Another difference between us? Violet had a home to return to.
All I had was a message from my brother:
“Don’t come back here, Layla. Don’t come home acting like anybody owes you something.”
So I followed Violet to her city.
Not in a creepy way. In a broke-twenty-five-year-old-with-no-plan kind of way.
My apartment was tiny. The pipes screamed every morning, and the kitchen window refused to shut, but it was mine.
Violet showed up during the first week with groceries and a plant I managed to kill in nine days.
“You need curtains,” she said. “Maybe a rug.”
“I need rent money, V.”
“You need a home-cooked meal. That’ll fix everything.”
That was how I met Rick—Violet’s grandfather.
The first Sunday Violet brought me to his estate, I stood in his dining room pretending I understood the art on the walls. I complimented the silverware, staring at the array of forks and knives like I was preparing for surgery.