I twisted my hands together. I no longer saw the images on my screen. I was lost. I needed more coffee—or air. I needed space away from the incessant clicking that came from Addie’s tongue when she spoke.
 
 I mouthed to her that I’d be back in a few minutes. I pushed through the lobby, ignoring the long faces of the women already lined up for the morning. Meg looked confused.
 
 “Be right back,” I explained.
 
 There was a small campus store a few minutes from our building. I headed that direction. At least if I returned with a fresh cup it will have looked like I accomplished something.
 
 I stood in line to fill a cardboard cup, reading the headlines of the newspapers and magazines while I waited. Students talked about classes. I overheard someone mention plans for fall break. That was next month.
 
 I paid for my coffee and stepped into the sunlight. D.C. had already said goodbye to the sweltering summer. There was a new coolness in the air.
 
 My phone vibrated and I awkwardly reached in my bag to grab it without spilling my coffee.
 
 “Good morning,” Vaughn spoke before I could say hi.
 
 “Good morning.” I stopped by a tree, holding the cup close to my chest.
 
 “Get my notes?”
 
 “I did. I liked the second one.”
 
 “Both of them are true. I just got out of my first meeting.”
 
 Students walked past me. “I’m headed into one now. I stopped to get more coffee.”
 
 “Tired?”
 
 I pinched my lips together. “Maybe. You’re not?”
 
 “Exhausted.” His voice almost made me tremble.
 
 I smiled. I liked knowing I was the reason he was tired. That every time he yawned or his eyes burned today it would be because we had spent the night together. He felt everything I felt.
 
 I leaned against the bark. “Thanks for coming over last night.”
 
 “Sounded like you needed a friend.”
 
 “I did.” I hadn’t told Vaughn anything about Garrett. In fact, we never talked about why he showed up. I had greedily soaked up an excuse to focus on something else.
 
 “And tonight? Does dinner work for you?”
 
 This was the part where I could have played hard-to-get. I could have told him I needed a few nights before I was free.
 
 “Yes.”
 
 “I’ll pick you up at seven.”
 
 “Where are we going?” I asked.
 
 “There’s this Italian place in Georgetown where the women roll the pasta by hand. You’ll like it.”
 
 “How do you know I like Italian?” I teased, stalling to keep him on the phone. I liked the sound of his voice too much.
 
 “See you then.”
 
 “Bye.”
 
 I let my eyes close for only a second. But it was a beautiful second.