I watch him go and I don’t realize how tightly I’m holding my fork until he’s out of sight, vanished into his office. When I shift my gaze back to the table, I find Jet watching me like he knows what I’m thinking. I get the feeling he knows who just called too.
 
 “Why did you two fight?” I ask.
 
 “Why do you think?”
 
 Me. They fought over me.
 
 A long silence follows. I pick up my wine, but my stomach protests. I touch my lips to the rim of the glass, but don’t open my mouth, don’t swallow. Jet’s eyes are on me all along.
 
 “Does he always jump when she calls?” I ask after setting my glass down.
 
 “When who calls?”
 
 “Don’t be like that.”
 
 “Like what?”
 
 “Nothing. Forget it.” I pick up some pasta, but stop. “You know, I liked you a lot better the other night.”
 
 “Why’s that?”
 
 “You told me about your nightmares.”
 
 “You liked me better because I told you I have nightmares?” I watch his throat work when he swallows. This is harder for him than he wants to let on.
 
 “I liked your honesty. Your… humanness.”
 
 “Myhumanness? Is that a word?”
 
 I study him. “I don’t think Cassian’s ever been scared.”
 
 Jet breaks the lock of our eyes. “Don’t be so sure,” hesays seriously. I want to ask what he means, but he continues before I can. “What do you want, Allegra?”
 
 “I want you the way you were the other night,” I tell him and as the words come unbidden, I realize how raw they sound.
 
 Jet studies me, eyes steady. “I’m not sure that’s what Cassian wants.”
 
 “Is that why the bruise?”
 
 “You do seem to come up a lot in conversation lately.”
 
 “What do you want, Jet?” I ask.
 
 He considers, looks at his plate of food. I don’t think either of us are hungry anymore. He shifts his gaze back to mine. “Maybe I want to be the way we were the other night too.”
 
 I smile, unsure of the chaos of emotions inside my body right now. I love Cassian. I know that. This Jet, though, this vulnerable version of Jet? He’s special. I just haven’t figured out how.
 
 “Who did you trust who is untrustworthy?” I ask because I want to know about his scars, and I remember how he’d told me that.
 
 His eyes narrow thoughtfully, and he must remember our conversation the other night because one corner of his mouth lifts up into a grin.
 
 “My brother,” he answers and I’m not sure if I expected him to tell me or not.
 
 “Your brother did that to you?”
 
 He glances at my hand, the one without the bandage. “Sometimes family can be a real drag.” His mouth stretches into a grin that’s not remotely close to a smile. He eats a bite of pasta, leans back in his chair and studies me. “He promised to look after Vivi and Gage after Seth,” he says.
 
 I raise my eyebrows.