Zac:Not really, no.
 
 Love: Even with all the personal things you’ve told me?
 
 Zac: Nope.If it’s meant to happen, it will. Nothing I can do about it.
 
 He says if I’m meant to find out, I will.
 
 But the nagging voice in my head screams…
 
 What if I already have?
 
 The line begins to pick up, and I estimate that I should be at the front in less than five minutes.
 
 Zac: I mean, I could always stop texting you. If that’s what you want.
 
 Do youwant him to stop texting you?
 
 Be honest, Vee.
 
 Do you?
 
 No.
 
 No, I don’t.
 
 Love: I’m just sayingwe shouldn’t tell each other where we are from now on. I think last night was WAY too close.
 
 Zac: Ditto.
 
 Love: And no more sharing specific stuff like tattoos. It makes it too easy to find out who we’re talking to and we made a pact for a reason.
 
 Zac: Yes, ma’am.
 
 “Miss?” The cashier calls for my attention, and I jerk, realizing that I’m up next. I squeeze my phone inside my jeans pocket without answering and dump the water bottles on the checkout counter.
 
 * * *
 
 Dia’s lime-green car has never been what one would call “subtle.” I could always spot it from a distance, day or night, no matter the weather, but I still come to doubt my own eyes when I drive down the cul-de-sac leading to my house and make out her Beetle in my driveway.
 
 I blink one time.
 
 Two times.
 
 She’s really here.
 
 At my house.
 
 At 10:30 a.m. on a Saturday morning.
 
 I fill the last available parking space in the lot before stretching my arm out to grab the reusable grocery bags in the back seat. Try as I may, I can’t seem to come up with a feasible explanation to justify her presence here. Could it be that she forgot something at my house the last time we hung out?
 
 Her loyalty, perhaps?
 
 I proceed to the front door, my attempts at containing my nerves falling flat, and cross the threshold. At first sight, the kitchen is empty, but I flip my head to find Dia sitting on our velvet entryway bench.
 
 A basket of mini muffins rests on her laps.
 
 I wonder what to make of her visit until the familiar scent of apple pecan muffins tips me off as to her intentions. She got my favorites—wild guess: she’s here to apologize.