Ari chuckles, bringing out the deep dimples in his chin. My own lips twitch as we ease into a slow, comfortable stride on the sidewalk.
“Why haven’t you left Ohio?” he asks.
“Oh.” I inhale sharply. “You were serious about the question thing…”
“Yes, I was.”
“Uh…” We part slightly as a ghost, a witch, and a vampire run between us with overflowing candy buckets. “Well…” I clear my throat, “I wanted to go… anywhere but here for school but my parents convinced me to stay back home for a while to get my gen-ed credits out of the way first.”
Ari nods to show he’s listening. “Not a horrible idea nowadays, I hear.”
“It’s not, no. But it’s just a delay on the inevitable that they seem to have a hard time accepting.”
“You leaving them?”
“Yep.” I exhale. “I don’t know why but they’ve always been a little clingy, sort of.”
“I’m sure they mean well,” he says.
“They do. Definitely.”
“My parents were the same way.”
“Oh, yeah?” I chuckle. “How’d you get them off your back?”
“They died.”
I pause mid-stride. “Oh, god. I’m sorry.”
He laughs and motions for me to continue with him. “Don’t be. It was ages ago. Though, even now, I can still feel them lingering over my shoulder, waiting for me to screw up.”
I study his face as we walk forward. He can’t possibly be a day over twenty-five — thirty tops — but he speaks like he’s much older than that.
We come to a stop at the corner before crossing it.
I point right. “This is my street,” I say.
Ari turns with me, almost before I even announce it. The busy downtown streets fade off behind us as we enter a quieter residential area. House lights illuminate our way forward, each porch decorated with jack-o-lanterns and spooky clings on the windows.
“Nice neighborhood,” Ari says.
“It’s not too bad,” I say.
“It looks like you’ve…” he pauses and smiles, “you’ve lived a good life here, Tannis.”
I breathe a laugh. “It could be worse,” I say with a nod.
“Are you happy?”
The question strikes me oddly. I come to a slow stop and he does, too, his eyes locked on my face as he waits for an answer.
My tongue weighs heavy in my mouth. “Hm,” I hum.
“What?” he asks.
“Nothing. I… just realized that no one’s ever asked me that before.”
Ari smiles.