“Farrow!” a guy calls from inside the galley. Farrow keeps his gaze onme.
 
 I keep mine onhim.
 
 Then he walks backwards to the yacht door, towards that voice. “Need anything, wolfscout?”
 
 Yeah.
 
 I shake my head. “No.”
 
 His gaze drops to the black shirt in my hand, and his smile stretches wide. “Keepit.”
 
 “What?”
 
 “My shirt. I don’t need itback.”
 
 Holy…shit. I have no time to protest or offer to return the shirt—he already exits into thegalley.
 
 You’ll never believe this, but I’m smiling. I laugh to myself, my chest swelling with a better, lighter feeling. I glance back at the shut door, then the dark horizon. Ocean ripples below, calling me, to freeme.
 
 Fuckit.
 
 I run. Onto the sunbathing cushions, and I leap and dive off the bow. Water cocoons me like a hug and a welcomehome.
 
 1
 
 MAXIMOFF HALE
 
 Hurrying,I pull on a plain green shirt in a lake house bedroom. My elbow catches a bear-shaped lamp—I reach out too late.Fuck.
 
 Glass crashes on the hardwood andshatters.
 
 I quickly squat, barefoot, and pick up the larger shards. All things considered with my family issues, a broken lamp isn’t a bigdeal.
 
 I can handleit.
 
 As I gather the pieces, Farrow lowers to a crouch and helps collect the sharp glass—also while fitting in his earpiece. A radio is already clipped to his blackpants.
 
 I open my mouth to protest. To say,I gotit.
 
 But I stop myself and just watch him. My tattooed-childhood-crush-turned boyfriend. We were just watchingThe Fast and the Furiouson my laptop. I paused the movie only fifteen minutesin.
 
 Because both of our phones rang unceremoniously. I should already be halfway downstairs. But I’d much rather be dealing with a broken lamp withFarrow.
 
 He sweeps the tiny slivers into his palm, his focus on the fragments near my feet. And the more I watch him, the more I think,luckyme.
 
 Seriously, I’m damnlucky.
 
 A few hours ago we hiked the top of amountain.
 
 I told him I lovedhim.
 
 He said he lovedme.
 
 Adrenaline still pumps hot in my veins from the moment, but the current fallout from the media clings to me like a backpack of cement. He’s the only one I’d evenconsiderunbuckling the backpack for and passing half theweight.
 
 When I eye his silver-ringed fingers, he catches me staring. I lift my gaze higher to the tattooed swords on his throat, then his strong jaw and amusedlips.
 
 His browsspike.