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The Last Thing He Told Me: Now a major Apple TV series starring Jennifer Garner and Nikolaj Coster-Waldau
The Last Thing He Told Me: Now a major Apple TV series starring Jennifer Garner and Nikolaj Coster-Waldau
The Last Thing He Told Me: Now a major Apple TV series starring Jennifer Garner and Nikolaj Coster-Waldau
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The Last Thing He Told Me: Now a major Apple TV series starring Jennifer Garner and Nikolaj Coster-Waldau

Rating: 3 out of 5 stars

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* OVER TWO MILLION COPIES SOLD *
* THE NO.1 NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLER *
* THE RICHARD & JUDY BOOK CLUB PICK *

* THE REESE WITHERSPOON BOOK CLUB PICK *
_______________________________________

* NOW A MAJOR TV SERIES ON APPLE TV+ STARRING JENNIFER GARNER *


'The ultimate page turner' - REESE WITHERSPOON
'Powerful, intense and beautifully observed' - T.M. LOGAN
'A brilliant thriller' - JANE CASEY

IT WAS THE LAST THING HE TOLD ME: PROTECT HER

Before Owen Michaels disappears, he manages to smuggle a note to his new wife, Hannah: protect her. Hannah knows exactly who Owen needs her to protect - his teenage daughter, Bailey, who lost her mother tragically as a child. And who wants absolutely nothing to do with her new stepmother.

As her desperate calls to Owen go unanswered, his boss is arrested for fraud and the police start questioning her, Hannah realises that her husband isn't who he said he was. And that Bailey might hold the key to discovering Owen's true identity, and why he disappeared. Together they set out to discover the truth. But as they start putting together the pieces of Owen's past, they soon realise that their lives will never be the same again...

Now a major Apple TV+ series starring Jennifer Garner and Nikolaj Coster-Waldau, discover the book that everyone is talking about...

LanguageEnglish
PublisherViper
Release dateMay 4, 2021
ISBN9781782838777
The Last Thing He Told Me: Now a major Apple TV series starring Jennifer Garner and Nikolaj Coster-Waldau
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Author

Laura Dave

Laura Dave is the #1 New York Times bestselling author of The Last Thing He Told Me, Eight Hundred Grapes, and other novels. Her books have been published in thirty-eight countries and have been chosen by Reese Witherspoon’s Book Club, Book of the Month Club, and the Richard and Judy Book Club. The Last Thing He Told Me was chosen as the Goodreads Mystery & Thriller of the Year for 2021. It is now a limited series on Apple TV+, cocreated by Laura. She resides in Santa Monica, California.

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Rating: 3.107361963190184 out of 5 stars
3/5

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  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Gripping in
    n a different way .A new fan great read. Been reading for 74 yrs I am fussy now keep writing.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Beautiful, scary, big-hearted mystery of a man who walks away from his wife and daughter in the wake of a scandal tied to his employer.
    The characters felt 3-dimensional and the dialogue rang true to life as a sullen, confused teenager and wife struggle to find out why they’d been left behind.
    Fabulous story. Recommended reading for book clubs. I expect lively discussion at my book club. Reese Witherspoon picked another winner here!
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    The Last Thing He Told Me by Laura Dave is a 2021 Simon & Schuster publication. This book got lots of ‘buzz’ last year, was a Reese Witherspoon book club pick, and an instant NYT bestseller. Naturally, I added it to my TBR list… but it took me over a year to finally get around to reading it, but boy was it worth the wait!! The story grabbed my attention immediately, but I couldn’t have guessed how engrossing, smart and ell-plotted the book would be, or how emotional it would become… Hannah and her teenage stepdaughter, Bailey, are having trouble adjusting to one another, though Bailey’s father, Owen, insists his daughter will eventually come around. So far, though, Hannah's hasn't been able to win her over... But then Owen, only barely manages to get a brief, simple message to Hannah, sending her a note which read ‘protect her’- obviously referring to Bailey. With that, he proceeds to vanish- seemingly because his employer runs afoul of the law. But his possible culpability is the least of their worries, and suddenly Hannah and Bailey must work together, whether Bailey likes it or not, if they hope to find Owen, battling unknown forces in their quest to uncover the truth… The suspense is palpable, the mystery deep and compelling. The plotting is tight, the pacing so pitch perfect it was impossible to put this book down. But the story reaches out further than the mystery/thriller elements to create a mother/daughter bond that beyond all else is the cornerstone of the story-And is ultimately the most rewarding pay- off. Overall, this book did indeed live up to the hype. As 2022, with one or two notable exceptions, has mainly served up stale, lukewarm offerings in the thriller category, thus far, I was relieved to discover I had an ace in the hole with this one. Highly recommend!! 5 stars
  • Rating: 2 out of 5 stars
    2/5
    I know I'm in the minority here, but this book didn't work for me. I found too many aspects of the plot just too impossible. Like Hannah's first meetings with Grady and with Charlie. The idea that Owen had time to write a letter to Bailey but leave only a cryptic two-word message for his wife, Hannah, was unbelievable. People were too willing to help Hannah. Bell was every stereotype of a mobster. Bailey was every stereotype of a surly teenager. Hannah was a saint in her reactions to Bailey. Hannah and Owen had a perfect relationship ('til he disappeared). My ability to suspend my disbelief was tested, and failed, with this book.One thing I did like was the way the author revealed facts through increasingly far-back memories. The writing was pretty good. Too bad the plot wasn't
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    This is not fine literature, but its fast pace and entertaining, screenplay-like storyline make it a good summer/escape read. I think that if the author hadn't ended with the "Five Years Later..." chapter it could have segued into a sequel.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    This was an easy read about a stepmother that is as to protect her daughter when her husband disappears. She has to figure out why he disappears in order to protect his sixteen year old daughter.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Fast moving mystery about the reason a step mom is left to protect her missing husband's daughter from something monstrous, but what?
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    When Owen disappears, he leaves behind a sackful of money and a cryptic note, "Protect her." The her, is her stepdaughter, Bailey, who hasn't really taken to her stepmom Hannah in the year she has been married to her dad. Hannah knows he wouldn't have abandoned them without good reason. A U.S. Marshal from Austin, TX asking questions about Owen's whereabouts has Hannah wondering about the jurisdictions involved, so she and Bailey fly to Austin to see if they can find a connection. What they do find is some very hazy memories that Bailey has of visiting the UT football stadium and attending a wedding. They soon discover that Owen isn't really who they think he is.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    While not always plausible, it will make great movie!
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Hannah’s beloved husband disappears and the novel reveals what she discovers about his past as she strives to protect his teen age daughter Hannah
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Audiobook performed by Rebecca Lowman3.5*** From the book jacket Before Owen Michaels disappears, he manages to smuggle a note to his beloved wife of one year: Protect her. Despite her confusion and fear, Hannah Hall knows exactly to whom the note refers – Owen’s sixteen-year-old daughter, Bailey. Bailey, who lost her mother as a child and wants nothing to do with her new stepmother. As Hannah’s increasingly desperate calls to Owen go unanswered, as the FBI arrest Owen’s boss, as a U.S. marshal and federal agents arrive at her Sausalito home unannounced, Hannah quickly realizes her husband isn’t who he said he was. My reactionsA book-club friend once said that she dislikes thrillers because she dislikes being manipulated. I am beginning to feel that way about thrillers, too. However … Hannah and Bailey are a great team. Reluctant barely begins to describe their relationship at the beginning, but Hannah takes Owen’s message seriously. Bailey is in many ways a typical sixteen year-old. She’s truculent and bored one moment, needy and tender, another. Of course, she also is dealing with the stress of a disappearing father and a country whose attention is focused on her family. But together, Hannah and Bailey become quite the team as they search their memories for any scrap of information that might be a clue to where to begin … to find Owen … to find the truth.This is a fast-paced, intriguing book. There are several twists and turns that kept me turning pages long after I should have stopped to do other necessary things. I started listening to the audio in my car and was near the end of disc one when I got home. I had the text handy, as I usually do, and brought it into the house so I could finish up that chapter (as I also frequently do). I finished and then read another chapter, and another, and another, and kept on reading until I had completed the book. Yes, there were some things that bothered me. A few threads that were left hanging. A few inconsistencies that an editor should have caught. (e.g. In one sentence a person is referred to as an actress; in the next paragraph she’s a lawyer.) But it grabbed me and kept me engaged throughout. As thrillers go, it’s pretty good. Rebecca Lowman performs the audiobook. I only listened to the first disc before picking up the text, but she set a good pace and had clear diction, so it was easy to follow.
  • Rating: 2 out of 5 stars
    2/5
    I really wanted to like this one...but honestly I'm still not sure I understand exactly what happened and why the husband had to disappear.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Review of audiobookAbandoned by her parents, Hannah Hall’s grandfather raised her. Now she works as a woodturner, a skill she learned from her grandfather. Despite her grandfather’s love, she keenly feels the absence of her mother in her life. But, one day, Owen Michaels walked into her woodturning ship; it isn’t long before they are married.A little more than a year after their marriage, a twelve-year-old girl knocks on the door and delivers a note from Owen. It’s brief:Protect herHannah knows that the “her” is his sixteen-year-old daughter, Bailey, a teen with whom Hannah has a contentious relationship.A bit later Hannah hears a news report of a scandal at the software/technology company where Owen works; there’s an investigation into fraud and corruption at The Shop and the FBI arrested Owen’s boss. And when Hannah picks Bailey up from school, the girl has a duffel bag . . . filled with more than six hundred thousand dollars . . . that her father left in her locker along with a note telling her how much he loves her and that Hannah loves her, too.And suddenly Hannah realizes she has no idea when Owen will be home or where he is at this moment. The arrival of U. S. Marshal Grady Bradford and a visit from the FBI convinces Hannah she must find out what happened.What will Hannah discover? Where is Owen? And what has he done?=========This suspenseful tale of a man living a lie has Hannah narrating the story in the present day; flashbacks give readers glimpses of Owen and their marriage.This character-driven narrative speaks about the relationship between Hannah and Bailey as well as the relationship between Hannah and Owen. The plot is straightforward; the mystery surrounds Owen’s disappearance and the reason for it. At its heart, this is a story about family, about love, about truth.Nuanced characters, a suspenseful mystery, and a search for the truth make this a compelling narrative. Forced to make some difficult decisions, Hannah struggles as she seeks answers. But, as the unfolding narrative documents the search for the truth, it’s obvious that whatever Owen is hiding is more than the trouble at The Shop.The short chapters in the telling of the tale keep the underlying tension steadily building while twists and turns ultimately lead to the surprising, selfless denouement. Readers learn early on that Bailey is antagonistic toward Hannah, even after they’ve spent more than a year together as a family. And, although the girl’s attitude begins to change, readers are certain to wonder if Hannah’s decision would also be Bailey’s decision. But Hannah, positive that she knows what Owen tried so hard to provide for his daughter, chooses what she believes he would choose, chooses what she believes is honoring Owen’s request to “protect her,” no matter what the personal cost.Rebecca Lowman’s reading voice is pleasant. The story flows easily, keeping the listener involved in the telling of the tale. The character voices remain consistent; the pace comfortable and appropriate. The book is well-narrated.Recommended.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    A promising start and an anticlimax.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    I listened to this one and enjoyed it a lot. I like the main character’s confident answers to authority figures. She and her stepdaughter are left behind when her husband runs, but with no clues to where or why he ran.!!is he a good guy? A bad guy? Sassy stepdaughter has no one else but Hannah.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    This was one of those books I thought I would just have to push myself through it (because my rule is once you start - don't stop) because the beginning was a bit slow/stilted/off. Then in the meat of the book, it was excellent. Lots of this way and that type of drama. Then the end; it ended like a Hallmark Christmas movie. Not what I thought but I'm not the author! I gave it 4 out of 5 stars because of the beginning
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    An interesting plot but I found it hard to believe that Hannah, an artist, was better at solving what happened to her husband than the police and the FBI. The relationship between her and her stepdaughter was little too pat.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    Not gripping enough to qualify as a thriller or suspense novel but a serviceable story about a woman whose husband does a runner when the software company he works for is found guilty of fraud, telling her only to "protect" his taciturn teenage daughter. The plot avoids unbelievable twists but still manages to take unexpected, clever turns.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    Let’s Move Real Slow

    This novel by Laura Dave is of two minds. It wants to be a suspense novel about a woman uncovering the reasons for her husband’s sudden disappearance. It also wants to be a novel about a stepmom trying to build a relationship with her stepdaughter that until the disappearance hasn’t been successful, the disappearance being the catalyst that finally brings the two together. Dave makes a valiant effort to merge these two things together into one novel that will hold a reader’s interest for 300 pages. Unfortunately, the effort doesn’t work very well, because the novel moves real slow, and because the mystery of Owen’s vanishing just isn’t very riveting. Add to that endless repetition and an unsatisfying ending, and it adds up to something like: read it only if you are desperate to something to do.

    Hannah married Owen at the end of a whirlwind romance. She accepted the fact that he had lost his first wife in an accident and she would be a stepmom to teenage Bailey. That doesn’t go well, though Hannah does her best, and Owen encourages and supports her. Then one day, poof, Owen vanishes, leaving her with a bag of money and one direction: Protect her. Protect her serves two purposes in the novel, to intrigue the reader as to why Bailey needs protection, and as a device allowing stepmom and stepdaughter to bond over the issue of trust. So, as Hannah launches a dogged campaign to figure out what happened to Owen, she constantly works at winning Bailey’s trust, and respect, and maybe, eventually, love.

    Owen, whom readers get to know in flashbacks, works as a coder and important cog at a software company developing a privacy program. His boss, Avett and his wife live high and fast. He’s one of those people for whom the rules don’t seem to apply, until he tries bringing his company public promoting a revolutionary program that has yet to work. The government doesn’t take too kindly to this, the whole fraud thing, you know. But, nobody really believes that Owen was materially part of the fraud, so why did he disappear? Unless, maybe, he didn’t want to be found by somebodies from his past. And it’s this that Hannah, with Bailey by her side, has to work out.

    If that, along with the relationship building plot, sounds interesting to you, then you might enjoy the novel. Otherwise, for suspense, you probably want to look elsewhere.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    The Last Thing He Told Me: A Novel. Laura Dave, author; Rebecca Lowman, narratorThis book is a page turner. Hannah and Owen were recently married. He is a widower with a teen-aged daughter, Bailey, who has recently turned 16. She is a bit of a rebel with purple streaked hair. She is not enamored with her stepmother, but Hannah is determined to win her over. Hannah is a wood turner. She designs furniture. Owen works for a company that is designing software meant to protect one’s privacy. Recently the company went public. Someone informed the authorities that the IPO was not conducted properly. The company was raided and the CEO was arrested.On the day of the raid, Hannah receives a cryptic notes from Owen. He asks Hannah to protect Bailey. Bailey discovers a note from her father in a duffle bag in her locker. The bag is filled with rolls of money. Why did her father leave her a bag of money? When Owen does not come home that night or the next, Hannah and Bailey are besides themselves. Owen has disappeared without any explanation. What has he done? Why hasn’t he come home? Did he know about the problems at The Shop? Was he guilty? Where could he be? Together, Hannah and Bailey try to find Owen. They think of possible clues to his whereabouts which lead them to Austin, Texas. Bailey had been there with him, as a child, and as her memories come back, Owen’s secret life is revealed. Does Hannah really know him? Does Bailey? Did he lie about his past? Why has he kept so much from Hannah? Is he safe? The larger question is really not where he is, but who he is. What is Owen’s real identity?The authorities suspect Hannah of knowing about what Owen has done, since they believe that the wife always knows, and yet, she discovers that she is not only ignorant of his possible crimes, she is also completely unaware of his past life. It all seems to have been made up out of whole cloth. Somehow, he has erased it, and as she and Bailey uncover it, they find themselves in great danger. There are people after Owen, people who are not connected with the crimes Owen is suspected of committing at The Shop. They might even be after Bailey. These people are powerful, and Bailey and Hannah need protection. Can Hannah protect Bailey from whatever Owen is afraid of, from those who are after him? The twists and turns lead the reader in several different directions. In the end, did Hannah make the correct choice to protect Bailey? Only time would tell. Would they ever see Owen again? They thought it was highly unlikely.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Excellent story. Some of the relationship issues may be unrealistic
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    The Last Thing He Told Me by Laura DaveHannah receives a note from her Husband (Owen) stating "Protect her". She knows it is in regards to her stepdaughter Bailey. Although they do not have the best relationship, the two set out to find Owen. The closer they get to reality, the closer they become (to each other). Finding the truth will be shocking and life changing.The story moves at a fast pace with attention to detail and engaging dialog. The characters are well developed and likable. The perfect mix (of) mystery, intrigue, suspense, secrets revealed and unconditional love. I was hooked from the first page until the end. I highly recommend The Last Thing He Told Me to all.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    I see very mixed opinions about this book, I really liked it! It was a slower mystery, suspense kind of story than I expected, and more thought provoking, than an edge of your seat kind of read. I found it to be a very engaging kind of story.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    While this is a mystery, it is equally a story about family.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    No real surprises for me. Nice enough for a light thriller. Fast paced and fun but ultimately unmemorable.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    I have read a couple of Reese's recommendations now and they are okay but not outstanding. Cannot say this one was satisfying. It was interesting in some ways but there was really no depth. I didn't care much about the characters or what happened to them. Overall just a meh.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    The plot moves along and there is a moderate amount of suspense. However, there isn't any real depth to the characters. I read this after finishing a 1100 page biography and it was the perfect light, enjoyable read.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    A much hyped book that left me cold.A fast read but left me wondering what the rave reviews were all about. "Meh"
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    When I read the synopsis for The Last Thing He Told Me by Laura Dave, I was hooked. I knew this book would be one that I would really enjoy judging by the sound of it. I didn't judge wrong!The Last Thing He Told Me was a definite page turner with a fast paced plot that I loved! I found myself trying to guess why Owen went missing and why Bailey had to be protected. I kept wondering how much Bailey actually knew or was she just an innocent. I also would second guess other characters' intentions throughout the book. I will say I was way off with my guesses about everything. The book does take a bit of an overdramatic turn about half way through, but although it's a bit far fetched, it's still plausible. Dave did a fantastic job with the world building as well. I felt like I was right there beside Hannah and Bailey the whole time. I especially felt like I was with them when they were in Austin, Texas trying to find out what happened to Owen and his whereabouts since Laura Dave described many landmarks within Austin that I've been to and near. There are no cliff-hangers in this book and all my questions were answered, but I was a little saddened by the ending, not because it wasn't written well (because it was written great!), but because of what happens.I enjoyed the characters in The Last Thing He Told Me very much as they were all very fleshed out and felt realistic. I really loved the family dynamic that eventually develops between Bailey and Hannah. It was interesting seeing them grow closer due to Owen's disappearance. Even the minor characters felt like really people instead of just random characters in a book.Trigger warnings for The Last Thing He Told Me include embezzlement, profanity, lying, violence, and murder.Overall, The Last Thing He Told Me has an intriguing plot that will leave you guessing throughout. You'll never know who who is bad or who's good. I would definitely recommend The Last Thing He Told Me by Laura Dave to those aged 16+ who enjoy fast paced mystery thrillers!
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    A man disappears when the company he works for is accused of fraud. His recently married wife and his sixteen years old daughter need to unravel the mystery. An affirming ending.

Book preview

The Last Thing He Told Me - Laura Dave

Prologue

Owen used to like to tease me about how I lose everything, about how, in my own way, I have raised losing things to an art form. Sunglasses, keys, mittens, baseball hats, stamps, cameras, cell phones, Coke bottles, pens, shoelaces. Socks. Lightbulbs. Ice trays. He isn’t exactly wrong. I did used to have a tendency to misplace things. To get distracted. To forget.

On our second date, I lost the ticket stub for the parking garage where we’d left the cars during dinner. We’d each taken our own car. Owen would later joke about this—would love joking about how I insisted on driving myself to that second date. Even on our wedding night he joked about it. And I joked about how he’d grilled me that night, asking endless questions about my past—about the men I’d left behind, the men who had left me.

He’d called them the could-have-been boys. He raised a glass to them and said, wherever they were, he was grateful to them for not being what I needed, so he got to be the one sitting across from me.

You barely know me, I’d said.

He smiled. It doesn’t feel that way, does it?

He wasn’t wrong. It was overwhelming, what seemed to live between us, right from the start. I like to think that’s why I was distracted. Why I lost the parking ticket.

We parked in the Ritz-Carlton parking garage in downtown San Francisco. And the parking attendant shouted that it didn’t matter if I claimed I’d only been there for dinner.

The fee for a lost parking ticket was a hundred dollars. You could have kept the car here for weeks, the parking attendant said. How do I know you’re not trying to pull a fast one? A hundred dollars plus tax for every lost stub. Read the sign. A hundred dollars plus tax to go home.

Are you sure that it’s lost? Owen asked me. But he was smiling as he said it, as if this were the best piece of news about me that he’d gotten all night.

I was sure. I searched every inch of my rented Volvo anyway and of Owen’s fancy sports car (even though I’d never been in it) and of that gray, impossible parking garage floor. No stub. Not anywhere.

The week after Owen disappeared, I had a dream of him standing in that parking lot. He was wearing the same suit—the same charmed smile. In the dream he was taking off his wedding ring.

Look, Hannah, he said. Now you’ve lost me too.

— Part 1 —

I have little patience with scientists who take a board of wood, look for its thinnest part, and drill a great number of holes where drilling is easy.

—Albert Einstein

If You Answer the Door for Strangers . . .

You see it all the time on television. There’s a knock at the front door. And, on the other side, someone is waiting to tell you the news that changes everything. On television, it’s usually a police chaplain or a firefighter, maybe a uniformed officer from the armed forces. But when I open the door—when I learn that everything is about to change for me—the messenger isn’t a cop or a federal investigator in starched pants. It’s a twelve-year-old girl, in a soccer uniform. Shin guards and all.

Mrs. Michaels? she says.

I hesitate before answering—the way I often do when someone asks me if that is who I am. I am and I’m not. I haven’t changed my name. I was Hannah Hall for the thirty-eight years before I met Owen, and I didn’t see a reason to become someone else after. But Owen and I have been married for a little over a year. And, in that time, I’ve learned not to correct people either way. Because what they really want to know is whether I’m Owen’s wife.

It’s certainly what the twelve-year-old wants to know, which leads me to explain how I can be so certain that she is twelve, having spent most of my life seeing people in two broad categories: child and adult. This change is a result of the last year and a half, a result of my husband’s daughter, Bailey, being the stunningly disinviting age of sixteen. It’s a result of my mistake, upon first meeting the guarded Bailey, of telling her that she looked younger than she was. It was the worst thing I could have done.

Maybe it was the second worst. The worst thing was probably my attempt to make it better by cracking a joke about how I wished someone would age me down. Bailey has barely stomached me since, despite the fact that I now know better than to try to crack a joke of any kind with a sixteen-year-old. Or, really, to try and talk too much at all.

But back to my twelve-year-old friend standing in the doorway, shifting from dirty cleat to dirty cleat.

Mr. Michaels wanted me to give you this, she says.

Then she thrusts out her hand, a folded piece of yellow legal paper inside her palm. HANNAH is written on the front in Owen’s writing.

I take the folded note, hold her eyes. I’m sorry, I say. I’m missing something. Are you a friend of Bailey’s?

Who’s Bailey?

I didn’t expect the answer to be yes. There is an ocean between twelve and sixteen. But I can’t piece this together. Why hasn’t Owen just called me? Why is he involving this girl? My first guess would be that something has happened to Bailey, and Owen couldn’t break away. But Bailey is at home, avoiding me as she usually does, her blasting music (today’s selection: Beautiful: The Carole King Musical) pulsing all the way down the stairs, its own looping reminder that I’m not welcome in her room.

I’m sorry. I’m a little confused . . . where did you see him?

He ran past me in the hall, she says.

For a minute I think she means our hall, the space right behind us. But that doesn’t make sense. We live in a floating home on the bay, a houseboat as they are commonly called, except here in Sausalito, where there’s a community of them. Four hundred of them. Here they are floating homes—all glass and views. Our sidewalk is a dock, our hallway is a living room.

So you saw Mr. Michaels at school?

That’s what I just said. She gives me a look, like where else? Me and my friend Claire were on our way to practice. And he asked us to drop this off. I said I couldn’t come until after practice and he said, fine. He gave us your address.

She holds up a second piece of paper, like proof.

He also gave us twenty bucks, she adds.

The money she doesn’t hold up. Maybe she thinks I’ll take it back.

His phone was broken or something and he couldn’t reach you. I don’t know. He barely slowed down.

So . . . he said his phone was broken?

How else would I know? she says.

Then her phone rings—or I think it’s a phone until she picks it off her waist and it looks more like a high-tech beeper. Are beepers back?

Carole King show tunes. High-tech beepers. Another reason Bailey probably doesn’t have patience for me. There’s a world of teen things I know absolutely nothing about.

The girl taps away on her device, already putting Owen and her twenty-dollar mission behind her. I’m reluctant to let her go, still unsure about what is going on. Maybe this is some kind of weird joke. Maybe Owen thinks this is funny. I don’t think it’s funny. Not yet, anyway.

See you, she says.

She starts walking away, heading down the docks. I watch her get smaller and smaller, the sun down over the bay, a handful of early evening stars lighting her way.

Then I step outside myself. I half expect Owen (my lovely and silly Owen) to jump out from the side of the dock, the rest of the soccer team giggling behind him, the lot of them letting me in on the prank I’m apparently not getting. But he isn’t there. No one is.

So I close our front door. And I look down at the piece of yellow legal paper still folded in my hand. I haven’t opened it yet.

It occurs to me, in the quiet, how much I don’t want to open it. I don’t want to know what the note says. Part of me still wants to hold on to this one last moment—the moment where you still get to believe this is a joke, an error, a big nothing; the moment before you know for sure that something has started that you can no longer stop.

I unfold the paper.

Owen’s note is short. One line, its own puzzle.

Protect her.

Greene Street Before It Was Greene Street

I met Owen a little over two years ago.

I was still living in New York City then. I was living three thousand miles from Sausalito, the small Northern California town that I now call home. Sausalito is on the other side of the Golden Gate from San Francisco, but a world away from city life. Quiet, charming. Sleepy. It’s the place that Owen and Bailey have called home for more than a decade. It is also the polar opposite of my previous life, which kept me squarely in Manhattan, in a lofted storefront on Greene Street in SoHo—a small space with an astronomical rent I never quite believed I could afford. I used it as both my workshop and my showroom.

I turn wood. That’s what I do for work. People usually make a face when I tell them this is my job (however I try to describe it), images of their high school woodshop class coming to mind. Being a woodturner is a little like that, and nothing like that. I like to describe it as sculpting, but instead of sculpting clay, I sculpt wood.

I come by the profession naturally. My grandfather was a woodturner—an excellent one, at that—and his work was at the center of my life for as far back as I can remember. He was at the center of my life for as far back as I can remember, having raised me mostly on his own.

My father, Jack, and my mother, Carole (who preferred that I refer to her as Carole), were largely uninterested in doing any child-rearing. They were largely uninterested in anything except my father’s photography career. My grandfather encouraged my mother to make an effort with me when I was young, but I barely knew my father, who traveled for work 280 days a year. When he did have time off, he hunkered down at his family’s ranch in Sewanee, Tennessee, as opposed to driving the two hours to my grandfather’s house in Franklin to spend time with me. And, shortly after my sixth birthday, when my father left my mother for his assistant—a woman named Gwendolyn who was newly twenty-one—my mother stopped coming home as well. She chased my father down until he took her back. Then she left me with my grandfather full-time.

If it sounds like a sob story, it isn’t. Of course, it isn’t ideal to have your mother all but disappear. It certainly didn’t feel good to be on the receiving end of that choice. But, when I look back now, I think my mother did me a favor exiting the way she did—without apology, without vacillation. At least she made it clear: There was nothing I could have done to make her want to stay.

And, on the other side of her exit, I was happier. My grandfather was stable and kind and he made me dinner every night and waited for me to finish dinner before he announced it was time to get up and read me stories before we went to sleep. And he always let me watch him work.

I loved watching him work. He’d start with an impossibly enormous piece of wood, moving it over a lathe, turning it into something magical. Or, if it was less than magical, he would figure out how to start over again.

That was probably my favorite part of watching him work: when he would throw up his hands and say, "Well, we’ve got to do this different, don’t we?" Then he’d go about finding a new way into what he wanted to create. I’m guessing any psychologist worth her salt would say that it must have given me hope—that I must have thought my grandfather would help me do the same thing for myself. To start again.

But, if anything, I think I took comfort in the opposite. Watching my grandfather work taught me that not everything was fluid. There were certain things that you hit from different angles, but you never gave up on. You did the work that was needed, wherever that work took you.

I never expected to be successful at woodturning—or at my foray from there into making furniture. I half expected I wouldn’t be able to make a living out of it. My grandfather regularly supplemented his income by picking up construction work. But early on, when one of my more impressive dining room tables was featured in Architectural Digest, I developed a niche among a subset of downtown New York City residents. As one of my favorite interior designers explained it, my clients wanted to spend a lot of money decorating their homes in a way that made it look like they weren’t spending any money at all. My rustic wood pieces helped with their mission.

Over time, this devoted clientele turned into a somewhat larger clientele in other coastal cities and resort towns: Los Angeles, Aspen, East Hampton, Park City, San Francisco.

This was how Owen and I met. Avett Thompson—the CEO of the tech firm where Owen worked—was a client. Avett and his wife, the ridiculously gorgeous Belle, were among my most loyal clients.

Belle liked to joke that she was Avett’s trophy wife, which may have been funnier if it also wasn’t so on point. She was a former model, ten years younger than his grown children, born and raised in Australia. My pieces were in every room of her town house in San Francisco (where she and Avett lived together) and her newly constructed country house in St. Helena, a small town on the northern end of Napa Valley where Belle tended to retreat alone.

I had met Avett only a handful of times before he and Owen showed up at my workshop. They were in New York for an investor meeting and Belle wanted them to stop by to check on a rolled-edge side table she’d asked me to make for their bedroom. Avett wasn’t sure what he should be checking for, something about how the table would look with the bed frame—the bed frame that would hold their ten-thousand-dollar organic mattress.

Avett couldn’t have cared less, honestly. When he and Owen walked in, he was in a sharp blue suit, his graying hair crunchy with hair gel, the phone glued to his ear. He was in the middle of a phone call. He took one look at the side table and briefly covered the mouthpiece.

Looks fine to me, he said. We good here?

Then, before I answered, he headed outside.

Owen, on the other hand, was mesmerized. He did a slow sweep of the whole workshop, stopping to study each piece.

I watched him as he walked around. He was such a confusing picture: This long-limbed guy with shaggy blond hair and sun-drenched skin, in worn-out Converse sneakers. All of which seemed at odds with his fancy sports jacket. It was almost like he fell off a surfboard into the jacket, the starched shirt beneath it.

I realized I was staring and started to turn away just as Owen stopped in front of my favorite piece—a farm table that I used as a desk.

My computer and newspapers and small tools covered most of it. You could only make out the table beneath if you were really looking. He was. He took in the stiff redwood that I had chiseled down, gently yellowing the corners, welding rough metal to each edge.

Was Owen the first customer to notice the table? No, of course not. But he was the first to bend down, just like I’d often do, running his fingers along the sharp metal and holding the table there.

He turned his head and looked up at me. Ouch, he said.

Try bumping up against it in the middle of the night, I said.

Owen stood back up, giving the table a tap goodbye. Then he walked over to me. He walked over to me until somehow we were standing close to each other—too close, really, for me not to wonder how we’d gotten there. I probably should have felt self-conscious about my tank top and paint-splattered jeans, the messy bun on top of my head, my unwashed curls falling out of it. I felt something else though, watching him look at me.

So, he said, what’s the asking price?

Actually, the table is the only piece in the showroom that’s not for sale, I said.

Because it could cause injury? he said.

Exactly, I said.

This was when he smiled. When Owen smiled. It was like the title of a bad pop song. To be clear, it wasn’t that his smile lit up his face. It wasn’t anything as sentimental or explosive as that. It was more that his smile—this generous, childlike smile—made him seem kind. It made him seem kind in a way I wasn’t used to running into on Greene Street in downtown Manhattan. It was expansive in a way I’d started to doubt I’d ever run into on Greene Street in downtown Manhattan.

So, no negotiating on the table then? he said.

Afraid not, but I could show you some different pieces?

How about a lesson instead? You could show me how to make a similar table for myself, but maybe with slightly kinder edges . . . he said. I’ll sign a waiver. Any injuries acquired would be at my own risk.

I was still smiling, but I felt confused. Because all of a sudden I didn’t think we were talking about the table. I felt fairly confident that we weren’t. I felt as confident as a woman could who had spent the last two years engaged to a man whom she’d realized she couldn’t marry. Two weeks before their wedding.

Look, Ethan . . . I said.

Owen, he corrected.

Owen. That’s nice of you to ask, I said, but I kind of have a no-dating policy with clients.

Well, it’s a good thing I can’t afford to buy anything you’re selling then, he said.

But that stopped him. He shrugged, as if to say some other time, and headed toward the door and Avett, who was pacing back and forth on the sidewalk, still on his phone call, yelling at the person on the other end.

He was almost out the door. He was almost gone. But I felt instantly—and strongly—the need to reach out and stop him from leaving, to say that I hadn’t meant it. I’d meant something else. I’d meant he should stay.

I’m not saying it was love at first sight. What I’m saying is that a part of me wanted to do something to stop him from walking away. I wanted to be around that stretched-out smile a little longer.

Wait, I said. I looked around, searching for something to hold him there, zeroing in on a textile that belonged to another client, holding it up. This is for Belle.

It was not my finest moment. And, as my former fiancé would tell you, it was also completely out of character for me to reach out to someone as opposed to pulling away.

I’ll make sure she gets it, he said.

He took it from me, avoiding my eyes.

For the record, I have one too. A no-dating policy. I’m a single father, and it goes with the territory . . . He paused. But my daughter’s a theater junkie. And I’ll lose serious points if I don’t see a play while I’m in New York.

He motioned toward an angry Avett, screaming on the sidewalk.

A play’s not exactly Avett’s thing, as surprising as that sounds . . .

Very, I said.

So . . . what do you think? Do you want to come?

He didn’t move closer, but he did look up. He looked up and met my eyes.

Let’s not consider it a date, he said. It will be a onetime thing. We’ll agree on that going in. Just dinner and a play. Nice to meet you.

Because of our policies? I said.

His smile returned, open and generous. Yes, he said. Because of them.

What’s that smell? Bailey asks.

I’m pulled from my memory to find Bailey standing in the kitchen doorway. She looks irritated standing there in a chunky sweater—a messenger bag slung over her shoulder, her purple-streaked hair caught beneath its strap.

I smile at her, my phone cradled under my chin. I have been trying to reach Owen, unsuccessfully, the phone going to voice mail. Again. And again.

Sorry, I didn’t see you there, I say.

She doesn’t respond, her mouth pinched. I put my phone away, ignoring her perma-scowl. She’s a beauty, despite it. She’s a beauty in a way that I’ve noticed strikes people when she walks into a room. She doesn’t look much like Owen—her purple hair naturally a chestnut brown, her eyes dark and fierce. They’re intense—those eyes. They pull you in. Owen says that they’re just like her grandfather’s (her mother’s father), which is why they named her after him. A girl named Bailey. Just Bailey.

Where’s my dad? she says. He’s supposed to drive me to play practice.

My body tenses as I feel Owen’s note in my pocket, like a weight.

Protect her.

I’m sure he’s on his way, I say. Let’s eat some dinner.

Is that what smells? she says.

She wrinkles her nose, just in case it isn’t clear that the smell to which she is referring isn’t one she likes.

It’s the linguine that you had at Poggio, I say.

She gives me a blank look, as though Poggio isn’t her favorite local restaurant, as though we weren’t there for dinner just a few weeks before to celebrate her sixteenth birthday. Bailey ordered that night’s special—a homemade multigrain linguini in a brown butter sauce. And Owen gave her a little taste of his glass of Malbec to go with it. I thought she loved the pasta. But maybe what she loved was drinking wine with her father.

I put a heaping portion on a plate and place it on the kitchen island.

Try a little, I say. You’re going to like it.

Bailey stares at me, trying to decide if she is in the mood for a showdown—if she’s in the mood for her father’s disappointment, should I snitch to him about her fast, dinnerless exit. Deciding against it, she bites back her annoyance and hops onto her barstool.

Fine, she says. I’ll have a little.

Bailey almost tries with me. That’s the worst part. She isn’t a bad kid or a menace. She’s a good kid in a situation she hates. I just happen to be that situation.

There are the obvious reasons why a teenage girl would be averse to her father’s new wife, especially Bailey, who had a good thing going when it was just the two of them together, best friends, Owen

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