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CHAPTER 10: What She Said

Author: Hope Mercer
last update publish date: 2026-06-29 13:00:32

Dani found him at the diner on Saturday morning with the energy of someone who had been waiting to have a conversation and had run out of patience for waiting.

Eli had been there for twenty minutes, working through the Harlow's revised scope timeline with his second cup of coffee, when she appeared across the table from him with her own coffee and an expression that was doing several things at once.

"You look better," she said.

"Than what?"

"Than when you arrived." She studied him. "Less like you're braced for something."

"I'm working." He indicated the plans on the table.

"You're always working. That's not new." She stole a corner of his toast, which he had not offered. "I want to tell you something. You can tell me to stop and I'll stop, but I think you should hear it."

Eli looked at her. Dani had been direct since they were fifteen and he had learned to receive her directness as the form of respect it was. "Okay," he said.

"When you left," she said, "Noah didn't tell anyone what happened. Not me, not anyone. He just — went quiet for a while. Not depressed, nothing alarming, just — interior. More than usual." She wrapped her hands around her coffee cup. "He's always been the person everyone comes to. You know that. He picks up, he shows up, he's there. That didn't change. He still did all of that. He just did it with less of himself available, if that makes sense."

Eli said nothing. He was looking at the table.

"It took about a year," Dani said. "And then he was fine. He was himself. But it was a — a quieter version, maybe. Slightly smaller. Like he'd edited something out."

"Dani."

"I know. I'm telling you anyway." She paused. "He dated someone four years ago. From Bend. Theo. He was nice, Eli, he was genuinely nice, and Noah tried. He really tried. And it didn't work and I asked him why and he said I feel like I'm apologizing for something I can't name and I didn't understand what he meant then." She looked at him directly. "I understand now."

Eli was quiet for a moment. Outside the diner window the Saturday morning town was doing its Saturday things — the hardware store opening, someone walking a dog he didn't recognize, the post office flag going up.

"Why are you telling me this?" he said.

"Because you're going to talk yourself out of it," Dani said. "You're going to find a reason why it's complicated or impractical or not the right time, and you're going to build a very logical case and it's going to be extremely well-constructed and completely wrong." She drank her coffee. "You've always done that. Built things around the thing you actually want so you don't have to look directly at it."

He looked at her. "That's a very specific observation."

"I've known you since you were fifteen." She stood, picking up her coffee. "He's the same person he was, Eli. He's just — he's built now. Does that make sense? He was half-built when you left and now he's done and he's — " She stopped. "He's really something. You should know that. If you didn't already."

She left before he could respond.

He sat for a long time with his cold coffee and his plans and the Saturday town moving outside the window.

He thought about a year of quiet. A slightly smaller version. An apology for something that couldn't be named.

He thought about the dovetails in the shelving and the wisteria at the base of the pergola and the archive drawings pulled a month before anyone asked.

He thought about built.

He turned back to his plans. He couldn't look at them for another ten minutes.

He walked back to the motel the long way.

Past the lake, which on a Saturday morning had two people running the path around it and a heron standing in the shallows with the specific patience of something that understood time differently than people did. The water was flat and silver and the firs around it were dropping their first needles of the season, the ground under them beginning to go copper.

He had grown up twenty minutes from this lake and had spent his adolescence taking it for granted the way you took for granted the things that were always there. The water tower. The diner. The particular smell of the air in October — rain coming, pine, something earthier underneath.

He had spent ten years in Seattle, which had water. He had looked at Puget Sound from his fifteenth-floor windows for ten years and thought about what he was building and where he was going and how far he had come.

He had not, he was now understanding, thought very carefully about what he had left.

He stopped on the path around the lake and looked at the heron, which did not acknowledge him.

He was built, Dani had said. He's really something.

Eli had known Noah Callahan at seventeen: open and certain and the warmest presence in any room, the person everything moved toward without trying. He had left that version behind and told himself it was necessary and built a very good structure on top of that telling.

The version he was working alongside now was that person with ten years of living in him. The warmth the same but grounded differently — in choice rather than nature, earned rather than given. The competence. The quiet care that manifested in pergolas and archive drawings and dovetail joints made alone in the winter after a loss.

The heron lifted and was gone across the water.

Eli watched it go.

He had been, Dani had said, building things around the thing he actually wanted so he didn't have to look directly at it.

He looked directly at it.

He stood by the lake in the October morning and looked directly at it for the first time since he'd driven back into this town, and what he found when he looked was not the complicated thing he'd expected but something simple and specific and completely without ambiguity.

He wanted to stay.

Not for the project. Not for the Harlow. Not for the drive or the pie or the long route past the lake.

He wanted to stay because Noah Callahan was here and had been here and was really something, and Eli had spent ten years building structures around that fact, and he was, finally, very tired of the construction.

He walked the rest of the way back to the motel.

He did not know what to do with the thing he had looked at directly. But he had looked at it. That was different from before.

That was, maybe, somewhere to start.

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