Instead, he turns away.
"Our plane leaves in two hours," he says. "We'll have to head out soon."
It feels oddly like a brusque dismissal, his stance doing nothing to warm his words. I mumble, "okay," under my breath as I head out of the shower, grabbing a towel on my way. I dry off, wrapping it around me, as I go back into the bedroom.
My eyes are drawn to his clothes on the floor, but I leave them there, focusing my attention on my own things. I dress quickly and pack, throwing my hair into a ponytail before making my way down to the first floor of the suite.
I can hear the shower turn off, hear Naz going about his business upstairs, as I walk to the vast windows and gaze out. We've been here for two days, yet it feels like we just arrived hours ago. There's so much I haven't done, so much I haven't seen, parts of the suite I haven't even ventured to yet.
Naz comes down, dressed back in a black suit. He's distracted as we check out, distracted on the drive to the airport in the limo. The others are already there, on the tarmac, belongings being loaded onto the plane when we make it that far. Naz bypasses them all, guiding me straight onto the plane.
We sit in the same seats as before.
The others take their same seats, too.
They're more subdued today, nobody saying much of anything as we settle in for the trip home. I glance around at their faces, my gaze settling on the seat across from me.
Empty.
We're coming home with one less person than we went to Vegas with.
You cannot step in the same river twice.
The first day of philosophy class, Professor Santino stood at the front of the classroom and uttered those words, quoting the philosopher Heraclitus. He said it with such conviction, and it made so much sense in theory, until he asked us to explain what it meant.
I didn't raise my hand.
There were a few responses, but they always went along two lines-either it's because you've changed, or it's because the river has. The debate lasted nearly the entire hour. At the end of the class, someone asked Santino to tell us which side was right.
The man shrugged a shoulder, absently tapping his pointer stick against the hard floor. "Nobody knows. Maybe it's both."
Standing in my dorm room so many months later, surrounded by all of my things, jet-legged and feeling out of place, I think I finally understand it. I'm not the same person who left here forty-eight hours ago.
And when Melody bursts in, wide-eyed and frantic, I seem to instinctively know: this place isn't the same, either. Minutes, hours, days passed... time that changed me, time I can never get back or experience here. Time I wasn't around for.
Lost time.
It changes everything.
Melody's breathing hard, staring at me like a mad woman. I freeze in front of my closet, a stack of hangers in my hand as I prepare to pack them in a cardboard box. Her eyes hold secrets she's desperate to spill, but I can tell from her expression they might not be ones I want to hear.
"Have you heard?" she asks, her eyes flickering toward my desk, where Naz quietly stacks up my books, his back to us.
"What?"
"Satan," she says, shutting the door. "He's dead!"
I blink rapidly. "Huh?"
"Satan," she says again. "Santino! He's dead!"
My stomach sinks, everything inside of me coiling, barely holding the swell of nausea down. I have a million questions, but all that sputters out are mere syllables. "What? When? How?"
"It happened Thursday … or Friday. I don't know. But somebody killed him! They stabbed him or something... impaled him." Her voice drops low, cracking as she steps toward me. "They said it was his pointer thingy, that the stick was like, stuck, in his chest! Can you believe it?"
I can't. Her words hit me, bouncing off the surface, refusing to sink in. How can he be dead? "Who did it? Who killed him?"
"Don't know," she says. "The police are investigating, but I don't think they've arrested anyone. It's just... wow. Someone killed him."
"Who would do such a thing?" I look at Naz, who is packing up my books in silence. "Naz?"
He turns at the sound of his name, raising his eyebrows. "Yes?"
"Professor Santino... he's dead!"
His expression is stoic. "I heard."
"Can you believe it?"
"Yes," he says, his curt answer catching me off guard. "I'm only amazed it didn't happen sooner."
"What? What do you mean?"
"Daniel didn't have a lot of friends, Karissa," he says. "It was only a matter of time before he pushed the wrong button."
I stare at him. How can he be so unaffected? Sure, Santino wasn't nice, but Naz knew the man.
Melody clears her throat, drawing my attention back to her. She launches into conspiracy theories, who could've done what and why and how, like this is a game of Clue and she can riddle it out with the right game pieces. I listen to her, my attention consistently shifting to Naz. He steadily packs, but I can tell he's listening.
"It's just so crazy," Melody says after a moment. "Thank God we're moving out this week. I don't know if I feel safe here right now, you know? It's creepy."
"I know," I whisper. "My mom always said New York was too dangerous."
A loud whack echoes through the room. I flinch as Melody gasps. My eyes dart to Naz in shock as he reaches down and picks up a textbook from the floor that he dropped. Wordlessly, he places it in the box, continuing on with the others, as if he hadn't interrupted.
"So you're packing now," Melody says. "Are you going home for the summer?"
Before I can respond, Naz interjects. "Forever."
"What?" Melody asks.
"She's going home forever," Naz clarifies.
Melody's gaze shifts between us. "Wait, what? You're moving back in with your mother?"
"No," I say quietly. "I'm moving in with Naz."
These were things I hadn't given much thought to last night. In fact, it didn't really hit me until we landed in New Jersey and Naz told me he'd help me gather my things to move in.
I told him that was crazy; I couldn't live with him.
He told me it would be crazy not to, considering we were engaged.
Melody stares at me with shock, and I almost feel guilty. The girl doesn't know the half of it yet.
"You're moving in together?" she gasps. "Already?"
"Uh, yeah."
"Are you ready for all that?"
Such a loaded question, one I'm not even sure the answer to. Before I can conjure up a response, Naz chimes in, laying it all out on the table. "I certainly hope she's ready, considering she agreed to marry me."
Melody looks like she's been slapped, her eyes so wide I'm surprised they haven't popped out of their sockets. She just stares at me, and I smile sheepishly, holding out my hand to show her the ring.
I expect her to be confused.
Maybe even angry.
But I don't anticipate her excitement.
She lets out the loudest shriek as she grabs my hand, jumping up and down with delight, yelling at me to spill every last detail. I explain what I can, what I remember. It's not much of a story, but the dreamy look she gets in her eyes tells me it's enough to make her swoon.
Naz remains quiet throughout my story.
He's still packing like it's the only thing that matters.
Melody is rambling too fast for me to keep up when a series of familiar beeps rings out in the room, interrupting her train of thought. Naz pulls out his phone, glancing at it, and turns to me. "I have to get going. Have something to handle for work."
"Okay."
"I'll be back to pick you."
"I, uh... I'd rather stay here tonight."
A look of hurt passes across his face, wounded pride, like I've rejected him. "You want to sleep here?"
"Yes. I mean, if you don't mind. I have to finish packing, and it'll give me a chance to catch up with Melody."
Naz looks like he's going to argue, but his phone ringing again stops him. Sighing, he kisses the side of my head and strides toward the door. "I'll be back tomorrow morning."
He walks out without waiting for me to escort him down, and I shrug it off. What are they going to do? Evict me? Certainly isn't the first time he's wandered these halls alone.
I turn to Melody as she flops down on her bed, staring off into space, shell-shocked. "You're engaged."
"I am."
Her skeptical gaze turns to me. "Have you told your mother?"
"No," I whisper. "Not yet."
Loud laughter bursts from Melody, like it's the funniest thing she's ever heard. I smile at the absurdity, although my insides are knotted tightly, so much I can hardly breathe.