Page 67 of The Wrong Exit Strategy

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He says nothing.

Good penguin.

Twenty-Five

Piper

We’re twenty minutes into the drive, and Griffin hasn’t looked at me once.

Not once.

Which would be completely fine if there was a functional reason for it. A podcast. Complicated merging. A particularly demanding stretch of asphalt that required his full attention. But no, we’re on an open highway with approximately one other car in the distance, and the road is a straight shot.

He’s also tapping the steering wheel.

I’ve known this man since I was five. I know his “normal,” and this is the opposite of it.

“Good morning,” I say, testing the air.

“Morning,” he says, eyes forward.

“Sleep well?”

“Great, actually.” A beat. “You?”

“Really well. Best I’ve had in a while.”

“Good. Great day for driving,” Griffin says. “Look at that sky.”

I look at the sky. The sky is doing nothing unusual.

I glance at him from the corner of my eye. “It’s a nice sky.”

“It is,” he agrees. “Classic sky.”

Classic sky?

Okay then.

I’m hyper-aware of my own body this morning. More than usual, which is saying something because the dream I half-remember from before dawn was—well, it wasn’t nothing. My skin feels sensitive in a way I’m desperately attributing to too much sun yesterday, not to the fact that I woke up in Griffin’s arms, his hand on my thigh, and a very specific hardness pressed against my leg.

He smells good. That’s just a fact about a person. It doesn’t have to mean anything.

Get a grip, Piper.

I shift in the seat, hoping the friction might help, but nothing works. I reach for my bag and start rooting around, needing a distraction.

“Fuck,” I mutter.

Griffin glances at me. His first direct look of the morning. Progress. “What’s wrong?”

“My notebook. I left it in the trunk again.” I drop my bag on the floor. “I need to get a separate one for the car. It’s been helping. Writing things down. Getting the noise out of my head.”

“Confessional?” he offers.

I shift again. The thing is, I have something in my head right now that would benefit from being said out loud to a non-judgmental party. Something I’ve been sitting with since yesterday, maybe longer, something that keeps surfacing and doesn’t have anywhere to go.

I swallow. “I can’t.”