Read The Rules of Love & Grammar Online
Authors: Mary Simses
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I return to the tent just in time to hear Mom singing the end of “I Get a Kick out of You.” It's painful, especially because it sounds as if the band is trying to drown her out. I take my seat next to Paul Duffner, who looks me up and down.
“I was going to invite you on a date,” he says. “But that was before I realized you're already spoken for. I'm not sure I can compete with Sean Leeds.”
“Oh, he's quite the beau,” I say, silently thanking Sean for his cameo appearance.
“Now I'd like to make a toast,” Mom says, raising her glass of champagne. “To Doyle, on this special birthday, and to all of you, for sharing it with us.” There's applause and whistling and chants of
Hear, hear
as glasses ring and chime.
I look at my parents and realize maybe this was why I came home to Dorsetâto be with my mother and father, to understand the past, and to figure out who I am in this unpredictable world. I can't fix all my mistakes, and I can't plan my life to avoid things I might not want to see happen. But that's okay. The future isn't in my hands. And that means there will be painful things. But there will be good things as well. I think I'm strong enough to handle all of it.
Dad walks to the stage and kisses Mom's cheek. He looks at the crowd, taking it all in, savoring the moment. “As usual,” he says, “Leigh has managed to steal my thunder.” He pauses and then adds, “Not to mention Sean Leeds.” He smiles, and there's a roar of laughter.
“This,” Dad says, “is the most extraordinary celebration anyone could ask for.” He looks around the tent again. “It really is.” He takes off his glasses and dabs his eyes. “I want to thank you all for coming. And I want to thank Leigh for everything she's done to make this perfect, and for everything she does every day.
“I also want to thank our daughter, Grace, for helping with this party. And for being a wonderful daughter.” He looks at me and smiles. “She's brilliant and talented and successful at whatever she does, and I'm so very proud of her.” He blows me a kiss, and I feel a warm sensation bubble through me.
Brilliant and talentedâ¦proud of her.
I blow a little kiss back.
Thanks, Dad.
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The guests have gone, the caterers are clearing the tables, and the musicians are packing up their equipment. I walk out of the tent, to the edge of the lawn, and take a seat in one of the Adirondack chairs. The sun is sinking, the light in the sky is soft, and the water is calm. Mom and Dad are in the house with an entourage of family and friends. I can hear Mom's laughter come through the kitchen windows, the sounds drifting across the lawn.
I think about how I'll be leaving tomorrow, and how I'll be packing my things tonight. I think about Renny's bike, which Cluny is going to pick up and store in her air-conditioned garage until I visit again in a few weeks. And I think about Mitch, and I wonder how he's doing. I wonder when he'll stop being angry with me,
if
he'll stop being angry with me.
I think about the day a couple of weeks ago when Cluny and I went into the bike shop and I corrected their flyers. And the day I got sprayed by Porcine Thighs, and how Mitch wanted to report it to the police. I start to laugh when I remember that. And the lighthouse, where I told Mitch about Renny and what happened the day she died. Yes, he was going to kiss me.
Maybe I should have thought of Mitch as more than the bike shop guy or the history teacher, more than the guy who played pool with me at Ernie's or walked with me in the orchard. But what does it matter now? I betrayed him. I went on television and said things that hurt him. And now he won't forgive me.
Twilight settles over the water. I close my eyes and listen to the
clink
of plates and flatware and glassware in the tent. I try to summon Mitch's faceâhis velvet eyes, the smile that goes up a little more on one side than the other, the lock of hair that sometimes hangs over his forehead. And then I hear a voice behind me, and I'm truly convinced I'm imagining it, because it's his voice.
“Nice view.”
When I turn, he's standing there, one hand on the handlebar of a bicycle. “Mitch?”
“I hope I'm not arriving at a bad time,” he says. “But your mother told me it was okay to come out here. I wanted to make sure I got the bike to you.”
“The bike?” I take a closer look. It's Renny's Schwinn, although it's not the Schwinn I dug out of the garage. The red paint sparkles, and the chrome shines, all of the rust gone. The new seat, lustrous and dark, is a perfect match to the old one, and the bike's cables are glossy and black. The chain and derailleur have been replaced, and the wheels have been rebuilt, every spoke shiny silver. And he's even replaced the bell. It's got a yellow flower in the middle, similar to the old one, but when I move the lever, it chimes.
I run my hand over the new pedals, the freshly wrapped black tape on the handlebars, the pristine leather on the seat. “Wow,” I say. “I can't believe this is the same bike.”
“So you like it?”
“Like it? I love it.” I walk around the Paramount, viewing it from every angle. I bend down and study the gleaming wheels. “I still can't believe it's Renny's bike. It's just the way I remember it.”
“Yeah, she came out pretty nice.”
“She did, Mitch. She really did.”
“I know you want to take it with you tomorrow, when you leave.”
I hear Mom and Dad and the group inside the house laugh again. “Yes, right.” I try to push aside some bit of reluctance I'm suddenly feeling. “So, you did all this work yourself?”
He nods. “Yes.”
I picture him by the repair stand, his hands on the wheels, the tubes, the brakes, the cables, making everything perfect.
Inside the tent, the caterers are folding up chairs and stacking them against the tent poles. “Look, I'm sorry to impose,” I say. “Especially after everything you've done, but do you think I could pay half the cost now and half in a couple of weeks? I just need toâ”
“Don't worry about that,” he says, rubbing a little spot on the down tube with the bottom of his shirt. “My dad was right. You did enough. You did plenty. In fact, I've got Kevin and A.J. working on organizing the rest of the workroom. We're even talking about doing a little redecorating in the store. It could use some fixing up.”
“Really? That sounds great.” But it also worries me. “Don't do too much. There's something about that place that keeps people coming back year after year. Maybe the clutter is part of it.”
He scratches his chin. “I didn't think the word
clutter
was in your vocabulary.”
“Ah, well. It's creeping in there.”
I gaze at the Schwinn. “Thanks, Mitch. Thank you for the bike. It's beautiful.”
He looks into my eyes. My heart starts beating fast. And I remember being a kid, eleven or twelve, bicycling in town one day, when my tires skidded on something slipperyâprobably oil or sand. I fell and scraped my arm, and it started to bleed. I walked the bike to the Bike Peddler, gritting my teeth so I wouldn't cry. A young guy was working in the shop, a teenager with a nice smile and a lock of hair that fell over his forehead. He took one look at my arm and pulled me into the bathroom, where he gently washed off the blood and dirt, dried the cuts, and applied a bandage. Then he brought me out front and handed me a white baseball cap with the name Shimano on it in blue letters. He told me it was for being so brave.
That guy was Mitch.
I turn to him. “You know, I just remembered something. I fell and scraped my arm one day when I was a kid, and I came into the store. You washed off the blood and put on a bandage and gave me a baseball cap. You said I was brave.”
He smiles. “I told you we'd met before.”
“You did, but it took me all this time to remember.”
“Sometimes things take a while,” he says.
He leans the bike against the chair. “I need to say something, Grace. About that interview. The thing on the news.”
My heart plummets. I look away, toward the purple horizon. A Boston Whaler with five noisy teenagers in it gurgles past us. “Mitch. I'm sorry. I wish I could turn back time and do it all over again and notâ”
He puts a hand on my arm. “Grace, stop. That's not why I'm bringing it up.”
I like the feel of his hand on my arm, warm and strong. “It's not?”
“No. That's not why I was angry with you. It wasn't the interview, although I was kind of pissed off about that.” He smiles, and there's a long pause. I hear the group on the Whaler and the sound of laughter.
“It was you,” he says finally. “I really care about you, Grace. I think I might be falling in love with you. And I couldn't have you around because⦔ He looks away. “Well, because you're in love with Peter. I just wanted to let you know the truth.”
I stare into his eyes, and I see honey and caramel and all sorts of colors I never noticed before. He might be falling in love with me.
Me.
Grace Walker Hammond.
“I'm not in love with Peter,” I correct him.
He stands up a little straighter. “You're not?”
“No, I'm not. I thought I was, but it was really about something else.” I hear a few final hoots and calls from the Whaler, and the boat motors around the bend and drifts out of sight.
“Huh,” Mitch says. “Not in love with Peter.” He takes a step toward me, and then another step. We're so close, we're almost touching. He reaches out and strokes my face. I look into his eyes, and I can see the future there. It's stretched out before me, and Mitch is part of it. He leans in and kisses me, and I hear the faint sound of a seagull and a splash.
D
o you think I could take it for a spin?” I glance at the bike.
Mitch laughs. “It's your bike, Grace. You can do whatever you want.”
“I'd just like to try it out, ride it down Salt Meadow before it gets dark.”
“Then let's do it.”
I follow Mitch as he walks the bike across the lawn and over the gravel driveway, down to the road, stopping at the weathered sign that says Private, No Trespass.
“I can't believe you still haven't fixed that,” he says.
“That sign will never be fixed,” I tell him. “It's kind of a family tradition.”
He nods. “Traditions are good.”
At the end of the driveway, I glance down the road, where the Percys live, and the Banners and the Rudolphs and the Albans. I can see Mrs. Baylor's white picket fence at the bend, and the pink beach roses that peek through the slats and hang over the top.
I glance at Mitch's hands, still on the handlebars, and I realize I've never taken the time to notice them before. They're nice hands, with long fingers that look strong and dexterousâhands that can fix bikes and write comments on high school essays.
We walk from the driveway to the edge of the road, where the surface is smooth and covered in blacktop. I take the handlebars, but I can see that the seat is too high. I'm wondering how to adjust it when Mitch pulls out a wrench, loosens a bolt, and lowers the seat for me.
“Sorry,” he says. “I took it for a test drive.”
“I'm glad you did,” I say.
He holds the bike as I raise my leg over the top tube and settle into the seat. “It feels pretty good.” I place my feet on the ground and run my fingers over the new handlebar tape. I look at the cables that travel from the handbrakes to the brake pads on the wheels. I squeeze the front brake, then the back. Everything is solid. I look up, and Mitch's eyes meet mine. I think about what he said the day in the orchard, when I told him about the first time I ate an apple fresh off a tree.
Those are great moments. When you have this feeling that what's happening is really special and you know you'll always remember exactly what took place. Every detail.
This is one of those moments.
“Are you ready?” he asks.
I take a deep breath. “I'm ready.”
He takes his hands off the bike, and I give myself a little push. I pick up my feet, and I'm off, cruising down Salt Meadow. I build up some speed, and then I coast, the freewheel ticking happily, my feet comfortable on the pedals, air rushing past. And Renny is with me, experiencing each bump in the road, each movement of the shifter as I run through the gears. She's with me, listening to the whir of the tires on the asphalt and the bark of the Johnsons' beagle when I round the bend, and I know I'm no longer in sight but that Mitch is still back there, waiting.
A book is a big project and many people have been involved in this one. Kim Witherspoon, my agent, gave me excellent guidance and support. Jamie Cat Callan, my friend, mentor, and earliest reader, once again used her skill and patience to help me navigate the bewildering sea of a first draft. My editor, Judy Clain, provided such insightful suggestions about the manuscript, and so much encouragement, that I was able to improve and strengthen the story in ways I cannot count. Assistant editor Amanda Brower never missed a detail and helped make the prose shine from beginning to end. My copyeditor, Katharine Cooper, saved me on numerous occasions (she's the real stickler for grammar!). And everyone else on my team at Little, Brown did an amazing job, from design to production to sales, in putting the book together and getting it out there. Thank you all.
I would also like to thank Meghan Hibbett, Deborah Krainin, Michael Simses, and Kate Simses for their guidance on how movies are made; Mark Quinn and Philip Elliott of the Palm Beach Bicycle Trail Shop, for their insights into all things bike-related; Lieutenant Michael Marx of the Palm Beach Fire Rescue Department for his emergency medical technician expertise; Joe Norkus for showing me what he can do with a cue stick, and Leanne Distasi for letting us use her pool table; and Pam and Will Braun of ciaobelladesigns.com for their insights about creating beautiful note cards.
I am most grateful to my additional readers, Michael Simses, Kate Simses, Suzanne Ainslie, Rebecca Holliman, Ann Depuy, and Christine Lacerenza, for their observant comments, which led to revisions that improved the story tenfold. To Christine I give another thanks for researching my many inane questions and for conducting the now infamous “water reflection experiment” on the Five Mile River in Rowayton, Connecticut.
Last on the list, but first in my heart, are my husband, Bob, and my daughter, Morgan, who are always there with the emotional support that keeps me going. I love you.