She was on the corner of Mifflin and Main and could swear — swear — she’d just seen someone jumping out of the second-story window of Regina’s mansion.
She killed the engine, grabbed her nightstick, and crept toward the gap in Regina’s hedge, which she knew would be the spot someone tried to get out through. She took a quick breath and heard footsteps, raised the stick, and slashed downward when she saw the dark figure.
The stick connected, and the figure went to the ground.
After a groan, she heard a familiar voice say, — Ow.
— Graham? — she said, kneeling and putting a hand on his back. — What the hell are you doing here?
Realizing the answer to her own question, she helped him up, brushed him off.
— Ah. I get it. Well, sorry. You okay? — she asked.
— The mayor needed me to…
— …sleep with her?
They stared at each other, and then Graham tried to explain.
Emma, a little grossed out by him, didn’t want to hear it.
Just like that, her attitude toward intrigue changed.
CHAPTER 6
THE HEART IS A LONELY HUNTER
— You do realize, — Mary Margaret said, eating her cereal, — that those were mine. Right?
Emma looked across the kitchen at the shattered vase and pile of dripping flowers in the corner. She’d come out and seen them and had lost control. A little.
She couldn’t stand the idea of Graham continuing with his quest to get her into bed, especially now that she knew about Regina. She’d seen the flowers, assumed they were from him, and had thrown them across the room. Sometimes she was definitive.
Sometimes he was, too. Last night, Emma had gone to Granny’s Diner for a nightcap, only to find Sheriff Graham there, completely hammered and completely belligerent. Things had been very strange between them in the few days that had passed since she’d caught him outside of Regina’s, and in a way, this was to be expected. He couldn’t handle the idea of someone knowing his secrets, which was true of all the men she’d tracked.
Sudden disdain. That was what she had thought, at least, when Graham drunkenly tossed a dart in her direction and nearly hit her. Things got stranger, though, after she left Granny’s Diner and he followed her out to the street.
— Stranger— was one way to say it. She left the diner and he grabbed his jacket and followed her out. Outside, the air was crisp.
— Let me talk to you, — he said on the sidewalk.
She didn’t stop, but she did slow.
— About what? — she said eventually.
Graham hurried to catch up. — I’m sorry. Let me apologize. Let me — let me explain, Emma. Everything.
— Explain what? You’re sleeping with the mayor, who I don’t particularly like, who is trying to keep me from my son, and who is, incidentally, our boss. There’s nothing to explain. I don’t want your apology. Go home.
— But I don’t feel anything with her. I don’t — you don’t understand.
Emma stopped walking and turned to face him.
— I’ve been in bad relationships, Graham, — she said. — Big deal. Get out of it and get over yourself. It’s not my problem.
— I am trying to explain this to you, — he said. — Because I do feel something. With yon.
This caught Emma off guard.
He leaned forward and kissed her before she could react.
For Emma, it was a foreign feeling to be caught off guard in this way, and she honestly hadn’t expected him to do something so brazen. For a fleeting moment before the anger came, she allowed herself to feel what it might be like to be with Graham. Not for long. But it was a nice moment. The kind of feeling she hadn’t felt for a long time.
She couldn’t show him that, though.
— What the hell are you doing? — Emma demanded, pulling away. There was a faraway look in Graham’s eyes.
— Did you just see that? — he said quickly, looking around.
— Did I see you kiss me without my consent? — Emma said angrily. — Yes. I was here.
— No. Did you see that wolf?
— Don’t cross lines like that with me again, — Emma warned, stepping back, not interested in any more of his games. — It’s not okay. You’re drunk, and that was a little too close to assault for my comfort. Go home, get over this.
— I’m sorry, — he said. — I just want to feel something. I can’t…
— Fine, — Emma said. — Feel something. That’s good. But whatever it is, you’re not gonna feel it with me.
That was last night. She hadn’t stopped thinking about the kiss since then.
— Yours? — Emma said, looking at Mary Margaret. — I thought they were from Graham.
— Um, no, — Mary Margaret said. — They were from Dr. Whale.
— Oh, — Emma said, going to the cabinet for the dustpan. — Oh.
As Emma cleaned up, Mary Margaret told her about her one-night stand with Dr. Whale. It gave Emma a kind of gleeful satisfaction to imagine her friend indulging in such things, harmless as they were. It was the opposite of her experience with Graham. Mary Margaret needed some more risk in her life, and besides, she needed to get past David. This was good. Emma told her so.
— Maybe, — Mary Margaret said. — I guess so. But do you know what’s also good?
— What.
— Admitting that you have feelings about somebody, — Mary Margaret said. — For example. You admitting you have some feelings for Graham.
Emma screwed up her face.
— What are you talking about?
— It’s obvious, Emma, — Mary Margaret said, smiling mischievously. — Everyone can tell. You don’t have to be smashing vases for it to be obvious.
— The guy gets under my skin, that’s all, — Emma said, knowing she wasn’t quite telling the truth. — Can’t I be irritable without people gossiping?
— Emma, — she said. — Come on.
— What?
— The wall, — Mary Margaret said. — This wall you have up around your heart. — She shook her head, shrugged. — You think it protects you. And it probably does. But there’s a cost to that.
Emma was surprised at the plume of sadness that expanded in her chest as she listened to her friend’s words. A wall. A shield. She didn’t want to risk saying anything, for fear of sounding choked up. So instead she waited, privately admiring Mary Margaret’s emotional intuition, privately resenting it as well.
— It makes it hard to love, — Mary Margaret said, — when you’re defended so well.
When her father died, there was a haze. Snow White would not have been able to describe it that way immediately after it happened, and besides, there was nobody with whom she could talk to about her feelings. One day he was okay; the next, he was gone. The haze came, and she dwelled alone within it through the funeral. Pain. That was what made the haze. That was what created the fog that rolled down through her soul. Snow White couldn’t see through it and wasn’t herself within it. She was a lost girl alone in the world. She was blind.
The haze never fully cleared, of course. She had never felt loss like this, and her whole self seemed to have come undone. She could not find clarity; peace seemed to have left her, and peace no longer even seemed possible. It never does after the death of a parent.
She also felt guilty, as though she might have saved him, even though she didn’t know what she could have done. Again, it was all very hazy.
She was quickly shuttled away from the castle by Regina and sent to one of the country estates. She slept fitfully on the first night there, dreaming of her father as a younger man. Her father, the man who’d showed her the world. The man who’d taught her to know reason, and kindness, and compassion. But in the dream, she kept losing him down on the beach; she would show him seashells, and whenever she would find one, she would turn, holding it up, but he would not be there.