by Mariah Dietz
I huff, thinking of meeting Ella for the first time. “No,” I say simply, before considering it more carefully. “Well, I think Rachel—” I wave a hand, “my neighbor—she did, or wanted to, but no, Ella tried to hide from us.”
“What?” My brother chuckles. “Way to burn.”
“Right?” I ask. “It was pretty bad. But her son actually has a severe peanut allergy, and a few nights later when her friend—my neighbor—”
“Rachel?” Joey asks, working to follow the list of names and how they connect.
“Right. Well, Rachel was watching him and he had an allergic reaction. She had run over to get help, which led to me stopping by Ella’s the next day to check on him. He’s a really awesome kid. I’ve been working with him with some baseball stuff, and Ella and I have sort of become friends through it all.”
“What’s she like?” Joey asks.
I take a drink of my lemonade and consider his question. “She’s different. She’s fun.”
“Different than what?”
“Just different. I don’t know how to explain it. She’s kind of a badass when I start to think about it. I mean, you know how we hear Mia and Sofia talk about how hard being a mom is? Well Ella’s a single mom, and her kid is so cool. He’s funny, and super smart, and he loves baseball and cartoons. I mean I could hang with this kid every day and not get tired of him.”
“But what about Ella?” he asks again.
“She’s great. She’s super easy to talk to. I don’t feel like I have to impress her or like she’s trying to impress me, and I like that. She’ll eat pizza in front of me, and when I come over and she’s in her sweats, she doesn’t run off and change. And she’s got this job that sounds stressful and time-consuming, and yet when you ask her what she does, she gives you this vague answer.”
“But she’s just your friend?” Joey chuckles as he says it. “You’re ready to move into her goddamn house. Are you hearing yourself?”
I shake my head. “She lives a few blocks away,” I remind him. “And she’s on a date right now.”
“Does that bother you?”
“No!”
Joey raises his eyebrows and takes another drink. “You sure?”
“Of course I’m sure.”
“Then why do you keep checking your phone?”
My response it to stand up and stretch.
“Where you going?” Joey taunts.
“Back to North Carolina.”
“To see your neighbor?”
“I told you already—she’s out on a date.” My eyes warn him to drop it. “I’m going to head to the open gym and play some basketball. Work off Ma’s cooking.” I pat my abs.
“Hey, I spoke to Pete McNally, and he mentioned there might be a captain position opening up soon in Haven Point. It would bring you closer to home.”
My eyebrows rise with intrigue.
“I know it’s a small station and you’d have to move again, but you’ve mentioned how the whole neighborhood thing isn’t exactly your thing, and,” he gives me a pointed look, “you’d be far enough from Ella that you could—”
I punch him in the gut to cut him off and head back inside to say good-bye to my mom, dad, and sisters.
15
Ella
Sucking in a deep breath, I straighten the navy blue tank top borrowed from Rachel’s closet. It fits too tightly across my chest and is too short, but Rachel said I looked like a ten in it, and out of desperation I believed her.
I don’t know if meeting for ice cream was his idea or was supposed to be mine—that actually came from Rachel—but am relieved not to have to sit through a meal.
I have to glance at my phone again to see what he looks like because with his name being Lance, all I can picture is the guy from that boy band from when I was a teenager. This Lance also has blond hair and a long face, making me seek out more similarities rather than differences.
“Ella?”
I swear even the shape of his teeth is similar to the old celebrity Lance’s, which then has me wondering how and why my brain chose to recall what a guy’s teeth looked like. It delays my smile, and he notices.
“You must be Lance.” I try to smile wider to make myself appear more enthusiastic. “It’s so nice to meet you.”
“You too. Sorry I’m late. I got hung up with a work thing.”
“Oh, it’s no problem,” I assure him. “I completely understand.”
He stares at me for several seconds, forcing me to fight my features to remain still as they war between wanting to frown and giving him a look of confusion. Maybe he knows who I am. Knows the rumors about me. It wouldn’t be the first time that’s happened, and sadly with the way this date has begun, I doubt it will be the last. The times that it’s occurred in the past there are two reactions: one: they think I’m going to be a guaranteed one-night stand, or two: they treat me like a social leper and make excuses to cut the date short. So I wait, allowing him the time to make an excuse to leave.
“Ready to get some ice cream?” he asks.
My gut twinges. I can’t put my finger on why, if it’s my self-consciousness or something specific about him, but with my experience, I’ve learned to pay attention to that feeling, and it has me giving him his first strike.
I paste on a smile and nod my agreement since we’re standing out front of the store anyway. Lance moves first and I briefly study him. His T-shirt, like mine, is both too tight and too short, emphasizing the size of his biceps that grow when he opens the door and stands to the side for me to enter.
His waist and legs are both narrow, his chest and shoulders broad, like an upside down triangle. His boots are heavy as he walks behind me and I move so he’s beside me before asking the question I hate most, “So what do you do for work?”
“I work security for a few places in town.”
“Really? Like for a nightclub?” I shouldn’t ask because if he starts naming them off or goes into details about it, I’m going to be bored and lost. When people my age were out at the clubs and bars making mistakes and learning about life, I was cleaning up Cheerios from the floor, milk off the walls, learning to make shaped pancakes, and healing boo-boos with magical kisses.
“Sometimes,” Lance says. “Other times for the arena in town.”
“That’s really awesome. I bet you get to see a lot of cool shows.”
He smiles, and it’s charming and reaches all the way to his eyes—I also realize it’s not being directed toward me when I notice his eyes are perched over my shoulder.
Strike two.
It shouldn’t make me feel anything but annoyed, but that self-consciousness that he exposed begins to expand.
The short line in front of us moves, and we go with it. “What about you?” he asks. “What do you do for work?”
“I work in marketing, actually.” My voice rises, and I know the fluctuation is because I’m trying to catch his attention again. It’s ridiculous, stupid even that I’m jealous that he hasn’t looked at me like he did the woman behind me, especially since I already know I wouldn’t want to date him again. But still, I’m flirting with him—or trying to—because even with the skin around my belly being looser and marked from carrying my son, my breasts being gravity challenged, my car not being cool but safe, and my purse housing more mom supplies than makeup, I want to be seen like he’s looking at her. I want someone to lust after me.
Lance either doesn’t notice or doesn’t care, because his smile reappears accompanied by a leer in his sea-colored eyes, and just like that, I realize that while I want someone to want me for me—mom bod, practical car, anxiety and all—I don’t want that person to be Lance, because his expression seems predatory and makes that twinge in my stomach become more pronounced, drowning out the self-consciousness in me.
Strike three.
“Next!” the woman at the ice cream counter calls, drawing my attention from the multitude of excuses I’m considering using to get out of this date and skip the ice cream
and forced chit-chat.
But before I can, Lance places his order and looks to me for mine. I blame it on the heat and Rachel calling me a saboteur for ordering their specialty cotton candy ice cream because logic would have me in my car already.
“Do you come here a lot?”
Surprise has me looking up at Lance with my eyebrows raised.
Is he implying that I look like I come here often? And why does Hayden have a better vocabulary?
“Not really,” I answer, then wonder if he asked because maybe it was Rachel who suggested we meet here.
“Yeah, me either.” His eyes drift to the door where two girls are walking in. They’re obviously still in high school, but it doesn’t stop him from sitting forward, focused on their movements. The roll in my stomach is too familiar, too real. I stand up with the excuse that I’m not feeling well and leave before he can say a word.
Once in my car my eyes burn, and my stomach burns, and my anger burns stronger than both. With an open palm, I hit my steering wheel. Before chancing anyone seeing me lose it, I head home.
The moment I get through my front door, I peel off the uncomfortable blue shirt and throw it into my hamper to launder so I can return it to Rachel and hopefully never see it again. I replace it and my too-tight jeans with a pair of cotton shorts and T-shirt and then add socks and my tennis shoes.
Lance’s face, the way he looked at those girls like they were a prize he could win—could obtain—it still has me nauseous as I wonder if that’s the same way Patrick looked at me years ago. I should have warned those girls. Should have told them that it isn’t the man who makes them feel special who deserves their love, time, and devotion, but the man who shows them that they’re special.
I glance at the clock, already knowing it’s before our five o’clock trade, but I grab my phone and enter a text to Patrick, asking to allow me to come by early to get Hayden. There’s a fifty-fifty chance of how he’ll respond. Often, I think he tells me no just to be difficult rather than wanting to spend more time with our son, figuring he cancels on his visitations at least once a week.
While I wait for him to reply, I pull up the dating site on my laptop and scrutinize each incoming message more carefully. I delete several before seeing a message from Outdoorsyman that I open with curiosity.
To: Shakespearian
From: Outdoorsyman
Subject: Re: Open Book
Hey Shakespeare,
I hope I didn’t scare you off. You seemed really nice and … well … normal. Is that a bad thing to say? I mean it as a compliment, truly. It’s just that I’ve met all kinds of interesting characters on here, and something about you doesn’t make me feel like I’m signed up looking for someone to date and checking off each other’s criteria lists but having actual conversation with.
If I haven’t addressed something on your list, or did and it was a deal-breaker, I’m going to be very disappointed, but will understand. I just want to make sure I convey my interest in you because I feel like I owe myself to do so, if that makes any sense.
Take Care,
Outdoorsyman
I probably shouldn’t reply right now, not with my emotions being in this state of turmoil, but I do, knowing I likely will forget to respond later tonight.
To: Outdoorsyman
From: Shakespearian
Subject: Re: Open Book
I’m glad to hear from you! I definitely have not written you off, just have been busy with work. I appreciate you finding me normal and feel the same about you. Being on here has been a very interesting experience to say the least.
You have me intrigued. What’s on your criteria list? I think I need to create one.
Shakespearian
I triple check my phone and still there’s no message from Patrick. So I send a text to Coen.
Me: Bonfire???
Coen: There’s kind of a fire ban in place since it’s been a thousand degrees.
Me: Way to ruin things.
Coen: What’s going on?
Me: Nothing. I have to go. I’m picking up Hayden.
Coen: I just got to the gym to play basketball, but if you want, I can come over.
I am tempted to say yes. Too tempted.
While Coen is kind and funny and easy to be around, I can’t have Hayden getting attached to him and then Coen dropping off the face of the planet when he finds a girlfriend. I can’t do it to myself either.
Me: Don’t worry about it. Have fun. I’m going to take Hayden on a date.
Coen: Well, you two better not get too wild without me.
Without me.
Without him.
Without Coen.
The words process through my mind again and again, and I wonder if he meant to imply something or if I’m simply reading into things too much. There’s a small ache in the corner of my heart that I quickly dismiss, knowing that hope for Coen is the last thing I need because he is not interested in me, and I’m not in him. In addition, Rachel has a thing for him, making this a thousand times more complicated because she’s my best friend, and really I should be working to tell him how wonderful she is so he drops this absurd rule that prevents him from dating anyone in a fifteen-mile radius.
Since I can’t think of anything to reply back with that sounds even slightly witty, only emotional, I don’t respond. I pack up my computer and a few folders I’ve been keeping my information and timeline in, and head to the coffee shop Patrick and I meet at to share the biggest part of my world.
I ignore the niggling reminder about the blue shirt having been too tight and order the largest caramel-flavored coffee they have, and when the barista asks me if I want whipped cream, I ask for extra along with a cookie. The air conditioning is turned up so high it’s hard to remember that it’s over a hundred degrees outside, tempting me to set up my work at one of the outdoor tables. Thankfully, there’s a sweater still in my bag, and I slip it on and find an unoccupied table in the back that looks out at the parking lot and get set up.
Soon, I will be meeting with the board of the Weile account and will be proposing my new approach for their marketing. The company sells cars with an alternative fuel, something I knew next to nothing about prior to this account, other than how expensive they were. I have spent weeks learning everything about their prospective buyers—their age range, gender, occupations, education, marital status, if they rent or buy, and dozens of other factors. I know their clientele inside and out, which has provided me with the best way of proposing the different ads and techniques I’ll be proposing for each region since the approach varies quite a lot.
I’m creating a mock-up of the advertising package I’m going to propose they use for the Midwest when I see Hayden bounding through the parking lot, Patrick close behind. I grab for the papers scattered around me, not worrying to organize them, or even ensure they’re not crumpled, just shoving them out of the way. I close my computer and drop it in my bag as well, seeing Hayden scanning the tables, looking for me.
“Hi, Mom!” he calls, a bright smile across his face.
Patrick is only a few steps behind him, and when our eyes meet, he smiles. I expected it, because he always does.
Our conversation about Hayden’s allergic reaction went far better than I had expected, likely because he hadn’t answered the dozen calls I made to him over the weekend that followed the incident. Now, it seems forgotten between us.
Hayden’s arms wrap tightly around my waist, his head against my chest. He smells different from staying there, and he’s wearing different shoes than the ones he left with. Each time he’s gone, even when it’s only for an afternoon or a single night, I always search for the differences.
“Hey, Elle,” Patrick says, standing at the edge of my table. On the times we’ve done this pass off at night after the coffee shop has already closed, Patrick will approach me for a hug, but never when we’re in public and people could possibly see him. I used to think it meant something that he wanted to embrace me, sometimes hol
ding me far longer than he needed to, but not nearly long enough for what I needed.
“Hi.” I try to push my pressed lips into a smile, but they don’t cooperate. All I can picture is Lance staring at those girls in the ice cream shop when I look at Patrick, and it makes me wonder for the first time if I was the only one, or one of many. I swallow down some bile, and grab my bag, keeping an arm wrapped around Hayden’s shoulders, my eyes on him.
“I thought we could go see a movie. What do you think?”
“Awesome!” Hayden cries. “Can it be PG-13?”
“No, but I’ll let you get two snacks.”
Hayden throws a celebratory fist in the air. “Deal!”
Patrick chuckles from Hayden’s other side, and then rests a hand between Hayden’s shoulder blades, his fingers brushing my bare arm. “This sounds fun. What do you guys think of making it a party of three?” he asks.
My impulse is to say no. We’ve done things like this together in the past, and I’ve read too much into each and every one of them. He sits too close so that when we part his cologne clings to me, and like a shadow, I can’t escape it. He knows my favorite snacks, my favorite drink. He knows where I want to sit in the theater and how I refuse to talk through the previews because I like watching them. Patrick knows everything about me because he met me when I was young and vulnerable, before I knew how to construct walls around my heart and my soul, and before I was wise enough to know better.
“Yeah, Dad! That would be the best!” Hayden says, a smile lifting his lips before I can organize my thoughts into an appropriate rejection.