Authors: Jane Heller
Anyone care for dessert? I said after Id cleared their table. The lemon
meringue pie is the best in the city, according to New York magazine. The
others declined, but Dan asked if he could get a slice to go.
Go? I said, and realized my heart was breaking. Perky, I told myself. Stay
perky. Absolutely. Ill have it wrapped up for you.
I presented them with the check and dashed off to get the piece of pie. When
I returned, I handed Dan the dessert in its Styrofoam container, took the cash
off the table, and said Id be back with their change.
Keep it, said Dan. Its all yours.
Thanks, I said, stuffing the bills into the pocket of the dopey black apron
they made us wear. That was the whole reason I was waitressingto pocket
tipsbut when I watched Dan and his friends get up, put on their jackets, and
start to leave, I didnt give a crap about the money. I only wanted him. How
insane was that?
See ya, Melanie, he said with a little salute as he trailed after the
others.
I faked perky again. Yeah, I called out. The next time Im in Minco.
He nodded and walked toward the door. He was about to push it open when he
stopped. Literally. He just stood there, getting jostled by the crush of people
waiting for a table. Just stood there with his back to me, head down, staring at
the floor. Just stood there. I think I actually held my breath as I watched him
and wondered what was going on. Did he forget his wallet or his keys? Did he
feel sick? Was I supposed to rush over and help?
I was frantically debating the above when he turned in my direction, slowly,
very slowly, and picked his head up. Instead of continuing out the door, in
pursuit of his pals, he walked straight back inside the restaurant, his eyes
lasered on mine. I remember emitting sort of a gasp as he strode toward me.
Please dont let this be about nothing, I prayed, as he kept coming. Please
dont let this be that he has to use the mens room or make a phone call or buy
another slice of pie for the girl back in his hotel room. Please let this be a
miracle happening, something I didnt have to work for just this once. Oh,
please
He was face-to-face with me then, and my brain shut down.
What? I managed. Did you leave your
Look, he cut me off. I know I didnt exactly sweep you off your feet while
you were bringing my buddies and me dinner, but
You were the only one who didnt treat me like I was dinner, I said,
cutting him off this time.
I ordered the pie just to hang around you a little longer, he admitted.
Did you? I asked.
He nodded. Do you have a boyfriend?
No, I said, my pulse thumping in my ears. No.
Good, he said. Im not leaving for two days, and I was thinking maybe we
could see
Yes, I said. More thumping. Yes.
He reached up and touched my cheek. "I want you to know that I'm not like Ernie," he said. "I don't go around hitting on waitresses."
"Then what do you do?"
"I follow my instincts."
He lowered his head and kissed me. Right there in the middle of the restaurant. It was a fabulous kiss that was interrupted only when one of the other waitresses bumped us as she passed.
"It's okay," said Dan. "I don't drop the ball in traffic, remember? I'm the calm one in the middle of chaos." And then he kissed me again.
"Hi, Ricardo," I said to the doorman at my old building. It was Monday morning at eight-fifteen and I had to get to the office by eight-forty-five for the Jed Ornbacher meeting at nine. I needed to hurry upstairs, deliver Buster to Dan, and beat it.
I tightened my grip on the dog's leash and was about to rush toward the elevator when Ricardo stopped me. "I'll have to buzz Mr. Swain before I can let you up, Melanie."
Of all the indignities. It had always rankled me that Dan was "Mr. Swain" while I was "Melanie," even though
Mr. Swain
wasn't the celebrity he used to be and I was the one paying for the damn place. But what really got me was that I had to be buzzed up to my own apartment whenever I brought Buster over. Like I was a dog walker.
I stood there, insides churning, while Ricardo, a short, burly Latino with a thin mustache, called Dan on the house phone, spoke to him in this totally ass-kissy voice, laughed at whatever he said, then hung up. Ricardo was the opposite of the surly, I'd-rather-be-doing-anything-but-this doormen you hear about. He took his job seriously, which I used to appreciate when I lived there, but now I found it insufferable.
I smiled sweetly. "So? Do I get security clearance?"
"Mr. Swain says it's fine to go up," he said, seemingly unaware that it was mortifying for me to have to stand there in my former lobby, being snubbed by my former neighbors, being
buzzed up
by my former husband.
"Thank you," I said. Buster chose that moment to fart in Ricardo's face. I reminded myself to give him an extra biscuit for good behavior.
We rode up in the elevator to the thirty-second floor, where Dan was standing at the threshold of 32G. He was wearing a velvety navy blue robe with what appeared to be a Polo logo on it and a pair of buttery brown leather moccasins with Gucci Gs on them. Only the best for our Danny. God, did it gall me that while I could no longer afford to spend freely on my wardrobe, his had become the stuff of
GQ
layouts.
And then there was the fact that he was wearing a robe, instead of a business suit, on a weekday morning. My guess was that Ricardo had woken him up. The right side of his face had pillow dents.
Did he bear any resemblance to the golden boy who'd swept me off my feet at the restaurant thirteen years ago? Sure. A handsome guy is a handsome guy. But there were shortcomings. His hair was still blond but longer and more straggly now, the bangs falling across his forehead, the ends curling around his ears. His body was still muscular but not nearly as tight as it was in his playing days. He'd gained weight and grown a gut, and his face had filled out, which, together with the puffiness around his eyes, gave him sort of a doughy, dissolute look.
"Did somebody die or are you just glad to see me?" he said as I ushered myself and Buster inside the apartment.
"Somebody died." I eyed his feet. "The poor calf whose hide made those shoes. They're new, aren't they, Imelda?"
"Maybe. I'd lend them to you, but they wouldn't go with your getup."
Getup. Please. I was wearing my investment banker gray pinstripe. It was a little on the mannish side, but so what?
"How's Buster?" he said, bending down to play with the dog.
"He's great," I said, glancing around the living room, where not a single piece of furniture had been rearranged or replaced since I'd moved out. He hadn't even repainted. (I was in my colorful period when we'd decorated the apartment. The living room was robin's egg blue, the dining room forest green, the master a deep burgundy.) Everything was just as I'd left it, including photos of us in happier times, which rested on various surfaces in their lovely silver frames. When I'd asked why he continued to display them, he'd shrugged and said he liked them. Typical Dan. Stuck in the glory days.
I also noticed two glasses on the coffee table, next to an empty bottle of champagne. But it wasn't just any champagne, mind you. It was Cristal, which is, like, three hundred dollars a pop.
Now do
you understand why I resented him? Wouldn't a less extravagantly priced bubbly have been festive enough? No, of course not.
"Listen, don't forget to take him for his checkup," I said. "It's Wednesday at four-thirty."
"You've reminded me six times."
"I'm just making sure. Also, he really seems to like the rope toy I bought him last week, so I think he should have one here too."
"I'll buy him one on the way to the park this afternoon."
"The park? You're taking him to the park?"
"Yeah, what's the problem?"
"It's unseasonably warm for December, Dan. They predicted it might go up to fifty degrees. I don't want him to overheat while he's chasing a football around."
He tugged on his earlobe, which is what he always did when he found me exasperating. "I'll be the one chasing the football around. It's my regular pickup game with Ernie and the guys."
"It must be nice to spend your afternoons in Central Park," I said with a little sigh.
"Where I spend my afternoons—or mornings or evenings, for that matter—is none of your business anymore," he said as he let Buster wander around.
"It
is
my business where you take Buster," I said. "For all I know, he goes with you to those lap dance clubs."
He laughed. "You're welcome to come too."
"My point is, I don't want Buster exposed to naked women."
"He's been exposed to you, hasn't he?"
"Yes, but I don't wear pasties on my nipples."
"I guess they frown on that at Pierce, Shelley and Steinberg?"
"Can we change the subject?"
"You brought it up."
I counted to ten, mindful of my promise to Robin. "All I ask is that you remember to take Buster to the vet on Wednesday."
"And all I ask is that you remember to stay out of my business. We're divorced now, which is how you wanted it, Mel."
I moved closer to him, stood face-to-face with him. I could see every pore of his skin, every bit of stubble along his jawline, every broken capillary on his nose and, yeah, he had a few now. "So I opted out and you're punishing me for it by getting alimony."
"I'm not getting alimony. I'm getting combat pay—for thirteen years of having to put up with you, darlin'."
"Put up with
me
?" I counted to ten again, but only made it to five. I was being provoked! I had to stick up for myself, didn't I? "I was the one who watched you sit around with Ernie, reminiscing about the good old days instead of trying to figure out what to do with the rest of your life. You think that was fun?"
"Ernie accepts me for who I am."
"Ernie's a hanger-on."
"It's not such a bad thing to have someone who hangs on."
"What's that supposed to mean? That I should have hung on even though you made absolutely no attempt to—"
I was in the middle of my counter when Buster started barking. Pugs aren't barkers, normally, but he was definitely letting us know he wanted us to cut out the fighting.
"Okay. Not in front of the dog," I said.
"Right," said Dan. "And now that you've brought him over, there's nothing keeping you. So why don't you hop back on your broomstick and fly off to work."
"You know what?" I said, stung by the implication that I was anything other than a kind, patient woman who'd been pushed to her limit. "I came over here determined to be nice, determined to show restraint. But you're baiting me and I refuse to be baited."
"Fine. I apologize." He tried to wipe off his smirk and look serious. "How is work, by the way?"
"Actually, I have a presentation this morning. If I land the client, I'll be very happy."
"Me too. In fact, I'll celebrate. Ernie and I will break open another bottle of Costal."
You see that? He was incorrigible! "What are you thinking, Dan? Cristal costs a fortune."