by Paul Levine
“I don't know, Jackie. It's just hard to fix people up.”
“Okay, I'm not gonna beg. But if I can't have the Bad Boy, can you clone Mr. Perfect for me?”
“Sometimes I wonder if I even deserve Bruce.” Victoria felt a pang of guilt. She hadn't even thought about her fiancé, Solomon being the prime topic of conversation.
“Stop or I'll hurl.” Then Jackie's eyes flickered with a mischievous look. “I'll bet Bruce really makes your sheets sing.”
“It'll take another martini before I go there.”
“Waiter!” Jackie called out. “The way I figure, Bruce tries so hard at everything, he's gotta be great in the sack.”
Why were her lips going numb? Victoria wondered. “The only thing I'll say, I'm usually sore for two days.”
“He's hung, too? I hate you.”
Just then, Steve hurried to the table, looked at Victoria, did a double take, and said: “Wow! You look outstanding.”
“Solomon, meet my haid of monor, Jackal. I mean, maid of honor, Jackie.”
Jackie bounded out of her chair and threw her arms around Steve, running her hands across his back.
“Where is it?” she demanded.
“You think I'm wearing a wire?” Steve said, bewildered.
“Your fin. Where's the damn fin?”
Victoria was laughing so hard she snorted, which caused Jackie to melt into a paroxysm of giggles. The only one not laughing was Steve.
“When did you two start drinking?” He counted the toothpicks, circumstantial evidence of their guzzling. “I can't believe this.”
“Uh-oh,” Victoria said. “We violated one of Solomon's Laws.” She mimicked his voice. “Never imbibe until sundown.” Then, hoisting the martini glass: “But just like Katrina said, it's gotta be dark somewhere in the world.”
“I didn't expect this from you,” he said.
“If the law doesn't work, jerk off the law.”
“Where's Bigby?” Steve asked, unamused.
“Trying to fit into his underpants,” Jackie said, convulsing in laughter, breasts heaving. She grabbed a baguette from the bread basket, waved it at Steve. “Hey, white shark, how's your package? Are you as big as Bigby?”
“Aw, Jesus,” Steve said.
The waiter showed up with a tray of martinis. “Would you like to catch up with the ladies, sir?” he inquired.
“I'd like to horsewhip the ladies.”
“Me first,” Jackie said.
“Take away the drinks. Bring a pitcher of ice water and a pot of coffee,” Steve ordered.
Victoria pouted. “Why so uptight, Solomon?”
“This is important to me, okay?”
“Don't worry, Stevie.” Victoria patted his hand. “I can carry this off. And if not, there's nobody I'd rather do jail time with than you.”
Twenty-four
HOW GREEN IS MY DAIQUIRI?
Steve spotted Bruce Bigby headed across the dining room.
Suntanned and smiling, Bigby made his rounds, smacking pals on the back, braying “Evening, Commodore” to an older gent, strutting toward their table in a black cashmere blazer, the breast pocket emblazoned with the yacht club seal. He grinned hellos to Jackie and Steve, then turned to Victoria. “Heavens, what's that you're wearing?”
“Do you like it?” she asked, extending her bare arms, swiveling to show off her mesh singlet and nearly naked back. She'd had a glass of ice water and three cups of black coffee, and best Steve could tell, was as sober as a judge. Actually, more sober than most judges he knew.
“It's very . . . very shiny,” Bruce stumbled. His tie was black silk with little gold anchors. “Aren't you cold?”
“Not a bit, hon.”
“No ‘hons' and no ‘sweeties' tonight. We might slip up later.”
“I'm glad to see someone's taking this seriously,” Steve said. “Thanks, Bruce. For doing this, for everything.”
“Hey, no problema, amigo. You're teaching Victoria some lawyer tricks. I'm happy to help out.”
Just then, Dr. Doris Kranchick arrived and introductions were made. Steve watched as Victoria went into full charm-school mode. Oh, how she admired someone who devoted herself to science, and had the doctor seen that recent article in the Journal of Applied Psychology on acquired savant syndrome? And what about behavioral therapy versus drug therapy?
Steve lost track when they began discussing cerebral refreshment and triggering stem cells to produce even more neurons. Just when the conversation grew impossibly dense, Victoria smoothly turned to lacrosse, starting with the Iroquois warriors who played the game with human skulls. Steve realized then that Victoria had prepared for the evening the way she prepared for court. Research, planning, outlines. She probably had alphabetized index cards in her purse: “Lacrosse, History of Sport. Native Americans.”
When Victoria paused, Bruce unexpectedly grabbed the baton and ran the next lap. He invited Kranchick to visit his farm, then cursed the “damned evil weevil” that attacked his avocado trees. Jackie jumped aboard with an offer to list the doctor's home for sale at a reduced commission if she'd be interested in a fabulous new bayfront condo in Hallandale.
The waiter came by with a tray filled with five slushy drinks. “I took the liberty of ordering for everyone,” Bruce announced. “We're starting with frozen avocado daiquiris. Then avocado vichyssoise, smooth as liquid silk.”
Steve thought he'd rather drink phlegm.
“Then a tofu salad with herbs and avocados,” Bigby continued, “vegetarian chili tamales with a tomatillo-avocado salsa, and sweet avocado mousse for dessert.”
“Utterly delightful,” Kranchick cooed.
Steve knew Victoria wouldn't be able to eat a thing without breaking out in a rash.
They chatted a while, Victoria making Kranchick the center of attention. Somewhere between the second and third tray of green drinks, Kranchick said: “Ms. Lord, it's absolutely wonderful to meet you. You're nothing like I expected.”
Steve wondered if he'd just been dissed, but Victoria smiled and replied, “Thank you.”
“And your engagement ring,” Kranchick gushed. “Simply spectacular.”
“Nothing says love like a big fat diamond,” Steve chipped in.
“Mr. Solomon, you grow on people, don't you?”
“Like a fungus,” he said.
“Which reminds me of citrus canker,” Bigby piped up. “Helluva problem.”
“I don't mean to pry, Mr. Bigby,” Kranchick said, “but are you and Ms. Tuttle an item?”
Bruce wrapped an arm around Jackie, and she dropped her head onto his shoulder. “We're not as far along as Steve and Victoria, but who knows what the future will bring?”
“Qué sera, sera,” the doctor sang.
With Bruce and Jackie cuddling, Steve felt he had no choice. He had to keep up appearances, didn't he? He slipped an arm around Victoria, but somehow, his hand ended up sliding under the fabric of her mesh top. Her skin was warm and smooth. He waited a moment to see if she would move away or dig a high heel into his ankle. When she didn't, he slowly began stroking her back.
She turned her head to him. A placid, controlled expression that betrayed nothing. Steve wished he knew what she was feeling. Desire? Regret? Anger? He sometimes thought he could read the look in a woman's eyes, but can any man?
“Tell me all about your wedding plans, Mr. Solomon,” Kranchick said. “Where's the ceremony going to be?”
“Ah, Temple Beth—”
“Church of the Little Flower,” Victoria interrupted.
“How lovely! I know it's a little soon to ask, but are you planning to have children?”
“Four,” Victoria said, just as Steve said, “Two.”
“Three,” they corrected, in unison.
“Four?” Bigby asked, looking at Victoria, eyebrows arched.
“And if you don't mind my asking,” Kranchick said, “are you planning on any religious training?”
“Jewish,” Steve said.
“Episcopalian,” Victoria said.
“Catholic,” Bigby said.
“One of each?” Kranchick asked, clearly confused.
“We need to talk about the bridesmaids' dresses.” Jackie desperately tried to change the subject. “Empire waists? Canary yellow and sunset orange? I'm gonna look like Kilauea.”
“Bruce chose them,” Victoria said, then realized she'd made a mistake.
Kranchick's high forehead furrowed. “Mr. Bigby, you outfitted the bridesmaids?”
“Yes, because . . .” Bigby began, then stopped. Stumped.
“Because . . .” Victoria said.
“Because . . .” Jackie said.
“Because Bruce is gay,” Steve volunteered.
“Oh, my,” Kranchick said.
“Was gay,” Bigby corrected.
“Until he met me,” Jackie said, stroking Bigby's cheek.
They were somewhere between the tofu and the tamales. Bigby was going on about the tragedy of medfly infestation, Kranchick listening as if he were revealing the mystery of Creation. Bigby's arm was still draped over Jackie's shoulder, so why shouldn't Steve keep up his own massage? With Victoria's back growing warmer under his touch, he nuzzled her ear and whispered, “For what it's worth, I think Bruce is the luckiest guy in town.”
“Do you mean that?”
“I'm green with envy, as green as my daiquiri.”
Leaning toward her, Steve's hand moved farther under the fabric, slipping around her rib cage and coming to rest just below her right breast. A perfectly fine, naturally firm, small but shapely, non-Rudnick breast, which now rested on the top of an index finger. She didn't move away, didn't call a cop, didn't slug him.
For a moment, he was fifteen again, in the balcony of the theater on Arthur Godfrey Road, wondering what Sarah Gropowitz would do if he cupped her 32A in his hand. As he recalled, he did nothing for so long that his arm fell asleep. The pain had been so severe, he'd thought the evening might end with amputation.
Steve sneaked a glance at Victoria. She was blushing, the color starting at the base of her neck, moving like the incoming tide until her cheeks were ablaze. A moment later, she discreetly reached behind her back, removed his hand, and slid her chair back. “If you'll excuse me a moment . . .”
She bolted from the table, avoiding eye contact with Steve. His eyes were trained on the front of her singlet, where her nipples propped up the silvery mesh like roof shingles in a hurricane. He ordinarily hopped to his feet when a lady left the table. But he couldn't stand up just now, not with his napkin pitched like a tent over his crotch. He shot a nervous look at Bruce, who was offering Kranchick a two-bedroom apartment at Bigby Resort & Villas, lakefront view at no charge. Then a peek at Jackie, who was watching him, eyes keen as talons. Smiling devilishly, she dangled a maraschino cherry by its stem, rolled it on her tongue, and bit into it.
“Mr. Solomon, I must say you have wonderful friends,” Kranchick said, breaking away from Bigby's sales pitch, “and your fiancée is both beautiful and charming.”
“Sometimes I feel like pinching myself, asking if it's all real.”
“It's real, old chap,” Bruce said heartily. “And you deserve it all.”
Old chap? Maybe it was the yacht club surroundings, or maybe he'd overdosed on daiquiris. Still, Bigby was a decent guy, and for a moment Steve felt guilty about the strange brew of feelings he had for the man's fiancée. The guilt, however, was pretty much drowning in a deep pool of desire. With Victoria still nowhere in sight, Steve excused himself from the table.
He searched the bar area.
No Victoria.
He went to the ladies' rest room, knocked on the door, and called her name.
No Victoria.
He ducked into the kitchen and looked around.
Where was she?
He went onto the patio and followed the path to the pier. And there she was, walking along a row of power boats. He caught up to her next to the Whiplash, a Fountain speedster owned by a personal-injury lawyer.
“You okay?” he asked.
“I just needed some air.”
She was staring across the bay and wouldn't look at him. He came closer. The only sounds were the clanks and groans of the boats in their moorings and the far-off caw of a seabird. The sun had set, and an evening breeze chilled the air.
“You're cold.” Steve took both of her bare arms in his hands and felt the goose bumps.
“What were you doing in there?” Sounding angry. Ready to unload on him. “Just what the hell were you doing?”
“I'm sorry. You're helping me. Big-time. So if I was out of line . . .”
“And in court, massaging my neck?”
“It won't happen again. Scout's honor.”
“I'll bet a year's pay you were never a Boy Scout.”
“I was till they caught me peeping into the girls' bunkhouse.”
“And what are you doing now?”
He hadn't realized it, but his hands were rubbing her upper arms. “Just keeping you warm.” But in reality, he simply couldn't keep his hands off her. “I apologize. Really, I would never—”
“Shut up, Solomon.” She threw her arms around his neck, pulled him close, and kissed him.
He was so startled that it took him a second to kiss her back. But he did. At first, soft and tender. Then deeper, hungrier. Lips melting, tongues circling, it was a long, sigh-filled, sweet river of a kiss that left them both gasping. He held her close, and for a long moment, neither moved.
He tried to fathom his longings. Why did this feel so different than all the rest? Why did this woman matter?
Suddenly, she pulled back and turned away.
“That didn't happen,” she said.
“Yes it did.”
“I'm drunk.”
“Don't think so.”
“Or it's some chemical thing. I'm light-headed from not eating.”
“You want the paramedics?”
“Or it's propinquity. We work together every day, so naturally some feelings arise.”
“That's gotta be it.”
“Or it's reverse chemistry. We really don't like each other, so this is some mutually codependent, destructive urge that manifested itself simultaneously in both of us.”
“Or a rational, synergistic coupling,” he said, using her own words against her.
“I doubt it.” She was hugging herself with both hands.
Steve came to her, put his arms around her from behind. “Whatever it is, why not go with the flow?”
She wheeled to face him. “And where will that take us? Besides your bedroom?”
“I don't know. I just thought—”
“Isn't that just like you, Solomon? Do what feels good and damn the consequences.”
“Do what feels right. And this feels right. Why fight it?”
“For one thing, I'm engaged.” She held up her ring finger.
“A lawyer would notice you didn't say, ‘I'm in love with someone else.'”
“That's implicit in ‘I'm engaged.'”
“Love's never implicit in anything.”
“Okay, I love Bruce. I love him a lot. I'm going to marry him. Satisfied?”
“If you are.”
“I'm not going to play this game.”
Suddenly, a woman's voice sang out of the darkness. “I knew it!” A second later, Jackie showed up. “What'd I miss?”
“Nothing.” Victoria raked her hair with her fingertips. “We were just planning trial strategy.”
“Sure you were. I saw Bad Boy cop a feel, then you took off without your purse, which you wouldn't do if the place were on fire. Then Bad Boy follows you out here, so I thought maybe, just maybe, you might need your lipstick, which believe me, you do.” She handed Victoria her purse.
“Oh, God, Jackie.” Victoria opened the purse and fished for a mirror.
“Relax. Bruce is describing the horror of root rot, which he claims is like genital warts. The doctor's enthralled. And
what do you have to say for yourself, Bad Boy?”
“Nothing happened out here,” Steve said.
“Don't worry. I won't rat you out. Vic's my best friend. But it's not fair.”
“What?” Steve asked.
“She has two fiancés,” Jackie said, “and I don't have any.”
Bruce Kingston Bigby
and
Victoria Lord
request the honour of your presence
at their marriage
on Saturday, the eighth day of January
Two Thousand and Six
at six o'clock in the evening
Church of the Little Flower
2711 Indian Mound Trail
Coral Gables, Florida.
Black tie dinner to follow at the Biltmore Hotel*
*No animals or animal prducts will be used in food preparation.
Twenty-five
A KISS IS NOT A KISS
Where the hell was she?
It was 10:37 A.M., according to the Miami Dolphins helmet clock on Steve's desk, and Victoria was MIA. Not like her at all. She usually got half a day's work done before most people had finished their Wheaties. Or in his case, a handful of guava pastalitos with café Cubano.
What if she'd quit? Quit the case and quit him.
No answer at her apartment, no answer on her cell phone. She probably spent the night at Bigby's house, a thought that depressed Steve even more.
Kissing me and sleeping with him. The wench.
Thinking about Bigby made Steve feel devious. Not lawyer devious, that was a given. Personal devious, and that wasn't him. Even as an adolescent, he never bird-dogged other guys' girls, cheated on exams, or boasted of his own conquests. And his lies were always harmless and easily disproved, like exaggerating the size of his penis.