by Melody Anne
Cringing, I say, “Not quite. I need to stay in Dallas a little while longer. No more than a few weeks.”
“A few weeks?” The way he says “weeks” sounds like he thinks I’m a sleazy car salesman selling him a lemon.
“But not to worry,” I say quickly. “I’ll be working from Dallas until I return. In fact, I’ve already submitted several documents for your review. They should be in your inbox as we speak.”
“Good. I expect nothing less from you.” Thomas Brandon hates excuses and doesn’t tolerate apologies. Do it right the first time, every time, no exceptions. “I’ll permit you to remain in Dallas as long as you’re back in the office by early November, ready to hit the ground running. We can’t afford a slow ramp-up period.”
“Why? What’s happening?” I ask, hoping it’s not a demotion.
“Despite the unprofessional way you left Benjamin to cover today’s presentation, Kingsbury Enterprises is quite impressed with the effort you’ve put forth into their product launch thus far. They’ve asked for you personally to lead the next phase.”
“That’s excellent, sir. Thank you.”
“This is the firm’s biggest account, so I shouldn’t have to remind you what’s at stake if our client’s expectations aren’t met.”
“Absolutely. You won’t be sorry,” I say, an idea forming in my mind. The diner already runs itself. All that’s needed is someone to ensure back-of-house operations—shift scheduling, payroll, communicating with suppliers, placing and tracking purchase orders—and that can be facilitated from anywhere. I could be back in Chicago by early November, working on the next phase of the product launch for Kingsbury Enterprises, all while overseeing diner business.
It’s a win-win solution for everyone. I’ll be partner by New Year’s Eve.
“I know I won’t,” he says in his no-nonsense, nasally voice. “In the meantime, I’ll rush some documents over to your address in Dallas so you can get started. Don’t screw this up, Lillie.” He hangs up without a good-bye.
By the time I park my rental car on the street in front of my father’s house, the night has turned cool, promising rain. Nestled in the middle of southern Rockefeller mansions decorated for Halloween, my father’s humble two-story home stands like a stale gingerbread house. Peeking out from under a thick layer of grime, white trim adorns the brick facade. Black shutters frame windows in desperate need of a cleaning. Even some of the shingles are peeling away from the roof. I wonder how my father let it get to this state of disarray. Growing up, he took pride in having the only original house left on the block, polishing our quaint little abode until it sparkled brighter than the stainless steel counters at the diner.
I take a seat on the worn front steps and dial Drew.
“There you are,” he says, concern edging his voice. “I’ve been worried.”
Stability floods my body. I catch the jumbled chatter of the television in the background, and I picture Drew lounging on our leather couch, his suit jacket and tie banished to the floor and his dress shirt untucked as he watches sports highlights.
“Sorry it’s so late,” I say. “Today has been such a mess.”
There’s a shuffle on the other end, and the background noise disappears. “What’s going on? Are you okay?”
“Better now.” Picking at a weed growing through a crack in the steps, I launch into the day’s events. Drew listens intently, murmuring his support, as I rehash how my father expects me to drop everything to manage the diner without any consideration for my life, my dreams, while he recovers from knee surgery.
After I’ve finished, Drew tells me he loves me and says, “What are you going to do?”
I sigh. “I’m not sure . . . I’m still figuring it all out. I mean, obviously I’m not moving back here, but I can’t leave him right now. I need to stay until I figure out what’s going on with him.”
“That’s understandable. Want me to come down there? I could see where you grew up. Help out for a bit.”
Even though he can’t see me, I shake my head. Drew knows the basics of my childhood. It’s not something I’ve ever tried to hide, but I don’t speak often or openly about it either. It’s a part of me best kept separate from him and our relationship.
“I want you here, Drew,” I say, biting my lip, “but it’s only for a little while. There’s no reason both of us should get behind on work. Besides, someone has to keep our plants alive.”
He laughs, then lets out the cute groaning sound he makes when he’s stretching. “Did you pack enough clothes when you left this morning? Do you need me to send you anything?” That’s Drew, always so caring, so thoughtful.
“That’d be great,” I say, and ramble off a list of items that don’t include business suits or stilettos.
“Did you tell your dad our news yet?”
There’s no accusation in his voice, only that hopeful sincerity I adore so much, but I still feel a pang of guilt as I say, “Not yet. With everything being so hectic around here, I thought I’d wait until after his surgery. Once life has settled down.”
“Okay. But I have to meet your father eventually, preferably before he’s walking you down the aisle.”
“Ha-ha. I promise I’ll tell him, but not right now.”
“It’s going to be weird sleeping alone tonight. I miss you.”
“I miss you, too.” And I do. I miss the way he leaves little notes scattered around our apartment just because. Or how his pillow still smells of him long after he’s left for work. Or when he surprises me at the office with takeout from our favorite Thai place if I’m stuck in the middle of a project. But above all that, I miss the easiness of him, of our life together.
We talk for a few more minutes where he rehashes his day and I complain about Ben before wishing each other good night. I put the phone back in my purse and push open the front door to a roaring crowd singing “Take Me Out to the Ball Game” during the seventh-inning stretch. My father is asleep in front of the Rangers game, an arm flung over the back of the couch, a foot resting on the coffee table. From my vantage point, I can see a big toe peeking out from a hole in his sock. The television flickers, and shadows dance across the ceiling, casting the living room in a faint glow.
My father stirs and mutters under his breath nonsensical snippets about balding watermelons and fuzzy raspberries. Laughing, I cover my mouth and creep toward the couch. By the time I bend down next to him, he’s rolled onto his side and started snoring, the sound as jagged and harsh as a steak knife. Tucking a blanket around him, I notice how he seems more like a scrawny boy I would punch on the playground as a little girl than the man who taught me to chop an onion and used potato-peeling duty as punishment. The diner has not been kind to him these past five years, and I imagine his knee giving him trouble has only added to wearing him down.
Slinging my bag over my shoulder, I tiptoe upstairs to my childhood room. The space feels strange and smothering now, as if the pale yellow walls are closing in around me with no chance of escape.
Boy band posters are plastered over the mirrored closet, staring me down. Medals from baking contests I won drape over the corner of a bulletin board cluttered with pictures and ripped concert stubs. The dresser and nightstand now look like dollhouse furniture next to the queen bed crowding the room where my twin used to be. I expect to find a fine layer of dust covering the desk and bookshelf, but they’ve been polished so they gleam, the scent of lemon cleaner heavy in the air. My father’s obviously been preparing for my arrival.
I hear the television turn off and heavy footsteps pounding up the stairs. A floorboard creaks outside my room, followed by a knock on the door.
“Baby girl?”
“Yeah?” I say, preparing myself for another one of my father’s infamous surprises.
“Oh good, you’re here.” He pokes his head around the doorway. His graying hair is sticking up at all angles, and the skin around his eyes is dark and wrinkled as a raisin. “You know better than to run off like that
. The Spoons doesn’t wait for anyone.”
“Neither does my career.”
“Then it’s time you reprioritize. And don’t think I didn’t recognize Wes tryin’ to distract me. I may be aging, baby girl, but I’m not stupid. Now before you get buried under quicksand with all this diner business, mind doing your old man a favor and meeting me at the lawyer’s office tomorrow afternoon? There’s some paperwork I need you to look at.”
I sigh. “Sure. Leave me a note with the address.” What’s the point of arguing? He doesn’t listen to me anyway.
“I scheduled myself for the early shift tomorrow, and there’s some banana pudding in the fridge if you feel so inclined. Sleep tight.” He winks before shutting the door with a soft click.
“Don’t let the sour candies bite,” I finish, reciting our old nightly bedtime ritual as I listen to him pad down the hallway.
Outside, the moon hangs low in the sky. The overgrown oak tree scratches against the bedroom window, the wind rustling its leaves. My eyes land on the stone mansion beyond the fence where Nick used to live.
Do you want to count the licks to the center of a Tootsie Pop with me?
Those are the first words I ever spoke to him, hours after his family moved in next door, the moment he slipped into my heart. We were an unlikely pair from the start. I was the spunky five-year-old girl who spent her time fooling around in the diner’s kitchen, while he was the golden boy—two years older and son of the beloved Dr. Greg and Charlotte Preston—who attended private school with Wes and dressed like he belonged in a yuppie children’s clothing catalog.
Kneeling on the bed, I touch the thumbtack wedged into the windowsill, once a part of our secret messaging system consisting of a pair of recycled soup cans and a long piece of yarn that ran between our windows. My mind flickers to a memory of a gap-toothed boy and a pigtailed little girl, soup-can phones pressed against their ears in the dead of night, trying not to laugh too loudly so they wouldn’t get caught.
Pieces of Nick are scattered everywhere. My eyes lock on one of the photos pinned to the bulletin board. With shaking hands, I pull it free. An ache spreads through my chest.
The picture was taken at the base of Turner Falls, the lush Arbuckle Mountains flowing with clear, spring-fed streams behind us. Annabelle was piggybacking on Wes, hands resting on his shoulders, a cheek pressed against his. They were bright smiles and freckled noses and neon sunglasses. Beside them, Nick and I were wrapped up in each other’s arms, not a gap between us. His eyes were closed as he kissed my forehead, while mine were squinting against the sun, a silly, stupid grin on my face, my blond hair dancing in the breeze.
I remember that Labor Day camping trip so clearly. Wes had driven the four of us north in his Jeep until SMU and the Dallas city lights faded into Oklahoma country sky. The guys constructed two tents while Annabelle and I unloaded the car. For three days, we splashed around in swimming holes and explored caves and hiked the trails that ran through the park. At night beneath the stars, with the sounds of waterfalls and the wilderness surrounding us, we told ghost stories and sang along as Nick strummed on my father’s old Taylor acoustic guitar and roasted marshmallows around the campfire. And when bedtime came, Annabelle and Wes crawled into one tent while Nick and I retired to the other, spending the hours we should have been sleeping memorizing every inch of one another’s skin.
The version of me in this photo would tell you without hesitation that Nick and I would last forever, we’d been so swept up in each other.
There was a time when one look into his deep blue eyes would make me feel like I was drowning, when a smile from him would send my heart skittering in my chest, when a feather-light touch from his calloused hand would ignite a fire inside me.
When I believed he would never let me go.
But that was the love of youth and idealism. All-consuming feelings like that could never keep a relationship together—they certainly weren’t enough to save us. There’s something to be said for stability, companionship, comfort.
Everything I have with Drew, I tell myself as I pin the picture to the board and take a deep breath, the ache in my chest dulling. Everything I want.
FOUR
THE NEXT MORNING, armed with an arsenal of binders and papers I stole from the diner’s office, I return to the Prickly Pear. It’s busier than yesterday, but I’m still able to snag the corner table near the windows. With its purple-painted brick, cascading chandeliers constructed entirely from recycled eyeglasses, and vintage movie posters decoupaged onto the floor, there’s a coziness to this place that helps me concentrate.
If I plan on overseeing diner business from Chicago, I need to devote some time familiarizing myself with the diner’s records. Otherwise my father will be badgering me with phone calls every two seconds while he recuperates from surgery when my focus should be on executing the product launch for Kingsbury Enterprises.
I order my usual chai and get to work. Only everything is disorganized. Payroll records are outdated and incomplete. Daily sales figures are missing for weeks at a time. Purchase order requests are only partially filled out, and even then, with incorrect shipping instructions. Distributors’ catalogs are ripped with chunks of pages missing and several suppliers have sent outstanding payment notices for deliveries made months ago.
So much for the diner running on autopilot, I think as I flip through page after page of chaos. How does it even function with record keeping like this? Is it even turning a profit?
The sound of hollering yanks my attention away. I glance around and see four guys that look like they stepped straight off a bus from Nashville—guitars slung across their backs, cowboy hats pushed down low over their eyes, tattoos covering their arms—jabbing each other’s shoulders and laughing as they walk into the back room, where the stage is set up.
I recognize them as members of the Randy Hollis Band from the various posters hanging around the Prickly Pear. They must be performing tonight. I remember in high school and college watching musicians shuffle through this place, paying their dues, living off tips stuffed in empty coffee mugs, cutting their teeth trying to make their dreams a reality.
The same way Nick did, I think as sudden images of him playing the songs he wrote to a crowded room crash into me. I shake them away. I don’t want to remember him. Or what happened between us.
I turn back around and continue sorting through the diner’s files, keeping my focus where it belongs. Three hours later, I’m still trying to make sense out of something, anything, in this mess. My father’s chicken scratch, haphazardly scribbled in the margins of almost every page, mocks me. Claiming defeat, I toss my pen onto the table and stretch my arms above my head. A bowl of teeth-rotting cereal calls my name.
In the room adjacent to the café is Couch Potato Corner, the perfect place to catch a quick mental break and where I spent many late nights with Annabelle after all-day studyfests. Distressed leather sofas surround old-school televisions, complete with built-in legs and rabbit ears. A breakfast bar flanks the back wall filled with glazed doughnuts, cereals reminiscent of childhood, and Eggo waffles begging for a toaster oven and a bath in Mrs. Butterworth’s. Six dollars and thirty-five cents for all you can eat.
I pay my admission to the barista behind the counter and contemplate my choices. After pouring a bowl of Lucky Charms, I curl up on one of the couches, flipping the television to cartoons. I’m so distracted by an anvil being dropped on a coyote’s head I nearly miss my cell phone vibrating. Catching it on the last ring, I grab it off the side table and answer without bothering to look at the name on the screen.
“Hello?” I say, shoving of spoonful of pastel marshmallows into my mouth.
“You better be kidnapped by Goonies.”
And out comes the mouthful of marshmallows.
“Annabelle!” I say, scrambling to put the television on mute. “Hey!”
“Cut the bullshit, Lillie. When were you going to tell me you were in town?”
I bit
e my lip. “It was a last-minute trip. I got in yesterday.”
The sounds of Dallas traffic filter through the phone. From somewhere far off, I can hear the ringing bell of the McKinney Avenue Trolley. I imagine her strolling around Uptown, carrying glossy bags overflowing with linen swatches and stationery samples, phone pressed to her ear as she pops in and out of boutiques.
“You’re lucky I love you,” she says, then changes the subject with her usual abruptness. “Your fairy godmother, Sullivan Grace, woke me up at the ass crack of dawn this morning.” In Annabelle terms “ass crack of dawn” means any time before ten. Welcome to the cushy life of a wedding and event planner.
“Okay,” I say. “And?”
“And she knows you’re in town,” Annabelle says, her voice turning muffled. I hear her shouting at someone in the background.
“Please tell me you’re joking,” I say, louder than what is appropriate for any indoor space in an attempt to talk over whatever squabble she’s having.
Seconds pass of more muffled arguing. Finally she sighs into the phone and says, “Sorry about that. A damn bike messenger nearly decapitated me. Anyway, if you’re at the Prickly Pear, you better run and hide while you can. You know how pushy that old woman can be.”
As if on cue, a voice as sweet as southern tea drawls my name, emphasizing each syllable. I’d recognize that Charleston accent anywhere.
I cringe. “Annabelle, she’s here. I need to call you back.”
“Don’t worry about it,” she says. “We’ll catch up later at the committee meeting. Don’t be late.”
Huh?
Plastering a smile on my face, I set the cereal bowl aside and haul myself up from the couch. Sullivan Grace Hasell—better known as Ms. Bless Your Heart for her uncanny ability to insult the sin out of someone but mask it as a compliment swathed in a little southern flair—stands before me in a floral couture dress. Her caramel-colored hair is styled in an elegant bun that accentuates her long, graceful neck.