startle me. “Thanks,” is all I manage to say before we hang up. Not that I think Chloe’s cold or anything—far from it. It’s just the first time she’s used those words with me, and now I feel stupid for being so awkward. I should have said them back, because I do love Chloe. She’s amazing.
Jen waddles into the room. “Who was that?”
“Chloe. I might go over to their place later.”
“Did she call you or you call her?”
“I called.”
Jen frowns.
Great, what have I done wrong?
“Sweetie, have you been watching the news at all?”
“No. Why? More stuff about Jason supposedly cheating?”
“Well, yes, there’s that, and then there’s the case she’s working on. It’s a violent kidnapping and they still haven’t found the little girl.”
Yeah…I should really pay attention to the news. See, the thing about Chloe is, she was kidnapped by her older brother when she was eleven and shot three times. It was a miracle she survived, and here’s an example of how small a town Albuquerque is in some ways: Jen and Jason’s parents, who were both with the DA’s Office, knew about her case. They even worked on it some and helped put her brother in jail. When Jason brought her to dinner that first time, they were thrilled to see that the little girl who’d almost died had grown up into this beautiful, hyper-competent woman. This current case is not what she needs on top of all the tabloids buzzing away with stories about Jason being unfaithful.
“I’m sorry. I just wanted to talk to her.”
“Honey, it’s fine. Just know that she and Jason are a little stressed out right now.”
“I’ll leave them alone.”
Jen pulls me in for a squeeze and a kiss on the forehead as she walks past me. “You’re fine. They love you. Just don’t feel bad if they don’t have much time for you right now.”
“Right.”
A couple of hours later, Chloe calls to invite me over to their house, and I go, even though I know it’s selfish. My issues are nothing compared to theirs right now. Still, I spill my guts to the two of them about my feelings for Zach.
“Listen, Kyra…” Jason says. “Even if he likes you, he’s not a person. He’s a brand. He doesn’t have control over his own life. Where he’s at right now? I’ve been there, kind of. Whatever he does has to be spun one way or another by his ‘team’, and his mother’s famous for being a stage mom on crack. A girlfriend probably isn’t in the cards right now. She wouldn’t allow it. And a non-famous girl who’s a racial minority… I know that’s completely unfair, but that’s how the world is sometimes.”
We’re standing in Jason and Chloe’s enormous living room with its cathedral ceiling decorated in stained glass and picture windows that show the sweep of the Sandia Mountains reaching up to the starry sky above.
Chloe stands beside me, fidgeting. All is not well with her and Jason. I can tell, and I hate it. They can’t break up. Not after everything they’ve been through. No one deserves happily ever after more.
Now isn’t the time to delve into my issues, to tell Jason that momager is gone and have a general meltdown about how confused I feel. I’m pretty sure Zach doesn’t think of me as a potential girlfriend. That’s just never been my role. The only relationships I’ve ever had were extended hookups when the guy I was with got territorial.
I look from Chloe to Jason and back again, taking in their stressed-out demeanors, and let the conversation end. After I’m done nodding in agreement to whatever Jason says, I let Chloe take me into their kitchen, which is big enough to land a commercial airliner in, and feed me Pie Pops - one of the best sympathy foods ever. I found them in the freezer section of Sprouts and they are the ice cream version of chocolate silk and apple pie on a stick.
My phone buzzes as we seat ourselves in the solarium—the all-glass room off the kitchen with more stunning views of the