She looked at me like I was contemptibly funny. “Lucinda and Daddy and I are all going.”
Had Parker just called my father Daddy? Nobody called my father Daddy. Not even me.
“We’re going to make a night of it,” she went on.
“No,” I said.
She went on, “Maybe hit a Brazilian steakhouse for dinner. Too bad you can’t join.”
“No,” I said again.
She absolutely loved how furious this was making me. “No what?” she asked, knowing perfectly well.
“No. This is my thing. And I don’t want you there.”
“That’s so funny,” she said. “Because, as usual, I don’t think you can stop me.” Then she waved at me all cutesy, like Buh-bye, before seeming to remember one last thing. “Oh! Did you get my comment?”
I shook my head. Curious, despite myself.
“The one I left at your Etsy store today.” Then she gave me a mischievous shrug and turned to go.
But I guess this was when the tsunami started to reach the shore. “Why?” I called after her.
Parker turned.
“Why?” I said again—all the pressure in my body making the sound tight and sharp. “Why, why, why, why, why can’t you just leave me the hell alone?”
And there it was. She got me in the end. As always. And now her work was done. “I don’t know,” she said with a cheerful shrug before turning to walk away. “It’s just so fun to watch you fall apart.”
I blinked after her for a second, and then I turned to push out the doors and escape into the sunshine. But as I did, all that building anger somehow shot into my arm like a bolt of lightning—and I accidentally on purpose slammed the coffee-shop door behind me.
The glass coffee-shop door.
Which, apparently—I was about to discover—had a broken soft-close hinge.
Because when I slammed it? It slammed. Hard.
It felt satisfying for a second, I’ll admit. But then, as if in slo-mo, all the glass popped, shattered, and rained to the floor.
I turned back at the sound and stared at the violence of what I’d done. The gaping hole of the empty doorframe. Glass everywhere. People staring. All movement and conversation frozen. A teenager started filming with his phone.
I put my hand to my mouth. I looked up and saw Hazel One over by the coffee station. She was the first person to spring into action, and she grabbed a broom and a dustpan and came my way.
“I’m so sorry,” I said as she got close. “I didn’t mean to do that.” Then, of course: “I’ll pay for it. I’ll fix it.” I’d figure it out somehow.
“Don’t worry,” Hazel One said kindly. “The hinge is broken. Happens all the time.”
It definitely did not happen all the time.
But I was too mortified to argue.
And then the craziest, trippiest, most unreal thing I’ve ever seen in my life happened right before my eyes. Hazel One leaned her broom against the doorjamb for a second, preparing to start sweeping up the mess, and she pulled out a ponytail holder from her apron pocket, lifted her hands behind her head to twist her hair into it, and when she dropped her hands again … she was Hazel Two.
What I’m saying is this: Hazel One always wore her brown hair down, and Hazel Two always wore her brown hair in a ponytail—and that’s how I could tell them apart. And in that one impossible moment, I watched Hazel One become Hazel Two right before my eyes.
Like a horror movie.
I gasped out loud at the sight.
“Wait…” I said, taking a step back. “What just happened?”
“When?” Hazel Two asked, starting to sweep.
“Are you Hazel One or Hazel Two?”
Now she looked up. I could feel the confusion in her expression. “Huh?”
“Of the two Hazels who work here,” I said, with a feeling like this question was already doomed, “which one are you?”
A pause. Then she shook her head. “I’m the only Hazel who works here.”
“Always?” I asked. “Has there ever been another Hazel working here?”
“Nope,” Hazel said, getting back to sweeping. “Just me.”
Oh, my god. There was only one Hazel who worked here. The girl with the bob and the girl with the ponytail were the same person.
Twenty
I KNEW, OF course, that I couldn’t trust my perceptions.
I knew that my brain was having a rough month.
But it was so strange to witness it correcting itself.
I really wasn’t okay. Not yet.