second place.

Finn pays the bill, and I realize he never answered my question about sex. From what he’s told me about Kendra, I don’t think of them as intimate. They must be, though, after so many years together. Even if it’s occasional. And what if it’s not? What if the next time he goes to Connecticut, he does to her what he did to me?

The thought makes me uneasy. I’m not sure if it’s jealousy, or something else, but my timing is off. It doesn’t feel right to bring it up now that we’re leaving. I put my coat on, pick up my purse, and follow him out.

Ashley is chipper as ever. “Enjoy your stay!” she calls after us. I wonder just how new she is to the city.

When we’re on the sidewalk, Finn says without looking at me, “I want to get you that Burberry coat.”

I balk. “No, Finn. Absolutely not.”

“I insist. Let’s just pretend it really is my fault your coat was ruined. I like to think it played a part in our love story.”

“Finn, really. I can afford my own coat.”

“I know. But I’m offering. How can you say no?”

Admittedly, it’s hard to turn down Burberry. Since I got a raise and Nate turned his down, I haven’t wanted to spend too much on myself. We’re in a better place financially than we’ve ever been, but it still feels a little like rubbing it in his face. “I can’t just show up at home with Burberry,” I point out.

“Would he notice?”

His question physically pierces, like a little knife. Nathan knows the contents of our closet. He would notice if he cared enough to look. All my pulse points throb at once for what seems to be slipping through my hands more every day.

“I’m sorry,” Finn says. “That was insensitive. Please don’t frown.”

“It’s okay.”

“Why don’t you keep it at my place?” he suggests. “At least for a little bit.” Without waiting for my answer, he takes my hand. We cross the street. When we’re on the other side, he ducks into a cramped doorway of an apartment building. He pulls my front flush against his, drapes me back over his forearm, and ghosts his mouth over mine. His whiskers tickle my upper lip. “By the way, it’s blue,” he says. “My favorite color.”

I try unsuccessfully to suppress a smile. “So what does the color blue say about you?”

He studies all the parts of my face—mouth, nose, ears, chin—as if he’s memorizing it for an exam. Then his eyes return to mine. “It says I never had a favorite color until I met this girl in a coffee shop with eyes so blue, they’re almost purple, like the absolute final moments before sunrise. This girl stayed on my mind. When I saw things like a cluster of irises or a peacock at the zoo, I would think of her and say to myself, that is my favorite color.”

 

TWENTY-FIVE

Amelia pays the cab fare and meets me on the busy curb outside of Chelsea Market. Without even a glance, she swipes away the one wrinkle in her loud DVF wrap dress. “As I was saying,” she continues our conversation from the car, “Misty Burroughs is not a woman we want to disappoint.”

“Who
do
we want to disappoint?” I ask.

She narrows her eyes at me. “Watch it. As much as I like you, I’m still your boss.”

“Oh,” my tone and movements are flowery as I pull on the marketplace’s heavy door, “let me get that for you, Miss Van Ecken.”

She grins smugly. “That’s more like it, minion.”

Once indoors, I pluck my gloves off by the fingers and stick them in my pocket. Amelia unfurls her scarf. I automatically fix the static flyaways that stick to her collar.

“The coat was a good choice,” Amelia says, eyeing me. “Misty can probably pick out Burberry blindfolded.”

I unbutton the collar. It’s funny how quickly a person can go from freezing cold to burning up in this city. When Amelia called me this morning to say we had an impromptu lunch meeting with the on-fire online entrepreneur, I’d waited until Nathan had left for work to knock on Finn’s door.

“You wore me out Sunday,” he teased, still half asleep. Two days later, my body was also still stiff. He passed me my brand new, navy Burberry coat, then kissed me. “Sorry for my morning breath,” he said, and I sighed, “I wish I cared.”

“That’s why I picked you for this meeting,” Amelia is saying. “I don’t know when or where you got that coat, I’ve never seen it before, but you’re good at pulling things out of your ass right when we need them.”

“I assure you, this did not come from my ass,” I say. We cross the indoor, warehouse-style food hall packed with gourmet eateries, curated gift shops, and bookstores. “Where are we meeting her?”

“Friedman’s.”

The rustic restaurant is small, with glass windows and a door that opens to the market. “There’s not a lot of space,” I say.

“I know, but she insisted. She swears by their Reuben.”

I’m quite sure Amelia hasn’t looked at bread in years, but I’m a regular consumer. “I’m surprised I haven’t been here,” I say. “I’m always on the lookout for good sandwich spots.”

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